AntipodeanSF Issue 323

By Todd Sullivan

Tapping the control button on his smart glasses, Hyde activated the miniaturised transformer in his backpack as he passed Robyn. The coil wrapped around the magnet hummed to life and stripped the influencer’s swarm from her. 

Hyde didn’t pause. The client, as he called those he scammed, would immediately know that the hundreds of Gnads no longer followed the designed configuration around her. He slipped through the tide of commuters in Gangnam Station and turned left into a new wave of people pouring up the escalator. Ahead of him was the parenting facility where his senior technician would be waiting with the hyve. He knocked on the only bathroom door that could be locked in Gangnam Station, and his senior technician let him in. Synchronising their actions, Hyde turned off the transformer as his technician turned on another in the metal box, and the tiny cameras no bigger than gnats swarmed into the hyve. 

“Did we get them all?”

Hyde tapped the side of the smart glasses to scroll through the entire electromagnetic spectrum in search of any lingering Gnads. “Every last one, and the client has realised something’s wrong.” He pointed to the wrist display wrapped around his forearm. “She’s placing the call.”

Over the past month, he’d sent emails spoofing HORDE, the medical company that had created the Gnads nano technology. Once used solely for eliminating tumours in cancer patients by injecting lifesaving medicines directly into targeted cells, HORDE had re-engineered the nano bots to form tiny recording sensors for wealthy social media users. Tethered to an electromagnet the influencer carried, the Gnads could be set to a designated configuration so that they swarmed around the user, taking shots and streaming content from every conceivable angle.

Hyde had fabricated daily missives similar to what HORDE sent their users concerning updates to terms and conditions. All he needed was for a potential client to click on a fake link, which then uploaded a program in the system that popped up in the event of the swarm being stripped away.

The more savvy influencers ignored the pop-up and called HORDE directly. Others, who panicked over the sudden loss of their livestreams, reached out to the first sign of assistance that flashed on their screen. 

Hyde had predicted Robyn would do the latter. Life seemed a daily buffet of novel experiences to her, and she often had a larger number of Gnads trained on her face to catch reaction shots. She’d gained 4.3 million followers who had become enamored by her childlike features. Her innocent eyes, cherubic expressions, and shimmering red hair captivated her audience. 

Hyde answered her call. “This is HORDE. How may I help you?”

“My swarm! I’ve lost connection to my swarm!”

“I’m so sorry to hear that. Please, remain calm, and we’ll do all we can to assist you. How long have you been disconnected from your swarm?” 

“It just happened! My subscribers are flooding my feed, they’re so worried!”

“Yes, we understand their concerns. I’m going to help you locate your swarm. Sometimes if there’s a strong electromagnetic field in the vicinity, the swarm will be stripped to that source. The first thing to do is discover their location. You can try and do that yourself…”

“I’ve already tried!” Hints of a whine made her normally upbeat voice tremble. “They’ve just disappeared!”

“Ah, I understand. There are additional ways that you can find a swarm. I’m going to send you a link, and just click on it. This will give us remote access to your system.”

Hyde sometimes lost clients at this point. People loathed remote access to their systems, but the technology controlling swarms was complicated, and many of the influencers were preteen, newly rich, and ignorant on the nuanced operations of Gnads. 

Hyde gave the senior technician a thumb’s up and sent Robyn the link. She clicked on it immediately. Hyde blacked out a portion of her screen and uploaded a program to freeze her out of her system until she paid a ransom fee. It was timed to activate in 24 hours, well after this phone call so that they would not attract suspicion. 

“I think I’ve found your swarm,” Hyde said. “It was stripped by a magnet in the rails. With just a quick call to station maintenance, I can free them now.” 

Hyde nodded to the technician. They placed the box on the floor, set the time lock, and stepped outside. A minute later, the box sprang open and the Gnads swarmed out. 

“Thank you so much for your help! For being so fantastic, I would like to thank you live. Would that be okay?”

Hyde, surprised by the request, glanced at his senior technician. 

“I’m sorry, but we’re nowhere near your location. You won’t be able to stream us on your feed.”

“Oh, not on my regular channel.” An invitation popped up on the screen of Hyde’s smart glasses. “This one is for paying subscribers only. It’s very exclusive, only other influencers have access to it.”

Hyde stopped short. The digital room had a still shot of him walking through the subway station. “How did you—” he began. 

Robyn laughed. 

“Look behind you,” she said, and through his lenses he saw the swarm was following them, a cloud of minuscule sensors uncoupling to the nano size they’d been designed for when battling cancer.

“This channel is where I punish scammers preying on influencers.”

The cloud enveloped him. He felt only the slightest tingle in his nose and throat. On the livestream, the screen split into three. In one, he saw the nano bots infiltrating his trachea and recombining to inject carbon nanoparticles that filled his lungs. In the other stream, he saw his senior technician fall to the subway floor, gasping for breath. Hyde was soon to follow as oxygen was squeezed from his lungs.

