Gavin watched Abby field the questions with more grace than anyone could expect of a person in her circumstance. He certainly did not envy her position. Even still, as expected, the answers she provided were shallow.
Just as in the last iteration of society, there were those who were placed in positions of power to facilitate order. They deemed who needed to know what, and when. This tragedy was no different, though that fact only served to diminish the lack of transparency to slightly less irksome.
Gavin nodded to Abby’s answer to him. His eyes would tell her that he understood, and that he did not harbor the dismissal of his inquiry as anything but an obligation of duty on her part.
That doesn’t mean it has to end there, however. Gavin thought, bringing his coffee to his lips. Knowing how the killer affected the demise of his victims could speak volumes, and Gavin was intent on reading that horrific tale. In Gavin’s mind, if the information he gleaned saved even one future life, than it would be a worthy endeavor.
With his mind absently working on just how to go about sating his curiosity, Gavin listened only half-heartedly to the rest of the briefing. Even as the crew chiefs, section leaders, and specialists introduced themselves, Gavin’s attention remained preoccupied. With the forefinger of his right hand tapping a rhythm of contemplativeness upon his upper lip, the doctor and synthetic biologist even forgot to stand and make himself known to his colleagues.
Gavin only realized this when an urgent beep and buzz from within his pocket brought him sharply back to the moment. Blinking as if he had just awoken, Gavin reached into his pocket for the palm-sized tablet computer he preferred to the larger cousins many of his counterparts utilized for their work.
Glancing down his nose at the screen, Gavin snorted as he read the note from the NI-Tech, Hob. Working his thumbs over the touch-screen, he replied:
Good thing I left my shotgun in my other hoodie, Hob. I’ll wake her up and send her your way. You kids have fun, and do keep it in your pants will you?
Sending the message, Gavin swiped over to the app he used to interface remotely with OLGA. Tapping a button, Gavin activated the interface. Instantly the screen was dominated by a pretty face and a set of large green eyes.
“Hey Doc, I was wondering when you were going to come finally say hi!”
Gavin cringed, bringing a finger to his lips as OLGA’s feminine voice came over the speakers of the palm-tablet. Speakers that apparently were set to full volume. OLGA’s voice would’ve filled the acoustic Auditorium loud and clear.
“I’m in the bloody briefing, O,” Gavin hissed silently through clenched teeth.
“Oh! Sorry, Doc.” OLGA said, her voice no quieter. The blond and bubbly woman that the AI chose to be her avatar clamped her hands over her mouth, suppressing an unapologetic giggle.
Gavin rolled his eyes.
OLGA, or Organic Laser-suspended Genetic Assembler, was an organic hybrid, autonomous computer system, originally designed and tasked for advanced genetic manipulation of both human and xenogeneic genomes. Being extremely expensive and rare, organic hybrid AI’s like OLGA were few and far between before the Change hit Earth. Now, floating in space on the ark of the Copernicus, OLGA was the last of her kind.
She had worked with Gavin since her “birth,” some fourteen years ago, as he had personally engineered the bulk of her organic neurological circuitry. Her intelligence and ease in the handling of DNA made her the most invaluable tool that Gavin had ever had access to, and she had been a shoo-in for a berth within the mainframe of the Copernicus.
Though technically Gavin’s, OLGA worked with anyone who required her processing ability. Most of the biological science division on the Copernicus utilized her in some capacity. Other divisions had access to her as well via the ship-wide network, though OLGA herself was limited to the data and processes in her own CPU.
In a much less official capacity, Gavin had taken it upon himself to load OLGA with as much electronic media that he could get his hands on before departing the Mountain. Everything from video-games, movies, music, and digitized art filled her memory. In her “down time,” OLGA herself even enjoyed the digital entertainment, and it was not unusual for her to challenge the squints of the scientific staff, as well as the NI-Techs, to rounds of Tekken, Street Fighter, or Call of Duty.
Gavin bent closer to the screen, hiding the device beneath the row of seats in front of him.
“Hob’s expecting you.” He whispered.
OLGA’s digital eyes brightened. “Oh, cool! Bye Doc.” The volume of her voice had not been tempered in the least, and it filled the Auditorium once again. She gave Gavin a quick wave before disappearing from the computer screen.
With an exasperated and helpless sigh, Gavin slipped the device into his pocket and leaned back into his chair. Around him, the meeting seemed to have come to an end despite the interruption of the boisterous AI.
“Well then,” Gavin said to himself as he stood to join the trickle of bodies that were beginning to depart the Auditorium. He downed the last dregs of his now cold coffee, set off up the stairs, and out into the main corridor. With his Chuck’s leading the way, Dr. Gavin Brock turned towards the deck that held the genetics laboratory, and began making his way there.
