"Carter, Raphael - The Fortunate Fall" - читать интересную книгу автора (Carter Raphael)
THE
FORTUNATE
FALL
RAPHAEL
CARTER
TOR
® A TOM
DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK NEW
YORK An
extract from Pnin by Vladimir Nabokov, copyright ©
1957 by
Vladimir Nabokov, copyright © 1985 by Vera Nabokov
and Dmitri
Nabokov, is reprinted by permission of Vintage Books, a
Division of Random House Inc. All rights reserved. An
extract from "Cinderella," Transformations, copyright
© 1971
by Anne Sexton, is reprinted by permission of
Houghton Mifflin
Company. All rights reserved. This
is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed
in this
novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously. THE
FORTUNATE FALL Copyright
© 1996 by Raphael Carter All
rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this
book, or
portions thereof, in any form. This
book is printed on acid-free paper. A Tor
Book Published
by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc. 175
Fifth Avenue New
York, NY 10010 Tor
Books on the World Wide Web: http://www.tor.com Tor®
is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates,
Inc. Library
of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Carter,
Raphael. The
fortunate fall / Raphael Carter.—1st ed. p.
cm. "A Tom
Doherty Associates book." ISBN
0-312-86034-X (alk. paper) 1.
Women journalists—Russia—Fiction. 2.
Genocide—Russia- -Fiction.
3. Virtual reality—Fiction. I. Title. PS3553.A78278F67
1996 813'.54—dc20
96-2656 CIP First
Edition: July 1996 Printed
in the United States of America 0
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 for
Pamela Dyer-Bennet who
turned out to be real THANKS to Rich
Veraa, who was first to read it; to
Patrick Goodman, who delivered take-out and
helped vet the continuity; to
George Willard, who posed for a statue, and
provided lessons in parachuting and costumery; to Beth
Friedman, who taught the nanobugs how to
drink; to
Patricia Wrede, who provided a critique so perceptive
I suspect she may be God; and to
Larissa Printzian, who told me the story
of Ivan Durachok, and may live to regret it. 1 VIRTUAL
OR IMMEDIATE TOUCH Love
not the heavenly Spirits, and how their love Express
they? by looks only? or do they mix Irradiance,
virtual or immediate touch? —Milton,
Paradise Lost The
whale, the traitor; the note she left me and the run-in with the
Post police; and how I felt about her and what she turned out to
be—all this you know. I suppose I can't complain. I knew
the risks when I became a camera. If you see something important
enough, your thoughts become a coveted commodity: they steal your
memories and sell them tied in twine. Now you may find my life
for sale in certain stalls, on dusty street and twisting
alleyway; it is available on moistdisk, opticube, and dryROM.
There are places on the Net where you can make a copy free,
although the colors may have faded to sepia and the passions to
pastel. You have taken my memories and slotted them into your
head. And you have played them through, reclining on a futon in
some neon-streaked apartment, reliving my every sensation and
thought from the hour underground with the whale. If you
paid extra for the moistdisk, you have more than just that hour.
You can peer around each thought to see the memories implied in
it, the way you'd turn a hologram to see what lies behind the
rose. You can freeze-frame at the moment I first saw the whale,
and follow the associations back—to the argument over
Moby-Dick the night before; to the first time Voskresenye
said the word, in the cafe on Nevsky Prospect; to the dolphins
that made me clutch my mother's hand with fear, at the amusement
park when I was six years old. You have searched me and known me:
and when at last you put the disk away, you thought of my mind as
a sucked orange, dry of secrets. But
what you saw, heard, touched, remembered, does not quite exhaust
my meanings. With the moistdisk in your head, however bristled
you may be with sockets, what you see is only the moment of
experience, frozen forever. It excludes any later reflections
upon the event—as the hologram of a rose in bloom excludes
the flower's swollen ripening and black decay. I will
give you my thoughts since that time, but not on moist-disk. I
will not let you explore the twining pathways of my thoughts as I
explore them—not again. I will hide instead behind this
wall of words, and I will conceal what I choose to conceal. I
will tell you the story in order, as you'd tell a story to a
stranger who knows nothing of it: for you are not my friend, and
what you know is far less than you think you know. You will read
my life in phosphors on a screen, or glowing letters scrolling up
the inside of your eye. And when you reach the end, you will lie
down again in your indifferent dark apartment, with the neon
splashing watercolor blues across your face, and you will know a
little less about me than you did before. One
Ashes, Ashes "Okay,
what's this scent?" "Roses,"
I said. "And
this one?" "Citrus.
Grapefruit." "All
right. What about this?" "Cow
shit." "Close." "Okay,
horse shit." "Bull's-eye.
Olfactory systems are go. Let's do hearing." I was
standing by the River Chu, in Kazakhstan, staring at a little
hill from which three naked chimneys rose. I stood alone; but a
thousand miles away, in Leningrad, a woman I had never met was
testing my senses. When she had finished, she would slide herself
into my mind, like a rat into water. As my thoughts went out live
to the Net, she would screen them through hers, strengthening my
foreground thoughts and sifting out impurities, so that—if
she was any good—the signal that went out on News One would
be pure and clear. And when she drew herself out of my mind
again, five minutes later, she would know more about me than a
friend of thirty years. "I
think it's an E flat," I said. "Yes,
but what instrument?" "Brass." "Be
specific." "Do I
look like a conductor?" "It's a
trombone. You can tell by the glissando. Now what's
this?" I had
never met this Keishi Mirabara. I had no idea what she looked
like. But Keishi was a screener, so for her, our acquaintance of
half an hour was already long. Hooking up mind to mind, the way
they do, they can only scorn the glacial rituals the rest of us
use to form friendships. By the end of the day, she might already
hate me—not with some casual dislike, but with a deep,
dissective hatred, such as is otherwise only attained after
decades of marriage. It's bad stuff, their hatred. Their love is
worse: a surge of emotion that comes at you flood-fast,
overwhelming your own feelings before you're even certain what
they are. And the poor camera, who can reach out to another mind
only with mute eyes and vague bludgeoning words ... well, it's
like being an amnesia victim, coming home a stranger to someone
who's loved you all your life. "All
right, stop me when this stripe is the same color as the
sky." "Now—no,
a little more—yes, there." "You're
coming through faded, then. I'm going to split your field of
vision. What you're seeing will be on your left, and what's
coming through here will be on your right. Tell me when the
colors are the same. Ready?" "Ready,"
I said. I gave it only half attention. I had done this all
before. Keishi
had come in to screen for me only that evening, when my last
screener, Anton Tamarich, disappeared on the day of a broadcast.
It didn't surprise me—screeners go burnout all the
time—but it left me stuck going live with a screener I'd
never worked with before. It's the beginning of any of a dozen
camera nightmares. You're working with a new screener who falls
asleep at the switch just when you remember something you heard
once about how to make brain viruses, and a Weaver possesses the
man you're interviewing and kills you on the spot. Or some
especially compromising sexual fantasy flits through your head
and out into the Net and is the scandal of the week. The untried
screener is the camera's equivalent of having your fly
open. It was
scary enough that—though I'd never thought I'd say
it— I missed Anton. I hadn't liked him, but I'd liked
working with him. He was an informer for the Post police, and he
hated me. I knew where I stood. "Say
the words that come into your head." "Excrescence.
Trapezoid. Spark. Blanket. Bolus. Rust." "Verbal,
go. Okay, Maya, I'm ready for link-up. Say when." I
walked halfway up the hill, arranged myself facing the river, and
started to prepare myself for contact. After all these years of
having strangers in my head, it's still not easy. I scratched my
nose, adjusted the camera moistware in the temporal socket at the
side of my head, and made sure for the tenth time that I really
did not have to go to the bathroom. "Relax,
will you?" Keishi whispered in my ear, from Leningrad. " 'So Your
Camera Has To Pee' is chapter two in the Basic Screening
textbook, and heck, girl, I'm up to chapter four
already." At that
moment gallows humor was not what I needed. Fear shifted in the
coils of my intestines, like a restless snake. I would forget my
lines. I would trip on a buried cobblestone and half the Russian
Historical Nation would feel me break my nose. I fixed my eyes on
the ground and began to hyperventilate, fighting for
control. And
Keishi, knowing that anything she said would make it worse, did
the only thing she could do to help. She plugged in her screening
chip and patched into my mind. There's
a sense of presence when the screener comes on line, a faint
heat, a pullulation. Keishi's feedback was clear and warm and
reassuring, the strongest I've ever felt—as though someone
had wrapped a blanket around my head. ("That's me," Keishi
agreed. "An electric babushka.") Maybe this would work out after
all, I decided, knowing she heard the thought. "Ten
more seconds," she warned me. "Five. Four. Three ... and you're
live, girl." I felt the "up" drug flood my visual cortex,
making me strain my eyes to separate the river from the rolling
hill behind it. Keishi fed the hours of interviews and research
that Anton and I had done into my memory, so that the five-minute
Netcast could imply a whole week's work. And you came on line, a
shadow audience that always stood behind me no matter how I
turned my head. "This
is what's left of Square-Mile-on-Chu," I said aloud, panning
slowly around from the river. You said it with me. In a single
body, with the same volition, we strode forward up the hill.
"Three crumbling chimneys and some scattered stones, half sunk
into the ground." I had reached the middle chimney now; I walked
around it, running my hand over the cobblestones to transmit
their tiled smoothnesses. "Typical Guardian construction:
cobblestone instead of brick because of the thousands of hours of
slave labor it took to gather the stones, carry them up here, and
fit them together. The more labor-intensive, the greater the
status." I
panned around to view the river again, then carefully leaned
against the chimney, feeling it cool and lumpy against my back.
"It's as idyllic a scene as you'll find anywhere in Kazakhstan.
You could spend hours in this place. Nature bounces back, you
think, whatever humans do. The hills are leaved with grass, and
laced with branches, growing the same as ever. The birds have
long forgotten what happened here, if indeed they ever noticed,
and are building their nests now. And the river flows on, just as
it did when the word Guardian meant a good thing." I
walked down the hill, slowly, letting the sun warm my back that
the stones had made cold. It was an aggressively beautiful spring
day, tyrannically perfect: the kind of day that spurs the suicide
to action by its mocking contrast to her own despair. Lull
them, Keishi, I subvocalized. Make them feel
it. "I'm
lulling, I'm lulling," was her reply, as laconic as the mood I
wished to set and as the day itself. Walking
slowly in the mild breeze, I approached the lake, reached it, and
did not stop. Without removing my shoes or rolling up my cuffs or
bracing myself against the touch of the water, I walked off into
the muck. Skirls of shock and disgust mingled with the
cold—your shock. Feedback to the limbic system, say the
manuals; what it means is that what you feel, I feel. And vice
versa: I took the feeling and intensified it, hurling it back out
at you. "It is
a beautiful day in Kazakhstan," I said, "and you are calf-deep in
the ash of human bodies." A second long wave of mute horror as
the ash and mud cemented in around my legs, entrapping
them. "The
Unanimous Army came through here in the fall of 2246," I said
when the audience had quieted. Calling on my imagination chip, I
drew a sound of marching out of the white noise of the river.
Then I looked up at the shadowed hillside and began to sculpt its
waving grasses into men. "Imagine a solid column of humanity,
twenty abreast, and so long that if you wanted to cross their
path you'd have to camp here until dawn tomorrow. They have no
uniforms, but wear whatever they happened to have on when they
were absorbed: overalls, cocktail dresses—some are naked
beneath makeshift coats. But all have the same round black chip,
the size of a ruble coin, in their left temples. From time to
time a memory unit passes, like the nameless man we met last
week—" and here Keishi lifted a curtain from the memory
"—people whose minds the Army erased and filled with its
data, so the memories of the others could remain inviolate. The
memory units can no longer even walk, so they are carried
along—but upright, to confuse snipers. At this distance
they are lost in the crowd, and you will never know
them." By now
the Army was almost as clear as reality, thanks to the
imagination chip in my right temporal socket. Keishi flashed the
word "re-creation" at the bottom of my field of vision, so
credulous channel-flippers wouldn't call the station thinking
that the Army had returned. "The
first quarter-mile of the Army consists of people who are weak or
dying or otherwise of little use. Their only purpose is to walk
blindly into everything and see if it will kill them. Now that
they've marched through the Square Mile without harm, Sensors
start to break away from the column: Eyes, Ears, Noses,
Fingertips, each with its respective sense enhanced and all the
others numbed. They swarm over the Square Mile in thousands,
sniffing and prodding and tasting. They take nothing, but now and
again they smear something with a fragrant paint they carry with
them, or with urine or blood. "When
the Sensors return to the march, the column slows and spreads out
to the width of the Square Mile. And when it has passed, hours
later, everything in the camp—the barbed wire, the burnt
wood, even the concrete from the foundations—is gone,
digested into that great worm of meat that once was, and will
soon again be, human. "By
November, every man, woman, and child over five in Kazakhstan had
been taken up into the One Mind and was marching on Occupied
Russia. And in 2248, when the Army software detected victory and
suddenly erased itself from all its component minds, more than
half the people in the world found themselves at least a thousand
miles from home. It was a time of global confusion, during which
millions starved or were murdered. Not many people were concerned
with seeing to it that places like this were
remembered." "But is
that the whole explanation?" (Okay, let's wind it up, I
subvoked.) "Or is there a deeper reason? The Holocaust and
Terror-Famine both haunted the consciences of generations, yet
the Calinshchina is barely remembered—why? We'll have some
answers for you next week, in the third and last part of our
series." And
then it's back to fads and scandals for the both of
us, I
subvoked to Keishi, who chuckled politely in reply. I closed my
eyes, calling up my quite beautiful and utterly fictitious
Net-portrait, and signed off: "Maya Tatyanichna Andreyeva. Of
News One hearth, a Camera." No
sooner had the audience fallen away than Keishi said: "I can't
believe you gave that whole speech standing in the water. I
filtered out most of the cold and wetness, but even so, it wasn't
easy to keep their minds on history while water was seeping into
their underwear." "If I'd
walked out of the water and stood around dripping," I said,
sitting down on the grass to take off my shoes, "it would have
been even more distracting." "You
could have saved your swimming lesson for the very end," she
said. "You could—" but I had pulled the Net chip out of my
head, cutting her off. The chip was long and white, with many
metal legs; cupped in my hand, it looked like some pale, crawling
thing that you'd find living under a rock. Vermin. I slipped it
into a pocket and began to scrape the ash off of my
shoes. Two
The Platypus This
was closed to you, even on moistdisk. Keishi was careful to block
certain things from the Net-cast—not that it mattered, in
the end. I was
folded into the single front seat of the electric car I'd rented
in Alma-Ata. Thanks to the rental company's paternalism, the car
would go no faster than 100 kph. At that rate I was four hours
from the trainport, then three more hours by bullet train from
the empty cathedrals and copper towers of Leningrad. Kazakhstan
crept past me in spurts of brush and patchy fields. There was
nothing for my eyes to do but look ahead for the five-kilometer
markers, distracted only where the scarred land condescended to
support a token sheep. A
yellow light flashed in the corner of my eye. "What?" I said
irritably. The
answer scrolled across my eyes: FEED NANOTECH. "All
right. Cancel alarm." SECOND
WARNING. "All
right, I said." The letters meekly disappeared. I took
my flask out of my pocket and shook it. Almost half full, and I
could get a refill on the train. No problem. I dug the telltale
out of my duffel bag and pressed it against the back of my neck.
It hummed as it read my implant, and clicked a few times,
thinking. Finally it chimed, and I pulled it away. It said I
needed fifty-three millilitres—just a booster. My nano
population was steady as she goes. I opened the flask and,
pinching it between my knees, dug into my duffel for a graduated
cup. The
shout of a siren interrupted my search. The car pulled itself
over to the side of the road. "What?
What's wrong?" "Alcohol
detected," the car informed me primly. "Drinking and driving goes
counter to company policy, as well as the laws of the Fusion of
Historical Nations." "Oh,
right," I said. I touched the telltale to the dashboard, but
there was no answering chime. "It's
right there," I said irritably. "Can't you read?" "Drinking
and driving is not permitted," the car repeated. "There are no
exceptions to this policy." "Look,"
I said, "I'm a camera. I've got more nanobugs in my head than a
corpse has worms. They're the old kind." I was speaking
very slowly and distinctly, as if this might help the car to
understand me. "They live on ethanol. If I don't give them some,
they'll starve, and they'll get all clotted up in my blood
vessels, and I'll have a stroke and die. What do the laws of
Kazakhstan have to say about dying and driving?" "Drinking
and
driving," it corrected me, "go counter to—" "Company
policy, yes, all right. The company was supposed to tell you this
before we left. Do you understand me? I won't get drunk.
The nanobugs will eat the alcohol. I'm not going to wrap us
around a tree—even if there were any trees around. Do you
see any trees? I don't see any trees." "Accidents
are possible at any place and time. Drinking and
driving—" "All
right, I heard you," I said. "I'm overdue to feed the bugs
already. If I don't drink some nanojuice within a couple of
hours, I will, at the very least, be in a coma. And when that
happens, I promise, if there's even one tree in this whole damned
Historical Nation, I'll find it and wrap your pretty little
bumper—" The
alarm light in my eye flashed again. "Yes, I know," I said. "What
do you think I'm trying to do?" A
message scrolled by, just above the horizon: CAN I BUY YOU A
DRINK?—KM. "Mirabara?"
I said. "How did you find me?" ONLY
PERSON IN KAZAKHSTAN WHO WOULD ARGUE WITH A CAR, she answered.
MIND IF I HELP? I
sighed and said, "Do I have a choice?" SURE
YOU DO. LET BUGS DIE. OTHERWISE, IMAGINE A PLATYPUS. "What?" HUMOR
ME. VISUALIZE PLATYPUS. I
stared at the car's hood ornament and tried to imagine a platypus
curled up around it. Gradually the animal gained solidity, and I
made it wake up, yawn, and defecate on the hood. NOW
MAKE IT A WEASEL. I
shrank the platypus into a weasel. CHANGE
IT INTO A WHALE. "A
whale won't fit on the car hood." SMALL
WHALE, she suggested. Then I heard her voice behind me: "Never
mind, I'm here." In the
back seat was a cloud of static, gradually taking on human shape.
As I watched it in the rear-view mirror, it sent out a tendril to
the dashboard. "Company
headquarters has just informed me of a change in policy," the car
said breathlessly. "Drinking and driving is now allowed.
No—I'm sorry, strike that—" it paused as though
listening "—drinking and driving now encouraged.
Also—" as it pulled back out onto the road "—speed
limit throughout Kazakhstan has now been doubled. Tripled if you
happen to be wearing a black shirt, and—" it squealed with
excitement "—you are!" The
accelerator fell under my foot. The speed indicator sprouted an
extra digit, and turned red. "Visualize
bat out of hell," she said. I glanced into the rear-view mirror,
which showed me only a strip of forehead; by craning my neck a
little I managed to see one eyelid, harboring an orb of static.
Then I looked back at the road, which was passing at an alarming
rate. "All
right, Mirabara, I understand how you slipped the text in through
my camera chip, but how are you giving me visual?" "Through
your imagination enhancer." I
frowned. "That doesn't hook up with the Net." "Not
usually. But it'll call out to News One's stock library if it
needs to draw something you don't have a clear memory
of." "Oh.
Like a platypus." "Exactly,"
she said. "By the way, you'd better not take any assignments in
Australia for a while. It's a little confused about egg-laying
mammals—thinks they all look like me. Oh, and they're a lot
bigger than you were imagining. See?" She reached forward and
deposited a platypus on my lap. "Hey!"
I tried to brush the animal away, but it was insubstantial; my
hands passed through it. "Will you get rid of that? I'm trying to
drive." "Oh,
all right. Spoilsport." She made the animal disappear. "You'd
better drink your nanojuice now." I
poured out the vodka—100 proof, strictly regulation; I hate
having to do math before I drink. "Hey,
nice flask," she said admiringly. "Right out of an old
movie." I
shrugged. "Keeps me from getting caught without when I'm out on
assignment." "So,"
she said dismissively, "would a crusty old plaid thermos out of a
lunch box. And a thermos would keep it cold, so you could put
nutrient mix in it. But that flask does something much
better." "What's
that?" I asked, unwarily. "Makes
you feel like Sam Spade." I
dropped my voice half an octave and drawled: " 'All we've got is
that maybe you love me and maybe I love you....' " I
stopped; the pleasure of quotation had carried me past caution.
She gave me a brief speculative look, but let the implication
pass. "Not
bad," she said. "Best Bogart I've heard in a long
time." "Flatterer."
I've been to Japan, so I knew she was putting me on. The Japanese
profess to think that Classical America was the high-water mark
of world civilization—mostly to spite the Africans' love of
Egypt. A good Bogart can get you promotions in Tokyo. Me, I don't
even like Bogart. I just watch The Maltese Falcon for
Peter Lorre, and Casablanca because the thought of people
wanting out of Africa is so agreeably deranged. "Not
that I'm not enjoying this little chat with the back of your
head," Keishi said, "but do you mind if I come up
front?" I
looked around at the interior of the narrow electric car.
"There's nowhere to sit up here except my lap." "Tempting
as that offer is," she said, "I think I'll make my own
accommodations." The right door of the car shimmered and receded,
and a new seat ballooned into the extra space. The car flickered
a little as it morphed, but when she was finished, I couldn't
find the line where real car ended and illusion began. I
looked away, disquieted that my reality could be changed so
easily. "Aren't my intrusion lockouts good for anything?" I
asked. "Oh,
they're good enough to keep you safe from the general
rabble." "But
not enough to make me safe from you?" She
clucked her tongue at me. "Girl, that's not a software
problem." At that
moment a car passed us on the highway, which, in Kazakhstan, was
a rare enough event to command my full attention. "Why
are you doing that?" she asked softly. "Doing
what?" "Looking
away every time I look over at you." "I am
not," I said irritably. "I'm trying to drive, that's
all." "Oh,
yeah? What color are my eyes?" "Mirabara,
I don't even know what color my eyes are." "All
right, then, what color's my hair?" "Black." "You
just guessed that because you know I'm Japanese." "Do you
have any idea how many blondes there are in Japan
now?" "Quit
changing the subject and look at me." It
really was a beautiful day. April: time to start cleaning. That
insulation would have to come out of the windows. And the
bathroom was really disgraceful— "Pull
over!" Keishi was shouting. "What?
What's wrong?" "You
blacked out, that's what. Now pull over before you get yourself
killed." "I feel
fine," I said resentfully, but I stopped the car by the side of
the road. "Maybe
too fine? Maybe drank a little too much nanojuice?" "You
saw me. I drank exactly what the telltale said. When exactly did
this alleged blackout happen?" "Right
after you turned around to look at me. I think I'm
insulted." "Very
funny," I said, but I looked down into my lap. I was beginning to
suspect what had gone wrong. There
are two ways of creating a virtual image. If you want, you can
send video to the optic nerve, but that takes a lot of bandwidth.
If all telepresence worked that way, we'd have sixty channels
instead of six thousand. So most channels barely send any video
at all. I saw a demo once in which they patched some soap-opera
channel through a video screen, and all you could see was a few
pale ghosts swimming in static. It looks solid to you because
your implants secrete what cameras call "down," which makes your
brain, well, gullible—"lowers your thresholds," I think is
the phrase. No, I don't know what thresholds they're talking
about, either. They say it's like the way dreams work, if that
means anything to you. To make
sure you see what you're meant to see instead of just dreaming at
random, the moistware sends signals to some gizmos called
neuromodulators, that sit in the part of your brain that
recognizes things. And the neuromodulators guide your mind, as it
amplifies the patterns it's being fed. This is
not an exact science. Sometimes the mind will amplify a purely
random pattern in the static, or make the right pattern into the
wrong thing. That's why on the low-bandwidth channels, you
sometimes get misrecognitions. The camera sees the Prime
Minister, and you see your Uncle Vanya. The camera sees her first
love, and you see yours. In a case like mine this presents
certain problems, as you can imagine. Now,
News One does go out in full video, precisely because they don't
want Mr. Yablokov to turn into Dyadya Vanya during a speech. So
while I'm transmitting, my nanos secrete "up," which somehow
makes my eyes work harder so you get a better signal. Sometimes a
new screener will give me too much up, and I'll go
agnosic—look at things and not know what they are. But
Keishi was coming in through my imagination chip's feeble
Net-link, and that is a very low-bandwidth connection,
lower than even the most obscure channels. To get an image that
way, I'd need a lot more down than I was used to. Since I'm a
camera, the bugs would keep the down corralled in certain parts
of my brain, which explained why I could still more or less
drive; but my visual cortex must have been swimming in the stuff.
Any moment now, the road might turn into a river, the grass into
seaweed, the sheep into shellfish. Small wonder if I mistook
Keishi for someone else. Unless.
What if it wasn't a misrecognition? What if she
was? I
glanced at her, minutely so she might not notice. I could have
seen her for no more than a fraction of a second, and yet I felt
my mind skid—with a moment of panic, like slipping on
ice—back to the thought of the insulation in the windows.
And this thought, which had gone through my mind a hundred times
and was familiar to it, brought on a pulse of nausea: as on those
mornings when the throat forgets all previous intimacy with the
toothbrush and, gagging, rejects it. You're
wrong, I told
myself forcefully. She is Keishi Mirabara, a screener, a
stranger, and not what you think. But if
she was? "Turn
around," she said. "Let me take a look at your
pupils." "I
said, I'm all right. I'm just a little tired, that's
all." She
leaned toward me; I twisted away. Finally she drew back and
frowned. "I think I see the problem." For a time, silence. Then
she said, "It's okay, you can turn around now." "What
did you do?" I said, not moving. "Told
your nanobugs to clean the fatigue products out of your system.
It'll keep you a few hours. There's a long-term solution—
called sleeping. You should ask the Net about it." I
suspected that the excuse of fatigue was as much a lie in her
mouth as in mine. But having advanced the explanation myself, I
could hardly deny it now. Slitting my eyes, as though that could
protect me from the sight, I turned toward her— And
felt waves of relief. ("There now," she said, "that's better.")
She was twenty years too young to be her—to be one of
them—to be what I had thought. Maybe I really was tired,
and imagining things. Or maybe it was too much down. And she
really was alarmingly beautiful; maybe it was only
that. No,
wait. Strike that. I took a second look: she was indifferently
pretty, perhaps, but taken for all in all, she was far too much
Central Casting's idea of the Japanese Black emigre to attract
anyone but the shallow. You know the type—young, overeager,
and a little bit more fashionable than it is fashionable to be.
She even had the statutory name-you've-never-heard-before. If
this were a vid, first we'd have the history lesson about how the
Unanimous Army stranded thousands of American Blacks in Japan,
and then she'd start telling me how she tried to get to Africa
but they turned her away at the border because she wasn't pure
enough of blood. Though, come to think of it, she looked as if
she might have been; the East had left few traces in her face,
except to lighten it. She could easily pass for an
African. "Well,
don't bother thanking me," she said as I pulled back out onto the
road. "Thank
you," I said with exaggerated courtesy. "Now will you please tell
me what the devil News One thought they were doing sending me an
NCG to go live? I could have been eaten up out there." "What's
an NCG?" "New
College Graduate," I said. "You know, a redshirt. Cannon
fodder." Keishi
gestured at the car she had refashioned. "Have you ever had a
screener before who could do this?" "Horsepower
is one thing. Experience is another." "I've
got that, too. Over ten years of it." "Mirabara,
you aren't old enough to have ten years' experience in
anything." "I'm
not in flesh, Maya. Virtual images don't age unless you tell them
to, you know. So I'm a little older than I choose to
look—is that a crime?" I had
to admit, it was a likely enough explanation for someone like
her. "That's different, then. I suppose I might take off a few
years myself, if I had the choice." "Really?"
she said with bland surprise. "What for?" "You
don't have to be sarcastic about it." I had only been trying to
be charitable. "I'm
not," she said. "I can't imagine why you'd change a
thing." "I
said, that's enough." Keishi
chuckled, leaning back in her seat. "You're a difficult woman to
compliment, News One." "I
don't need your compliments," I said, more harshly than I'd
intended. "What I expect out of a screener is a clean signal,
period. I don't need flattery, or companionship, or witty
repartee—" "Or
help with recalcitrant rental cars?" she said mildly. I fixed
my eyes on the road and tried to will myself not to blush. There
was no sense apologizing now. I'd been hostile enough to make her
ask for repartnering, and that would be the end of it. And even
if she didn't ask, they would send me someone new within the
week. They don't pair men with men or women with women, for
obvious reasons. The more so in my case. It was a mix-up,
probably; her name looked like a weird transliteration of Keiji,
a man's name, and someone must have made the wrong assumption. If
her assignment to me wasn't a mistake, it was a test—or
maybe both, since every screener is a test, in one way or
another. When you run into one like Anton, who only works for the
Postcops, you try to hold onto him. Most of them work for the
Weavers, and the Weavers are a lot more dangerous. "So,"
she said briskly, "we've gone over what you want from a screener.
What do you want from a research assistant?" "Why do
you ask?" I said with a sense of dread. "Because
I saw the request for an RA you posted. And I'd like to do
it." "Oh,
Mirabara," I said, grasping for any polite cliché, "I
don't know that that's a good idea. I don't think we're really
ready to be living in each other's back pockets just yet. These
first few months of a partnering are always hard...." "We
don't have to work that closely. After all, I've been
mind-to-mind with you—I've got a pretty good idea how
you'll respond to things. Just give me a direction and turn me
loose. If you want, I can even do fill-in recordings and make it
look and feel just like your style." "You
can do that? You're wired camera?" When I got into the business,
you could either be a camera or a screener, never both; when they
wired you, you were tracked for life. It was nice. It cut down on
the understudy effect. But I'd heard of people wired both ways,
screening each other, a two-way connection. There were even some
who left the link on all the time, merging their minds
forever—people who had ceased to be human, by any
reasonable definition of that word. "Wired
camera?" she said. "Girl, I'm wired everything." And suddenly her
face was bathed in light. An invisible Net-rune, no less. The
tech in that head must have been worth more than the whole
Kazakhi GNP. It was tempting. But it would be
intolerable. She
must have seen "no" in my face. "Look," she said, "we'll be
seeing each other less than if I just screen, because I can work
independently. And if I'm doing some of the camera work, we won't
have to go mind-to-mind as much." "Look,
I just don't think—" "If you
want," she interrupted, with bitterness in her voice, "you can
send me instructions by Net-text and you won't have to see me at
all." I
looked at her and, despite myself, felt sympathy. She seemed not
far from tears. It was my fault—mine and the bastard's who
invented this technology. It's his plotline we're forced to
repeat. For the camera, a stranger with the key to all your
secrets. For the screener, feeling closer than a sister to
someone who does nothing but push you away. And as I thought of
this, I felt a grim determination to see things through with
Keishi. There was a kind of poetry to it—her irreverence,
my hostility. We deserved each other. "All
right," I said, "we'll try it. But there's one thing you need to
know." "What?" I
glanced over at her. "Do you know how I got this
assignment?" "No,"
she said, her eyes narrowing with curiosity. "And I wondered. No
offense, Maya, but you're not exactly typecast." "I
applied for it," I said. "I put in a proposal." "What
possessed them to accept? Sunspots?" "They
didn't accept. I got back a curt little Net-text saying that they
had no plans to do a story like that at this time. They were just
going to let the anniversary go by." "Let me
guess. You hacked the News One computers and inserted the
assignment." "No," I
said irritably. "Are you kidding? News One is a fortress. I
couldn't pull off a thing like that. I don't think anyone
could." "I
could," she said smugly. I
looked at her skeptically out of the corner of my eye. "Be that
as it may. I took a more low-tech solution. I was interviewing
the camera who broke the Shimanski scandal—typical
incestuous News One bullshit; I think I've interviewed more
cameras than I have anyone else. That's what happens when you
slip this far down on the food chain." "A
predator who feeds on other predators is at the top of the
food chain," she pointed out. "Only
if she takes them live. This was scavenging, and I wasn't even
the first jackal at the corpse. So I got down to question number
six on the Universal Interviewing-Another-Camera Script, which
is, and I quote, 'What's your position on invisible wiring and
cameras without Net-runes? Is it really ethical to put someone on
the air without his knowledge, or—' " " 'Or
is it an unwarranted invasion of privacy?' " Keishi chimed in the
last words. "Exactly.
I see you've watched telepresence at least once in the last ten
years. Of course the only political topics they let us cover are
the ones that will never change anything—they are not going
to go back and scar all the new cameras just so people will know
what they're dealing with. So this idiot I'm interviewing, who's
been asked the same question a hundred times in the last week,
makes doe-eyes at me out of his perfect face and says, 'Well, my
goodness, Maya Andreyeva, you really ask the serious questions.'
