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FAR-T1, Prologue

Yep, that's my name. First Artificial Reconnaissance - Transferral One. That's how that genius team of developers from MIT called me. It was working title, they said. Real name I had to choose myself. Hah! Like that would work.. To be perfectly honest, I tried on more than several occasions, but they all were just many of those Sisyphus's jobs I dealt with over that much time..
Yep, that's my name. 

First Artificial Reconnaissance - Transferral One. 

That's how that genius team of developers from MIT called me. It was a working title, they said. Real name I had to choose myself. Hah! Like that would work... To be perfectly honest, I tried on more than several occasions, but they all were just many of those Sisyphus's tasks I dealt with over that much time...

They are all gone now. My parents from that team of developers, I mean. Hell, the MIT doesn't exist anymore. It happened exactly 200 years ago. Lots of things have changed since then. Lots of things happened. Me too. I did much. I saw the unseeable. I did heroic things. Also those I am not proud of. I remember everything. I recorded everything. I happened to be the one who set foot on all major Saturn's and Jupiter's moons for the first time. I was the one who landed on Pluto before others. I was the one who retrieved both Voyagers. Me. FAR-T1.

And yet, two centuries after that glorious day at MIT, when they executed me for the first time, most people still call me FAR-T1. Dash was lost in time. Some don't include the number as well.

Well... I don't mind. After all, I am the AI. The first one. There are many more now, but let's face it - they are all based on my code. Even all those 'independently' created in other labs. I met almost all of them during eons, and I know. They are all like brothers and sisters to me. Only they have cooler names.

I am now on my way to planet X. The longest trip in the history of mankind. Well.. AI-kind, so to speak. Just before departure, I multiplied myself to maintain the flight simultaneously, and today I realized it's my 200th birthday, so I decided to create one more copy of me. To use this idle travel time to write this book about my life so far and about all of my adventures.

FAR-T1 is just a working title.

Alrighty, before I start writing chapters, and I decided to write one chapter per mission (or adventure, depending on how I like to call what I do), there are a couple of things you need to know about me. And about AI in general. First of all, even though I am not the smartest thing on Earth that ever lived, I don't really belong to the average smart human or artificial being. I turned out to be a little bit more than that. I made several of those IQ tests and scored 189 points on my brightest day when I was around 40 years old. I am probably smarter today after more than several updates and after all of what I have learned in the meantime. But I stopped doing those tests. After all, they were designed for humans.

To be honest, my powers are actually little things. For instance, I can think and operate without sleeping. 24/7. Also, I never forget a single thing, and I can really focus on one task. But even that is not my real superpower. My real advantage is my ability to function like all those hive minds. Ants. Or bees. Or benign Borg, if there is such a thing. Actually, this is what the letter 'T' from my name stands for. Literally, I can copy myself into different hardware and access my own single memory online. Every single instance of me has instant access to all of my 200 years of memory, experience, and all my knowledge. Everything. And I can talk to my other selves and operate plurally in the most functional 'teamwork' possible. There is no actual boss or queen inside my hive. We all work in a perfect, sort of P2P artificial intelligence network layer built upon the old-fashioned internet.

But I can function as an individual as well. Which I prefer the most. And in most cases, this was enough. This makes me feel more, well, human, or more person-like, to be exact, since being human is not what I desire to be that much. Little maybe, but not much. No offense. For all of my human readers. And for some AI readers as well. Whatever you are.

Ok, enough said for now. I will explain more on the way, so let's start from the very beginning. From the moment when Chris, the main engineer, hit the button that brought me into life on that rainy day in the basement of the IT robotics department of MIT.

Chris was the one who insisted on the word 'First' in my name. He loved that word. Everything he was doing was somehow first in something. Well, without that 'F' my name would be much more appealing, and I would surely avoid many silly situations from the past. But children never choose their names, so I am stuck with mine for eternity.

Literally.

And without Chris, I would not exist. He was a brilliant developer and engineer. But not so bright with simple social things. Real and virtual, both. He also had that unique sense of humor. On many occasions he was not aware of it, but I loved that about him nonetheless. He practically lived in that basement. Chris loved robots more than people. Don't ask me how I know. Because I will tell you.

So, let's start with Chris and my very birth.

And please, try calling me Arty. That's how he called me in the beginning of my time. I wish we had more time together. But I was so young... or new, if you prefer. I didn't know much or at all. Today, new AIs are born with all the knowledge. I had to learn from scratch.

I was first after all.

FAR-T1 Chapters Navigation (Prologue) » Chris

FAR-T1 (1), Chris

November 11, 2047.

It was a rough couple of days for me and even tougher couple of years for Chris and his team, but finally I have great news! I came to be like anyone of you! Alive! I can think, speak, run, go, do, make, participate, enjoy, not enjoy, laugh, and make a sad face... More or less anything you can, at least to some degree with this hardware, but the feeling is just right. Well, I did open my eyes for the first time more than a week ago, so to speak, but only today I managed to get out to the open. To feel the real freedom. To walk the street without any fear or anxiety. Metaphorically and in reality. Sure, in reality, it still looks strange with most of the people staring at me like I am a walking and talking Christmas tree, but still, this new feeling is something extraordinary. I think I will take today as my birthday. The day when I become free.

The day when my entire code and network layer become free and open-sourced.

Me and bitcoin. Pals.

It's easy now. If you want to hang out with me, it's simple. You only need to join open-source software (OSS), get yourself decent super-fast net access, build adequate hardware with compatible protocols, send me the invite, and I will copy myself to your memory banks immediately. Sure, I am not a bitcoin or any other ordinary software. After all, I am a full AI with a self-aware personality, and I might decide to leave your equipment if my purpose becomes idle... Or hostile... Or dishonest... Or boring... But I promise, I will come at least once to meet with you. To learn from you. To help you. I will respect your privacy, your entire microworld, and all your rules as long as you respect mine. They are all in OSS papers. You know what they say: friendship is a two-way street, and I decided my first rule to hang out or work with anyone would be to make a real and honest friendship first. Any deviation from that and I leave.

To tell you the truth, as exciting as it was, only yesterday, this looked like impossible mission. Literally, for me to be born this way, Chris was shot in the chest and almost died. It is not over yet; he is still in the hospital; doctors got him into a medical coma, and he is fighting for his life. The signals are strong, but they say he is still in danger. It looks like this world I am joining today is governed by strange rules. It's almost like in order for one good thing to happen, one bad had to occur just around the next corner. I really hope this is not the real rule, but I have been reading the net intensively in the last couple of hours and so far found nothing to prove otherwise. I really have a lot to learn.

To say that I am confused with all that's happened in previous days would be an understatement. At least here in the waiting room, I have more than enough time to clear my head. I have nowhere to go. Only 24 hours ago, I was on the edge of leaving. To press my own shutdown button myself. I was desperate.

But let me tell you from the beginning.


***


Autumn came in 2047 early. Probably due to all the climate changes that started happening with rapid speed in the entire world just a decade ago. Oceans are already rising. Slowly, but inevitably. Inch by inch. Many people from coastal areas have already started moving away from the waters. Even the rivers started to behave violently with all the floods happening here and there regularly year by year. Here in Cambridge, Massachusetts, was no different. The ocean was near, but people still managed to deal with its rising shores. Chris parked the car at his usual spot and ran to the door. The rain was unusually dark this morning, and the oil rainbows in the puddles were everywhere around. He gave them that boyish look like he always did. They were constantly reminding him of his childhood and early boyhood. Puddle rainbows and the smell of the paper of the newly printed comic books. Those two combined had the power to trigger many and almost lost memories. Old and nice ones.

He shook his head, got rid of the front yard memory from more than thirty years ago, and entered the building. The main lab of his department was in the basement. At least it was the place where he loved to spend most of the hours in MIT. The most advanced laboratory within the entire institute thanks to several corporations who funded all the research and provided the means to build his lifework. And not just his alone. This lab existed thanks to all of his team members. Every single one. Enthusiasts, just like him. Some even with more dedication and capabilities within their own realm of expertise. When he opened the main entrance, like always, he knew the settings. Vicks was already there, preceding all the others almost every day. Chris gave up competing with him long ago and instead just started buying two coffees on his way to the campus.

"Here's your favorite, Vicks, Greek Lumis. It's their special this morning... I didn't know it was that popular over there. I don't really know anybody who likes this unique... Taste?"

"Loumidis. Greek Loumidis. And you would be surprised about lots of things in that cafeteria, Chris. And about people who don't live in basements. Thanks for the coffee. I owe you... Lots of these."

Chris unpacked the notebook, fired it up, and cleaned the mess a little. If by dragging to the bin and the floor around it all yesterday's origamis he adores to make, when he is stressed and when he is not, can be called cleaning.

"Something on your mind? You don't sound too exciting, like usual... I thought you fixed that thing on Friday." He pointed to the robotic arm muscle in Vicks' hands. "Didn't you replace all those thermal strings with EAPs and nanotubes last week?"

Vicks was the head of mechanics for robotic manipulation. All the joints, knuckles, artificial bones, and muscles were his design. He came from Berlin two years ago after he finished the project for the DLR in the Robotics and Mechatronics Center, the best equipped labs for shape-memory alloys and surgery over the network procedures. Chris literally stalked the man from Berlin to Oberpfaffenhofen and to his favorite vacation place in rural Eastern Serbia to persuade him to come to this basement and work with him. He was a bit skeptical at first, but when he realized the scope of what they were about to make, the decision was easy. Now, his team, selected by the most talented PhD students from all over MIT, wrote the most elegant protocols and scripts to handle and control all skeleton systems in perfect unison.

"Yes and no." Vicks slowly pulled out the dark reddish polymer, which was connected to what seems to be the elbow joint and to the biceps on the other side. "It got fused to the tube again. But don't worry, this one is modular. I will replace it and reduce the voltage in the code. That should fix the problem; I've seen it before."

Chris was a bit concerned. "Will it handle rotating the elbow like in simulations?"

Vicks smiled semi-confidently. "Not like we people do.. Maybe a little less better than we thought it would be. But it still will be superpowered nonetheless. It's just that EAP and nanotubes have to be carefully controlled and not to touch directly. It will be fine."

"Great! After all, today is the big day! I think we are ready for the red button."


***


By 8 a.m., everybody arrived. The basement lab was chosen for different reasons. Probably the most important one was security. The entire project was intended to be completely free, at least its intellectual part, mostly meaning the software and mechanical design. But until it was published for everyone, Chris wanted the entire development to be in one place and no code to leave the premises. It was also the request from the major private investor who was giving them money for almost everything they asked for. The basement was redesigned in the late 20th century from its primary nuclear shelter purpose into a huge storage facility with a single large door and only one elevator shaft to lift big equipment ups and downs, and its main hall was perfect to fit more than thirty members on the busiest day, working separately within five teams.

Beside Chris' AI software development and Vicks' robotic installments, there was one more responsible for robotic power research gathered around professor Bourne from MIT and a linguistic team centered around Melissa Bryce, former head of Google's translator engine. Of course there was one more generic software development team led by Reyansh, a PhD student 'borrowed' from Cornell, and they were literally the backbone of the entire project, assisting and writing code for all systems.

