Part 1: Night Falls
The curved bow of the sunset lurched eastwards. Across the innumerable settlements on Planetface sharing the same meridianline, dusk was encroaching - same for the observation towers and watchers of Hive dens, operators hundreds of meters below the surface. Same for the shuttered streets of the Datatech metropolises, undergoing their latest power outage in recent weeks. Same for the sand-polished remnants of the Usurper fortresses, lonely amongst the dunes, and within which nothing animal has stirred for over seven thousand such sunsets now.
Sunset was not due for over a metric hour yet, in Data DeCentral. Along GammaProm, the sluicegates opened to allow egress for the geothermally heated steam to escape - turbines specially baffled in order to suck every last joule possible from the energy source. GammaProm offered an eastward facing view of the cultivated farmlands and ominous sensor arrays that littered the sprawling Planetside around the central cities. It also offered a good view of the closer of the two suns, Alpha, as it descended Planetwards to deprive this hemisphere of its warmth and energy for another 8 metric hours.
Already the crowds were thinning - the Datajack's moderate attempt at a nascent police force were doing their rounds in the city now, broadcasting on all commercial headwaves for the citizens to return home. Times had toughened recently, what with the successful Species Wars on Harmonia, and the Datajack had decided to meet the crunch gradually. Hence the initially-gentle police force. Time would come - the unspoken fear was - when the police would have to turn their ministrations outwards. Perhaps it was that fear alone that kept the normally-defiant populace in line.
Joe caught the headwave along with all the rest of the transients in RapCafé Blue. Maybe it was the crackling of the steam vents' electric currents, maybe it was just his bad headache, but either way his headset couldn't catch the first half of the transmission.
"...to return to your homes or to designated public rest areas. This is for your own protection and wellbeing. The Proms Alpha through Lambda must be clear by 16.00 hours. Any malingerers after 16.00 will risk punishment. This is a preliminary curfew warning - all civilians are strongly advised, for reasons of internal security, to return to your homes or to..."
Joe took his headset off and hung it round his neck. No point in turning down the volume - the squad rovers were broadcasting on hidden frequencies too, one of which was bound to be the internal operation frequency of the headset. They could turn the volume up just as loud as they wanted to. Best to leave it off the earlobe altogether, then replace it come 16.10hrs.
The glare from the eastern sunset was more than Joe could bear, accustomed as he was to his polyfilter eyeshades. Unfortunately, they came included with the headset. He rubbed his eyes and squinted. Sacrifice your eyesight to save your hearing.
"Something wrong?" asked the prop'.
"No," snapped Joe angrily, then immediately regretted it. The proprietor was a nice guy - he'd let Joe come in to use the net-lets even though he only had netcreds to spend. Most other props would only accept cash, preferring the comfort of cold hard chips to the airy uncertainty of credits, in these uneasy times. "Yeah," said Joe. "Playing too much holoNet. Screwed my head in."
"What, is it a dull - aching - pain in front?" asked the prop' eagerly.
"No, just a big burning in the back, near where the neck meets the skull, you know."
The prop's face fell slightly. "Oh," he said, evidently disappointed.
Joe ordered a synthemesc anyway and continued to speak, massaging his eyeballs with one hand and the back of his neck with the other. "Too many goddamn hours of Guesswork. I shouldn't do this to myself." He grabbed the drinking bulb with more enthusiasm than he felt, and downed the drink.
Guesswork was the latest craze of pretentious and rather unpleasant games to hit the holoNet recently. Based in part on news nodes, and in parts on the pungent forum nodes, Guesswork emphasized tasteless bets placed for various outcomes, and moderated by several delocalized authorities. Exactly who these hidden authorities could be was the target of much speculation on the net - current thought billed them as bored Morganite wealthies, frittering away netcreds to generate rumors and a subculture; all for their own amusement. Subjectwise, the present winning question concerned guesses to the current kill rate on the distant shores of Harmonia, where the ruthless armies of the Hive were at present deployed. There, you could bet against other military specialists who reckoned their death tolls to be in the hundreds, thousands, or tens of thousands. The numbers changed hourly, and so too were credits awarded to successful punters. You could color in a greyscale image of war corpses for a tiebreaker if you liked, or guess the location of the decapitated Progenitor's head, anywhere in the hologram, the headless corpse of the actual creature rotting away happily in the foreground. If it appealed to you, you could even revisit the node an hour later and see how far the cephalopodic body had decomposed in the nitrate-rich air.
