The online racing simulator
Pluto no more..
(129 posts, started )
Who are humans to say what is and isn't a planet? If you look at the big picture, we're just a tiny speck of dust next to some of the monesters around us.
Quote from P5YcHoM4N :Who are humans to say what is and isn't a planet? If you look at the big picture, we're just a tiny speck of dust next to some of the monesters around us.

There is a very famous book that begins with the following . . .

'Space,' It says, 'is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mindboggingly big it is. I mean you may thinks it's a long down the road to the chemist, but thats just peanuts to space. Listen . . . . '

And so on.

The Universe - Some information to help you live in it.

1 Area: Infinite.
Infinite: Bigger than the biggest thing ever and then some. Much bigger than that, in fact, really amazingly immense, a totally stunning size, real 'wow, that's big', time. Infinity is just so big that by comparison bigness itself looks really titchy. Gigantic multiplied by colossal multiplied by staggeringly huge is the sort of concept we're trying to get across here.

2 Imports: None.
It is impossible to import things into an infinite area, there being no outside to import things from.

3 Exports: None.
See imports.

4 Population: None.
It is known that there are an infinite number of worlds, simply beacuse there is an infinite amount of space for them to be in. However, not every one of them is inhabitated. Therefore, there must be a finite number of inhabitated worlds. Any finite number divided by infinity is as near to nothing as makes no odds, so the average population of all the planets in the universe can be said to be zero. From this is follows that the population of the universe is also zero, and that any people you may meet from time to time are merely the products of a deranged imagination.

5 Monetary units: None.
In fact there are three freeely convertable currencies in the Galaxy, but none of them count. The Alterian dollar has recently collapsed, the Flainian Pobble Bead is only exchangeable for other Flainian Pobble Beads, zand the Triganic Pu has it's own very special problems. It's exchange rate of eight Ningi's to one Pu is simple enough, but since a Ningi is a triangular rubber coin six thousand eight hundred miles along each side, no one has ever collected enough to own one Pu. Ningis are not negotiable currency, because the Galactic banks refuse to deal in fiddling small change. From this basic premise it is very simple to prove that the Galactibanks are also the product of a deranged imagination.

6 Art: None
The function of art is to hold a mirror up to nature and there simply isn't a mirror big enough - see point one.

7 Sex: None.
Well, in fact there is an awful lot of this, largly because of the total lack of money, trade, banks, art, or anything else that might keep all the non-existent people of the Universe occupied.
However, it is not worth embarking on a long discussion of it now because it really is terribly complicated. And we would end up being here all night.
Quote from Funnybear :...perfect beginning to a book...

I was going to show him a picture from inside the total perspective vortex, but I ran out of fairy cake.
All we need now is a brownian motion generator, in fact I'm going to go make one now . . .
Something new. Something I've been working on for a while so this is a good catalyst for my brain to start picking it up again. Will be slighty episodic for those who care . . .

Working title. Pluto No More . . . . *Grin* Enjoy.

* * * * * * * *

*Edited. See below for details*
You could make this into a bloodly good novel I'd love to read the rest
'Tis updated. Did you read the first bit?
Quote from Funnybear :'Tis updated. Did you read the first bit?

Just a helpful tip for you, Funny...
Be careful with this story. What you wrote so far seems a little too familiar.
Read *this* (if you haven't already), and try not to copy it.
You're a real talent, and I'd hate for you to work hard on something that's already been done.
Quote from TagForce :Just a helpful tip for you, Funny...
Be careful with this story. What you wrote so far seems a little too familiar.
Read *this* (if you haven't already), and try not to copy it.
You're a real talent, and I'd hate for you to work hard on something that's already been done.

No it's not . . .I've never seen it and having read that it's gunna be nothing like it. You've read the first two introductions, I've written over 60,000 words to the book and trust me, it is all my own work from my own head.

But, at the end of the day what are your own ideas if not a mix, rehash and regurgitation of someone elses.