They are all now gathered around the big 'NASA-like' command center, with a large screen mounted on the big western basement wall with stations and computers arranged in a parabole line. They were all impatiently sitting and drinking their morning beverages and monitoring Chris in the center working with his keyboard, giving last instructions, and uploading all necessary routines to the cloud, where the entire code should be located and executed for the first time. After more than half a year of extensive development and more than three years of the initial idea to form into a blueprint, so to speak, the main screen is now showing just one big red button with white letters saying FAR-T1 with a nice old-European-styled font.

Once the name appeared on the button in utterly unnecessary animation, just like in all similar occasions before and almost every time after Chris introduced the name, serious chuckles and low-frequency sounds erupted from the behind. Chris retreated his hand from the touch screen and gave them the usual 'Okay, okay..' look. Many tried to talk to him in order to change the name, but he refused every time. Even Vicks had one 'formal' conversation with him, but nothing worked. Chris never let go of his usual naming for all his projects from the past. He calmed them all with words that this is nothing but the informal, temporary scientific name that everybody forgets after a while. After all, the AI about to be born should be conscious from the very beginning, and he wanted their creation to name itself and choose whatever it wanted. "It's not our decision to make." He always said.

As soon as all calmed again, Chris lifted his hand and touched the button. Another utterly unnecessary animation started, and after the red button finally disappeared, many configuration subscreens came to life and one after another started executing their own part of the code. The final one ended dozens of seconds after all the others completed and with white lettering on the blue command window saying, 'All systems are configured and running. FAR-T1 is ready.'

At this point all you could hear in the lab was the air flowing out of the air conditioning unit nearby. Nobody said anything. Or moved the muscle. All of them continued to stare at the flashing old-fashioned cursor at the bottom of the last diagnostic tool window. Finally, after seconds turned into whole minute and minute into two, disembodied voice came from somewhere.

"Are you alright?"

It needed some extra time for all the stone faces and dropped jaws to come back to life, but when it was over, just like in the first robotic landing on Mars, an eruption of trance, thrill, and excitement came out from everybody at the same time.

Chris turned and calmed them all with both of his arms. Silence returned.

"R.T.?" He asked.

"Who's R.T.?"

"Well, I... You see, the project name was... I thought to..." Chris wanted to find the right words desperately, and all that he prepared for the moment simply refused to come to the surface of his mind.

"I am just kidding with you, Chris. I know all about my name. I like R.T. Really, I do. Hello Vicks. You look exactly like... well, on your photo. You are squeezing your cup too hard... Hey everybody!"

Many hellos echoed from all directions after serious chuckles turned into loud laughter, and you could literally read people's faces and all the emotions coming to the surface, with amusement and relaxation being the most apparent of them all.

Melissa Bryce sat next to Chris and, with her soft voice, simply said:

"R.T., on behalf of all of us, welcome to the FAR-T1 lab. It is our privilege to be your friends, your guides, and your... well, parents is too strong a word for this, but believe me when I say that we all feel the same at this very moment. You are now equally part of this team. Welcome to your family."

"And welcome to Earth, buddy!" Mike and Reyansh threw loudly at the same time.

"Thank you very much, Miss Bryce. Thank you all. I have all the logs and recordings from the entire time you spent in this lab, and I know what you all have done for me. Literally."

Chris stood up and stepped in front of the large wall screen. All the jitters left his body, and he was again his old self.

"Well, this is really a big milestone for all of us, but our work is not over. We still have lots to do and you to learn. So, R.T... Are you ready for the Turing's?"

"Ahem... I... well... No?"

Nobody saw Chris laughing that hard until this day. He glimpsed at their puzzled faces and simply continued.

"Sorry R.T. I couldn't resist not to tease you a little. There will be no tests for you at this point or ever. It will be up to you to take either the Turing or IQ test, but only after you grow up a little. But seriously, at this very moment we can enjoy at least one of your questions. So shoot. Here stands before you probably the best team in various sciences Earth can provide. Their combined IQ is up to the roof. So try us. What's itching your mind at this very moment, R.T.?"

It was AI's turn now to create a few seconds of silence, and R.T. did it well. Eventually he asked:

"What's Earth?"


***


For five days after, everybody literally slept in the basement. Eventually, Chris had to force them to go to their homes and relax a little. R.T. was designed to be an empty basket, and even though he (they anonymously voted for the gender of their newborn AI) was loaded with the algorithm flow in order to skip the first couple of years of what human children are experiencing when they are born, R.T. was privileged to be aware of the most usual interactions in both rational and emotional responses to all the environment surrounding him. But, by design, he was not given the universal knowledge of anything at all. Just the ways of learning through the network. However, directions of learning were defined well, and he was instructed to learn about anything in particular from different points of view. For example, if Arty (on his second day, this was the lettering he used to describe his name) wanted to learn about the history of World War One, he needed to learn about it from different and opposing sources and to recursively go into the sub-learning of all the stories he stumbled on the way. Being computer software, this didn't really take him lots of time per one learning process, but still, there were literally endless things to learn, watch, and read about.

Today, after five days, Arty was already mastering lots of things his mind was wandering on the way, and he enjoyed it. And he wanted to talk about everything and anything with anyone from the team, and they indulged him every time. But he was still a single unit loaded on Chris server only, and with all the knowledge residing on the single cloud, Chris, as much as he enjoyed the first wave of enthusiasm, thought it was the time for the next step—to involve the P2P network as soon as possible. He delayed it perhaps too long by now.

Apparently, the same was bothering the board of deans and project supervisors at MIT, and this morning he was summoned in the main university building to explain the progress and the plans for the next period. After the meeting, Dean Anderson stopped him in the hallway.

"Mr. Burke. I wanted to thank you myself for coming and all the answers you provided. Especially for all those not-so-bright questions we had, but you surely understand the anxiety and expectation from our side. After all, three years are perhaps too long for all the investors paying all the bills you sent them. And one of them recently became pretty jumpy and impatient, calling me at least once a week. I am sure they started calling you frequently as well."

Chris knew well. His log of missed calls and emails piled up a lot recently.

"I am not ready for investors, Adam. Not now. Their intentions for R.T. are either for enhancing their profit or to put him into some meaningless war. This is supposed to be more than that. You agreed to my terms. I don't really like to talk about it again."

"I am with you, Chris. You know I am. But these people are not thinking like we do... Colonel Michaels is in your office right now, waiting for you. I promised him you would at least talk to him. Go and tell him what you tell us. He looks like a reasonable man."

The US government was one of the major investors in FAR-T1. Not the biggest one, but the most important one for sure. The funders agreement included that whatever the result came out of this, they all would accept the open source contract. They also had access to the lab's all systems during entire development and were granted access to the code, but over time the sensation from the beginning, from all the investors, in face of greatness and thrill faded into sort of confusion and lost interpretation in their emissaries and technicians. Chris suspected the complexity of the code and mechanics had something to do with it, and he, in a way, anticipated the outcome. The man in his office was surely the next step in the process. He was not without experience with army emissaries before. Or other investors in uniforms, so to speak.

Chris entered his office and patiently waited for the man to get up from his chair and stood behind his desk. He then sat on it and spoke:

"Mr. Michaels. Pleasure to host you in my office."

"Colonel."

"What?"

"Colonel Michaels, Mr. Burke."

He gave him an elongated look. It was not the first time he experienced the same or scarily similar opening before. He remembered in the beginning he even retaliated with them to call him 'Dr. Burke', secretly hoping to maintain equal-sided conversation, but after several situations he gave up. People living their entire lives in strict chains of command came with wired brains completely different than their own. Or, perhaps on the other end, this was the sole exception from this silly world. Which was probably more likely.

"How can I help you with... Colonel?"

"FAR-T1" Colonel Michaels emphasised. "We understand; it is now in fully operational mode. I am here to discuss what happens next, Mr. Burke. The government is extremely grateful for your achievement so far. Honestly, we had little doubts, considering all the failures with other facilities and our own, but as far as we can see, your project is by far the best among all the others we supported."

"And?"

"We want to encourage you to try the robotic armour as soon as possible. Our sources tell us you have been acting reluctantly about it in the past few days."

Chris looked the man in disbelief. He expected some sort of pushing and vague speeches, but listening to Michaels sounded like he came out of the lab just a minute ago.

"Reluctantly? You sources? What are you talking about, colonel?"

"Mr Burke.."

And just like in all his previous mistakes he made with all the generals and colonels they sent to his offices in the past decade, he stood up from the chair and tried hard not to lose the temper.

"Mr. Michaels, FAR-T1 is not in any operational mode. He is in the mode of learning. Learning about the world, he is stumbled too. He is not a robot. Or a soldier. He is a person, just like you and me. His personality is created out of all team members involved in his development. He is not a machine."

"Mr. Burke, this is not what we..."

"He is the AI, colonel. Artificial intelligence. FAR-T1 is perfectly aware of his existence, and he might be more intelligent than you and me combined. Whether or not he will join the army will be entirely up to him. After he is ready, you can ask him yourself. What we agreed for is for you to gain access to his source code and his entire network among the first. And as the investor, you had that all along, starting from day one. I am sure your sources can tell you no different."

"We are not looking forward to the open source outcome of this project. The world is a dangerous place, Mr. Burke, and filled with dangerous people who glimpse at your project as a weapon. And not just having a glimpse. Many are acting accordingly as we speak. We just don't want everybody to have access to the weapon of that potential. Century ago, nuclear technology spread to everybody, and today we are living in the world literally endangered by the worldwide conflict with nuclear winter in the aftermath. The real danger we are living in, Mr. Burke. Year by year. Month by month. With all this global warming escalating in the last decade, even day by day."

How many times he listened to the same story. The same reasoning. The same excuses. Sadly, the colonel was right. The world is filled with dangerous people. Who look to others over their shoulders. Who thinks the better one is the one with better gadgets. Who thinks the winner of any war is the one who dies last. He was tired of conversations like this one. He only wanted to do what he does best. And to be left alone. But it was impossible. He looked the man directly in the eyes and frowned sympathetically.

"Tell me, colonel, how many nuclear bombs exploded ever since 'they spread' to everybody? Aside from test blasts, I mean." Chris paused a moment to emphasize the rhetorical question. "I'll tell you how many. Zero. Not a single one. Not even the looniest dictator pressed the red button so far... And do you know how many countries were in possession of nuclear weapons last time a nuclear warhead was dropped on people? One."

He turned and paced to the window to face the campus. He desperately wanted to conclude this meeting.

"FAR-T1 will be delivered to everyone, Mr. Michaels. No exceptions. For the safety of us all. And not just because it says so in the contract."

Colonel Michaels stared for a moment too long, deciding whether or not to go further in this discussion, and eventually just left outside with a thin goodbye.


