Joe
There was no denying that the attack had been skillfully coordinated. Sealing the four exits was accomplished by a double override of the door locks, and then a shorting of all the control mechanisms. In order for the doors to open again, the lab techicians would have had to get a man through the crawlspace above the corridors and then replace the circuitboards manually. This was a time consuming and difficult job at the best of times. In the midst of the probe attack, it was nell-nigh impossible.
The corridors had then been flooded to a depth of roughly an inch with coolant fluid, caused by an extensive rupture in the pipelines. This not only rendered the corridors corrosive to human flesh and electrically charged, it also meant that the computer systems had shorted as their coolant supply vanished. All in all, the civilian casualties had been high, and what few survivors there were were hiding out in the retrieval sections, waiting for the emergency to pass or for the police to respond to their doomed netbeacon requests.
For them, the outlook was surprisingly good. The leader of the attacking probe team had served on Iphiclia before, and had enough experience to know that the faster the objective was achieved, the better one's chances of getting away alive. Aurum-4 saw no profit in wasting valuable time eliminating harmless civilian scientists. He had proceeded almost in a straight line from the western breach to the headquarters at the center of the sensor complex, disposing of the interposing enemy agents with a ruthless and quick efficiency.
A quick bypass at the corner turret, and the path was secured - any following intruders would have to deal with a suddenly-traitorous shredder cannon. Aurum-4 waited for just under fifteen seconds to be sure of his comrades' positioning, then opened the door with his free hand.
That done, he shifted position slightly for better leverage, and hefted the corpse of the DataTech probe member into the room. As the sound of gunfire broke out, he primed a flashpack and threw it in, high. The dull burst of the pack announced that it had discharged its energy in a blinding flash of light, and Aurum-4 was through the door and rolling low.
He sensed a reeling figure behind the nearest computer banks, and downed it with a single shot. His eyes were scanning even before the victim collapsed, noting the others behind their protective screens. He dropped to his knees and scrabbled across to a less exposed area behind some terrain array maps, mentally willing his backup to note the remaining foes.
As he drew his second sidearm from his vest, he heard the swoosh of another door breach, and lay low. Friendly fire - best to stay out of harm's way. Whilst huddled, he noted the moderate damage done to one of the computer terminals beside him: the enemy agents had already begun to destroy their own hardware rather than let the Hive access them. He thanked his foresight in maintaining the momentum and speed of the attack.
A few quick bursts of gunfire, and all was silent in the smoke. There was the crunch of glass under boots, and the slight clink of metal links and synthleather equipment straps, as the survivors searched cautiously.
Aurum readied his pistol and called out slowly: "Pineapple throne."
A whistle, and a relieved sigh. "Jacksberry stage," came the reply.
Anhalt Reinhardt stood up slowly and saw his two fellow team members, Murath and Farnham, peering around in the wreckage. He sheathed his two pistols and came over to where they were.
"Last stand," said Murath, turning the dead Angel over with the toe of his boot.
Reinhardt waved him on to the terminals. "We got here just in time," he said. "They've already started to derail their own equipment. We need to work fast while the nets are still stored in memory."
Farnham sat down with his portable node and jacked into the central MilMat, substituting a slowdown algorithm to defeat internal security. Murath did the same with the sensor base security, reactivating all dormant cannon and sealing all doors.
The whole of the transfer and analysis took less than two metric minutes, but this owed more to the sparseness of valuable information than to Hiverian efficiency. Folder after folder of node space was ominously empty. This meant only one thing - that the DataTech had decided to purge their records entirely rather than let their secrets fall into Hiverian hands.
Murath disengaged with a disgusted intake of breath, and Reinhardt did not have to ask to know the results. He felt a leaden sinking in him as he pondered the hard work that had gone into this raid. Two days earlier the strike against the skyrail had been aborted at the last moment after a dramatic discovery - that the DataTech had mobilized against the other Hiverian teams and had eliminated or diverted a vast percentage of total Hiverian probe power.
Reinhardt had discreetly plumbed the fragmented DataTech reports to determine how many of his colleagues exactly had been caught or killed. The end result lay somewhere between sixty and eighty percent. Either the DataTech were preternaturally good at this work (and of course there was every reason to expect such), or somebody had tipped them off beforehand.
"Aurum-4," called Farnham suddenly. "You might want to look at this."
Reinhardt's musings dissipated instantly as he stepped over to the portable node. In it, he saw the usual ominous expanse of empty folders and blank records. Blank, however, save for one single lone file - a message file, much as those sent from commercial nodes in interpersonal communications.
What on earth was one of these civilian broadcasts doing here?
Aurum-4 looked at the title.
