Chapter Fifteen: 001.00 - Chapter Sixteen: Meiki's Plan


Photo credit: anjan58 via Foter.com / CC BY-NC-ND



  Running through the woods in the dark is never easy. When all you can see is a meter or two in front of you no one would blame you for smacking your face into a tree branch and if you are running at top speed for fear of your life then that branch is likely to knock you out cold. Phel never saw a thing until the sharp crack of wood on forehead dropped him to the ground.
  He woke up in the middle of a strange room. The trees were gone and the darkness of the forest had dissipated. He sat up and noticed that he had been sleeping on a cushion of black plastic. It felt soft, like vinyl and rested atop a plastic slab that rose directly out of the floor.
  The whole world around him seemed to be made of similar material. Floors, and walls were built of modular pieces that looked to have been snapped together. Phel could not discern which portion of the wall contained a door, if any. He looked at the ceiling and saw none, just the green-black night sky. He touched his face to feel a bandage had been placed over his forehead. Then he remembered running. He remembered what he had been running from.
  “Hello?” he called out.
  “Is anyone there?  Am I in a hospital?  My name is Phel-  Phelliam Glebe. I’m from Gates. Is anyone listening?”
  He heard a whirring noise and a panel popped open in the wall across from him. Out stepped the same figure he had seen in the forest.
  Phel gasped and tried to back away but he had nowhere to go in that room.
  “Please," said the thing with its strange mockery of his face, “Please, Phelliam Glebe. Do not be frightened. We are still learning you. We mean no hurt.”
  “Harm. You mean no harm.”
  “Yes,” it continued, “see?  Already you teach us. We want only to understand and to improve ourselves. To become whole and proper.”
  “What are you talking about?  Why do you look like me?”
  “Does that not please you?  We apologize. We calculated that appearing like you would be the best course of action to engender your acceptance. We see now that this has been an error. It will be corrected.”
  The things face seemed to melt and twist. In seconds it had formed anew. It still looked like an attempt at a human face, but not Phel’s. It had become a face he did not know.
  “Is this better?” it asked him.
  “I don’t know what could be worse than what you had before.” Phel said, “It was like looking into a broken mirror.”
  “Your malfunction has been repaired to the best of our abilities. Is the repair acceptable to you?”
  Phel didn’t understand the question until he remembered the bandage. He tore it off and saw that it was made of a black synthetic fiber. Don’t these fellas know any other colors? He thought.
  He touched his head where he had hit it and found no trace of a bump or laceration.
  “It’s ok,” he said, “fine.”
  “Fine.” the robot repeated slowly and deliberately.
  “When I saw you in the woods you were mocking me, like a parrot.”
  “Parrot?”
  “You know?  The colorful birds...I guess you ain’t never seen a bird before. I’ve only seen them in movies. Well. The thing about a parrot is that it don’t know what it’s saying. It just repeats what it hears.”
  “We see.” it said, “We were like parrot. At first we were. But we learn you. Study your words and with new parts we can even see brain.”
  “WHAT?  What do you mean you can ‘see brain’?  I didn’t hit my head that hard!”
  “Phelliam Glebe. We do not hurt. We find new parts in the forest. We acquisition. We absorb and learn. New parts gave us way to think thoughts. Think your thoughts. We hear the words you say and the words you do not say. We understand. More understanding.”
  “You found a thing in the forest and now you can read minds?  Is that what you’re talkin’ about?  Well, it’s damn rude. Keep out of my brain.”
  “Phelliam Glebe. We do not mean to hurt. Only to understand.”
  “You said that, for starters keep out of my head. If you want to understand you can give me some answers too. Who are you and where am I?  What are we doing here?”
  “We are Ghost. That is what you say. Monster in forest. Eat your face.”  the robot spoke that last line in an exact rendition of Phel’s own voice. His own words.
  “But you do not know us. You do not understand. We do not eat face. We do not eat. We are machines. We are in the place you call Blackpatch. We grow here for a long time. Today we understand much more than we have for one hundred years.”
  “Your words keep changing up," said Phel, “You talk like a cartoon robot one minute and like a teacher the next.”
  “We learn your words. We learn to assemble thoughts into sentences. We will not read your mind because it is...rude. We learn much from you already. We also learn much from the other.”
  “The other?”
  “The other is like us but not like us. The other is like you but not like you. The other is tall but has an outer shell the same as yours. The other has no thoughts. The other is labeled, Tyson.”
  The robot led Phel through a larger panel and down a hall.
  “So, this is what the Blackpatch is, huh?” said Phel, “I always reckoned it would resemble a spooky forest like in the fairy tales. But instead it’s a big building?  That somehow ain’t as scary.”
  “We do not call it Blackpatch.” the robot said, “We do not use names like you do. It has only a designation.”
  “Oh yeah?  Well, what do you designate it?”
  “It is noted in our records as 001.00.”
  “Zero zero one dot zero zero?”  That’s a mouthful. How about you just call it Zero?”
  “That would be incorrect.”
  “Ok. Then. I guess I’ll stick with ‘the Blackpatch’ then.”
  “001.00 is not merely a place. It is the first. It is the initial member of us.”
  “You mean, this place is just one big robot?”
  “That is correct.”
  The further he travelled the more Phel could feel it. He wasn’t in a hospital. He wasn’t in a building at all. He walked inside a vast living thing.