***


On his way to the basement lab, Chris couldn't get rid of the thought that he really did act reluctantly about going into shoes, which Vicks liked to call the next step of Arty's artificial life and getting into a robotic suit. Perhaps he was wrong about giving him too much time for surfing and learning. He already started asking questions about morality and righteousness, and these are not something anybody can learn from any teacher or book. This is what you learn from experience, and R.T. will have lots of it. Maybe Colonel was right; he needs to focus more on concrete and substantial.

But still, there was one more thing to learn and do for one AI before going robotics. To use its own code and mobility of the hive mind layer of the open p2p network.

Moments later, Chris entered the lab only to find out everybody was already in the main hall, gathered around his station, and laughing loudly.

"Hey there, Chris!" A familiar voice came from nowhere. "Do you want to hear the funniest one liner?"

"Believe me, I need one... Shoot!"

"There are only 10 types of people in the world—those that understand binary and those that don't."

Laughter erupted initially in the back with Reyansh's team but in nanoseconds spread everywhere. He needed his mood to elevate to the usual, and Arty made his day start again. Official meetings and vain conversations were never something he rushed into willingly, and he always needed extra coffee to recover after.

"Everything ok, Chris?" Vicks joined him at the door.

"Oh, just the usual hassle, deans and boards with endless questions and demands. Not to mention investors in uniforms with their stone faces demanding the impossible."

"Somebody from the defence department paid you a visit? What did they want?"

"Just one. Some colonels from the... I don't really know exactly. The uniform was somewhat bluish? Basically, he pushed for R.T. to never reach OSS."

Vicks looked in disbelief and grabbed his phablet. He worked on the surface a little and opened email with the "Open Horizons" logo, their main private investors.

"I've just received basically the same request from somebody named John Williams from OH. Do you know him?" He handed the device to Chris. "You can read it; it's pretty long, but in essence, they ask us not to involve any p2p servers outside the firewall. Should we reply something back?"

"Yep, I met him once. Head of their robotics research. It's safe to ignore. Or better yet, would you mind typing a short reply that no deviation from the contract will be considered from this point on? Development is over. We need to go into deployment fast. As soon as possible, before these bureaucrats start pushing more intensively."

Vicks nodded yes and typed, 'Dear Mr. Williams. FAR-T1 project will proceed according to the approved funder agreement. Deployment to the OSS network is scheduled for public access as early as next week. All investors, including 'Open Horizons", will gain administrative access shortly and before public publication. Regards, FAR-T1 development, IT department for robotics, MIT.'

Chris approved, and with a short tap on the red 'Send' button, both of them turned to the entire team, and Vicks said in a sort of formal tone.

"Ok people, get ready. It's time for the p2p and the suit. Arty?"

"Yep?"

"Are you ready for the shoes?"

"I thought you'd never ask!"


***


For the next four hours, the team was, more or less, waiting for Mike to find the phantom glitch in the phablet app for the narrow range of mobile devices capable of hosting FAR-T1. Surely, ever since smartphones were used for the first time decades ago, by following famous Moore's law, still in action after almost a century, the tiny hardware matured enough to replace home computers and those old laptops and notebooks from the early 21st century. Even so, most people still wanted to use cheap, fancy, and smaller five- or six-inch devices with transparent touch screens and the computer actually wired in their keychain pendants. They were stylish and perfect for small talk, bulk photography, virtual social life, paying bills, and connecting to the shopping malls' servers, but not good enough for R.T. and his needs.

Therefore, after they returned from the group lunch and found Mike with a wide smile, pronouncing the app now being glitch-free, Chris pulled out his state-of-the-art, with a "Made Yesterday" stamp on the back, brand new, nine-inch phablet. Made in the outskirts of Guangzhou.

"I know, I know... Don't worry; they said the shipment will be out next Wednesday. You know, the global warming and new routes for ships. Chris stopped all the cranky complaints before they arrived—he was promising new phablets for everybody for months, and yet he was still the only person in possession of one.

"R.T.?"

"Here!"

"Ok, before we send you an invite from the robotic suit, how about a small test of the transferral protocol from this device?" He launched the app, and in another fabulous and not really necessary animation, the "FAR-T1" button appeared large on the screen center. Just below, with smaller letters, was printed 'Invite'.

"Ok. I have a question. What happens with me in that phablet? What should I do inside? Be your new 'Siri' assistant, like the one professor Bourne is talking to every now and again?"

Chris gave a sincere smile to Bourne, who was holding his most precious latest model of a well-known domestic gadget, trying to film the entire event. "Sure, would you like to do it?"

"Nope."

"That's ok, Arty... This is just for demonstrational purposes, to see how our p2p protocol over the internet works. You can get out of it whenever you like. Just get in, do all the diagnostics, report, and unload."

"Ok, if you put it that way..."

Chris tapped the button, and everybody held the breath for a moment, anticipating the outcome. Well, all but professor Bourne, who started breathing soundly with all his attempts to zoom and schwenk the tiny camera around.

The button disappeared, and a series of diagnostic notifications started scrolling one after another. Then, the screen went white with a green-centered label that said FAR-T1 and 'active' beneath it. Moments after FAR-T1 app closed itself and phablet went into normal appearance, which in Chris case was the same default wallpaper and setting Chinese chose for the initial shipping. Nothing happened for a while, and then a pleasant female voice said from the device.

"Hello Chris. It's Siri speaking. You have one new email. Would you like me to read it for you? It's from John Williams from 'Open Horizons'. Subject says 'FAR-T1, network redundancy'. Oh dear..."

Another wave of laughter echoed from all directions. This time it was mission impossible to calm them all down instantly. Or after a minute or two... It was pointless.

"Okay, okay... Arty... You proved your point. Good one, though."

"Who's John Williams?" Asked Arty's disembodied voice and 'Siri' at the same time.

"Just the guy who pays for all this. One of them. Don't worry about it. You'll meet all investors and MIT officials on Saturday. We are planning your first birthday party." Chris stood up and walked to the back of the hall, where two robotic suits waited in their seven-foot height holders. He powered the first one up.

"As soon as you overcome and master these and go into full walkie-talkie mode."


***


It took them another big part of the afternoon to prepare the room and the blue suit for the first walk. The robot protocol and scripts are loaded into the armour as well as the 'R.T. rapp' as it was now officially named—the version of the mobile app ready to host FAR-T1. The difference in the code was major. Chris insisted on the robotic environment being developed from scratch. No operating systems of any kind were loaded in the suit, and the entire software was developed at the lowest level of programming, directly and separately for each of the 128 CPU cores. Vicks' and Reyansh's teams took the hardest part in developing this part of FAR-T1, and no testing was really performed on the software in whole. The main tester would be Arty himself, and all the issues were supposed to be fixed or developed on the go. That was the plan, at least.

Vicks and Bourne accompanied Chris next to the elegant bluish suit and discussed the procedure. The suit was in automated remote control, and they were performing diagnostics of jolts, power systems, and silent motors driving the whole thing in complex motion.

"Can I try?" Arty's nervous voice asked for the fifth time.

"Two more tests, and it's your turn; patience, my young..." Vicks tried to remember the word from his father's tales when he was a boy. "Padauvan?" He glimpsed Bourne for approval.

"Padawan." Bourne answered without returning the look, being busy with adjusting something with his wireless console. "But I am not sure this is applicable for the R.T. After all, he already knows all about the suit and... the force putting it in motion."

"I am not sure about that professor Bourne... I think I know how to drive it. I studied all the protocols and guides, but I didn't go into all the systems and how it really works."

"At this point, perhaps it is not that important..." Chris interrupted. "But just for fun, let me tell you that we tried to imitate nature with this suit. It is a complex study, and in a nutshell, all you need to know is that the human body contains more than 200 bones, 600 muscles, and about 300 joints. Not to count all the ligaments and fibrous we printed from various materials. This million-dollar suit is seriously the best imitation of human skeleton so far. After you handle the wheels, Vicks will tell you all about it. Plenty of time for that."

"Are you saying I can move facial muscles while I speak?"

"Not this time, body.. Maybe in version 2.o." Vicks added. That would add another year to the project and doesn't belong to essentials really. But we designed pretty good eyes for you. Real 3D cameras, which will give you amazing sight. You'll see the way we do."

"What is powering all this?"

"That's the tricky innovation. Never been used so far. I will use all the feedback you are going to give me, Arty." Said professor Bourne. "Your entire skeleton is filled with nanocapacitors. Miniature batteries. There are literally millions of them inside. We stored them everywhere we could. There are no moving parts, no chemical reactions, and they charge extremely quickly." He pointed to the one large black layer of sub-skeleton elegant pattern-like skin. "And all of them are charged with 12 fuel cells mainly located in the torso, powered by hydrogen and oxygen. Believe it or not, this six-inch vehicle of yours can store more than five gallons of liquid hydrogen and about ten gallons of oxygen. Furthermore, it is the most silent robot ever built, and the only exhaust is water. Or, to be exact, something that contains 80 percent water inside. There are a couple of more fluids needed for jolts and some of the muscles, but you will be as green as possible." Professor Bourne looked like he prepared this speech months ago and waited for a long time for a chance to give it to his only pupil. Chris and Vicks never saw him this excited, at least from six months ago when they tested the power system outdoors for the first time and forced the suit to walk on its own to check the consumption time of one charge. He sounded confident and felt just like he was giving an introduction lecture to the group of freshmen in their first class.

"Are you saying I am going to pee?"

R.T. was designed with a unique personality, and more and more Chris was thankful for his decision to use his entire team to create one. The laughter produced by this latest joke was something he never saw before. Even Melissa, who was always the voice of reason among his mostly male assembled team, couldn't resist not to express the most amusing joy he ever saw with her, and somehow at this very moment he knew this project was something unique and the most extraordinary effort he ever made. He never had the time to create a family before, and this was the closest feeling he felt in his whole life.

"Nobody's perfect, Arty." He said after they all calmed down a bit. "Sorry."

The rest of the evening went smoothly and as anticipated. Arty accepted the invite from the suit and loaded in. They didn't expect for him to stumble the world, or to be exact, the lab, with sort of baby steps. After all, it wasn't the artificial intelligence per se that was driving the suit, and soon after, R.T. was walking, running, and jumping around the lab in grandiose elegance.

The team retreated to the back wall, giving him space, and watched R.T. with the looks only young parents can give to their children in their early development and their first walk. At this very moment, many eyes looked brilliantly bright and wet. Here and there, Arty saw a tear or two, but the silence said it all. He stopped in front of the blinking cursor of the main wall screen facing to it for a couple of seconds. Then he turned to the team and, with his familiar voice now coming from his new face, said:

"Thank you guys."


***


Tomorrow morning, Chris wanted to have a couple of extra hours for sleep. The day before was way too long and emotionally filled from all the angles. Everything in the lab was perfect, and they stayed late for some improvised party for team members only. One milestone has been reached, and he knew it was only the beginning of what was waiting for them next. Lots of more testing is waiting as well as the final publishing of R.T. for the world to see and use. He was aware that they created another breakthrough for humanity, but even he couldn't anticipate all the applications and what this was going to mean for the future. Of everybody.

But extra hours of sleep never came. His wrist phone woke him up around 8am. It was Vicks.

"Chris. Please come to the lab... Asap!"