In earlier days, the big bet had been which side would be first to call off the conflict: Hive marauders, or Caretaker defenders. Both sides of the argument had reasons to back them, one citing the mysterious pre-warning resonance capabilities that the Caretakers possessed, enhancing their defence systems; and the other looking to the past example of the utter destruction of the Usurpers at the hands of Hive soldiers. Those days of polarized betting were long past, now - with the Chairman's total commitment to full nerve gas deployment, the xenomorphs had vanished from Planetside just as inevitably as their dead Usurper peers had, two decades prior. Now the predominant bets concerned whether the Guardian herself would somehow escape the conflagration. It was perhaps a mute testament to the Chairman's sinking popularity that many net-heads were still voting in favor of the xenomorphs.
Better Prog' than Prol' ran the slogan on the nets. Their own species were beginning to hold the Hive in lower trust than they did the aliens. Still, the central continent of Planet did indeed host both the valuable Uranium Flats and the mysterious Manifold Harmonics, the latter of which lent its name to the entire landmass. The Chairman's slow extermination not only secured him the continent, but these two Planetary anomalies.
Joe didn't consider himself to be a sadist and he would never acknowledge any political swerving, but he visited those forums all day long. Hey - there was good credit to be won from that sort of netdipping. Plus, you got to meet all sorts of interesting people there. With these lies he justified his ghoulish pastime to himself.
"When you're going insane - push a drink in your brain - it'll ease the paaaaaaaain..." crooned the prop'. Joe reluctantly slid back into reality.
"Another, please."
The prop' accepted the empty bulb and refilled it, humming the popular song out of tune. Joe sat back on his stool and lazily tried an earpiece to see if the police broadcast had ended. It had not. He sighed, put the headset back down on the table, and looked out toward the sunset. There was lazy and half hearted bustle in the RapCafé as others moved seats, changed tables, ordered drinks, hooked up to net-lets, tested headsets, picked crumbs, swung their feet, looked up at the ceiling... Joe let it all pass over him like a cool wave of air conditioning.
He has not seen many sunsets for a while - let him enjoy its orange-clouded, brown-fielded splendor while it lasts.
[This message has been edited by Alinestra Covelia (edited August 20, 2000).]
The curved bow of the sunset lurched eastwards. Across the innumerable settlements on Planetface sharing the same meridianline, dusk was encroaching - same for the observation towers and watchers of Hive dens, operators hundreds of meters below the surface. Same for the shuttered streets of the Datatech metropolises, undergoing their latest power outage in recent weeks. Same for the sand-polished remnants of the Usurper fortresses, lonely amongst the dunes, and within which nothing animal has stirred for over seven thousand such sunsets now.
Sunset was not due for over a metric hour yet, in Data DeCentral. Along GammaProm, the sluicegates opened to allow egress for the geothermally heated steam to escape - turbines specially baffled in order to suck every last joule possible from the energy source. GammaProm offered an eastward facing view of the cultivated farmlands and ominous sensor arrays that littered the sprawling Planetside around the central cities. It also offered a good view of the closer of the two suns, Alpha, as it descended Planetwards to deprive this hemisphere of its warmth and energy for another 8 metric hours.
Already the crowds were thinning - the Datajack's moderate attempt at a nascent police force were doing their rounds in the city now, broadcasting on all commercial headwaves for the citizens to return home. Times had toughened recently, what with the successful Species Wars on Harmonia, and the Datajack had decided to meet the crunch gradually. Hence the initially-gentle police force. Time would come - the unspoken fear was - when the police would have to turn their ministrations outwards. Perhaps it was that fear alone that kept the normally-defiant populace in line.
Joe caught the headwave along with all the rest of the transients in RapCafé Blue. Maybe it was the crackling of the steam vents' electric currents, maybe it was just his bad headache, but either way his headset couldn't catch the first half of the transmission.
"...to return to your homes or to designated public rest areas. This is for your own protection and wellbeing. The Proms Alpha through Lambda must be clear by 16.00 hours. Any malingerers after 16.00 will risk punishment. This is a preliminary curfew warning - all civilians are strongly advised, for reasons of internal security, to return to your homes or to..."
Joe took his headset off and hung it round his neck. No point in turning down the volume - the squad rovers were broadcasting on hidden frequencies too, one of which was bound to be the internal operation frequency of the headset. They could turn the volume up just as loud as they wanted to. Best to leave it off the earlobe altogether, then replace it come 16.10hrs.
