[ Pike knows panic when he hears it, and he's used to talking it down, though the circumstances are a little unusual. He slides over to the console and opens the channel. ]
You've got command central. You're coming through loud and -- clear enough.
Trying to get the tracking signal to connect. Talk to me. What are you looking at?
Hey man - yeah, I'm not sure where we are. This is Peter from the Ketsora team - well one of the Peters from the Ketsora team -
[ More interference, along with shuffling against the mic and the odd thwipping sound of his webshooters. ]
- Gwen and I, we went through this portal thing we found and ended up somewhere else. By the way, matter displacement? So cool what the hell. Do you want the good news or the bad news first?
There's a terminal here, but we're hitting some resistance and I think it's - from the system itself. The rest of the team hasn't arrived yet but there are people here, and some of them are...I don't know how to explain it. They're going cuckoo for cocoa puffs out of nowhere - hey! You dropped this!
[ Whatever was dropped sounds suspiciously like an explosive device. ]
The Parkers. I remember. This is Pike on the line. Jim and Spock are standing by. Hit us with it.
[ Pike's voice is firm, solid, reassuring. If he's honest, it's a bit the tone his mother used to use with him when she told him he did the right thing by letting her know about a problem he was having - even when she also had no idea how to fix it. ]
A few questions for you. Is the portal still open? The people you're seeing-- are they other chosen, or are they some sort of system security feature? And how's Gwen?
[ Peter's not used to coordinating with other people. Working as a team, people having his back - in his universe, there was no one else. Just him, doing his best to keep the streets a little safer. And another voice, on the end of the line? He hasn't had someone like that around since Gwen. Suffice it to say, this is all a new experience for him, but it's - dare he say it - kind of nice not to have to deal with it all by himself? ]
No, the portal just kind of dumped us out here, everything went...white? [ The only indicator that there's exertion on Peter's side is the slight huff to his voice, so hopefully that means it's going well? ] The rest of the team hasn't come through yet. Charles, Peter, and Shinji - they were holding off the guards but they...they aren't here.
Other chosen. They're more of ours, I think. Miller and friends. But a couple people just started going nuts, and that one dude was being super weird about the terminal before he let Gwen at it... [ Peter pauses in thought, but Fandaniel did let them at it afterwards, and he wasn't trying to stop them. ] She said she saw something. A kid, begging her not to complete the reset.
Everything still white, or can you give me a visual?
[ Well, fuck. That's half the team, including the kid with the backup. Pike tries to ping a comm signal to test that theory, but doesn't get an immediate response. Could just be the ion storms that seem to love this place. ]
Nothing to worry about yet. Especially if Miller didn't go through with you at Ketsora. Time and space gets screwy around stable wormholes and matter manipulators.
[ Pike has seen enough other people fuck around and find out with semi-sentient AI to know that a sufficiently sophisticated system can manipulate, duplicate or even infect some organic matter. What a corrupted (or simply malevolent) AI could do within the confines of a simulated reality that the entity itself controlled? What it could do to the people trapped inside it? The only limit was its CPU.
They're just ants under a magnifying glass to this thing. Or, well. Spiders. He wasn't trying to do a thing here. ]
If the system is trying to prevent you from rebooting it, you're probably running up against some failsafes in its code. Or maybe in ours.
No, no, we’re good. We’re in a kind of tower…place. It’s made out of stone and seems abandoned, except for the terminal itself. Like the whole top of this place is gone, but the terminal seems pristine? We’ve got desert on one side and ocean on the other.
[ It surely can’t be near Ketsora, after the trek they made all the way out there…can it?
Luckily, the other Peter gave them the suit before he went off to be a hero, so at least that’s something? He should probably mention that, at some point. ]
Yeah, I’m not sure where they came from. Hasn’t really been a convenient time to ask - hey!
[ More thwipping and a huff of irritated air. ] You’d think someone would teach these punks some manners, oy gevalt.