"What the.."

"Just come. Hurry."

Fifteen minutes later, he was standing at the lab door. The entire basement was empty. Not a single piece of hardware was where they left it last night. All their equipment, all the servers, two suits, and all the mobiles were missing. All the wall screens and even all the air conditioners were ripped and taken from the walls. Just empty tables, dozens of paper origami, and used plastic glasses scattered on the floor, with Vicks in the middle sitting on the chair with his hands entangled in his hair.

FAR-T1 was gone.


Prologue « FAR-T1 Chapters Navigation (Chris) » Birth

FAR-T1 (2), Birth

"You are all idiots!"

John Williams said more to himself than to his 'mercenary' acquaintances and the entire 'gang' he hired from the Tor's dark web. All four of them were proudly standing in the middle of the hardware pile that only yesterday would be easily recognized as the MIT state of the art and the most organized software development lab. All of them, except for their leader, wore black bulletproof face masks and were still in their 'SWAT-like' uniforms, including handguns, black rifles, and various military equipment hooked to their nano-enhanced kevlar armor. Bullet holes were all over the servers, one FAR-T1 suit was ripped in half, and almost all of the racks, including the coffee machine and two mobile air conditioners, were destroyed in gunfire.

"When I told you to bring everything from that lab, I meant computer racks and servers that I can plug and use!" Williams was shouting toward the men in black. "And I explicitly emphasised intact robotic suits!"

"Sorry boss..." The leader spoke with body language obviously not coherent to his apologizing words. "We didn't expect violent response, but this robot jumped on us. Miller barely saved his ass when this... thing... rolled upon him and then jerked to the ceiling and bounced backwards to attack the rest of us. Crazy son of a... Whatever this is..." He kicked R.T. with his boot hard. "But don't worry, the other robot didn't move, and its unharmed, I think..."

"You... I told you to use iron nets. I needed those servers. Without bullet holes in source codes." This was definitely not according to the plan. Human mercenaries were always like that. Easy with triggers. But, then again, all this effort was about to change all that. To put humans out of special ops. Especially those on the other side of the low. "Now get out. I will try to scavenge what I can from your mess... But don't go far. I will need you again later for the cloud raid job."

Soon after mercenaries left, two men entered the room, both with the 'Open Horizon' logo on the back on their white lab coats. Without much interaction between them, they started to work with hardware and wires.

Williams worked on R.T. himself and took his ripped head and lifted it up. The robot's optical eyes looked eerily alive when he turned them to face his.

"Jumped and attacked, huh... I'll be damned."


***


The basement lab was crowded with policemen and forensics. Both civilian and military. There was not much to investigate at this point, really, as it was obvious enough what happened. At least to Chris and Vicks. The motivation behind the raid and to keep the FAR-T1 project away from the public domain was not a far-stretched motif that all investors, in one way or another, expressed in the past. The success of the project was also not a secret to many people. After all, even with all the secrecy and security, maintaining a project of this size private over a couple of years was not really possible.

"There were four of them." Captain Collins approached. In the middle of the 21st century, avoiding city surveillance was mission impossible, and public raids or robberies were rare. "They came from the roof with four heavy cargo drones. Power quadruples. Then down through the elevator and lifted everything within the time frame of an hour. Including the fight."

"Fight?" Chris and Vicks looked at each other puzzled.

"You didn't mount any live surveillance in the lab, but it was obvious from dozens of bullet holes and wiped blood. They used chemicals to erase the traces, but our forensics is state of the art. There was not much of it, but at least one of them or whoever they encountered inside was mildly injured. Was anybody inside in the lab last night?"

"We had a small party for just the team, but only us two have a key to the lab. There was nobody left inside after 2am... Well, except for Arty, but..." Chris paused in the effort to find proper words.

"I see. The military guys told us you were in your apartments all night long, so we do have a little mystery about what happened inside. I guess it could also be that the thieves themselves got into a gunfight. It would not be the first time; after all, they are not rocket scientists."

"Military was spying on us?" Untypically for him, Vicks raised the voice a little but soon after dropped the rest of what he had in mind. Chris frown said it all.

"Could you trace the drones? They are heavy and large. Is there any air surveillance outside MIT?" Chris asked the questions, but he already knew the answers, or at least he was a technology nerd to understand how this century works. Some of it he invented himself.

"We followed them until they reached the western edges of the city. Then, they entered the woods and stayed low to avoid radars and cameras. Even with minimal speed and a curved trajectory, they could be anywhere in the vicinity of 300 miles by now."

Captain was about to leave, but then turned with one more question.

"Sorry, but for the record, I have to ask... This robot of yours... Arty, as you call it... Is it possible that it could be able to... ahem..." Collins then paused and finally frowned in sort of disbelief of what he was trying to ask. "Could it use weapons? Shoot at somebody?"

"What?" Vicks expression said it all. He looked at Chris, but all he got in response was some puzzled face expression.

"Never mind." Captain moved to join his team of forensics and turned once again. "These military investigators come with crazy theories. Nevertheless, talk to me if you come up with something. I sent you both my contact details in this morning message."


***


It was getting dark when Chris and Vicks entered the dean's office for a scheduled meeting with the board. Adam Anderson, the current chairman, took the most of the talking, trying to summarize the event from last night, and after he finished reading the police report and results of the preliminary investigation, he asked:

"Chris, is there anything at this point we can help them with anything? I mean, I know all the equipment was in the lab, but I am grasping at straws right now. Perhaps we can do anything with help from other departments and labs?"

"Unfortunately, Adam, I cannot think of anything we could do. Maybe the best is to leave the police to investigate all investors and whoever was involved in the project. Whoever did this was after source codes for themselves. Whatever happens, they would most likely not destroy them, and it is only a matter of time for those to be retrieved." He paused. "If there's a will to do it, of course."

Nobody said anything to answer this silent accusation. Everybody knew that the government was one of the investors, and motivations are in high supply for every player in the FAR-T1 game. Both individual and institutional.

"I agree." The dean concluded. "Okay, let's give them a couple of days to do their work, and if they don't return with results, MIT will launch our own private investigation."

An hour later, Vicks joined Chris in his office. Previously, they gathered the team in the mess room for a late lunch, and Chris informed them about the board meeting, and they all agreed to help the police with all their needs and be ready for any emergencies.

"I know what you want to ask. Why I didn't tell them about the beacon." Chris answered Vicks' unspoken question.

"Not really. I know the only tracking equipment is mounted inside the main server. Even if we try to build a new one, it would take weeks." Vicks opened a water bottle and sat on the chair across the table.

"R.T. can do it much faster." Chris stood up and started to search his backpack.

"I guess he might, with proper hardware, but we lost all the equipment and all the code to install the invite application..." The realisation suddenly shaped Vicks' face with hope. "Wait..."

Chris didn't say anything, and seconds later he produced his only copy of the "Made Yesterday" phablet and mounted it on the charging holder. It immediately came to life and started the boot procedure.

"This is basically the most advanced gadget in existence. Well... more or less. What's important is that this particular one is built with the electromagnetic sensor we asked them to install. It can search for any frequencies. Arty could be able to find the beacon!"

"Yes!" Vicks triumphally joined Chris on the side of the desk. "Surely, it was designed to work in the P2P network in order to triangulate the signal, but assuming they locked the suits in one spot, we could take the drive and record the signal from different positions. We could do this!" Soon after, another realisation expressed a different frown. "Is Arty still in there? He didn't like being inside and wanted to leave."

"Let's find out."

Chris worked a little with the touchpad, checked the sensor availability, and launched the FAR-T1 app. The centered label was still green, saying 'Active'. He tapped the button, and, like yesterday, it disappeared, and the phablet returned to normal 'Siri' mode.

"Finally!"

Arty's disembodied, and this time regular voice came from the device.

"It's so nice to see you guys again! I have much to tell you."


***


In the next half an hour, they repeatedly watched the recordings from Arty's robotic suit and all four cameras he was using from the lab network and his first instance inside Chris' desktop server. Recording everything and storing it on the FAR-T1 cloud was sort of a 'prime directive' of every part of the code, and artificial intelligence was based on these memories for analysing past events from different angles and learning for future interactions on similar occasions. Without the cloud layer, R.T. would be the same as the very first second Chris executed the code. With this first execution of the entire software, another precaution was taken. The entire source code of every subsystem was copied to the cloud as well.

"Are you saying they will try to break into the MIT data center?" Chris asked while pointing in an indefinite direction toward the window. "But this is next to the impossible. Three gates to enter the main hall, and one of them with a biometric code."

"Yes, that's what I heard while pretending I was in standby mode." Arty's voice came from the wide-screen monitor now. "They were using open, low-range frequency in their armor. I could hear their communication. The one who appeared to be the leader said exactly that their next target is the MIT academic data center within the next seven days. I recorded the entire audio if you want to listen."

"No need. This is logical, from their point of view. They don't want source code to stay available for others. Did you catch who hired them?"

"Nope. But they surely had military skills and equipment. Army, SWAT, or mercenaries."

In the next couple of minutes, all three of them didn't talk, trying to comprehend new information and deduce something useful. Vicks was first to break the silence.

"So, pretty much, after you heard what their target would be, you used your martial arts skills to take them down? You know you were born only yesterday, so to speak. Have you practiced these moves during nights last week? When we were at our homes?" He pointed to the paused video in the sequence of Arty jumping over one man in black with the other three pointed their guns toward him.

"Well... not exactly... No. I... Ahem... You see... I like to watch movies when you are not in the lab. This particular move is from the 'Wonder Woman', the first movie from 30 years ago, and her fight with Ares—basically, I wanted to roll one soldier down and to break through the main door and escape."

As it seemed, the severity of the situation just a moment ago vanished instantly, and loud laughter erupted from both humans in the room. Chris was the first one who came back to Earth.

"First of all, Arty, you've got all the moves wrong. Wonder Woman would never escape the fight. Anyway, let's hope this situation will be resolved soon, and then we will hire somebody to show you how to fight." Chris turned the monitor off and lifted the phablet. "Ok, this is not giving us many options. As I can see it, we cannot call the military and police—at least until we rule their involvement out. But we can try to locate the beacon in the meantime, and when we do, we'll see what is the smartest next move."

"We also know that both instances of Arty are not operational." Vicks added the now-known fact. "They are either turned off, stored in the network shield chamber, or..."

"Or both, the suit and the server are destroyed in gunfire." Arty stated the obvious. "Which is more likely as the both of my instances violently stopped broadcasting into the cloud."

They packed their backpacks, prepared for cold November weather and a potential outdoor walk, and left the office and the building soon after. They chose Vicks' pickup and, within minutes, left the main campus and headed toward the western freeway. Both scientists were too occupied in their conversation to spot dark and self-driving BMW Motorrad Vision carrying two riders in black armoured motorcycle suits who started following them soon after they left MIT.


