Files
post-self.ink/content/stories/coffee-leak.md
Madison Scott-Clary f3eee2ee15 Typesetting
2023-11-17 18:26:58 -08:00

149 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

---
title: Coffee Leak
author: 'Krzysztof “Tomash” Drewniak'
character: Tomash — 2299
type: story
---
There were places in the System that the newly-uploaded tended to wander into, thanks to the self-reinforcing nature of “X Best Sims To Check Out When Youre New” articles and the finite set of recommendations the default tutorial construct drew from.
This led to the System Emergency Response Group doing their collective best to have someone hovering around the newbie hotspots. They werent necessarily full perisystem technicians, with all the rights and privileges etc etc, but could talk people through fixing “Help, I forked weird!” or “Help, everythings black and white!” or the like, and someone really new might not know they could call SERG or think to do it.
Currently, Tomash was watching the Alley Cat. Hed taken a small table near the middle of the indoor seating and had draped his vest — the token he put on to activate his systech powers — over the back of the chair. He alternated between reading a book (the report on a gravity shatter incident from six months back) and munching on a croissant. This wasnt one of his usual haunts, as he still wasnt much of a coffee person, but hed offered to take the watch over because he didnt have a lot of other plans that evening.
It was a nice, quiet day. The conversation around Tomash was a low buzz of noise. Suddenly, his ears twitched towards a loud crack, followed by the hiss of steam. Then, a scream.
Tomashs gaze followed his ears. With a thought, his vest undraped itself from his chair and put itself on, its side buckles closing automagically. The world began to shimmer, each object before him hinting at the existence of debugging information hiding just below the surface if he needed it.
He dropped the report he was reading, not bothering to dematerialize or close it, and hurried towards the noises. “Make stasis sim,” he muttered before he even fully registered what he was looking at — a coffee mug that was making pressure-cooker noises and had some sort of barrier over its top. That barrier was meant to be invisible, but it still had the faint glow of a physics-altering area to his techs sight.
He pointed at the mug. “Move to Tech Stasis#4f552c06,” he commanded it, and it did so.
With the immediate problem out of the way, Tomash took a look at the man whod been sitting at the table. That arm didnt look good. The rest of the man seemed fine, though. He looked older than most on the System, with his white hair that didnt see a lot of intentional grooming, and clothes that felt thrown together with little care for style. A very professor-y look.
The man — Dr. Diego Rodriguez, the System informed Tomash — was staring at him. Hed only uploaded a few hours ago, so it wasnt surprising that a bipedal dog whod just made his coffee disappear would throw him off. Especially if said dog had a black vest, meant to emulate a working dogs harness, that declared him to be a “PERISYSTEM TECHNICIAN” in large white letters. (The smaller “Do Not Pet” note underneath was both traditional and sometimes necessary.)
“Sir,” Tomash said.
No immediate response. Still, the safeties hadnt kicked in, so he had to at least be conscious.
“Dr. Rodriguez,” Tomash tried again.
“Huh?” asked the professor.
“I need you to fork please, Dr. Rodriguez.”
“Fork?”
“Like in the tutorial, where you made a copy of yourself.”
“I…my arm…”
“Exactly,” Tomash said. “Thatll clear up when you fork.”
Dr. Rodriguez looked confused.
“Ok, so, think about there being another copy of you, your fork, standing next to me. Theyre unhurt, but, other than that, theyre you like you are right now.”
“Ok…?”
“In a moment, Ill need you to breathe in deep and start really thinking about a reality where that fork exists, holding it in your mind as best you can. Then, Ill count you down from three. Once Im done counting, youll breathe out, and, as you do that, youll make that world where youre forked happen. Can you do that?”
“I…ow fuck fuck fuck my arm!”
“Its OK, were fixing it. Now, breathe in,”
Dr. Rodriguez took a shaky breath.
“And three…two…one…fork. Fork now.”
Dr. Rodriguez forked. A new instance of him, whose upper arm was right as rain, appeared next to Tomash.
“Now,” Tomash said to the first Dr. Rodriguez. “Youve got a fork, and so your arms fine. I know it hurts, but theres a you whos patched up standing right in front of you. Please quit in favor of your fork.”
The rootward Dr. Rodriguez didnt need much prompting. He remembered how quitting out felt from the tutorial, and the shock was starting to wear off. So, he disappeared, leaving just one of him in the coffee shop.
“What happened?” a dazed Dr. Rodriguez asked Tomash. “I — who are you?”
“Im Tomash,” the dog said, holding out a paw.
“Diego,” the old man said, accepting the handshake. “Im not in trouble, am I?”
“No, definitely not,” Tomash said. “But Id like to hear more about how that happened. Mind heading to a debrief room with me?”