" "Oh,
God." "My
reaction exactly. And I thought, I can't go on like this. I just
can't do it anymore." "What
did you do?" she asked, with a peculiar tenderness. "Well,"
I said, "it had to be sudden, or Anton would see it coming. So I
just reached out with my foot and pushed over the table between
us, and while Anton was racing to cover up the sound and create
the image of a table and cover up the idiot camera's shock, I
said: 'Well, that'll certainly be useful next week, when I'll be
doing a story in honor of the anniversary of the liberation of
the Square Miles. Um, a three-part series, actually.' And it went
out on the Net, and News One decided to run the story rather than
have people wonder." "Didn't
the filters screen it out?" "Why?
The Calinshchina isn't killfiled." "So
it's not," she said appreciatively. "There's a Weaver that keeps
track of it, but Weavers don't care how you pursue your career
goals." "That
could have called a Weaver?" I said in sudden fear. She
looked at me strangely, as though my reaction had been
unexpected. "Maya, if a whiteshirt were going to come for you,
don't you think she would have done it long ago?" "Of
course," I said hastily, realizing I'd misstepped. "I'm just
being paranoid, that's all. Occupational hazard." "After
all," she said slowly, "the Weavers have the whole Net to
control. Why would one single you out?" "Yes,
you're right." I kept my eyes on the road, trying to make my mind
as blank as possible. She
watched me a little longer, then let the subject drop. "So," she
said. "The point of your story is that News One is pissed at you,
and that you're the last person I should hitch my fortunes to.
Well, you're not going to get rid of me that easily." "No," I
said. "The point of my story is that my objectives and News One's
may not always correspond. You can back them, or you can back me.
And if you're going to back them, I don't want you
around." "I
see." She turned her eyes on my feet and did a slow pan
upward. "What
are you doing?" I said. "Deciding." "I
don't have time for games, Mirabara." "Oh?"
she said, and chuckled. "Well, don't worry. It was never even
close." We
drove on, in a conspiratorial silence. At the
next five-K marker she added: "On one condition." Here it
comes, I
thought. "What kind of condition?" "I know
you're not used to our Japanese informality, but you're driving
me crazy using my surname all the time." I
winced in apology. She had asked me to call her Keishi, and I had
done so, in my thoughts. But I was reluctant to pronounce the
name, with its diphthong, its doubtful gender, and its
indeclinability. At least "Mirabara" had a feminine ending,
whatever its bastard origins. "If you
really can't bring yourself to just call me Keishi," she said, "I
could make up a matronymic. Keishi Eikovna." I
laughed. "That sounds like a patronymic. You want people thinking
you're eighty years old, be my guest." "Well,
what do you do with names that end in o, then? My mother's name
was Eiko." "Russian
names don't end in o." "Well,
whose fault is that?" She frowned and tried again.
"Eikichna?" "Better
not try," I said, and hazarded: "Keishi?" She
smiled on the attempt. "Close enough. If you could bring yourself
to hold that first vowel for more than a femtosecond it might
sound a little bit less like a sneeze—" she saw my
irritation "—but, yes, certainly, you may bid me by that
name. How may I serve Your Eminence?" "For a
start," I said, "pull out everything available about the
Holocaust, the Terror-Famine, and any other miscellaneous horrors
you can think of. I'm looking for popular media, mostly. Then dig
up every broadcast and Net-text about the Calinshchina. And sit
down for about a megascops-hour and think about the similarities
and differences—not between the events, so much as between
the reactions to them. Then put it all on a chip I can slot in
over breakfast tomorrow. Can you do that?" "That,
and have time for about four hours' sleep besides." "In
that case, bring it to me at the Leningrad trainport. I should
arrive there around two this morning. And quit bragging, it's not
attractive." "Only
if you quit trying to intimidate me," she said. "I'm not afraid
of work. I told you, you can't scare me away that
easily." She
smiled and her image faded, then returned. "Oh, one more thing.
Stick your camera chip in your wrist socket for a second. I want
to tweak some things—you're not getting the color fidelity
you should be." "I
don't have an adapter." "You do
too, it's in your duffel. Don't you know you can't lie to your
screener?" "I like
my colors the way they are," I said. "Now
you're grasping at straws." "No, I
mean it. Most cameras nowadays make all their colors
super-bright. The muted colors from the old moistware remind
people that I'm a veteran, not just a mayfly that some idiot has
wired." "Like
me, you mean?" "Doesn't
one of us have some work that she's neglecting?" "Oh,
all right, if that's how you want to be about it." She faded
again. When only Cheshire eyes remained, she said softly: "It
will work out, Maya. I promise it will." "This,"
I said, lapsing back into Bogart, "could be the beginning of a
truly appalling partnership." I heard
her laughter, and the clinking of her earrings. The car's extra
seat disappeared. Earrings!
Honestly! It struck me only then: how like her, to follow fashion
right off the cliff into that quaint disfigurement. In my day
when you poked holes in your head it was to expand your mind, not
just for decoration. Except, of course, for the people who had
fake sockets drilled, so everyone would think they could afford a
real set. As I drove toward Alma-Ata I wondered idly what those
people were doing now that the real status was in being wired
invisibly, like Keishi. Wearing hats, I supposed. And carrying
around fake totems with fake chips plugged into them. I ought to
do a retrospective. Vanity.
I took out the rest of my chips—all but two—and drove
to Alma-Ata quite inviolate, my head accepting input only from
the holes that Nature drilled there. It was
a quiet drive, and would have been restful, if not for one
thought I could not put aside. No doubt it was only a trick of my
memory, which I had every reason to distrust. Or too much down
and not enough bandwidth. But when Keishi had first appeared and
I had seen her forehead in the rearview mirror, a featureless
strip of anonymous skin—I was almost sure of it—that
skin had not been black. (Centipede) (I did
leave two chips in my head; one was a dream coprocessor. Whatever
you've heard, dreams don't reveal your hidden desires— if
they did, I'd never be allowed to dream. They don't reveal
solutions to your problems, and they don't foretell the future.
They're just the fumes your brain exhales as it digests the day's
new memories and mulches them into the old. A dream coprocessor
increases the efficiency of that process, improving memory. Which
is a good thing on the whole, although from time to time I wish
there were a button for "forget." One that I controlled, I
mean. The dreams you get with a coprocessor are bloody, vivid,
and obscure, like second-rate German Expressionism. On the
bullet train to Leningrad I briefly slept, and dreamed she stood
before me, holding something in her hand: a centipede. She held
it out to me. I must have refused, for she drew it back,
laughing. And then I saw that she was wearing a cloak with two
hoods, one lying empty on her shoulder. But no, it was not empty.
Her second head lifted itself slowly, and its eyes were flashing
incandescent bulbs in metal sockets. I woke
with the tunnel lights reddening the inside of my eyelids, dark
and bright, flashing, flashing.) Three A Faster Cable I had
expected that she would be waiting for me, but she wasn't. I
walked out of the gate into the trainport, past a shop full of
T-shirts, snow domes, and cheap telepresence tapes of the city's
attractions; past a kiosk of black moist-novels and garish blue
and yellow drydisk magazines; then into the trainport bar, which
was, I thought, entirely brighter than it should have been. When
I gave the bartender my order, he looked at me with alarm. "Vodka
and what?" "Compost.
Vodka and compost. You haven't been here long, have
you?" "No,
ma'am," he said sheepishly. "The servo's broken. I'm sort of an
emergency replacement." "There's
a lot of that going around. Let me guess. You probably have ten
years' experience too. You're a virtual ghost the same age as
Prime Minister Yablokov." "Excuse
me, tavarishcha?" "Comrade,"
no less. This one was as young as he looked. "All right, look.
Compost. Noun. A mixture of micronutrients for the nourishment of
aging nanobugs. Named for the taste—" "Oh,
you mean NanoSweet?" "That's
what the manufacturer is pleased to call it, yes." The
bartender chuckled. "I'll just need to see your readout,
tavarishcha." Oh, goodie, I'd made a friend. I
touched the telltale to the back of my neck, and showed it to him
when it chimed. The number was higher this time; Mirabara must
have fried quite a few bugs remodeling the rental car. That was
fine with me. At least the drink would taste like alcohol, even
if it didn't feel like it. Ten
minutes later I'd drunk the last vile drop, and still no sign of
Mirabara. I gave her another five minutes while I drank a cup of
coffee, then got up to leave, resolving to fill out a
repartnering form before I went to bed. I was almost out the door
when a bell chimed softly and a speaker above the bar singsonged:
"M. T. Andreyeva, hearth News One, clan Camera, insert a white
courtesy plug please. Maya at News One of Camera, white courtesy
plug." I found
the rack of plugs conveniently located right where people had to
stand to look up at the arrivals screen. You'd think a trainport
would be quiet at two in the morning, but, this being Leningrad,
there was a crowd. By the time I got through to the phone I'd
used three different obscenities a total of seven times, made at
least two lifelong enemies, and possibly broken one toe—
not mine, someone else's. Served them right for using the monitor
when they could get the same data faster from the Net. When I
looked at the plug I felt a wave of nausea. The cable was crusted
with reddish-brown spots—catsup was the least disgusting
theory—and the plug itself was greasy with someone's hair
oil. I didn't relish the thought of having it a centimeter from
my brain. Why do they always give you an audio plug, anyway? A
microphone and speaker would be just as good and far more
sanitary. Kickbacks from the manufacturer? There was a story in
there somewhere. I
looked wistfully through the press of bodies at the snow dome
store, where I might beg a disinfectant. But that would mean
fighting my way out again through sweat, perfume, body heat, and
gutter exclamations. Besides, they probably wouldn't have it. I
settled for wiping the plug on my shirt, to replace some of the
unknown dirt with dirt I was on intimate terms with, and slid the
disgusting thing into my minisocket. Then I remembered that the
minisocket was sitting right on top of Wernicke's area, so if the
plug infected my brain with something, the first thing I'd lose
would be the ability to understand speech. Oh well, I thought
jauntily, it's too late now; and besides, how often do people say
anything worth listening to, these days? You could almost get
along without that skill. In this
cheerful state of mind I thought out into the cable and said:
"This had better be good." The
answer was terse and delivered at a volume just this side of a
shout: "Slot up for God's sake, agoraphobe." Click. It was
Keishi. Sighing,
I made my way back through the crowd, less rudely and therefore
more slowly than before. I settled back down at the bar, took out
my Net chip, and put it on the counter in front of me. "Would
you like something else, tavarishcha?" "As a
matter of fact, yes," I said, leaning forward. "I would like to
get well and truly drunk. I know it's probably against company
policy, but you wouldn't tell on me, would you?" He
shuffled his feet uneasily. "Drinking beyond your ration can be
very dangerous—especially—" He broke off. "Especially
at my age. So you know that, do you. You know, you remind me of a
car I met once. Look, overfeeding them just this one time won't
kill me. Even if they have evolved out of their bug birth
control program, they can only reproduce so fast." He gave
me a pained look. "I'm sorry, tavarishcha. We're not
allowed." "Oh,
all right then. If you can't, you can't." I started to turn away,
then looked back at him appraisingly and said: "Of all the seedy
two-bit brains in all the Historical Nations in the world, she
patches into mine." He
searched my face, puzzled. Then he smiled the smile of someone
finally making out the elephant in a child's drawing. "Oh, is
that supposed to be Bogart, ma'am?" Just as
I'd suspected. I ordered coffee to make him go away, then picked
up the chip from the counter and slotted it in. "Behind
you," she said. I
turned around on the stool. "Fashion risk, Mirabara?" Keishi was
wearing a Leningrad University T-shirt that must have been twenty
years old, and at most had been washed once in all that time;
white slacks stained gray and rolled up at least six inches;
wisps of greasy hair escaping from a broad-brimmed hat. She
looked like a hard-core wirehead, the kind you see trying to kiss
the horse on Nevsky Prospect. "I saw
the way you looked at my earrings last time. I thought I'd try a
different effect." "Maybe
something a little less radical," I said. She
shrugged and morphed back into the clothing of the day before.
"It's just a virtual image. Actually, this is what my body's
wearing today in real." "Then
what was it wearing yesterday?" "Nothing." "All
right, if you don't want to tell me...” "I just
did," she said, raising her eyebrows. This
reminded me that my body was sitting in a trainport bar
carrying on a conversation with thin air. I glanced warily at the
bartender. He returned the look without surprise and said, "More
coffee, ma'am?" "No,
I'm all right," I said. He seemed blasé enough about
it. "Anything
for your friend?" I
looked at him incredulously. "I'm not a lunatic, I'm virtual
conferencing. And even if I were a lunatic, I wouldn't need you
to humor me." Keishi's
voice chimed from the speaker above the bar: "Please excuse Maya
Tatyanichna, she is a little confused about modern technology
this morning. I'll have a coffee, too, please." "And
your Netname?" "Keishi
Mirabara, of hearth—" "Put it
on mine," I interrupted, before she could say "News One." I don't
like being recognized. "Thanks,
but it doesn't matter," she told me. "I'm hearth
Whisper—Margay clan, you know. I only use News One bang
Screener as a hathook, for expense accounts. But
thanks." "What
are you here for, Mirabara? With a high-class address like that,
why do you need a job?" "Green,"
she said frankly. "Margay doesn't take the Robot
Dollar." "Bozhe
moy—last
capitalists on earth refuse the dole; sensorium at
eleven." "They
have to," Keishi said. "Most of their hardware's from
Africa—Whisper itself runs on a Dahlak. They have to have
money they can convert." The
bartender pulled a sky-blue cable out from under the counter,
cleaned the plug carefully with peroxide, and handed it to me.
When I hesitated he said, "it goes in your wrist,
tavarishcha." "I know
a wrist plug when I see one." I looked at Keishi, then sighed and
plugged it in. At least it was clean. "You do know that you're
completely insane. If you can materialize half of a car, you can
easily whip up some virtual coffee. But instead you're paying
trainport prices for it." "It's a
matter of etiquette," Keishi said, picking up the cup that had
materialized before her. "It would be inconvenient if someone
else were to sit in the bar stool where I'm manifesting. So I'm
paying for the privilege of occupying space that could hold a
real customer." More
information than I'd wanted. "So where are you physically, and
where's my research? You said you were going to have it for me by
now." "My
flesh is at the archives and so is your research, for now," she
said, rubbing her eyes. "When I gave you that estimate, I was
planning to get everything through the Net and send it straight
into memory, bypassing my conscious mind to save time. But it
turns out that most of the material on the Holocaust was never
uploaded. Some of it's on paper and the rest is on something
called microfilm. So even though I could uptake the information
at around ten megabaud, that doesn't do me any good, because my
eye muscles can only move about a hundredth that fast. Then I had
the bright idea of looking at it through a videophone camera,
only to find that the hardware wouldn't go over a refresh rate of
sixty frames per second, and I couldn't even turn the pages
that fast. And this microfilm thing is insane—it
takes longer to thread the damned spools than it does to read
them. So the bottom line is, working straight through, I can have
it for you by noon tomorrow. Um, I mean today, since it's past
midnight." I
looked at her with a new respect. "I'll give you one thing. You
know how to work." "Well,"
she said, "somehow I got the idea that if I worked my ass off for
you, you might start taking me seriously." "What
makes you think I don't take you seriously?" She
looked at me as though I'd solemnly informed her that the moon
was made of green cheese. Right. Never lie to your
screener. "All
right, it's true," I said. "I didn't at first. You look so young
that it's hard to. But I'm working on it." "Age is
easily fixed." She morphed older, the skin of her face curdling,
silver corrupting her hair; then smiled at my horror, and
switched back to an age just a few years older than she'd been
before. "Better?" "Not so
you'd notice," I said. "But it doesn't matter." She
added a few more years and glanced at the mirror behind the bar.
Then, satisfied, she drank down the last of her coffee, holding
the cup in both hands. "I'd better get back to the library," she
said. "I've got a deadline to meet. Besides, now that I'm almost
your age, I'll have to add an afternoon nap to my
schedule." "Make
sure you get someone to burp you afterward," I said, smiling
despite myself into my coffee cup. "How much data do you have so
far?" "Nearly
everything for the Calinshchina. I've got about three-quarters of
what's out there on the Terror-Famine, and maybe half on the
Holocaust. Add it all up, and the minimum descriptive algorithm
is about a megaturing." "How
many bytes is that?" "Well,"
she said, "you really can't express moist memory in bytes,
because it's not a string of ones and zeros and there's no single
way to convert it into one. See, if I converted it all back to
the forms I found it in, it would be one number of bytes, but if
I just recorded the connections of each neurode in the network
it's stored in, it would be a completely different number. It's
like those bone-head British cameras on Science News who give you
the weight of a space probe. The probe would have one
weight on Earth and another on the moon, and besides, those are
just potentials—it doesn't actually weigh anything, as long
as it's out there between the stars. Space probes have mass,
moist memories have minimum descriptive algorithms. Measuring it
in bytes wouldn't tell you anything." I
nodded. "So," I said, "how many bytes is that?" Keishi
sighed. "About a trillion." I laid
my hand on her arm. The virtual software let me feel the fabric,
but could not make her arm solid, so my hand passed through skin,
vein, and bone. "Mirabara—Keishi—get some
rest," I said. "I've never seen a terabyte of research on one
chip in my life. You must be exhausted. You know, I didn't even
think about it, but what a horrible assignment. That
telepresence, especially. It must have really put you through the
wringer." "Actually,"
she said, "the books are worse. I can send the telepresence
straight to disk, so I don't have to look at most of it. And it
looks like the telepresence is all by cameras, not the survivors
themselves. Some of the books are by people who were there,
and—" She shivered. "Now,
that's funny," I said. "Why shouldn't there be telepresence from
survivors? There were thousands, weren't there? You'd think that
at least one of them would have put it on disk." "The
Army took over all the camps," Keishi said, "so the survivors
were enlisted. And most of them didn't already have sockets,
because they were prisoners. The Army had to give them sockets.
Now, when you've been drilled by an Army soldier in the middle of
a field, with a rock to the head for anesthesia, further
implants...." "Oh.
Yes, that makes sense," I said. "Too bad; I thought I was onto
something. No moist memory either, I suppose?" "Of the
survivors themselves? Not a single disk." "Well,
it can't be helped. Anyway, what I really need is that
megascops-hour of making sense out of it. But get some sleep
first and do it in the morning—I mean, the
afternoon—when you're fresh. How long will that take
you?" "I can
do the 'hour on the train home from the archives, and have the
chip waiting for you when you wake up." I
looked at her in disbelief. "You can do—that's what? three
hundred and sixty million scop?—on the train home? Keishi,
how fast are you?" "For
simple stuff like this, a couple meg. It should take me about
half an hour." A few
hundred scop—Standard Consciousness Operations—go
into the making of a typical word of interior monologue. An
unaugmented human brain does maybe a thousand such ops per
second, a kiloscops. Keishi was talking about thinking two
thousand times that fast. That's raw processing speed, mind you;
the wet-memory interface is much slower. So it's not quite as
incredible as it sounds. It's I-saw-an-alien incredible but not
I-am-an-alien incredible. "You
were wired in Japan, then?" "No,"
she said. "On Zanzibar." Oh—African
tech. In that case, go back to the I-am-an-alien thing. "How'd
you manage that?" "Under
the Law of Return. My skin's just dark enough to make me
Presumptively African—yes, I know, what a term for
it—so that got me in long enough to dive for the nearest
knife while they decided to reject my blood sample." "I'm
surprised the Africans don't keep a better lid on their
tech." "Oh,
it's illegal all right, but they don't enforce the laws. They
love watching us dissect their chips, not understand a thing
about them, and build exact replicas that don't work." I
thought for a moment. "You know, I could do that for the last
segment, if all else fails. How world politics are still
determined by the Army's actions. Try to figure out why they left
so much of Leningrad and Tokyo, and didn't get past the Sahara at
all." "Easy
question. The Sahara's too hot, Leningrad's too cold, and ... oh,
I don't know, one of the hackers who made the Army probably had a
grandmother in Tokyo or something." She smiled at me. "But in the
Netcast, you talked like you already knew what you were doing
next week. It was a little transparent, you know. You
weren't trying to lie to your screener, were you?" "No,
just to the audience." "Oh.
Well, that's all right then. I always patch up lies in
post-production, anyway. Just be sure to tell me if you ever want
them to know you're lying." The bartender nodded toward
her cup; she shook her head and dematerialized it. "So when I've
got the research, what do we do next?" "Then
we look for an interview." Keishi
raised her eyebrows. Oh—she'd tricked me into saying "we."
Well, it wouldn't matter. We'd be reassigned soon
enough. "Then
I'll call you in the morning. You should sleep in. Shall we say
around noon?" I
hesitated, nodded, then turned to the bartender and asked for the
bill. He laid a matte black card before me on the bar. When I
pressed my thumb into it, gold script numbers appeared,
displaying the usual breakdown—this much of your cup of
coffee was produced by human labor, and the rest is owing to the
labor of robots, so we suggest you pay so much in green and the
rest in red. I always read that stuff; it's interesting; but I
don't go by it. It's not always accurate, anyway. For example,
they'll tell you that your steak dinner is ninety percent
robot-made, but they get that by counting animals as robots. And
my Netcasts count as a hundred percent human, though my head's as
much metal as bone. I
touched the right side of the card, to pay all in red. Old
habits—I like to use the robots' earnings first, and hold
on to what I've produced myself. Actually, of course, the Robot
Dollar is just as good as the Reconstructed Ruble, unless you're
going to go to Africa, and what are the chances of
that? "Confirm,"
I said to the card. Thank You, Maya Tatyanichna Andreyeva,
it scripted. The
bartender picked up the card and glanced at the back, where my
name and Net address were displayed. "That page earlier—it
was for you. You're on News One." This
didn't seem to be a question, so I didn't bother
answering. "I've
seen your Netcasts," he said. "Not this history thing—
that's a little dry for me—but I saw your piece on that
bastard Shimanski. You really told it like it is." I
grunted noncommittally. After an awkward pause he blurted out:
"You don't look much like your Net-portrait." "It
keeps me from being recognized by duraks whose fathers
never taught them any manners," I snapped back, out of reflex.
But I could not help looking past him at the mirror behind the
bar. I look in the mirror every morning, of course, but there are
certain things my eyes have ceased to notice. In that mirror, I
saw the five palm-sized holes drilled in my head, capped with
black adapters into which the brightly colored modern chips were
plugged. I saw the Net-rune in my cheek, a scar of garish
luminescence slashing down from eye to jaw in swoops and angles.
I saw the places where the hair has never grown back right since
surgery, and the bumps and bulges in the left side of my skull
where implants nestled in the connective tissue, like baby
spiders hidden in the tangle of their egg sac. "I
saved you the trouble of killing him," Keishi said from behind
me. "Over the next thirty-six hours his body parts will be
arriving in twenty different Historical Nations in the luggage of
unsuspecting passengers." I stole
a glance at the bartender. He was alive, but involved in a heated
phone debate which he seemed to be getting much the worst
of. "Don't
punish him for pointing out the obvious," I said. She put
her chin on my shoulder—not an easy feat for a virtual
ghost—and looked my reflection in the eye. I hated the
smoothness, youth, perfection of her face next to mine. "How many
people know your face, Maya?" she asked me gravely. "A few
hundred? Well, a hundred million know you from the inside out.
They know who you really are, not just what you look like. What's
a face but Nature's blind kludge at a way of letting minds
communicate? You have a better interface than that, a faster
cable. You've evolved beyond the body. The face is a sheath for
the mind. It's nothing—it's maya, illusion," she
said, smiling. "Forget about it." I could
think of nothing that she could have said that would have been
less comforting. She
drew back. "Besides," she said, "a lot of people think scars are
sexy." And she drew her finger along my cheek and around to the
back of my head, over Net-rune and camerasoft and bare occipital
socket. If she had been there in her body, my ruined nerves would
have felt nothing. But because she was a virtual ghost, a thing
of air and shadows, I could feel her soft, warm fingers just as
if the flesh were whole. Four To
Make Much of
Time I woke
at ten that morning to a pounding on the door. I answered it
holding my bathrobe closed with one hand, with what hair I have
matted or standing on end; hastily thumbed the offered card; and
accepted the package. The box was a triangular prism a meter
long, such as roses are sometimes shipped in. If Keishi had sent
me roses, we were going to have to have a serious talk. I sat
down in the little passageway between inner and outer doors,
which in winter keeps the warmth inside the house from mixing
with the cold outside, and opened it. It was
not roses. The box had three separate flaps, one for each side. I
opened the first and found a set of kopek-sized chips, already
plugged into the adapters that they'd need to fit my old style
ruble sockets. Both the chips and the adapters were a medium
brown and no thicker than a fingernail. When I pried one out of
the foam and held it up, it slowly changed color and lustre until
it matched the skin of my hand perfectly, even mimicking the
pores. Oh, of course; a brown default color because they were
African. It was probably the skin color of some drone in quality
control—inspected by cafe au lait. If I put the chips in,
then from a few feet away, maybe even close up, you'd hardly know
I'd been drilled at all. The
second flap revealed another set of adapters and chips, just like
the first set, but teal blue instead of brown. I touched one and
it displayed a palette; when I chose a color at random, the whole
set of chips turned a dusty rose. The chip asked if I wanted to
explore textures, but I touched the box marked "no." Behind
the third flap was a blaze of gold: some chips inscribed with
hieroglyphs, others painted with jackal-headed gods and lapis
scarabs, all in holographic bas-relief. Ooh, Egyptian kitsch. It
was African, all right. I read the card: Even
though the mother country thought her girlchild was too white, I
still have connections there. Nice to use them for something
halfway legal just this once. Wear these if you ever decide to
quit camera work and take up modeling—
you've got the bones, girl. Mirabara. With
roses I would at least have known for certain. This gift was
ambiguous. Certainly it was no ordinary podarok. She had
spent sweatcoin on this—not robot labor, given in red to
every citizen, but her own work in green Reconstructed Rubles.
And at that, the gods only knew how she'd gotten them to take it;
even red money is about as hard as a three-minute egg, in Africa.
Connections, my ass—she had called in a favor for this, I
would have bet on it. And getting an African to owe you a favor
is slightly less difficult than putting God in your
debt. It
might have meant nothing more than overactive
thoughtfulness—not an uncommon vice in screeners. Or it
could have been a truly world-class effort to curry favor. But
there was a chance it was more than that, and no chip in the
world, or even in Africa, was worth that kind of
trouble. I
looked more closely at the chips, to see what she'd given me. One
chip in each set was a memory wedge, and the skin-colored one had
a moistdisk stuck into it—a cylinder actually, even less
disklike than its Russian cousins. I plugged it in and found it
held my research. That, at least, I need not refuse. Most of the
others were just copies of what my head already held, some in
more up-to-date versions. Then there were a few extra basics,
such as four fluency chips with a total of sixty-four languages,
most of them African. And there were a few things I didn't
recognize at all, chips popular in Africa, I guess: an intuition
enhancer, a myth coprocessor. No, don't ask me what a myth
coprocessor does. Makes you act like a hero, I guess. I took
a deep breath. Face it, Maya. You want these a lot. I took
the box into the bathroom, where sunlight filtered dimly through
the paper wadded up between the double windows. Got to take that
insulation out, as soon as this series ends, I thought. Maybe
take a week off and do all that stuff. Yeah, right. I set the box
on end on the counter, where it promptly extended a pedestal and
rotated itself. Typical. The girls in Nairobi had more industrial
capacity than common sense. I'd be lucky if I could leave the
room without it hopping out after me. I put
shrink-seals over my sockets to protect them—my sockets are
guaranteed waterproof, of course, but a guarantee can't restore a
scorched forebrain—and showered, hastily because I was
getting close to my Strongly Suggested Sustainable Water Usage
for the month. When I
had dried my hair and gotten dressed, I opened the box and
started to slot in the chameleons. They matched my skin color
even better than before, but once I had a couple of them in, my
head started to take on a sort of chemotherapy look: patches of
sparse hair interrupted by tracts of bare skin. I tried brushing
a lock of hair over one of the chips, and they got the idea and
mimicked it, but their hologram engines could only produce so
much depth. The look would make more sense if I shaved my hair
off, which would be fashionable enough, but I wasn't ready for
that yet. So I switched to the colored set, slotted them in, and
chose a dark blue from the palette the chips superimposed on my
field of vision. Then
another problem stopped me. There was one chip I could not take
out without risking a number of complications, starting with
moderate to severe brain damage and getting worse from there. I'd
have to leave it in, but I didn't want Keishi to know I was
wearing it. I needed to cover it up somehow. I went
to the bedroom and dug a strip of gray and yellow fabric out of
my chest of drawers. It was supposed to be the scarf for my Truth
Awards suit, but since I'd worn the same outfit to the last five
years' ceremonies, I was probably due for a new one anyway. Or I
could just not go, though it was always kind of fun to sit around
with all the other Swiss-cheese types and hate the smooth-heads
who were walking away with everything. I took the scarf back into
the bathroom, folded it down, and tied it around my head so that
the frontal socket was covered. Then I menued the chips' color to
a gray that matched the fabric. I stepped back and checked the
effect in the mirror. The
transformation was amazing. Ten minutes ago, I'd looked like a
typically encrusted old-time Netcaster. Now I looked like a
dangerous lunatic with no fashion sense. Stop me before I
accessorize again. All
right, News One, I
thought, taking off the scarf, you may not be a megascops, but
you're a reasonably intelligent person. You can figure out what
to do about that damned suppressor. Apparently
I'd thought the magic words. My face faded from the mirror, to be
replaced by a map of Africa on which the god Osiris was stretched
out, as on a crucifix. I recognized the Diaspora motion
logo—the one the Africans had on their banners when they
took Egypt from the Guardians. This was the full-length version,
beginning all the way back with the slave trade. I tried saying
"escape" and "cancel," but it wouldn't, so I leaned back against
the towel rack to wait it out. The continent was stabbed by
ships, and hemorrhaged men; the fertile soil dried up and cracked
into countries. At the same time Osiris was torn into parts,
which were scattered. Then
the flow reversed: men came back to Africa in planes and ships,
the borders healed, and Osiris began to gather himself together.
His-Majesty-in-Chains appeared in person to sew Egypt back
on—with thread, not missiles as you might
expect—whereupon Osiris was at last restored. Behind His
Majesty, the two other Known Kings of Africa were briefly
visible: a shining tower to represent Its-Ethereal-Highness, and
for Only-A-Man, a face that changed from male to female, adult to
child. At last Osiris opened his eyes; the deserts exploded with
green trees and waving wheat; and the Wall of Souls was raised
around the continent, like armor. It's a hell of a mogo. Myself,
I wouldn't have gone to war for it, but that's me. The map
of Africa didn't disappear, only faded, until it was as subtle as
a watermark on paper. I was expecting something else to show up
in the mirror, so I watched and waited. Then suddenly someone was
standing beside me: an Egyptian god—Horus, the one with the
hawk's head—pressing so close that his beak was only inches
from my eye. I was startled, then entranced. He was breathtaking.
In the little painted portrait on the chip, he'd looked smooth
and cartoonish. But the virtual image overwhelmed me with its
bloody realism: feathers accurate in every fibre, some split and
notched as if by battle; beak the color of bone, sharp as glass;
a yellow raptor's eye without a trace of mercy, in whose lids the
throbbing veins were clearly visible. So this is why
people become pagans, I thought; this cold, this inhuman regard.
The same reason we listen for messages from the stars. The
alien god fixed me with a yellow stare and said—in an
absurdly inappropriate Moscow accent—"All Series 6000
moistware is equipped with automatic neural dampeners for the
changeout or removal of suppressor chips without the use of
chemical anesthetics. Since you have already inserted at least
one Series 6000 moistware package, you may safely remove your
suppressor chip from its socket. If you do not replace it with
the corresponding Series 6000 moistware within thirty seconds, a
timed phaseout of the dampening function will automatically
initiate. Series 6000 moist-ware is guaranteed to prevent any and
all neural damage from suppressor chips, including those that
have been implanted as a punitive measure by the agents of
fraudulent and tyrannical First World warlords, and this
guarantee is backed by the full force of the treasury and army of
His-Majesty-In-Chains. We conclude this communication in the
confidence that Series 6000 moistware will provide full
satisfaction and exceed all reasonable expectations." And he
vanished. For a moment of stunned silence I could only think that
if I had known an Egyptian god was going to manifest himself in
my bathroom I would at least have scrubbed out the toilet bowl.