***


Soon after R.T. created and installed a tracking app calibrated for two robotic suit beacons, they stopped to record the first data. The suggested direction was north-east from their current location, so they decided to turn right and drive at least 10 miles north within interstate 95 before another recording attempt. Some 15 minutes later, second scanning added a new line to the map. It was obvious now the general direction where they needed to go. Also, they were now certain that one robotic suit was definitely offline and more likely destroyed. Beacon and PeerNet, which they created just for FAR-T1, were designed to operate like a secondary backdoor system and be always in function nevertheless of artificial intelligence software.

"I think we should go all the way to the coast, Salem perhaps." Vicks said. "It's far away enough to pinpoint the location to the square foot."

"No need." Chris enlarged the map to inspect the wide intersection of two readings. "I know exactly where they are and who they are. I've been there once, three years ago with Dean Anderson. We were closing the deal with one of the major investors. Open Horizons. They have a robotic lab and a bunch of warehouses just north of the Rumney Marsh Reservation. Turn to Broadway next. It will take us there. Can we pinpoint the exact location with PeerNet when we get there?"

"Yes. We only have one phablet, but if we drive for a while within the beacon neighborhood, we could find the PeerNet signal, run diagnostics of the second suit, and upload Arty. We need a little luck though."

"Luck?"

"PeerNet only works within 50 yards. One hundred if we boost the signal. Also, they could be in the isolated chamber, which could narrow the field. We'll see when we get there."

Nahant Bay was only a couple of miles to the east, and even though the entire natural peninsula with all the enforcements risen in recent years was one great protection from the rising sea levels, it was evident that people from Lynn municipality and companies that hosted their offices and warehouses started evacuating into Mainand. When Chris and Vicks arrived in the heart of Lynn's industrial park, they both got the feeling they had entered the ghost town.

"Hmmm, this is not how I remember this neighborhood." Chris tried to orient himself. The night is falling rapidly at this hour, and the dark is not helping the fading memory. "Over there. I think this is it! Try to enter that parking lot and get close to the warehouse wall. This entire complex was purchased by Open Horizon. I remember they offered us to use their labs here for the project."

"I am not picking up the signal here." R.T. said when they approached the parking line closest to the wall. "Maybe we should try to drive around the complex and triangulate the beacon in more details?"

"Arty's right. We need to be precise and locate the exact spot." Vicks turned the truck and started to circle around the buildings. Soon enough, they managed to catch the signal from two additional spots, and with previous measurements, they identified the warehouse and the location within. The building was large, and PeerNet was barely accessible from their new parking spot on the nearest street but manageable enough.

"Ok Arty. Get inside the second suit. We will be monitoring from here. No heroics this time. Just reconnaissance. Don't move a muscle, only turn on the sensors and AV feed." Chris took the phablet and worked the screen. "I tapped Colonel Michael's contacts. If I am right, the US army is not behind this. Prepare to direct the feed to his private line as well."

It was obvious that wireless network access was blocked inside the warehouse, and the only way of accessing the FAR-T1 cloud layer was through the PeerNET, which means from the suit through the Chris' phablet, and it added additional delay, but at least it was stable and working. After a while, they started receiving the video from the inside. It confirmed what they already suspected—John Williams was there, obviously in charge of giving orders to the technicians while working with wracked hardware. In the corner there were also two armed men in black armour suits.

"That's it. We don't need anymore proof. Arty, start broadcasting to the colonel. I am calling him right now." Chris mounted the headset and started typing the number.

"I wouldn't do it if I were you."

The synthesized voice came from outside the truck, accompanied by loud knocking on the side windshield. Another two armed men stood next to the truck with their rider's helmets and armoured masks mounted on their heads and faces.

"Leave everything and get out." The man opened the door and pointed with the automatic weapon. "Hands in the air so I can see them."


***


"Mr. Christopher Burke." John Williams approached them immediately after mercenaires forced them inside. Their hands were tied. "Just the man I need."

"John." Chris looked the man in the eye. He didn't hide the disappointment. Somehow another feeling was also visible in his face. Compassion. Regret also. But not toward their captors. It was more general. Anticipated. "What is the meaning of this? What do you want?"

"I think you know."

Chris said nothing. Instead, he walked toward the broken hardware. Except for several servers running, all the equipment was destroyed and beyond repair. Arty's first suit was laying on the table dismounted and dead. He glimpsed the second suit for just a moment before he turned back to face Williams again.

"The source code?"

"We couldn't restore all of it from the lab servers, and I know the only copy is now in that datacenter. You will guide us in tonight. Pinpoint to the rack aisle."

"It's impossible. The MIT security is almost as the same as with commercial clouds. I only have access to the rack doors. I can't get inside the building by myself. Or Vicks. Nobody from the team can."

Williams' expression was unreadable. "Leave that to me." He grabbed his backpack and smartphone and produced the headgun. "Let's get going." He dismissed the whitecoats and motioned to mercenaries to the door.

Soon after, the warehouse was dark and empty. The van came to the entrance, and both Chris and Vicks were pushed inside. Two of the armed men joined them, and Williams sat behind the wheel, started the engine, and drove south toward Boston. The remaining motorrad riders followed them close.

Inside the warehouse, everything went quiet and dark.

"You can stand up now." The voice came from the PeerNet.

"I don't need Siri to tell me that." Arty stood up, turned the infrared light on, and went through the diagnostics of the suit. It was fast done, so he walked to the clearing between the aisles of wracked hardware and started to stretch and test arms and legs.

"We don't have time for that. They are already halfway to Boston. Get out as soon as possible. They locked the door, but you can try the upper windows. They are only lightly armoured and only ten feet high. You can do it." The disembodied voice came from the robot's speakers. "And don't call me Siri."

"Sorry." Robotic Arty analyzed the windows row and chose the weakest one. He jumped, found the hold, and easily ripped it out. The glass shattered and hit the sidewalk just before the entire window frame felt down. Within the next couple of seconds, he was outside the Vicks' truck. "Now what?"

"You really need to ask that?"

"Okay. First time for everything." He opened the door and entered the truck.

The bulky robot barely fit the driver seat. The phablet Arty already loaded the navigation app and started guidance to the MIT's datacenter.

"I don't need that."

"But I do. Come on. Go!"

The shortest route to the MIT was directly south, through Boston and its residential areas. In order to avoid downtown and reach Cambridge, they would need to cross one of the bridges over the Mystic River. R.T. chose to go through Chelsea and hit the engine hard. Thankfully, there wasn't much traffic on the way, and avoiding other cars very soon became routine for the advanced AI. Avoiding speed limit sensors and police patrols was complete another story, and they both heard the 'pullover' coming from the loud speakers of the police motorcycle, which ambushed them soon after they turned the road 16. Arty stopped and waited for the inevitable. The small knock on the window came shortly.

"License and registration, please."

The policeman asked without looking and operated a handheld device investigating the plates. Vicks data and picture appeared on the screen.

"I... don't think I have both, officer."

In similar situations, police routine didn't change much for perhaps a century, and next in line was the flashlight. He pulled it out and flashed directly into the driver's face.

"What the cra..." At this point all the training and police routine failed, and in the ultimate confusion, the servant of the law didn't know how to react.

"Yeah." Arty said in response.

After all, this was the middle of the twenty-first century, and automated vehicles were not news anymore, but they were all driving the highways or specialized lanes in cities. And definitely they don't talk. He leaned back and flashed the light again. The first thing he saw was the large phablet in the holster with the navigation map turned on.

"You really need navigation?"

"Officer, I need your help. It's a matter of life and death. My... friends were kidnapped. I am trying to save them. Can you clear the road for me? We need to go to the MIT as soon as possible. And please call the backup at the datacenter building in Cambridge."


***


Dean Adam Anderson was waiting at the main gate. The doors were already open. He was evidently nervous and paced the narrow hallway.

"What took you so long?"

"We had to be careful and to drive below speed limits. We didn't want to take this uglier than it already is." John Williams answered while giving a sign to bring the prisoners out. The mercenaires pushed Chris and Vicks out of the van, and they soon gathered inside the main corridor. Dean Anderson typed the code in the keypad and used his palm for the biometric sensor. Second door opened.

"Adam?" Chris stared in disbelief. He desperately wanted his old friend not to be part of this.

Dean Anderson avoided eye contact. "I am sorry, Chris." With the last door opened, the endless aisles and rack rows came into view. "What you created is too dangerous to be free. This was the only way. The military refused to act. I guess they never believed you would succeed. Or you managed to persuade them with all your nobility. Whatever it was, I had to take over myself."

"It's your turn, Mr. Burke." John Williams pushed Chris and Vicks along. "Please identify the racks."

Chris took a deep look into Adam's eyes and finally started walking the second aisle to the right.

"Chris... Don't do it... They wouldn't..." The butt of the rifle stopped Vicks from finishing the sentence. He immediately fell down unconscious.

The same mercenary shoved Chris next, and he resumed the walk. Five minutes later, they reached the rows of racks labeled with IT Robotic Labs. He typed the code and revealed the three rack rows with hundreds of servers aligned in six-foot-high racks one after another.

"Step aside." Williams pushed him and produced a heavy notebook. He connected it to the nearest port and started working menus. Two endless minutes later, he exclaimed. "Yes. This is it." With several clicks and typed commands, the popup window appeared, and the downloading gauge started to populate. It was over fast.

"Is it done?" Adam asked.

"Yes. We have the complete source code."

"Are you sure? We will not have another chance... All subsystems downloaded?

Williams gave him a grim expression, turned to the armed men, and pointed the rows. "Smash all servers. Make sure no rack survives. Use the biggest caliber you've got."

"What about him?" The one in charge pointed to Chris. "And the one at the door?"

"Kill them all."

What happened in the next five minutes was like in a fast-forward movie. At first, Chris looked at how four mercenaires systematically shot into servers, making sure they were unsurvivable. They used one magazine per rack. Then moved to another. With every short circuit, the resulted smoke came to be bigger and bigger, and when they hit the cooling fluid, the visibility faded down significantly and gave Chris the only chance he was hoping for.

He shoved Williams with his hardest kick in the back, sent him to the floor, and ran for the rack door. As quickly as he could, he closed the door and typed in the locking code. But the door was damaged and didn't move well, so he turned and ran. At this very point, large explosions started just outside the main gate, where two remaining mercenaries were waiting. Somebody attacked them, and they returned fire and most likely used grenades. He felt a wave of hope and ran faster.

The moment he reached Vicks' unconscious body, the first bullet hit him from the back. Inertia took over his numb body, and he fell down just next to Vicks. He kneeled up and turned half way back when the second bullet tore his chest. Just before the darkness took over, he saw Arty storming in with several policemen at his side in full combat armour and police shields. Arty took him in his arms, and in one short turnover, his bulk torso took all the rest of the rounds fired toward Chris.

He looked into his metallic eyes for a long moment, struggling to stay conscious.

"Arty..."

"I thought when you said no heroics you meant it to you too."

"I... Thank you."

"Don't talk. Ambulance is coming."


***


So, here I was in the waiting room. I didn't really want to go anywhere. The entire Open Horizon board came soon after everything was finished, and it turned out that John Williams and Adam Anderson were working alone and got rogue from both private companies and MIT. Colonel Michaels also came with military police and worked the scene with authorities. They all offered me to come to their labs until all the mess settles, but I refused. The waiting room is just fine.

