Spheria Read online




  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  / Part One / Origin

  Chapter 1 - Shard of Life

  Chapter 2 - 1% Inspiration, 99% Funding

  Chapter 3 - Uplift Pass

  Chapter 4 - Cell Division

  Chapter 5 - Arcane Physics

  Chapter 6 - First Impressions

  Chapter 7 - The Interview

  Chapter 8 - The Rift

  Chapter 9 - First Day

  Chapter 10 - The Fertile Field

  Chapter 11 - Min's Assignment

  Chapter 12 - Return Journey

  Chapter 13 - Happy Hour

  Chapter 14 - Extra Sense

  Chapter 15 - Starlight Walk

  Chapter 16 - Cliffhanger

  Chapter 17 - God from the Machine

  Chapter 18 - Prime Directive

  Chapter 19 - Crossing Over

  Chapter 20 - Running Out

  Chapter 21 - Cat and Mouse

  Chapter 22 - In Our Image

  Chapter 23 - Nourishment

  Chapter 24 - Pro Creation

  / Part Two / Dynasty

  Chapter 25 - Start the Press

  Chapter 26 - Conspiracy

  Chapter 27 - The World Builder

  Chapter 28 - Streets of Gold

  Chapter 29 - The Deleted File

  Chapter 30 - God Like You

  Chapter 31 - The Exchange

  Chapter 32 - Confinement

  Chapter 33 - Coffee Break

  Chapter 34 - Putsch

  Chapter 35 - The Shadow Room

  Chapter 36 - Enslaved

  Chapter 37 - Split Decision

  / Part Three / Effluence

  Chapter 38 - The Plan

  Chapter 39 - Mala Sanctis

  Chapter 40 - The Machine

  Chapter 41 - Button Mashup

  Chapter 42 - Storm Wind

  Chapter 43 - The Incinerator

  Chapter 44 - The Great Divide

  Chapter 45 - Ashes to Ashes

  Chapter 46 - Into Battle

  Chapter 47 - Clean-out

  Chapter 48 - Liberation

  Chapter 49 - Projection

  Chapter 50 - Interruptions

  Chapter 51 - Hand of God

  Epilogue

  Author's Note (ebook)

  Appendix - Polyan Language

  SPHERIA

  Cody Leet

  Copyrighted Material

  This book is a work of fiction and takes place in a parallel universe. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the authors’ imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2016 by Cody Leet.

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address below.

  Editing by Michele Jacklin (www.linkedin.com/in/mjacklin).

  Cover Design by Isabel Robalo (www.isadesign.net).

  Stuff You Should Know transcript used with permission.

  Gizmodo is a trademark of Gawker Media, used with permission.

  First Edition, 2016, Version 1.0.9

  ISBN: 978-0-9977513-1-4

  No Trees Harmed, LLC.

  56 Brewster Rd,

  South Windsor, CT 06074

  www.notreesharmed.org

  Dedicated to my descendants,

  that they might remember me when

  I no longer walk this Earth.

  Acknowledgments

  Special thanks to Jan DiRuzzo, who believed I could write this since I was 12. I would honestly never have attempted it without her encouragement. It took a while, but I did it!

  Thanks to my loving wife and kids who allowed me the time and freedom to get this project done.

  Thanks to my parents who always encouraged me to try anything, and when doing so give it my best.

  Thanks to the indie authors who inspired me by example including Hugh Howey, Andy Weir, and E.L. James. And the hosts of the Self-Publishing Podcast (sterlingandstone.net) and the Authority Self-Publishing podcast (authority.pub) for their wisdom.

  Thanks to Josh Clark and Charles W. “Chuck” Bryant from the Stuff You Should Know (www.stuffyoushouldknow.com) podcast for permission to reprint some of their dialog. Thanks to Gizmodo (www.gizmodo.com) for permission to use their name in a fictitious article.

  Thanks to my creative team: Michele Jacklin for fixing my typos and grammar, Isabel Robalo (www.isadesign.net) for designing an awesome cover and being a pleasure to work with, and my beta readers, Rick Baumgartner, Therese Arkenberg, and Mohammad Hamad, for their invaluable feedback.

  Most of all, thank you, my readers! I really hope you enjoy this as much as I enjoyed dreaming it up.

  Prologue

  Photons flickered like frantic fireflies, blinking out of existence. Then they appeared elsewhere as if by magic. In a desperate attempt to hold onto life, they acted. Some died, and some lived; their destiny was not of their choosing.

  The doorbell rang. It was Aunt Mayra from Victoria coming for the annual Australia Day cookout. Graham lingered in his bedroom, trying to prolong his peace before encountering her. It wasn’t that he didn’t like her, because he actually did, especially when she brought him gifts. There were just two things that nagged at him about Aunt Mayra: her persistence and her kisses. He promised himself he’d be respectful this time.

  His parents greeted her at the door. After the usual pleasantries, their voices trailed off to the kitchen. The TV in his room began playing a new video, “Beds are Burning,” from the local Sydney band Midnight Oil. He muted it so he could hear the conversation down the hall. But the voices were too distant to make out anything.