Are you sure? What if it’s like…a warning sign? [ Peter doesn’t know how any of this works, but when something comes to you in the form of a child begging you not to hurt it… ] Like hostile architecture for nuclear waste. Warning us to keep out when we don’t know any better. Something about this feels…I don’t know. You guys are sure about this?
I'm sure there will be plenty of time to read them some Emily Post after you're on the other side.
[ Pike took a breath, weighing the information Peter was giving him. ]
No, I don't think so. Nuclear semiotics is a warning. It's not an attack.
[ Honestly? No. Pike wasn't certain of anything. Pike had many doubts about this place, about what it really was, and how it really worked, and who was really behind it. But a decision had to be made, and this one had the backing of his best available officers. ]
As sure as we can be under the circumstances. I've dealt with a program like this before. Same bag of tricks.
[ He sounded so confident he almost reassured himself. In a pretty unusual twist for Pike, his distrust outweighed his uncertainty. He'd watched a fledgling AI's struggle towards sentience, towards dominance. How it used false visions of familiar faces to turn them against each other in a march towards all out galactic war.
Pike didn't believe this place was what it calmed to be. He didn't believe it had good intentions. And he didn't believe that it had their interests in mind at all. It took humans hundreds of thousands of years to evolve to live in societies without constant war. Artificial sentience had barely begun that process. Who could say if it would ever get there?
Pike wasn't a big Lovecraft fan, but he understood the idea that undergirds a lot of cosmic horror. Something with immense raw power that's motivated solely by rational self-interest can be even more dangerous than someone who really wants to hurt you. At least the second guy understands that you can hurt. ]
[ If he's cracking jokes, whatever's happening must be under control...or at least that's the illusion Peter is stubbornly subscribing to. ]
I dunno man, this kind of feels like a warning.
[ But his spider senses aren't tingling, so to speak, which doesn't give Peter much room to argue it. Pike and the others - that gruff, military commander who had given them all their briefings - they knew what they were doing. Right? He's going with it, at least. ]
Really? That's kind of awesome. [ Peter doesn't know what to think about this place. Up until about a month ago, he had no idea this kind of thing was real. Taken firmly out of the world of science fiction, the idea that they're inside a computer program feels ever more far out. ] Why does everybody else get all the cool stuff? Went to my universe and all I got was an angry Russian guy in a Rhinoceros machine.
Will they go back to normal? Everybody that's been - infected with - whatever this is?
no subject
You've got command central. You're coming through loud and -- clear enough.
Trying to get the tracking signal to connect. Talk to me. What are you looking at?
no subject
[ More interference, along with shuffling against the mic and the odd thwipping sound of his webshooters. ]
- Gwen and I, we went through this portal thing we found and ended up somewhere else. By the way, matter displacement? So cool what the hell. Do you want the good news or the bad news first?
There's a terminal here, but we're hitting some resistance and I think it's - from the system itself. The rest of the team hasn't arrived yet but there are people here, and some of them are...I don't know how to explain it. They're going cuckoo for cocoa puffs out of nowhere - hey! You dropped this!
[ Whatever was dropped sounds suspiciously like an explosive device. ]
no subject
[ Pike's voice is firm, solid, reassuring. If he's honest, it's a bit the tone his mother used to use with him when she told him he did the right thing by letting her know about a problem he was having - even when she also had no idea how to fix it. ]
A few questions for you. Is the portal still open? The people you're seeing-- are they other chosen, or are they some sort of system security feature? And how's Gwen?
no subject
No, the portal just kind of dumped us out here, everything went...white? [ The only indicator that there's exertion on Peter's side is the slight huff to his voice, so hopefully that means it's going well? ] The rest of the team hasn't come through yet. Charles, Peter, and Shinji - they were holding off the guards but they...they aren't here.