Chapter Sixteen
Meiki’s Plan

  Meiki and Rashmi ran through an alley.
  “Where are we going?” Meiki asked.
  “We can’t stay at the library. There is no way that agent worked alone. We need to find a place to hide for a while before we go back.”
  “Why are you dead set on going there? Tell me the truth.”
  “I told you the truth. Someone at the library is hiding something. I want to find out what.”
  “But,” Meiki said, “why do you care so much?  Why are you really here?  There’s no way they would go through all this trouble to stop you if you weren’t up to something important. I want to trust you, Rashmi, but you need to tell me everything.”
  Rashmi stopped running. She put her hands on Meiki’s shoulders. “I told you,” she said, “they want to put everyone in chains. I’m here to stop that.”
  “What? Stop it how?  What does it have to do with Naya?”
  “Your Nebcore is the only unsecured access point in the galaxy. With it I can send a broadcast. I can send a message that will break the chains.”
  “You mean you’re like a freedom fighter?”
  “Yes, in a way. When the chains are broken the Catena will no longer have control of people. People will live and die as they please.”
  “What can I do to help you?”
  Rashmi’s eyes softened at the question. She seemed truly touched that Meiki would offer to help her. “I need to get into the library. Up to the highest level where the Nebcore transmitter is. From there I can send my signal. But if I get close to it those agents will track me. This suit protects me and keeps me alive, but it also allows the agents to track me.”
 “Can’t you just take it off? That way they can’t track you?” asked Meiki.
 “I could do that,” said Rashmi, “but they’d still find the suit wherever I left it and I doubt I could get far before they found me again. Plus I’d be even more vulnerable without it.”
“What if I wear the suit?” Meki said.
“You mean, to lure them away? That could work.” Rashmi paused a moment. “But no. It’s far too dangerous.”
“Letting them hunt me down instead of you? Sounds like fun.” Meiki tried to sound bold, but her voice cracked as she spoke.
  “Meiki. I wouldn’t ask you to do this if it wasn’t so important. Perhaps one of the most crucial moments in the history of the human race...”
  “That’s pretty dramatic.”
  “Perhaps,” Rashmi continued, “but it is important. And you are a child. I am certain they will not harm you.”
  “I’m not so sure. I think that maniac broke my ribs.”
  Rashmi cast her face downward, “I’m so sorry to have brought you into this. Once you are wearing the suit it will heal the damage done. It will make you well, better even.”
  “So. I’m just going to be bait. That way you can run off and save the universe?” Meiki said.
  “It was your idea.”


