"INCOMING MESSAGE"
The computer screen flashed, insistently playing that annoying chime sound. Still, Kylie supposed, it was better than that annoying notification system the email application had. Scientifically speaking, she was fairly certain that one could only hear "You have mail!" in that monotone voice so many times before their head would explode. She sat up strait at her desk, mouse hovering over the notification. Yet it was not the annoyance of the chime that set her on edge today. It was the very fact that it was chiming.
"INCOMING MESSAGE" the words kept flashing. But how?
On any other device, she would have checked it immediately, then probably dismissed it as spam. But this was her research computer- this computer didn't get messages. She'd built it herself a few years before, and had continued to modify its programming in her spare time. It was set up on it's own network, completely inaccessible to the rest of the world. In order to send a message to this device, one would have to break through several layers of coding she'd deemed to be unhackable. Yet there it was, flashing and chiming. Quickly he went into alert mode, using every anti-virus program she'd ever created, then manually searching the code for any changes. The process took several hours, even with Kylie's photographic memory and impressive speed-reading capabilities (all part of the hyper-intelligence that had driven her to isolation) There was a ridiculous amount of code to go through. Try as she might though, she couldn't find anything wrong with the system. All of her protection codes were still in place, entirely undamaged. The only difference she could see was that her device seemed to be connected to another network now.
"INCOMING MESSAGE"
Gritting her teeth, Kylie closed out the notification for what must have been at least the twentieth time. She'd even erased the base code for accepting transmissions at one point. She'd put it back of course, but not before the computer had chimed at her again. Frantically, she tried to regain her old network. It was there, she could see. It had not been harmed. Yet every time she tried to connect to it, she'd find herself back on this new one. "Connect to: SilverHome" she'd input the command. It would load as normal, but a second later it would tell her "Connected to: PARAGON"
"INCOMING MESSAGE"
"Get out of my system!" she muttered in frustration.
She realized suddenly that these were the first words she'd spoken in months. She'd spent so long making absolutely certain that she didn't talk around people that she'd even stopped speaking to herself. There was power in her voice, power that terrified her. Still, it had its uses. The last time she had been forced to speak had been a few months back, when a group of thugs had decided to rob a local electronics store. Kylie had been shopping for parts at the time. She remembered telling them to put down their weapons, give back the equipment they had stolen, and zip-tie themselves to the counter until the police arrived. She also remembered them obeying. It had been so amusing, watching them fight over the bag of zip-ties... No, she couldn't think like that. She'd been helping people, but she couldn't let herself get to the point where she enjoyed manipulating others. That was how corruption began.
Too bad her power didn't work over the internet. "INCOMING MESSAGE" it flashed again. There was nothing left that she could do. She typed out a quick program that would destroy any personal information that another device on this network tried to access, and clicked on "ACCEPT"
The computer screen flashed, insistently playing that annoying chime sound. Still, Kylie supposed, it was better than that annoying notification system the email application had. Scientifically speaking, she was fairly certain that one could only hear "You have mail!" in that monotone voice so many times before their head would explode. She sat up strait at her desk, mouse hovering over the notification. Yet it was not the annoyance of the chime that set her on edge today. It was the very fact that it was chiming.
"INCOMING MESSAGE" the words kept flashing. But how?
On any other device, she would have checked it immediately, then probably dismissed it as spam. But this was her research computer- this computer didn't get messages. She'd built it herself a few years before, and had continued to modify its programming in her spare time. It was set up on it's own network, completely inaccessible to the rest of the world. In order to send a message to this device, one would have to break through several layers of coding she'd deemed to be unhackable. Yet there it was, flashing and chiming. Quickly he went into alert mode, using every anti-virus program she'd ever created, then manually searching the code for any changes. The process took several hours, even with Kylie's photographic memory and impressive speed-reading capabilities (all part of the hyper-intelligence that had driven her to isolation) There was a ridiculous amount of code to go through. Try as she might though, she couldn't find anything wrong with the system. All of her protection codes were still in place, entirely undamaged. The only difference she could see was that her device seemed to be connected to another network now.
"INCOMING MESSAGE"
Gritting her teeth, Kylie closed out the notification for what must have been at least the twentieth time. She'd even erased the base code for accepting transmissions at one point. She'd put it back of course, but not before the computer had chimed at her again. Frantically, she tried to regain her old network. It was there, she could see. It had not been harmed. Yet every time she tried to connect to it, she'd find herself back on this new one. "Connect to: SilverHome" she'd input the command. It would load as normal, but a second later it would tell her "Connected to: PARAGON"
"INCOMING MESSAGE"
"Get out of my system!" she muttered in frustration.
She realized suddenly that these were the first words she'd spoken in months. She'd spent so long making absolutely certain that she didn't talk around people that she'd even stopped speaking to herself. There was power in her voice, power that terrified her. Still, it had its uses. The last time she had been forced to speak had been a few months back, when a group of thugs had decided to rob a local electronics store. Kylie had been shopping for parts at the time. She remembered telling them to put down their weapons, give back the equipment they had stolen, and zip-tie themselves to the counter until the police arrived. She also remembered them obeying. It had been so amusing, watching them fight over the bag of zip-ties... No, she couldn't think like that. She'd been helping people, but she couldn't let herself get to the point where she enjoyed manipulating others. That was how corruption began.
Too bad her power didn't work over the internet. "INCOMING MESSAGE" it flashed again. There was nothing left that she could do. She typed out a quick program that would destroy any personal information that another device on this network tried to access, and clicked on "ACCEPT"