The glare from the eastern sunset was more than Joe could bear, accustomed as he was to his polyfilter eyeshades. Unfortunately, they came included with the headset. He rubbed his eyes and squinted. Sacrifice your eyesight to save your hearing.
"Something wrong?" asked the prop'.
"No," snapped Joe angrily, then immediately regretted it. The proprietor was a nice guy - he'd let Joe come in to use the net-lets even though he only had netcreds to spend. Most other props would only accept cash, preferring the comfort of cold hard chips to the airy uncertainty of credits, in these uneasy times. "Yeah," said Joe. "Playing too much holoNet. Screwed my head in."
"What, is it a dull - aching - pain in front?" asked the prop' eagerly.
"No, just a big burning in the back, near where the neck meets the skull, you know."
The prop's face fell slightly. "Oh," he said, evidently disappointed.
Joe ordered a synthemesc anyway and continued to speak, massaging his eyeballs with one hand and the back of his neck with the other. "Too many goddamn hours of Guesswork. I shouldn't do this to myself." He grabbed the drinking bulb with more enthusiasm than he felt, and downed the drink.
Guesswork was the latest craze of pretentious and rather unpleasant games to hit the holoNet recently. Based in part on news nodes, and in parts on the pungent forum nodes, Guesswork emphasized tasteless bets placed for various outcomes, and moderated by several delocalized authorities. Exactly who these hidden authorities could be was the target of much speculation on the net - current thought billed them as bored Morganite wealthies, frittering away netcreds to generate rumors and a subculture; all for their own amusement. Subjectwise, the present winning question concerned guesses to the current kill rate on the distant shores of Harmonia, where the ruthless armies of the Hive were at present deployed. There, you could bet against other military specialists who reckoned their death tolls to be in the hundreds, thousands, or tens of thousands. The numbers changed hourly, and so too were credits awarded to successful punters. You could color in a greyscale image of war corpses for a tiebreaker if you liked, or guess the location of the decapitated Progenitor's head, anywhere in the hologram, the headless corpse of the actual creature rotting away happily in the foreground. If it appealed to you, you could even revisit the node an hour later and see how far the cephalopodic body had decomposed in the nitrate-rich air.
In earlier days, the big bet had been which side would be first to call off the conflict: Hive marauders, or Caretaker defenders. Both sides of the argument had reasons to back them, one citing the mysterious pre-warning resonance capabilities that the Caretakers possessed, enhancing their defence systems; and the other looking to the past example of the utter destruction of the Usurpers at the hands of Hive soldiers. Those days of polarized betting were long past, now - with the Chairman's total commitment to full nerve gas deployment, the xenomorphs had vanished from Planetside just as inevitably as their dead Usurper peers had, two decades prior. Now the predominant bets concerned whether the Guardian herself would somehow escape the conflagration. It was perhaps a mute testament to the Chairman's sinking popularity that many net-heads were still voting in favor of the xenomorphs.
Better Prog' than Prol' ran the slogan on the nets. Their own species were beginning to hold the Hive in lower trust than they did the aliens. Still, the central continent of Planet did indeed host both the valuable Uranium Flats and the mysterious Manifold Harmonics, the latter of which lent its name to the entire landmass. The Chairman's slow extermination not only secured him the continent, but these two Planetary anomalies.
Joe didn't consider himself to be a sadist and he would never acknowledge any political swerving, but he visited those forums all day long. Hey - there was good credit to be won from that sort of netdipping. Plus, you got to meet all sorts of interesting people there. With these lies he justified his ghoulish pastime to himself.
"When you're going insane - push a drink in your brain - it'll ease the paaaaaaaain..." crooned the prop'. Joe reluctantly slid back into reality.
"Another, please."
The prop' accepted the empty bulb and refilled it, humming the popular song out of tune. Joe sat back on his stool and lazily tried an earpiece to see if the police broadcast had ended. It had not. He sighed, put the headset back down on the table, and looked out toward the sunset. There was lazy and half hearted bustle in the RapCafé as others moved seats, changed tables, ordered drinks, hooked up to net-lets, tested headsets, picked crumbs, swung their feet, looked up at the ceiling... Joe let it all pass over him like a cool wave of air conditioning.
He has not seen many sunsets for a while - let him enjoy its orange-clouded, brown-fielded splendor while it lasts.
[This message has been edited by Alinestra Covelia (edited August 20, 2000).]
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