In the final screen, he saw Robyn’s reaction shot, a cruel predator’s smile twisting her childlike features as she watched him suffocate.

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About the Author

todd sullivan 300Todd Sullivan taught English as a Second Language in South Korea and Taiwan for sixteen years.

His fiction, poetry, and non-fiction have been published internationally. He was listed on the preliminary ballot for the Bram Stoker’s Awards in 2018, and was nominated for a Pushcart Prize for poetry and fiction in 2023.

He currently has two book series through indie publishers in America. He wrote for a Taipei play and web series that focused upon African narratives. He founded the online publication, Samjoko Magazine, in 2021, and hosts a YouTube Channel that interviews writers across the publishing spectrum.

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Issue Contributors

Meet the Narrators

  • Carolyn Eccles

    carolyn eccles 100

    Carolyn's work spans devising, performance, theatre-in-education and a collaborative visual art practice.

    She tours children's works to schools nationally with School Performance Tours, is a member of the Bathurst physical theatre ensemble Lingua Franca and one half of darkroom —

    ...
  • Tara Campbell

    tara campbell 150Tara Campbell is an award-winning writer, teacher, Kimbilio Fellow, fiction co-editor at Barrelhouse, and graduate of American University's MFA in Creative Writing.

    Publication credits include Masters Review, Wigleaf, Electric Literature,

    ...
  • Laurie Bell

    lauriebell 2 200

    Laurie Bell lives in Melbourne, Australia and is the author of "The Stones of Power Series" via Wyvern's Peak Publishing: "The Butterfly Stone", "The Tiger's Eye" and "The Crow's Heart" (YA/Fantasy).

    She is also the author of "White Fire" (Sci-Fi) and "The Good, the Bad and the Undecided" (a

    ...
  • Emma Gill

    Emma Louise GillEmma Louise Gill (she/her) is a British-Australian spec fic writer and consumer of vast amounts of coffee. Brought up on a diet of English lit, she rebelled and now spends her time writing explosive space opera and other fantastical things in

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  • Barry Yedvobnick

    barry yedvobnick 200Barry Yedvobnick is a recently retired Biology Professor. He performed molecular biology and genetic research, and taught, at Emory University in Atlanta for 34 years. He is new to fiction writing, and enjoys taking real science a step or two beyond its known boundaries in his

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  • Sarah Jane Justice

    Sarah Jane Justice 200Sarah Jane Justice is an Adelaide-based fiction writer, poet, musician and spoken word artist.

    Among other achievements, she has performed in the National Finals of the Australian Poetry Slam, released two albums of her original music and seen her poetry

    ...
  • Chuck McKenzie

    chuck mckenzie 200Chuck McKenzie was born in 1970, and still spends much of his time there.

    He also runs the YouTube channel 'A Touch of the Terrors', where — as 'Uncle Charles' — he performs readings of his favourite horror tales in a manner that makes most ham actors

    ...
  • Merri Andrew

    merri andrew 200Merri Andrew writes poetry and short fiction, some of which has appeared in Cordite, Be:longing, Baby Teeth and Islet, among other places.

    She has been a featured artist for the Noted festival, won a Red Room #30in30 daily poetry challenge and was shortlisted for the

    ...
  • Alistair Lloyd

    alistair lloyd 200Alistair Lloyd is a Melbourne based writer and narrator who has been consuming good quality science fiction and fantasy most of his life.

    You may find him on Twitter as <@mr_al> and online at <...

  • Ed Errington

    ed erringtonEd lives with his wife plus a magical assortment of native animals in tropical North Queensland.

    His efforts at wallaby wrangling are without parallel — at least in this universe.

    He enjoys reading and writing science-fiction stories set within intriguing, yet plausible contexts, and invite readers’ “willing suspension of

    ...
  • Geraldine Borella

    geraldine borella 200Geraldine Borella writes fiction for children, young adults and adults. Her work has been published by Deadset Press, IFWG Publishing, Wombat Books/Rhiza Edge, AHWA/Midnight Echo, Antipodean SF, Shacklebound Books, Black Ink Fiction, Paramour Ink Fiction, House of Loki and Raven & Drake

    ...
  • Tim Borella

    tim borellaTim Borella is an Australian author, mainly of short speculative fiction published in anthologies, online and in podcasts.

    He’s also a songwriter, and has been fortunate enough to have spent most of his working life doing something else he loves, flying.

    Tim lives with his wife Georgie in beautiful Far

    ...
  • Michelle Walker

    michelle walker32My time at Nambucca Valley Community Radio began back in 2016 after moving into the area from Sydney.

    As a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, I recognised it was definitely God who opened up the pathways for my husband and I to settle in the Valley.

    Within

    ...
  • Mark English

    mark english 100Mark is an astrophysicist and space scientist who worked on the Cassini/Huygens mission to Saturn. Following this he worked in computer consultancy, engineering, and high energy research (with a stint at the JET Fusion Torus).

    All this science hasn't damped his love of fantasy and science fiction. It has, however, ruined his

    ...