Meiki didn’t know what she expected to see when Rashmi came out of the restroom dressed in mundane clothing. She had claimed to be nearly a century old and that the suit kept her healthy. Meiki worried that she would look like a frail old woman suddenly or worse. She had read the myth of Tithonus, the man who wished for immortality but did not receive eternal youth. But in a t-shirt, jeans and a gray jacket Rashmi still looked like a healthy young woman.
  “I thought that taking the suit off would make you weak.” she said,
  “Oh it does. Not as weak as the people of your world. Not yet anyway. In time that would come, but for now I am merely an example of a woman with a perfect body.”
  “At least you’re modest.”
  “It’s your turn now,” he said.
  They were in a coffee shop. Deep scents hung in  the air. Bitter coffee mixed with sweet sugar and spices in a soothing manner. Rashmi sat and nursed her espresso while Meiki changed in the restroom. The suit looked snug, but almost imperceptible. It felt like wearing ink. She threw her shirt and overalls on overtop it,
  “How do I look?” she asked when she stepped back into the cafe.
  “Exactly the same as you did going in. That’s perfect.”
  The plan called for her to run out to the edge of town and draw Junko’s attention. Rashmi would do what needed to be done on her end. Meiki was a little foggy on the details of that part, but she trusted the anthropologist.
  “How long do people live now?” Meiki asked. “On Earth?”
  Rashmi sipped her drink and gazed out the window. Children were frolicking on a playground across the street. The colorful play equipment contrasted starkly in Meiki’s mind with the barren unused lot that stood outside dorm 7C. Rashmi watched them for a long while before responding.
  “We live a long, long time. The oldest person on record is about two hundred and ten, I think. It’s likely that the current generation will outdo her by quite a bit.”
  “Do you think it’s possible to live forever?”
  “I know it is.” Rashmi pivoted toward her. “Meiki?”
  “Yes?”
  “If you could live forever, would you?  I mean, if someone gave you the power to never ever die no matter what...would that be a good thing?”
  “I never thought about it.”
  “Come on. You’re the most contemplative child I’ve ever met. Surely the thought has crossed your mind at some point.”
  “Well,” she began, “I suppose there’s more than one way of looking at it. I mean, forever is a long time, right?  If you live forever and never die?  Centuries? Millenia?  Watching planets crumble and stars explode?  I guess it would all get tiresome after a while.”
 “Do you really think that?” she asked Meiki.
 “I don’t know for sure. I guess if I had no choice in the matter I’d come to resent it eventually. Kind of how I’ve felt my whole life. Like I had no choice. The options I’ve been given weren’t really options. I guess after a million lifetimes I’d feel the same way about the whole universe.”
  “Thank you.” Rashmi said.
  “For what?”
  “For helping me be sure that I am doing the right thing.”
 

The Diary of Wartha Gormley - Day in the City



Day in the City

Diary. It’s been awhile again. I’m sorry. I feel a little better now. I had started on some other entries, but I tore them out. Sorry about the ripped pages. I threw them in the river. Maybe someone will find them some day and wonder. They were mostly bad poetry and me feeling sorry for myself.

I miss Drucilla something awful, Diary, but it’s ok. My journey is all that matters now. I’m going to kill The Sun. It’s what Dru would have wanted.

I don’t know how many days it’s been since I last wrote a serious update. I passed through some more hue-men villages. Their false caves are everywhere in this part of the land. I’ve been going on foot so it takes a lot longer to get anywhere. I climbed the tallest tree I could find and looked out to the edge of the world. It never seems to get any closer. Is the Upworld messing with me? Does it just grow bigger and bigger the more I march? Will I ever get to the place where The Sun makes its nest?

I’ve come too far to turn back now. I don’t think I could even make it back to the tunnels if I tried. This hue-men world is so big and wide. I don’t know the way back to the cave I entered it through. I should have made a dang map. What was I thinking.

Anyway, Diary, it’s late. I’m going to watch The Sun rise and then I’m going to sleep for the day.

-----

Diary. You won’t believe what I saw today. A whole dang city of hue-men. It’s massive! The caves- I don’t even think that’s the right word for them...more like towering spires of metal and stone- they reach toward the sky. I can’t believe Updwellers built all of this. I’m still in the woods near the city. I followed the river all the way here. It seems to go right through the heart of it.

I’m going to wait until nightfall then see if I can make my way through it. Gashwhisker alone knows if there’s any way to get around this thing.