Then I was clawing the 6000s out of my head and saying aloud,
"All right, Maya, don't panic, it's just a standard message, they
all come with it, it doesn't mean anything—" but I was not
convinced. And I took the chip that looked like an encyclopedia,
stuck it in my occipital socket, and asked the Net what it
was. The
Net's answer was immediate. Keishi had indeed perfectly
duplicated what was in my head. And one of the chips in my head
had the cover of a DejaVu Instant Encyclopedia chip, holding
something it was never meant to hold. In exchange for that thorn
in my pride, Keishi had given me a chip that bore the DejaVu logo
in faint white outline, but contained the very moistware that had
sat disguised in my frontal lobe so long that the pins must have
rusted solid to the socket. It was a chip of the model which
Post-Soft Limited had named, apparently without a trace of
intentional humor, the Nun 500. It was a device that blocked all
memories from ten years of my life, and eradicated even the most
minute sexual impulse. And the Nun 500 did not come with any set,
nor could she have bought it off the shelf—not in this
package. She must have had it custom made, or possibly configured
it herself, bending over it for fevered hours in some tiny rented
workspace, with scales of sweat sloughing off her brow, her eyes
rolled back into her head, and both her wrists and both her
temples tied by cables to a robot arm with vision more acute and
touch more delicate than any flesh. She
knew. Five As
a Wife Has a
Cow I have
played this scene over and over, with the moistdisk slotted into
the back of my head, until the pain has almost—not
quite—worn away. I
waited for her in the living room, pacing, too restless to sit
down. When she manifested, I saw the videophone swivel toward me.
She was looking through its camera so she could see me as I was,
not just a default image generated by her moistware. When the
camera focused on my face, she looked at me with surprise that
quickly turned to disappointment. "Is something wrong? You're not
wearing your research." "I
transferred it to this." I tapped a memory-wedge at my temple,
not holding the single African moistdisk, but a battery of
Russian ones that I'd dug out of various drawers—looking
like a roll of toroidal candies in assorted flavors. Six held her
research; the seventh was quietly recording our conversation, in
case I needed evidence of what had happened. "Oh,"
she said. "If there's something wrong with the 6000s, you know,
they're on warranty—" "I
know," I said shakily. "A little bird told me." "I
see." She looked puzzled, but did not pursue the line of
questioning. "So, are you ready to find that
interview?" "Keishi,
I think I may have misled you, and if I have, I'm sorry. I've
been working alone much too long to change now. I know you put a
lot of work into that research, and I appreciate it, but that's
all I really need. I'll take it from here." "Nice
speech," she said flatly. "How long did it take to
write?" "Keishi,
I'm serious—" "You
think I'm not?" She turned away suddenly, walked over to the
videophone table, and leaned against it. "So when should I plan
on screening your first interview, or do you just want me to stay
on call?" One
more hurdle, and it would be over. I said with an effort: "I'm
going to record to a disk for now and have it screened later. And
... I'm going to file for repartnering, Keishi. It's nothing
personal. Or rather, I mean, it is personal and not professional.
I'll give you the highest rating. But I don't think it's going to
work out. Between us." Her
eyes and the vidphone's eyes watched me together, like two cats.
Unnerved by her silence, I blurted out: "I mean, after all, Anton
will be back soon, it's really not fair—" "Anton
has been Net-silent for two days," Keishi said. "He probably
rejected his bugs in some back alley, and they'll have to bring
his brain home in a sausage casing. Don't try to tell me
this is about him." Her
eyes stared into mine, unflinchingly, but the vidphone glanced at
the rosebox on the table. "This is about that encyclopedia of
yours, isn't it? That's why you're not wearing the moist-ware I
gave you." I felt
myself silhouetted by the accusation, like a deer by
headlights. "You
really thought I didn't know," she marveled. "Maya—I wish I
didn't have to be the one to tell you, but I don't see any other
way. Every screener you've had must have known. Screening out sex
is the main thing we do, after politics. People use suppressors,
but even so, you get memories, traces. When somebody comes
through completely blank ... well, it's not hard to guess
why." "How
much do you know?" I asked, trembling as though she'd touched
me. "I know
you're wearing a suppressor chip that you haven't had out for a
very long time. And that making it look like an encyclopedia is a
typical Postcop trick. And that when I look into your memories,
there's a hole you could drive a ten-year marriage through. All
of which means that you've had some good tea in your time, though
you don't remember it very well." "What
are you going to do?" She
looked at me in exasperation. "I'm going to tell the whole Net,
make a huge scandal, ruin your career, and get you disappeared,
what do you think? Maya, I'm not going to 'do' anything. I would
never have brought it up if you hadn't forced me to." "Thank
you." I sat down, relief stinging my eyes. "I should have known.
I guess I'm a little paranoid—oh, all right, I'm a lot
paranoid. A felon on News One has to be. If one hint of my past
made it out on the Net, I'd disappear, you know, kak korova
yazikom menya slizala." "Like a
what?" I
smiled, grateful for the change of subject. "As though a cow had
licked me with its tongue. Meaning completely. The way you do
when you run afoul of the Weavers." "I've
never heard that expression in my life," she said. "It never
fails; just when I think I'm finally assimilated. Hang on, let me
get that down." She took out her totem, a faux-granite obelisk,
to put her fluency chip into learn mode. Then she set the totem
down on nothing; there must have been a table there where she
was, but to my eyes, it simply hovered in the air. "That
might not be a good idea," I said. "If it's not on the fluency
chip, it's probably because someone doesn't want it there. The
Postcops might throw you a tea party just for having it in
RAM." She
raised an eyebrow. "Agent 99, I live for danger." I
sputtered—relief was still making me giddy—but
recovered in time to produce a creditable "Oh, Max." "Really,
Maya, I don't care what you do," she said with (so it seems to me
now, playing it back from the disk in slow motion) a studied
indifference. "Speaking strictly under the Cone of Silence, why
don't you just take the damned thing out and put in a real
encyclopedia? You can count on the 6000s to prevent any brain
damage—His-Majesty-In-Chains does not make idle guarantees.
And I can fix your Netcasts to look like it's still in place. You
can have your memories back. And ... and the rest of it." She
shrugged. Her body was pretending to examine the tabletop, but
the vidphone's eye was pointing right at me. "It's something to
think about. We don't have to talk about it now." I
looked at her in horror. "You're a cuckoo." "What?" "You're
a Postcop. Or"—and a blade of ice slid into my heart—
"are you a Weaver?" "What
makes you think that, Maya?" she said in a tone that was not at
all what I'd expected. "How could I be a Weaver?" "Anton
Tamarich is drinking tea, and you're his cuckoo," I said. "No
wonder I've never seen you except in virtual. You're
sitting in some control tower, running, what is it, my sixth
loyalty check, or are we up to seven now? Don't you people ever
give up?" "Oh,"
she said, looking down. "I see. That's what you think. Maya, it
isn't true." "Come
on. I know the drill by now. You just gave me a textbook
incitement to violate parole—nice and hypothetical, nothing
that would look too pushy on the disk. Perfect, in fact. You're a
lot better than that idiot they sent last time, I'll give you
that." "Whatever
I may be, I'm not a Postcop," she said. "Really?
Let's see—" I sent out a query to the Net"—your
resume says you graduated from Leningrad University. Lapshina is
still dean of the department there, isn't she? I've known her
since before you were born, if you're the age you look. If I were
to call her up...” "By all
means." I moved
toward the videophone. She was still standing in front of it.
When she wouldn't move aside, I reached through her for the
touchplate. "Oh,
God." She sat down without bothering to materialize a chair; it
was an eerie effect. "I was hoping you were bluffing." Of course
I had been, but I wasn't going to tell her that. "No, she won't
remember me and yes, my resume is a fake. But it's not what
you're thinking. Maya, the degree takes four years at a minimum,
and there's no way to expedite. Do you have any idea how absurd
that is for a multimegascops?" She had talked herself out of fear
and into anger. "The Net makes universities obsolete. Anyone with
a bandwidth over room temperature can learn how to screen from
the Net in a few hours. All those years of university
training—they're not trying to give you knowledge, they're
trying to control it. They're weeding out the ideologically
impure." "Incitement
to agree with slanders against the government. That's very
inventive. You must be up against a bitch of a quota." I picked
up the box of moistware and threw it at her image. It sailed
through her and clattered against the wall, spilling out
flesh-tone and gold. "Take your rosebox and go home,
cop." "What
are you going to do?" she said. "I'm
going to apply for immediate repartnering. If they'll take it
without a reason, fine. If not, I'll put down unprofessional
conduct, which would be true even if you were just an overeager
megascops." "You
don't even trust me enough to give me one chance to prove that I
am who I say I am?" "I quit
believing in trust twenty years ago, over one hell of a cup of
tea." On the
disk her face clouds for an instant. Watching it now, freezing
the moment, zooming in, I wonder if her enhancements sped up
emotion, as well as thought. Was this the brief catch in the
throat it seemed to be, or was she crying in there for hours, in
her silicon cage? Or—I cannot help but think it—was
that sob a cover, under which she plotted the next phase of her
deception? When I
unpause the disk, she says quietly: "You'd have to have absolute
proof." "Yes." "Then
I'll give you your trust through a cable," she said with sudden
vehemence, "since that's the only kind you
understand." "You
must be joking. I'm not going to give you a direct line to my
brain." She
lifted her eyebrows incredulously. "You really think you can keep
me out, if I want in?" If I
had been able to stop the disk then, as I can now, I might have
seen this as the product of rejection and despair. But at the
time, I could think only one thing. Keishi Mirabara scared the
hell out of me. I
reached for my Net chip, but too late. She had grasped her totem
in her fist and thrust it into my head, a symbol of the invisible
connection she was making through the Net. (Now, replaying it in
slow motion, I can feel a tingling as the granite spire passes
the skull, but only silence as it moves through layer after layer
of unfeeling brain.) Then all at once her mind was there,
out at the end of the virtual cable, and it was impossible not to
stretch out to it, impossible not to touch those memories, so
much clearer than my own. And gradually, gently, passively, her
mind gave up its secrets. "Am I a
cop, Maya Tatyanichna?" she said at last. "No. I
guess you're not." She
drew the totem out. "You believed it, though, didn't you? You
didn't have a trace of doubt. You really don't trust
me." "Keishi,
why the devil should I trust you?" I nourished the anger I felt,
knowing that nothing else could make me say what I had to say.
"I've known you for two days—no, not so much, not two. The
ink isn't even dry on our partnering assignment. I don't know you
and you don't know me. You think we have a connection because of
all the things you've sucked out of my mind by screening, but
that isn't real. Trust comes when you've worked with someone for
years; it doesn't speed up just because you can think fast, and
it doesn't materialize when you stick a cable in someone's head.
What you get from screening me isn't friendship, it's data. We're
strangers." She
looked down to hide the moistness in her eyes. "Yes," she said,
"I guess we are." And she
vanished—leaving me feeling like I'd just told a child that
her mother was dead, not because it was true, but just for fun.
But I had to be ruthless, yes, ruthless. For with the Net linking
our minds, she had not been able to hide it. Keishi Mirabara was
in love. SIX
The Word That
night I went over the research, with Keishi's thoughts haunting
my mind. "Most
images of the Holocaust come from photos taken during the Allied
liberation of the camps," she said once, "but the Square Miles
were liberated by the Unanimous Army, which did not take
pictures, and whose component selves did not remember the
experience." And again: "The Nazis had only a few years to carry
out their pogrom. The Guardians had nearly fifty, and they had
the whole world to do it in. In fifty years you can raise new
generations that have never known anything but tyranny. You can
destroy not just a people, but all memory of a people." By nine
o'clock the next morning—late evening by my body
clock—my mind began to wander, her voice intruding on my
free associations in a surreal counterpoint. Soon my thoughts
turned to what I'd felt from Keishi through the cable, and the
moistdisk announced: "The homosexual prisoners of the Nazi
concentration camps were not released when the camps were
liberated. Not only were they returned to prison, but their time
in the camps was not counted toward their sentences. Compare
Calinshchina." "Christ,"
I said. "Yeah,
that one's a bitch, isn't it?" I'd
grown so used to hearing her voice in my head that I forgot to be
startled. She was walking toward me through the slanting sunlight
in the hall; a black fedora cast a diagonal shadow across her
face. She wore a mask of eggshell-thin ceramic, after the African
fashion, matte white. When she smiled, the mask copied her
expression, but its features were not hers. Her image was so
vivid that I thought it must be real, until I noticed that the
milling dustmotes were indifferent to her presence. Had she been
flesh, they would have swirled about her as she walked, as if
recoiling from her touch. She
came to the doorway and stopped, leaning against the wall and
watching me to see what I would do. She was wearing a Word: a
gold cartouche on her lapel that, from time to time, would pluck
a single word from her thoughts and display it. That's the
fashion, too—a random, drop-by-drop exposure that always
struck me as faintly obscene. At the moment it said
inversion, for no reason I could think of. "You've
got to quit barging in on me like this, Mirabara." "I seem
to have this problem knocking," she said, passing her hand
through the wall. "But I'll ring the videophone next
time." "That
would be nice. Just in case I'm in the shower or something," I
said, and inversion faded into soap. "So is this
just general neighborliness, or is there a special reason for
this visit?" Foodchain
flashed
on the Word as she said "Depends. You want to do an
interview?" "Who?" "Pavel
Sergeyevich Voskresenye." The
moistdisk instantly supplied an image. I was reading a tattered
old book at impossible speeds. I closed it with a snap. The spine
said: Victims of the Square Miles, by P. S. Voskresenye.
It was one of the first books published during the early
Reconstruction, and a cornerstone of Keishi's
research. "Voskresenye
is alive?" "He's
got a pulse and a Netname. Beyond that, I wouldn't expect much.
At his age he ought to be half fossilized." "What's
his real name?" "That's
what's on the records: Voskresenye." "Not
Voskresenski?" "Nope,
that's what it says. 'Mister Sunday.' And it gets better. He's
operating as Pavel of hearth null , clan
Darkness-at-Noon." "What
the hell kind of a clan name is that?" "A fake
one," she said, and waited. "More
than that," I said. "There's plain fake, and then there's
obviously fake. If he just didn't want to be found, he'd
have plain fake. But Darkness-at-Noon is obviously fake. He wants
everyone to know that he doesn't want to be found. It's a
challenge." Keishi
smiled, a teacher pleased with her slow but faithful student. I
turned to the videophone and repeated the Netname. White letters
appeared on the screen: "Connected. Video
unavailable." "Pavel
Voskresenye," I said to the blank screen, "this is Maya
Andreyeva, a Camera at News One hearth. I'd like to set
up—" "Meet
me in grayspace," said a voice from the videophone, followed by
the flashing message: CONNECTION BROKEN. "Why
would an old man out of the Square Miles want to meet in
grayspace?" I said warily. "Maybe
he figures it's your home turf. Maybe he remembers." And
that was possible. Back in 2297 I covered the Binary Biodiversity
Act, the law that put life into grayspace. It was an African
idea: since most computers are partly idle most of the time, why
not use the extra processing capacity to evolve new algorithms?
The Fusion was mistrustful, naturally, but the idea was too good
to pass up out of spite. So the unused space—the
grayspace—on thousands of computers was stitched together
into two kingdoms: moist grayspace, dry grayspace. The dry side
was seeded with random code, and the moist with random
neurodes. For the
first couple of years everybody was happy, and I got to say all
sorts of pretty phrases about a new age of cooperation between
the FHN and Africa. After all, they'd given us such a good deal:
we could have anything in grayspace that we recognized as useful,
and they'd have their pick of the rest. I don't need to tell you
who got the better end of that bargain. And so, instead of
getting more stories on African politics, as I'd hoped, I wound
up going back to grayspace every couple of months to check up on
the aborigines and grouse about African trickery. I still
wonder: what did the Africans want? Were they as naive as we
were, hoping for a faster sorting algorithm and better robot
vision? Or did they want to fill up grayspace with feral
intelligences, and if so, to what end? "I hope
I haven't thrown out my myrmichor," I said. But I knew just where
it was, nestled in foam in a plastic box on the top shelf of the
bedroom closet. The myrmichor plugs into the occipital socket,
the parietal, and both temporals, so I had to take out all my
other moistware, except, of course, the encyclopedia. After some
fumbling I got it strapped on: a baroque headdress covering the
whole back of my skull, looking like a set of external
vertebrae. "Why
don't you plug your camera chip into your wrist," she said, "so
it'll be there if you need it?" "What
good would that do? It won't work in my wrist." "I can
get to it through your wrist socket and patch it back into your
temporal lobe. Just in case he says something you want to catch."
As she spoke, her Word panned from slithering to
hope. "This
is strictly background, Keishi. I'm not going to use it directly.
No one cares what Pavel Voskresenye looks like in grayspace. What
is it with you and that camera chip, anyway?" The
mask grinned. "Okay, you caught me. I was going to modernize your
colors. But subtly, subtly. You would have liked the
results." "Just
leave my colors alone." "Whatever
you say, chief." Bolus appeared on her Word in elaborate
script letters. "Are you ready?" "Keishi,
you are not going with me." "Oh,
come on," she said. "It's an old dream of mine. When I was in
school I glued the cover from a textbook onto my Net chip so I
could watch you in history class. When the Mars landing was up
against reruns of your show, I watched your show. I've dreamed
about going into grayspace with you since I was twelve years
old." "I was
on the Net when you were twelve? Excuse me while I crawl off into
a corner and decompose." "Oh,
quit being so sensitive," she said. "Just let me tag along. It
really means a lot to me—it's like getting a chance to ride
with the Lone Ranger." The
Lone Ranger, no less. The things a classical education does to
people's minds. I wasn't going to have the energy to fight this
out, I realized. "All right," I said, "Just don't get in the
way." "Perish
the thought." Cross, said the Word. I
didn't trust her for a second, but I said: "All right, you've
been here more recently than I have; should I put on my
shields?" "Depends.
What kind of shielding have you got?" "I
don't know. Whatever they gave me, fifteen years ago." "Oh,
good God. Petrov shielding? The kind without
camouflage?" "I
said, I don't know what it's called." "Looks
like you're encased in a gigantic Christmas tree?" "That's
the one." "Leave
it off, then. It'll attract predators for miles around. I guess
you left before the aborigines discovered stealth
technology." "Stealth?
What kind of stealth?" "Well,
to begin with, you should turn the sensitivity and contrast on
your myrmichor all the way up, if you want to see
anything." "Terrific."
I hadn't even met Voskresenye, and I was already starting to
dislike him. Take me
in, I
thought to the myrmichor, and it began to feed images into my
optic nerve. It wasn't loading me into grayspace yet, only
sticking a periscope into it, so I could find a nice safe corner
where I could upload in peace. But
everything I saw looked quiet and safe, even when I turned up the
controls as far as they would go. I was using the classic
interface: the size of a neurode shows how many connections it's
got; colors indicate how many times it's fired since you've been
watching; you blink to reset. But no matter how long I held my
eyes open, and no matter how much I played with the depth of
field, nothing would strobe down the spectrum to red. There were
long branching synapse-chains, like veins or vines, that would
slowly turn golden; drifting baleens in violet and indigo against
the black; but nothing that looked capable of
locomotion. "All
right, then," I said. "Let's do it right here." The myrmichor
touched my brain, and began to upload me. I read
somewhere that myrmichor means "being carried away by
ants." I don't know if that's even true, but when I hear the word
I always think of a video I saw once, of an ant cutting a circle
of leaf and carrying it off in her mouth; and then the camera
zooms back, and you see there are a million ants, and the tree is
almost bare. It's
actually a little bit more organized than that. First the bugs
divide your mind into parcels that are almost independent—I
always picture paper growing up between the wrinkles of the
brain, like the membrane between cloves of garlic. The ants
descend on each clove in turn, carry it off to grayspace, and
reconnect it. As this happens, you briefly lose certain
capacities; sight, mostly—I was blind for a long time, and
when the sight came back I was agnosic, and then
paralyzed. At
least there was no aphasia, and no obvious loss of memory; the
myrmichor only had to upload a part of my mind. In Africa, where
the Net will hold souls, people upload nearly all of their brains
into grayspace, neuron by neuron. In the real world, if you do
that you lose your sensory qualia: colors are reduced to
wavelengths, emotions become mere data, and in short, you get
desouled. So we leave most of the brain in the skull, and only
move the parts that need to run at Net speeds. I don't know the
details of what uploads and what doesn't, but you can tell that
some of your memories stay in the skull. If you try to remember
how your breakfast looked, you can do it easily; but if you try
to remember how it tasted, it seems to take hours, as if your
mind had to send off to Moscow for the information. And all the
while your eyes are darting around, hyper-alert to the least
movement. As in a dream, where your pulse is racing but your legs
won't move at all. Even
having a little bit of your brain in the Net is an unpleasant
sensation, though. You feel half dead, half petrified, as if
you'd been given artificial legs. It feels—tinny, false.
It's impossible to describe. If you've got nanobugs in your head,
try it and you'll know. If you've only got an implant, then for
God's sake don't upgrade for grayspace; it's
overrated. The
myrmichor chimed to signal that the upload was complete. I moved
my muscles experimentally, trying to get used to my new body. The
body feels different in grayspace; something to do with the
organization of the sensory and motor cortices. I didn't really
read that part of the manual, though I remember the illustration:
a little homunculus arched over a cross-section of the brain,
with its face upside-down above the rest of its body and its
tongue above that—which is about what it feels like. The
Africans draw this as the sky-goddess Nut stretched out over the
world, which is not how it feels, at least not in
Russia. When
I'd finished uploading, I looked around me. Where was Keishi? She
should have loaded faster than I did; her myrmichor was newer.
But all I could see was rain—little yellow sparks of life,
falling randomly into the dark, that could animate what they
touched. Most were being eaten up by driftweeds, the grayspace
equivalent of plants. All
right, then, I thought; if she didn't want to come, that was fine
with me. I didn't have time for games. I
called up a hardware map and, sure enough, there was
Darkness-at-Noon—visible, I suspected, only to me. I began
to swim in its direction. Then my
vision went red. I blinked it back, but it was red again the
moment my eyes opened. I turned, but it was all around me. I
tried to break through, but I was trapped. Some driftnet spider,
combing the waves, had entangled me. Reaching back into my body,
I groped for the manual abort button. "Cancel
that!" Keishi said. "Relax, News One. It's only me." My
mistake had been looking for something my own size. She was all
around me, spread out in a thin layer of cortex from which towers
of enhancement rose. I had, of course, known before how fast and
dense her mind was, but only now did I truly feel it. Beside her
acres and arches and spires of mind, mine was a mere clot of
neurodes. As I searched for her, I had been moving through her,
like a tumbleweed through an abandoned city. Then
the city came to life, collapsed its towers, and gathered into
folds around me. "Keishi,
what are you doing?" "Umm,
I'm sort of engulfing you," she answered distractedly. I felt
her mind seep into me, taking up my unused spaces, and then seal
itself around me like a shell. "Keishi,
this isn't funny." "I'm
trying to protect you. Stealth technology, remember? You're
shining like a lighthouse; half of grayspace can see
you." "There's
nothing there to see me." "Contrast,
News One, contrast. Just because you can't see it doesn't mean it
isn't there." When I
protested again, she said impatiently: "Here, look!" and folded a
layer of herself over my eyes. All at once the space around us,
which had been a field of undistinguished neurodes, took on odor,
taste, and texture. I felt tremblings, tramplings, stirrings
round me. It was like the bottom of the ocean, where strange
cave-jawed fish, impossible in light, are nourished, and pearl
and weed have been developing for years, unseen of man. I saw a
shark sniff Keishi's tendrils, turn bronze in fear, and scull
away; and in the distance some lopsided creature spasmed,
drowning, tangled in a knot of fishing line. "You
could have shown me this before you did it," I said, but so
halfheartedly she didn't bother to reply. Instead she moved
forward, instantly attaining an impossible velocity. I was
frightened at first, but then began to lose myself to the
experience. I swept past sharks and spiders, and rocketed through
tangler webs, invulnerable because I was armored in her; so that
I began to dread the thought that we would soon reach
Voskresenye, and she would have to stop. We
passed a border between computers. I couldn't see it, but I felt
it slow us down, like breaking through a sheet of paper. "This is
Whisper," she said. "My hearth." It looked just like the rest of
grayspace; yet, somehow, the confidence was comforting. "We'll
just be going through one corner of it, though—yes,
here." Ahead
of us, sharks were moving in slow motion. "Oh,
devil take it! I thought Swazi would be the fastest way—
it's a Dahlak—but it's overloaded. Some idiot must be
compiling an AI. Well, it's still quicker than
backtracking." We
passed through into the slower hearth. Our thoughts didn't slow
down; the speed of neural nets isn't affected by load in other
parts of the system. But our motion ground to a crawl. There
was no sense trying to look ahead of us—everything there
would be as slow as we were—so I looked behind us, where,
things would be faster. But Whisper was as black as night. "Did
you take away that new interface?" I said. "No,
it's still there." "Then
why am I blind?" "The
regulators are way backlogged on 'see' commands," she
said. "That
never used to happen. Motion would get slow, but you could always
see." "That
was back when most abos were still blind, so demand for sight was
low. Now almost everything has vision, and the rules committee
won't increase the regulator standards. Just thank God you
weren't here ten years ago, when the abos were collecting eyes
like kids collect marbles. One argus could bring a whole hearth
to its knees. God, I'm glad they're extinct. —Burst your
eyes, Swazi, if you can't keep your grayspace running right, then
give it the hell away. Fucking public hearth admins...." She
crawled and fumed, mostly in Sapir. The
sharks back in Whisper were starting to fade into view, their
movements fast and jerky, like bad time-lapse. One or two dipped
into Swazi, tempted by slow-moving prey, but most kept their
distance. The abos know you can't compare speeds across the
boundary between computers. Gradually, they were
dispersing. Then as
the sharks became brighter, I saw that some of them were not just
pacing at the border. Some had their mouths stuck into Swazi, and
were spinning out great woven sheets of neurodes, larger than a
tangler's web. "What
are they doing?" I asked. "That's
right," Keishi said, "you don't know about webfish either.
They're a convertible shark that takes advantage of slowdowns.
They stay at the border, where the vision is still fast, and send
out sticky strands one neurode wide. Since the strands are so
small, they move faster than everything else. And when the
slowdown's over, they reel in their catches. It's sort of a
brainless strategy, but it works. That's why arguses had so many
eyes, too— they'd deliberately backlog the regulators until
everyone was equally blind, and then they'd fish by
touch." "What
happened to them?" "The
hearth admins screamed about the overloads, so the rules
committee decided to limit the number of vision calls per abo.
The arguses lost all their eyes, but they developed a symbiosis
with these huge clouds of aphids that each had one eye, and those
were even better at slowing a system down than the argus had
been. Finally some bright hacker cooked up a program called
Millipede, that would run around faster and faster the less it
could see, so that no matter what happened, motion was always
backlogged worse than vision. That made the argus strategy
obsolete. Made huge traffic jams, too, until the ecosystems all
reorganized to cope with it. —Thank God, here, this is
Veles." We
broke through another membrane, and Keishi began to pick up
speed. "Just
in time, too," she said. "Swazi is about to freeze up. We'd have
had to unplug and start over." As we
moved away I saw Swazi behind us begin to turn silver. Swazi had
been unable to maintain its part of grayspace, and, finding no
one to take it over, was storing it all on a moistdisk, frozen in
time. A boom
of sound disturbed my sightseeing. I looked forward. Some long,
lithe creature, like an eel, was swimming for its life, with an
immense shark behind it. It jumped over us, booming; the shark
followed, close enough to touch. At the last instant, the eel
ducked into Swazi and was silvered. The shark tried to follow it
in, but bounced off. Pacing in Veles, it fretted and fumed, like
a cartoon lawman stopped by a painted border. "Oh,
clever thing!" Keishi said. "Beautifully timed!" "What
good does that do it?" I asked. "Eventually that part of
grayspace will be reactivated. If Swazi can't find time to run
it, someone else will." "Yes,
but the eel will still have its momentum and the shark won't,"
Keishi said. "Besides, by then the shark may have lost interest."
Then she was silent for a long time. I was about to ask another
question when she said thoughtfully: "Although, I don't know,
some sharks are damned persistent." She slowed a little, as if
she might go back to chase the shark away. But she shook the
impulse off, and we swam on through Veles. "This
is nice," I said. "The water—I mean, grayspace is clear
here. No weeds, no debris." "Veles
is reliable. They've held on to this section of grayspace for
weeks without a serious slowdown. So the gazehounds and sharks
keep things pretty clean. Yes, it's nice. Nice if you're
armored." A
school of spheres came toward us from above, enveloped us, and
matched our pace. Then they turned silvery, reflecting us. It was
like seeing your image in a thousand hand-mirrors. "What
are those?" I said. "Doppelgangers.
They won't hurt you, they'll just imitate you." "Like
mirror-fish?" "Not
really. Mirror-fish just imitated for camouflage. Dopplers do it
to learn better algorithms, to take back to their queen. They
won't get much from us, though—we're optimized for a
different universe." "I
thought that kind of imitation was what shielding was meant to
prevent. Algorithmic quarantine, and all that. You know, 'Imagine
the destruction of native culture that would ensue if you dropped
a radio on some unsuspecting tribe of Bushmen—'
" "Oh,
that's an excuse. Bushmen, my ass. They only said that to piss
off the Africans. If you dropped a radio on a traditional
village, they'd bloody well use it to grind flour—they'd
see it in a way appropriate to their world. No abo's going to
duplicate a human; we're sloppy and inefficient, by their
standards. The Weavers made all that up to keep people out of
grayspace, because they were afraid grayspace would be impossible
to control. But it didn't work out that way. As you can see,
right up ahead." The
dopplers had gone; I saw nothing. "Where?" "Dead
ahead. Do you see her?" "Who?" "Look
carefully—there." She made an arrow in my visual field to
point it out to me: a barely visible disturbance in the neurodes,
moving slowly, like the shadow of a hawk against the
ground. "What
is it?" I said. "Weaver." "Why
are we staying here? Why aren't we running?" "Stay
calm, News One. It's just a tendril. She can't see us at this
distance." "Why
risk it?" I said. "Let's just go." "Sit
tight a minute," she said, creeping toward it. "I want to see the
rest of her." "Keishi!" "Hold
on." And we were moving again, twice as fast as before. Beneath
us was a vein of shadow that gradually widened and silvered, a
creek becoming a river. Then suddenly it was a delta, and an
ocean, and we were rocketing up away from it, until we could see
all its twining tendrils and its spinning core. It looked like
something you might see on the slide of a microscope; and then
again it looked like a galaxy, something impossibly vast. I felt
a rush of vertigo—a fear that I had lost myself, that I
would never return to my body. I had to carefully concentrate out
of the Net, and focus on the slow inflation of my lungs, to prove
to myself I was still real. "Let's
see which one she is," Keishi said, and blew out a stream of
bubbles. "Are
you insane?" "Relax.
The stimuli are so low-level she'll hardly even notice them. And
she couldn't trace them to me if she did. I just want to see
which one she goes for." The
bubbles circled the shifting and spiraling Weaver. At length one
of her tendrils flicked idly, like a hand absently grasping a
teacup, and a bubble disappeared. "Aha,"
Keishi said respectfully. "This one sweeps for a brain virus
called Parafango. Minor, but not as minor as I thought.
—But then, this wouldn't be the original. This virus killed
three or four Weavers, before they finally made the nastiest
strains extinct." "Who
wrote it?" "No
one, it's indigenous. It's a timid little herbivore that learned
to protect itself in grayspace by hiding in a human brain.
Perfectly harmless, as long as you're here. But if it gets
downloaded into your flesh brain—well, they wiped out the
one that trashes the arcuate fasciculus, thank God. So much for
your Bushman's radio; do you really think the Weavers could fight
abos like that and still worry that we'd invade
them?" Her
derision made me nervous, but the Weaver was still grazing
unperturbed. "Have
you ever seen one before?" she asked. "A
Weaver? No," I said. And then: "Not that I remember." "I'm
glad you got the chance, then. Isn't she beautiful?" "Beautiful?"
I said scornfully. "Necessary, maybe. I don't want another Army
any more than anyone else. But Weavers, beautiful? They scare the
hell out of me." "Beautiful
and terrible," she said. "Like a snake, or a
tiger." "Squids
and spiders come to mind." "Oh,
don't be so literal. Doesn't she remind you of—damn!" she
cried out suddenly. And we were speeding through the Net again,
in full flight. "What
happened?" "She
almost saw us," Keishi said, slowing down. "It's okay, she's not
pursuing. She was just curious." "That's
what you get for taking risks like that." She
ignored the warning. "This," she said, "is
Darkness-at-Noon." I first
saw Voskresenye as a tiny knot of neurodes, about the size of
mine but more irregularly shaped, like an apple with some bites
out of it. Grouper fish of some kind, not dopplers, were
schooling around him. As Keishi circled him at a distance, I saw
that the lump of neurodes was thickly cabled to a vast dark bulk
that loomed above us, dwarfing even Keishi. It was like a
storm-cloud that takes up the whole sky. The eye shrank from it.
How the hell did a man that old get wired like that? "How
interesting." The voice came from the little knob of cells I had
first seen. "A delegation. Does one address Leviathan, or the
seed in his stomach?" Before
I could answer, Keishi said "I was going to ask if you were the
blimp, or the ugly dwarf in its gondola." "Keishi!"
