《Singularity [Fantasy-LitRPG | Hard SF]》Chapter 35
Advertisement
Perhaps it was because it was an unscheduled logout, but the room Arnel found himself in — the same one as always — was empty. Of course, until recently, he never even would’ve considered the option of logging out if he didn’t have to; there was only a world of pain to greet him, back then. He couldn’t even see.
Had someone told him that one day he would wake up, and that everything would’ve been fine, he would’ve thought that person was verifiably insane. He still would. He could see, yes; he was not in pain, sure; but there was a greater problem than any one of those things — even put together, they were a lesser problem than the real issue.
Every electronic device in this room was connected in some way to Theta. Every building he could see through his window, with the glowing neon signs of mass advertisement, was connected to Theta. In fact, Theta ran the programming and scheduling for those advertisements, many of which urged people to join the military for a “life of adventure”. What adventure? Driving trucks? Repairing drones? Filing paperwork? Ah, yes, the one weakness of drones: no opposable thumbs. If only they could hold a pen to write words. Or, heaven forbid, if only they could somehow electronically store, write and process data.
Sarcasm put Arnel in a good mood. Something about laughing and sneering at his own situation had that effect on him; like a venom that feels good before it causes permanent damage.
Prometheus-7 was not like the other Arcologies; and it was definitely unlike Prometheus-14, which was where home was for Arnel. Seven was spacious; more luxury than necessity, something that it owed to the fact that it was vastly under population capacity. In fact, just like hospitals, seven was not making any profits. It always ran in the red. But it was a necessary expense — again, just like hospitals — for it provided services that other Arcologies could not. This was mostly due to the manufacturing sector in the cold, dark underground of the Arc.
Weapons. That was the name of seven’s game. Drones, Satellites, rifles; many components were sourced from this particular Arcology. There were others, of course, but seven did not just produce weapons; it also developed them.
And not just weapons. Arnel’s right eye was proof of the kind of research and manufacture that went on in seven. Bioengineering, cybernetic technology, and weapons. If Arnel had to guess why this particular Arcology was underpopulated, he had two options and they weren’t exclusive to each other. The less civilians around, the better. The other option was that scientists probably did not like to live in tiny little tin cans, packed together like sardines.
Sardines, huh? Now that Arnel had a taste of real food — at least desserts — he couldn’t help but feel hungry, even though he was perfectly aware of the fact that the nutritional fluid had taken care of his hunger and thirst needs.
Where was Ermin Saltzer, anyway? The man had practically camped in this room until recently, now he was nowhere to be found.
Arnel side-glanced his surroundings. For once, he didn’t feel terrified of the voice — if it could even be called that — in his head. He was terrified of hearing it here. In this place. Certainly, he realized that acting a bit haughty, earlier, was a bit of a risk, but this went beyond haughty, and firmly into the realm of suicidal stupidity worthy of the Darwin Award.
Advertisement
Now that he thought about it, why hadn’t Theta found him yet? Surely, there was a reason. Of course there was a reason. It was impossible to imagine Leviathan would take such risks without certainty of the outcome. But how?
Arnel imagined himself like a black hole in the great system that was Theta. But even if that were the case, surely, Theta would’ve noticed by now. Especially considering the fact that Ermin Saltzer was in alpha, likely reporting to Theta. No, Theta surely knew about Arnel.
Did that mean that Arnel appeared as a normal person to Theta? Subject: Arnel Weis. Normal person — nothing to see here. Is that what Theta saw when the entity looked at him?
Arnel turned towards the terminal in the corner of the room and sighed as he reached for the lead. He slapped the patch on his neck and closed his eyes.
The world opened up to him. He felt like he was floating — or perhaps falling? — and it was a disorienting experience. He hadn’t done a dive into the cybersphere in a very long time. As expected, his ghost was bound to the limitations of the hospital. He didn’t find himself in a room, or a place, as much as it was a virtual mind-construct of the hospital’s internal network. It was a sort of undefined space — a landing — leading to other places.
He willed himself to dive deeper, seeking out the cafeteria. He wanted to eat. Food was on the menu, as redundant as that may sound. Chicken was food. Nutrient fluid was for dying people.
However, his mind could not penetrate the barrier of the cafeteria’s construct. The virtual door had a large [Closed] written all over it on red tapes that criss-crossed across the door.
Dejected, Arnel inwardly sighed.
[ Do you require assistance? ]
A private message appeared in Arnel’s mind. Arnel pressed the air in front of him — something he knew how to do in the cybersphere, but only recently learned it was possible to do in Singularity also — and a scroll opened up in front of him. It was a chat window. Arnel pondered why he never tried to do this in Singularity. He partly blamed the realism of the world. It just didn’t seem… virtual.
Arnel focused on the message.
Sender unknown. Arnel pondered the meaning. Maybe it was a nurse, or an administrator. Most likely, it was a helper program or AI.
“I would like to order food,” Arnel said.