**60!d3n |304 r!p 2 D P0\\/4(lip!**
He looked at his compatriots, then opened the file and glanced at the short message therein.
Looking for a special friend? Get ahead! Meet me at the RafeCafe Blue at GammaProm in DeCentral. I'll be waiting for your call, quasi golden boy.
Reinhardt sat back, pensive. The others took their turn to read the mysterious epistle.
"What's all that about?" asked Murath. "Looks like spam to me."
"Forget what it's about," said Farnham. "I'm more worried about how it got here."
"Well, if you're worried then just delete it and let's go. We don't have much time before Interior sends a clean-up squad."
Reinhardt spoke up. "Wait a second," he said. "The message is for real. I don't know who it is, or how they found out about me, but they know enough for us to take them seriously."
"What?" said Murath. "But it's just spam, isn't it?"
Reinhardt glanced again at the title. "Golden Boy Rip to the Powerclip," he read. "How many other people know of the codename of the DataTech project?"
"Probably all the big DataTech cheeses," said Murath. "Especially the ones who'd love to catch you for your little stunt at Governor Halls with Agent Hu. It's just spam, Aurum-4."
"Perhaps," said Reinhardt. "However, do they know we're looking to sabotage the Secret Project? Do they even know that we know about their Secret Project? Look here - Looking for a special friend? Get ahead! See? How many DataTech interior know we're after the Secret Project as well as Agent Hu?"
Murath shook his head. "I don't believe you're actually entertaining thoughts of changing a probe mission to accommodate spam suggestions. When was the last time you paid any attention to network spam and spent twenty energy credits at AfterBirth World just to get a free placenta? It's spam, Aurum. Spam at its most commercial."
"Look," said Reinhardt. "They know my name too. Quasi golden boy. Aurum-4."
Murath did not comment. Farnham cocked an eyebrow.
"Shall I delete it?" he asked.
"Wait," said Reinhardt, scanning the letter for one last time. "RapCafe Blue - GammaProm - Data DeCentral. Okay, got it. Delete at will."
Farnham wiped the slate and prepared to disengage, when a new message appeared.
The three men leaned forwards and read it closely. It was even shorter than the previous communication, and a spelling mistake therein suggested hasty submission, but the whole message left no doubt as to its salience:
________________is__on
____________head____the
________who's________block,
Remember_____________REINHARDT
* ~ * ~ *
There was no denying that the attack had been skillfully coordinated. Sealing the four exits was accomplished by a double override of the door locks, and then a shorting of all the control mechanisms. In order for the doors to open again, the lab techicians would have had to get a man through the crawlspace above the corridors and then replace the circuitboards manually. This was a time consuming and difficult job at the best of times. In the midst of the probe attack, it was nell-nigh impossible.
The corridors had then been flooded to a depth of roughly an inch with coolant fluid, caused by an extensive rupture in the pipelines. This not only rendered the corridors corrosive to human flesh and electrically charged, it also meant that the computer systems had shorted as their coolant supply vanished. All in all, the civilian casualties had been high, and what few survivors there were were hiding out in the retrieval sections, waiting for the emergency to pass or for the police to respond to their doomed netbeacon requests.
For them, the outlook was surprisingly good. The leader of the attacking probe team had served on Iphiclia before, and had enough experience to know that the faster the objective was achieved, the better one's chances of getting away alive. Aurum-4 saw no profit in wasting valuable time eliminating harmless civilian scientists. He had proceeded almost in a straight line from the western breach to the headquarters at the center of the sensor complex, disposing of the interposing enemy agents with a ruthless and quick efficiency.
A quick bypass at the corner turret, and the path was secured - any following intruders would have to deal with a suddenly-traitorous shredder cannon. Aurum-4 waited for just under fifteen seconds to be sure of his comrades' positioning, then opened the door with his free hand.
That done, he shifted position slightly for better leverage, and hefted the corpse of the DataTech probe member into the room. As the sound of gunfire broke out, he primed a flashpack and threw it in, high. The dull burst of the pack announced that it had discharged its energy in a blinding flash of light, and Aurum-4 was through the door and rolling low.
He sensed a reeling figure behind the nearest computer banks, and downed it with a single shot. His eyes were scanning even before the victim collapsed, noting the others behind their protective screens. He dropped to his knees and scrabbled across to a less exposed area behind some terrain array maps, mentally willing his backup to note the remaining foes.
As he drew his second sidearm from his vest, he heard the swoosh of another door breach, and lay low. Friendly fire - best to stay out of harm's way. Whilst huddled, he noted the moderate damage done to one of the computer terminals beside him: the enemy agents had already begun to destroy their own hardware rather than let the Hive access them. He thanked his foresight in maintaining the momentum and speed of the attack.