-----

Diary, the hue-men never seem to sleep here. I have to be very careful here. I don’t know how they’ll react if one of them sees me. The Updwellers have some messed up ideas about goblinkind if the story that Miri told is any indication. I’m laying low, but it ain’t easy. The river cuts right through this city and the forest around it has thinned out to nothing. I’m sitting behind the last tree before a huge clearing. Around me are countless Updweller caves. They stand up straight and tall. Most of them are blocky and rectangular. Some have artistic flourishes and sculptures around them, but most are pretty plain. It’s a little unnerving, I tell you. Caves are supposed to go down, not up. Updwellers are so backwards.

Paths crisscross the city. Some of them are for walking on but most are dedicated to those big metal hue-men carts. Nonstop they dart around the place. I guess that’s just how Updwellers get about. Must be nice.

-----

It’s really dark out now and I don’t see too many carts about. I think the city is mostly asleep finally. I’m going to head out and see how far I can get into this place. Maybe I can make it to the other side and back into a forest or maybe even some proper caves (not hue-men caves) before The Sun comes around again. If I don’t make it then I’ll find a place to hunker down until it gets dark again.

-----

I’m deep in the heart of the hue-men city. It’s like a maze of towers built upon towers that seems to go on forever. I’ve never been to the goblin city, Witherburg, but I’ve read about it and even seen drawings. It’s not like this. Everything in Witherburg is carved out of the stone of the tunnels. It sits just beside the pit of the Downlow. Have I ever told you about the Downlow, Diary? It’s an infinite pit filled with all sorts of monsters and ancient civilizations. The only goblin who’s ever gone there and returned is Gashwhisker. That’s how he got to be the Dark Hob, watcher of us all. Gashwhisker was the only goblin brave enough to face the fearsome spirits and eldritch terrors of the Downlow. But even Gashwhisker has never been to the Upworld. There are no tales of him visiting a hue-men city.

Look at me. Comparing myself to the Dark Hob. If Ma read this she’d scold me. I don’t mean any disrespect, Gashwhisker (I know you can read on account of you see everything). I’m just writing the facts as I see them.

-----
Diary. I heard something. I found a place to hide- I think. It’s a hue-men carved stair that goes down to a door alongside one of the cave towers. The door is boarded up so I don’t think hue-men are likely to be coming down here. I just hope that they blocked it off to keep beings out and not to keep something terrible in.

I’m going to rest. The sky is turning purple. That means soon The Sun will be back and the Updwellers will start moving about. I’ll just hide out here a bit.

-----
The noise is unbearable, Diary. I can’t sleep. There must be hundreds or thousands of hue-men stomping and shouting up there in the canyons between their tower caves. I pulled my hood over my face but I can still hear it. And those carts make a load of noise too. They roar and hum and sometimes make a strange noise like a snorting honkerbeast.

-----

Diary. I think someone is coming. Down the steps. I’ll try to hide in the corner of this hole, but I don’t think there is any way to avoid getting caught. I got to put you away for now, ok? Don’t be scared, Diary.

Duskworld Chapter Fourteen - The Library.