“_Id_ like to know what happened, so sure!”
“Ok, Perisystem Ops#Debrief 23, please,” Tomash said before he disappeared.
Diego followed a moment later, after hed remembered that he just had to say he wanted to go there with intention. The room was a wide space, filled with a collection of chairs, desks, and couches all arranged to face towards a large window that faced out into a black nothing. Tomash had seated himself at a central desk, and Diego sank into a nearby recliner.
Tomash waved a paw, and the view out of the window changed. The place they were looking at was still a black void, but now it had Dr. Rodriguezs coffee floating in mid-air, a snapshot of a jet of steam coming out the crack in its side.
“…Hows my coffee levitating?” the professor asked.
“I chucked it into a stasis sim — physics doesnt evolve forward in those. Theyre useful for figuring out whats happening to something.”
“So…they kill you when you step in?” Dr. Rodriguez asked, looking at Tomash.
Tomash shook his head. “Nah, instances — our minds — run on a different system. If you put yourself in a stasis sim, you get this really weird brain inhabiting a statue feeling until you decide to leave. Im not a fan, but theres people who do stasis meditation.”
“Huh,” Dr. Rodriguez. “Can you make time run backwards?”
“Yep, I saw this really cool exhibit where — hold on, were getting distracted. What happened right before,” Tomash gestured at the window, “that?”
“Well, Id gotten lost in thought, and my coffee was cold, and I decided to try the System out, so I said…weird, I can remember it exactly…I want my coffee to get as hot as it can and I dont want heat escaping out the top.’”
“Thatd explain the physics plane,” Tomash said.
“The physics plane?”
Tomash tapped a finger on his desk, and Dr. Rodriguez could see a thin disk of something clearly virtual sitting on top of the mug. “Its an invisible bit of space that changes how matter behaves. This ones…” strings of text floated above the plane, completely impenetrable to Diego, “… a perfect lid for gases, Interesting that thats what you got.”
“So, completely airtight mug,” Dr. Rodriguez commented, staring off into space. “That shouldnt have…”
“Can I ask what you did before uploading?” Tomash said.
“Theoretical physics,” Diego said. “I uploaded because I needed more time to think.”
Tomash was starting to get an idea. “While your coffee was getting cold, what were you thinking about?”
“What sort of impossible stuff you might be able to create here. Like, will the System let me make the land of intro exams where theres no friction and no air resistance? Whats that got to do with the coffee?”
“The Systems really good at picking up on intent, including subconscious intent.”
“Wait, so, when I wanted my coffee heated up,” Diego said, standing, “all the stuff I was thinking about bled through somehow, and I ended up with _really_ hot coffee, which would mean…airtight lid —”
Tomash looked at the sim, and rotated the view to show the coffee. “Yeah, 352 Celsius in there, huh, —”
“— only liquid under very high pressure…did I just make a coffee bomb?” Dr. Rodriguez asked, horrified. “On my first day?”
Tomash looked over at Dr. Rodriguez. “Looks like the mug cracked first, so…that couldve gone worse.”
“So how do I not do that? I couldve hurt someone!”
”All I can say is that you might want to deliberately think about standard physics when youre doing environmental changes, at least until you get the hang of it. That and get some lab space — you know anyone at the universities?”
“Not really?” Diego said. “Weve swapped emails, but…yall dont show up to conferences easily, so its hard to make connections up here.”
“Well, I can try to make some introductions,” Tomash said, offering a handshake. Diego stood up to accept. “Welcome to the System, Professor. Were glad to have you.”
There was an awkward pause. “Now what? Is there a hearing?”
“Nah. I should probably write this up, but thats me, not you. So lets head back?” Tomash suggested. “I need to keep an eye on the place to make sure no ones made more coffee bombs, and youll need a new coffee.”
“If you say so,” Diego said cautiously. “Id think theyd be pretty unhappy with me after,” he gestured towards the timeless mug.
“Nah, they know this stuff happens sometimes. Youre good.” Tomash said.
“Still,” Dr. Rodriguez said. “After you.”
Tomash stepped back into the Alley Cat, where someone had already reset the table and floor back to default while hed been out.
The professor followed suit soon after. He walked up to the counter sheepishly. “Could I get another coffee?” he asked. “Mine…exploded.”
“Sure thing,” the barista said. “And its no trouble, really, I already cleaned up. Exploding coffees a new one for me, but its not a lot worse than folks levitating their coffee and dropping it back in a panic.”
That was oddly reassuring. Diego took his coffee and went to sit down, intending to actually drink the thing this time. He glanced over to Tomashs table. The dog had taken his vest off, and was now writing something.
“I wonder if all my days here will be this weird,” he said to himself, taking a sip. “Itd be interesting, thats for sure.”