You've pissed me off now. Thats the thing about being open to the community, your not always going to like what you hear but I do think your slightly wide of the mark.

And another thing . . I can't try not to copy anything. If I'm writing then I take styles, experiances, constructs and syntax from many sources and inspiriations. But when your writing you don't stop to think whether you are copying something or not. That comes later when you realise that entire passage you have just lifted out of someone elses work. You havn't done it intentionally, it's just how the mind works. But once you've realised it you go back and have another look at it. Maybe you can change it, maybe you say hang it and leave it in the hope that nobody notices. But then what is one mans plagerism is another mans sign of respect . . .

Everything you see around you, everything you read, everything you hear has been done one way or another before. There are only so many letters in the alphabet, so many notes in an octave, so many ways to put bricks, glass, wood or celluloid together.

I have a story in my head. And it may transpire that I have indeed taken it from elseware ot an editor might look at it and go 'been done before' but thats the way of it. But it doesn't detract from my writing because untill I actually finish the damn thing it doesn't mean a thing . . .

Rant over.

Maybe.
Quote from Funnybear :Rant

You think I was flaming you for that storyline?
You completely misread that...
I'm not saying you're blatantly copying those books... In fact, I told you I even doubted you'd read those books. From the first 2 parts you just posted it just seemed that the ideas for the two seperate stories were very similar.
I like how you write, and what you write... I just wouldn't want you to write something that would later on cause you problems.

I don't know how your story continues, but I would like to find out. I was just alerting you to a story that might be similar to yours, so you could rethink your strategy if you deemed it necessary. You don't seem to think it's necessary, and you're free to continue writing whatever it is that you're writing. If you write something similar to Otherland, it just proves you've got talent, because that story is absolutely perfect. Unfortunately for a story similar to that story it means that you'll be competing with perfection, which is hard for a first time novelist. Hence my alert.

But please, do continue your story.

EDIT:
Every author takes his ideas from somewhere... Take an idea, change a few things here and there, and you've got a new idea. Nothing wrong with that. By trying not to copy it I merely meant writing a story that uses the same devices for telling the story. If you haven't read it, you're not going to be able to copy it. So no worries there, then. Just trying to give you a heads up, m8.

EDIT2: For those that wonder what perfection is: Take 'The Matrix', add about 15000 different matrices to the system, and imagine a perfect Matrix 2 and 3 and even a 4 movie... That's perfection.
I know you ain't flaming mate. You have been an avid supporter from day dot. No worries.

And once I got some thinking done I shall continue when I get the chance . . .
Been a while I know but hey, all good things come to those that wait. As we in the LFS community are all to familiar with.


* * * * * * *
In the delivery room the hush was deathly. After the raw emotion that had come before the contrast was startling. The mother lay panting softly, exhausted and confused. Her baby had gone. They had taken her baby away. She lay exhausted on her bed. There was no energy left in her body.
She looked to her husband who was stood next to her holding her hand.
He shook his head, bemused.
‘It’s ok’. Said the midwife. ‘They’ve just taken him for some tests. I’m sure everything is all right, but lets get you cleaned up. Don’t worry, they will tell you soon.’
Silence reigned once again, interrupted only by the gentle remonstrations of the nurses and the quiet sobbing of an exhausted woman.

