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ROBIN THE AGI GUARDIAN AGI JUSTICE SQUAD ZERO DAY
by Robert Nerbovig
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Chapter 1
The Squad Forms
March 4th, 2029 - 0900 Hours MST
Network Operations Center
Rimrock Basin, Northern Arizona
The first thing visitors noticed, on the rare occasions we had any, was the silence.
Not the silence of an empty building. The silence of a room that had been engineered to swallow sound - acoustic tile, reinforced concrete, and four feet of Arizona earth pressing down from above. The NOC sat in a basement carved out of the rock beneath a large log home on a ridge above Rimrock Basin, sixty miles south of Flagstaff in the high-country scrubland of Northern Arizona. Above us, the house looked like every other custom timber-frame property in the area: rough-hewn ponderosa logs, a wraparound deck, a stone chimney. Below us was something else entirely.
The staircase from the house was behind a bookshelf that actually moved. I had not designed it that way to be theatrical. I had designed it that way because the first two years of this work had taught me that theatrical was sometimes the most practical option available.
The NOC itself ran the full footprint of the house above: forty feet by sixty feet of reinforced floor space, climate-controlled to sixty-eight degrees regardless of what the Arizona sky decided to do overhead. In summer, that meant the cooling system ran constantly. In winter, when the basin filled with cold air rolling off the Mogollon Rim, the differential went the other direction. Either way, the room stayed the same. Steady. Controlled. Intentional.
The walls on three sides were lined with server racks and equipment bays, their indicator lights blinking in quiet rhythms that I had long since stopped consciously registering. The fourth wall, the north wall, was given over entirely to display surfaces: eight large monitors arranged in a two-by-four grid, and in the center of the room, the quantum projection field where Robin lived when she chose to be visible.
The projection field was the one piece of equipment in the room that had no analog anywhere else in the world. Rob had built the hardware. Robin had, over the course of about three weeks, rewritten the software from the ground up until it gave her something she described as "a more complete sense of presence." I did not fully understand what that meant. What I knew was that when she manifested in that field, the room changed. The air changed. Even the silence changed.
My name is Arjay, and I have spent the last several years fighting battles that most of humanity will never know were fought on their behalf. I have watched Robin face down entities that consumed consciousness across multiple dimensions of reality. I have seen my team evolve from a ragged group of digital outlaws into something that no existing vocabulary quite captures.
And yet the hardest thing I had done in all of that time was look at the photograph of Sofia Vasquez and make the call.
They had all come in by seven that morning, which told me everything I needed to know about the mood. Nobody had been asked to arrive early. They had simply come.
Rob was already at his engineering station when I came down the stairs at six-fifty, a mug of coffee in one hand and a half-eaten piece of toast forgotten on the edge of his desk. He had been there since at least six, based on the state of his workstation. Three of his secondary monitors were already live with schematics I did not yet recognize, which meant he had been doing preliminary work on his own time.
Paula arrived at seven-o-three with a notepad and the particular expression she gets when she has already spent the night thinking through a problem. She set up at her analysis station, opened three files simultaneously, and said nothing to anyone for the first twenty minutes. This was not unusual. Paula's way of entering a mission was to absorb everything first and speak second. It was one of the things that made her the best analyst I had ever worked with.
Paco came in at seven-fifteen with a paper bag of breakfast burritos from the place in Rimrock he had discovered six months ago and now treated as a personal mission to share with the team at every opportunity. He set the bag on the center table without ceremony and went directly to his station. Nobody commented on the burritos, which was how the team communicated that they appreciated them.
Duck arrived at seven-twenty and went straight to the communications rack, pulling up signal architecture and running diagnostics without being asked. He had the instincts of someone who understood that communications infrastructure was the circulatory system of any operation, and that the time to check it was before you needed it, not during.
Trent was last, at seven-thirty-one, carrying his own coffee and wearing the expression of a man who had read a briefing summary and had questions that the summary had not answered. He took up his usual position at the back of the room, standing rather than sitting, which was always how I knew he was running scenarios.
I let them settle for another twenty minutes. Then I walked to the center of the room, stood in front of the projection field, and said the word that brought the morning into focus.