Just as in the last iteration of society, there were those who were placed in positions of power to facilitate order. They deemed who needed to know what, and when. This tragedy was no different, though that fact only served to diminish the lack of transparency to slightly less irksome.
Gavin nodded to Abby’s answer to him. His eyes would tell her that he understood, and that he did not harbor the dismissal of his inquiry as anything but an obligation of duty on her part.
That doesn’t mean it has to end there, however. Gavin thought, bringing his coffee to his lips. Knowing how the killer affected the demise of his victims could speak volumes, and Gavin was intent on reading that horrific tale. In Gavin’s mind, if the information he gleaned saved even one future life, than it would be a worthy endeavor.
With his mind absently working on just how to go about sating his curiosity, Gavin listened only half-heartedly to the rest of the briefing. Even as the crew chiefs, section leaders, and specialists introduced themselves, Gavin’s attention remained preoccupied. With the forefinger of his right hand tapping a rhythm of contemplativeness upon his upper lip, the doctor and synthetic biologist even forgot to stand and make himself known to his colleagues.
Gavin only realized this when an urgent beep and buzz from within his pocket brought him sharply back to the moment. Blinking as if he had just awoken, Gavin reached into his pocket for the palm-sized tablet computer he preferred to the larger cousins many of his counterparts utilized for their work.
Glancing down his nose at the screen, Gavin snorted as he read the note from the NI-Tech, Hob. Working his thumbs over the touch-screen, he replied:
Good thing I left my shotgun in my other hoodie, Hob. I’ll wake her up and send her your way. You kids have fun, and do keep it in your pants will you?
Sending the message, Gavin swiped over to the app he used to interface remotely with OLGA. Tapping a button, Gavin activated the interface. Instantly the screen was dominated by a pretty face and a set of large green eyes.
“Hey Doc, I was wondering when you were going to come finally say hi!”
Gavin cringed, bringing a finger to his lips as OLGA’s feminine voice came over the speakers of the palm-tablet. Speakers that apparently were set to full volume. OLGA’s voice would’ve filled the acoustic Auditorium loud and clear.
“I’m in the bloody briefing, O,” Gavin hissed silently through clenched teeth.
“Oh! Sorry, Doc.” OLGA said, her voice no quieter. The blond and bubbly woman that the AI chose to be her avatar clamped her hands over her mouth, suppressing an unapologetic giggle.
Gavin rolled his eyes.
OLGA, or Organic Laser-suspended Genetic Assembler, was an organic hybrid, autonomous computer system, originally designed and tasked for advanced genetic manipulation of both human and xenogeneic genomes. Being extremely expensive and rare, organic hybrid AI’s like OLGA were few and far between before the Change hit Earth. Now, floating in space on the ark of the Copernicus, OLGA was the last of her kind.
She had worked with Gavin since her “birth,” some fourteen years ago, as he had personally engineered the bulk of her organic neurological circuitry. Her intelligence and ease in the handling of DNA made her the most invaluable tool that Gavin had ever had access to, and she had been a shoo-in for a berth within the mainframe of the Copernicus.
Though technically Gavin’s, OLGA worked with anyone who required her processing ability. Most of the biological science division on the Copernicus utilized her in some capacity. Other divisions had access to her as well via the ship-wide network, though OLGA herself was limited to the data and processes in her own CPU.
In a much less official capacity, Gavin had taken it upon himself to load OLGA with as much electronic media that he could get his hands on before departing the Mountain. Everything from video-games, movies, music, and digitized art filled her memory. In her “down time,” OLGA herself even enjoyed the digital entertainment, and it was not unusual for her to challenge the squints of the scientific staff, as well as the NI-Techs, to rounds of Tekken, Street Fighter, or Call of Duty.
Gavin bent closer to the screen, hiding the device beneath the row of seats in front of him.
“Hob’s expecting you.” He whispered.
OLGA’s digital eyes brightened. “Oh, cool! Bye Doc.” The volume of her voice had not been tempered in the least, and it filled the Auditorium once again. She gave Gavin a quick wave before disappearing from the computer screen.
With an exasperated and helpless sigh, Gavin slipped the device into his pocket and leaned back into his chair. Around him, the meeting seemed to have come to an end despite the interruption of the boisterous AI.
“Well then,” Gavin said to himself as he stood to join the trickle of bodies that were beginning to depart the Auditorium. He downed the last dregs of his now cold coffee, set off up the stairs, and out into the main corridor. With his Chuck’s leading the way, Dr. Gavin Brock turned towards the deck that held the genetics laboratory, and began making his way there.