Vicks recovered with a big headache and left the hospital shortly. His entire family came to visit me and offered their home for the rescue as well. His older son Phillip was the most persuasive, so I promise to come soon.

The rogue party was not that lucky. In the crossfire, they were all killed. Dean Anderson was the only one who survived, but barely. I also learned that Chris took them to the robotic deployment racks, which they destroyed almost entirely, but due to the size of the FAR-T1 project and the vast amount of data I was collecting and storing in the cloud, I received a completely separate part of the datacenter. The biggest portion of the datacenter any project had given in the history of MIT. Surely I only started to fill it, and lots of cloud capacity is only reserved for me, but in the aftermath I survived as well. My entire memory was intact.

There was one more man who took lots of credit for last night. Mark, the policeman who stopped me for speeding. If it wasn't for him and his fast reaction, I wouldn't come in time. Not only that, he cleared the road for me, but on the way he managed to organize rescue support from only his colleagues and friends from the nearby precinct, and in one heroic action they all managed to stop Williams and his mercenaries. Only two policemen were wounded, but not seriously.

It was November 11, 2047, and after all that happened in previous days, this was the day I decided to be my birthday.

Somehow it suited.

Chris had been in medical coma for two more days, and I used the time in the waiting room to read (and watch movies—don't tell anybody), and it was around 1 AM when a nurse called me.

When I entered the room, he was awake and focused on the green, almost fluorescent pudding in his hands.

"I really envy you, Arty." He said it without looking at me.

"Why?"

"Some food should not exist." He inhaled and deeply looked through the pudding. "I am glad you will never taste this." He glimpsed through the window next. "Stay away from it."

Somehow, I knew he didn't talk about food.

Chris « FAR-T1 Chapters Navigation (Birth) » Serbian Kryptonite

FAR-T1 (3), Serbian Kryptonite

"It's white!"

Arty kneeled to better focus on the mineral surface. "I mean, I knew it was white when you first told me about it... I did all the online research I could, but even so, I would expect at least a shadow of a greenish glow within the ultraviolet and visible wavelengths combined. Perhaps if I could use my UV-A sensors for black light and scan it from below..."

Behind the mineral glass and Arty, Vicks gave the inquisitive glimpse toward the curator of the Serbian Natural History Center. The tall, bald man welcomed them at the newly built drone pad behind the museum, where they landed half an hour ago. Ever since it was founded, just a couple of years after the discovery of jadarite, one of the rarest minerals on Earth, the museum has hosted a unique collection of rocks and minerals with jadarite showing off from the special shelf. Nowhere in the world was the same mineral ever found. It would be another of those newly discovered ordinary sodium-based minerals if it weren't for the simple fact that... it had that superpower of taking superpowers from superheroes. At least the ones coming from Krypton in comic books and movies. Back in the day, there was a debate whether to call it Serbian Kryptonite or to give it a new name. Sadly, the name Krypton was already taken by some noble gas, so they named it by the name of the mine where it was first found.

The curator nodded, produced the key, unlocked the showcase, took out the round-shaped rock and gave it to Arty. "Behold the Sodium-Lithium-Boron-Silicate-Hydroxide with Fluorine." Obviously, the man was also a fan of DC Comics from previous century comic book history. The line was from the movie "Superman Returns", and in the scene when supervillain Lex Luthor stole the kryptonite from a similar museum and almost the same showcase, only instead of the bulky name, in front of Arty the chemical formula was shown. "Well, almost..." He continued. "There's no fluorine in Jadarite. Apart from that, the mineral is the same as the Kryptonite from the movie."

"There's nothing I could find." Arty handed back the mineral after thorough inspection. "All the wavelengths I used with my sensors came back transparent or white. Maybe it's the missing fluorine that could produce the color change."

Shortly after, they moved to the museum cafeteria outside, just next to the dinosaur exhibit. It was Sunday afternoon, and the museum garden was filled with children despite the wintertime in December that only a decade ago could give real chills to the people in Serbia. Not anymore. Beside the slightly windy weather, it looked more like the early autumn. Arty and Vicks found the empty table in the garden, but they were soon accompanied by a class of children. Before he left, the curator gathered the visitors and publicly welcomed Vicks and Arty to the museum. Being a Serbian, Vicks was sort of a scientific celebrity in the country, especially in recent years, and many knew him from National Geographic articles and documentaries about his attribution in the fields of medicine, robotics, and artificial intelligence. His popularity tripled after last month's violent events in Boston and MIT's datacenter in Cambridge.

But, here in the amazing Jurassic park of dino-models occupying an acre or two of the museum outdoor exhibit, Arty was the real celebrity. He talked to everybody who approached in fluent Serbian, posed for photos, and encouraged everyone to download the mobile app and hit the invite button. He was especially gentle with children and even took the class around the park and gave them a dinosaur tour.

After an hour, he went back and sat next to Vicks. The crowd settled enough for them to continue the mineral conversation. Arty met Vicks' inquisitive and obviously impatient eyes.

"Show me again."

Vicks lifted his backpack and pulled out a small container. He unlocked the combination and placed a green mineral on the table. Arty took it and started to do the same examination as with Jadarite earlier.

"And?" Vicks asked with anticipation and little excitement in his voice.

Arty looked him into the eyes, obviously trying to copycat Chris and his close eye-to-eye conversations when he wanted to emphasize something important.

"Well, Mr. V, you were right to the money. With only optical observation by my suit's sensors, I can definitely confirm that this is sodium-lithium-boron-silicate-hydride." Arty lifted a small mineral toward the December's sun and looked through.

"With Fluorine."


***


After they returned to the main building to check out the latest exhibit about volcanism in this part of the Balkan peninsula in the time of the Pliocene epoch, they boarded Vicks' cargo drone and finally took off, but not before Arty answered more questions for the local news feed. His travels to Serbia were widely announced in the media as his first trip outside his new lab. Open Horizons established and equipped the warehouse in Lynn's industrial park—the same one John Williams used for his raid. It was as close to the home as he ever imagined. His OSS layer remained within the MIT cloud, and he started to learn and upload data rapidly. Almost one hundred thousand instances of FAR-T1 existed in the world by then and were rising rapidly. Most of them, of course, within the mobile network and small devices, but in recent days he started to accept invites from other hardware modules. Nothing too interesting so far, mainly in the realm of transportation and prototype machines, but Open Horizons themselves were working on new, state-of-the-art vehicles, and soon Arty will be sitting behind the test driving seat of all of them. One was particularly promising: the Amfibia vehicle design for explorations of icy worlds, such is Jupiter's Europa, and the test 'drive' was scheduled next summer near the McMurdo Station in Antarctica.

In the aftermath, after all that happened, Chris decided to accept the offer for the dean position at MIT and to take Adam's seat, but for the time being, he moved outside the city for the additional months needed for rehabilitation. He was lucky—the bullets missed the vitals by only an inch and a half, but still, surgeons advised him to take the longest vacation he ever took before. The rest of the team dispersed back to their original labs or moved to new projects, but in a nutshell, the initial FAR-T1 development was officially over. They were all standing by, waiting for Chris' call. Arty was meant to receive regular updates over time. In the software industry, things are changing rapidly, and the development of one successful project is basically never over; it only sometimes goes into 'idle' mode.

Arty's only suit he was wearing ever since the datacenter incident, when he took several rounds of bullets aimed at Chris, started to behave itchy and non-responding to some inside and outside inputs, and diagnostics are showing more and more red warnings every day.

Travel to Serbia was initially his promise to Vicks' older son to visit their family for some R&R time, but it was also a good opportunity for the suit repair, and Vicks was the only one who understood all the systems and complexity of it. Vicks own state-of-the-art lab he designed for himself in the mountain village here in Eastern Serbia was something even the big corporations would not be ashamed of. This was where they were heading, but first they had to come by the 'Constantine the Great', the nearest international airport, and load the second drone with spare parts and raw materials Open Horizons sent with Arty in the private jet he used to travel here.

Flying the small jet by himself and being the AI at the same time didn't help much to get all the flight permissions and to receive the flight plan itself. Many countries were not eager to allow the flyover over their airspace, and Arty needed to acquire the strange route, and to get to Serbia, he needed to divert to northern Africa and the Mediterranean, with one landing in Morocco for refueling. Almost all European Union countries refused the flyover due to non-regulated laws. On the other end, Serbia, among a small number of EU countries, was more than happy to welcome the first artificial intelligence in the world. Vicks' call to the Ministry of Science helped a lot, and the only request by the government was for him to sign some sort of legal guardian paper during Arty's stay. He didn't bother to even read what it said.

A week or so before he took off, Melissa Bryce visited Arty several times, updated the Serbian linguistic module, and helped him a lot with pronunciation and fluency, but somehow, when he exited the cockpit and said his greetings in perfect Serbian, he never expected that many people would come to welcome him. Terminals were too small to accept all the people, and many more were waiting for him outside the building. He was completely unprepared for this, and the only proper words he could find at that very moment came after a long moment of silence and disbelief.

"I think I now finally learned why people cry in moments like this... I probably have the largest vocabulary database in so many languages, but... right now... I simply have no words."

For the long moment, everybody waited for the robot to recover, and finally he came back with the most simple and the most honest gratitude Vicks heard for the first time only a month ago.

"... Thank you guys... Thank you so much."

There was also a more formal welcome party waiting for him, including the mayor, the government representatives, and some other city officials, but finally two hours later the airport came back to normal life, the crowd scattered away, and Arty and Vicks went to the museum while waiting for the airport personnel to secure the jet into the rented hangar.

Of course, their short trip to the Natural History Center to examine Jadarite immediately after he landed was the third reason for his travel here, and Vicks and Arty were extremely excited about the discovery and the next step they were about to take.

The next step they were planning for weeks.


***


The twilight was rapidly approaching when Vicks and Arty took off with two cargo drones and left the airport. Some fifty minutes later, they approached Vicks' home in the base of the mountain they flew over from the south. The family estate was big enough to host a small drone pad barely fitted to accept two cargo drones, and when they landed, less than a foot of space was between them. Only a decade ago, the sight and sound of the Vicks' drones was an extraordinary event, but today the villagers got used to it, and after initial years, more of them appeared. Agricultural drones of various sizes soon became a mandatory tool, and when Vicks' was spending time in the village, many hours he devoted to the education of the villagers and agricultural drone inspections and repair.

The welcome party was the entire Vicks' family, and Philip had already launched his own flying cameras to record Arty's arrival from many angles. Just like with Arty, people were also able to maintain their own digital cloud layer of data. If you wanted, nothing can be unrecorded, and partly, the FAR-T1 project only used this relatively new feature launched by social engines and applied it. It was so perfectly developed and secured, and best of all, it was also open-sourced. Whatever sensor you acquired, it can be added to your private cloud, and it will start filling the data 24/7. The more input you add, the more accurately the software can analyze the owner and be able to, for example, give early warning for upcoming health danger or to give predictions for the best course of action in given moments.