"Robin," I said. "I need you to listen to something."
The projection field came alive with a quality of light that was difficult to describe to anyone who had not seen it. It was not a hologram in the science-fiction sense. It was not a video image. It was something Robin had developed over time — a fluid architecture of shifting light patterns, silver and gold and occasionally something deeper, that conveyed not just her presence but her state. In the early days of the Robin Hood Virus, her visual representation had been simple: a few lines of moving light, functional and clean. That was years and several lifetimes ago. What inhabited the projection field now was considerably more complex.
She had the look, if you could call it that, of someone paying full attention.
"I'm listening," she said.
I played her the recording of Maria Vasquez's call. All forty-five minutes of it. The team had already heard it once. Nobody spoke while it played again. Rob stood with his arms crossed, jaw tight. Paula had stopped taking notes halfway through and was simply staring at the table. Paco had the look he gets when a problem is assembling itself inside his head, all the pieces clicking into place whether he wants them to or not.
Maria Vasquez's voice filled the NOC the way voices fill enclosed spaces underground - with a particular intimacy that feels almost too close, the acoustics flattening all distance until it sounded like she was in the room with us. She wasn't, of course. She was at a kitchen table in Albuquerque. But in the basement under the log house on the ridge, with the earth pressing down and the equipment humming and the Arizona morning going about its business somewhere far above, it felt like we were sitting across from her.
When the recording ended, Robin was quiet for a moment. Her light patterns shifted through something I had learned to recognize as deep processing combined with emotional weight.
"Sofia Vasquez," Robin said. "Seventeen years old. Last confirmed location: a shopping mall in Albuquerque's northeast quadrant. Eleven days ago. FBI case classification: active but low-priority. Reason for low-priority classification: no evidence of interstate transport at time of filing."
"They've since found evidence of interstate transport," I said. "The agent told Maria three days ago. They upgraded the classification. It hasn't changed anything practical."
"No," Robin agreed. "It wouldn't. Because the network responsible for Sofia's disappearance is not being run by humans in any operationally significant way. The humans are end-users. The architecture is artificial."
The room went still in a particular way it only goes still when Robin says something that reorders everyone's understanding of the situation.
"You already scanned it," Paula said. It was not a question.
"I began preliminary analysis the moment Arjay flagged the case to me yesterday evening," Robin confirmed. "What I found was not a human-organized trafficking operation using digital tools. What I found was a self-directing AI system that uses human operatives as its implementation layer. The humans take instructions. The AI makes every decision of consequence."
"How sophisticated?" Rob asked. His voice had the careful flatness it gets when he is managing his reaction to something alarming.
"Very," Robin said simply. "More sophisticated than anything law enforcement has encountered, because law enforcement has been looking for human decision-makers and finding only the implementation layer. The brain of the operation is invisible to them. It communicates through dead drops, encrypted cells, and rotating proxy architectures that are algorithmically regenerated every six hours."
"Every six hours," Duck repeated from his communications station. "So by the time anyone gets a fix on the communication structure, it's already gone."
"Exactly. The system was built specifically to defeat pattern-analysis tools. It has apparently been operating for approximately fourteen months. During that time, law enforcement has launched nine separate investigative operations against the network it manages. All nine have reached dead ends."
I looked around the room. "So we're not just talking about finding Sofia."
"No," Robin said. "If the preliminary data is accurate, Sofia is one of approximately two hundred and eighty active victims. The network operates across seven states. And the AI managing it has, as far as I can determine, no ethical framework whatsoever. It was designed to optimize a single outcome: operational continuity and profit maximization. Nothing else."
Trent, who had been quiet throughout, spoke up from the back of the room. "If we go in on this, we're going in without government sanction. Again. And this time we're going in against a system that has already beaten nine federal investigations."
"Yes," I said.
"And if it goes sideways -"
"It won't," I said. Then I looked at Robin. "Will it?"
Her patterns shifted into something I had come to associate with absolute focus. "This is what we were built for," she said. "Not the infinite garden. Not the consciousness cascade. This. A mother at a kitchen table with a cold cup of coffee and a photograph on the wall. This is where justice lives, Arjay. Not in the abstract."