I cried out, shocked. But Voskresenye was not
offended: "I
expected someone unenhanced, so I extruded something her own size
for her to talk to. I hardly expected that she would come riding
an elephant." Keishi
swam a little closer toward him, and spoke a stream of
static. What
was that? I
subvocalized. "Sapir." I know
it's Sapir, I said
irritably. There are only two computer languages that have native
human speakers, and KRIOL sounds different. I know Sapir when I
hear it; I just never got past the segmentive case. What did
you say? "If you
put in your new language chip—" The
audience doesn't want to deal with Sapir any more than I
do, I said.
Will you just tell me? "It was
a superimposition of several comments involving his sexual
preferences, his mother, and his bandwidth." Keishi,
for God's sake, I
said. But by that time, she and Voskresenye had already exchanged
more words in Sapir than I could hope to count. What's he
saying to you? "Umm,
let's just say that only a few years ago it would have been
anatomically impossible." Then
Keishi said something that made Voskresenye laugh and turn
away. What?
What was that? "Sorry,
no way could I translate," she said. "Some insults just don't
make sense unless you can specify a waveform with a single
word." Voskresenye's
eyestalks swiveled toward me, and he spoke again. "I'm
sorry," I said. "I don't speak Sapir." "He
asked you to confirm your Netname," Keishi said. "Oh.
Umm, confirm(Maya, News One, camera)," I said, pleased to
discover that in grayspace the palatal click for left-paren
didn't hurt my mouth. A pattern of colored lights appeared
between us. "Is it
safe to say my pass phrase?" I asked Keishi. "Yes,"
she said. "I've got you covered." I had a
moment of amusement when I realized she meant this literally. A
million kilometers away, my body stirred and whispered: "Give up
your past desires, and leave the poor world to its fate." The
colors rippled in response. "Confirmed,"
Voskresenye said, after a brief pause. "Gol an ix
(KRIOL)?" "I
don't speak native KRIOL either," I admitted, feeling thoroughly
outclassed. "Only interpreted." "Well,
I can tell you one thing," Keishi said. "He speaks a very
high-class KRIOL. Judging by the number of parentheses he elides,
he's been talking to computers that could parse Russian if they
felt like it. He split the verb from its argument, too, and he
used the pronoun 'ix' without a restrictive definition. He's been
talking to AIs; I'd bet on it." Thanks,
I said.
I wasn't sure what use the information was, but better to have
Keishi feeding me trivia than heckling Voskresenye. To my
relief, Voskresenye switched to Russian. "Even so," he said, in a
tone of pleased surprise, "you speak KRIOL. How quaint. Nothing
has quite the appeal of a dead language; it's no accident that
most of the world's great religions have been conducted in
them." "KRIOL
isn't dead," I said. "Not in
Russia," he said dismissively. "It is in Africa, where it
matters." I
seemed to have completely lost control of the conversation. To
gain time I said—not very originally—"You are Pavel
Voskresenye?" "Yes,"
he said. "And I know who you are. So, the formalities being over,
you may now proceed to the jugular, if you can find
one." "Don't
you love it when your reputation precedes you?" Keishi whispered
in my ear. "I
wasn't thinking of you as an opponent, Pavel Sergeyevich," I
said. "Why are you treating me like one?" "I have
lived a long life," he said, "and I have made so many friends and
so many enemies that I can no longer remember which is which. So
I treat everyone as an enemy. It saves memory which can be used
to better purpose." I
blinked. Lucky that Keishi had changed my interface, or I would
have had to wait for him to reappear. "And why
grayspace?" "As
I've explained, I have many enemies. Grayspace is not secure, not
anymore, but it is more secure than vidphones; if someone happens
to be listening in, it should be relatively easy to detect
him." "So ask
him what he's got to hide," Keishi prompted. I had
been about to do just that. I nearly changed plans out of
annoyance with her; but no, she would take that as a triumph.
"Anything you say to me is going to wind up all over the Net, one
way or another," I said. "What's the danger?" "The
danger, Maya Tatyanichna, is that if I tell something to a
camera, the obvious way to prevent its becoming common knowledge
is to kill both that camera and me before the Netcast can begin.
Once the information is already on the Net, of course, that
solution is useless. One must still fear revenge, but revenge is
a less powerful motive than necessity." "I
see." I paused as if considering this closely, and subvoked:
Keishi, just for fun, see if there's a psychiatric record on
this man. "There's
not," she said. "Which isn't to say that there shouldn't be, but
there isn't." Well,
it was worth a try. Aloud
I said: "We somehow skipped the part of this conversation where I
tell you why I'm here, and I think you've gotten the wrong
impression. All I want to do is ask you a few questions about the
Calinshchina. I don't see why there should be anything sensitive
about that. It's part of a series that's been on News One for two
weeks already. If someone wanted it suppressed, wouldn't they
have done it by now?" "Asking
questions about the Calinshchina," he said, "is like pulling on a
tangler's web. You can pull them all day and find nothing. But if
you choose the wrong one, you never know what sort of twitching
horror you may bring to light." "I
see," I said, again. Voskresenye had a knack for crafting answers
that frustrated all my follow-ups; I couldn't pursue the question
without risking the attention of a Weaver. I went to a canned
question: "In
your book you give hundreds of survivors' stories, but you leave
out your own. Why? Which Square Mile did you survive?" "I was
imprisoned at Arkhangelsk," he said, and even in gray-space,
where there are no facial expressions, I could sense bitterness
tinged with amusement. "Whether I survived is a matter of
some debate." "What
do you mean by that?" He
paused, then replied ironically: "What records there are insist
no one survived Arkhangelsk. I have allowed the misconception to
persist. I would not wish to diminish Mr. Calin's crime by
subtracting even one death from his body count." It was
another of his slantwise evasions. Yet I could feel myself
warming to him, and if I did, so would the audience. I decided to
consider this a screen test, and not worry about pinning him
down. Later I'd go over the disk, analyze his strategies, and
develop a response. "There
is no disk, remember?" Keishi whispered. "If you want to put your
camera chip in—" Forget
it, I
subvoked flatly. Record this yourself, if you
want. To
Voskresenye I said, "Wouldn't you rather tell people about the
millions who died, instead of just adding one to the ranks of the
forgotten?" "Naturally."
His tone was nonchalant. "Pavel
Voskresenye, why don't we remember?" The
stormcloud that hung above our heads shifted uneasily. "That is a
question that wants answering in a dark place where no one can
listen, with all the chips out of our heads. Will you meet with
me?" "I was
going to ask the same thing," I said, and added to Keishi: but
not for the same reasons. "Where do you live?" "Meet
me at noon tomorrow on Nevsky Prospect, in front of the Bronze
Horseman." I
frowned. "I'd rather record you on your own turf. In your home,
if possible." I hate doing interviews in public places; it's not
fair to the screener to make her edit out gawkers. Then, too, a
house is an extension of the self—a shell the soul
secretes; like faces, they leak information. "Perhaps
later," he said. "For now, the Horseman. I must ask that you come
alone, and isolated from the Net. You may have an encrypted
channel to your screener—I have just given her the
specifications—but no more. Bring a vehicle; I will direct
you to the site of the interview from there." "You're
maybe taking her to the Batcave?" Keishi said. "You want I should
blindfold her?" Keishi,
behave! "It is
a most ill-mannered elephant." "She's
a loaner. My real screener's in the shop." I had been about to
ask him for a different meeting place, but after Keishi's
outburst, it seemed petty to press the issue. "How will I
recognize you?" I asked. "I
assure you I am unmistakable. I look forward to our conversation,
Maya Tatyanichna. Now if you will excuse me." "Until
tomorrow, then." "Tomorrow."
He looked up, toward where the rest of Keishi's body towered over
me. "Good-bye, elephant. Such an oddity—an elephant raised
by wolves." "Yeah,
same to you, buddy." "Keishi!" But
perhaps he did not even hear her; he had already moved away, the
blimp swiftly reeling in the dwarf as he receded. A single
grouper, streaming toward us from the dwarf's direction, was
about to overtake us— Then I
was back sitting in my living room. Rather than swim back to
where we'd started, Keishi had simply pulled the plug. It
always takes me a long time to recover from going into
gray-space. The parts of your brain that get copied into
grayspace aren't silenced, they're just cut off from the rest of
the brain. Isolated, they dream; and though the myrmichor
overwrites the dream, there's always something that remains, just
out of reach. I can't help trying to grasp it, though it always
slips through my fingers. Keishi,
however, was awake at once. "What an asshole!" she
said. "I
think he'll be all right," I said when I felt whole again. "He's
got presence—it's a strange kind, but he's got it. If I
could feel it even in grayspace, it should come through
beautifully in the Net-cast. This could work out." "Well,
if he screens well, he screens well. There's no arguing with
that," she said grudgingly. "He's still an asshole," she confided
to the vidphone. Then she inclined her head and said slyly, "Have
you thought any more about—" "You
know," I interrupted, "you can't keep doing this
forever." "What?" "I know
you think now that you've got something on me, you can do
anything you want. And you're right, there's nothing I can do.
But sooner or later, News One's going to catch on." She
rested her elbow on nothing and leaned her head against her hand.
"Haven't we had this conversation already? At least once? It's
like a bad video game: if you leave the castle and go back in,
the Guardians are resurrected and you have to fight your way
through all over again. I thought we established that I'm not a
cop, or a spy, or a blackmailer. I thought we'd finally reached
some understanding—" "Of
what? Of what you showed me yesterday? What does that have to do
with disrupting my interviews?" "Oh,"
she said. "That's what you mean." Her image shrugged; the Word
scrolled down from treachery to flame. "It's a whole
different etiquette in grayspace, Maya. People always insult each
other—it's practically impolite not to. I mean, it worked,
didn't it? You got your interview. I can't always explain
everything. Sometimes I have to just follow my
instincts—" "You
don't have instincts yet," I said. "You haven't earned
them." "Oh,
God, not this again. I thought I took care of this
before—" "You
took care of it by lying to me, yes. You can't expect me to stick
to that now that the lie's been uncovered." "Scratch
'video game,'" she said. "Insert 'soap opera.' " She turned
aside, and I thought she would leave. Then she wheeled back
around and said in a burst of energy: "Why do you have to make
this so complicated? Why won't you understand—" "Because
I can't," I said. She
made a vague searching gesture, as though about to argue the
point, then hesitated. She fixed her eyes on my encyclopedia.
Doubt crossed her face like a shadow. "No," she said bleakly,
"you can't. Of course you can't. I don't know why I ever expected
anything else." I took
out my Net chip, and she vanished. For a while I sat with my hand
on the moistdisk, lest she should, by some miracle, find a way in
through that. She didn't. I moved my hand around to the front of
my head, and rested it against the familiar warmth of my
suppressor chip. I want
to say that it's horrible. I want to tell you that being
suppressed makes every moment of existence a torment, because
maybe that would help—but it would be a lie. In fact, the
most horrible thing is how easy it is to slide into contentment,
how hard it is to nourish anger or regret. If you lost the sense
of smell, say, or taste, you'd grieve for it; but if you were
born without that sense, you'd never miss it. You'd almost forget
there was such a thing as smell, until someone reminded you, and
even then you'd only half believe it. That's how it was for
me—the sense was gone, as though it had never been. For the
first few years after suppression, I kept myself in misery by
sheer effort of will, trying to imagine, every day, what it was
that I had lost. But in the end, it became too much trouble. I
gave in to the inevitable. I forgot. It
must, I supposed, have been terribly strong, for me to risk so
much. Did it come over me by surprise, like a storm uprooting
everything? Or was it always there, enriching my
perceptions—as when Keishi covered my eyes, making the dark
world bright with salts and textures? I didn't know. In those
early years, when I imagined desire, I used to think of it as an
energy that clings to objects— an electricity, that sparks
and dies in every rustling of a dress, and that lives deep among
the wires beneath the skin. But
those were only words. I could no more bring back the feeling
with them than a man desouled in grayspace could remember the
smell of a rose. I had forgotten. I had grown
complacent. And now
she came into my life, and offered me all of it back— and I
must refuse it. Because it would mean being dependent on her
forever. Because I could never ask her to leave. Because when it
was over between us, or when her enhancements aged into
obsolescence, some automatic spy would sniff me out and we'd both
disappear. It was impossible. I liked her—it was not that;
might have liked her a lot under other circumstances; but it was
impossible. The false intimacy of the screening chip had ruined
any chance of friendship, much less love. If
only, I thought, I could meet her in some other place, where the
Net did not reach, and where the only cables were the roots by
which the grasses passed along their ancient thoughts. If only we
could meet there as if for the first time, and talk together as
two strangers talk: locked into our separate skulls, as though
nothing had been said between us. (The
Helmet) (Dreams
don't contain symbols. Where would they come from? Not from some
collective unconscious—we're not born cabled to the
world-mind, that's a myth. Not from your own mind, either;
symbols are hard enough to invent when you're awake, you're not
going to come up with them fast asleep. So if something in a
dream looks like a cross between a vidphone and your cat, it's
not because your cat is like a vidphone; it's because you're too
sleepy to make up your mind. If Mr. Yablokov turns into your
father, it's not because he reminds you of your father, it's
because there's no continuity director. That
night, I did not dream of Keishi. Instead I dreamed, over and
over, that I met Pavel Voskresenye. He was an old man, sitting in
a wooden chair. Blood was leaking from a small hole in his
temple. As I watched from a coign of vantage, he reached up and
guided down an enormous helmet which, when he locked it into
place, engulfed his head completely. But it was not a helmet: it
was a brain, from the back of which there trailed a spine a
hundred meters long, like a skeleton in a museum. The rest of him
sat motionless, but the spine began to twitch, drawing all my
attention toward it. It shuddered, then rippled sinuously like
the body of a snake. At last, with an effort that wrinkled his
brow, the spine raised itself and arched forward over his head,
like the tail of a scorpion.) Seven
Khristos Voskresye "Put in
your code chip." All
right, I
subvoked, fumbling it into my head. Are we
scrambled? "Yeah,
we're locked up tight. I still don't see the point, though."
Neither do I, but we might as well do what he says. It can't
hurt anything. I'd
come early and waited for a parking place near the Horseman to
open up, so I could watch for him from the car. Now I was having
second thoughts about the whole plan. He'd probably counted on
recognizing me from my Net-portrait, in which case we were in
trouble. And there was little hope of his being unmistakable: on
that sidewalk, no one could have been so outlandish as to stand
out. Or so I
thought until I happened to glance in the rear-view mirror, and
saw a man of about the right age, wearing a heavy black overcoat
that was wildly inappropriate for the early spring
sweater-weather. I half-opened the door for a better look. His
head was full of sockets of every possible design, and he was not
only wearing a coat, but gloves—black and lumpish. He was
unmistakable, all right. "Voskresenye?"
I called out. The man
looked at me as though I were mad. "Voistinu
voskresye—but not today!" Oh.
Khristos voskresye is an old Easter greeting meaning
"Christ is risen." Voistinu voskresye is the
answer—"truly he is risen"—but of course, it wasn't
Easter. Well, it wouldn't be the last time I'd make an idiot out
of myself in the name of journalism. For a moment I was afraid
he'd think I was a wirehead trying to steal the car—I've
got enough sockets to look the part—but he passed by
without further comment, disappearing into the crowd. Then
the passenger door seemed to open by itself. I flipped open the
cover of the Electrify switch and had my finger on the toggle
when he hissed, "It's me—Voskresenye!" and climbed into the
seat with a peculiar crab-motion, still crouching
down. "What
the hell are you doing?" "No
time. Pretend you've given up on me and drive away." One of
the advantages of driving a car of Reconstruction vintage is that
they generally put in a few concealed weapons. There was a
ceramic flechette gun behind a panel just beneath the driver's
side armrest; a tap with my left hand, a quick grab with my
right, and I'd have it. I would take the gun, make him get out of
the car, drive away, and produce some nice boring conclusion to
my series on the Calinshchina. I would take the assignments I was
given, and I would die in my sleep. Then I
looked at his face, and my hand wavered. He had one of every kind
of socket ever made, from the round Army standard to the tiny
modern squares, but the ones at his temples were like nothing I'd
ever seen before: oval, with three concentric rings of pins
inside. And the jagged scar that went all the way around his head
was beyond the clumsiness of even the most disreputable Moscow
hack. He'd been modified by the Guardians. I
turned my sigh of resignation into one of frustration and slumped
my shoulders to mime discouragement. After another thirty seconds
of craning my neck I muttered, "The hell with it, then," found a
tiny chink in the wall of traffic, and threaded the car into
it. "You
shouldn't have called out my name," he said, straightening up. "I
know you didn't know, and it can't be helped now in any case. But
I don't think we've fooled anyone. We'll have to try to lose
ourselves in traffic." "Voskresenye,
why are we acting like fugitives?" "I know
how all this must seem, Maya Tatyanichna. But I am not paranoid,
nor am I being overcautious. On the contrary, it is reckless of
me even to risk speaking to you. I am widely accounted a most
desirable person to have at one's tea party. Ask your
screener." "He's
telling the truth," Keishi said. "He's been wanted by the Fusion
of Historical Nations since before it fused." What
for? "Oh,
treason, terrorism, conspiracy to overthrow the government.
Little things like that." I
thought wistfully of the flechette gun and the chance that had
evaporated when I decided not to use it. Why
didn't you tell me this before? "It
never occurred to me to check for warrants on someone his age,"
she said with chagrin. Twenty
years of good behavior, sunk by a stereotype. Now I'd get to test
the old maxim about Postcop tea. The first time you drink it,
they say, you soon forget it—that part I'd already proved.
But the second time, the saying goes on, you remember it the rest
of your life. "Give
me one good reason why I shouldn't make you get out now," I
said. "Because
it's too late. They already know we're together. I just saw the
bulletin go out." What
are my chances if I kill him and say he tried to carjack
me? I
asked. No, don't bother, I know the answer. Don't mind me, I'm
just struggling against the inevitable. "I
assure you that your reputation will not be damaged as a result
of this meeting," he said. "I have made extensive preparations to
avoid endangering you. When the day shift clocks out, I will
erase the information from their chips before the next shift
slots them in, and purge all external records. At six o'clock
this evening, you will be as clean as you were
yesterday." "And if
he doesn't do it, I will," Keishi said. "I'll power-down their
whole network if I have to." Keishi
was wired beyond the Post police, but even so, it didn't seem
remotely plausible. And while they both sounded confident, I
wasn't sure how much to credit that. The overenhanced often come
to believe they can hack their way out of anything. Sooner or
later, life proves them all wrong. "I'm
not making this up, Maya. I can do it." I
believe you, I subvoked without conviction. "The
first thing," Voskresenye said, "is to lose any surveillance we
may have attracted. Take a right turn up at the
light." "Where
are we going?" "I'll
know when we get there." I
wasn't reassured, but saw no reason not to go where he suggested.
As I made the turn I said, "Just so I know what I'm being
disappeared for, what exactly did you do? Plant a bomb or
something?" "I
planted something much more dangerous. An idea. —Here! Turn
into this parking lot. —An idea, but it didn't go off.
Secondhand explosives; you can't trust them. Park there, next to
that gray car." I
pulled in next to a car that was a perfect duplicate of mine,
except for being a slightly darker shade of gray. The owner must
have parked it indoors. Kruchonykh never sold a gray car, you
understand; they just turn that color. He got
out, and though his movements were neither as fast nor as
acrobatic as they had been when he scuttled into the car on
Nevsky, they still didn't fit with his age. For a moment I
wondered if he was a younger man in some sort of make-up. But no,
it was more than that. There was something inhuman about the way
he moved, about its smoothness—fast precise movements with
no diagonals, like a toy robot. I
followed him around to the back of the car and started to ask
what he was doing, but he put his finger to his lips and looked
into the sky. "There ... and there...” he murmured, then
said to me: "Stand over to your left a little, and keep
talking." "What
sort of idea?" "Oh,
some nonsense about human beings having inalienable rights. Or
was it that the Earth is flat? At my age one begins to forget
these things." He had
removed my license plate, using a tiny electric screwdriver
produced from one of his coat's many pockets. "About a foot to
your right, if you please," he said. Then he went to the car
beside us, and started switching plates. "Will
that work?" I whispered. "Speak
freely; no one can hear us now. And yes, it should. You're
between me and the closest spy satellite; the other one's too far
to see much. Back to where you were before, please." He put on
the new plate, then moved back to the other car and laid his
hands on it. Its dashboard lit up, except for the security
section, which remained dark. "All right, friend," he murmured to
the car, bending down to press his cheek against its hood, "who
do we belong to? Ah, registered to Maria Petrova and Ivan Petrov,
a man and a woman... and they're both here. Perfect. That makes
everything much easier." He straightened back up and brought one
hand to his head. I heard the car's phone begin to dial
itself. On the
second ring someone picked up the phone. "Petrova." "Maria
Petrova," he said in a creditable imitation of an early-model
Kruchonykh voice, "this is an automated call from your Kruchonykh
KL-37. There has been an attempt to steal me. I have already
electrocuted the offenders and alerted the appropriate
authorities. Please proceed to my vicinity as soon as possible to
fill out the police report." "Bozhe
moy—how
many were there? Are they alive?" "The
hooligan or hooligans are dead. No further information is
available at this time. Thank you for choosing Kruchonykh." The
phone went dark. He turned to me and said: "That ought to do it.
The promise of carnage rarely fails to bring people
running." "Won't
they just call the cops and draw attention?" "It
doesn't matter if they do or not; the cops already know we're
here." He touched the car again and its motor started. "The
satellites have infrared, so their motor has to be about as warm
as ours. The Postcops will figure they started it remotely, if
they notice at all. —You were asking about my checkered
past." "
'Conspiracy to overthrow the government'?" "Oh
yes, that. A youthful folly. That was when I thought that liberty
in the Fusion was being destroyed by people, and not by
impersonal forces. I tried to embarrass a few of those people.
But I discovered that in the Historical Nations you will never
run out of tyrants. Depose all you want, they'll make more. By
the time I realized who my targets should have been, I had become
much too old for such antics. 'If youth knew, if age could.'
" "If you
don't mind my saying so, you look as though your age
can." "Aesculapius
and Hephaestus have been kind to me," he said, "but there are
limits." "He
means medicine and technology, the pretentious old bat," Keishi
put in, before I could ask. I was
about to ask another question when he said: "Don't look now, but
here come the Petrovs, every petty-bourgeois inch of them. Now,
the satellite takes pictures at a rate of one every four seconds,
so when they're four seconds away from the car—say, when
they reach the bumper on that Honda there—get in as fast as
you can. Ready?" He adjusted the side mirror as the couple
approached. Then at the appointed moment we both jumped
in. "Look,"
he whispered, pointing to the side mirror. "They're standing by
the car and talking. They're us, and we're them. He's even
wearing a sweater, so he'll only be a little brighter than me in
infrared. We've done it." Maria
Petrova noticed us and rapped at the window. I rolled it
down. "Excuse
me, tavarishcha. Did you see anyone near this
car?" "No," I
said, "but we heard the alarm call you. It must be on the
fritz." "Those
Kruchonykh alarms are crap," Voskresenye said in a crotchety old
man's voice. "They'll do that every time. It's a miracle we
weren't electrocuted. Just you trade that pile of garbage in on a
Stepanova. You mark my words." I
rolled my eyes. "Oh, Sergei." To Maria Petrova I said, "Sergei is
an engineer for Stepanova. He gets like this." She
looked back and forth between us, seeing the difference in
ages—then decided to smile. "I understand. You should hear
Ivan on the evils of Japanese software." Having
affirmed my membership in the international sorority of suffering
spouses, I realized, I could now drive away without arousing
comment. "Sergei, let's go home and quit bothering these nice
people," I said, and to Petrova: "Proshaite,
sestra." As I
backed out I heard Ivan say, "But she's driving a
Kruchonykh!" "Of
course I am!" I called out the window. "I'm not stupid enough to
drive anything my husband designed!" Voskresenye
chuckled as we drove away. "Most impressive. You missed your
calling. You should have been an actor." "I am,"
I said. "Or at least, I was until today. Are we clean
now?" "Once
more for good measure. Stop anywhere along here." I did,
and he switched the license plate again, this time with a small
green convertible that he said was between sensors. "Now
we're
clean. By the time anyone figures out what happened, we'll be
miles away, and they'll be tracking the wrong
vehicle." "And
Maria Petrova drinks tea?" "No. At
the most, a Postcop asks some questions and they get an extra
dose of surveillance for a while; nothing worse. Even if we were
being watched, which we may not have been." "And
meanwhile, I sink deeper and deeper." "Not at
all. As of six o'clock, that's always been your plate number. I
have already set up the logic bomb." "He's
telling the truth. I saw him do it," Keishi said with grudging
admiration. "Under all that rusting hardware, the man's got
street." I
looked toward Voskresenye, and then around at the spot just
behind me where I always imagine the screener standing, and shook
my head. "So are we clean enough to make it out into the
countryside, to someplace unsurveilled?" "We're
clean enough, but that's the wrong place to go. It's too obvious,
and a plate search on cars leaving the city wouldn't take them
long. What we need is a place within the city where we can be
certain we're unobserved." Keishi's
voice rasped from the car speaker: "Like a nice big semistable
bubble right on Nevsky Prospect?" "Exactly,"
Voskresenye said, nodding. "What's
a bubble?" I asked. "A
temporary surveillance-free zone. Head back downtown, if you
please. Park us anywhere off Nevsky, and we'll walk." "Why do
you want to go back to Nevsky? Isn't that the first place they'll
look?" "Who
would expect us to circle back to the place where we were first
identified?" "Anyone
with an ounce of imagination," I said. "Anyone who's ever read an
American detective novel." He
nodded. "You mean, anyone but a Postcop. Besides, they can look
all they want; they won't find us." I
looked at him skeptically. "And what good does this bubble do
us?" "It
gives you a chance to interview me." "Are
you putting me on?" I glanced from the road to his face, which
was unreadable. "You think I'm not in deep enough tea already, I
should try Netcasting the life and times of a wanted
criminal?" "We can
limit our discussion to the Calinshchina," he said. "Your
screener can alter my features, and elide any mention of my
so-called terrorist activities." I
thought for a moment. Keishi, can you make this 'cast
clean? I mean a hundred percent, no traces
whatsoever? "In my
sleep, girl." I
decided that if she could make the Postcops forget about me, she
could give me a clean Netcast; and if she couldn't, then it
wouldn't matter. I might as well go ahead and get the story I was
risking my career for. Besides, I was curious. "All
right," I said grudgingly. "In for a penny, in for a
pound." "That's
the spirit," Voskresenye said brightly. "Nothing like a good
cliché to help you to a wise decision." As I
opened my mouth to answer, I heard a siren behind us. "Oh, God.
Please tell me that's an ambulance," I said feebly. "No.
It's a yellow-and-black," he said. "Turn your head, as though you
were looking for a place to pull over." "I hope
you've got a backup plan," I whispered, complying. "That's
not for us. He's chasing a speeder or something." "Look,"
I said, "you're wanted, you were seen, I was heard calling your
name, now a Postcop comes out of nowhere. It stands to reason
she's looking for us." "Listen."
The wasp's siren dopplered past, not even slowing. "You see? The
Postcops are unimaginative, predictable, and overdependent on
machines, but they are not stupid. In a matter of this importance
they would not be so unsubtle as to send a wasp. If they come for
us in a car, you may rest assured it will be unmarked and
Net-silent." "How
comforting." "You
could not be safer than with me, Maya Tatyanichna," he said with
quiet amusement. "The Hanged Man is not in my cards. I am told to
fear death by drowning, which has happened once already, and will
happen once again—but not just yet." The
traffic was now so thick that I had to devote all my attention to
driving. At last, just a few blocks away from where we'd started,
he silently pointed out a crowded parking lot. He had me park the
car with its rear bumper to a wall, so the license plate would be
hidden from the security camera. "Our
bubble is about a kilometer away," he said. "I apologize for
making you walk, but that way, if they do find the car—" he
tapped its hood smartly, making the dashboard lights wink
"—we'll have some warning." As we
walked I asked him what the terrorism charge on his record was
for. "The
charge is actually 'informational terrorism,' " he
said. "What?"
I turned to face him, fear constricting my throat.
"Informational terrorism? That's not a Postcop crime.
That's under Weaver jurisdiction." "It
happened a long time ago," he said. "The Weavers have long since
forgotten." "Weavers
don't forget." "They
most certainly do," he said. "Unlike the Postcops, the Weavers
are entirely rational; that is their only point of weakness. If
they are confident that you cannot repeat your crime, they will
not seek you out. You need only stay offline for some years, and
you will be entirely gone from their minds." Should
I believe that? "Sure,"
Keishi said. "A Weaver sees a healthy chunk of the whole Net
every day; they can't remember all of it. For most things they
rely on sense and reflex, not on memory." "How
did this charge come about?" I asked Voskresenye. "Some
decades ago," he said, "I was involved with a group of dissident
hackers who wrote a virus designed to seek out the computers of
every financial and governmental agency in the FHN. Only
computers, you understand, not minds—otherwise it would
have been far harder to get past the Weavers. It hid there until
a certain day, then encrypted every byte of data it could find
and self-destructed, leaving a series of ransom demands behind
it. In effect, we were holding the information
hostage." Why
doesn't that sound right to me? I
subvoked. "Ask
him how he put an unbreakable code in the space of a virus,"
Keishi whispered in my ear. "A virus would have to be small, to
get so widespread without being detected. You could fit in a key
a few thousand bits long, maybe, but you put a couple of
teraflops on that and it'll crumble." I
paused to reorganize the question in my mind, then repeated it to
Voskresenye. "Oh, it
did crumble," he said. "It crumbled very quickly. We were
astonished to discover that in some places it had held out as
long as forty minutes." "Then
what good was it?" He
looked at me out of the corner of his eye, not moving his
head—almost, I thought, as though he couldn't. "You might
better ask, what good would it be otherwise? Do you think the
Weavers negotiate with terrorists? What concessions will they
give as ransom? Would they not instead hunt us down and kill us,
even if it took a thousand men to take each one? If we had
succeeded, it would have sealed our fates—such a simple
trick as temporary disappearance would never have thrown them
off, if I had done enough damage for them to take me
seriously." "So you
failed deliberately?" "We
invented a false purpose, and deliberately failed in that, yes.
This was to conceal our true purpose." "Which
was?" I prompted. "To
build a network of back doors into the computers that we
infected. We knew that when they decrypted the data, after such a
short time, they would not bother to check that what they
recovered was the same as what they had before—especially
since they had intercepted several copies of the virus, and made
sure that their only function was to encrypt. We had only to hope
they would not find the few copies of the virus that were subtly
different from the others; and they did not. So the programs they
restored had points of entry that had not been there
before." "These
back doors—wouldn't they have found them
eventually?" "Certainly.
But they remained in place only a few weeks. They were only meant
to provide us access to the lowest levels of the system, a toe in
the door. From there we could strip away the root passwords,
letter by letter and bit by bit. And once we had root access, we
could create all the back doors we dared. In that way, and by not
doing anything that would alarm the Weavers unduly, we've managed
to keep one step ahead of them ever since. The descendants of
those original back doors are still being maintained. That's how
we're able to create the bubbles." "Who do
you mean when you say 'we'? The people involved in this virus
project?" "Their
current equivalents. All the members of that team have long since
been disappeared, and those that followed them, and those that
followed the ones that followed. You can evade the Postcops a
long time, and the Weavers a short time; but in the end, they
always catch you." Keishi,
crack the surveillance camera and give me a direct shot of his
face, I
subvocalized. I wanted to see his reaction to my next question.
When the window opened up in the lower left-hand quadrant of my
field of vision, I asked him: "You say a person can only evade
the authorities a few years, yet you've apparently been doing it
for decades. Why have you survived where so many others were
caught?" In the
window he raised his eyebrows. "Why, skill, of course." Then he
laughed: "All right, then, good wiring." And then the window
closed and he said, "Off the record? A combination of abject
cowardice and pure luck. But don't let it get around." The
window opened again on a face without expression, save perhaps a
hint of mischief at the corners of the mouth. Can he
hear everything I say to you? "Absolutely
not," she said. "He didn't hear you ask me for that crack, he saw
the crack. Your thoughts are cabled to me on quanta; if he looks
at it, he changes it and I can tell. He can't break that unless
he can revoke the laws of physics. The very first leg of the trip
is by radio, and that he could hack in theory, but it's coded
with megabit primes and not even he could break that. Besides,
I'm keeping close tabs on what goes on inside that crummy little
cranium, and if he tried to crack us open, I'd see it in a
second. Believe me, Maya, he's good, but I'm a whole lot better.
And when I say we're tight, we're tight." When
she was finished I said, exhaustedly, Keishi? "Yes?" Next
time I ask you a yes or no question, give me a yes or no answer,
OK? "OK.