  He shrugged to himself and resumed his work, which he took very seriously. It wasn’t real work – more like research – and wasn’t even research since it wasn’t related to any schoolwork. It was his hobby: exploring what makes computers tick. More so, trying to make them, for lack of a better word, think.

  Graham heard Aunt Mayra’s footsteps heading toward the bathroom, which was right next to his room. After a bit, the toilet flushed, and the sound of running water seemed unsettling. A moment later, Graham’s door was pushed open, and Mayra poked her head into his bedroom.

  “My little Graham! Wow have you grown! Aren’t you gonna come give your Auntie a big old hug? After all this time?”

  “Yes Auntie, how are you?” He rose and gave her a brief hug. Oblivious to his dodge attempt, she responded with her typical kiss on his mouth. He knew this was going to happen, so had prepared by pressing his lips together. He smiled at her, proud that he’d avoided any direct saliva contact.

  She looked around, and not finding another chair, sat on his bed. He gave her a “you want to talk more?” look and returned to his desk. Amber squares blinked on and off on the screen of his Apple II computer. His father had bought it “to calculate taxes,” but that coincidently aligned with Graham entering high school. He soon monopolized it to teach himself programming, which secretly his father endorsed.

  “Here, I brought you something,” Aunt Mayra said, handing him a wrapped package.

  He tore the paper, revealing a calculator with a solar panel.

  Mayra looked proud, and added, “I saw this in an electronics store in Canberra. It never needs b
atteries. Cool huh? I knew it’d be right up your alley.”

  “Yes, it’s great. Thank you. This will help with my math homework.”

  “Okay, but no cheating.”

  “Of course not. We’re allowed to use calculators now.”

  Mayra cocked her head and squinted at him. Then she gazed at his computer screen for a rather long moment, perhaps mesmerized by the changing patterns. She finally asked, “What game are you playing?”

  “It’s not a game,” Graham responded. “It’s a simulation.” Indeed, even though it was called the Game of Life, the word ‘game’ was a misnomer. In truth, it was a simulation of, well, life, albeit very primitive life. The simulation was developed as a mathematical way to express how life can function under a simple set of rules. It consisted of a grid of squares, any of which could be either on or off, with on representing being alive.

  He was about to explain the whole concept and the rules to Aunt Mayra but thought better of it. Instead, he just said, “These dots represent bacteria fighting for survival. If they get too crowded, they kill each other. If they get isolated, they die of loneliness. And if they’ve got some friends, they multiply. It’s a program that simulates artificial intelligence.”

  “Artificial intelligence!” Mayra echoed. “That’s silly. How can a machine have intelligence?”

  Graham resisted the urge to roll his eyes. “Well, it doesn’t really. It just behaves like it does, thus the artificial part. There are a bunch of experiments like this one that simulate aspects of human thought.” He stood and pulled a book off his shelf. “This book explains all the ways that people have made machines think. They’ve been able to form symbolic relationships, solve puzzles, classify animals, and even have a conversation with you. But they don’t get the computer to think for real, like where it’s self-aware. That’s going to take a while. But I'm planning on specializing in A.I. in college, and I will figure out how to do it for real! That’s my goal, at least.”

  Mayra was speechless, which was unusual. She stared at the blinking screen again, then back at Graham. “Whatever silly pursuit makes you happy. Hopefully, you’ll change to a real career before you graduate. Something that can make some real money!”

  Her words proved prophetic. Graham went on to major in economics – but he never forgot his dream.

  / PART ONE /

  Origin

  Chapter 1 - Shard of Life

  “Problem solving is hunting. It is savage pleasure and we are born to it.” - Thomas Harris

  The plants rustled around the great beast, but not enough for it to notice. It was focused on finding buried crystals, violet ones, containing life-giving energy. The bright sphere above shown white, compelling it to forage.

  Nine Polyans surrounded it, taking care to stay hidden. Like the beast, they were compelled to hunt. The bright orb above, which they called “The Source,” governed their behavior.

  Unlike this beast, their best source of food wasn't from the ground. Instead, it came from the heart of ones such as this. There, in the center of its two rows of three massive legs and shelf of five scooping tusks sat an enormous violet crystal, pulsing with light. That single crystal was the one that gave this creature, known as a Zalisk, and all the beings of the world for that matter, their life. Without it, they’d be mere inanimate structures consisting of connected tetrahedrons.

  Each member of the Polyan hunting party was about equal in size to a single leg of the gigantic Zalisk. Being of the Soldier caste, each of them had five limbs, connected to a violet core. But rather than being lined up on the sides, their legs were evenly spaced about their roundish body. They looked like how a five-legged spider might look, were there such a thing. As they got into position surrounding the beast, it stopped and listened. Zalisks were known for severe aggression, and many Polyans had died blundering into their territory. That was how they learned to work as a team.