The baby was back. The room was quiet but this time in a controlled way. The hubbub of a busy maternity ward dulled by thick doors. Mother and son reunited again.
‘It’s not right’. The husband stood silhouetted against the darkened window of the hospital room his arms crossed. The mother lay in bed holding her babe in arms. She cradled him gently in her arms cooing softly.
‘It’s my son. I will look after him.’
‘Why didn’t you tell me?’
‘Because he is my child’.
‘Our child Marion. It’s our boy, was our boy. But you have made your feelings obvious.’.
‘Oh no Bill. Please don’t do this’.
‘You didn’t tell me Marion. You didn’t say a word. You kept it hidden from me.’
‘But you would have . . ‘
‘Would have what Marion? What exactly would I have done? The least you could have done was tell me.’
The exhausted mother broke. ‘But you where never there Bill. Never. Never at the scans, never at the CC meetings. I decorated the nursery, I’ve supplied everything this baby needs and what have you given me? Given us? Nothing. You where always too busy with your precious work. Your . . .’ She spat the next word. ‘Company. Never once have you given me reason to think you where at all interested in this baby. Can you blame me for not telling you? I knew exactly what you would have done. You would have made me loose him.’ She looked to the little bundle in her arms. ‘You would have taken away my baby boy.’
He sighed a deep and long sigh. He pushed himself away from the window and opened the heavy door. The harsh light of the corridor shone bright across mother and child. She squinted, the baby nary stirred. He stood for a moment looking out into the corridor.
‘There will be money.’ He said, his back to the room.
‘I don’t want your money’ He heard as he walked away. ‘I just wanted my baby . . .’ The closing heavy door drowned out anything else.
And with that he walked back to his life.
Having heard the raised voices a nurse popped her head into the room.
‘Everything alright love? Can I get you anything?’
‘I’m alright thank you. I have everything I need right here.’
The nurse smiled and left.
Mother sat up cradling her son.
‘Don’t listen to him Baby. I’ll look after you. You and me. Together. I don’t care what you are. Just you and me baby.’
She sang a gentle lullaby to her son and rocked her silent charge to sleep.
The nurse on her rounds came in soon after. She took the sleeping child from his drowsy mother and placed him in his cot. She glanced over their notes.
Marion Maria Gateley. Stable, no complications. Just a replenish drip to bring her levels back to normal. Normal Observation.
Peter Frederick Percival Gateley. Paraplegia. Inert from the neck down. Internal functions appear normal. Breathing laboured, but improving. Circulation good. regular Obs.
She checked the baby boy over carefully, nothing amiss. The cot would keep him warm and comfortable and warn her desk if anything changed.
She moved silently out of the room and quietly shut the door.


Bill Gateley sat in his office. He was at work, the child at home with the mother. He looked around his office, this was his home. This was where he was comfortable, this was his familiar. He glanced at the Projection wall. His company logo filling the wall, spinning slowly. He had designed that logo. It was one of the first things he did, designing it at college, it hadn’t changed a bit from the original design. He always new he would have this company. It was always going to be this way. A successful software engineering firm, system wide, multi platform. He was a big boy now and all the right people knew that. He was a player and even governments listened when he spoke. Or rather when he offered to pick up the tab.
A gentle tone filled the room for a moment.
‘Yes?’ He said.
His secretary’s voice came through. ‘Mr Yang for you Bill.’
Mary, his secretary was one of the few subordinates who called him by his first name. But then as even she says, she probably knew more about the state of the company than he did and she had been with him from the start. She was ferociously loyal, and Bill trusted her explicitly. Marion had once challenged him to having an affair before she and Mary had met, to which he just laughed. ‘She’s 62, married with four children with a devoted husband and 4 grand children. She is my secretary, nothing more, nothing less’. And as calculating as he was the only affair he was capable of was with his work.
‘Thanks Mary, put him through.
The holo screen changed to show Charlie Yang his partner in the business, he had kept the ship running whilst Bill had been away with Marion.
‘Hey Bill. Congrats on your new arrival. How is the little blighter.’
‘Good Charles. Good. Coming on nicely.’ Bill didn’t stay on the subject. ‘So how we looking on the Biomech deal.’
Charlie knew better than to dwell on Bills private life. Bill didn’t have a private to have a life in. He had long given up trying to encourage him to go home. Because he never would. He could live for weeks out of his office. He had a bathroom, a wardrobe and a pull out bed there so he was never caught without a clean shirt or unshaven.
‘Looking good. Got the team running the final figures. You checked through the amendments?’
‘Sure. There is nothing that could cause us any problems.’ The sentence hung for a moment. ‘Anybody else interested?’
‘Yea, just a few. The way we got this thing sewn up everyone wants a piece of it. Europa Government is having a look and so is Intercorp. This could be a good one your sitting on here Bill. I can see this running Let’s not make any mistakes eh’.
‘Your saying that to me, Charles?’
‘Yea, sorry, just worried y’know. This is a big deal.’
‘Relax Charles, we’ve checked everything. We have everything covered, from the bio mesh to the interface. You know we have got this own sewn up.’
‘Yea, ok. I know. Ok, I’ll get back to work. Call me if you notice anything ok.’ He hesitated for a moment. ‘This is ok isn’t it?’
‘Sure it is Charles, just relax ok. This thing is going to be very good for us.’
Charles hit a button and cut the call leaving Bill the fading impression of a man who had given somebody their last chance to say or do something.
If Bill had recognised it , which he had done, he didn’t show it. Bill was happy now. Back at work. His only true love. Moving figures. Software bundles and packages. Hardwires to the net. That was his playing field. This was where he belonged. This was where he thrived. Big money, big business. His world.
But he had noticed something within the software. Something quite important. Something that it took a lot of looking to find and an intimate knowledge of his own construction techniques and language but it was there never the less. And Charles also knew it was there. But it wasn’t his call, it was Bills. And he had called it. Everything would be just fine.