The connection speed on her book was fantastic in Newbright. It wasn’t necessary to actually visit the library since Meiki could access everything it had to offer from any point in the city. Still, it had always been her dream to visit the place and she wasn’t going to pass it up.
  The ivory building sprouted out of the ground. Its central form was an organic bubble of glass and ceramics that twisted upward like the petals of a massive flower. Frond-like structures spread out from the bubble to give shade to the plaza before the main entrance. The arcade roof of the foyer opened as if to catch the sunlight. Even in the murky light of Naya this building glittered. Meiki had never realized how beautiful her world could be.
 The library of Newbright was more than a collection of reading materials. It was the seat of the local government and the hub of life in the city. This treasure trove of knowledge and beauty was the beating heart of Newbright and some would say all of Naya. This was part of what had been cut off from Meiki throughout her life in Gates.
  Lily shaped booths loaded the ingress. From them individuals could connect to the Zephyr network. Every library in every settlement on Naya connected here. This was one of the things Meiki had run away for. This is what she had run towards.
  “I told you I haven’t got an ID!”  came a familiar voice from behind one of the booths.
  “Look. I’m from...out of town...I don’t...”
  Meiki poked her head around the side of the booth to be certain. There stood Rashmi arguing with a librarian. She wore a light jacket and a pair of trousers over it but Meiki could see her zepto-scale foglet suit poking out of the collar.
  “Madam if you could please-”
  “Never mind...I don’t need your help," said Rashmi. She saw Meiki and winked.
  The librarian stood blankly before walking off.
  “My friend,” said Rashmi to Meiki, “I was afraid I had lost you.”
  “You...” said Meiki.
  “I know what you’re thinking...”
  “YOU!” Meiki said. Her eyes drilled a hole through the woman who had forsaken her in the woods.
  Rashmi stopped. “I’m sorry.” was all she mustered.
  “You left me in the forest when those...things...”
  “I told you not to go back. You chose not to listen.”
  “Junko...she...Phel...” Meiki stopped talking and began blubbering. All of the fear that she had pushed down, all of the worry she had ignored to get to where she was at this moment, it spilled out of her. A hurricane of tears punctuated with thundering sobs gushed out of her face. Rashmi patted her shoulder awkwardly.
  “What are you doing?” asked Meiki between sobs.
  “I’m...comforting you. Isn’t that what you’re supposed to do when someone is crying?”
  “I guess,” Meiki said, “but...well, I reckon it’s just weird. I only just met you. I shouldn’t care that you ran off in the woods. I shouldn’t be this sad. I don’t need you. I never need anyone. Being alone. That’s my thing.”
  “Well,” said Rashmi, “I need you, even if you don’t need me. I’m sorry I ran off like that. I’m on a mission and I didn’t want to jeopardize it, but I should not have left you in danger. I’m sorry.”
 Meiki turned away from the woman and thought for a while. She no longer trusted Rashmi, but was still in a strange city with no other friends.
 “Fine” said Meiki.
 “Fine what?”
 “Fine, I forgive you. For now. But don’t think this means you’re totally off the hook. I know I can’t believe in you now. If I’m in danger there’s no way to be sure you won’t just leave me again. But I could use a friend right now.”
 “A friend with technology beyond your wildest dreams?” asked Rashmi.
 “Well, I guess that sweetens the deal a little.” said Meiki, smiling and crying at the same time.
After the tears dried they sat near the fountain where Meiki had eaten her sandwich. Meiki told Rashmi what happened with Junko and about the kind trucker who got her to Newbright.
  “So, “ said Rashmi after a short silence, “what do you plan to do now?”
  “Plan?  Gee. I really didn’t think it over, I guess. I need to figure out how I’m going to feed myself for starters. I didn’t bring more than a few days worth of sandwiches.”
  “Well, that would be a problem, I suppose, for someone who needs food.”
  “Don’t you ever get hungry?”
  “Nope. My suit generates all of the nutrients I need and feed them directly into my bloodstream. There are also drugs that keep me from feeling hunger pains. Like most of my tech I couldn’t tell you exactly how it works. Sorry.”
  “Wow. I know how almost everything I use works. I can’t imagine what it’s like to be so stupid.”
  Rashmi smiled at the insult.
  “How about you?” Meiki asked, “Now that you’ve made it to the greatest and only city on all of Naya what do you want to see?”
  “Well, I really wanted to see the library. Particularly the Nebcore.”  
  “What is it with you people and the Nebcore?  That Junko lady was after that thing too. I’m pretty sure there isn’t one.”
  “Oh. It’s real,” said Rashmi, “It’s been sending out a steady signal for some time now. That is what drew me here in the first place. I responded but it was not receiving...only transmitting.”
  “Transmitting what?  Is there a message?”
  “Just one word...’Hello’...over and over again.”