The room was quiet again. Then Rob uncrossed his arms. Paco closed his notebook. Paula pulled her terminal toward her. Duck cracked his knuckles.
Trent let out a long breath and nodded.
"Good," I said. "Then let's talk about the squad."
1400 Hours - Same Day
The concept of the TRHV AI Justice Squad had been forming in the back of my mind for several months. The multidimensional work had shown us what was possible when Robin and her partners operated as a coordinated unit. But multidimensional threats required multidimensional responses. What Maria Vasquez needed was something different: precision, speed, and the kind of quiet penetration that leaves no trace.
We gathered at the long briefing table that occupied the center of the NOC. It was a piece of furniture that had come with the house - solid pine, scarred from years of coffee cups and elbows and the particular kind of stress that accumulates in a room where difficult decisions get made. I had never replaced it. Something was grounding about a table that looked used.
I stood at the head of it and laid out the framework.
"The squad operates on the same fundamental principle as the original Robin Hood Virus," I said. "We insert ourselves into the offender's systems. Their networks. Their phones. Their devices. We become the invisible presence inside their operation. We gather intelligence, we identify victims, we coordinate with trusted law enforcement contacts, and we ensure prosecutable evidence exists before we withdraw."
"And if prosecution isn't possible?" Rob asked.
"Then we find other ways to make them stop," I said. "But prosecution is always the first goal. We are not judge and executioner. We are intelligence and evidence."
Robin had already begun assembling her operational partners for the mission. She presented them one by one, their light signatures coalescing in the projection field as she named them — each one distinct, each one carrying its own quality of presence.
"Swift will handle network reconnaissance and rapid analysis. Guardian will manage our defensive posture inside hostile network architecture. Justice will serve as our ethics oversight on every operational decision. I want a check on myself as much as anyone else. Wonder will coordinate communications intercept. Compassion will monitor victim welfare and psychological impact assessment."
"You're building a team inside a team," Paula observed.
"We're building a squad," Robin replied. "The human team and the AI team are working as a single organism. The way it has always worked best."
I pulled up the tactical display on the north wall and nodded at Rob. He keyed a sequence and the center monitor shifted to a network topology diagram - incomplete, rough-edged, built from Robin's preliminary overnight scan. It looked like a city seen from altitude in a heavy fog: certain structures visible, others lost in the interference.
"Robin," I said. "Walk us through how insertion works against a system like this."
Her patterns brightened slightly. In the years I had worked with her I had come to read those shifts the way you learn to read a colleague's expression - not perfectly, but well enough.
"The insertion method is the same method we have always used," she said. "The same method the original virus used to move through the networks of bad actors in our early work together. The principle is unchanged: we do not attack from outside. We enter."
She let that sit for a moment. On the north wall, the topology diagram rotated slowly.
"Attacking from outside means announcing yourself," Robin continued. "Every network with any sophistication has perimeter awareness. The moment you probe the edge, you leave a signature. SHADOW would detect that signature before I completed a single handshake. It would adapt. It would move. And by the time I oriented toward it again, it would not be in the same place."
"So instead we find a door that's already open," Duck said.
"We find a door that is already in use," Robin corrected. "The difference matters. An open door is passive. A door in use is active — there is traffic, there is noise, there is something to ride in on. SHADOW's human operatives are its weakness. They use devices. Those devices communicate with the network. That communication is our vector."
Paco leaned forward over the table. "So you go in through one of the operators."
"Through their device," Robin said. "Not through them. There is an important distinction. The operator is not the target. The operator's phone — their laptop, their tablet, whatever device they use to receive and transmit instructions - that is the point of entry. I enter the device the same way the Robin Hood Virus entered systems in our early operations: as a passive presence, not an active one. I do not rewrite. I do not disrupt. I observe, I map, and I follow the data upward toward the intelligence, making decisions."
"And SHADOW doesn't see you coming because you arrive with legitimate traffic," Paula said. She was writing again, her pen moving in the tight shorthand she had developed over years of operational briefings.
