The third part. Things tense up as the rising action leads into the main conflict! Enjoy. :D
The Gathering Shadows, Chapter 1, Part 3:
The next few days were spent searching almost non-stop through the Matrix for Faliria. Tz’alin let his mind wander near and far across the wireless world, but it was to no avail. His supply of NutraSoy diminished until he was down to just one. Instead of eating it, Tz’alin decided to try and find another source of food. The streets provided his first lesson in begging, which quickly degenerated into one of stealing. The lesson went poorly; Tz’alin just barely avoided being captured and suffered several nasty scrapes for his troubles.
Several days went by and so did the last of his NutraSoy cakes. Tz’alin had to spend more and more time hunting for food during the day and safe shelter during the night, and as he focused on what he needed to stay alive his interest in the Matrix and his mysterious abilities was pushed aside. For a long time, his life was harsh. He slipped into a more animalistic state as he had to fight with other street rats for food and knick-knacks which could be turned in for food. The fear of being found and cornered by authorities or worse, a street gang, caused him to live a paranoid lifestyle without friends.
But eventually things did get better; Tz’alin became better at living the street life. By the time a month had gone by he had learned the art of being at dumpsters outside of restaurants at just the right time to grab all the scraps he could, as long as he managed to evade the other stragglers.
Only when his basic needs had been filled did Tz'alin really start to explore his newfound abilities. He knew he was different; what he could do was special. The way he could feel the flow of data around him, the way he could reach out with his mind and shape it set him apart from the other rundown occupants of the city, made him special. He found a relatively stable corner on the second floor of a long closed, disintegrating Stuffer Shack and spent a good deal of time exploring the Matrix. He often left his body behind to enter a new world of more vivid reality through the Shack’s curiously still-functioning node.
When in the Matrix, Tz’alin learned that he could do whatever he wanted, be whatever he felt like. He quickly styled himself after the hero of his favorite sci-fi simseries: Robonoids. He took on the likeness of a young, generic boy in a powered Battlebody Mk. III. With his robotic suit he set out to chart the vastness of the Matrix, finding chat rooms, databases, security systems and more. It was all available to him in a way he never would have thought possible.
It was during one of these days of virtual exploration that Tz’alin came across a very intriguing medical study. With keywords like “Matrix” “crash” “2064” and “symptoms” the article instantly piqued his curiosity. It detailed cases of severe psychological and sociological damage in survivors of the very horrendous event Tz’alin had gone through. Thoughts of his sister’s voice calling to him on his first night on the streets haunted him as he read:
“A large majority of those caught online during the Matrix Crash of 2064 experience a wide variety of afflictions, mainly psychological in nature, that can be collectively categorized as symptoms of a disorder known as Artificially Induced Psychotropic Schizophrenia Syndrome (AIPS Syndrome for short). It shares pathologies with post-traumatic stress disorder, attention deficit disorder, Gordon’s syndrome, and dissociative identity disorder.”
Tz’alin’s eyes grew wide at such disturbing news. He followed several links to other articles until he happened upon the results of a study run by the University of Washington that halted him in his tracks. There, at the top, were the words, “Research Director: Garith Rhom.”
The name jumped out at him. Garith Rhom was his father. Tz’alin swallowed hard, his memories drifting back to his childhood. The fight to survive had kept him so busy that the months had slipped by without so much as a thought about his family. With careful precision his mind hunted through the endless fields of data, sifting through academic reports, news stories, statistics collections, and government forms alike. His search extended all during the day and into the night, and by the time he came out of virtual reality he felt he had gathered enough knowledge. With the last of his waking energy he set the vital part of his plan in motion before dozing off.
When Tz’alin woke up the following morning he skipped any sort of breakfast; he wasn’t hungry. He boarded the underground transit for the first time since his escape from the hospital, but this time he did so with a purpose. In his field of vision he organized helpful virtual aids into windows, just as he had done on computer systems as a child. He used the information he could feel intuitively to plot out his course, and also to control the system into registering him as a permitted passenger. Tz’alin rode into the center of Bellevue before getting off as discretely as possible.