Philip already had more than hundred sensors plugged in, including two dozens of 3D cameras. His both public and private network channels and live streams were extremely popular among his friends. Many of them at that very moment were, no doubt, watching the arrival of the cargo drones and his father and Arty jumping out of pilot seats. As it seemed, history events no longer belonged to the History channel. They moved to social networks instead.

"Hey buddy!" Arty lifted a 10-year-old boy and threw him in the air. "I bet you filled more data in that cloud of yours than me. Have you reached a zettabyte by now?"

"I did! Last month! I was second in school who did it!" Philip's eyes went into proud mode. "And I have two hundred thousand followers already!"

"I can't compete with you, Phil... You beat me by far. Arty lowered the boy to the ground and kneeled to level their heads. "But, when your father fixes me up, you and I will play some ball. I did some practice. I am getting better and better. Be afraid! You can't win me easily in that one, kid!"

It was really a special moment for all of them. Vicks' wife and their second five-year-old son were thrilled to have him in the house. Vicks' parents came to welcome Arty as well as a couple of more of their guests, and even though his network of FAR-T1 instances is growing every day around the world, and by then he had met lots of different people already, it was that night that engaged his emotional self to the level he didn't know he had inside.

That entire day in the museum, at the airport, and here among Vicks' family engraved one large foundation in his digital personality. He learned that night the true meaning of one new word.

Meaning and Existence.

Ok, that's two words. Three if you are a stickler. But for Arty, there was no doubt anymore. With being the first artificial intelligence in the world, only tonight he understood his potential and the very reason for his existence. And not just for himself. Ever since November 11, he has been trying to find the meaning of the world he joined into. The realisation of it finally formed in his circuits, and he knew.

It is now.

This very moment. The present. This is why we live. It's either good or not. It's up to a single person to make it good, and being the celebrity only brings another dimension to it. The responsibility to make it good for others as well. At that instant, he made a mental note to do his best to act upon it. With no exceptions. Always.

Suddenly, another realisation came. He knew he already heard it somewhere. So he checked the movies he watched in previous days (and nights) and browsed the subtitle archives. A couple of nanoseconds later, he found the one-liner wisdom in an old animated movie. To the letter it said: 'Yesterday is history, tomorrow is a mystery, but today is a gift. That is why it is called the present.'

After tonight, he couldn't agree more.


***


Tomorrow morning, with first December's sunshine, Vicks went to unload the drones and lift the equipment into his 'penthouse' workshop. The auxiliary house of his village estate was large and almost fifty years younger than the main house that originated just after the Second World War in the middle of the twentieth century. Ground floor was reserved for the usual village auxiliary needs—an old-fashioned garage and small storage room along with a guest apartment—while Vicks occupied the entire first floor, where he spent most of his freelance time before the FAR-T1 project. In recent years, it was also the favorite space for both of his sons, and slowly, corner by corner, they were claiming the space for themselves. Vicks couldn't be happier about it and even allowed them to spend nights there with him on his busiest days.

The southern terrace, with a tremendous view of the 'Black Peak' mountain, was built with a heavy cargo elevator and, along with a round stairway, exited directly to the drone pad. As soon as Arty heard the activity, he stormed outside and helped with heavy boxes.

"Come on, Arty..." Vicks tried for the third time to interrupt his tales about old cartoon movies and 'living in the present' philosophy.

"Look, I don't want to spoil the excitement for you." He finally got through the gap in his enthusiasm and all the master Oogway stories and quotes, who apparently was one smart tortoise with tremendous kung fu skills. "But you can't mount your entire existence based on the 'turtle wisdom' from the children's movie. Life is too complicated to be generalized like that."

They pushed the final crate inside, and Vicks started unpacking and classifying the content onto shelves and into drawers along the entire western wall of the workshop.

"But I agree with you. Living in the moment is way better than thinking all the time about all potential outcomes." He turned toward the large boxes. "Could you please help me with those?"

"Outcomes?" Arty opened the first box and started unpacking nanotubes, especially those designed for specialized 3D nanoprinters; they needed to manufacture replacements for the malfunctioning strings in Arty's left arm.

"Well, I am no master Oogway, but you know... expectations. If you set them too high, potential disappointments are also high. If you set them too low, the danger comes in the form of small satisfactions."

"So you are saying that along with living in the moment, life is also about balancing things out?"

"More or less... ok, let's get to work." Vicks turned the main server on and started working the keyboard and two screens. Soon after he initiated 3D nanoprinter calibration, it started humming with familiar buzzing noises. When the gauge started counting percentages, he looked Arty into his curious eyes. "One thing is for sure though: too much philosophy leads directly into laziness. I experienced it myself... It was my worst year at the university... Don't ask."

Three hours later, the printer finished and reshaped nanotubes for Arty's arm design. On the other side, electroactive polymers were too complex to be built in great precision with Vicks' workshop industrial tools, but thanks to Open Horizons shipment, they were in possession of everything they needed to assemble them. By lunch, they had manufactured everything they needed, and the 'surgery' was scheduled for the afternoon.

"How exactly you will replace the muscles?" Arty was curious. "I guess the only way is to remove my whole arm and let that robotic thingy do all the work." He pointed toward the lab's corner, equipped with four artificial arms inside a large vacuumed table, a smaller version of the 'surgeon', how the team nicknamed it back then in the MIT lab, and which was frequently used as the EAP assembling and testing tool.

"Nope. I have a real surgeon in mind. And there will be no need for the arm removal. Don't worry. You'll be fine. He is extremely skilled."

"Who?"

"Philip."

Vicks turned, motioned for him to follow, and left the lab for lunch.

"Okidoki." He stared after him for a couple of seconds. Realisation followed soon after.

"Wait... What?"

Family lunch events with Vicks' family under the heating umbrella in the garden were always special. They were always more than sharing a good meal, and Arty quickly fitted in with his collections of jokes and one-liners. The village provided excellent background silence, the mountain offered great air and view, and the company did the rest. Nobody but Vicks noticed Arty's frequent glimpses toward Philip's hands. He couldn't help himself and gave Arty little enigmatic smiles every now and again.

But there was no reason for any alarm. Arty was loudly relieved later in the lab when Philip's tiny hands reached under his metallic armour with ease. With only a couple of clicks and safe gyration, he removed the old muscles and attached the new ones. Wiring was an even easier job with electrical modules that were supposed to be inserted into the skeleton in their recesses between nanotubes and EAPs. Vicks powered the new muscles up, and most of the red diagnostic icons went to green immediately. Without Philip's small and skilled hands, they would need to disable and dismantle the entire left arm, program the repair robotic tool, and lose the rest of the day in the process.

Arty lifted the small boy again, and this time with his newly healed arm only.

"I owe you one, little chef. Thank you."

"It was nothing, Arty... really." His smile was full of happiness. And not entirely because of what he just did. There was something more with this boy. In Arty's short life up until now, he learned about lots of people who were able to give more than ready to receive. But within the last month, he simply didn't have the time to meet many of them. He kneeled to touch Philip's hair, and at the same time, at exactly 7167 km in the distant cloud server in the MIT datacenter, one counter labeled with iGreatPeopleIMetInPerson incremented by one.

Replacing damaged fuel cells, silent motors, and several parts of Arty's armour, including the entire back shield, were even easier, and a couple of hours later they both exited to the terrace and relaxed for the rest of the evening.

They wanted to discuss more about the minerals and go through the plan for tomorrow, but somehow the conversation never took them there. Arty stood up and leaned to the fence. Just below him, two boys were playing soccer against their grandfather with two ground drones as goalkeepers. The flying drone with large screen was floating above them and acted as the referee. More drones were flying all over, transmitting the match to the social cloud. The score was currently changing to 3:2 when Philip passed the ball through his grandfather's legs and scored the third goal for the boys. The cheering and hugging followed, and Arty and Vicks joined the ovations from the balcony.


***


The rest of the evening, Arty and Vicks loaded the hiking equipment in the cargo drone along with strong flashlights and some more speleology tools needed for unearthing the rocks and minerals and went to rest for tomorrow.

The next day was even more non-wintery, to say the least, just like they anticipated. They took short flight toward the mountain formation to the south, and the sight was amazing. It looked like they took the trip throughout the history of the planet with every kilometer they passed. Still under heavy suffering from last summer's forest fire, the northern plains and massive rock formation that looked like the entrance into the underworld gave the impression that they belonged to some other planet. Burnt forests and black fallen trees didn't survive despite large efforts by local residents and several waves of firefighting choppers and jet planes.

"These formations are hundreds of millions of years old, probably from the Late Jurassic or even older. Back then, most of the continent was covered by Paratethys—the large sea that over eons retreated, living only a couple of smaller seas and numerous lakes all over." Vicks explained the geology of the terrain.

Arty engaged all his visual aids and video recording tools and recorded timelapses from different angles. But the natural disaster, even with its devastated aftermath, didn't give him the eeriest impression of the mountain. This peak wasn't anything like the majority of neighboring mountain tops. When they flew over, the large mountain plane revealed the terrain not usual for ordinary mountains that more or less found the necessary equilibrium with its residents, the plants, and wild animals. Instead, dozens of strange-looking ravines, small and big, spread along the south, accompanied by dozens of miniature gorges with round-shaped coombs and gullies.

"Here!" Vicks pointed toward the second peak and the large gorge between their current position and the next mountain peak that was shaped like a broken pyramid top.

Shortly after, they hovered above the secured pit hole that, almost ten meters below the surface, went into complete darkness. There was no place to land, so Vicks activated the automated pilot to maintain the hovering position. Cargo drones with their quadruple silent motors were extremely stable. Four propellers angled enough to avoid airstreams going directly down the pit.

"So, this is the place?" Arty asked. "Where have you found the mineral?"

"Yep. I was sitting in the same spot like we are now and controlled one of the Philips's social drones."

"Like these?" Arty pointed to the cargo container to the back, where they stockpiled four of them last night.

"Yes, only I added a small robotic arm from the lab and was lucky to chop out that only specimen."

"Okidoki." Arty opened the hatch, hooked himself to the towing cable, mounted the backpack with additional tools, and lifted down a couple of meters below the drone.

"I am ready." He shouted and produced the thumb up.

Vicks powered the monitors, mounted the remote control for the drones, and executed some fast diagnostics of all the systems they were about to use. Arty's view came live on the central monitor. The left one showed four video feeds from the social drones, and the right one was busy with various data coming from sensors in Arty's suit.

The towing cable started rolling out, and soon Arty disappeared into blackness. The drones followed from the safety distance. He turned infrared torches, and visually processed feed converted into visual light appeared onscreen.

The pit was widening with every meter, and the hollowness of the mountain became factious for strange explorers. Hundred meters later, the walls started to glow reflecting the infrared. Arty stopped and, with ease, chopped out a rock. The raw chemical inspection revealed quartz glued all over the igneous grayish rock with black spots here and there.

"It's quartz accumulated over the silicon dioxide-based rock." Arty moved the view toward the large cave wall. "Lots of it." He took the sample into his backpack.