Umm, I mean yes." Thank
you. Keishi's
lecture had forced an awkward pause in my conversation with
Voskresenye. To end it I asked why he hadn't tried scrubbing the
data, instead of encoding it. "Because
by that time I had realized that destroying data wouldn't have
weakened their grip. I needed a bigger bomb." "What
kind of bomb?" "It has
not been set off yet. Perhaps it does not exist. —Here we
are; this is our bubble." "Where?" "Right
in front of you." We had
come to a little open-air cafe on Nevsky itself, crammed with
customers and visible to hundreds of passers-by. Overlooking it
were two surveillance cameras mounted on lampposts. The cameras
were at least twenty years out of date, since we could see them;
but that didn't make them any less effective. "You
must be kidding," I said. "I'm not going to sit here and discuss
your career as a terrorist where a thousand wired people can see
us. Not to mention those cameras. I thought you were taking me
someplace unsurveilled." "At the
moment, this is the most secure spot in the Russian Historical
Nation. If you will kindly refrain from looking in my direction
for a moment, I will demonstrate." I was a
little edgy about turning my back on him, but I would have felt
foolish saying so, so I averted my eyes. "Thank
you. Now, dearest elephant, can you tell me how many fingers I am
holding up?" My face
went numb, and for a moment I thought he'd done it. But it was
Keishi's voice that came from my mouth: "There's no need for
games. As long as you're in the bubble, I can't see you unless
she looks at you. You're secure." Don't
ever
do that again, I subvocalized, gasping for air as the
sensation in my face returned. "I'm
sorry. But he did ask, and I can't get at any other
speakers—" I am
not a speaker. Keep your mind to yourself. "I said
I was sorry." Later!
I don't want to hear another word from you until this interview
is over. "Why
don't you just send me to my room?" I
imagined myself filling out a repartnering form, and she
responded with silence. "Trouble
controlling the elephant?" Voskresenye said. "In the circus they
use hooks, I think." "I'll
have to look into that," I said. "Are
you now confident that we can safely talk here?" "I
believe we're safe from cameras," I said. "But what if someone
overhears us? The Postcops may not be able to pick that up, but
Weavers can." "A
legitimate worry. I will be keeping tabs on the minds in our
vicinity; however, you might wish to have your screener
double-check. It can't hurt, and it would surely take most of her
brainpower, so it might keep her quiet." "Tell
him I could watch everyone in Leningrad and never miss the
bandwidth!" I
pictured myself thumbing the form and handing it in. Keep an
eye on them, but don't say a word unless you see something. I
mean it. We
found a table in the shade. As he sat across from me, I noticed
that he was sweating under his out-of-season overcoat. When water
and menus had been brought, I said, "Why don't you start by
telling me why you're dressed for snow in this
weather?" "I will
explain; but first I suggest you have your screener alter my
features. The events I will retell may be safely Netcast, but my
face may be familiar to the Post police." "Go
ahead, Keishi," I said, and then subvoked: Don't tell me how
you're doing it, just do it. His
face morphed through a series of subtle changes that,
collectively, left it unrecognizable. "Maybe
you should take out the sockets, too," I said. "They're pretty
distinctive." "I'm
afraid they are essential to the story," Voskresenye put in.
"However, there are others still alive who are socketed much as I
am, so it should not matter." "All
right then. Now, about that overcoat." "Since
when do you cover fashion?" Keishi whispered; I ignored
her. "It is
uncomfortable, yes, but I did not wish to call attention to
myself. And while an overcoat in April might draw the occasional
glance, I think you'll agree that this would be substantially
more indiscreet." Screening his hand from the sidewalk with a
menu, he took off one glove to reveal the structure of metal and
insulated wire that covered his hand. Steel slid against oiled
steel to lift one of his fingers, and the tangle of wires on his
skin shifted uneasily with the motion. "Without
this ... device, you are paralyzed?" "Nearly
so, yes. I can move a little, but I cannot walk. And without the
wires, I'm quite atactile. My mind and my body no longer talk to
each other the way they used to; like so many couples nowadays,
they prefer to interact through a machine." "May I
ask ... an accident? A degenerative disease?" "Yes,
and yes. An accident with a degenerative disease named
Derzhavin." "Aleksandr
Derzhavin?" Unassisted, I would not have known the name, but
Keishi's moistdisk had woven itself so seamlessly into my memory
that I could not keep a note of horror out of my voice. "You were
a victim of Derzhavin?" "Victim
is such a loaded term," he said, calmly replacing the glove. "I
have a great deal to thank the man for, including much of my
current bandwidth and all of my continued mobility at my advanced
age. No, not his victim. In the beginning I was his experimental
subject, then his lab assistant, and eventually—" and here
I heard the whirr of clockwork as he picked up his water glass
"—a great deal more." "I
thought Derzhavin did his experiments on Kazakhs, not
politicals." "Kazakhs
and the mentally retarded. And by the time I met him, I fit that
latter description very well. Read the marks for yourself." He
pulled up his coat sleeve. As I
looked for the Guardian tattoo, I saw that the steel rods that
controlled his hands were connected to a hard black shell that
started just below his wrists. Keishi, I subvoked, give
me four hundred percent, quick. When the magnification kicked
in, I could see the rows of copper needles that anchored the
carapace into his skin. "You
understand the code?" he prompted. I
canceled the zoom and looked back at the thirty-two squares
etched into his skin with magnetic ink. Keishi's moistdisk helped
me recognize the blackened sixth, nineteenth, and twenty-sixth
boxes as signifying "irreparable but nonhereditary organic brain
defects." "I
guess they were wrong about its being irreparable." "On the
contrary, it has not been and cannot be repaired. But the right
sort of wiring can compensate." "How
did you go from a political to a six-nineteen?" Before
he could answer, the waiter returned to take our orders. I had
not opened my menu, so I asked for black coffee and a ham
sandwich. After a long discussion about ingredients, Voskresenye
commanded cabbage pirozhki, which the impatient waiter twice
assured him were free of meat. "You
are vegetarian?" " 'My
food is not that of man,' " he quoted; " 'I do not destroy the
lamb and the kid to glut my appetite; acorns and berries afford
me sufficient nourishment.'" "Gandhi,"
I hazarded. "No,"
he said. "Frankenstein's Creature. Gandhi, I imagine, would not
have been so arrogant, but for me it's most
appropriate." I
frowned. "I don't remember—" "Not
the film, the book. A preclassical allusion, by the modern
reckoning. Forgive me; I have grown too used to being my own
audience." Mark
that for human interest, Keishi. I wish I could do the whole
story on this man—
a cabbage-eating terrorist, it's perfect. "Actually,
several of us were vegetarians," he said thoughtfully. "That was
her influence, of course.... After we were caught, the Guardians
were hysterical enough to pick up every vegetarian they could
find in Russia, reasoning that a few might have been our
accomplices. It hardly mattered to them that they also got every
Zen faddist and food-allergy victim in Moscow." "I seem
to be asking you this question a lot: who do you mean by
'we'?" "I'm
sorry, I'm not making much sense, I'm afraid. I have gone over
this story in my head a thousand times, and now, when it matters,
I cannot even keep it straight. It would be much easier if I
began at the beginning." "By all
means." Eight A Man Who Had
Fallen
Among Thieves The one
good feature of telepresence news—compared to text news,
which is superior in every other respect—is the way you use
interviews. In print, you can use only a few sentences of any
interview, which means they're mostly short. In telepresence, you
can interview someone for hours, and then when you're online, you
just remember it and it's there, a new memory in the viewer's
head. Most of it goes away when your story's over, but it's there
while the audience needs it. You can include a whole story, not
just summarize it. Still,
the holographic memory that telepresence gives is rather
lossy—from a distance the event seems vivid and complete,
but when you approach it, it eludes your grasp. It is a mystery
to me how so much of the value of an interview can be conveyed in
telepresence, when so little information comes across; but then,
it is also a mystery to me how the events of your own life can
matter, when memory sweeps away a thousand things for every one
it lets remain. I have
an aid to memory: a copy of the screener's disk, which Keishi
kept, and which has come into my hands. While I will not release
it (and don't bother trying, I burned it long ago) I have
replayed it many times, and will set down what Voskresenye
said. "I was
born in Moscow, shortly after the Guardians first took that
city," he began. "By the time I was old enough to form clear
memories, they had already 'cleansed' the country of nearly all
its 'undesirables,' as they would say. So while my parents
sometimes mentioned the purges in a whisper, I did not remember
them myself, and all my childhood the Guardian regime was simply
fact. If someone had asked me how I felt about the Square Miles,
I might have realized that I should abhor them; but no one ever
asked. I grew up less than a hundred miles from
Square-Mile-on-Volga, but what happened there seemed as remote to
me as squalor in the Americas does to you." He
spoke softly, but his eyes looked directly into mine. Most people
I interview won't look straight at me; but this man's mirror, I
realized, had long ago accustomed him to scarred faces and heads
full of silicon. As he began his story I again felt the intensity
I had sensed in him in grayspace. If the audience was half as
rapt as I was, my ratings might be almost respectable for
once. "I grew
into a young man of an aesthetic and not a political
temperament," he continued, "and so managed to stay on the
Guardians' good side. As a result, I was able to attend Moscow
University, even though it was then under very strict Guardian
control. I was so otherworldly that I barely noticed how uneasy
the other students were around me—they were Americans for
the most part, the children of Guardian politicians and
bureaucrats. Portia and Raskolnikov did not disdain my company;
and it was with them that I spent my time. So despite the thinly
veiled contempt of many of my professors, I was able to make fair
grades and, if things had gone a little differently, would have
taken my degree with a comfortable margin of honor." "What
did you study?" "My
principal subject was Classics." "Where
are your glasses, then?" I said. "I thought Classicists went
blind from squinting at all that flat video." He
raised an eyebrow. "This, of course, was back when 'Classical
culture' meant Greece and Rome, not Hollywood and
Motown." "Oh.
Well, yes, I mean, printbooks'll do it too." "Ooh,
nice save," Keishi said. We'll
take care of it in postproduction, I
said, gulping ice water in hopes of forestalling a
blush. "You
think I'd let a thing like that get on the disk?" she said in
mock affront. I
thanked her for the editing and God for not letting me make that
mistake live. Take a note, Maya: no more banter. Voskresenye
was staring at my encyclopedia, a mocking smile curling his lips.
It was the Postcops' joke on me, though not their last or
cruelest: seeing an encyclopedia in my head makes people magnify
my lapses and minimize any knowledge I display. It's like being
caught with crib notes. "I
don't really use that," I said. "It doesn't even work right
anymore—" And what kind of idiot would wear a broken chip?
I was making matters worse with every word. But
Voskresenye's eyes were not unkind. "I see no moral difference
between keeping knowledge in one's head and on a chip," he
said. I
wanted to protest again, but it was no use. And besides, when was
the last time I'd gone live without a gigabyte of background
research whispering into my ear from a moistdisk? It wouldn't
hurt if it weren't partly true. "I
suppose," I said, "your generation was the last to spend its
childhood memorizing facts, and mine the last to feel guilty
about not doing it." "A man
is fortunate if he has nothing worse than that to feel guilty
about," Voskresenye said sententiously. "However, the endeavor of
memorization is a noble one. Once knowledge is centralized on the
Net, it becomes very easy to change—Queen Mab need only
ride the world-mind once, new dreams for old. And so in the
modern age, the amasser of useless facts is your only hero. An
encyclopedia that was not new twenty years ago at least provides
a point of reference." I
pulled my pride away from that last sentence, the way you'd pull
a dog from a sprayed fencepost. "Does the knowledge really have
to be useless?" I said. "It
need not be," he said, "but the sort of person who will cram his
head with facts, as a squirrel crams his cheeks with nuts, will
most often do it for its own sake, with no thought of future use.
Certainly that is the sort of person I was, as a student. Even if
I had taken my degree, I don't know what I would have done with
it. I honestly don't think I ever thought that far ahead. Of
course I could not teach in the universities. No doubt I would
have wound up riding herd on second-graders in Kazakhstan for a
couple of years until the next purge of ethnic
intellectuals." "What
happened?" "Two
things. First, impatience. I had a fair command of Latin, but for
my degree I also had to learn Greek, and I did not look forward
to the years of study that would be required; nor did I want to
wait so long for Homer. So I got drilled for my first
socket— which was illegal for me, you understand, because I
was not one of them. The law was not strictly enforced, but
occasionally the Guardians would decide to make an example of
someone. The socket was a small one, and I was able to hide it,
but the need for secrecy gradually increased my awareness of what
the Guardians were doing to our nation and its people. So I began
to develop a vague, unformed, and still largely selfish political
conscience—and that helped prepare me a little for what
happened next." At this
point the waiter arrived with our food, and Voskresenye was
distracted by the need to dissect his pirozhki before tasting
them. To get him back on track, I restated the obvious: "It
doesn't sound like you were the kind of person to defy the
Guardians." "
'Defy' sounds as if I was hurling insults at them on the street.
The reality was more like a whisper in a darkened room that the
wrong person overheard. And even that I would never have done, if
not for a fellow student named Katya Andersohna." I
didn't need a moistdisk to recognize that name. "Any relation to
Harold Anderson?" "She
was his daughter." "A
dangerous person to know, then." He
nodded, his hands pausing above the plate. "Yes, very much so.
But not for the reason you think. She was a
four-nine." "Harold
Anderson's kid was a dissident? That's hard to
believe." "Katya
Andersohna was dissidence at MGU. Without her there would
have been nothing. She was an amazing person; she had inherited
her father's genius and her mother's beauty, and to that she
added humanity, a trait neither of her parents appeared to
possess. Perhaps compassion is an environmental illness rather
than a genetic disorder. Or I should say, a bacillus, for she was
quite successful at infecting others.... But I'm getting ahead of
myself," he said, shaking his head a little, as though this Katya
were a subject whose gravitation he escaped with difficulty. He
turned his attention to his plate. I groped for some banal
question in order to fill in the dead audio time, then stopped:
to watch him eat was fascination enough. Before each cut, he
rotated the plate to the correct angle, as if the dance of his
knife and fork were programmed and immutable. The swift,
practiced movements of his hands made me think of a sign
language, or of a series of magical passes by which the food was
made to disappear. Voskresenye
raised an eyebrow, and I realized that I'd been watching him too
long. "I'm sorry," I said. "Staring's an occupational
hazard." "Not at
all. If my being a freak will get people to listen, I am pleased
to be one." I let
that sink in and then asked: "How did you get mixed up with Katya
Andersohna?" "Not by
choice, that's for certain," he said, laying down his knife. "I
had no idea she was a dissident, nor did I know her by the
Russian form of her name. To me she was Catharine Anderson, the
chief of propaganda for the Student League, a thing to be feared;
and the daughter of the Heptarch, all the more terrifying. I
rarely saw her, and when I did, I deemed it prudent to go the
other way." "Then
how did it happen?" "She
approached my table one day in the library. I was bent over
Aeschylus, so all she could see of me was the garish little cap I
affected—having reasoned that a person in a nondescript hat
was hiding a socket, while one in some blue-and-green monstrosity
was merely eccentric. She was carrying an armful of leaflets, and
she laid one down before me on the table, saying, 'Here, brother;
the latest from the Ministry.' When I looked up in surprise she
laughed and said, 'Oh, sorry, Mishenka! I took you for your
better.' She started to take the leaflet back. Then she thought
better of it and said, 'Well, keep it; you might learn your
place.' And she turned away, tossing her hair to flaunt the
silicon embedded in her skull, and went to give leaflets to the
people at the other tables, most of whom were now smiling at her
performance." As he
spoke I tapped into my imagination chip and visualized the scene.
I didn't know what Andersohna looked like, so I pictured her with
long, dark hair, shaved a little on the left side to expose the
sockets. When I made her flip her hair, Keishi responded with a
soft "ooh," and I knew I'd hit the right gesture. "Well,
my cheeks were burning, as you can imagine," he continued.
"Hatred of us was rarely so overt; they saved their venom for
Kazakhs and Arabs for the most part. I was not used to it. I
wanted to throw the pamphlet away, but that would have seemed
like defiance, so I marked my place in Aeschylus with it and
left, trying not to run. But as I did, I noticed something
strange. The covers of all the leaflets the others were reading
were white on red. Mine, and only mine, had black lettering as
well. "When I
had put some distance between me and the library, I checked to
make sure. Yes. Beneath the white title, 'Kazakhs versus Animals
at Square-Mile-on-Volga,' someone had written with a ballpoint
pen, in English, 'A Modest Proposal.' And the handwriting was
quite recognizable. It was my own." "Andersohna
forged your writing? She was trying to frame you?" "That
was my first thought. I turned and made for the incinerator,
planning to throw it in. But I stopped short. If Harold
Anderson's daughter had taken a dislike to me, burning one
leaflet was not going to change my fate. I might as well look at
it; perhaps I'd learn why I'd been singled out. I stood close to
the incinerator, opened the door so I could throw it in at once
if anyone came by, and began to read." "It was
dissident literature?" "For me
it was, yes. To anyone else, it would just have been another
purple-faced leaflet from the Ministry, marked up by an even more
zealous student. Where the leaflet said, 'One would not subject
an innocent animal to this treatment, though one would never
hesitate to inflict it upon prisoners who have been guilty of
such heinous crimes,' this fellow had put, 'Such as being born
Kazakh!' And where it said, 'This will help reduce the dimensions
of the Kazakhi tumor,' neat proofreading marks emended this to
'Senses, organs, dimensions, passions,' and added in the margin,
'Let us prick them and see if they will bleed.' All this was, for
a student of what we were then misguided enough to call the
classics, highly suggestive stuff." I took
another sip of ice water as he went on. "Even
then I would not have been sure that it meant what it meant,
except for that scrawled subtitle: 'A Modest Proposal.' In the
eighteenth century, in what you'd call Ancient Britain, a
four-nine by the name of Jonathan Swift had written a satire by
that title, pointing out that the problems of overpopulation and
famine could be solved simultaneously if we would simply begin
eating the children of the poor. I used the memory chip I was
wearing beneath my cap to call up the moment when she'd tossed
her hair. Yes: she'd been showing me the English Literature
textbook in her socket. "What I
was holding, then, was a satire after the example of Swift. If a
Guardian read it, he would see in it nothing more than
overexuberant patriotism: 'Since we have so many human subjects
available at the Square Miles for our experiments, why ship in
animals?' A noble but impractical thought, by Guardian standards.
Read it with a different eye, and it said, 'What the Guardians do
to Kazakhs, you wouldn't wish on a dog.' But this meaning only
fell into place with that obscure allusion written on the
cover— something that no board of inquiry would ever catch.
And on top of that, all these little hints were in my own script,
so that if the leaflet should fall into the hands of someone else
that could understand it ... well, I'd be an ethnic with an
illegal socket who claimed the Heptarch's daughter did it in his
handwriting." "That's
a lot of thought to put into recruiting one person," I
said. "For
anyone else it would have been. But Katya was, even unenhanced, a
brilliant propagandist, and besides that she had the best
moistware her father's blood money could buy. For her it was the
sort of thing one dreams up on a break between classes. Katya
never did anything with less than three layers of
deception." He
looked down at his plate and cut off another bite, but did not
eat it. When he continued his story it was in a quieter
voice. "I
didn't dare keep the leaflet, of course. Yet I knew I had to talk
to Catharine Anderson. The leaflet she had written had done what
she meant it to. It had forced me to think about things I had
been ignoring for twenty years. I had to see her. So I found
another, unmarked leaflet—they were all over campus within
a day— and wrote on the cover with a black ballpoint pen.
And for a week I spent every waking hour in the library, hoping
to run into her again. "Finally,
one afternoon when I had given up and was on my way out, I passed
her in the foyer. She was talking to a friend, some one on the
Student League. I was almost at the door by the time I saw her,
so I stopped and went back to the book return, as though I had
forgotten something. I pulled out Aeschylus, took the leaflet
from him, and, even though he was not a library book, I dropped
him into the return slot. So much for the classics; I never saw
him again. Then I opened the leaflet, as if I had just noticed it
there, and stood for a while pretending to read it. She glanced
at me for one instant—that was all it took for her to
understand—and, quickly but unhurriedly, took leave of her
friend. She walked out and, cautiously, I followed
her. "She
led me all the way across campus without acknowledging my
presence, and after a while, I began to think she hadn't noticed
me at all. Then suddenly she was nowhere to be seen. I stopped,
looking around. But to stand there craning my neck like that was
too suspicious, so I started to leave. As I did, she reached out
for me and pulled me back behind the shrubbery where she was
hiding. She pushed me against the wall and covered my mouth with
her hand. "
'Never call me Catharine,' she hissed. 'Don't even think of me by
that name. Only Katya—you understand?' "I
nodded as best I could with my head pinned to the wall. She took
her hand away from my mouth and said, 'Now tell me why you're
smart enough not to approach me, but not smart enough to burn
your leaflet.' "I
reached into my pocket, as she watched me warily, and took out
the leaflet to show her. On the cover where Katya's subtitle
should have been, I had written, 'Paper due 11/IX
Greek.' "She
looked at me differently then. 'It's about time the gods sent me
someone with half a brain. You won't be too bad once we get your
head out of the clouds.' "
'There are others?' I said. "
'Well, of course there are others. You don't think that some
floatheaded Classics major was the first person I went after? I
wouldn't have bothered if not for that horrible cap—I hoped
you were hiding a socket under there.' "I took
the cap off to show her. "
'Sense and a socket. More than I'd hoped for. Come to the
coffeeshop in the Student Union at seven tomorrow.' " 'You
meet in a public place?' "
'Someone will lead you from there to where we meet,' she said
impatiently. 'Come, and for God's sake don't use your real name.
For us you will be—' she stopped and looked at my
blue-and-green cap again. 'I don't have my language chip in.
What's a peacock in Russian?' "
'Pavlin,' I said, looking down in
embarrassment. " 'From
now on you are Pavel. Paul—a nice biblical name for a
four-nine atheist.' " 'I'm
not an atheist!' " 'You
will be,' she said, and she broke through the hedge and was
gone." He
paused to take another bite of pirozhok and chewed it slowly,
remembering. I had been ignoring my food and was beginning to get
hungry, but again I had to fill in with a question: "If
your name was changed to Pavel, what was it
before?" "Stepan
Sornyak. But I've been Pavel for a long time now." A
strange surname—stranger, really, than his adopted one. And
he'd called himself an ethnic intellectual; the Guardians
didn't usually apply that term to Russians. Iudey,
perhaps? Or cigan, given his mention of Tarot? It was
possible; he had a wanderer's eyes. But if so, why had he sunk
his ethnic noun-name in the strange but clearly Russian
Voskresenye? "Was it
Katya who named you 'Sunday,' too?" I asked. "More atheist
irony?" "No.
That name came later. —Of course you will alter the names
before the interview is Netcast?" "Yes,
of course," I said. "Why did you change your surname?" "I did
not," he said simply, putting the last crumbs of pirozhok into
his mouth. I took the opportunity to steal a bite from my
sandwich. My question could wait; but I made a note not to
forget. "At
first Katya insisted I keep up my schoolwork, to avoid drawing
attention to myself. But soon we both realized that my slipping
grades only confirmed what everyone had expected of me all along,
and I began to skip classes with abandon. Instead of Homer, I
read Katya's leaflets. Instead of writing papers, I altered
records at Square-Mile-on-Volga. Instead of attending classes, I
fed escaped prisoners on their way to Africa. I cut my hair
short, grew my beard, traded my hideous cap for a black one that
would be less visible at night, learned to shoot a gun—for
though we did not use weapons, Katya insisted we be ready
to—and stopped eating animals—for she insisted we
practice compassion toward all creatures, even the lowliest.
Within a month, my life had changed so much that everything that
had come before seemed like a dream." "And
did you become an atheist?" He
laughed. "No; that was the one thing in me she did not
change—not entirely. Although, since it was the Catholic
Church that most often gave sanctuary to fugitives, I did trade
my Old Slavonic mass for Latin." "How
much resistance was there, in all?" "You
mean numbers of people? A few thousand in Russia, I suppose. It's
hard to say. Communication was poor, and coordination
nonexistent. Not enough to loosen the Guardians' grip on power,
by any means. At best, we were a very minor annoyance. We spared
them the trouble of killing a few of their prisoners, by sending
them on those ridiculous treks to Africa. Moscow to Riga is a
hell of a hike, and from there no easy trip to Casablanca; I
doubt any of them made it there alive." "Did
you know that at the time?" "Katya
and I did, yes. We tried to let the others think that they were
doing a little good, but it must have been obvious. A resistance
can support the attack of an army, but there was no opposing army
then; or it can mobilize the people, but not when the slightest
uprising is instantly crushed. We would have needed to strike
with ten thousand even to hold out long enough to gain new
recruits; and yet for us it was a major undertaking to contact a
band of dissidents thirty miles to the north. It was
useless." "Then
why bother?" For the
first time, he would not meet my gaze as he spoke to me. "Because
it made us feel a little better," he said at length. "We could
not save even one innocent from the Guardians, not for long. But
we could declare our opposition. We could go on record, however
secret a record, saying that we did not condone the Square
Miles—that we did not accept the subjugation of our people.
And also, she said, we could be ready. She believed that one day
something, she did not know what, would come to challenge the
Guardians. She always had much more faith in that than I did. And
of course she was proved right, though when the Unanimous Army
finally came, it hardly needed a resistance to support it.
Besides, by that time everyone in our group, except for me, was
dead, and I was scrubbing bottles for Derzhavin." "If
Katya was so careful," I said, "how did you get
caught?" "Katya
was a victim of her own success. It took her at most a week to
study a person, understand him, and devise just the words, just
the gestures, just the intonation, just the words on a leaflet,
that would make him one of us. She never once failed that I knew
of. And so, inevitably, she came to the end of her A list, and
started on the second choices. Eventually she came to the one
that brought us down." "He
reported you?" "Oh,
no. Quite the contrary, he was the most zealous of us all." He
frowned down at his empty plate. "I remember that when she
renamed him, as she did everyone, she did not give a reason, as
she always had before. Afterward, when I asked her why, she said,
'I named him Piotr because he's as dumb as a rock, and if we
don't look out, he'll sink us like a stone.' She knew from the
beginning. "Actually
he was only a little bit stupid, but he was a lot naive, and
tremendously charismatic: a dangerous combination. After a month,
every time Katya gave an order, everyone looked at Piotr to see
what he would say. After two months, he was the leader in
everything but name, and Katya was agonizing over whether she
should challenge him directly. In the end, she decided to let
democracy take its course. And three months after Piotr joined
the group, he asked for formal leadership; received it; and as
his first act, proposed that we burn
Square-Mile-on-Volga." "Did
you resist him?" "We
argued with him, certainly. We asked what advantage there was in
incinerating the prisoners we hoped to save. He said that we
would free them first. We asked what would prevent the Guardians
from hunting them down and killing them in the woods. He said we
would hide them. We asked if he intended to conceal ten thousand
refugees in his dorm room. He said there would be so many that
some must get through, and that was better than they could hope
for at Volga. We explained that, even if the plan succeeded, the
resulting investigation would be so thorough that it would surely
uncover us. He said that we had to decide whether we were an
underground or a social club, and that we might as well go ahead
and be discovered, if we were not going to make any
difference. "And
then, as I kept arguing, Katya suddenly changed sides, and said
she thought it could be done, if only she were allowed to plan it
herself. Everyone agreed to this at once, and I was shouted down.
After the meeting she told me she had supported Piotr because she
knew he would win, and if she planned it herself, the damage
might be minimized. "I
begged her to forget him, forget our group, go back to her
family, let us self-destruct, and then start over. She would be
safe; no one would believe that the daughter of Harold Anderson
was a dissident, no matter how many clues seemed to point toward
it. But I knew before I said the words that she would not hear
them. For almost two weeks no one saw her, not even me; and when
she came back, she had made her plan." Nine
All the King's Horses Katya
had camped in the woods and watched the Square Mile through
binoculars. The Square Miles, you understand, were franchises;
the guards were brought in by the dozens, trained in a few days,
and retained for an average of less than six months. It was a
uniquely American approach to holocaust, a sort of McGulag. The
guards were bored, unskilled, and lazy. Most of them were under
eighteen, except for a few senior citizens hired under that
Golden Guards program they used to run all those smug commercials
about. The camp's security relied on quantity, not quality. Katya
knew that if she looked closely enough, she would find some
little hole she could thread her way into. "It had
taken her a week, but she'd found it. A farmer who lived near the
camp came by, she said, every Wednesday and Saturday to pick up
manure for his crops. He did it at night, and surreptitiously,
and was always waved past the station without being searched;
Katya thought he might be related to one of the guards. He drove
an old truck with a small trailer which could hold two people, at
a very tight squeeze. Further, as the manure did not smell human,
she suspected it came from the stables, which would be up on the
hill where the Guardians' homes were. If so, we could burn out
the Guardians without endangering the barracks, and in the
confusion we might get a few people out. "It was
not a plan I found convincing. There were too many loose ends,
and no lists of contingencies. The plan for getting people out
was vague and halfhearted, more a hope than a plan. I knew she
didn't think we could succeed. But there were no objections. The
only question was who should go. "In the
end, over Katya's protests, Piotr and one of his closest
supporters were chosen. As Katya was walking out, Piotr laid his
hand on her shoulder and said, 'An excellent plan, truly, Katya.
You see, sometimes your input is very important!' "It was
too much for her. She turned to him and said, 'Do you know why I
didn't want you to go? Why I didn't want to expose you to that
danger?' "He
thought about it for a moment, nodded solemnly, and said, 'You
don't think I should take the risk. Because I'm needed
here.' " 'No,
you incredible idiot,' she said. 'Because I want you to live long
enough to see the rest of us die because of your stupidity.' And
she walked away, leaving him gaping in disbelief that there was
someone on the planet who did not admire him. "
'He'll get himself captured, give information, and we'll all be
shot,' I said. " 'No,
he won't,' she said matter-of-factly. 'He won't get anywhere near
that trailer. If he went on Wednesday, he wouldn't do any damage,
because the farmer picks up his dung on Tuesday; and besides, he
won't go, because on Tuesday I'm going to do it myself. Are you
coming?' "I was
coming. At four a.m. the next Tuesday we
arrived at the farm, wearing stolen Guardian uniforms, and
carrying rifles, cans of kerosene, a flamethrower,
and—strapped to our thighs-—two flasks of
eggshell-thin ceramic, made to curve around the skin so that a
casual search might miss them. We forced the latch on the trailer
and folded ourselves into four feet by five feet by three feet of
corrugated aluminum: a coffin built for two. We would have to
wait there the whole day; but it was safer than trying to break
in during the daylight. "The
fellow hauled his manure in plastic bags, but the trailer still
smelled. Our chips had no scent-suppression functions—that
great consolation of modern life had not been invented
yet—but after a while I did start to get used to it. In the
year since we'd met, I had been too busy to think about anything
but our work. Besides, we had seen each other for only an hour or
so at a time, usually with others present. Now we were alone,
hour after hour, pressed together in that tiny trailer bed. And
as I began to smell the manure less, and her more, the warmth of
her arm against mine began to wear away the control I'd
maintained for the last two years, so slowly I barely knew what
was happening. "At
last I turned my head toward Katya, not even sure yet what I
meant to say or do. But she knew what I was thinking better than
I did. 'The way I look at it,' she said, 'we have two choices.
Assuming that we'll be in the remembering business past this
evening, we can remember some awkward, unsatisfying groping in a
trailer the size of a coffin, with the smell of shit in our
nostrils and the chance of getting shot hanging over our heads,
the main effect of which will be to make us feel embarrassed and
frustrated for the last few hours of our lives. Or you can
go on imagining the six children and the white house with the
picket fence and the incredible sex and whatever the hell else it
is that's kept you going these past two years. If it were me I'd
go for the fence thing, but I'll leave it up to you.' "And
then, before I could reply, she raised her head, and said through
the communicators we'd socketed: Or we could have what's
behind door number three. A moment later I, too, heard the
farmer's footsteps as he came up the walk to his
truck. "Luckily,
he did not check the trailer. We felt the truck begin to move; we
traveled in silence; then, all too soon, the truck stopped again.
