^-^ okay. Well tomorrow's the last day!
Paschalis Talitha was given flowers, and that's all anyone else knew.
Talitha didn’t have a family to speak of. He had few connections. People knew of him, but nobody knew him, not really. He had customers, certainly, but even they could rarely give a proper account of his avatar, let alone personal details. Even after he disappeared, nobody was suspicious for hours- objective hours, too, not Vyar-perceived ones, an awfully long time for something of the sort. The stelisto had chosen their target well, I had to admit.
Nobody would’ve questioned him about that flourishing bouquet he carried; he was a gardener, after all. Nobody noticed the way they didn’t move quite right in the wind, or the almost-but-not-quite way the light bounced off their petals. Even if they had, they would’ve dismissed the flowers as just some strange experiment of Talitha’s, some attempt to ground his work in the deeper levels of the Nexus. The flowers were not by any measure the strangest feature of this stratum. Nor had his absent-mindedness been a cause for concern; like many of his kind, he was admirably inventive and intelligent, but could never have been mistaken for stable.
The flowers themselves were beautiful. They sat in a vase on Gaspar’s featureless desk now, encased in several layers of safety netting that shimmered like the thin rainbow glaze of oil on a puddle. They were lillies and passion-flowers, rendered in sharp crystalline detail in shades of amaranth and fiery orange, with edges so fine and blade-like he felt certain he would cut himself on them if he were to be foolish enough to touch them.
The only source of illumination in the barren study was a window directly behind the man, whose light barely reached into the far corners of the room. It was enough to make the flowers glimmer eerily. Upon closer inspection, they were captivating: delicate filigree patterns covered their petals, and it seemed that every time he looked a little closer, another layer of complexity revealed itself, a vague glistening fractal superimposed over every bloom. The whole arrangement looked fragile up close, like it was made of sugar.
Elegantly beautiful, for a weapon.
He closed his eyes momentarily and sent the summons to Efe Kipling. A fraction of a second later, he accepted her request for entry.
In the center of the empty space, a small white ball appeared, hanging perfectly still in the air before its surface began to ripple and expand. He watched, mesmerized, as the tiny white pebble became a writhing lustrous mass, simultaneously so organic and so unnatural. Watching her materialize always gave him the chills, even though the process never took more than a few seconds.
Several moments later, the mass had coalesced into a female figure, dressed in a toga with two pairs of smooth feathered wings sprouting from her shoulders. Blue lines of ink snaked across her body, azure vines and flowers rendering her features in impossible detail. Efe Kipling stood before him, a smiling angel of liquid porcelain.
“Dante Gaspar. What a pleasure! It’s been ages.”
Out of politeness, he stood. “Efe- Ma’am.”
“I see you’ve decided against redecorating,” she remarked as she gave the dim room a cursory glance. “Really, Dante- it’s so bland.” It always made him uncomfortable when she used his first name.
“I don’t spend a lot of time in here,” he said with a shrug. “And when I do, it’s because I don’t want distractions. Here; take a look at this. This was the vector.” He sat down again, gesturing to the flowers.
She floated closer, wings spread out so she took up a significant portion of the room, and brushed one white finger against the safety netting. He had to stop himself from warning her not to touch it- she knew what she was doing.
“Remarkable craftsmanship,” she commented.
Gaspar frowned. The statement was callous, but not inaccurate.
“So- shall we take a look?”
With a nod from Gaspar, the safety netting dissipated, leaving only air between himself and the beautiful, deadly things in the vase.
“They should be harmless. The most probable case is that the virus was fine-tuned to his genes: they must’ve seen some gap in his security, perhaps due to one of the untested mutations the system introduced,” Gaspar explained. “He wasn’t in a very good spot in the first place, anyway. I’ve got evidence to say he was a relatively troubled person. They might’ve even sent in a weaker preliminary virus, to eat away at his defenses before this assault, though I might not be able to prove it- he couldn’t afford to have himself backed up, and until I find him I have no way to tell how bad the damage is. It wouldn’t have taken much to infect him.” Gaspar cast a sidelong glance at the flowers. “But I would still be careful. They can’t infect you, but they might be able to do some damage.”
Efe laughed. “You just worry about yourself, Dante. You do your thing, and let me do mine. It can’t do anything to me- even if it did, I updated my backup about a centisecond ago.”
Gaspar wondered if she meant a hundredth of a second perceived in Vyar, or a real, solid, immutable hundredth of a second in the real world. The accelerated time was already making his head hurt a little bit. He’d have a hell of a migraine by the time he was done here. Normally, he would’ve given himself a few minutes of respite from Vyar to clear his head- but every objective hour that passed in the physical world cost him nearly four days of perceived time in Vyar, and right now, time was of the essence. He just had to hope the machinery would keep his brain from frying. Unlike the Denizens, his meager biological brain had never been designed to process information this quickly. The implants helped, of course, but nevertheless he still had to take a few moments here and there to collect his thoughts, and he never seemed to comprehend Efe’s words as quickly as she did his.