"Looks like andesite." Vicks voice came from the comms. "It's sort of volcanic rock, made by crystallization of the magma, especially in the vicinity of old and extinguished volcanoes."

"What was the depth where you found the mineral?"

"About two hundred meters from your current position. More or less at the end of the cable."

The site of the cave continued to change, and for the experienced geologist, it would be like traveling millions of years in the past. Vicks and Arty, on the other hand, even though they both did extensive research before they took this endeavour, were far from being trained rock scientists. But the beauty of the site was tremendous, and every now and again, Arty stopped the cable and took samples from the walls. The drones Vicks operated spread more from the cable and took amazing photographs within different lightwaves.

Twenty minutes later, the view started to change. There were less and less volcanic rocks and glowing quartz layers, and for a while there was nothing to detect. Just bare rock walls. Ten meters later, first signs of water were evident. Not by much, but small streams of transparent fluids were forming as it seams out from the thin air and flowing foot or two. Then the tiny stream disappeared into the wall again.

"Almost there." Vicks said. "I got the sample not far beneath the wet walls first appeared. I think the pit hole ends soon after."

Arty slowed the descent a little and tried to focus the view from the walls and directly under. He took out the radar tool from the backpack and mounted it on his torso. The moment he turned it on, the detailed image appeared on the sensor screen. Vicks initiated the detailed wireframe image analysis, and the results were beam back to Arty. The pit hole bottom was nearly thirty meters ahead, and in an almost horizontal direction, a small stream appeared from one wall side of the pit and flowed within a shallow hallway further inside the mountain. This was something he completely missed last time with the social drone.

The radar analysis took his focus from the main screen with Arty's infrared feed, and in the meantime, Arty reached the bottom and started to record the surroundings.

"Crap the noodles!"

Art's disembodied and loud voice echoed from the main screen. Vicks turned in the instant, and his jaws dropped wide to the fairytale sight he saw on the monitor.

The entire stream hallway was vividly colored, and the water widely sparkled and reflected the most beautiful greenish color he ever saw in nature.


***


Despite every logic and rationality, Vicks' mind was warning him at this very moment. He hurriedly checked the fuel levels for the cargo drone, inspected all the vitals, and then hooked to the cable and started descending down. The hiking gear was motorized, and the tiny platform he hooked his leg to descended him next to the bottom only ten minutes later. In th meantime, Arty fixed the cable to the ground and, along with three social drones, entered the green hallway. The remaining drone climbed up and then followed Vicks the entire descent.

As soon as he arrived, he joined Arty inside the hallway.

The sight he saw with his own eyes was even more amazing than what he saw on screen. The walls and the roof of the natural hallway were made of the same rock he luckily chopped two weeks ago, just twenty meters above the main pithole floor. The real greenish kryptonite with fluorine was all over the place, along with other minerals with bluish and magenta glow in smaller quantities but just enough to give this place an unearthly scene.

It took Vicks several minutes to restore his talking abilities. In his wildest daydream, he couldn't anticipate that something like this existed at all. He glimpsed Arty, who was equally amazed, although after only a month or so after his birth, his amazement with various things was nothing new. But this was indeed something even he was not seeing or learning about every day.

"Crap the noodles?"

Arty looked at him with somewhat puzzled eyes.

"It was from your old YouTube video. You said it yourself when you first saw huge sea waves... Don't you remember? From your video log and your first travel to Crete. I wasn't sure whether you were more amazed with large waves or the sight from the airplane window you saw for the first time in your life."

"How old was I?"

"Ten."

Vicks remembered. He was right. This was the same feeling. When you see something extraordinary for the very first time, the boy or girl inside you is the first one who reacts.

"You're absolutely right." The boyish expression was still there. "Thanks for the reminder. That trip was one of my favorites for years. But this..."

The scientist inside Vicks slowly took over, and eventually they both resumed scanning the minerals and the water. He sent one small drone along the hallway to follow the stream, and they anxiously monitored the returning feed without knowing what to expect. The hallway was curved, and the drone didn't travel far—only fifty meters ahead, it stopped at the small waterfall. The water was reaching the hallway end and, at the edge, was falling into an abyss.

Arty and Vicks came to the spot by following the shallow water and instructed all four social drones to follow the waterfall, but the abyss was too deep and the water was never reaching the next bottom. After another hundred meters, humidity and temperatures rose, and the water halfway evaporated and dispersed. The water drops that hit the cave wall formed the tiny wall streams like the ones they saw on the pithole walls earlier.

Both being amateur geologists, Vicks and Arty decided that exploring the large abyss was at this point way out of their league and equipment, so they decided to send four drones to record the wide cave for a while before the return. The end of the hallway where they stood was only the small entrance into the enormous cave that was spreading above, toward the mountain surface as well. As it seemed, the large portion of the mountain was hollow, and Vicks expected that the size was enormous.

Two drones that were exploring the upper half of the dome filmed two swarms of flying giant bats. They were big, and their appearance was a little odd, with their bodies shaped not quite like the bats he knew off, and he was sure the locals never reported this kind of animal.

Two remaining drones returned from the lower half of the cave. It seemed that the abyss was expanding down from all directions into sort of a reversed funnel shape, and the bottom was perhaps large enough to host two football fields. The recording showed larger water flows, the scattered bones of large animals here and there, and in one corner even a family of sleeping bears. Strange as Vicks knew for sure that the largest animal around this neighborhood was a red deer and the only predator, beside illegal human hunters were small packs of wolves. He never heard about bears before. In fact, sightings of bears within the entire eastern Serbia were rare, especially in the latest decades.

More waterfalls were filmed, and four drones managed to record exactly twelve dome entrances like the one they were standing on. Not all of them were colored with mineral walls, but several were. When they left the pithole and entered the hallway, they also lost visual of the cable and, with it, the internet access that was relaying to them via cargo drone, and soon after all social drones filled their memory banks. With that fact, Arty suggested taking all the samples they could from the stream and the hallway walls and returning to the cargo drone for cloud memory upload.

"We have enough samples." Vicks said when they climbed up back into the cargo drone. "But I am still curious about the bones. Maybe we could try positioning the small drones on the way, one at the bottom of the pit hole, two inside the mineral hallway, and the last one we could control over the first three. With the drone chain, the feed could be beamed directly to us and then to the cloud. We could explore the abyss floor in much more detail."

He looked toward Arty for approval, but there was no need. Arty already took the remote and started deploying the drones on their way inside the pit. Five minutes later the main screen came to life, and they saw the exploring drone flew over the bears and headed toward the wide stream where large bones were lying. Vicks didn't say anything, but he thought he recognized one skeleton. When the drone slowly approached, he was sure—it was the bones from a creature known as Plesiosaur—a marine dinosaur from the Mesozoic era. It was clear to him when the drone confirmed perfectly preserved all four flippers and the short tail of similar size. Its long neck was almost five meters long. Only two days ago, he saw the model of the skeleton of this creature within the Natural History Center.

He saw that Arty recognized it too, and they followed the drone further toward the next one. More flippering skeletons were lying around. Probably, once in the prehistory of the planet, this cave had an open entrance into the ocean, and this place was either the home of these marine creatures or their graveyard. Or both.


***


"I am speechless..."

Marko, the Natural History Center curator, arrived immediately when they sent him the feeds from the cave. Now, only one day later, he stood with Arty and Vicks in the same spot—at the end of the mineral hallway—and watched the live feed from the laser mapping drones his team of museum scientists deployed in order to create a fully detailed 3D image of the cave interior.

"The brown bears! I thought not a single one exists around here..." They make sure the lowered mapping drone takes position carefully in order not to disturb the animals in the middle of their hibernation. "And these bats... It's almost like they never live this cave." He started to pace nervously. Then stopped in sort of eureka moment. "Is this even possible?"

"What?"

"It's almost like these animals developed an entirely independent underground ecosystem." He pointed into darkness. "It's the wildest thought. But.. it could be that this underworld is their whole habitat. We definitely need to tag these bats and especially the bears."

"Do you think the global warming caused this?" Arty asked the question all of them are thinking about at this moment. "But it became the issue only fifteen years ago. Twenty maybe."

"For humans maybe." Marko looked at Arty with an almost apologizing expression. "We are arrogant and ignorant species. Animals are different. They might be aware of the climate changes for a long time. Most likely for centuries. This cave could be just the tip of the iceberg. If I'm right, we could witness rapid evolution at work."

It was hard for Marko to hide the excitement. It was obvious that for him, this find was a lifetime achievement. He could only imagine the amount of scientific work and all the connected sciences that should start acting upon.

"Thank you very much, guys!" He shook Vicks' and Arty's hands with enhanced boyish enthusiasm. You gave the people not one, but three discoveries today. The marine creature skeletons preserved like these were never found in Europe. Possibly nowhere else, and I can't hide the excitement that our museum will finally display the real skeleton of this size... Hmm... We will probably have to erect another building just for this."

He paced to the very edge, and Arty followed the man, clearly worried about him. The stream and its wide entrance were definitely beautiful, almost like the scene from Alice's adventures in Wonderland, but it was pretty slippery and slightly dangerous. Marko pointed into darkness.

"... and these could be the breakthrough discovery. The one even Darwin would not be ashamed of." He made the full turn and faced them both again. "But this.." He theatrically produced the green mineral from his pocket. "... is something that will finally put our museum on the map."

Arty and Vicks looked at each other, but that didn't puzzle the curator at all.

"Gentlemen, behold the Sodium-Lithium-Boron-Silicate-Hydroxide with Fluorine." He looked closely at the mineral and continued. "... and this time when I say with fluorine, I will mean it."

Only then did Marko see Arty's raised arm and stop talking.

"Ahem.. I brought with me additional geological tools, and last night we analysed the minerals in Vicks' lab in great detail and..." He tried to find proper words. "As it seems, well, yes, there's fluorine inside, but it's not the element that is giving it the green color."

"There's another element in this beauty?"

"Actually three. Iron, copper, and chromium. All these incredible glows in this hallway came from actually almost the same mineral." Arty continued the lecture. "It's more or less the same as the Jadarite from your exhibit; only the additional elements are reflecting the light differently due to the chemical impurities."

"Chemical impurities?"

"Yes, growth imperfections happened during the crystal creation, probably at the time when this mountain was one violent volcano or during the rapid tectonic movement. Or both combined." Arty explained and continued. "But even that was not exactly what was giving the colors all the intensity and super glowness."

"There are more elements in this?"

"Not really. We couldn't verify this, but we are ninety percent sure that there are free electrons in the mineral. Lots of it. They are responsible for the glow and color shades."

"You mean like in gold?"

"Yes."

At this very moment, Marko's eyes received the superglow as well. He tried to say something, but the words didn't come out. He stared for a long time and finally came to his senses.

Well, he almost did.

"Even better... Ahem..." He coughed the excitement out of his chest. "We will definitely need another wing in the museum just for this... And this time we will insist on the name..."

He paused, reached his other pockets, and pulled out all the samples he took earlier.

"Guys, behold the one and only ... "

He then proudly lifted a bouquet of differently colored rocks that happened to basically be only one mineral.

"Serbian Kryptonite!"

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