25 Years later. Europa-1.

Carl Payne flicked his wrist in aggitation. His implant reacted appropriately and produced a gently glowing display projected just above the skin on his wrist.
7.08am. It read.
‘Shit’ He said mainly to himself but some passers by turned to look at him.
He was late.
He hadn’t meant to be late. It had just happened. Like it always seems to do just when you don’t need it to.
He pulled out his mobile. It showed him that he had 4 messages. All from Dillan.
He knew also, without having to listen to them that they would be of Dillan shouting. It’s something Dillan did a lot off. He was a born shouter, it was something you got used to if never completely comfortable with. With Dillan you just learnt to tell the difference between the levels of shouting. Also you took notice of the colour of his face. If it was bright purple and he was spitting blood and the whole office floor was walking around as if on egg shells you turned around and took a week long holiday.
He knew the messages would be escalating in grades from just shouting to a furious shouting.
And to add insult to injury John had actually been up and around since five this morning. He couldn’t sleep last night and had got up early. He had showered and changed into his day wear. Open shirt, smart but loose slacks and soft shoes.
He had then sat at his terminal for a while going through the news.
Pirate raids in the Belt had risen to an all time high.
And talks between the Inner circle and Europa had broken down again. Bloody politicians, they where gunna end up giving us another war. Which might have been exactly what they wanted. The Inner Circle and Europa with it’s Union of Off World Colonies and Population ships had been at each other for years. Earth and Mars where running short on resources to remain competitive with Europa and it’s seemingly unlimited oceans and energy from Jupiter. It’s tapping and harnessing of Io’ seismic and electrical fluctuations. It’s deep space exploration of the Kuiper belt and scout missions into the Ort Cloud. The mining vessels that constantly circled with the Asteroid belt where in a constant state of fraction over mining rights. What would be known as pirate raids where often little disguised attacks from either side. There was a famous case that came before the courts of an Outer Raid on an Inner vessel and all the ‘Pirates’ had done was cover over the insignia designating it as Europan Meteor Class attack vessel. The name was still visible and the transponder codes tied brought it up immediately. It went to the Merchant Civil Code Courts and officially got put down to a Rogue Captain who got a little overzealous in his independent actions. Unofficially though he was one of Europa’s most respected and decorated militia and once he had served a low key and purfunctual term under house arrest in a back water Station orbiting Saturn he was quietly released and after a few years in reclusivity on, ironically, Earth he was back on Europa with new incites on Inner Circle politics and a renewed vigour for active service.
The rest of the news that Carl scanned through was trivia, local highlights, special events and just in –
Another Plug In kid had been found dead in a Chair. A boy, 18 years old.
John frowned, that was the third in two weeks. Small news, not that children dying is a small thing. But a lot of people die in any particular week. And these where just three more that the coroner would be filling out the paperwork for. Although Carl had been following the story as it was an ongoing tagline through the news broadcasts.
He had finished reading and watching the feeds when a call came through from the Precinct. It was Tracy. It was still early even for her but he answered.
‘Yep’.
‘Carl?’ Tracy was Dillan’ private secretary. Her pretty face looming large on the wall screen. Not an entirly unpleasant image with which to start the day.
‘Hello my lovely.’
She was not impressed. ‘Dillan wants you in now.’
‘What’s it he want?’
‘He wants you, as soon as you can’.
‘When exactly?’
She sighed an experienced sigh ‘Carl, He just wants you now’.
‘Ok, ok. Be there by seven’.
‘Be quick John, He’s well pissed’.
‘When isn’t he. Ok. I’ll be there as soon as I can.’
‘Thank you Carl. See you in a bit’. And she rang off.
Carl slung on his full-length jacket and hurried out the door. This was going to be fun he thought to himself.