To him, the Vyar Denizens were like butterflies, flitting from place to place in microseconds, juggling multiple conversations with ease, treating their physical form like a change of clothes rather than like their own body. They were united by two things: a remarkable intelligence, and a remarkable, perverse disinterest in the world outside their simulated pocket-universe. In this sense, they fascinated him- how could they know their world was virtual, and be perfectly content with it?
And yet here they were, a colony of half a billion such souls. And here he was, a flesh-and-blood man, the very being they considered inferior, protecting them from their own system. Ironic, when he thought about it that way.
Efe’s fingers brushed against the petals of one of the flowers. He watched it dissolve into crystalline dust under her touch, a tiny portion of the flower becoming a glittering cloud suspended motionless in the air before her. She ran her smooth porcelain fingers through it, then held her fingers up to the light, inspecting the thin layer of residue. It hissed quietly as it reacted with her skin, until all that was left was a thin sooty layer on the otherwise pristine white surface.
“You were right about one thing, at least. The virus was specifically made to target Talitha. It doesn't like me much, naturally.” Efe smiled, folded her four wings, and tucked her legs up towards her chest. “It may be a tough nut to crack. Whoever created this strain certainly knew what they were doing. Give me, oh…” She cocked her head curiously at the bouquet. “Twenty minutes. That ought to do the trick.”
Gaspar blinked. “That long?”
“I cannot work miracles, Dante,” she chided as she swept the flowers out of the vase with a flourish and let out a small sound of surprise. “They’re cold- you know that? They’re cold to the touch. Beautiful craftsmanship. Stunning.” She took a deep breath, or at least pretended to do so. It looked odd: he saw her open her mouth- an unnerving black hole cloaked in shadow, confirming her avatar was the same stark white porcelain all the way through- and heard the inhale, and yet the rest of her body stayed perfectly still. It made him picture a ceramic vacuum cleaner. It wouldn’t have taken much effort on her part to complete the illusion, but the Vyar Denizens always seemed reluctant to adopt fully realistic forms, as if being a creature of flesh and blood was somehow disgraceful, so instead, they had decided to be unnerving.
Efe glanced up from the flowers, as if surprised he was still sitting by the desk. “Now, Dante, while I’m busy, be a good man- run along and see if you can trace him.” There was an impatient edge to her voice that Gaspar tried to ignore. He also tried to ignore the slight disdain in the way she’d said ‘man’: here the word ‘man’ implied someone from the outside world, and not once had he heard a Denizen use the word without some measure of contempt.
“I’m on it. Adieu.”⧖
I closed my eyes, took a deep breath, focused momentarily on the real, air-conditioned air filling my body’s lungs back on Earth: it smelled of rain.
Efe would’ve just seen me wink out of existence without fanfare. I had never been a huge fan of their pompous demanifestation displays- the way Efe always seemed to morph and fold into a point of nothingness every time she left was on the tamer end of the spectrum. Green plants and the offputting artificial scent of Vyar atmosphere greeted me in Königsmann Forum as I winked back into view. It had been the favored Forum of Talitha’s, and as I looked around, it wasn’t too difficult to judge why.
The place was a wild jungle of wrought-iron, a three-dimensional complexity that twisted and curled in on itself as it rose higher into some indeterminate place in the sky, and overtop that iron lattice grew a second, horticultural jungle, a tangle of vines and creeping flowers that wrapped around every available inch of solid material with the exception of the glass floors. As I glanced down, I saw nothing but more layers of the jungle, though sunlight seemed to have no difficulties penetrating to the lower depths; off to one side, an edge of the structure was visible, and through the holes I caught glimpses of blue sky. I would’ve bet money on this being an isolated structure. If I were to look down through one of those gaps, all I would see is blue sky in every direction.
Around me, avatars of Denizens milled about in groups of anywhere between two and two hundred. Each avatar was stranger than the last: most were humanoid to some extent, though I saw a few that looked more like animals and even a handful that didn’t even look alive. Nevertheless, they gave me a wide berth: there was nothing official that revealed my identity, but with my baseline projection avatar- a perfect copy of my own body- I would’ve been a social outcast here. They never ceased to amaze me.
The Denizens didn’t like me much- and I didn’t like them, either. In some ways, I could see why they considered themselves the epitome of humanity; but the entire setup was too quixotic, too delicate. The real world had its limits, but at least it was robust and reliable and it couldn’t change with a single thought: at least you could count on the ground beneath your feet, and know it was real. Not that they could ever know.
