After going through some of the diagnostic printouts from the chairs, most of which Carl just nodded too in complete incomprehension, Carl had sent Dave back to his offices on a promise to make everything that Carl asked for available. Besides he wasn’t official in any way shape and form. Even Carl would have a bit of difficulty getting in some of the places he was likely to go let alone a guy like Dave. A guy like Dave don’t go down the deeps. And definitely wouldn’t go into the kinda place that the plug in kids frequented.
And anyway the Chair that the kid had died on had been taken back to Spenneys Labs for a complete rip apart.
Spenney Gaming World Interactive. GWI. Controversial, rarely out of the headlines, high stock value for a tech firm. Extremely popular.
It’s main concept. Completely interactive gaming environments with realspace representation of the Net. It was an immense project. An astonishing feat of Software Engineering.
Originally built around complete immersion suits. Suits that allowed the wearers every sense to be optimised in the gaming world. Sight, sound, touch, taste, even smell to a certain extent although this was by far the most difficult sense to fool. But these suits where prohibitively expensive. Giving way to only a fairly clique clientele. The Rich Kids with Richer parents. Successful Gups who had made a quick buck on the back of the mining corps and software moguls and space financiers who cast their easily won fortunes wherever they could.
But then came the revolution. Direct nodal implants. These had taken decades to perfect. Mainly in use by the military and medical professions, but once out into the Real world soon became di rigour for the new generation. The Plug In generation.
For them it was nothing to have a node implant. In fact you where abnormal if you didn’t have one at school nowadays.
The prices dropped for the implants. Still expensive but getting more and more popular.
But it wasn’t without it’s problems. Kids where dying. A thing called the Brain Body Paradox. If the Brain thought it had died on the Net, or in a gaming world, in some cases the body would think so too. Complete body shutdown. Didn’t happen all the time. Most kids where mentally strong enough to cope with it. But complete immersion means just that. It was getting less and less easy to tell the difference between the game world and the real. Thus the body was sure that the mind had, in effect, made up it’s own mind about being dead and agreed to make sure that it was. Terminal shutdown. No reboot.
To combat this GWI came up with the Chair. A system that allowed the user to plug in without fear of Terminal shut down. The Chair acted as a gate to the Net. It channelled all input through its lifeguards. Everything passed through them, if you sat in a Chair, you couldn’t die. Your body could not be terminated whilst in the chair, not from a Net source at least. So that seemed to cheer people up slightly. Every now and then a few people would decide to plug in without the aid of Fail-safes or lifeguards. It was the ultimate game. The ultimate Russian roulette. The fight of the fittest. If you claimed to be the best fighter in the coliseum then you proved it, and you proved it with your life at stake. You took a gamble that you could win, or if you lost that your body and subconscious had more sense than you did and kept you alive. It didn’t always happen. But those incidents where few and far between, kept from the public pretty much and, due to the time constraints and cost of setting up a stand alone, where fairly restrained to the rich and bored. The ones with far too much time on their hands.
The only issues left connected with the Chairs, or the Net where the parents. The mothers and fathers who where loosing their children to the Net. To the Gaming worlds. Plug in Kids spent all their spare time on the Net. And time that wasn’t spare as well. It had swept the colony like a rash. No more did kids play at home on the consoles or under the watchful eye of mom and dad. Instead they headed in their droves to the Halls.
Halls where set up by an eagle eyed entrepreneur who knew a business opportunity when he saw one. Andrew Davies was an extremely rich man off the back of the halls. With just one hall with fifty Chairs he opened another with 200. Within six months another with 500. He just kept on adding Chairs to Halls and opening Halls to accommodate Chairs.
You paid for your hall time. And it wasn’t cheap. But this was where Andrew was very clever and very astute. Kids don’t have that much money. Especially when mom and dad don’t want them to be sitting on the Net all day and night. So he got them working for him. Plug in kids are amazingly quick when it comes to anything net orientated. With direct access into their brains they could scan, run, burn, chase, copy, write, design, program, any number of things. And if they couldn’t do it, they knew somebody who could. They worked together. A tight nit community. They talked, communicated. They could effectively read each others thoughts.
So Andrew got them working. They where happy, he was happy. Nearly everyone was happy. Andrew was especially happy. People paid him to employ Plug-ins. Kids paid to get into the halls. He paid a few kids who worked for him. With minimal outlay, he was racking it in.
Carl was heading to one of Andrews many Halls now. There was one in New Plaza North, pretty close to the Precinct. Is also happens to be the first Hall that Andrew built and where he kept his offices.