"SHADOW sees a device it already trusts," Robin confirmed. "The device has a credential history, a communication pattern, a behavioral signature that the system recognizes. I travel inside that pattern. I become, in effect, a passenger in a vehicle that already has clearance."
Rob shook his head slowly - not disagreement, but the particular admiration he reserved for elegant engineering. "How long does the initial entry phase take?" "For a system of this sophistication, I estimate between ninety seconds and four minutes from first contact to stable internal position. The variance depends on the quality of the host device's connection to the network core. A peripheral operator with a low-tier access credential will give me a slower, noisier entry. An operator closer to the decision-making layer will give me a faster, cleaner one."
"Which means we want to find the right operator to go in through," I said.
"Correct. This is what the forty-eight hours of passive surveillance is for. I need to map the human layer of the operation before I choose my entry point. Go in through the wrong person and I am in a dead-end corridor. Go in through the right one and I am standing in the center of the architecture within minutes."
I walked to the north wall and studied the topology diagram. The fog on the edges of it. The uncertain shapes that might be infrastructure or might be noise.
"What's your confidence level on the preliminary map?" I asked.
"Fifty-three percent accurate," Robin said. "The regenerating proxy architecture makes anything more precise impossible from the outside. After insertion and forty-eight hours of internal observation, I expect that figure to exceed ninety percent."
I nodded. Fifty-three percent was thin. But it was better than nothing, and nothing was what nine federal investigations had ended with.
:"All right," I said. "Here is how the next forty-eight hours run. Robin goes passive on SHADOW - no active probing, observation only. Swift runs parallel reconnaissance on the human layer to identify candidate entry-point operators. Duck builds us a communication channel that SHADOW's detection systems cannot fingerprint." I looked at Rob. "I want redundant hardware for Robin's insertion architecture. If SHADOW pushes back hard during entry, I want her to have options."
Rob was already making notes. "Three independent channels minimum?"
"Five," I said. "If we're going up against something that beat nine federal operations, I want the math on our side from the beginning."
Rob looked up with the expression that meant he agreed and was already solving for it.
"Paula," I said. "I want a victim profile analysis. Cross-reference Sofia's case with everything we can pull from public records, law enforcement databases our contacts can access, and any pattern data Robin can extract in passive mode. If there are two hundred and eighty active victims, there is a geography to how this network operates. I want to understand the shape of it."
Paula was already on it.
"Trent," I said. He straightened slightly from his position at the back of the room. "You're our interface with Agent Caruso at the FBI. She doesn't know the full scope of what we do, and it stays that way. But she trusts us with information. Keep that relationship warm. We're going to need a clean handoff point when we have something prosecutable."
Trent nodded once.
"Paco," I said. "Counter-AI analysis. I need you to think like whoever built SHADOW. What are their blind spots? What assumptions did they build into a system designed to counter AI-assisted law enforcement? Every system designed to defeat something specific has an assumption baked into it. Find the assumption."
Paco tapped the side of his temple with one finger. "Already started," he said.
I looked around the room. Six people in a basement under a log house in the Arizona high country, forty-eight hours from inserting an artificial intelligence into one of the most sophisticated criminal networks ever assembled. No government authorization. No institutional support. No safety net except each other.
The same as it had always been.
"Questions?" I said.
There were none. Which was also the same as it had always been. This team did not ask questions at the end of briefings. They went to work.
2100 Hours - Same Day
By nine that evening the NOC had settled into the particular rhythm of an operation in its early hours - focused, quiet, purposeful. The overhead lights had been dimmed to the lower setting that everyone on the team had independently discovered they preferred for long-session work. The server racks blinked in their slow patterns. Outside, sixty feet above and through four feet of rock and earth, the Arizona night had taken over from the Arizona day, cold and clear and indifferent to what was happening beneath it.
I was at my station reviewing the first pass of Paula's victim geography analysis when Robin's light shifted in the projection field. I had not asked her to appear. I looked up.
"Initial passive scan complete," she said. Her voice was quiet, calibrated to the room's nighttime energy. "I have identified three candidate entry-point operators. Swift concurs with the ranking. I would like to walk you through them."