His ratty clothes set him apart, but the determination to meet up with his family overrode any concern this might have given him. While delving through the Matrix Tz’alin had learned some of what had happened to his family, but not all. After the Crash 2.0, as that horrible even was being called, the University of Washington had been forced to undergo some drastic changes to stay up and running. Tz’alin’s mother had died in a fire the night of the crash, and as for his father, the university had assigned him a smaller house in a more crowded neighborhood. Despite his best efforts, Tz’alin hadn’t found any mention of either him or his sister in any resources anywhere. This led him to believe that perhaps his sister was okay, and just in the same condition that he had been in. Tz’alin hoped meeting with his father would solve all that.
The night before, after his thorough search of the Matrix, Tz’alin had sent an encrypted message to his father’s new commcode. He knew his father would recognize the encryption; it was the very first one Tz’alin had managed to crack without any electronic aid as a child, much to the amazement and interest of his parents. The message was simple: “Meet me at the Gold Lion Inn, 1285 118th Avenue SE at 1400 hrs., Tz’alin.”
Tz’alin had picked a place he knew his father would recognize for their meeting. The inn where they were to meet was just down the block from the Cavilard Research Center. Tz’alin remembered the tour he had been dragged along for as a child. The stark white walls were a shining contrast to his father’s dark mood at the time. As Tz’alin briskly walked toward the Gold Lion Inn he pondered what would happen at their meeting. Would his father be happy to see him? Something in his gut told him ‘no’.
At exactly 1400 hours the doors to the inn’s lobby opened suddenly, and in strode the man Tz’alin immediately recognized as his father. The man hadn’t changed a bit. His impeccably neat suit and mannerisms gave off an aura of cocky self-certainty that had earned such outstanding success in his career, along with more than his fair share of bitter enemies. Tz’alin felt small in his tattered jacket and pants, but he stood his straightest as his father walked up to him.
There was no time wasted between them on cordiality. “What do you want?” his father asked as soon as he was close enough to talk discreetly. “Why did you contact me?”
“I want to know what happened. I... I want to see mom’s gra-”
“You won’t be going anywhere near her!” Tz’alin’s father practically snarled at him. The reaction sent the youth reeling. He had expected the curtness, but this was something more. “She’s gone, dead. And it’s because of you.” The weight of his glare was enough to force Tz’alin’s knees to lock and his lip to quiver.
“I don’t know wha-” he tried to protest, but his father cut him off.
“If you hadn’t convinced your sis- Faliria to go where you weren’t allowed, your mother wouldn’t have had to go into the building when the fire started. She wouldn’t have been still up there getting your body when the beam fell.” His eyes drifted out of focus, but he never once dropped his stern look. “Severe contusion, internal cerebral hemorrhage. Dead before help could arrive.” He focused in on Tz’alin once more. “And you are to blame. For that I can never forgive you.”
Tz’alin fought back tears, swallowing hard. “I’m sorry, I didn’t... Father, where is Sis? What’s happened to her?”
For a brief second his father looked like he was about to turn and walk away. But then he smirked sardonically and shook his head. “She’s gone: her mind. It’s completely gone. I have her body in deep freeze, but without her mind...” His words trailed off and he looked at Tz’alin with a suddenly different air about him. Tz’alin shivered inexplicably at the shift in attitude. “I wonder,” his father continued, “how you came to your recovery. I must admit that your message came as a bit of a shock to me. I double-checked with the hospital, and for some reason they show that you are still there. A quick search proved otherwise, obviously... but for all their systems knew, you are vegetating in your bed at this very moment.”
As his father spoke, Tz’alin felt pinpricks of information traveling through the air about him, the buzzes building up frequency and increasing in proximity. He listened to his father with only half his attention, using the rest to quickly hack into the hotel’s external security cameras. What he saw frightened him beyond words. Armed men clad in the uniform black of a government response team were in positions just outside the door. Tz’alin backed out of the system and scanned the room. While his attention had been focused on the conversation with his father, the room had quietly cleared of people. The clerks, the couple arguing over their luggage... they had all left the room.
His father looked at his son with a nod of approval. “Yes, you’re figuring it out, aren’t you? If you have one redeeming quality, it is your ability to piece things together. You know that we can’t let you go. You have managed to wake up after a five-year coma. Your brain might hold the answers to save Faliria... and that is a trade I’m willing to make.” He smiled an eerie grin as he said it, and from his coat pocket he deftly withdrew a sidearm of some sort. He slowly held it up towards Tz’alin, his movement slow with the concentration of a man intent on having his revenge. “You will stay still. There are some men who will escort you back to the university.” Then, in a lower voice, he boasted, “You are going to make me world famous as the man who solved AIPS.”
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