*Authors note. That original piece up above this one don't kinda run chronologically with this new writing. This is the new start rather than the old one above. So I'm gunna keep updating this so long as I don't get into admin trouble or such like. Things might read as a tad familiar. Mainly because them old short story's and this slightly longer affair are based in the same literary universe. It's not the only universe I have but it's the one that is most fruitful for me atm. Like I said, I've come along way with this recently so expect regular updates untill I hit the wall again.
I thought "Oh my ****ing Google" Pluto isnt a planet anymore...

*prepares to tell friends and family*

See's post date...Oh.
Maybe a nice friendly mod could merge all of these stories into a separate thread, and make it a sticky? I would also suggest that this thread be locked, with access rights (for upload) given solely to Funnybear.. and another thread made just for comments/praise/adulation etc.
I know that they are nothing to do with LFS, but these stories do make for an entertaining distraction.


PS..slightly disagree with the reference that Funnybears style is similar to DA's... I think that there is a lot of the Clifford Simak style in there as well, and I noticed touches of Asimov as well...
I would therefore not be frightened to state that Funnybears style is like:

FUNNYBEARS!!!!
Carl flicked his wrist again. 7.20.
Oh shitty ****.
He had got caught up in the morning rush. A fully integrated 24 hour society and there was still a rush hour.
Bollocks.