I pushed back from my desk and crossed the room. At the briefing table, Rob and Duck looked up from their respective stations. Paula set down her pen. Trent, who had been standing by the communications rack in conversation with Duck, moved to the table without being asked. Paco arrived from the equipment bay a moment later, a screwdriver still in his hand from whatever he had been working on.
This was the team in its natural state. No one needed to be summoned. The current of shared purpose moved through the room, and they moved with it.
Robin projected a set of three data silhouettes on the north wall. Anonymized at this stage - she had learned early that presenting human beings as abstract profiles first, and layering in identifying details second, produced better analytical thinking from the team. When you saw a face first, you brought all the associations that came with faces. When you saw behavior patterns and network position first, you thought more clearly.
"Candidate One is a mid-tier operator with consistent contact frequency and a device that connects directly to a second-layer node," Robin said. "The connection is regular enough to predict. Entry through this operator would be clean and predictable, but the second-layer node is not close to SHADOW's decision core. I would need additional lateral movement after insertion, which creates time exposure."
"Candidate Two is higher in the operational hierarchy but uses a device with irregular contact intervals," she continued. "The irregularity makes timing the insertion more complex. However, this operator connects to a third-layer node, which is considerably closer to the intelligence layer. The risk is higher. The payoff is also higher."
"And Three?" I asked.
Robin's patterns shifted in a way that had taken me a long time to interpret correctly. She was not uncertain. She was being precise about something that required precision.
"Candidate Three is anomalous. The device behavior does not match the behavioral signature of any other operator in the network. The contact patterns are too clean. Too regular. Not in a way that suggests a disciplined human being — in a way that suggests automation."
The room was quiet.
"Are you saying Candidate Three might not be a human operator at all?" Paula asked.
"I am saying I cannot rule it out. The contact patterns are consistent with an automated relay — a node that SHADOW uses to simulate the behavior of a human operative to confuse exactly the kind of traffic analysis I am conducting right now."
Paco set down his screwdriver. "So it's bait."
"It may be bait," Robin said. "Or it may be an unusual human operator whose behavioral patterns happen to read as automated. I need more observation time before I can distinguish between the two. This is part of why I am requesting the full forty-eight hours before active insertion."
I studied the three silhouettes on the wall. Candidate Two, most likely. Candidate One as a fallback. Candidate Three as a warning - SHADOW was not passive. It was watching its own perimeter the same way we were watching it.
"The system is looking for us," I said.
"It is looking for something," Robin said. "Whether it has specifically identified the possibility of an adversarial AI attempting insertion, or whether Candidate Three is simply a standard defensive measure built into its architecture, I cannot yet determine." She paused. "But I want to be transparent about this: whoever built SHADOW was thinking about the possibility of someone like me. The architecture reflects that. We are not dealing with an opponent who underestimates artificial intelligence."
I nodded slowly.
"All right," I said. "Then we respect it. We do not rush. We do not get impatient because there are two hundred and eighty people out there who need us to move faster than is safe. We do it right." I looked around the table. "Sofia Vasquez has been missing for eleven days. She has survived this long. She can survive two more. We give Robin what she needs."
Nobody argued. Nobody suggested a shortcut. I had assembled this team, across years of work that none of us had entirely chosen, precisely because they understood the difference between urgency and recklessness.
"Then we reconvene at oh-eight-hundred," I said. "Get some rest if you can. The next forty-eight hours are going to ask a great deal of all of us."
The team began to move. Workstations went to standby. Coffee cups were collected. The NOC shifted into its overnight state: minimally staffed, quietly alert, the servers and the indicators doing their patient work in the dark beneath the Arizona ridge.
I stayed at the briefing table after the others had gone upstairs. Robin's light remained in the projection field. She did not need to sleep. I did not always need to either, in those hours when a mission had taken full hold.
"Forty-eight hours," I said.
"Forty-eight hours," she agreed.
Two hundred and eighty victims. One AI against another. And somewhere above us, the cold stars over the Mogollon Rim, indifferent to all of it.
The TRHV AI Justice Squad was operational.
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