Carl walked, his long stride covering the few miles quickly. He liked to walk, Europa Centro wasn’t that big an area but it made up for it by cramming as much into the available three dimensions as it could. Ostensible it was designed around a park. A large, open atrium downlit from huge sun panels that simulated day and night. But soon demand caused swooping walkways tbe built. Wide throughfares that crisscrossing the open air above the park connecting points in the atrium wall, each with their own bustling market communities. The higher up you went the more luxurious the services. Carl remembered seeing an Italian bridge from his geography lessons at school which looked like that it being a bridge was second to the community making a living on it. The walkways and air-crossings reminded him of that bridge. The air above Centro Park was now so crowded that new Sun Panels had to be installed to allow light to filter down to the perpetual dusk of the arboretum on the Atrium floor. Carl crossed that floor now. He liked walking amongst the trees and the tended flower beds. Centro was busy. It always was. People thronged the walkways and streets every hour of the day, shopping, working, playing.
Europa-1 was a strange place. Built into the very ice sheet of Europa it had developed from a Jovian observatory to a research laboratory. Then the nutrient rich seas where opened for use and Europa grew exponentially from there.
Capitalism ruled on Europa. There was little or no religion except at the altar of the fiscal. The only worship that happened was in the pursuit of money. Everyone came here for a quick buck. From the fishing the deep ocean depths to mining the relatively close asteroid belt and exploiting the other Jovian moons. And then, of course, came the support services. All those Off World miners and spacers needed somewhere for shore leave. All those software magnets and tech. Industrialists needed a base of operations. And Europa opened its doors to them all.
Carl was an Europan born and bred. His parents had come here from Earth on a transfer order for his father. He was an engineer on the gigantic mining ships that coasted around the asteroid belt and when his employers moved their headquarters he came too, young wife in tow. Carl didn’t remember his father that much. He died when Carl was 7 in an accident on board a vessel. And before that he would be away for months at a time doing a circuit. Then back home a month then back out on another circuit. Mother always said he was good at his job and was in demand and the money was good.
Carl was an only child and was a natural birth. His parents had been given the choice of engineered kids, as paid for by the corporate insurance but they had chosen not to. For which Carl was glad. Everything about him was meant to be. From his size 11 feet to his slightly dodgy left eye. It was all natural. You could spot a Geenee, genetically engineered, from miles away. It was like Hitler had succeeded and the Airen race was alive and kicking. Blond hair, blue eyes, 6’ some things. And they had all the good jobs. The richer got richer whilst the poorer couldn’t afford to make themselves competitive in the high flying jobs market. You had to continuously reengineer your offspring to make them more capable for the new jobs. You, in effect, in having reengineered children where mothballing yourself. Occasionally mistakes where made, almost like they would naturally but with unnatural results, like a 6’ 8” albino with no eyebrows and a missing nose.
There were thousands of horror stories about the Gen. Labs and the discarded mutated foetus’s of experiments gone wrong.
But people will be people and even with the best engineering and an IQ well into the 200’s with the best will in the world you can’t tell a rebellious teenager that they really should go into the military or into the sciences, or big business because that was what they had been designed to do. These kids want to go out and play with their mates and have a laugh. They want to spend their days Zero-g’ing or rail jumping. They want to take some risks and live a little recklessly. They wanted to spend most of their day’s in the halls with their brains wired up to the Net.
And that was what Carl was faced with when he walked into the Centro Hall. Hundreds of chairs arranged in seemingly endless rows. He flashed his badge at the bored receptionist. She barely gave him a second glance. He started to walk past the chairs each one with a plug in kid laying inert in it. Totally absorbed into whichever world they habituated at the moment. Carl passed by a few chairs. The pale, sallow features of habitual Pluggers before him. Here a fresh faced girl, no more than 13, still with colour in her cheeks, the scarring of her freshly grafted node that would not be given the chance to heal properly her body turning it’s valuable resources to the pressing task of keeping itself alive. Over there the corpse like features of a boy. Cheeks sunken, limbs shrivelled and atrophying. He would never leave this place. Probable no more than 20 years old and yet looks like an old man.
Carl passed a Body Tender. These where generally unemployable Genee rejects. The Mistakes that found a way out of the big GenLabs and managed to live past puberty. Parentless, homeless and unwanted they found work here in the halls and other such places. They worked in the hall servicing the bodies of anybody who was willing to pay. Carl had heard some stories that some BT’s didn’t even take money for their services, these kids where so divorced from their bodies that they just didn’t care what happened to them so long as they kept the brain alive. This one was big and hulking, muscles bunched and rolled as he went about his ministrations on his charge. Carl got within metres before the BT noticed him, shrieked in a high pitch falsetto and disappeared into the gloom of the dimly lit hall. A cowardly war machine, Carl thought, what are we doing to ourselves.
Carl got to the back of the Hall with the sense that a hundred eyes where watching him from the shadows and walked into the offices.
Nobody seemed to be in occupation of the outer one so he walked through the open door into the inner office.