Title: Prelude to Eternity

Author: Stormhawk

Rating: PG

Disclaimer:

Matrix universe and associated characters: Wachowski brothers.

ATS universe: co-owned by me and Mordax.

Stef: me

Word Count: 2578

Summary: An insight into Stef's life before the Agency. Takes place before

the beginning of ATS.

Notes: Umm…nope. I shouldn't have to tell you that the angel she thinks

about is Smith. If you didn't know that I suggest you go read (and review)

'The Angel' which was the birthplace of the name Angel Smith.

'Or wills c real' that still scares me, it almost seems deliberate. Maybe it

is….

Please read and Review.

"What the hell is so hard about spelling my name the right way?" Stef

mumbled to herself as she flipped through her mail on the way back to her

apartment. Mostly people got it right, it was just Mr. Jenkins who insisted

on spelling her name with a 'ph', the man was in his sixties so she could

forgive him on that basis.

Locking her door she pinned the bills on her notice board in the kitchen,

grabbed a can of soda from the fridge and went straight back into her room.

She'd been living there since she moved out of home four, almost five years

now. She'd moved out when she was seventeen, with no complaints from her

aunt. Having no contact since she wondered if the woman who had raised her

for nine years even remembered she was alive.

Then again, she had half raised herself, Pam had been busy with many a

party, social occasion and gentlemen caller. Living the high life that was

demanded of their status. At least according to Pam they were a

high-standing family. What was left of it anyway, the Henderson's money had

almost run out. (Her aunt and her mother were born Henderson's; she was a

Mimosa because of her father.)

It had been old money, made in the early days of the family. There was still

enough, that she was glad of. Namely her inheritance. Her grandparents had

arranged it before they died, and put into a trust fund. It had been just

over ten thousand dollars.

That may sound like a lot of money but with bills and rent to consider it

really wasn't much. There was little over two thousand left. Mostly she used

it to pay the rent, her work paid for everything else.

Not that she did an actual job that involved being employed by a business or

company. Her job involved a lot of sitting behind her computer. That she

loved, she loved being able to immerse herself into the computer and the

world of the net. There was nothing wrong with being connected about half

the day and doing offline work the rest of time, except what was required to

sleep, eat, shop or other necessities.

Stef wasn't a hacker, she was a webhunter. Someone who would scourer the

internet (and private databases) for information or facts that a client

needed. It could be a simple order like students too busy or too unfamiliar

with the net to look for information for assignments. Other clients used her

like a private detective, having her sift through virtual paper trails to

look for someone.

It paid well enough, she always had enough, always had a roof over her head

and the lights on. And it was the only thing she felt she was good at. There

was nothing better than the feeling of being plugged in.

Her net connected and her Yahoo mail account opened up. 'Welcome Unseen

Spyder' it said, she felt comfortable by either of her two names. Not that

many others besides those hooked up ever used them. The most human contact

she had had in months, or that matter years, was when she went shopping and

made idle chitchat with the clerks.

Humanity sucked.

An odd thought for a human but a true enough one.

There were several webhunting jobs lined up. A couple of author alerts for

stories on Fanfiction.net, junk mail and some quick notes (and a couple of

viruses) from some hackers she knew.

Viruses between hackers (or hunters) were like jokes for the rest of the net

community, something you sent when you didn't want that person to feel alone

in the world, but not something that required a reply.

"Shit," she cried as a pain struck her head. Holding her head, she hoped the

pain would pass quickly. They were really irritating her, the headaches.

They had started a few weeks ago and hadn't given up. They would come and

go, and no painkillers she took helped.

Unable to focus on the screen in front of her, she crashed the computer and

fell over onto her bed, which was easy because it was right next to it. With

the heavy curtains drawn, and the door closed, it was dark like night.

Closing her eyes, she fell asleep on the cool sheets.

A couple of hours later she felt a lot better. Rising, she felt hungry. As

she walked out to the kitchen her eyes passed on the calendar. Oh, so that's

what day it was. She had thought today was something special, just couldn't

remember what.

Opening the fridge she pulled out a small white box. The bakery in this

neighborhood made nice cakes. And since it wasn't right to make your own

birthday cake she had walked down and bought one for herself.