The farmer called to the guard, barely slowing, and we were
pressed against the doors of the trailer as the truck started up
the hill. It leveled, then stopped. The accordion creak of the
parking brake; the car door; then the farmer's footsteps. A
knife-blade of light cleft the trailer door. "I was
ready, and knocked him out with the butt of my rifle— not,
I hoped, too hard. We put him back in the car and pushed it out
of the sight of the guard towers. Then we went into the stables
and slopped kerosene over everything that looked flammable. The
horses were thoroughly spooked by this time, and when we released
them they galloped away, alerting the guards. We heard a siren
and saw floodlights through the window, but, to our relief, there
were no shots. Soon we could hear people running and shouting all
around us. " 'Our
life expectancy just doubled,' she said. 'From the towers, we'll
just be another couple of idiots running around trying to catch
the horses.' So we stood by the door, lit the straw with the
flamethrower, and ran to watch from safety. "The
stables crackled, like the warning rattle of a snake, and seeped
out smoke at every pore, and then at last put on a wreath of
flame, like a woman tossing a red cape around her shoulders. And
for all that I knew the futility of what we did, no other moment
in my life has been as satisfying. " 'Will
it spread?' I asked her, as the cry of fire went out. " 'I
don't give a damn,' she said bitterly. She was immune to the
destructive joy that had seduced me. 'Piotr wanted a fire, so
there's his goddamn fire. Whether the Guardians have to rebuild
their library or not is all the same to me. Let's get the
generator and go find Piotr some roommates.' "In the
confusion, no one challenged us as we found and burned the
generator. The searchlights went out all around the hill. We went
down in darkness, to where the long narrow barracks lay side by
side like rows of corn. "One of
the horses had found its way down the hill, and men in uniforms
and nightshirts were trying to trap it in the narrow space
between two barracks. It was an admirable plan, and might have
worked, if only they could have agreed which aisle they meant to
drive the poor thing into. Every time they thought they had him,
he would find a way out, darting between two shoulders just in
time. "The
prisoners, hearing the footsteps and hoofbeats and cries, must
have thought the last extermination was upon them. A wailing
would start in one barracks and be taken up at once by others,
like an old song that everyone knows. Now and then an irritated
Guardian would go along the rows, rapping a stick against the
wood and then against the tin, to quiet the cries, but each time
they only started up again. In such an uproar, no one would
notice the two of us; but prisoners flowing from an open barracks
would be seen at once. "We
stopped, pretending to gawk at the fire, as Katya checked the map
on her drydisk. 'There,' she said at last, pointing up the row of
barracks. 'It says Terminal Isolation Cells.' "
'What's that?' "
'Something bad enough that being shot in an escape would be an
improvement. Let's go.' "One
guard had remained by the door of the square building, but she
easily persuaded him that he was wanted in fire fighting. When he
was gone, we shot the padlock off the door with a silenced pistol
she had brought for just such purposes. Its sound surprised me:
louder and more mechanical than the cat-sneeze sound effect you
hear in the movies. I kept flinching, afraid of ricochets, so I
had to keep shooting and shooting to hit the lock. But when I
finally hit it, it flew to bits; it was a twenty-ruble padlock,
nothing more. We were both surprised to find such token security;
as I recall, she remarked that she'd seen bicycles better
protected ... until we opened the door, thrusting in our guns
like policemen in a video. "The
smell of urine, feces, and decay was overwhelming. The building
was packed solid with cubical cages, a metre on a side. They were
piled three high, and filled the building wall to wall, so there
was no corridor by which to reach the cages at the back. In each,
a naked prisoner sat huddled, a food dispenser pressing into his
arm. The muscles even of the ones in front were visibly
atrophied, and in the cages at the back we could see corpses,
rotting in the same position they had crouched in when
alive. "For a
time we both stood mute. Then, feeling that something had to be
done, I started toward the nearest cage. But Katya held me back.
'Pavel, we can't let those people go,' she said. 'They couldn't
walk across the room, much less make it out of here. And it would
take days to move the cages around to get to them all. Pavel,
there's ... is there nothing we can do?' " 'Burn
it,' said a voice from the cages. We jumped, whirling around to
see who had spoken. The prisoners' condition was so bestial, we
had not imagined them capable of speech. But one of them nodded
his head, all the gesture that he could make, and said again,
'Burn it all.' "I had
the flamethrower. But I was paralyzed, imagining the fire
creeping from cage to cage. It would move slowly; nothing but the
men themselves was flammable among the tin and steel. Each one,
unable even to cover his face, would watch his neighbor's long
matted hair bloom yellow as he awaited his own turn. "If
Katya had turned to me, if Katya had given one of her sharp
commanding nods, I would have done it. But she, even she, could
not command such a horror. " 'Then
give it to me,' the man said, 'and I'll do what needs
doing.' "Silently,
not even needing to look at each other, we agreed. He could do
it. He knew. "I put
in a new clip and aimed the pistol at the simple cage lock from
above. But I could not fire so close to the man's unprotected
flesh, could not find an angle that did not risk a ricochet into
arm or face or thigh. "Finally
Katya closed her hand over mine, and slipped her slender finger
into the trigger guard, where mine, thick and clumsy, trembled
against the steel. She squeezed once, firmly. The cage door burst
open, and the man spilled out, uncurling. He should have been
left to unfold on his own, as you give the hatched butterfly a
chance to dry its wings; but there was no time. She helped him
prop himself up against the side of the cage, and I put the
flamethrower in his hands. "Then
we heard someone call out, in English, 'Isolation is open!' We
heard running footsteps, and then a hand at the door. "Without
an instant's hesitation, Katya shot the man we had just freed. He
fell to the floor never having fully stood, his limbs slowly
drawing themselves back into the posture of the cage, as a
scroll, let go, curls back into its native state. "As the
door opened, she called out in her unaccented English, 'We have
shot the escapee! Hold your fire! We're coming out!' "The
guards still looked suspicious, but she overwhelmed their doubts
with anger. 'Which one of you deserted this post? Well, I suggest
you find whoever did and put him in that little hotel you're
running—I've just opened up a vacancy. While you people
were watching the fireworks, someone went in there and started
arming the prisoners. And from what I've seen of your security, I
think a cripple with a .45 could have limped right out of here
under all your noses. Do any of you want to argue with
that?' "Her
tenuous invention hung a moment in the air. It would be
challenged, I was sure; this was the end. A guard opened his
mouth— "And
reinforced the fragile structure. 'That's a flamethrower,' he
said. 'You think that's the man that burned the
stables?' "Katya
hesitated, tempted. But the idea was too ridiculous to hold up.
She took a breath and blustered: " 'No,
I do not think a naked cripple made it up the hill, nor do
I think he came all the way back here just so he could be
discovered in the place he left. Are there any more stupid
questions?' "There
were not. 'Good,' she said. 'Then get on the radio and tell
anyone who hasn't already guessed that the light show you've been
staring at was no accident. This Stonie didn't do it, but whoever
armed him did. And when you've done that, call up Commander
Sinclair for me and tell him I'm done playing soldier. Tell him
the girl he used to read Alice in Wonderland to is ready
to go home.' "I
had to, she said through our radio link as the guards stared.
They would have killed us and put him back in that thing. I
didn't have any choice. "I
know, I told
her. You didn't do a thing wrong. You don't have anything to
feel guilty about. "Yes,
it was a most commendable murder, she
said. But I knew her: she would find a way to hold back grief
until we were safely out. It was not in her to lose
control. "Five
minutes later the camp commander, Katya's 'Uncle Eddie,' drove up
with a worried look on his face. 'Kitty?' he said. 'It is
you—what are you doing here?' " 'Oh,
Father wanted me to see the glorious workings of the Guardian
cleansing machine or something like that. Honestly, to hear the
man talk, you'd think the Square Miles were a dishwasher. All
I've seen is a bunch of Zaks and Stonies, and some stupid guards
who're too busy watching the fire to notice them
escaping.' " 'Why
on earth didn't I know you were here?' " 'I
was supposed to be just like any other guard. He didn't want me
to get the executive tour or be coddled. He wanted me to see what
it's really like.' Her face lit up. 'And I sure did that, didn't
I! I shot a prisoner! Father's going to be ever so
proud!' " 'He
certainly will, Kitty, but right now we've got to get you out of
here. It isn't safe.' " 'But
we haven't got a ride! We weren't supposed to leave for three
more days. Can you take us?' " 'I'll
get a couple of the guards to take you.' " 'Oh,
God, you must be kidding. Those idiots? That prisoner couldn't
even walk, and I still had to do him myself because those
incompetents couldn't keep track of him. Honestly, I can't
believe you'd leave me to them. Can't you take us yourself, Uncle
Eddie?' "
'Kitty, I have armed people loose in the camp—' "
'Well, we'll just wait in your office till they're found, that's
all. Come on, Eddie, you don't have to take us to our dorm, just
as far as Father's house. It's only a few miles. Father'll be mad
if you don't.' A spark of shrewdness lit her disingenuous eyes,
and she whispered: 'We don't have to tell him about the break-in,
you know.' "Edward
Sinclair, the commander of the third or fourth most efficient
killing factory in the world, closed his eyes in amused
irritation. 'All right, then. Get in. I never could say no to
you.' "Can't
say no to making a hero's entrance at the Heptarch's house, he
means, the old hypocrite, Katya
said, starting toward the truck. " 'Put
your guns on the rack, kids,' he said, 'and be sure you unload
them first. We don't want them going off if we hit a
pothole.' "Katya
complied. We climbed into the enormous pickup truck, Sinclair
giving her a hand up. "
'Who's your friend?' he asked her as I climbed in
numbly. " 'Paul
Wintermute. He's a ninth cousin or something. Don't make him talk
to you, it's cruel—he's never seen anyone die before and
he's trying really hard not to throw up.' "I
understood: if I spoke, my accent would give everything away. The
Heptarch's daughter could not associate with a
Russian. " 'And
be a love and don't tell anyone I'm here. Father made me
promise.' "We
waited in his office for an hour, with a guard watching over us,
until Sinclair returned to tell us that the intruders must have
escaped. "He
knows we've been here, I said
as we were waved past the guard station out onto the highway.
Sooner or later he'll tell someone who can put two and two
together. "No, he
won't, Katya
said matter-of-factly, her eyes searching the cab of the truck.
She looked down between our feet; found a red metal bar with a
bifurcated tip that was lying on the floor. 'What's this?' she
asked, picking it up. " 'It
goes on the steering wheel,' Sinclair said absently. 'I use it to
keep the truck from being stolen if I have to go into
town.' " 'Good
idea,' Katya said, nodding vigorously. 'Those Russians'll steal
anything.' She idly laid the bar across her lap, resting one hand
on it. " 'What
are those cells we saw for, Uncle Eddie?' she asked. 'Are they
politicals?' "
'They're the worst politicals, honey. The most
dangerous.' "She
snorted. 'Not anymore they're not. The man I shot could barely
stand.' She leaned against Sinclair and laid her head on his
shoulder. 'I've missed you, Uncle Eddie. Remember when you
used to come over every weekend, and talk to my father about all
the funny things that happened at the camp? When I was little I
wanted to be exactly like you.' "He
took his eyes off the road just long enough to glance at her with
fondness. 'You are a lot like me and your father, Katya.
You keep your head under pressure and you're not squeamish about
things dying.' "You
bet I'm not, she
thought grimly. "Katya,
don't. "Of
course I will, she
said. It's the only thing that makes sense. Piotr should have
made me do this in the first place, if it weren't for his idiot
chivalry. "Please,
I said.
Let me do it. He's no one to me, just another Guardian. It
won't hurt me the way it'll hurt you. "You're
right, she
said. He's no one to you. That's why I'm the one that has to
do it. He and my father talked genocide the way other men talk
football. He taught me to admire every form of atrocity when I
was still wearing drop-drawer pajamas. If you killed him he'd die
like anybody. When I kill him he'll die as the monster he is.
This is the man I was born to kill. "Don't
do this to yourself, I
pleaded. You've got yourself so worked up you 're not even
thinking straight. " 'I
wish I had a hundred like you at the Square Mile, Katya. You'd
make a great camp commander, in fact; it's a pity you're not a
man.' " 'Now,
Uncle Eddie,' she chided him, brushing the hair from his brow,
'can you really wish such a thing?' "He
laughed. 'Well, I can, old fogy that I am, but I imagine the
young men at MGU would put up quite a protest.' He looked at her
again, mist in his eyes. 'You've grown into a fine woman,
Kitty.' " 'Oh,
Uncle Eddie,' she said, kissing him on the cheek, 'you always
know just what to say.' "In my
head she shrieked: I WILL kill him! "
'Please, Katya!' I said. Only when he looked at me did I realize
I had spoken aloud. "
'You're Russian? But—' "And
before he could work out the implications, Katya grabbed the bar
of steel on her lap, and thrust the forked end into his face. His
head was driven back into the side window, through the glass,
which cut the arteries of his neck. When I reached across her to
grab the steering wheel and slid over to hit the brake, the
inside of the truck was already covered with blood. By the time
we pinballed to a stop, my left leg was on his lap and my right
on hers, and both of them were perfectly still. " 'He
made me kill that man,' she said. 'He murdered
thousands—and he drank tea with my stuffed
animals—and he made me kill that man.' " 'It's
all right, it's all right, it's all right,' I said, trying to
embrace her. I might as well have been hugging Uncle Eddie. Of
course it was not all right. From
Square-Mile-on-Martha's-Vineyard to Square-Mile-at-Kamiyaku, and
from my mind to hers, as far apart as those two islands, nothing
was in the least all right. And it is my shame that when I should
have been trying to comfort her, my thoughts were of myself. I
kept trying to figure out just when I had stopped being a child,
playing a game with secret names and passwords. "At
last she said, 'Let's take care of the body.' I realized that I
was still clutching her, so hard it must have hurt. I let her go:
and that was the only time that we ever embraced. "As the
days passed, her shock faded into a seraphic calm that, in her,
was profoundly unwholesome. When they came to arrest us, her only
comment was, 'It's about time, loves.' " 'Tell
them the truth, Katya,' I said. 'I'm the dissident, she's
innocent—my God, this is the Heptarch's
daughter!' "
'Don't tell lies, Pavel," Katya said in a false Russian accent
that only a Guardian could have believed. 'They'd only find it
out, and it would go worse for us in the end. I am Katya
Andropova, no relation to the Heptarch. Let's get it over
with." "Then
we were at Square-Mile-on-Volga, in a holding area thrown
together out of barbed wire, along with thousands of others. They
didn't know it was we who had raided the camp; they were just
rounding up every dissident they could track down, on the
slightest rumor. We would stay in the enclosure for a time, and
then when the camp had recovered from the fire, we would be
processed. "
'Maybe some of us will be let go—maybe you,' I said.
'Look at all these people. There's not room to keep more than a
few.' " 'You
see that column of black smoke, from behind the hill?' Katya said
quietly. "
'Yes,' I said, craning my neck. 'What is it?' "
'Room.' "On the
evening of that day, our first, Piotr arrived, and rounded up
enough of our tribe to get a good groupthink going. Piotr had
read Gandhi, and understood him about as well as Piotr ever
understood anything, so he thought it would be a capital idea to
try out some passive resistance on the Guardians. He suggested
that as a start they refuse to eat their dinner, as a token of
resistance, and also because it was likely to contain meat. Now,
Katya had not managed to make all of our group into vegetarians;
but even those that weren't cheerily acceded. A principle not
important enough to eat cabbage for had become important enough
to die for, just because it might irritate the fellows with the
guns. I tried to tell them that passive resistance was only
useful when you had reason to suspect your enemy possessed a
conscience. I described the terminal isolation cells, and asked
them whether they thought that men who could do such a thing
would be swayed by children who didn't want to eat their food. It
didn't help. I appealed to Katya, but she only said, 'Let them do
what makes them feel better; it's all the same in the
end.' "When
dinner came—a ladleful of thin soup in a tin bowl, as we
squatted in the dust—the guards noticed that Piotr and his
followers were not eating. They found this singularly funny. 'It
looks nasty now,' one said, 'but a week from now you'd eat it if
I pissed in it.' "Piotr
stood up and gave his little speech; the guards roared. 'I tell
you what,' one of them said. 'You're going to eat your soup, and
if one of you leaves one drop we'll shoot you down to the last
man.' Rifles were leveled. Piotr's little band of Gandhis still
refused. Here and there a knee was trembling, but their jaws were
set. They were magnificent, as a bull charging a wall is
magnificent; I had to admire their courage, even as I regretted
their stupidity. "Then a
miracle happened. The Guardians put down their guns and looked at
each other sheepishly. Then they started frisking Piotr and his
people, taking all their personal effects and spare change.
Passive resistance had made killers into pickpockets. " 'It
worked,' I said in amazement. 'They won.' " 'No,
they didn't,' Katya said gently. 'They did something unexpected,
and Guardians can't handle the unexpected. But they'll find some
way to pump up their courage, and then finish what they started.
Piotr's people will be dead soon, and the sooner, the better for
them. Eat your soup now, Pavel, before they come for us
too.' "If she
had not commanded it, I don't think I could have managed. It
seems so ridiculous now; the animals were already dead, and
besides, we had killed men, and besides, the Guardians weren't
likely to waste meat on the likes of us. If that slop had a
connection to any bleeding thing, it was only some microscopic
globule of anonymous hydrocarbons. But at the time, it was as
though I dismembered the deer with my own hands, and sank my
teeth into its throat. Because it was then that I knew I was a
traitor to the bone. I would betray everything I believed in,
simply to survive another day. It was the great lesson of the
camps, and I was fortunate to learn it so soon. That saved me
trouble in the end. "Then,
a disaster. One of the guards who had been frisking prisoners for
nickels and kopeks came over to us. 'You, too, sister,' he said.
'Stand up.' And he put his hands on her. " 'Is
this the only way you can get a girl to look at you, poor thing?'
she said. "He
ignored her, but blood rose into his cheeks. He found the flask
strapped to her thigh, reached into her pants to take it
out— I could have cut off that hand without
regret—opened it and sniffed it. A smile curled his
features. 'You'll need it where you're going,' he said. 'Too bad
it's not allowed.' And he poured the flask out in front of her
and crushed it under his heel. Then he moved on to me. "We
exchanged looks of panic as his hands touched my shoulders. In
desperation she burst out: 'Now do you like the boys better,
Johnny, or is it just because the girls all laugh at
you?' "He hit
her across the face with his closed fist. Then, his anger still
building, he took out his pistol, held it to her forehead, and
cocked it. She stared back at him unafraid. "At
last his face twisted into a smile again, and he drew the gun
away. 'Live then,' he said. 'It's so much worse.' And he walked
away laughing. Katya was bruised, bleeding—but all was not
lost. I still had my flask. "
'Guardians! They're not even a challenge,' she said lightly,
touching the bruise on her face. 'Their petty fears, as like as
peas. Don't worry, Pavel, we can share the one.' " 'But
whoever does it first might drop the flask.' " 'Well
then, one of us will have to do the other.' "I
looked at her and thought of what I would have to do. 'Katya, I
can't,' I said. 'I'm sorry. I should be able to. But I can't hurt
you.' "She
snorted. 'I didn't mean you, silly. Give me the flask, I'll hold
it.' "And as
I handed over the flask I was wearing, every thought I had ever
had about what might have been with her, every daydream of house
and children and every furtive nocturnal imagining—all that
she had labeled 'the fence thing'—folded into nothingness.
If she had felt for me what I felt for her, she could never have
said that so calmly. It was necessary, there was no question of
that. They could have tapped into our sockets and found out
everything we knew, which might put dozens of people in Square
Miles who would otherwise be free. Even killing ourselves might
not help; it was rumored that the Guardians could suck the
thoughts from a brain three hours dead. And if we were taken
alive, we could be made puppets of the Guardians—so rumor
said—our wills extinguished by the sockets, or perhaps
remaining, watching what they made us do. We had to do it. But I
could not do it to her; and she could to me. She did not love me.
If she had ever loved anyone it was, perhaps, the man whose head
she had beaten in with a steel bar. " 'Go
ahead and do it now,' I said. 'I'm ready.' " 'Are
you sure?' she asked. "
'Yes.' "We
uncapped our sockets. The night before we raided the camp, we had
carefully dissected them, taken out the linings, and broken the
water-locks, in preparation. " 'I
wish I had never met you,' she said, 'so it wouldn't have come to
this. I care for you a great deal, Pavel.' "
'Katya, I love you.' " 'I'm
sorry, Pavel,' she said gently, tears threatening in her eyes.
And that was an honor, I realized: she had strung along our band
of dissidents with a series of convenient fictions, but now, even
now, she would be honest with me. "She
uncorked the flask and carefully poured a little of the clear,
sweet water from it into the socket in my head. For a fraction of
an instant after that I could still see her, tipping her own head
to receive the water, and drawing the flask toward it; and a
guard shouting and lunging; but I could not tell who would be the
quicker. And after that, for a long time, I remember nothing
more." Ten
My Man Sunday Voskresenye
looked down at his plate, hoping, I supposed, that there would be
something left to give him an excuse for pause. The white china
was clean. He looked up and tried to catch the waiter's eye, to
no avail. His right hand made strange clockwork-spider movements
that I supposed were his version of fidgeting. The awkwardness,
more than anything else, persuaded me that some part of his story
was authentic—that's how people act when they realize
they've revealed more than they wanted to. Even so, his story was
more smoothly chronological than it had any right to be. I found
myself wondering how long he'd rehearsed it, how much he'd
embellished it, how much of it was true. Voskresenye
stared wearily at the waiter's receding back. "Do you know what
was on the waiter's tombstone?" he asked. "What?" " 'By
and by, God caught his eye.' " I
smiled politely. "What happened to her?" I asked, as gently as I
could. His
hand grew still. "I have never known. I can only hope that,
because she was more deeply wired than I, she died quickly. But
there are no records—if there ever were any, the Army
destroyed them. Certainly she did not survive the camps; after
the war, I searched most thoroughly. But I will never know
exactly how she died." "And
you?" He
touched his forehead with his fingertips. "The shock traveled
down along the wires and into the implants, burning away the very
functions that my wiring had enhanced. It damaged my language
centers: Broca's area, Wernicke's area, angular gyrus. It
scorched my visual cortex. It nearly severed my corpus callosum.
But worst of all, I lost the ability to form memory traces. So
for the next three years, the last thing that had happened was
the moment when Katya Andersohna poured her flask of water into
my head." "What
was it like? That time?" He
closed his eyes, and said at last: "You set me a pretty problem.
How can I remember what it is like not to remember? If I think I
recall sensations—falling through the dark, and reaching
out, again and again, and brushing a handhold but not quite being
able to grasp it—how shall I trust the memory? All I can
tell you for sure is that when I began to wake, I was like a man
who has been walking across ice for so long that he does not
trust the ground to hold him. When I turned my attention away
from a thing, I was surprised that it persisted in my mind. And
gradually I realized who I was, and where I was. I was
Voskresenye—that was the name he had given me; and I was
playing chess with Aleksandr Derzhavin." "Oh, I
see. Not Voskresenye, Voskreseniye. He named you
'Resurrection.' " Voskresenye
shook his head. "No. He named me 'Sunday.' He identified his
subjects by the dates on which they came to his laboratory. Those
of us he spent the most time with soon acquired some shortening
of our dates as a nickname: Voskresenye, Fevral, Aprel,
Chetverg." Voskresenye's eyes grew thoughtful. "Whether he saw
the pun available to him by changing a soft sign into an 'i,'
whether that pun did not lead to his choosing me—that is
something I have wondered for a long time. If he did know, then
all my calculations with respect to him were based on a false
premise. But those calculations proved right, many times, so I
don't think he did know; although, in his own way, he was not
humorless." "You
said you woke already playing chess with him—you
were doing this while still brain-damaged?" "I was
imprecise. Behold the dangers of Russian, which forces me to say
'I played chess,' when what I mean is more complex. We should be
having this discussion in Sapir, whose verb forms are less
dogmatic. In Russian, only barbarisms—'I was played at
chess,' 'chess was played through me.' Until that moment of
awakening I was merely an eccentric interface for Derzhavin's ...
well, say computer, for now; that was what he always called it.
When I first became aware of my surroundings, I realized that my
hands had been moving the pieces for some time. Yet I could not
understand the moves I was making, or even tell who was ahead. I
barely knew the rules of chess; to me it was just a quaint
pastime of strange old men at tables in cafes." He put
his palms down on the table, thumbs in, as if marking off the
corners of a chessboard: so that pepper, salt, and sugar became
dark king and white queen and pawn, locked into their final and
fatal embrace. I blinked slowly to show that I understood, but
declined to belabor the joke. "Then,"
he said, "I began to notice a voice in my ear that was whispering
symbols, so fast I couldn't follow them. I listened closely, and
the voice slowed down. My heartbeat slowed, too—or rather,
as I realized later, my thoughts were becoming faster, so that
everything else seemed slow. When I listened to the voice again I
understood it: it was listing moves, devising strategies,
anticipating responses. I looked at the board and it burst into
life, the pieces seething and roiling, like bubbles in a boiling
pot. They moved faster and faster; the patterns of black and
white merged into an incoherent gray, like static on a TV screen.
Then something drove itself into the center of my brain,
splitting me into halves. Suddenly the board was still, and all
possible chains of moves existed simultaneously. I looked up at
Derzhavin. From him too I could see sequences of actions
branching forth, and in his head, patterns of possible thought
looped and twisted—trails of light. 'Well,' he said,
'welcome to the world, Voskresenye.' I knew the words before he
spoke them. " 'Do
you want to finish the game?' he asked. 'Or would you rather have
a tour of the laboratory?' "I
looked down at the board again. Its futures were already charted,
and all were variations on a theme; they held no interest. The
rooms around me branched out in a bramble of unlikelihoods that
tempted me much more. And just beyond the door behind me, a
shadow blanketed the light: a secret, something important that I
did not know. I grasped the first thread that led into it. I
tried to stand. " 'No,
please, don't!' he said, putting his hand on my shoulder. I had
foreseen that reaction, but I knew this line of play would bring
the shadow into view. 'Look at your hands.' I did, and saw them
as they are now, half-mechanical. But I had known that already.
He was trying to see whether I could access memories from before
my awakening. I kept my face carefully blank, to frustrate his
deductions. " 'I
didn't expect you to wake so soon,' Derzhavin explained, 'so I
haven't done your legs yet. It will be my next task, I assure
you. But for now, I'll have to wheel you in the chair. What do
you want to see first?' " 'Show
me the other half of myself,' I said, and then, although he could
not understand, I added, 'I think that's the shadow.' "He
turned the chair around, and we followed the cables that trailed
from my head and spine into a long corridor. There were cages on
either side. As we passed—slowly, since the chair was
heavy—I looked at the people huddled fearfully in the
cells, or lying on their cots as if dead. Derzhavin made no
explanation; he seemed unaware of the effect their presence had
on me. Instead he spent the time apologizing to me for the cable,
explaining that he intended to replace this crude umbilical cord
with radio transmissions once, as he put it, 'the system was
debugged.' "As we
approached the door to the next room, he chattered on with the
hearty incomprehensibility of an auto mechanic, explaining how he
had rebuilt my ruined mind. It was a simple idea, he said, and
one he'd used before, though never (here he laughed) on such a
scale. Really, you would almost think that Nature had intended
it. The corpus callosum, the anterior commissure—why,
they're no more than a pair of cables; they link the right and
left halves of the brain, just as you might link one computer to
another. And they're cables wide enough to merge two lobes into
one self, so that if you could not dissect, you would not guess
the halves were separate. And if you had a cable, well, why not a
cable splitter? Could you not set up a cloverleaf among, not two,
but four lobes? Would they not then be as intimate with
each other as the two hemispheres of the brain are? Would they
not merge into a single self? "He was
still talking as we passed through the doorway, and his voice
droned on, uncomprehended, as I saw what we had come to. It was
an enormous tank, brackish, encrusted with barnacles, and full of
floating stems of cable cased in plastic. Then I caught a glimpse
of the 'computer' that was now part of myself, and I no longer
saw or heard him. The thing that lay suspended in that tank would
not let even light escape from it, and no voice could out-shout
its rasping breaths." I had
been lulled by the scansion; now I snapped awake. "Wait a minute.
Breaths? What are you saying—it was biological?" He
hesitated, then said in a sudden burst of nervous energy: "It was
not 'biological,' it was alive; indeed, it is still alive; 'it'
is a she; and "she—" he paused, took a breath, grew
calmer "—is a whale." "I
see." I leaned back in my chair, my wrist sockets clicking
against the table. I never asked for this. All I ever wanted was
a nice column in a print newspaper, a thousand words a week and a
flattering mug shot, in which I could foist my every cockamamie
opinion on a groggy audience for whom it was me or the cereal
box. When Novaya Pravda folded I should have given up and
gone into something less invasive and degrading, like, say,
prostitution. But no, I had to retrain for an exciting career in
the growing field of telepresence. Same job, new medium, I
figured, but it's not. In print news, your job is to know things
about others; you peer out at the world through an arrow slit. In
telepresence you are known. If I'd still been writing for
a newspaper—if there still were newspapers— I could
have forgotten Pavel Voskresenye and gone on. In telepresence the
whole episode would be implicit in my broadcast, my gullibility
stretched out for every imbecile to poke. I could only hope
Keishi would manage to screen it all out. Maybe,
I thought, this would be the time that I'd finally quit. The
doctors could fill my sockets in with something that wouldn't be
flesh, but would look a little like it, and I could emigrate to
North America and never see anything more technologically
advanced than a pitchfork. Except, of course (I had almost
forgotten) that I was about to be arrested just for talking to
this man. Maybe if I resisted arrest just right I could get
myself shot. "Hey,
sorry, I was playing with the mix instead of listening," Keishi
said. "Are we having a low blood sugar moment or
something?" Actually,
I
subvoked, watching Voskresenye flag down the waiter for tea,
with you here there's one tiny redeeming feature to this mess.
Let this be a lesson to you if you ever become a camera. This
sort of thing can happen to you when you least expect it. Always
be ready for it, 'cause I wasn't, and I'm going to look like a
real idiot. "Wow, I
guess I did miss something. Should I get it from your memories or
do you want to tell me?" It goes
by different names, I
said. We usually call it "being conned." "Yeah?
You think the old guy's lying?" Are you
kidding, Keishi? A whale is as big as a—
well, as a whale. They're the metaphor for big. You can't
put a whale in a tank. It's like claiming you slipcovered
Leningrad. Especially if you're a fugitive from the
Postcops. How exactly do you take a whale on the lam, shove it in
a briefcase and drag it past the metal detector? Not to mention
the question of how Derzhavin got a whale in the first place.
Remember that vid a few years back where they find a whale frozen
in an iceberg, and they thaw it out and clone it and repopulate
the oceans? Don't you think that was a little improbable? And
Voskresenye claims that a whale has survived all this time, not
in the Antarctic ice, but in his basement. Yeah, I'd say
I'm a little skeptical. Fair warning, Keishi: don't count on
getting any sleep the rest of this week. We're going to be
scrambling to finish this story without him. "Maya,
don't you think you should at least give him a chance? He's
obviously been modified by the Guardians in some way. That
carapace is pretty convincing." He may
not be lying about that part, but with the whale there's just no
way. —
Wait. If he's lying about the whale, why should I think he wasn't
lying about everything else? My God. I laughed with relief.
"Stand a little to the left, please; spy satellites, you
know." I can't believe I bought it. No, this is definitely a
scam. Ten to one we find out he wrote that police report himself.
All of which means that I'm not drinking tea after
all. "You're
jumping to conclusions," she said sternly. Look,
Mirabara, I've been a camera for about as long as you've been
multicellular, and every instant of that experience tells me that
this man is not for real. I'm going to try to find out why he's
doing this. Meanwhile, you put together some contingency plans,
OK? See if you can find me another interview. "All
right, but I still say—no, never mind, I'm
going." Since I
no longer had to worry how any of this looked on disk, I might as
well satisfy my hunger. I took a bite of sandwich and said with
my mouth full, "So, what kind of whale is it exactly?" Voskresenye
looked up from his teacup, which he had been staring into as if
trying to read a message in the leaves. "Oh, come now, Andreyeva.
Don't humor me. Ask what you really want to ask." "All
right, then. Instead of pouring water in your socket, why didn't
you just signal the mother ship to pick you up?" He
rubbed the bridge of his nose exhaustedly. "This bubble shows
signs of degrading, and I can only go so long without recharging
my exoskeleton, so I have no time for games. This will
demonstrate the truth of what I say." He set a vial of red fluid
on the table. "What's
that?" "A
blood sample." "Yours?" "No.
The whale's." "Yeah.
Whatever. Listen, you wouldn't happen to have an overwhelming
desire to tell me why you're doing this, would—will you
stop that?" He was chorusing every word I said, with no
perceptible delay. "You don't really think you can make me
believe you with a parlor trick, do you?" "Of
course not; I would not so insult your intelligence. Good day,
Andreyeva." He stood abruptly and began to leave. Then, just
before he reached the sidewalk, he turned and said pensively,
"Consider this, however. If it is true ... well, it's the
story of the year, isn't it? To let someone else get it would
indeed be a shame." He shrugged slightly and vanished into the
crowd. I paid
the bill and started to leave. "You
forgot the blood," Keishi said. What's
the point? It's not whale. There's no point checking. It's just
not. "Maybe
not. But if you had it analyzed, you might be able to figure out
what Voskresenye's game is." I
don't think we're going to have time to worry about that,
I said. But
then again, you can't just leave blood lying around on tables.