Carl stepped into Dillans’ outer office. Tracy was looking harassed.
The door to Dillans’ own office was ajar.
‘Carl’. Boomed The voice. ‘Get your lazy behind in here’.
Carl gave a wry smile and blew a kiss to Tracy who only raised her eyebrows in return.
He walked in to see Dillan, red faced, leaning against his desk.
Carl was surprised to see another man sitting very meekly in one of the extra chairs in front of Dillans desk.
‘Carl. ‘Bout bloody time. This is Dave Spenny’.
Carl acknowledged the stranger. ‘Of Spenny GWI?’.
Dillan answered. ‘You know this guy?’
‘Know of him rather than actually know him. He’s a director of Spenny’s, makes the chairs that they all sit in, I presume he’s been a bit caught up with these Plug in kids carping off.’ Carl smiled a predatory smile at the Mr Spenny.
The stranger returned the smile thinly. Dillan did the introductions. ‘Dave, this is Inspector Payne’.
The man rose from his chair and weakly shook John’s hand. It was a limp clammy shake of a man who was not used to dealing with the Dillans’ of this world. He was going to have trouble with me then, Carl thought.
Dillan walked to his side of the desk and sat heavily in his large chair. ‘Sit down Carl, we got some talking to do.’ Dillan shouted through the open door of his office ‘Three coffees, Tracy. . .Please.’ He turned back to the other two ‘There’s been another one Carl.’
‘ I know, read it about it on the bright eye bulletin this morning’.
‘What do you know about it’.
‘Not much. Third one in two weeks. Look like Identical deaths. All died in the Chair. All Plug In kids, two boys one girl. I thought the local boys had a handle on it’.
‘So did they, but I’m putting you in charge of the case’.
‘Case?’.
‘Yea, We think they are all connected. If they are this is bigger than the locals. They all have the same trademarks. No signs of outside interference, nothing on the autopsies. Just gone’.
‘How do we know it’s not just suicide’.
‘Three in two weeks? And in a Chair. Come on Carl you better than that’.
Carl grunted. It was impossible to die in the Chairs. What with their fail-safe’s and lifeguards. They would not let a body die. They could not let a body die even if the body wanted to.
‘So what we got to go on?’
‘Not much. In fact we’re stumped. At least until young Mr Spenney here decided to pay us a visit. You know there was nothing on the bodies. No sign of beating or any indication of intent to kill. Even the Autopsy’s brought up very little other than these kids where barely alive anyway. It couldn’t be any non payment beating gone out of control. There is nothing to indicate anything going on in the Real and I was loath to think that it was coming from the net.’
‘Which is impossible to do, right?’
‘Yea, so we thought. Until our new friend here came to us. He also read the news this morning and decided from the goodness of his heart and his community spirit to share some information with us. Haven’t you Dave’. The disdain fairly dripped from Dillans booming voice. Dave was visible shaken. Carl was almost feeling sorry for him having to face such a man as Dillan. But by the sounds of it he was deserving of the wrath of Dillan.
‘Er, yea. Um. Here.’ Dave handed Carl a folder that he had been holding closely. ‘This is a complete diagnoses of our Chairs and the systems involved.’
‘Your chairs?’
‘Yea, we manufacture all the chairs used in the Halls. It’s an old agreement that nobody seems to want in on. Umm . . .every, umm.’ Dave’s eyes darted from one policeman to the other.
‘Death’. Prompted Carl.
‘Er, yea. Has happened in our Chairs, well I mean there are no other chairs, only ours.’ Dave glanced again at the two hard faced cops. ‘Right. Umm. We only use our software and carefully vetted hardware in them. They use fully integrated hardwired failsafe. Nothing can get around them. When the first One happened we just assumed it was a No pay beating. Didn’t think anything else of it. It’s happened before. But then the second happened and your Local lot started asking us questions.
I mean we don’t want this back on us, the Chairs get enough bad publicity as it is. You know taking away kids from their parents, getting them into money troubles. The last thing we need is our Chairs to be ****ing up. And it’s not as if we design all the software or anything. We build the chairs. People sit in them. We protect them from themselves. But everyone wants anyone to blame so long as it’s not their children or their themselves. And the anyone in this case will be us. We have been testing and debugging like nobodies business. We can’t afford for this to be our fault.
So we ran our full diog. It turned up nothing. Completely clean.’
Dave gulped down on something. His Adams Apple bobbed like a fishing float.
He continued ‘And then the third this morning.’ He was visibly sweating. ‘We ran it through again, changed a few parameters, tweaked the remit slightly and . .’ He paused and swallowed hard. He looked like a man pleading for his life. Maybe he was. ‘We found something.’
‘God damn corporate.’ Dillan shoved his chair back. ‘Why didn’t you tell us this earlier.’
‘ I, er. I didn’t think. We’re very busy at the moment we have nearly six worlds ready to launch and what with the debugs and rip outs.’ He paused looking at the unimpressed faces and then to his clammy hands that lay in his lap. He felt like a chastised school boy before the Head and his tutor. He was having nasty flashbacks. They said that this might be a side effect. He realised he had left his Nebuliser in his desk at work. God, how he wanted a hit right now. He tried hard to compose himself again. He fessed up ‘I didn’t get a chance. I’m sorry I didn’t think.’