[ Unable to comply. Rephrase input. ]
Ok, so it wasn’t a person. At least, Arnel hoped it wasn’t a person. There was a growing trend of people who desired to be like artificial intelligences. Instead of Singularity, they spent their lives in the cybersphere, constructing worlds and massive networks. They believed that one day, they could incarnate Artificial Intelligence, and live alongside them, or alternatively, become one by uploading their consciousness into the network.
There were more dangerous ideas as well. Like the urban legend that dying deep within the cybersphere would disconnect one’s ghost from their physical body, forever trapping them inside the sphere.
“I am hungry,” Arnel said, rephrasing his input.
[ Recommended action: Eat. ]
Advertisement
Arnel narrowed his eyes. AI was not stupid. Was this thing making fun of him?
“Yes,” Arnel said. “For which I need food brought to my room.” He drew out each syllable, as if he was speaking to someone who did not understand the language — not that there was a concept of language in the sphere. It was all thoughts. Perfect comprehension and conveying of ideas.
[ Stand by. ]
Arnel narrowed his eyes to even smaller slits. This was a militarized AI. Instead of the generally polite please wait, he got a stand by. That explained the responses he received. Militarized AI wasn’t exactly famous for politeness or common sense. They were problem solvers. Troubleshooters, and not just figurative ones. Militarized or not, it was still just a helper program; there was no reason to be concerned.
It took almost a dozen seconds, but finally, a reply arrived.
[ Method of delivery? ]
“Room service?” Arnel asked. He wasn’t exactly sure how to answer that question. Method of delivery — into his hands? Hopefully, it wasn’t asking about the method the food was delivered — through the stomach on that one, preferably; chewing and swallowing.
[ Closest match selected. ETA: three minutes. ]
Did he not get to select what he wanted to eat? Maybe a pizza?
Before he could ask, the next reply almost floored Arnel.
[ Subject is under Type-II lock. Access to most facilities is restricted. Would you like to disengage Type-II lock? ]
Arnel stared at the door in front of him. Was this AI about to release him? “Yes. Affirmative.”
[ Stand by. ]
Arnel saluted. “Standing by!” Could he actually finally leave the hospital? At least in the sphere, but it was something.
[ Lock disengaged. General access code granted. ]
Arnel almost jumped with joy. He was free!
The transparent tape on the door disappeared. The hallway unfurled, as if space itself was expanding. The entire network was suddenly available to him.
The joy was very short-lived. Out of the corner of his eye, he noticed something that he did not have the permissions to know until a moment ago.
And it terrified him. It was the identity of his liberator.
Refusing to believe what he saw, with a strained voice, he said: “Please identify yourself.”
[ This unit is a Subordinate-class Machine Arsenal Agent with nuclear first-strike, orbital bombardment and electronic warfare capabilities. Codename: Deucalion. ]
Arnel’s heart sank. He started hyperventilating.
This wasn’t his liberator. This was his executioner.
[ Detecting mood fluctuations. Would you like to watch a movie? ]
“No!” Arnel responded, practically shouting the word. “No. Thank you. For the assistance. Farewell.”
Watch a movie!?
[ Have a good day, Code. ]
Arnel disconnected from the sphere and scratched the lead off his neck, throwing it to the floor. His fingers were trembling. His whole body was trembling. His heart monitor showed a dangerous spike, which was holding steady now at one hundred and forty beats per minute.
Deucalion. The Machine Arsenal assigned to the defense of the Prometheus Constellation. A fitting name. Everyone knew of Deucalion, but few have ever seen it. One could buy plushies and toys in the shape of the arachnid weapon of war. It was practically the mascot of the Prometheus cluster.
Perhaps something that even fewer people have done — seeing the Machine Arsenal, that is — was talk to its AI.
Cold sweat poured down Arnel’s back, drenching his plain shirt. Goosebumps appeared over his arms as he could not stop replaying the entire sequence in his head. Had he known who he was speaking to, he surely would’ve done things differently.
He actually asked Deucalion for room service! He almost wanted to go back and apologize to the AI. Maybe if he begged for forgiveness, a good outcome was still possible. He realized that most of his thoughts, at that moment, were guided by panic.
Arnel tried to calm himself down by convincing himself that it was a strange, but albeit harmless conversation. He tried to remember the conclusion that he was under Leviathan’s protection, and that everything would be fine.
Then, his window exploded, and reflexively, Aren threw himself on the floor while simultaneously thinking it was all over. He was about to die. Plastiglass fragments showered the room, falling all over the place.
He was so terrified that he could not even act, beyond helplessly hugging the floor.
The powerful mechanical roar of whatever it was that invaded his room reverberated in the walls, and in the instruments, and in the metal frame of the pod. It was so loud that Arnel could feel the floor vibrating.
And then, surprisingly, it receded into the distance.
For several minutes — at least, the way Arnel perceived it — everything was mostly quiet. He could hear the curtains dragging across the walls as the wind buffeted them. He could hear the distant whining of his heart monitor, tapping out a rhythm that would generally prompt emergency intervention if he was thirty years older.