  Hearing nothing unusual, the beast returned to sensing the ground. It paused over a patch of barren surface, then rose up, plunging its five frontal tusks into the ground. It leaned back, leveraging them into a scoop, overturning a chunk of inert brown rock. Amongst the debris was a small green crystal, and the creature eyed its prize. It moved its hulking form over the shard and aligned the point of its own violet core to its dinner. The energy from the previously buried crystal flowed into the belly of the beast. Once the new crystal was depleted and now clear, the Zalisk moved on. Its own core was a little bit brighter, almost full in fact.

  The group of Soldiers had been following the Zalisk for some time. They watched and waited, letting it do the work, before taking their own meal. Now was the time.

  Ga∙zo, Za∙zo, and Be∙zo had been staying a slight bit ahead of the beast. They swerved in unison as it went, remaining in the same relative position while staying hidden. The first two each dragged the end of a long strand of chords, resembling rope. Be∙zo carried a small shard of green crystal on his back. The remaining Polyans, three on each side of the Zalisk, trailed the rest of the rope. These two flanking groups kept visual sensors toward Ga∙zo, waiting for the signal.

  The beast paused again. Its enormous tusks swayed to the left, then the right. It attempted to sense another green crystal buried in the ground.

  With the beast distracted, Ga∙zo bowed, and the others stopped as signaled. He made a circular motion with one of his legs and Be∙zo began to dig a shallow hole in the path of the Zalisk. Ga∙zo and Za∙zo each made a loop in their ropes, which they then hung from a branch in the way of the beast. These were suspended at the exact level of its outermost tusks. The others grabbed the loose ends of the ropes and stretched them around trees. They braced for them to go taut. Be∙zo placed a small green crystal into his hole and covered it.

  The Zalisk didn’t detect anything in the current spot. Still unaware of the stealthy trackers, it shifted forward to try again. It took three more steps, paused, and sensed the crystal that Be∙zo had buried. The Zalisk moved toward it, and in doing so, unknowingly slid its two outer tusks through the dangling loops. Another step and the loops caught, pulling taut. The Soldiers reacted quickly, and in unison. They pulled the trailing ends of the loops toward the back legs of the creature, seeking to bind them to the tusks.

  Seeing sudden quick movement, the creature panicked. It made a loud bellowing sound and flailed its tusks to one side. Za∙zo went flying through the air, along with two other Soldiers. They landed in front of the beast’s deadly tusks. It immediately charged at them. But just before smashing them with a crushing blow, the Zalisk jerked back and fell sideways. The second strand had caught on a tree as the other three held it. They tied it to the creature’s three exposed left legs, rendering them useless.

  The Zalisk struggled to get back up, thrashing its right three legs. The Soldiers heaved on the left rope, and the beast was rolled onto its back. Ga∙zo and Za∙zo scrambled up the creature’s forward appendages and onto its exposed belly. Two others retrieved the strand dangling from the Zalisk’s right tusk and tossed it up to them. Along with Be∙zo, the three on the ground each grabbed onto one of the flailing legs and, holding tight, pulled with all their strength. Ga∙zo and Za∙zo went to work, binding each leg with the rope.

  The creature struggled, pushing with its middle legs on each side. It was working to remove the strands connecting its tusks to its legs. They’d soon come off, but the Soldiers were ready. They snared each leg with additional strands and pulled them tight around more vegetation. This stretched the body of the creature, its legs spread wide. It lay immobile, vulnerable to the sky.

  Be∙zo, who was on his first hunt, was given the honor of the kill. He retrieved a bundle of clear crystals that the group had been dragging with them. He removed one and hefted it onto the belly of the beast. The Zalisk struggled against its restraints, knocking Be∙zo off balance. But he recovered and climbed up. He reached the spot between its six outstretched legs and looked into its belly. There, pulsing from a day of foragin
g, was the life crystal: large, violet, and glowing.

  Holding the clear fragment high above his head, Be∙zo proclaimed the words he was taught. “This Zalisk gives us its energy, that we might move, that we might live, that we might multiply.” He then pressed the pointed tip of the shard against a flat edge of the beast’s core. The color began to flow into the crystal, turning it a vibrant violet, and the Zalisk’s life dimmed. Be∙zo passed down the saturated shard, and the others handed up another clear one, which he also filled. In this way, they removed all the energy contained in the beast, and it went limp, the struggle over. The core of the magnificent creature, still impressive in size, twinkled clear like a diamond.

  Be∙zo once again raised a shard over his back and this time, with the final one filled, proclaimed, “For the Colony!” The pile of crystals contained enough energy to replenish them all.

  “For the Colony,” the others repeated in unison.

  #

  Ti∙ni squealed “All fall down!” as the stack of brown rocks collapsed onto its side. They tumbled into a ragged column along the ground. She laughed and began pushing them back together with her three legs, but paused when something caught her eye. A moving glow became visible in the forest just outside the Colony.

  The proud Soldiers emerged from the growth. They each carried a radiant shard above their backs, displaying them like trophies. The other Polyans rushed out to greet them, and everyone danced around in a wild commotion. This was the third great haul, possibly enough to refill everyone. These shards contained more energy than a week’s worth of foraging for green crystals. They formed a line and marched between the hives to the center of the Colony.