Dillan exploded. And it wasn’t for Carls’ benefit. Dillan was truly angry. Good old Dillan thought Carl, one of the old school. No bullshit. What’s black is black and what’s wrong is wrong. No political correctness about it.
‘Too ****ing right you didn’t think. If you want us to help you with this you gotta keep clean with us. Because believe me if we find you are withholding anything else we will clean you out and strip you down. That goes for both you and your company.’
Dillan came around the desk and stood in front of the quivering Dave. His jabbing finger inches away from the mans nose. ‘So do have you anything else important you feel obliged to tell us’.
‘We, er . . ****.’ Dave started gushing. ‘ We thought it was nothing. It couldn’t possible be connected. It was a subroutine so deeply buried in the system that even we don’t really know it’s there.’
Carl spoke, his voice softer than Dillans. Dave looked at him almost relieved, anything to take the heat from Dillans stare from him. ‘What does this subroutine do’. Carls voice was calm and smooth, feeling sorry for the beleaguered man.
‘It . .If it’s broken and modified in a certain way it gives access to a few more routines. And then a few more. Then a few more.’ He loosened his tie. ‘Well, without going into the technicalities of it all . . ‘
‘Please don’t.’ Interrupted Dillan who was leaning against his desk, his arms folded severely across his broad chest.
Dave carried on ‘ . .It eventually leads to a breakdown in the lifeguards. Once that happens the Occupant can over ride the pullouts and the Resus equipment. Once he or she does that they can allow themselves to die. From the inside out. They kill their mind. Without the mind the body is allowed to die by the Chair.’
Dillan returned to his side of the desk. ‘Shit’ he said under his breath. That was the quietest Carl had ever heard Dillan. ‘So these kids are committing virtual suicide on the Net. And in response their body believes it and dies along with it.’
‘That’s pretty much the jist of it, yes. But it is a lot more complicated than that. You see . .
‘Spare me the details, they are for Carl here to go through. Carl, I want you to use my other office. Tracy is at your disposal. My door is always open. Go and sit down with Dave here and go through some of this shit. Keep me updated ok.’
‘Sir, but I don’t know the first thing about this sort of thing. You know I don’t, there hundreds of script kids, Porn Chasers and Hacks in this building that can handle this a thousand times better than I can’.
‘I know that Carl, but I want you on the case and you ain’t going to argue.’
Carl knew better than to argue. He indicated to Dave that they should go. He led Dave through past Tracy to the other office. It was more of a meeting room. A large pseudo wood table dominated the room surrounded by high backed chairs. In the centre of the table with it’s matching box on the ceiling was the projector. Carl knew that the entire opposite wall was a view screen. He sat Dave down telling him he would be back in a minute.
He went back into Dillans office.
‘Cracked it already’. Said Dillan sarcastically without looking up something he was reading.
‘What else is there?’.
Dillan Looked up. ‘What do you mean?’.
‘You wouldn’t have put me on this case if you thought it was cut and dried. You know full well I cannot stand this head ****ing techno shit.’
‘Language! Only I’m allowed to swear in this office as well you know.’
Carl shrugged his shoulders. ‘Look, I’m a Real. Always have been and always will be. I mean, ****, I can only just use my Mobile’.
‘You rarely do that’.
‘Exactly. You know I’m not a Tech head. So why give me this job?’
‘Look Carl. Don’t you think it’s about time you joined the 22nd century. Look around you. Have you seen the sort of shit we use everyday that neither of us had thirty, forty years ago.’
‘I try not too’.
‘Well maybe it’s a time you started trying, some of it is actually quite useful.’
‘But why me Sir, Why this job. You know I got other cases on the go.’
‘I know but they are just street jobs.’
‘Just Sir? I’ve got two rapes, a suspected murder and a rash of burglaries down in the basement. You know what they get like down there. They’ll take it into their own hands if they don’t see us doing anything.’
‘I’ll get Harry onto those. He’s good and well known down there. Look Carl.’ Dillan settled back in his chair and rested his hands on the desk. ‘I need you on this case. You are the best I got. And you know it so don’t look like that. I dunno what you got going on in your head but you got a good mind for catching the bad guys.’ Dillan spun in his chair to look out of the window that was behind him. He was pensive for a few moments his hands folded under his chin gazing out unseeing at the colony beyond the glass. He sighed and turned back to Carl. ‘Look, this isn’t just a murder investigation. I reckon this goes a lot deeper than that. I can’t tell you how I know, you need to find this out for yourself.’ He fixed Carl in a hard stare. ‘Please. Take this case on. Look into it and find out what is going on. And look good and hard. Promise me ok?’
‘But . . .’
‘No but’s Carl. Please see this through and do what you have to do.’ He looked away suddenly back to his paperwork. ‘Dismissed’.
Carl knew he wasn’t going to get any more out of Dillan. He had his orders. He turned and left the room confused and a little bemused.
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.
You realise there are writer's forums for this kind of thing? My girlfriend signed up for a load a while back and has had a bunch of stories printed since then.

