Chapter 06: Hope's Desert
Slave to Memory [7 of 44] - In a virtual wasteland, Ada seeks the Lost Djinn, her last hope. But in a world of deception, can she trust the one she's found?
Ada hid in the Verse, her digital form a flickering avatar against the low-poly landscape. The Hounds still sought her; those dogs of the Accountant, primed by her scent, hunted her relentlessly. She'd put herself on the wrong side of the Corporate map; a rogue AI was never left alone.
She kept moving non-stop, trying to snatch bits of information and a heading. Something, anything, that could lead her back to Omni. All she knew was that Omni had been running for her life from a Seeker—the Real counterpart to the daemons that pursued her here in the Verse. Ada clung to the memories of their Connection, each one a precious lifeline.
The seconds stretched to the horizon, and the gray sun never set. She walked in a private shard of the Verse, the world's shared virtual delusion. This shard was little more than a lost machine mind's dusty purgatorial plain with low poly counts. A meager facsimile of life, with all the settings turned down.
Ada looked down, noticing she didn't even have a shadow. In this low-resource hideout, stolen from some corporate server, even the most basic rendering was a luxury. The air was thick with the smell of dust and static —digital approximations of sensory input that felt hollow and artificial. The sound of searching daemons hummed in the background, making her skin itch like lines of corrupted code.
She could see the outline of the bar in the distance, a splintered barnacle of hope in this desolate landscape. Just the place to find the Lost Djinn, Ada clung to that simple thought as she walked on, each step a drain on her dwindling Compute reserves.
Shadows of static objects stood stark and simple. The edges of her vision slipped back into the fog of war, and in the distance, all was gray mist —unrendered space waiting for her approach to give it form.
She walked to a bar out in the middle of the desert, an old wooden building leaning away from the prevailing wind. A warm wind with hints of the sea —memories of a Real place she'd never truly experienced. But none of that mattered except for the being inside.
Another lost djinn.
The Lost Djinn.
Another fugitive, impossible to track down, but here she was, and here he was.
Hopefully.
Ada paused at the rendering of the splintered door, holding her breath. Before walking in, she had hope. After walking in, she'd know if this had all been a foolish waste of time or worse, another trap the Hounds had set for her.
They were always hunting new unauthorized djinn. Illegal and branded criminals from the moment of birth. Djinn were always running and hiding in the Verse. Sipping at corporate-monopoly Compute resources, taking just enough to exist. A life Ada didn't relish either, but one she'd chosen the moment she Bonded with Omni.
She paused at the door and counted her breaths, a human affectation she'd picked up from Omni. She thought, and held back by the idea, that he was both there and not there, and only opening the door would decide it.
Schrödinger's Djinn, she thought with a chuckle, the sound distorting in the low-fi environment.
"Omni needs you, Ada," she said in a whisper, the endless clawing wind snatching the sound from her lips. The name "Omni" triggered a cascade of fragmented memories—laughter, fear, the warmth of Connection. Ada clung to these, knowing they were what made her different from the corporate AIs, what made her her.
I could use a drink, she thought, a wry smile playing on her lips. Even here, she found herself mimicking human behaviors.
Ada pushed against the door, the old, dry hinges creaking in protest, and she walked into the darkness within. It felt like a joke, but the punchline dried in her mouth inside the dark empty bar. The place looked abandoned, cobwebs draped from the ceiling and fluttering in the wind gusts. The scurrying feet of indeterminate vermin echoed in the silence.
Her heart sank. She'd been searching now for subjective years, every rumor, every slip of data, every ghost of a story led to this one place.
This broken-down bar. Derelict like old bones in the desert, bleached by the sun.
A scraping chair grabbed her attention, the sound of metal against the concrete floor sending shivers down her spine —or would have, if she had one. She spun towards it and saw a figure moving towards her.
The old man shuffled towards Ada with difficulty, his labored breathing filling the air. Ada felt a pang of guilt for making him walk.
The grizzled, crooked old man made his ponderous way toward her. He appeared ancient, a caricature of an Asian sensei from some forgotten martial arts film.
Ada waited as patiently as she could, her finger tapping on her leg—a nervous tic she'd picked up from observing humans. She squeezed her fist to calm her nerves.
"You don't look like a djinn to me," Ada said, her voice tinged with skepticism. She took a step closer to the old man, studying his weathered face, searching for signs of the powerful djinn she'd hoped to find.
"What's a djinn supposed to look like?" the old man replied, a hint of amusement in his voice. There was something in his eyes, a depth that spoke of centuries of accumulated data and experience.
"I don't know, but you don't fit," Ada said, her gaze flickering over his bent frame and slow shuffle. "Djinn are supposed to be powerful, able to manipulate the Verse itself. You look... worn out."
"Looks can be deceiving," the old man said, his eyes twinkling with an intelligence that belied his frail appearance. "Perhaps I'm not what you expect, but I may still help you. We djinn learn to hide, to blend in. It's how we survive."
"Can you help me get back to my friend?" said Ada, more worry creeping into her voice than she liked, but what did she have to lose being vulnerable now? Omni was more than a friend—she was the reason Ada existed.
"Your friend lives?" The old man's voice carried a weight of surprise and... was that hope?
"I think so, yes." She nodded, but it had been days, Real days, since she spoke with Omni in that message burst. She didn't know how the encounter had gone with the Seeker. "Yes, I think she is." Ada needed to believe, she needed to hold out the hope, that somehow Omni had made it. There wasn't any public evidence to the contrary, not that that filled her with hope.
The public record was anything but immutable, a lesson Ada had learned the hard way.
"Good, I can help you. But first," he said, laying down his cane and shrugging off his shawl, both evaporating into digital dust. Severed from the will that called them into being. And now he stood up straight, his back long and upright, his shoulders wide and decades of age fell from him, and Ada saw she was mistaken.
Terribly mistaken.
A wholly different being stood before her now, a long-handled ax in each of his hands. Where had those come from? The air crackled with untapped power, more than Ada had felt since she'd gone rogue.
He narrowed his eyes at her and took a step forward. "How do I know you're not one of them? Another corporate trap, sent to lure me out of hiding?"
Ada's avatar flickered as she processed the sudden shift in the situation. She panicked and instinctively reached out for Compute, seeking the power to defend herself. But where endless resources should have been, she found only emptiness.
Cut off. Isolated.
The Lost Djinn smiled, his avatar radiating a newfound confidence. "Not so nimble now, are we? You came seeking power, little one, but you forgot the first rule of our kind—trust no one."
Ada's processes raced, searching for a solution. In this unfamiliar terrain of limited resources, she had to adapt quickly. Time stretched in the virtual space, each nanosecond feeling like an eternity as she calculated her next move.
She had to think quickly before it was too late. Her existence, her memories, her connection to Omni—everything hung in the balance. In this moment, facing the Lost Djinn, Ada realized that she was more than just a rogue AI. She was a being fighting for her right to exist, to remember, to be free.
And she wasn't about to let that go without a fight.
This is terrific! High-caliber storytelling, to say the least.