Writing hadn't cost anything extra so it had '22' written in blue icing on

chocolate frosting. Chocolate on chocolate, her favorite.

She slipped the cake from the box onto a dinner plate, took a knife and

carried it over to the dining room table. Birthdays weren't any harder than

any other day of the year, and being alone had never bothered her.

Cutting a slice, she almost considered singing 'happy birthday' to herself,

but there wasn't much point in that. No one would hear her. She put the cake

back down on the plate, stood and looked around the room.

"Do I even exist?" she asked the world at large. "Well, answer me."

No one answered.

"I need an answer," she said as if admitting something that would make her

weak.

Sitting back down, Stef chided herself. She knew she existed, and that would

have to be enough.

Maybe it was time to do something else, maybe go to college. Spend more time

outside her apartment.

Or maybe she could stay here and die.

She loved her life, no one bothered her, no one controlled her. She loved

her life on the Internet. She didn't need anyone else.

That was perhaps the source of the problem; it was always 'no one'.

No one would care if she died, if her headaches were something serious. If

was a tumor or something and she died no one would care. No one would

notice. It wasn't so bad, it wasn't like she'd be missed or miss anyone.

She finished her slice of cake, stashed the rest back into the fridge and

went back to her computer.

*****

"Morpheus, good to see you," the Oracle said as the bald rebel walked into

the kitchen.

"You told me you needed to talk to me."

"Yes, I did," she said as she pushed the cookie barrel over to him. He

declined.

"What about?"

"There's someone you need to find."

"Who? We have potentials looking all the time."

"No, this one is different. She's not looking for you, specifically, the

truth maybe, but you'll never find her."

"We can find anyone, is this potential part of the prophecy?"

"No Morpheus, not everyone is part of the prophecy."

"Then why?"

"Do you trust me enough to look?"

"Of course we do, you've helped us so much."

"The name is Unseen Spyder, and I want you to send her this message," she

said handing him a slip of paper.

"I'll do my best," he said bowing his head and leaving.

*****

Stef was in a better mood the next day, the amount of sugar she had ingested

at one in the morning may have had something to do with that. There was none

of the self-doubt there had been the night before, and none of the angst.

She was herself again.

Micro waving a bowl of popcorn, she got dressed into a pair of loose jeans

and a long tee shirt and flopped on the couch to watch a movie.

After it finished, she dialed up and got most of the webhunting orders

finished for the day. Sending off messages to the clients and her bank

details she just sat back and waited for the money to be transferred to her

bank account. Payment before information that was her motto.

As was the motto of all true webhunters, of which there really wasn't that

many. There were a couple of others she knew in various parts of the

country, and a couple of international ones. The only other one she knew of

in the city was some guy named G'Mork, or GMork_the_hunter, as his email

stated.

He was good, not as good as her but good enough for some of her clients to

transfer to him, because he had cheaper rates. He probably didn't pay the

bills with what he did. He covered his tracks well, and she couldn't find

anything out about his offline life.

For all she knew, G'Mork could be an eight-five year old woman living in a

cardboard box. Not that that was likely but the idea made her smile.

Seeing no money was coming in straight away, she got up to make dinner. Not

that she was a gourmet chef but she could cook what she liked to eat.

Tonight, all she felt like was a peanut butter sandwich.

She turned on the kitchen CD player, and took her sandwich out to the tiny

balcony. But as she did her eyes caught onto Alexandria who was in the

lounge room on a bookshelf as always.

Alexandria stared at her from her one eye, her one lifeless eye. The other

side of her skull had been broken long ago.

Alexandria was a doll.

"Don't give me that look Alexandria," Stef said to the doll. When she had

first gotten the doll she'd been unable to pronounce the name correctly so

it had been 'lexandwa', she had been Stef's favorite doll until it had been

broken.

The day Jack had stomped out of her life he had stood on the doll's head and

never even looked back. Jerk.

And the angel hadn't come back to fix it.

"Oh shut up about that Stef," she said to herself. She couldn't believe that

still believed she had seen an angel twenty years ago. How the hell was

anyone supposed to remember things coherently from that long ago? They

didn't. And she was stupid for believing in a thing like an angel. Angels

didn't exist, god didn't exist, there was nothing beyond the world that

everyone saw.