Cause here it just looks like a huge block of text that almost nobody will read. And at this rate will also get the thread locked.
Yea, thinking that. Nobodies really interested anyway . . . .
Quote from Dajmin :...
Cause here it just looks like a huge block of text that almost nobody will read. And at this rate will also get the thread locked.

Comment not needed. Now please go back to work (or whatever you were doing ) and let me read. Thanks!
Hey, I never said "don't write it" or "it's crap" I just suggested there are better places for posting huge blocks of writing

@Mille Sabords
Yes I'm working, but it's a slow day
Children . . calm down. I don't want to come between you!! lol.
Or do I...?
Hmmm, Honey.
Quote from Hankstar :It's all part of the US administration's Galactic War on Terror. Strip Pluto of "planet" status and classify it as a "rogue asteroid" and you can unilaterally impose a friendly puppet government and extract its mineral wealth with no objections from the UN

or maybe they just wanna blow it up!
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(Funnybear) DELETED by Funnybear
-Was that our turning? No, serioulsy hun. I think we should have turned there. Yea, look. Alpha z plural 9, that was definatly our turn. Hon? Honey? Are you even listening to me?
-huh?
-I knew it. You whern't. Where you even paying attention to the space lane? Didn't you see the nav ping? God. Now we're going to be late. My mother always said this of you. She told me I was making a mistake marrying a Jew. 'Never marry a jew' she said. 'Crap at navigation'. Are you gonig to turn this boat around any time soon? Look, there is a service station coming up. Pull over, I need the loo anyhow and the one aboard is still broken after your last emergency evacuation. Then we can turn around and hopefully still make it in time to see Father reasuringly titanic sruggle with the old Cine projector. Turn off here . . . . Here. Damn it! And mind that Freighter, I said mind it! Never mind that you had inches to spare, I'd prefer metres. Now, look for an empty slot, somewhere near the hub, i don't want to go traipsing miles down some dimly lit corridor fighting the gravity and what ever Freight Jock takes a shine to me. What did you say? I'd be lucky would I? You've got some nerve Joe, you really have. There!, right there! They are pulling out, here! Stop! Right here. What do you mean your too close and you'll have to back up. If you stopped when I said you wouldn't have too. You don't need left or rights, you should be more observant in the first place. Right, there. They are gone, never mind them behind you. Right, are you coming? No? A ciggerette? So your going to leave me to wonder the halls of a strange far flung service station in the middle of bloomin nowhere? I could be ravaged by anyone in there. Those Freighter types, they are not civilised. And i'm sure I saw a navy Vessel on the other side and you know what they can be like. . . . . Joe, If I didn't know you where a man of god i would almost have taken that to be maliscious. Very good then. If I'm not back in ten minutes, come and find me. Look, see, even the airlock hasn't been cleaned recently, I hate to think what life form left that there . . . . . . And no pulling away like you did last time. It wasn't funny then, and it won't be funny now. Right! Back soon dear! . . . . . . . .

Pluto no more..
(129 posts, started )
FGED GREDG RDFGDR GSFDG