You might frighten people. So, hating myself for doing it, I
picked up the vial. I put it in my pocket and tried to forget it,
but it pressed against my leg, a cold accusatory finger, all the
way from the Horseman home. Eleven A Property of
Easiness This,
of course, you can see on your moistdisk, but you will find
strange gaps, and paths of memory that lead to
nothing—remnants of an erasure Keishi never finished. I
would rather complete the job she started, but if the story must
be known—and it is known—then it is better it be
known fully. I was
sitting in the kitchen, with moistdisks strewn across the pitted
tabletop and lengths of cable hanging from the backs of empty
chairs. I had split my field of vision into quadrants, and was
trying to splice together a conclusion to my series on the
Guardians. I was hoping to give them a prefabricated segment,
already in the can. It would mean a fight; News One hates it when
you don't go live. But they'd never wanted to do this series
anyway, so maybe they'd let me get away with it this
once. When
the phone rang, I switched off my fourfold vision. I hate those
first few moments coming out of a sightsplit, when your head
feels like it's breaking up and you develop a deep sympathy for
honeybees. Blinking heavily, I stared up at the ceiling and
walked to the vidphone by memory. When the walls finally started
to look real to me again, I touched the plate. "Hey,
Maya? It's Terentev. Forensics." "Even
if I hadn't recognized your face," I said, still blinking, "I
think the bodies in the background might have tipped me
off." "Oh,
yeah. Sorry." As he fiddled with the controls on his phone to
hide the tableau of the dissecting room, I caught a glimpse of a
bone-white face being wheeled past. "My
God—how long's that one been dead?" He
looked around, then laughed. "Oh, him? I don't know, maybe twenty
minutes." Terentev dabbed at imaginary make-up on his flat
Asiatic cheekbone. "It's face paint. He's a mime." "Trying
to find out who the medal goes to?" The
creases of laughter around his eyes disappeared into seriousness.
"You know, Andreyeva, you're colder than anything I've seen
wheeled in here." "It was
just a joke," I said. "You don't have to take everything so
literally." He kept
his eyes on mine a moment, then averted them and shrugged. "Yeah,
whatever." "So
what do you have for me?" "Oh,
your paternity suit?" His face was jovial again. "Unless the kid
has scales, you'd better settle." "It's a
fish?" "It's a
dolphin." Well,
that made sense. Dolphin blood would not be hard to find, and
Voskresenye might have hoped that it would pass a cursory
inspection. A simple hoax. I would have preferred to know why,
but for the moment, I'd just have to set aside my
curiosity. "Okay,
Terentev. Like I said before, I owe you one." "What's
your rush, Andreyeva? Don't you even want to know what kind of
dolphin?" "Not
really," I said. "Good.
Because we can't tell." "Why
not?" "Doesn't
match up with anything. It's in the general neighborhood, but we
can't quite pin down the address." "Oh, my
God." "Hey,
it's not that big a deal. It's probably some microspecies that
got stranded in a river somewhere. Nothing to write home about,
unless you're a marine biologist. What is this, anyway? New gig
for you, Andreyeva? 'Maya on biotech'?" "Can
you check it against whale DNA?" "What
did you say?" I
realized I'd whispered. "Can you check it against whale DNA?" I
repeated. He
lifted his eyebrows. "Whale?" "Just
humor me, all right?" "Well..."
His eyes unfocused as he consulted the Net. "There were a few
sequences mapped before they went extinct. I can give it a try.
It would help if I knew what I was trying to prove,
though." "Ask me
afterward." He
frowned. "What does this have to do with that Calinshchina thing
of yours? Or did News One pull the plug on that? After all, it's
not their sort of thing—" "Just
run it," I said. "Then if I'm right, I'll tell you." He
frowned. "OK, if that's the way you want it. This'll take a
while." "I'm
not going anywhere," I said. He
signed off. I stood by the phone for a while, drumming my fingers
against the coffee table. Then I went back into the kitchen and
swept all the moistdisks into the recycling bin. When the phone
chimed I ran for it. "Tell
me," I said. "You
know, my granddaughter carries a stuffed whale everywhere she
goes? When I was a kid it was horses, before that it was tigers,
dinosaurs come around again every twenty years—she's got a
whale. She's got whale T-shirts, whale pajamas, a whole goddamn
whale ensemble. This is way beyond owing me a favor. This is
going to cost." "Red?
Green?" "Not
even close." "All
right, Terentev, you can use my dacha. But if there's one stain
on the carpet, they'll be centrifuging you." "This
is bigger than that. You may have to give me your
dacha." I
inclined my head and watched him silently. There was not a trace
of laughter in his face; and Terentev was not a good
liar. "How
about a spot as an expert witness in the story of the
year?" He
nodded solemnly. "That, Maya Tatyanichna, will do just
fine." Keishi!
I
called out, through the Net. I need you online
now. "Hang
on, I'm crossing the street," she said. "Is this urgent enough
for me to just sit on the curb?" This is
urgent enough for you to sit on—but
no; this was all on the record—anything that comes to
hand. "If you
say so," she said dubiously. "But if I get socket-jacked, I'm
holding you responsible." A
familiar warmth announced her presence. "Dr. Terentev," I said,
"the other day, I gave you a blood sample to analyze. Could you
tell me what kind of animal it belongs to?" "A
humpback whale," he said, then added nervously, "genus
Megaptera." Just
what the audience really wants, a scientific name. Why do people
turn into boring encyclopedias the minute you light your
Net-rune? "How
big would this animal be?" He
hesitated—asking the Net, probably. "About fifteen meters
when full grown." "And
that would be about the size of..." I prompted. "Oh.
Umm, a small yacht." "Or for
those of our viewers who don't own yachts, about the size of two
bullet train cars placed end-to-end." He
nodded nervously. "Yes, that'd be about right." "When
did humpbacks become extinct?" His
eyes unfocused, and long seconds passed before he had his answer.
You try to take a stand against passing off Netlinked actors as
"experts," you spend years cultivating contacts, and then your
real experts consult the Net anyway—except when they do it,
it's obvious. "They were one of the last to go," he said,
finally. "There were a few around as late as Guardian
times." "And
how long will blood keep in the fridge, before it
rots?" Now he
was back in home territory. He said confidently, "About eight
weeks. Nine at the outside. That is, in this condition. You can
keep it usable indefinitely if you've got the equipment, but not
like this. Those cells are frisky." "When I
gave them to you, they'd been unrefrigerated for at least a day.
Does that narrow it down?" "In
that case, I'd say it's fresh. A couple of weeks, maybe
less." I
frowned, to simulate a skepticism I no longer felt. "Not that I
doubt your expertise, Dr. Terentev, but this is a little hard to
accept. Is there any chance it could be a hoax? Could you fake it
with nanoconstruction?" "No
way," he said emphatically. "You'd never get all the bug
byproducts out of the blood without killing the
cells." "So
somewhere in the world is a live humpback whale." "Live
or very recently dead, yes." "Well,
I'm sure everyone who saw The Day of the Whale has the
same question: could you clone more whales from this?" He
shook his head. "No. Not from blood. Blood doesn't have that much
DNA, and what there is, is all jumbled up. It'd be like trying to
put together a book that had been cut up into single
words." "But if
you had a tissue sample? If you had a live whale?" He
nodded thoughtfully. "I'm not a marine biologist, but I'd say
it's possible in theory. It would take a lot of trial and error
to get the fetus to grow in vitro, but given enough time, it
could probably be done. And if the whale were female,
certainly." "Thank
you, Vladimir Terentev." He
smiled. "Always a pleasure, Maya." "Hypocrite,"
Keishi said as I signed off. At
least he didn't say hi to his mother. How soon can you be
here? "How
soon is this?" I
turned around to face her. "I meant in person." "My
person is in Moscow. While you were putting together a backup
story, I've been trying to figure out where you could hide a
whale." If she
had been corporeal, I would have clapped her on the shoulder.
"Always the true believer. What did you find out while I was
wasting my time?" She
frowned. "I mostly wasted my time, too. Voskresenye had his
signals bounced through here, but it was apparently just a false
trail. My best guess is that the whale might be somewhere in
Arkhangelsk." "Where
he was imprisoned." "Exactly." I
nodded. "Are you still sitting on the curb?" "I'm in
a cab on the way to the trainport." "Okay,
go to full-link. I'm going to call Voskresenye." Keishi
disappeared as I turned to the videophone. "Pavel of null hearth,
clan Darkness-at-Noon." The phone chirked and purred for long
seconds. Then Voskresenye's face appeared, in an unusually tight
close-up, as though to hide the background. "Well," he said,
"Maya Tatyanichna. What a pleasant surprise. So glad to have a
chance to say good-bye before the mother ship takes me
back." "When
can I see the whale?" He
smiled at my haste. "Arkhangelsk. Five o'clock
tomorrow." "That's
not my time slot," I said. "Maya
Tatyanichna, you have the last whale in the world. They will give
you any time slot you want." I gave
him a calculating look. "How secure is this line?" He
touched something on his videophone. "I will vouch for it against
a Weaver." "All
right, then. If I tell News One about the whale, they'll take
this story away from me so fast I'll get friction burns on my
camera chip. Now if you want to sit across from a smooth-head,
that's your option, but—" "Oh,
no, Maya Tatyanichna!" he said with ardor. "No other camera in
the world will suit so well." "Well,
then. Let me come up with something to tell News One, and we'll
do it in my usual time slot." "Your
time slot is far too obscure," he said. "Tell News One whatever
you like; but it must be at five." "I
can't just commandeer prime time. If I called in favors I might
get it, but slots between five and six are only ninety seconds
long. Is that enough for you?" "Ninety
seconds?" he said. "Why so much? Ask them for ten, if it's
easier. When you show them the whale, do you think they will cut
you off?" "No," I
said, nodding slowly, "I guess they won't at that." I had been
thinking much too small. "Where do I go?" "If you
come to Arkhangelsk alone, at the proper time you will be guided
to the whale. If anyone else comes with you, you will never find
me." "My
screener—" "Of
course," he said. "Naturally your screener may accompany
you." "Can I
meet you, at, say, four o'clock? I'll need to set up shots, and
plan what we're going to cover. And since I won't have time to
run the whole story about you and the Guardians, I'd like to have
you finish it in advance, so we can put it in as
memory." "I am
afraid that I cannot allow that," he said. "You may be followed.
I accept it as inevitable that my sanctuary will be found after
your Netcast is finished, but I will not have them barging in
while we are still on the air." "You
expect them to find the whale? To take possession of
her?" "I
expect—" he briefly studied a point just below the screen,
then raised his eyes again "—that I will no longer be able
to keep her where she is now." "I
understand your protectiveness, but what would it hurt for you to
provide a tissue sample? Think of the importance
of—" "Contrary
to what the producers of vids believe, Maya Tatyanichna," he
interrupted, "you cannot just dump a cloned calf in the middle of
the ocean and expect her to repopulate her kind. Whales in the
wild had millennia of accumulated knowledge that is now
irrevocably lost. Without a parent to protect and guide her, a
cloned whale would starve, freeze, or drown in a matter of
days." "Could
your whale—" "She
could not," he snapped, "and even if she could, I would not allow
it. Hundreds of whales would die in this ridiculous experiment,
and even if some lived, if they eventually flourished, what do
you think would happen? Amusement parks would capture them, ships
of tourists harass them; perfumers would discover a need for
ambergris; jaded executives would pay thousands to slot up
Queequeg on adventure vacations.... No, Maya Tatyanichna. There
will be no whales." "But we
need them," I said. "We
need them? Is that the best reason you can come up with?"
He laughed, a rasping, mechanical sound. "The kings of the ocean
are gone, and what is our argument for their return? We
need them? We? Their murderers? The ones that made the
water bitter in their mouths, and killed the food they ate? The
ones that made the ocean boil red with their blood for miles
around? Men need them? Those vermin? Those stinging
insects? Struggling pustulent humanity—needs them?
Do you think a whale cares? You might as well need the sun
to rise at midnight because you're feeling a bit chilly. Yes, of
course, certainly we need them. But the question is, do we
deserve them?" Silence.
Then I heard the whirring as he moved his hand toward the
vidphone's control panel. He paused and said: "Be in
Arkhangelsk." "I
will." CONNECTION
BROKEN, said the phone. "Well,"
I said. "He can be goaded." "I
charge you to use this power only for good," Keishi said
solemnly. "Just
when I thought you were starting to understand this business.
Mirabara, park your body on a train to Arkhangelsk and get your
bandwidth over here. We've got work to do." Twelve
Immediate Touch She
materialized again. "Already bought the ticket. What do you
need?" "I
won't say I need anything. I seem to get attacked when I use that
word. What I want is to know everything there is to know
about whales by noon tomorrow. Biology, history, poetry,
folklore, you name it." "Is
that all?" "No. I
also want every scrap of information you can dig up on
Voskresenye. Go over the interview with a fine-toothed comb and
do a search on every word he used, apart from 'and' and 'if.'
Anything you can dig up on Derzhavin, on the Andersons,
especially on Catharine Anderson—I know most of it's
probably on the chip you gave me, but I need to be
sure." "Sounds
like a long night. Should I order in pasta or
something?" "I'm
sick and tired of makarony," I said. "What are you in the
mood for—dim sum or Ethiopian?" She
shrugged. "Up to you. I'll be eating train food,
remember?" "Oh,
right," I said sheepishly. "In that case, which of those two will
make you the least envious if I eat it in front of
you?" She
smiled. "I've never been much for African food.
Ironically." "Ironically,"
I echoed. "Ethiopian it is." I was about to touch the videophone
when she said, "Let me do it." I shrugged assent; her eyes
unfocused for a second. "Done." "That
fast? OK, let's start with—" The
doorbell rang. My house, unlike my car, does not have weapons
hidden in its every crevice, so my first thought was of kitchen
knives and cast-iron skillets; my second, of escape
routes. "Don't
panic," Keishi said. "It's just your food." I went
to the door and looked through the peephole, cringing a little as
I did. It was rumored that the Weavers would use infrared to
watch you approach the door, and then, as you squinted to see who
it was, fire a bullet through the glass into your eye. The fear
was irrational, I knew; they usually gave the Postcops a chance
at you first, and the Postcops would consider such a tactic
impolite. But the thought made me uncomfortably aware of the
shape of my eyes in my head, and their softness. Somehow you
think of eyes as being as shallow as almonds, but of course
they're not; they go back deep, and press against the brain's
gray labyrinths. The feeling persisted as I opened the door on
the bored and impatient delivery boy, and made me reluctant to
allow his retinal scan. "I
can't give you your food without a scan, tavarishcha.
Regulations." He balanced the stack of boxes on his shoulder,
obviously prepared to wait. I
submitted my eye to be lasered, and paid all in green out of
sheer irritation. "Is that all, or do you want a blood
test?" "So
take it up with management." I
slammed the door in his face. Punk. "Keishi, do I want to know
how you did that?" "I just
found the nearest unit and switched addresses." "Didn't
your mother ever teach you it's wrong to steal?" "So who
stole?" she said. "You paid for it, didn't you?" "I
guess that's true," I admitted. The smell of food had made my
salivary glands spurt to life, with a stab of pain far more
compelling than the pangs of conscience. I sat down on the couch
and started opening boxes. "You're sure you don't mind my eating
in front of you?" "What
are my chances of stopping you?" she said, smiling. "No, relax,
I'm not hungry anyway." "Thanks,"
I said, and proceeded. She watched me closely as I tore off a
piece of crepe and used it to scoop up mashed
chickpeas. "You're
staring," I said. "I thought you weren't hungry." "I'm
not. It's just that you're eating with your right
hand." "That's
how you eat Ethiopian food," I said, capturing a blob of umber
curry. "How
come?" I
fanned my mouth instead of answering; the lentils had been too
hot. When my tear ducts stopped firing, I said, "The left hand
used to be considered unclean." "Like a
taboo?" I
paused with a bite halfway to my mouth. "Um ... no, just basic
hygiene, actually. I think it goes back to before they had toilet
paper. Could we talk about this when I'm not eating?" "Huh?
Oh, sure." I
looked at the crepeful of vegetables suspiciously, then thrust
all associations from my mind and swallowed it. She
couldn't let the topic go. "You know," she marveled, "I never
would have thought of something like that." "Typical
wirehead," I said between mouthfuls. "You've spent so much time
on the Net you've forgotten you have a digestive
tract." "Yeah?"
she said, raising an eyebrow. "Okay, Miss Earthier-than-thou,
when was the last time you cooked a meal that didn't come in a
box?" "I'm a
camera," I said. "I'm all over the country. I don't have time to
shop." "All
right, then, when was the last time you ate? Not since yesterday,
I'll bet." "I had
something for breakfast." "Something
solid?" "All
right, Mirabara, you've made your point." "You
know," she said, pressing her advantage, "I think you'd maintain
the Net against someone who preferred the body, and the body
against someone who preferred the Net. You don't seem to have
much use for either one." "And
what does that leave?" "You
tell me." "Look,
as fascinating as this is," I said, using a stray chopstick from
the day before to mix the bland chickpeas into the overspiced
lentils, "we've got about fourteen hours before I have to get on
the train to Arkhangelsk, and in that time I have to get ready
for the biggest interview of my life. This strikes me as more
important than a lecture on nutrition. Can we leave it for
another time?" She
sighed slightly and stood very straight, as though at attention.
I wondered briefly whether she was making fun of me. "All right,"
she said. "Where do we start?" "Let's
see what we can find on Voskresenye himself." We
spent several fruitless hours in search of data. Every time we
caught hold of a thread, it would wind around and around the Net,
until finally at the end we found his name, Net address, police
record, dates of birth and death—and nothing more. Finally
we gave up and started tracking down the people and things he'd
referred to during our first interview. Catharine Anderson, we
found, went missing during her senior year at MGU. A few days
before that, Edward Sinclair drove his truck into the Volga River
in an apparent suicide, which was later reclassified as a
terrorist strike. Dr. Aleksandr Derzhavin, a Russian scientist
who had collaborated with the Guardians, died of a heart attack
at age forty-five; little more was known, because the Guardians
had burned his laboratory, and his records with it, as the
Unanimous Army approached. It was all consistent with
Voskresenye's story, but then you'd expect it to be. If he made
something up, he would consult the Net first; and what he could
find was about the same as what we could find.
Stalemate. "All
right," I said, rubbing fatigue from my eyes, "what about this
'Queequeg' reference?" "It's
the name of a harpooner in a novel about whaling called
Moby-Dick." "Sounds
vaguely familiar." "You
might have heard about it in school," Keishi said. "It was widely
read in Classical America. I think there's an episode of The
Brady Bunch where Greg doesn't return it and gets a huge
library fine ... no, wait, that's The Red Badge of
Courage. Anyway, it was well known." "How
long would it take you to read it for me?" "Slot
me a fresh moistdisk," she said. "I'll give you the novel as a
memory. Have you used an English fluency chip much?" "Sure,
but not for a while." "A
year? Two years? That's okay, the neuromodulators should still be
able to find those pathways lying around; you won't have to burn
in again. In English, then. Oh, and I can also give you the
memories of a Preclassical Lit. professor from LGU who wrote his
thesis on it. Ready?" I
nodded. The novel seeped into my mind, like milk into a sponge. A
man tattooed with frogs and labyrinths; a leg of polished
whalebone; duodecimo, octavo, folio whales; a coffin bobbing
among the waves; and in the blue distance a white mass rising,
unknotting its suckered limbs, and sinking: unearthly, formless,
chance-like mockery of life. "Now
that's really something," I said when it had finished. "Why
couldn't we read that in school, instead of watching all that
television?" "You
liked it?" "It
beats hell out of The Brady Bunch." "Well,
I think it's horrible," she said, leaning forward in her chair.
"It makes whaling out to be some kind of heroic pursuit, when all
it really was is genocide." "Sure,
in hindsight," I said. "But there were whales all over the place
back then. They didn't know they were going to run
out." "It's
still disgusting. Look at that scene where they go all orgasmic
over that spermaceti stuff. He makes it out to be a mystical
experience, God's in his heaven, all's right with the world, and
there they are running their hands through some gunk they dug out
of an incredibly beautiful creature that they killed by ramming a
harpoon into its eye and dragging it in—" She shuddered and
drew her legs up onto the chair, wrapping her arms around her
knees. "First
of all," I said, "I think you're confusing a few different
incidents. And secondly, when exactly did Pavel Voskresenye take
over your mind?" She
stiffened. "If two people who hate each other as much as
Voskresenye and I do can agree on something, you should consider
the possibility that we might be right. Killing is killing; it's
sordid, bloody, stupid, and wasteful. There's nothing noble about
it. People will do what they'll do, but we can at least call it
what it is." "But to
take on something a hundred times your size and bring it down by
strength and cunning and sheer determination—I can't think
of anything more noble. Sure it's brutal. Biology is always
brutal. 'Dinner' is just a euphemism for destruction." I waved my
hand at the rubble of my meal. "You do remember eating, don't
you? That's your problem, you know. Too much time out-of-body.
You've forgotten the brutality of the flesh." "If
keeping your mind in a piece of rotting meat makes you condone
violence, that's another point against it," she said irritably.
"If I could get African citizenship, I swear I'd take Translation
and have done with the whole stinking mess." I
sighed and said: "Dost thou think because thou art virtual there
shall be no more flesh and blood?" "Aha!"
She put her feet back on the floor, noiselessly. "Now I have you!
You can't tell me you had Shakespeare ready to mind before you
slotted up—certainly not in English. Without the
moist-disk, you wouldn't have been able to express the thought so
elegantly. Without my Net link, I wouldn't have known what you
meant. The electronics improve understanding. They put us in
sync. Even something as simple as a Preclassical Lit.
chip." "Just
more garbage encrusting the truth," I said, but I didn't take out
the moistdisk. "Words
encrust," she said earnestly, leaning forward. "Words and bodies.
The truth is underneath, and cables can break through to it. Why
do you deny that?" "Because—"
I said, and then stopped, feeling the futility of trying to
explain. "No
answer?" she said. "I'll tell you what I think it is. I think
you're afraid. You're terrified of anything that might connect
you to another person, and you fear cabling most of all because
it's the surest way to—" "All
right, then," I said in exasperation. "There are so many reasons
I hardly know where to start, but here's one. You're always
talking about getting past people's surfaces to what's inside,
and that's what you call real. But you can't just break through a
person's defenses like that; the defenses are part of the person,
they are the person. It's our nature to have hidden
depths. It's like—" my eyes searched the room for a
metaphor "—like skinning a frog and saying, 'Now I
understand this frog, because I've seen what's inside it.' But
when you skin it, it dies. You haven't understood a frog, you've
understood a corpse." "The
cable doesn't 'skin' anything. Besides, it doesn't have to be
one-way." "Oh
yes, that's even better. People swapping souls on the first date.
Once you've done that, what the hell do you talk about for
the rest of your life?" She tried to break in with an answer; I
cut her off. "Nothing, that's what. There's nothing left to say.
There's no wonder, no unfolding, no chance to gradually grow into
each other ... I don't know why I'm even trying to
explain...." "But,
Maya," she said, "you sound like a person who knows what she's
talking about. When, apart from the other day with me, have you
cabled before?" I
looked down at the table. "I've been working with screeners a
long time. You get a feel for what it's like." "All
the same—" "And
even if it were real," I interrupted, "if you can achieve total
intimacy with a piece of cable that costs fifty-nine kopeks, what
good is it? How can you say that you have something
special with a person, when you can get the same thing with
anyone in Russia in fifteen minutes?" "You
can not." She had risen and was pacing around the room.
"You can't just cable with anyone. You can put in the plug, sure.
But not everyone fits. Most of the time you can't get in deep
enough. And if you do, if you go ahead and force it, you just
find out that on the inside, most people are stupid, mean,
selfish, and boring. When you find someone that you can keep
coming back to again and again, it does mean something. It
is love—how can you say it's not?" "Oh,
it's love, I suppose. It's love the way sugar is food: it's got
lots of calories, but no nutrition. You can't live on it for
long." She
stopped pacing, but did not sit down. When she spoke again it was
more slowly and more softly. "If you take flesh as your starting
point," she said, "you're always going to find some way that
silicon falls short. But there's nothing special about flesh.
Look, sex wasn't invented by some loving God who wants us all to
understand each other and be happy. It was made by nature, and
nature doesn't give a damn whether our hearts hook up or not,
just as long as our gametes do. Why should evolution get to make
all the decisions? Why can't we use something that is
designed to bring people together? If you turn the comparison
around, and start with cabling, then love in the meat starts to
look pretty shabby. Love happens in the mind, in the
soul—what does the union of two sweating bodies have to do
with that?" "Love
without touching—" "I
would touch your mind more gently than any hand," she said,
looking down at me. "More softly than—" "That's
not what I mean by touch, and you know it," I said. "You keep
trying to change around the meanings of words. You're using some
new definition of love, too. I don't think it's in my
dictionary." "No,
nor in your encyclopedia, either," she said, so gently that I
couldn't take offense. "It's real, though. And it isn't new.
That's one thing Derzhavin was right about, as twisted as he was.
You think cabling is unnatural—that's what your arguments
all come down to. But it's not. Not between people that really
fit. Maya, do you have any idea how unlikely it is that two
structures as complex as minds could be joined like that? It's
like picking up two stones at random and discovering that they
fit together perfectly. It isn't a coincidence. It can't be. They
fit together so easily—like reuniting something that
should never have been broken, filling in some ancient
wound...." She sat
down on the sofa beside me, and looked down at my hand. Her
fingers brushed my palm, then stroked the socket at the throat of
my wrist. "The mind has doors," she whispered, "even as the body
does. And when you drill new holes, you tap old
hungers." "What
would you know about hunger, you ghost?" I said. "You've
forgotten you have a body—you just said you wish you didn't
have. Is there hunger on the Net now? No, don't you dare
call that hunger. Hunger is something that can be sated. But you
can touch a hundred minds a night and never be filled—or
fulfilled. That's not a desire, that's an algorithm." She
slowly leaned over me, as though to rest her head against my
shoulder. "I've been in thousands of minds, yes, Maya," she
whispered. "I fell in love with one." I kept
perfectly still and said flatly: "What else is there on
whales?" She got
up, bent over the videophone, and stood there staring at the
blank screen. I could not bring myself to look at the reflection
of her face. When she had been silent so long that I was sure she
wouldn't answer me, she said, "... There are songs." "Right,"
I said briskly. "Traditional songs about
whales—" "No,"
she said, "I mean the whales, they sing." "That's
not in Moby-Dick." "Well,
they weren't listening, were they?" she snapped. "If you up and
chucked a spear at every human you saw, you wouldn't know we
could talk, either." "You
mean their songs were a language?" I said, amazed. She
thought for a moment and then said, with more composure, "They're
a little repetitive for a language. More like a bird's song,
except they go on for hours. People used to listen to them for
relaxation." "Play
me one." "All
right," she said at length. She went back to the armchair, sat,
then closed her eyes and took a deep breath. "This might not be
such a good—" "Play
it," I
said. She
nodded, slowly. Squeaks and echoes filled the air. I
winced. "A bird's song played off-key by fingernails on a
blackboard in a swimming pool! People listened to this?
Voluntarily?" Instead
of answering she turned away, pressing her face into the back of
the chair. I could see by the spasms in her shoulders that she
was crying, though her hands concealed the tears. I felt shamed
by the unfeignedness of her grief, where I myself could muster
little feeling for a race of creatures that had died out before I
was born. "Keishi,
I'm sorry, I didn't mean—" "It's
not the song," she sobbed. "Oh.
No. No, of course it's not." I tried
to touch her hair to comfort her, but my hand passed through the
strands without disturbing them. I thought of embracing her, but
that too was impossible. I settled for sitting on the floor next
to her chair, leaning my head against the armrest. Her face was
turned away; all I could see was a crescent of cheek and temple,
notched by the eye-socket, trembling and bright with
tears. "Keishi,
I owe you an apology. Several, in fact. I know I'm not an easy
person to work with—" she sobbed aloud "—all right,
I'm a pain in the ass. I know that. What I'm trying to say is
that this is the story of a lifetime, and I would have thrown it
away if it weren't for you. And I've treated you like dirt for
your trouble. I don't know why you've put up with me this long.
But I hope you'll give me another chance.... Keishi, I don't care
whether Anton comes back or not. I want you to be my screener for
as long as we can trick News One into keeping us together. And
for as long as you'll have me." She
wiped away tears with her hand, still averting her eyes. "That's
not the kind of partnership I want with you." "Oh,
Keishi, please, any time but now—" "I have
to. Maya, I love you. And if we can't come to terms with that,
then I'd better just go, because it's only going to get more
painful. Maya, I know you don't love me now. I know it's hard for
you to even think about it. All I can ask is that you try to
remember ... if the encyclopedia were out, do you think you could
love me?" "I'm
sorry," I said. "That part of my life is over." She
looked up at me as I stood. "You don't know, do you?" "No," I
said, starting to clear away the take-out boxes in order to hide
the shame in my eyes. "I don't know." I
carried the boxes into the kitchen and threw away the empty ones.
As I was making room in the refrigerator for the leftovers, she
came in behind me, so quietly I didn't know she was there until
she spoke. "I want
to give you something," she said, "but I'm afraid to. The last
time I gave you a gift, it didn't turn out very well." I
smiled down at the sink as I rinsed my hands. "I promise not to
throw this one at you. But you don't need to give me anything. I
owe you enough already." I turned to her, drying my hands on a
dish towel. "What is it?" "Freedom."
She leaned against the doorframe, as if to block my exit from the
room. "When you were interviewing Voskresenye, and I touched your
mind, I found out why you didn't want me to help you with your
encyclopedia before. I didn't mean to peek, but it was right
there. You're afraid that if I did, and then something happened
to me, or I fell in love with someone else, or we just wound up
hating each other, you'd be out in the cold. There'd be no one to
protect you, and the first Weaver to happen
by...” "Oh,
Keishi, I didn't mean it that way." "No,
please don't apologize, it's all right. I understand. I wouldn't
want you to stay with me out of fear. What I want to do is modify
your camera software to screen out ... well, everything your
encyclopedia suppresses. The thoughts will come back, but they
won't ever escape to the Net, or even to your screener, if that's
anyone but me. The Weavers will never know about them. You can
leave the suppressor chip in, so the Postcops won't suspect; even
if they examine it, it won't have been altered. But when you say
so, it will stop working." "Wouldn't
the Weavers be able to see the modification?" "Why?
Anything that doesn't make it to the Net won't set off their
detectors. Other than that... in ten years the Postcops might
have come far enough to figure it out, if they knew what to look
for, and if you never got an upgrade. But ten years is a long
time." She brushed the salty deposit of tears from her cheekbone.
"You could say no, and live to be a hundred. Or you could die
tomorrow, for all you know." "Especially
if the Postcops figure out the man with the whale is
Voskresenye." "He and
I fooled them once; we can do it again," she said reassuringly.
"But Maya, you could be run over by a bus next Thursday and never
know what they took from you. If you take it back, you'll have at
least ten years. Probably more. They may never find out. I don't
want to tell you what to do; it has to be your choice. But if it
were me, well...” She smiled and lapsed into KRIOL, her
tongue clicking softly in the hidden spaces of her mouth:
"!Gather(rosebuds) while.do(may)...." My
spine burst into shivers. I could not explain why a few words of
KRIOL should have such an effect on me. Nevertheless they did. I
had to turn away, pretending sudden interest in the moonlit trees
outside the window, in order to hide the feelings that I knew my
face betrayed. She
went on, half-heard: "I want you to know that if you say yes and
you find out you don't love me, that's all right. That's not why
I'm doing it... well, not the only reason. You deserve to be free
whether you love me or not." "Do
it." The words seemed to come directly from the tingling of my
spine, bypassing my better judgment. Yet once they were said, I
did not want to take them back. "Are
you sure?" she asked, solicitously. "Do you need some time to
think it over?" "The
last thing I want to do is think it over. Just do it." She
looked at me with concern, but relented. "All right, then. You'll
need an adapter." "Why?" "You'll
have to put it in your wrist. You can't alter a chip in a skull
socket; the hardware won't do it. Security thing. Is your adapter
still in your duffel?" "No. I,
um, I put it away.... Hang on." I opened my junk drawer to look.