Was there?

But, she realized as she started to eat her sandwich while overlooking the

city. It was still nice on some level to believe that something special like

that had happened.

It would be so nice to know that there was someone out there that was

looking after her.

She slowly ate the rest of her sandwich as she watched the little lights of

the city go out. Not that you got a great view from a third-floor apartment,

but those who had lived there their whole lives knew when 'the city that

never sleeps' was going to bed.

That was her cue to go back to her computer.

Hopping back onto the net, she jumped over to her site, 'The Spyder's Lair',

which had no point, just links to stuff she liked and details on her skills

as a webhunter. Though, when she jumped into the guest book she found a new

message.

Whoever had placed it was obviously playing a joke; the name read 'Trinity'.

Everyone knew that Trinity was a world-class hacker, what the hell would

someone like her…or was it him…no one knew for they were good at covering

their tracks, want with a webhunter like her?

Stef clicked it and opened up the message. She was disappointed, it was only

a riddle.

"Is this the truth or…or wills c real. Find it to find the truth." She read

out loud. She clicked to delete it but something stopped her. Trinity, if

this message was really from Trinity, had ties to this mysterious

underground hacker movement; they apparently left clues and only those who

were smart enough found the truth.

The Truth.

Something about those words resonated in her. The Matrix. The Truth. Maybe

they had answers.

But she had to find the answer to the riddle first.

She tried running it through some online translators, but nothing came out

that made sense. She knew it was the last part of the message that was the

important part. Reading into it, it could mean something to the nature of

you had to have a will to see what was real and what wasn't.

"Damn you," she cursed at the computer. She was on the verge of giving it up

so she jumped over to a forum she haunted. The last thread that had been

replied to was 'Sorry I'm Late' she clicked over to read it. One of the

administrators did a rambling apology about something or other and ended his

post with a screen cap of the Disney 'Alice in Wonderland.'

Realization dawned over her as she realized what the message meant. Somehow

it came to her within an instant, the translation was Lewis Carroll.

Why that was she had no idea, but it was the answer to the riddle.

She jumped back over to her lair and send off a reply to the mysterious

person.

About an hour later, she dropped off to sleep.

The next morning she woke to someone incessantly knocking at her door.

Dragging herself out she undid the locks and looked blearily at…a FedEx

deliveryman.

"Can I help you?"

He smiled a nice false smile, something that made her want to punch him.

"Stef Mimosa?"

"Yes."

"Package for you," he handed her a clipboard. "Sign here." She grumbled

something unintelligible and signed her name on the dotted line. He smiled

again and handed her a package.

She slammed the door behind him and dumped the package on the table. She

tipped some coffee granules into a cup, "must have caffeine," she muttered

as she turned the kettle on.

The package rung.

She looked back at it, "no, that didn't happen," she said shaking her head.

It rang again. Tearing it open she pulled out a cell phone. As a side note

it was an expensive cell phone. She answered it.

"Hello?"

"Unseen Spyder?" a man's voice asked on the other end.

"Who is this?"

"Unseen, this is the reply to you answer to the riddle."

"You can call me Stef," she said quietly, "is this Trinity?"

The man laughed, and following the Wonderland theme she thought of the

creepy cat. "No, my name is Morpheus."

"I've heard of you," she said in wonder, Morpheus had even more underground

fame than Trinity did.

"That's good to hear. I understand you are looking for answers."

For lack of a coherent sentence, she just answered "yes."

"I can give you those answers. Will you meet with me?"

"Just name the place."

"A friend of mine will meet you on the corner of River and Dale."

"When?"

"Nine o'clock tonight, can you make it?"

"Of course."

"Then I shall say goodbye." The call died in her ear, and she put the phone

down on her table. She wasn't sure what to do, most hackers waited their

entire online lives for a call like this, she had heard about 'contacts'

like this. And she had been contacted by Morpheus and Trinity, whatever she

had done to deserve this was she glad of.

Nine pm, which was about eleven hours.

Nothing would be the same after that.

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