Immersion Playground
Book #1: The Proposal
Chapter 2
Though it had felt like hours to them since they entered the pool house, less than thirty minutes after they began their passionate lovemaking Charlie and Todd step from the shower after washing the sweat and sex from their bodies. He smiles as he watches her. She moves like a lioness, full of power and grace, her eyes partially closed in the way of a well-fed cat. After dressing in their swimwear, she takes the top towel, damp with their sweat, and tosses it on the bench with their clothes. The bottom towel joins it on the bench and the remaining clean and dry towels are refolded and placed back on the shelves. By the time she is done, he has folded and placed their street clothes on the shelves as well.
Pool house tidied, and all evidence of their lovemaking removed, they emerge, the outside air feeling cool on their skin after the sweltering heat inside. As they exit, he latches the door open to allow the interior to cool and to remove any lingering scent of sex. Tossing the two towels they had set aside onto a chaise, Charlie slips into the pool, sighing as the water cools her. Todd takes a less elegant approach and, with a running start, cannonballs into the deep end of the pool, splashing water everywhere. He surfaces, then swims from the deep end of the pool to where she is standing, the water just covering her breasts. Laughing at her disapproving look, he takes her in his arms, easily lifting her off the floor of the pool, and kisses her with gusto.
They are still in the pool, laughing and splashing, when Giselle and Rick return home. "Hope you don't mind, but we started without you," Todd says in greeting as they step out onto the patio.
"Not at all. Rick and I will change, then join you in a moment," Giselle says with a big smile and wave.
Charlie watches as they enter the pool house. Giselle seems normal, upbeat even, but Rick appears a bit tense and reserved. Within a few minutes they emerge dressed in swimwear but carrying no towel. She clambers out of the pool as they appear and saunters over to Giselle without saying a word. Giselle is just settling into a chaise when she reaches her and bends down to kiss her ever so lightly on the cheek.
"Thank you," Charlie whispers so that no one but Giselle can hear.
Giselle sits still for a moment, shocked by Charlie's kiss, then gives her a near imperceptible nod in acknowledgement. Giselle peeks over the top of her sunglasses as Charlie begins to dry herself. "So, how was it? The immersion, I mean."
Charlie answers after some thought. "It was fantastic. It was like I was you." Then looking to Rick, she asks, "I thought you told me once that immersions can't capture people's thoughts?"
"It can't," Rick replies, getting comfortable in his chair. He is over his shock that Giselle would share something so intimate, her Sphinx-like calm while they were gone effectively defusing his anger and frustration. Now he's just embarrassed that Charlie, of all people, has seen him at his most exposed and vulnerable.
Charlie settles into a nearby chair, still drying her hair. "But I could. I could tell exactly what Giselle was thinking. When I... when she saw the pineapple I knew that was her favorite fruit. I didn't know that before."
"That's just a biochemical reaction to her seeing something that gives her pleasure. The neural interface picks that up and boom, you know she likes pineapple," Rick explains.
He would know, as he is a key figure in developing both the original neural network and the immersion interface.
Noting the look of confusion on Charlie's face, Rick continues, "Let me give you a bit of background to help you understand what we're dealing with. Early in the twenty-first century the amount of information available to people exploded. First there was the World Wide Web, then search engines, then intelligent search engines. Each was designed to better manage the ever-increasing volume of data, but even with all the advancements, people and businesses were drowning in information, which is nearly as bad as not having enough. The neural network, or net, started out as just the latest attempt to handle that flood of information."
"What's that have to do with pineapple?" Charlie asks with a grin.
"Nothing," Ricks says with a smile of his own, "except to give you some background on how we got here."
"So the chip I had implanted started out as nothing but a search tool for the net?" Charlie asks. "I didn't know that."
"That's right," Rick continues. "The chip NIT developed uses an ultra-thin film technology, powered by the heat of your body, and once implanted it is a totally self-contained device. That's what allows you access the net with the same seamlessness that you access your own memories."
"I don't know how anyone did anything before the net," Charlie says. "It's amazing that tiny little chip can do all that."
"I know," Rick nods. "It's hard to believe that something smaller than you little fingernail packs more computing horsepower than a warehouse full of computers did 50 years ago, but once I saw that this was going to work, I knew the neural interface technology wouldn't stay confined to data retrieval for long. And it didn't. Now you are seeing the beginning of a revolution in the way people interact with each other and the world. Companies like Feedback Alive are making continuous improvement in the software interface to the body, and now the technology is becoming so pervasive it's everywhere. Nearly anything that can be automated is now controlled through the net using that little chip." He looks at Giselle. "Take your car, for example. What do you expect as you walk up to your car?"
"I want the doors to be unlocked, with the air conditioning or heat on, making the interior comfortable for when I get in," Giselle says.
"So it is," Rick confirms. "But the Aston can't do that because it is too old, built before the net was even conceived. Here's another example. When you leave your house you expect the doors to be locked, so they are, right? It's all automatic now because we're used to that. But none of this was possible before the net. Well, not with the ease of use we have now. And all of this is controlled by that chip at the base of your brain reaching through the net, using a series of hardware-based encryptions keyed to each person's DNA, so just anyone can't start your car or open your doors."
"That's what makes it secure, impossible to crack or fake?" Todd asks as he climbs out of the pool, becoming interested in the conversation. "I always thought that bit of the spiel was pure marketing BS, but it's true?"
"That's right, it's true," Rick says. "That's why non-violent crimes like identity theft and fraud are now effectively down to zero, which in turn has led to an explosion in the use of the human/network interface. The immersion is only the first of what is likely to come. As soon as we work the kinks out on the immersion we're—Feedback Alive, that is—going to try to go for full simulation. And we're not the only ones working in that direction. We're just a little ahead of game at the moment," Rick says with a satisfied grin.
"Full simulation?" Todd asks.
"That's right. A complete virtual world where you—well, your avatar anyway—can do anything, be anything, and it will be as real to you as sitting in that chair."
Giselle has heard most of this before, but she can tell Charlie and Todd are thinking over the possibilities.
"Sounds pretty far-fetched to me," Charlie finally says.
"Not as far-fetched as you think," Rick replies with a grin.
"Maybe," Charlie allows. If anyone other than Rick had told her this, she would call bullshit on the spot, but if Rick believes it, she wouldn't bet against it.