  Rashmi held out her arm as if looking at a watch. “I managed to load a map before that fascist librarian accosted me...take a look.”
  The lines on her forearm displayed a map of their general vicinity. Meiki could see the library. At its center a small red dot blinked. There were two blue dots outside the building.
  “What’s that?”  she said, pointing to the red dot, “Is that it?  Is that the access point between our world and the rest?”
  “Yes. I was surprised to find that no one here, not even the librarians knew about it. But there it is.”
  “Why do you want to get to it?” asked Meiki
  “It’s a mystery.” said Rashmi, “Why is it hidden?  Why does no one know about it?  It seems to be active so someone within the library is still using it. Someone is communicating with the Solar System.”
  “I guess those two blue dots are us, right?”  asked Meiki.
  “Yes, clever one. I placed a tracer on you last night. Sorry. I wanted to be able to find you again if I needed to.”
  “You could have told me.”
  “Yes. I could have. I’m sorry that I didn’t trust you.”
  “What’s that green dot?  It’s moving fast...toward us.”
  They both looked up in shock as the motorbike sped toward them through the plaza.
  “Junko!” shouted Meiki.
  Rashmi pushed her out of the way as the bike raced toward them. To Meiki’s amazement Rashmi leapt clean over it.
  Junko spun the bike one hundred eighty degrees to face them.
  She glanced at Meiki, “I knew the two of you were working together...should have apprehended you earlier. But she’s the real threat.” Junko pointed at Rashmi.
  Her bike began to hum as if powering up. Rashmi stood right in her line of sight. A small tube sprouted out of the fork of the bike. Meiki may have been a stranger to this technology, but that thing had ‘weapon’ written all over it.
  “Rashmi!  Look out!” Meiki shouted, but she had already leapt out of the way again as a blast of light shot out of the motorbike. Rashmi landed on top of Junko, knocking her off the bike.
  The agent landed gracefully and tripped Rashmi to her knees. The technology made Rashmi fast, but she was still just an anthropologist facing off against a trained fighter.
  Before Rashmi could get to her feet Junko released a spray of chemical foam from her suit. It enveloped Rashmi. On contact the stuff hardened and immobilized her.
  Junko produced the device she had used before to disable Rashmi’s suit. She began to work at Rashmi as before- poking it at her and clicking. The fugitive struggled for a moment but then fell, resigned to her fate or perhaps just sapped of all her strength.
  “Noooo!” shouted Meiki as she slammed Junko with her backpack, knocking the tool to the ground. She dropped Meiki to the street with a swift kick.
  “Keep out of this, child!” Junko growled and lunged for the device. Meiki brought her heavy work boot down on it, cracking it into pieces.
  Junko rose up and punched Meiki square in the chest, cracking her ribs. Meiki fell upon Rashmi.
  “Get back!  Leave her alone!  Don’t put her in chains!” Meiki gasped.
  With the device broken Rashmi’s suit seemed to start reactivating. Meiki noticed a barely audible hum and the anthropologist’s expression changed. Her eyes focused and her brow furrowed. Rashmi grunted. A crack appeared on the outside of her chemical prison. She strained some more and there was a loud snap as Rashmi escaped the shell of hardened foam as if it were meringue.
  Junko pounced on her again, screaming. This time instead of fighting Rashmi just ducked and dodged.
  A crowd had gathered to witness the spectacle. Meiki suspected that soon the local authorities would arrive as well.
  Meiki picked up the device Junko had dropped. It was not destroyed. She could see its inner workings. The technology was alien to her, but there were some familiar principles. It had a power source, some sort of media for it to travel along, an aperture through which energy was either taken in or given off.
  She could probably repair it, even improve it even though she didn’t know exactly how it worked. The opening was hindered by a sliding switch that seemed to control how much energy  the device could manipulate. It clearly could be opened to a much greater degree than the slider allowed. Most importantly, Meiki saw that the energy flow could be redirected outward.
  The two aliens continued to battle on. Rather one of them attacked while the other evaded. Meiki reassembled the disabler while they were occupied.
  Hiding it in her palm, Meiki put herself between Junko and Rashmi once more.
  “Please,” the girl said, “just leave her be. She’s no threat to you and the Catena!  She’s just an anthropologist!”
  Junko looked confused but charged at the two of them. When she came within five feet Meiki hit her with the disabler at full blast. It whistled and whined. A cone of hot white light burst out of the thing. The tube had become so hot that Meiki dropped it in shock. The agent careened into the child and the professor, knocking them over and fell to the ground. All of the lights on her suit shut down. She seemed to be unconscious.
  Meiki rose up with her arm held to her ribcage. Rashmi stood up too. The young girl looked at the device- nothing left but a melted clump of black plastic.