His mind-state could only be described as overwhelmed.
Side by side, a soldier and a nurse burst into the room. Arnel, who had crawled under the bed, could only see their legs. Slippers and white stockings for the nurse, uniform and boots for the soldier.
“Clear!” the soldier shouted.
“What happened…?” the nurse asked. There was more confusion than concern in her voice.
The soldier’s feet shuffled a bit. “You can come out,” the soldier said. “It is safe.”
He recognized that voice. It was the same soldier from before. Half-reluctantly, Arnel crawled out from under the bed, and the soldier helped him up, and onto the bed once more.
“We’ll get you a new room,” the nurse said. “I will be right back. What a strange incident...”
But Arnel could not hear her. That was not entirely correct. He heard her, but her words did not register.
Arnel stared at the package on his bed, right next to him. A pizza box.
Room service.
Arnel was not hungry anymore.
Advertisement
Liminal Radiance: Path Of Old Dreams
“Bring your brother back alive.” With these words, her family had sentenced their unwanted daughter to death. Frail and broken in more ways than one, she was ill-prepared to face the post-apocalyptic nightmares of the fallen capital. Yet legends are forged on the anvil of adversity. When the last heroes are dead and the powerful dance in madness, a chance encounter with an old friend set this tormented girl on a path to change destiny. Now the weak must become the strong as wit prevails. But sanity is a scarce commodity when the skies are ruled by a false star and primal entities awaken from slumber. [This is an action-horror story set in a gothic scenario. It includes some Yuri-Romance elements in a grimdark setting.] Please note: The first chapter includes a short tag overview at the end. If you like your author chatty, I'm always happy to reply. Each chapter also has a bit about my writing process. Check in, see what's there and if you like it, cool. If not, tell me how I can improve. This story is a proud participant in The Pledge. This means it won't be dropped and is guaranteed to get the intended ending. You can find more about my update schedule at the end of the first chapter and more info about The Pledge by clicking the banner.
8 113Etherious
Plagued by indecision and guilt, Arthur has fallen into the chasms of despair and depression, trying to come to terms with the consequences of his actions. His friends tell him that it wasn't his fault, his therapist that he should leave the past behind him and his colleagues that he can change nothing. But Arthur knows better. After all, no one knows what he's done. No one knows the life he's lived. But just six months after the loss that would change his life forever, Arthur is given a second chance. Redemption. The world has changed; evolved, and with it has come the intangible and esoteric energy of Ether, as well as the system that governs it. With new rules to live by and a path to redemption before him, Arthur now has a way to right his wrongs. At least he thinks so. After all, nothing is quite impossible when you can rewrite reality itself. He'll do anything he can to bring his sister back.
8.18 137The Demon Lord Among Heroes
Shin is surrounded by friends and is cared by many, but he feels cold and empty. He considered nobody as true friend. Except there was one, but it broke him. Ever since the tragedy, Shin's heart became even colder. However one morning when he opened his eyes, he was greeted by a foreign scene. A king, a princess and priest-like people surrounded him and three other classmates of his. They were told three things:1) This is a world of fantasy with unlimited opportunities2) Currently, human kind is threatened by the advances of the demon-kind and the revival of the Demon Lord3) They are summoned as heroes to save humanityThe other three were expected to be heroes in this world. However, Shin was slightly different.
8 191Everlasting Struggle
Life is an endless battle. A battle for a better life.A battle for maintaining happiness.A battle for peace. Shin's a 12-year old youth, fighting since the moment he was born for a better life. Dreaming and wishing for a happy life, but he can't see himself in that kind of position. Shin's looking at the empty dark sky, breathing his last breaths, still dreaming and wishing for a better life.
8 142The Second Divine
if you could do anything you want to, will you even have anything you that want to have? this story follows a young boy who through various events got the power of an almighty god, only to find out that immortality and endless power isnt all its cracked up to be. will he become the saviour of everything or its ender? will he warp reality or let it be? what is reality to begin with? join him in his philosphical search for answers and adventures far beyond your wildest dreams because everything is possible, especially when you control everything. Note : This is my first novel written ages ago and i have matured since then (back then i only read light novels) Its not edited cause honestly i cant bring myself to read something i already know whats gonna happen in, so yeah alot of typosThe chapters are long as hell so yeah treat them as multiples (i mean by the end of chapter 3 its 10k words)
8 138The Darkest Star
Katie Wilson was driving with her friend’s daughter in the back, when bombs went off in the nearby nuclear plant. She should’ve died, but she didn’t. She recovered and began to work for S.H.I.E.L.D. Then she noticed what she could do. She could use the energy of movement to fight. Even when she walked, she gained energy, and could let it out in a sort of shockwave. Soon enough she joined the Avengers and fought alongside. She got captured by CERBERUS during a battle and they amplified her powers x100. Eventually, though, her powers become unstable and dangerous. (A/N: it gets wayyy better after chapter 8 or so)
8 98