

Hax 6Stewart Kincaid tightened his jacket as best he could as the snowstorm blew harder. "What foolish mockery he had made," said the council, "Calling us boys, telling us to act as men." But Stewart was right. Months of research had passed, and the council could not create a machine as complex as found in designs and blueprints written and drawn by Seth. The were "Just plain stumped by his genius," finally giving in. But, finally, one fateful day, a clue arrived.Hax 6
The council sent Stewart to the last place Seth had traveled: Alaska. Seth had flown to Alaska and back 12 times in the month he disappeared. He owned a, now snowed in, Hang


Hax 5There within a large conference room sat 13 men at an oblong table, each man ofHax 5
importance wearing a different shaded suit and tie for the occasion.
Only one of the thirteen stood; he was at front.
"Gentlemen, council members." "Aye," in unison. "We've gathered upon information of Artificial Intelligence." "Aye," again in unison. "Which I find no evidence of falsification of the logs found on the harddisk of the
Securitron," he paused. "Which causes me to believe that our company needs to re-evaluate
our...'components.'"
One council member


Hax 4Earlier that day, there was a memo from the CEO of the company to the Federal Bureau of Investigation: To whom it may concern: Seth has grown far out of our control as a single man running a business. We cannot vote him out of his own company; nor can we stop his "Projects". On a moral note, I would love to shut down his "Projects", especially the one codenamed "Hax" which I described prior as his experiment to "Hack" the human brain.Hax 4
He is a dangerous man and if we do not stop him before it is too late, he will control the world.
-Robert Smith
But Seth recieved it rather than the FBI. Smith
Previous PageNext Page