Other chosen. They're more of ours, I think. Miller and friends. But a couple people just started going nuts, and that one dude was being super weird about the terminal before he let Gwen at it... [ Peter pauses in thought, but Fandaniel did let them at it afterwards, and he wasn't trying to stop them. ] She said she saw something. A kid, begging her not to complete the reset.
no subject
[ Well, fuck. That's half the team, including the kid with the backup. Pike tries to ping a comm signal to test that theory, but doesn't get an immediate response. Could just be the ion storms that seem to love this place. ]
Nothing to worry about yet. Especially if Miller didn't go through with you at Ketsora. Time and space gets screwy around stable wormholes and matter manipulators.
[ Pike has seen enough other people fuck around and find out with semi-sentient AI to know that a sufficiently sophisticated system can manipulate, duplicate or even infect some organic matter. What a corrupted (or simply malevolent) AI could do within the confines of a simulated reality that the entity itself controlled? What it could do to the people trapped inside it? The only limit was its CPU.
They're just ants under a magnifying glass to this thing. Or, well. Spiders. He wasn't trying to do a thing here. ]
If the system is trying to prevent you from rebooting it, you're probably running up against some failsafes in its code. Or maybe in ours.
no subject
[ It surely can’t be near Ketsora, after the trek they made all the way out there…can it?
Luckily, the other Peter gave them the suit before he went off to be a hero, so at least that’s something? He should probably mention that, at some point. ]
Yeah, I’m not sure where they came from. Hasn’t really been a convenient time to ask - hey!
[ More thwipping and a huff of irritated air. ] You’d think someone would teach these punks some manners, oy gevalt.
Are you sure? What if it’s like…a warning sign? [ Peter doesn’t know how any of this works, but when something comes to you in the form of a child begging you not to hurt it… ] Like hostile architecture for nuclear waste. Warning us to keep out when we don’t know any better. Something about this feels…I don’t know. You guys are sure about this?
no subject
[ Pike took a breath, weighing the information Peter was giving him. ]
No, I don't think so. Nuclear semiotics is a warning. It's not an attack.
[ Honestly? No. Pike wasn't certain of anything. Pike had many doubts about this place, about what it really was, and how it really worked, and who was really behind it. But a decision had to be made, and this one had the backing of his best available officers. ]
As sure as we can be under the circumstances. I've dealt with a program like this before. Same bag of tricks.
[ He sounded so confident he almost reassured himself. In a pretty unusual twist for Pike, his distrust outweighed his uncertainty. He'd watched a fledgling AI's struggle towards sentience, towards dominance. How it used false visions of familiar faces to turn them against each other in a march towards all out galactic war.
Pike didn't believe this place was what it calmed to be. He didn't believe it had good intentions. And he didn't believe that it had their interests in mind at all. It took humans hundreds of thousands of years to evolve to live in societies without constant war. Artificial sentience had barely begun that process. Who could say if it would ever get there?
Pike wasn't a big Lovecraft fan, but he understood the idea that undergirds a lot of cosmic horror. Something with immense raw power that's motivated solely by rational self-interest can be even more dangerous than someone who really wants to hurt you. At least the second guy understands that you can hurt. ]
no subject
[ If he's cracking jokes, whatever's happening must be under control...or at least that's the illusion Peter is stubbornly subscribing to. ]
I dunno man, this kind of feels like a warning.
[ But his spider senses aren't tingling, so to speak, which doesn't give Peter much room to argue it. Pike and the others - that gruff, military commander who had given them all their briefings - they knew what they were doing. Right? He's going with it, at least. ]
Really? That's kind of awesome. [ Peter doesn't know what to think about this place. Up until about a month ago, he had no idea this kind of thing was real. Taken firmly out of the world of science fiction, the idea that they're inside a computer program feels ever more far out. ] Why does everybody else get all the cool stuff? Went to my universe and all I got was an angry Russian guy in a Rhinoceros machine.
Will they go back to normal? Everybody that's been - infected with - whatever this is?