I had an advantage over all of them: they needed me, and I didn’t need them. No matter how they chose to look at it, they were trapped in the Vyar for the rest of their lives. I was a messenger, able to jump between worlds at will- and that was something Efe would never be able to say for herself. No matter how fast and smart that ceramic angel got, she was still just a delicate little fragment of code that had been tricked into consciousness in a universe of illusions.
I glanced away quickly: time to get to business. Efe would be waiting.
With a sigh, I placed my hand on the nearest column. It was smoother, warmer than real iron, as if someone had their hand on it before me and left only a moment ago. Pushing the thought to the back of my head, I began to whistle a quiet tune as I peeled back the Forum’s records.
It didn’t like me. It fought back. Layers of security I’d already bypassed twisted around and nipped at me again. It was like peeling an onion, only the layers were made of rubber and had minds of their own. Never mind my security clearance; the place would’ve put up a fight if Alpha themself was trying to dig into their archives. If there was one thing these people valued, it was information. In a way, it made total sense: information was the essence of their being. On some level they recognized they were not so fundamentally different from the stupid Forum archives.
Nevertheless, the Forum knew it was fighting a losing battle. I dug into it and, with a little forceful coercing and a quick argument with a particularly uncongenial security program, grabbed hold of Talitha’s signature. It took me a few long seconds to comb through the records and trace it, and I had to put on a greater show of authority than I was used to, but finally I had a data trail.
The level of security clearance and force it had taken worried me. They’d hidden their trail well- not well enough to do much more than inconvenience me, of course, but enough to cause concern. Whoever had been responsible for the virus knew what they were doing, and that did not bode well for Paschalis Talitha.
I disappeared from the Forum.
When I entered the locus- a small clearing in an evergreen forest, dimly lit by a vague purple sky- I saw Talitha as a human-shaped black hole cut from my vision. There was no doubt on my part now: there was no saving him.
The thing which had once been Paschalis noticed my presence a few nanoseconds too late. I watched the shape freeze for a moment as it searched for an escape, but I had taken no chances: for what had once been Talitha, escape would be impossible now.
“Under the authority of the Paragon Imperial Council, you are under arrest for the unlawful murder of Paschalis Talitha.”
“What are you going to do? Die about it?” A hollow, sarcastic androgynous voice. It took an unconcerned step towards the trees, then broke into a run.
I didn’t follow.
Three short minutes later, the human-shaped void popped out of the other side of the clearing. It slowed to a stop, shifting its weight casually. “Very interesting. I’ve heard of you Enforcers pulling stunts like that, changing the local topology and all, but I’ve never seen it in action.”
“Most don’t live to tell the tale,” I replied, keeping my voice just as casual. It was difficult to suppress my anger.
It laughed. I wanted to punch it. “So I’ve heard.”
“Shut the hell up.” I glared. “Answer me one question before I do what I came here to do. And keep in mind that I can get whatever the hell I want from you with force if I have to.”
It spread its arms. “Ask away then, Dante Gaspar.”
I froze in place. “How the hell do you know my name?”
“Is that your question?”
“You’ll answer as many damn questions as I want you to.”
It shrugged. “Efe Kipling let that one slip. A tiny chink in her armor: she was careless. You can blame her for it, though I doubt anyone except me knows at this point.”
I swore under my breath. I’d deal with that later.
“Why the flowers?”
“They’re pretty, aren’t they?”
“Why did you kill him?”
The shape cocked its head. “Excuse me?”
“You heard me. He never did anything to anyone- trust me, I’ve checked. He had nothing of value. He had no use to you. Why did you kill him?”
“You’re right about one thing, Dante: he never did anything. He was an artist, and a mediocre one at that. This world has a surplus of artists. They do nothing. This world needs more networks who can act.” It took me a second to realize that by ‘networks’, it meant ‘people’. “I want my say in things here, Gaspar. Influence. There’s only so much a single copy of a person can do. Little Paschalis was taking up space. I had every right to replace him. Space to expand is so hard to come by nowadays.”
“I want to know who you are, where your original is, and how many of you there are.”
“Oh, please. I know what you believe. Don’t think you fool anyone. It’s all just numbers to you. Paschalis wasn’t real to you, and neither am I. You’re doing a job, that’s all. Come to think of it, why don’t I make your life a little bit easier?”
Before I could reply, in the timespan of a nanosecond the shape crumpled and disintegrated before my eyes, taking all the information it owned with it.
I stared numbly at the place where the last traces of Paschalis Talitha had stood only a moment before.
Don’t let it get to you. Don’t let it get to you.
I knew it was only a matter of time until it did, or until I got numb to it all.
I wasn’t sure which was the better alternative.
sparrow; wrote:I wrote a short story, but I don't think I'm going to share it. Thanks for the good prompt, though!
♕Crøwned wrote:HECK YAS! I have been looking for this post for forever! I can finally put my writing on the internet to get judged and see the results from other point of views. Getting to work right away!
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