A few quick bursts of gunfire, and all was silent in the smoke. There was the crunch of glass under boots, and the slight clink of metal links and synthleather equipment straps, as the survivors searched cautiously.
Aurum readied his pistol and called out slowly: "Pineapple throne."
A whistle, and a relieved sigh. "Jacksberry stage," came the reply.
Anhalt Reinhardt stood up slowly and saw his two fellow team members, Murath and Farnham, peering around in the wreckage. He sheathed his two pistols and came over to where they were.
"Last stand," said Murath, turning the dead Angel over with the toe of his boot.
Reinhardt waved him on to the terminals. "We got here just in time," he said. "They've already started to derail their own equipment. We need to work fast while the nets are still stored in memory."
Farnham sat down with his portable node and jacked into the central MilMat, substituting a slowdown algorithm to defeat internal security. Murath did the same with the sensor base security, reactivating all dormant cannon and sealing all doors.
The whole of the transfer and analysis took less than two metric minutes, but this owed more to the sparseness of valuable information than to Hiverian efficiency. Folder after folder of node space was ominously empty. This meant only one thing - that the DataTech had decided to purge their records entirely rather than let their secrets fall into Hiverian hands.
Murath disengaged with a disgusted intake of breath, and Reinhardt did not have to ask to know the results. He felt a leaden sinking in him as he pondered the hard work that had gone into this raid. Two days earlier the strike against the skyrail had been aborted at the last moment after a dramatic discovery - that the DataTech had mobilized against the other Hiverian teams and had eliminated or diverted a vast percentage of total Hiverian probe power.
Reinhardt had discreetly plumbed the fragmented DataTech reports to determine how many of his colleagues exactly had been caught or killed. The end result lay somewhere between sixty and eighty percent. Either the DataTech were preternaturally good at this work (and of course there was every reason to expect such), or somebody had tipped them off beforehand.
"Aurum-4," called Farnham suddenly. "You might want to look at this."
Reinhardt's musings dissipated instantly as he stepped over to the portable node. In it, he saw the usual ominous expanse of empty folders and blank records. Blank, however, save for one single lone file - a message file, much as those sent from commercial nodes in interpersonal communications.
What on earth was one of these civilian broadcasts doing here?
Aurum-4 looked at the title.
**60!d3n |304 r!p 2 D P0\\/4(lip!**
He looked at his compatriots, then opened the file and glanced at the short message therein.
Looking for a special friend? Get ahead! Meet me at the RafeCafe Blue at GammaProm in DeCentral. I'll be waiting for your call, quasi golden boy.
Reinhardt sat back, pensive. The others took their turn to read the mysterious epistle.
"What's all that about?" asked Murath. "Looks like spam to me."
"Forget what it's about," said Farnham. "I'm more worried about how it got here."
"Well, if you're worried then just delete it and let's go. We don't have much time before Interior sends a clean-up squad."
Reinhardt spoke up. "Wait a second," he said. "The message is for real. I don't know who it is, or how they found out about me, but they know enough for us to take them seriously."
"What?" said Murath. "But it's just spam, isn't it?"
Reinhardt glanced again at the title. "Golden Boy Rip to the Powerclip," he read. "How many other people know of the codename of the DataTech project?"
"Probably all the big DataTech cheeses," said Murath. "Especially the ones who'd love to catch you for your little stunt at Governor Halls with Agent Hu. It's just spam, Aurum-4."
"Perhaps," said Reinhardt. "However, do they know we're looking to sabotage the Secret Project? Do they even know that we know about their Secret Project? Look here - Looking for a special friend? Get ahead! See? How many DataTech interior know we're after the Secret Project as well as Agent Hu?"
Murath shook his head. "I don't believe you're actually entertaining thoughts of changing a probe mission to accommodate spam suggestions. When was the last time you paid any attention to network spam and spent twenty energy credits at AfterBirth World just to get a free placenta? It's spam, Aurum. Spam at its most commercial."
"Look," said Reinhardt. "They know my name too. Quasi golden boy. Aurum-4."
Murath did not comment. Farnham cocked an eyebrow.
"Shall I delete it?" he asked.
"Wait," said Reinhardt, scanning the letter for one last time. "RapCafe Blue - GammaProm - Data DeCentral. Okay, got it. Delete at will."
Farnham wiped the slate and prepared to disengage, when a new message appeared.
The three men leaned forwards and read it closely. It was even shorter than the previous communication, and a spelling mistake therein suggested hasty submission, but the whole message left no doubt as to its salience:
________________is__on
____________head____the
________who's________block,
Remember_____________REINHARDT
* ~ * ~ *
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