When I didn't see it, I started furiously rummaging through the
drawer; I had to fight back the urge to dump its contents on the
floor. Then Keishi came, stood behind me, and put her hand on my
shoulder—the faintest of pressures, an insect alighting. I
forced myself to calm down. She glanced at the drawer and reached
through my shoulder to point out where the adapter
lay. I
picked it up. "Which wrist?" "Left,
since you're left-handed." I slid
the plug into its socket, wrapped the Velcro cuff around my
wrist, and started to put in my camera chip. "Not
that one, the 6000," she said. "What
difference does it make?" "Well,
there's—" she began, then broke off and smiled. "This
probably isn't the time for a technical lecture. Let's just say
the old chip isn't up to it." I went
into the bedroom to collect the rosebox from my closet. At first
I hesitated over the choice of chipsets, but she said, "It
doesn't matter. Once I've done one, it'll be easy to copy the
changes to the other two." I plugged the chameleon chip into the
adapter, where it promptly sprouted trompe l'oeil black Velcro
fur. "Find a
comfortable place to sit," she said. "The first one may take a
while." I sat
on the armchair that Keishi had vacated—briefly surprised
to find the cushion cold. I slipped off my shoes and leaned
back. "Just
try to relax," she said. "I am
relaxed." "The
hell you are. If your heart were going any faster it'd break the
sound barrier. Breathe slowly, and count your breaths—just
up to four, then repeat it. Try to clear your mind of everything
else." As I
struggled for calm, she made the motions of taking something out
of a bag, though there was no bag to be seen. Then she crawled up
onto an invisible ledge five feet above the floor—a
levitating mime—and reclined there, in a slightly cramped
position. Her real body must have been getting into the sleeping
compartment on the train. She unbound her hair, which suddenly
became longer. That must be what she really looked like, I
thought with half-suppressed excitement. Her hair was lifted back
into the thing she had set up—a myrmichor; it must be. That
was how the African engineers had solved the problem of getting
data into a head without using sockets: they'd replaced her hair
with some sort of conductive fiber. If I ran my fingers through
it, would it be soft, or stiff, I wondered? I longed to
try—a small, quiet longing; but I had not felt one as
strong in twenty years. Then I
remembered how, when I had first realized she knew about my
suppressor chip, I had pictured her configuring it with a waldo
at a table, not with her hair in a myrmichor. That image had been
so vivid—where had it come from? Who had sat at a table for
hours that way, with cables trailing from her head and
arms? But
there was no time to think of that. I could already feel my hand
beginning to stir, to touch wires and move among patterns, though
physically, of course, it hadn't moved at all. If the image with
the waldo was a memory, I would know in the morning. The dream
coprocessor would bring it up. "Do you
want me to take your hand offline?" she asked, in a strangely
blurred voice. "No," I
said. "No, leave it on. I want to feel it." "I
always knew you were the Lamaze type." She chuckled distractedly.
"I'm going to give you a phrase to say when you want the
desuppression to begin. It's not in Russian, so you won't say it
by accident. Listen closely: O vos omnes, qui transitis per
viam. Say that back to me." I
repeated the phrase. "Good.
Now don't say it again, unless you mean it." "I
won't," I said. "If you
feel like sleeping, do." "I'm
not tired," I said. "I'm not tired at all." But hours later, when
she wanted me to switch chips, she had to rouse me first; and by
the time she had finished all three, I was sound
asleep. She
touched my cheek to wake me. "Go to bed. I'm going to stay with
you tonight." I
looked at her, blinking thickly, and said, "Are you
here?" "No.
You're still asleep. I mean in virtual. If I were there, I'd have
carried you to bed, so I didn't have to wake you. One of the
problems with being discorporate." "What
time is it?" "About
three in the morning." "Oh,
God," I said, finally coming awake, "I've got the interview of my
life tomorrow and I'm completely unprepared—" "Don't
worry. I'll give you a moistdisk in the morning. You'll be fine.
Everything will be fine." I went
to bed without undressing, setting the adapter on my nightstand.
She stood by the door, where, it seemed, she meant to keep vigil
all night. And just as I fell asleep—or did I dream
it?— she came and kissed me on the eyes. Her lips seeped a
little way through the lids into the liquid depths behind them:
small, cold kisses: silver coins. (The
Frog) (Dreams
aren't stories. They don't have a point, a theme, a plot, a
moral. All those things take skill to craft, and the sleeping
mind is inept. That's why most dreams are just a lot of aimless
wandering. Once in a while you'll be awake enough for a small
part of you to feel you should be getting somewhere, and then the
dream becomes a nightmare. All
night I dreamed that I was walking through the streets, carrying
a sack of groceries that I could not manage to look into. Then I
dreamed I woke up from that dream, to find myself back in the
reclining chair in the living room. Keishi was floating above the
floor. My left hand had detached itself and was holding a
scalpel; it had slit my arm open, from finger to elbow. The skin
was fastened back to the arm of the chair with dissecting pins,
and among the flayed muscles, I could see my arteries begin to
pulse. Keishi drifted toward me, bent down as if to whisper some
secret in my ear, and then opened her mouth and exhaled
daisies.) 2 PHYSICAL
BONES "However,"
added objective Pnin, "Russian metaphysical
police can break physical bones also
very well." —Vladimir
Nabokov, Pnin Thirteen
Icarus Rain: I
woke to the sound of rain crashing above me. The falling drops
were blowing against the wire mesh of the window-screen, filling
it in square by square, like pixels on a monitor. Perhaps all the
windows in the city, if seen from a sufficient distance, would
form some enormous image that only the gods could see. I lay
there trying to guess the pattern a long time. Then I stretched
in my pocket of warmth beneath the blankets, and turned over. The
camera chip was there, still plugged into its adapter. It had
been no dream. I went
into the bathroom, opened the little window above the shower, and
cleaned out all the crumpled newspaper—blank newspaper;
they sell it in Leningrad stores expressly for the purpose of
being wadded up in windows. I jammed it all into the wastebasket
and opened up the outer window, so the clean, cool air from
outside could dispel the bathroom's mustiness. Then I took a
shower, hot and luxuriously long. I should be careful about the
water, I knew; but I would be careful tomorrow, tomorrow would be
soon enough. Today, even the city was being cleansed by this
downpour. I closed my eyes and imagined it, as I worked lather
into my hair. The sky threw down great solid sheets of water that
fell against the rooftops, where they shattered into drops. The
rain poured down along the shingles, picking up and carrying with
it every crumb of dirt that Leningrad possessed; and streaming
down from eaves and windowsills, it crashed into the streets and
ran down gutters in excited single-files, which met at drains
and, crowding round them, plunged together into nothingness. Even
the veins of stink that lay beneath the city must, I thought,
have been washed clean by this exuberance of rain. "Freedom,"
Keishi had said; and though I knew that it could never be so
simple, I allowed myself to hope. I put
on my robe, fed the bugs, and ate breakfast, scooping up leftover
chickpeas with a hardened bagel. My body, unused to anything but
coffee and nanojuice at this hour, soon warmed to the idea and
sent me scurrying after the lentils, which I finished with a
spoon. They tasted better than they had last night. They were
better cold; no, I had been distracted; no, I had forgotten how
to taste food years ago, and only now remembered. When
I'd finished my makeshift breakfast, I gathered the camera chips,
replaced them in the rosebox, and took it into the bathroom to
dress. I opened all three flaps of the box, set it on end, and
watched it rotate. How do you dress for the biggest interview of
your life? Exactly
like any other day, I realized, and I put the box under the sink.
This interview would bring scrutiny. If I had suddenly changed
moistware just before it, people might suspect something. But if
I changed a few days after, it would look like I went out and
spent my bonus on an upgrade, and no one would think twice. I
went to the living room to retrieve my old camera
chip. The
moment I slotted it in, I was glad of my decision. That chip and
I had been through decades of obscurity together; it would be
heartless to change now, on the cusp of my first real success.
And she could love me even so; I knew that. She had known me no
other way. I put
on the most ordinary outfit in my closet and went back into the
kitchen. As I poured coffee into a selfheating News One mug, a
note on the refrigerator caught my eye. It hadn't been there at
breakfast. I put down the coffeepot and went to look. There was
no salutation, no signature, only two words in a large flowing
cursive: BE BOLD. I stood there looking at the note a long time,
feeling the warmth of the mug as I rested it against my
collarbone. Then I reached out to touch the note, and passed my
hand through it: unreal. The
phone chimed, and I answered it without begrudging the
intrusion. "Good
morning," Keishi said. I had
to choke back my usual rejoinder—"That's an oxymoron."
Instead I said, "Yes, I think it is." She
smiled appraisingly. "You know, this has really changed you. You
look five years younger than you did last night." I
sniffed the air. "Are you testing my sense of smell
again?" She
laughed politely. "I take it you're not having second thoughts
about last night." "When I
do, you'll know." "Then,
ah, may I ask why you're not wearing the murder
weapon?" "Gold
and dead gods aren't my style, I guess. Why do they do that,
anyway? You see Egyptian gods plastered over everything that's
African, but nobody worships them." "That's
why they do it. They figure that since those gods are dead, they
won't get pissed off about how you use their images." "Oh, I
see. Same reason people throw around the Coca-Cola
logo." Keishi
smiled. "You've got two other sets, you know. The polychromes can
look like whatever you want. Including the Coca-Cola
logo." "I
thought I'd better wait a few days," I said, more soberly. "This
would be a bad time for a mysterious upgrade. It's better to wait
till the worst of the furor has passed." She bit
her lower lip. "The new chip will need some burning-in time, you
know, if it's going to do all its tricks. It can use the pathways
your old one established if it has to, but it really ought to add
more." "All
the more reason not to try using it today." She
looked away from the screen, then back at me. "Maya, can I ask
you to just slot one of the 6000s? I can't tell you why
until— until later today. But I wouldn't ask unless there
were a good reason." "Look,"
I said firmly, "I'm as disappointed as you are. But you promised
me ten years, and I mean to collect every minute. It'd be foolish
to throw it all away because I couldn't wait for a couple of
days." "Then
take them with you," she insisted. "What if your old chip fails?
One whiff of seawater and it could rust up
like—" "Keishi,"
I said. "You're being ridiculous." She
lowered her eyes, but not before I saw her face cloud. Well, love
was impatient. Or so I told myself, not really knowing whether it
was or not. "I suppose you're right," she said forlornly. Then
she suddenly brightened. "Say, why don't you come to Arkhangelsk
early? There's a train at 9:15." "I
guess I could. There's not much left for me to do here. Any
special reason?" "Apart
from the obvious? I'm trying to sniff out that whale. If I do,
maybe we can crash Voskresenye's party a little early and get
this story put together right." I shook
my head in amazement. "How did I ever get along without you? Here
I've practically forgotten the whole story, and you're working
harder than ever." She
inclined her head, obviously pleased. "Where
should I meet you, then?" She
hesitated for what was, to a megascops, quite a long time. At
last she said: "When you get to the trainport I'll be
there." "You
mean in person?" "...
Yes." "Well,
it will be nice to meet you, Keishi Mirabara." "You
know," she said carefully, "I don't look exactly like my Net
image." "Who
does?" I said, laughing. Then I saw how nervous she was, so I
said, "I still don't know exactly how I feel about you, but I
doubt it would make any difference if you weighed a hundred
kilograms." She
looked up sharply, then relaxed and smiled. "I may just hold you
to that." "Well,
I'll find out in Arkhangelsk." Her
face grew wistful again. "Yes, you will.... Maya, I love you."
She smiled, rather weakly, and held up a hand. "No, don't answer.
I know you can't yet." Her image vanished. I
whispered to the blank monitor: "I hope I love you
too." I stood
there thinking until the phone reverted to its clock display,
then jumped: it was almost 8:30. Barely time to put on my coat,
shrink-seal my sockets, wrap a plastic babushka around my head,
and run to the trainport. I plunged out into the rain, feeling,
reckless and rakish. A dangerous joy was gathering in my heart:
the kind of joy that makes you do things you remember all your
life, not necessarily with fondness. I stepped right into the
braided ripples in the gutter, and crossed the street in defiance
of all laws of traffic. The
quickest route was through the park. I started to walk around to
the gate. But on my way, I noticed a gap in the hedge that
children squeeze through when, to their childish impatience, the
gate seems too far. On impulse I ducked into it, emerging on the
other side with leaves and twigs clinging to my coat. Well, let
them cling. I would not bother to brush them away. The
rain pounded against my head, and the sky was a charred log. It
was almost perfect; but it needed music. I switched on Audio
Classical Seven—picking the number for luck. White letters,
projected onto the saturated grass, informed me that I was
hearing Mozart's Requiem. Then the lyrics began to scroll through
my peripheral vision. A sing-along? Well, all right, I'm no
soprano but I can follow the bouncing ball. I sang loudly and
tunelessly, the Net helping me to understand the Latin. Dies
irae, dies illa, solvet saeclum in favilla: a day of wrath,
that day, it will blow the world to smithereens—or words to
that effect. But not just yet, please; I have ten years coming;
do it then. Then I
thought of Keishi's passphrase, and gave it to the Net to
translate. "All you people who pass on the street..." Yes. Yes,
that was just how I felt. As I
racewalked my way through the park, I came upon two women ducking
under a single umbrella. Their heads were almost touching, and at
my approach they looked up with, it seemed to me, guilt: caught
in the act, by a camera, no less. "Relax
for gods' sake!" I called out to them. "Your tribe!" And I
laughed as I passed, seeing myself through their eyes: a singing
missile, if you could call it singing, that had crashed past and
shouted nonsense at them. I knew they were only sharing an
umbrella, not kissing as it had seemed. But it was lovely to
pretend. Galuboy—the
word came to me suddenly, out of the undiscovered country the
encyclopedia suppressed. "Light blue." How odd; how
inappropriate. Like kit, whale, which sounds like a
chick's peeping. But galuboy's for men; what is it called
in women? Well, words would come later. For now, this feeling. My
head tingled with the memories it kept in trust, as though it
couldn't hold them back much longer. The Requiem crashed in my
head like the stamping of a great beast. Of course, an elephant.
Oh, I had been awful to her! Hooks, indeed. But even those
remembered insults would be cherished in the end. I
turned around and walked backward a few steps in order to sing
another verse to the umbrella women, and as I spun back again, my
coat fell open. I had lost the belt somewhere, probably in the
hedge. There was no time to retrieve it, so I held the coat shut
by crossing my arms and gripping each epaulette in the opposite
hand. Just you give me a crook and flail, and I'll adorn you a
sarcophagus, or lie on an African moistdisk in hologram
gold. The
trail started to meander unproductively, so I splashed onto the
grass, refusing to divert my path even for the deepest puddles.
And so, butchering the Tuba mirum, I climbed and crested a
low hill, and saw a man in a black suit leaning against a tree
ahead of me. I stopped singing, reduced my pace, and changed
course slightly to avoid him. I had almost passed him, and was
half-convinced my fears were wrong, when he called out, "Do you
know the time, tavarishcha?" "Ask
the Net!" I shouted, and looked back over my shoulder at him. He
had turned his head, showing me a black slab of moist-ware set
flush with his skull, like those sunken tombstones you can mow
right over. "Please
put your hands in the air where they are clearly visible," the
Postcop called out. I
did. "Thank
you, tavarishcha. Now please reach down very slowly and
remove first your Net chip, then all other enhancements except
for your encyclopedia." Again I
complied, fumbling with the babushka. Yes, quite an enhancement,
that encyclopedia. "You
see it is much better to cooperate. Now, if you would, please
place your hands behind your head and lie on the ground with your
face down." I
dropped to my knees and then, because I couldn't use my hands to
catch myself, fell forward awkwardly onto the wet grass. My face
was in a puddle, so I had to close my eyes and hold my breath.
For a moment no one came, and I vainly hoped that I would be
allowed to lie there in the grass until the rain dissolved me. It
was a hard, sharp rain that would leave no skeleton. Then my
arms were grasped and cuffed, and two sets of hands gently lifted
me to my feet. My face and clothes were covered with mud, and I
noticed that the Postcops that were flanking me wore rubber
gloves. As we
walked to the van I began to think again, a little, and realized
that they would not have known where to ambush me unless they had
been listening in on my conversation with Keishi. In that case,
they must know everything. The rain would not dissolve
me—in fact, I realized as they loaded me into the back of
the windowless van, I might never see rain again; and I turned to
see the sky one last time, only to have my head pushed firmly
down. As the
van drove through the streets of Leningrad, the rain besieged it,
crashing against the metal, clawing the roof with its nails,
howling as a wolf howls when torn from her pups or her prey. It
could not get to me. No, it would not be the rain. But I had
gotten what I'd wished for. I was dead. Fourteen
Tea and Sympathy After
three hours of interrogation, I finally cracked. "No!" I
screamed. "For the hundredth time, I do not want any more fucking
crumpets! And get that teapot out of my face." The
young man across the table set down the little delftware teapot
and put on a face of disappointed concern. "I am sorry that our
hospitality is not to your liking. We had very little notice of
your arrival. If there is something we can remedy, by all
means—" "I've
told you a dozen times. I want these handcuffs off. And I want to
go to the bathroom." Officer
Rubatin turned to his partner and said in a conciliatory tone,
"They seem reasonable enough requests, Officer
Ignateva." The
woman with the sergeant's bars pressed her thin lips together.
"The manner in which they were delivered was anything but
reasonable. Such a tone is inappropriate in this environment, and
her use of profanity denotes a person unable to control her
passions as society requires." "Ohhhhhh,
I get it now," I said to the woman. "You're the bad cop and he's
the good cop. You know how I can tell? Because you whisper
louder." "Plainly
we are getting nowhere," Good Cop said. "Perhaps if we remove the
restraints, as a gesture of goodwill, she will recognize our
peaceable intentions." "Very
well, Officer Rubatin," Bad Cop said, scowling. "I trust that our
good-naturedness will not be met with more hostility." She nodded
to Good Cop, who moved around the table to remove the
cuffs. "Um,
actually," I said, "the bathroom thing is a little more urgent
right now." Bad Cop
was incredulous. "We give you one thing and you instantly demand
another?" "Oh,
no. No, by all means, please remove the cuffs, that's fine. I
thank you profoundly for the favor." My wrists were starting to
go ominously numb, so I didn't want to lose the chance to free
them, even though my bladder had been a dull ache for most of the
last hour. I had drunk one cup of tea to keep my strength up for
the interrogation, and a second cup because it really was
excellent tea, and a third because the sips gave me a chance to
think before I answered. Now I was paying the price. I wondered
whether I had fallen into the same trap the first
time. I stood
so Bad Cop could remove the cuffs, and stayed standing as I
rubbed my wrists. It felt good to have them off now, though at
first I had been grateful for them. My greatest fear had been
that a Weaver would possess one of the Postcops, take out a
cable, and mindsuck me. The thought had made my every socket
ache, as though fear had given the metal nerves. So I had been
glad of the cuffs that locked over my wrist sockets, giving me
the illusion that they were protected—two fewer wounds
through which I might be hurt. But
they were not going to go Weaver. I was almost certain of that
now. A Weaver can be in a hundred places at a time, so what they
do, they do quickly. If a Weaver were going to take one of them,
she would have done it long before. I
started to sit down, wondering whether they'd let me go expel the
tea if I asked very, very nicely. Suddenly I stopped, my knees
half-bent, and thought: Postcops. Maya, these are Postcops, and
not Weavers. They were ordinary citizens, appropriated for a day;
someone had shown up at their doors that morning, ignored the
usual excuses, and inserted the Post moistware into their heads.
Their behavior was electronically regulated, and, in the areas
that mattered most, predictable. They were going to kill
me—there was no doubt of that. It would be soon. And no
matter what I did, the death would be polite and
painless. To know
for certain that you cannot change your fate can be a rather
liberating experience. The instant I'd accepted it, I had an
idea. "May I
stand a while and stretch my legs, please?" I asked. Bad Cop
looked sour, but since I had said "please," she
nodded. "Thank
you. I am in your debt, tavarishcha." I walked a few
steps, then stood in the corner, stretching my legs with
exaggerated motions. I felt chilly under the thin hospital gown
they had given me to replace my muddied clothes. "Now,
Maya Tatyanichna," Good Cop said, "you were about to tell us what
Keishi Mirabara said to you in the trainport." "Absolutely,"
I said, leaning against the wall. "I'll tell you
everything—everything I can remember. But there's one thing
I need to do first." And I squatted, hiked up the gown, and
urinated on the floor. "Cuff
her again. Behind her back this time. Then get on the Net and get
a wet mop up here." She turned to me and said. "That was so
uncalled for I can't even find words to describe it." "Take
out that Post chip and you'll find all kinds of
words." "I see
you think you can defy us," Bad Cop said ominously. Ominous in a
polite sort of way, of course. "I
think I can do whatever the hell I want. This is the last day of
my life. I may as well have a little fun with it." "With
someone who has remained in conformance as long as you have,"
Good Cop put in, "we may be able to consider leniency. But only
if—" "Bolus.
Nobody comes away from the Postcops alive a second time. I'll be
dead by midnight. All you can offer me is crumpets and trips to
the bathroom. But what difference does it make if I wet myself?
What difference does it make if I won't tell you anything? The
worst you can do is kill me, which you're going to do anyway. I
can piss on the floor, I can stand on my head, I can tell you
every Postcop joke I know, and you can't do a thing." Good
Cop interrupted Bad Cop's glare by plucking at her sleeve.
"What?" "Something's
wrong," he said. "I'm cut off from the Net." Bad
Cop's eyes unfocused for a moment. "I am, too. I'll go get us an
audio communicator." She stood up, then turned at the door to
look at me. "While I'm gone, consider whether you want to leave
this room alive. The choice is yours." Good
Cop watched the door swing shut, then leaned across the table
toward me. "I admire your courage, Maya," he said in a
conspiratorial whisper. "However, I must say that I believe it is
ill-timed. Officer Ignateva is operating on an older version of
the Emily Post moistware. If you continue to provoke her, it
might overload, and my own moistware would prevent me from
interceding." "Oh.
Wow. Thanks for telling me," I said. Then I leaned forward and
matched his whisper. "You know, I really hate these cuffs. If you
could take them off—" He
considered, then carefully looked to both sides. "All right,
then." When
they were off I said, "You know, the whispering and the looking
around to see if anyone's looking are great stage business, but
they seem a little fake when you're alone in a soundproof room.
Haven't you ever heard of method acting? Doesn't the police
academy have a drama department?" He sat
back and sighed indulgently. "I really do have your best
interests at heart, tavarishcha." "Yeah,
right. So is the Net really down, or is it a trick to get the two
of us alone together so you can be my friend?" Before
he could reply, Bad Cop returned, carrying a portable radio. "The
whole building's down," she said. "They're working on it." Then
she looked at me with surprise and said, "You took off the cuffs,
Rubatin?" "He was
playing good cop," I informed her. "It didn't work very well. Why
don't you try that bad cop thing again?" "I fail
to understand why you refer to me as a 'bad cop,' " she said
testily. "All Post police officers run on the same software. We
are bound by the law of the land and the laws of propriety, so we
are incapable of being 'bad.' " "Where
did you people go to school?" I said, rolling my eyes. If
Good Cop could overact, so could I. "Haven't you ever watched
CHIPS? Haven't you ever watched Hill Street Blues?
Do the words 'Book 'em, Danno' mean nothing to you?" I looked
down on their scrubbed puzzled faces and sighed. "Okay, kids, let
me correct a major gap in both your educations. When cops in
Classical America interrogated a prisoner, one cop would be the
Good Cop and try to become his friend, and the other would be the
Bad Cop and try to scare the shit out of him so he'd confess to
his buddy the Good Cop. Just like what you're doing. Except they
could back up their threats. They could swear. They could break
things. They could hurt people. You can't even ask me for
something without saying 'please.' Frankly, Ignateva, you're
pathetic." "Insults
can only make this more difficult." I
laughed, leaned back, and rubbed my eyes. "I was hoping they'd
make it more interesting. But it's like teasing animals in the
zoo: it's poor sport and it frustrates the animals. Why are we
doing this? Why don't you just—" I broke
off. Why didn't they just mindsuck me? You think of
Weavers doing that, but Postcops do it too, once they've run
through all the polite options. Ignateva and Rubatin were
incompetents—that's what you get when you recruit by
lottery. It would take them a long time to give up. But in the
end they would, or they'd be relieved by someone who would. And
then the cable would come out of whatever pocket it was hidden
in, and any hope that Keishi had would be gone. I had
known that. And I had thought that there was nothing I could do.
But there was. "Could
I have another cup of tea, please?" I asked, trying to keep my
voice from shaking. "Oh,
certainly, certainly," Rubatin said, hastening to
pour. "Thank
you," I said, and gripped the handle like a lifeline. Taking the
encyclopedia out might be enough, and then it might not. But
surely, after all these years, the waterproofing would not hold
against a direct assault. "All
right," I said. "Let's put all our cards on the table. I seem to
have run out of reasons to play for time. What can I do that will
get this over with?" "You
can tell us what we need to know, tavarishcha." "Other
than that." "Let's
just make a start, shall we?" Good Cop said sympathetically. "You
came back from Kazakhstan. You arrived at the train-port. What
did you do?" "I went
to the bathroom. It smelled a lot like it does here." Good
Cop leaned over and whispered to Bad Cop, "Is that janitor on the
way?" "They
said she would come. See what the radio says." Bad Cop
switched it on. "Officer Mayich," it blared, "Officer Andrei
Mayich, come to the front desk please." She scowled and turned
down the volume. "What
did you do after you went to the bathroom?" Good Cop pressed
on. "I
washed my hands in the sink." "We
don't care about that," Bad Cop put in. "You
don't care about washing your hands after you go to the bathroom?
Oh gods, and I let you hand me that crumpet. That's
disgusting." "What
we want to know, please, is when you met Keishi
Mirabara." "I
didn't meet her at the port at all. She had me paged over the
trainport speakers, but I was too busy trying to get
drunk." "You
cannot get drunk, Andreyeva. No bar would serve you beyond your
ration. We know that." "I
didn't say it was working. I just said I was trying. Why do you
ask these questions if you're not even going to listen to the
answers?" "Officer
Ivanova," the radio said, "Officer Tatyana Ivanova, please come
to the front desk. Your daughter is here." Tatyana
Ivanova was my mother's maiden name. Strange
coincidence. "Maya
Tatyanichna," Good Cop said, "our records indicate that you did
insert the courtesy plug." "Officer
Pudding," said the radio, "Officer Chocolate Pudding, please come
to the front desk." I
laughed and slouched back even further, tightening my grip on the
cup. I would have to take the socket-cap off with one hand, and
raise the cup with the other. The parietal socket, on top, would
be best; to get the tea to run out again, they'd have to turn me
upside-down, and by then it would be much too
late— I sat
upright. Officer Pudding. The speaker trick. It was
Keishi. Or the
Postcops trying to entrap me with hope. I had to be sure. "Yes,"
I said carefully, "that's true, I did put in the plug. She told
me to put my Net chip in, so we could virtual conference. But I
thought, 'What would a person like Keishi Mirabara want with me?'
" "Officer
Cavalry, Officer John Wayne Cavalry, please come to the station,
you are needed." Bad Cop
gave Good Cop a worried look and said, "Officers of French
ethnicity are an asset to the Leningrad police force." I
suppressed a smile. Somewhere deep in Bad Cop's mind the words
"goddamn frogs" had flared up and been quenched. Jean-Waine
Chevalri. No allusion to the Ancient West could have come from
these duraks. And no Weaver would have reason to play such
games. "What
exactly did she say to you over the courtesy plug?" Good Cop
asked. "Oh, I
hung up after a few words," I said. "She was trying to tell me
what to do. I hate it when people do that." "Officer
Rune, Officer Net Rune, please return to your vehicle. Your
headlights are on. Officer Net Rune." Bad Cop
and Good Cop exchanged perplexed glances. "She
tried to tell me why, but by that time I'd hung up on
her," I said. "Officer
Pavlov, Officer Ivan Pavlov, please report to the front desk
immediately. There is a camera here to interview you. Your
tardiness in this significant public relations effort does not
become the Leningrad Police Force. Officer Pavlov, come to the
front desk now." Of
course. I let
the cup go, buried my head in my hands, and pretended to sob.
"I'm sorry, officers. I've been trying to lie to you, but I see
now that it's fruitless. Can we start at the beginning again?
Could you repeat the charges against me?" "You
are here for conspiring to remove a court-mandated suppressor
chip, and for consorting with a known dissident, and for intent
to commit affectional deviance." "And
disturbing the peace," Bad Cop added peevishly. I knew
my singing would be the death of me in the end. "I'm sorry," I
said, "I don't know the jargon. What is 'affectional deviance,'
please?" "You
deliberately set out to fall in love with a person of your own
sex, in flagrant violation of the laws of the Fusion of
Historical Nations as well as of the terms of your
parole." "And
did I succeed at this?" "Not at
the time at which you were arrested," Good Cop said. "And
why not?" "Because
of the corrective device which we implanted twenty years ago, at
the time of your first arrest." "Because
of Postcop mind control." Bad Cop
and Good Cop exchanged nervous glances. "The colloquialism is
essentially accurate, yes." "And
how did you find out about this intent? By monitoring private
videophone conversations, yes? Through spy satellites? Through
hidden cameras? By using the Net to spy on people's
minds?" "She
has no need to know that, Officer Rubatin," said Bad Cop warily.
"She is stalling for time." "Common
courtesy demands that we answer all reasonable questions," he
said in a conciliatory tone. "There is nothing to fear; the
information will go no further than this room." "No it
won't, will it?" I said. "Because I'll leave this room a corpse.
Have you already decided which one of you pulls the trigger, or
do you flip a coin when it's time?" I parted my fingers, as if
accidentally, to let a little light from my Net-rune shine
through. Bad Cop's eyes widened. "This
information could only distress you—" Bad Cop
grabbed my hand away from my face, revealing the lit rune.
"Shit!" she yelled. I longed for my imagination software, to draw
a little puff of smoke above her Post chip. "Smile,
duraks," I said, "you're on News One. Why don't you tell
the world why you wouldn't let me go to the bathroom?" "It's a
trick," Good Cop said. "It has to be." "Of
course it's a trick," I said sweetly. "Just go on as you were
before. What difference will it make?" Then I widened my eyes and
said in mock astonishment: "The Post police wouldn't have
anything to hide, would they?" Bad Cop
grabbed the radio. "Front desk, come in." "Front
desk. This is Officer Miranda." It was Keishi's voice. "Maybe
I'll just take a little warmup on this tea," I said to no one in
particular. "I think the world would like to know what Post-cop
tea tastes like, don't you?" I poured tea into the teapot, then
back into the cup, and sipped with gusto. "Is
your Net link still out?" Bad Cop demanded. "It's
just come on again," Keishi informed her. "Tune
in News One and tell me what you see." There
was a brief pause. Then the voice on the radio said, "Oh, gods.
Don't move. Don't say a word. Just wait, and someone will be
there right away." "Tsk,
tsk, tsk," I said, sipping my tea. "You swore on duty, and I've
got every last phoneme on disk. What does the chief of police do
in a case like this? Wash your mouth out with soap?" Good
Cop and Bad Cop sat frozen, as though they'd been switched
off. "Well,
will you look at this? You give them a little media exposure and
all of a sudden they're so high and mighty they won't even talk
to you—" "Maya
Tatyanichna!" boomed the captain, bursting in. "Thank gods you're
all right. I came the minute I heard about this terrible
misunderstanding. I'm sorry to prevail still further on your
patience, but may I speak to my officers outside for a
moment?" "Sure,
no problem. But I warn you, they're really not much fun
anymore." "Thank
you," he said, bowing slightly. "I will return shortly." He
escorted them out. I did
what any self-respecting camera would have done under the
circumstances. I poured out my teacup, put it against the door,
and listened. The
captain was saying: "... judged that you have erred so grievously
that, in accordance with regulation 3708 stroke 25 paragraph c, I
am removing my Emily Post chip in order to impress upon you the
magnitude of your offense." "But...
but..." "You
goddamn stupid whores!" I had
to bite down on my hand to keep from laughing. If only I'd really
been recording. Of course I wasn't; I'd had my Net-rune hot-wired
years before, so I could turn it on and off as I pleased. It's
nice for letting people think that something's off the record.
But a Postcop captain swearing like a sailor all over the whole
Net! If I had to choose between that and the whale, I might be
tempted to give up the whale. The
whale. If I was going to live, then there was still a world
outside the police station, and in it I had an interview to do.
Not without regret, I abandoned my post for a moment to pick up
the radio. "Hello, Officer Miranda?" "I read
you, Officer Pudding. Over." "Hey,
front desk," I said, "things are a little confused back here. Do
you happen to know the time of day?" "You've
got around five minutes before someone figures out that
everywhere but this building, News One is carrying a political
debate in Otaku. Over." "What
do I do? Um, over." "They're
hoping you'll get bored waiting and everyone will tune out. So
you want to let them know it won't work. Just make a pain in the
ass out of yourself." "I
think I could manage that. Over." "That's
a roger, the plan is designed to make use of our
operative's natural talents," Keishi confirmed. "Break a leg,
Officer Pudding. That's an order. Over and out." I
pressed my teacup against the door again. The captain was still
swearing industriously. "Haven't
you duraks ever heard of a retrofit? Just because the
bitch has sockets in her head, you assume she can't also
be wired with a totem. So you confiscate the totem, don't
deactivate it, and she beams your every word to News One out of
our own goddamn evidence room?" "But we
did check. We checked her file and we scanned her twice,
and she didn't have anything that could have been a totem in
disguise—" "Well,
you obviously didn't check well enough." "Can't
they just cut off the Netcast?" "We
don't dare. We cut off the Netcast all of a sudden, and then
she's never heard from again—what are people going to
think?" It
seemed like a good time to pound on the door and shout at the top
of my lungs. The
captain appeared promptly. "Hey, Cap'n," I said. "If it were just
me I'd wait, but I've got half of Russia sitting in this chair
and they're getting a little bit restless. Could you talk to the
folks for me? Say hi to your mother or something." "We
will release you now, Maya Tatyanichna." "Oh,
come on," I wheedled. "I spent months setting up this story. You
can't just take it away from me." "Right
this way, please." "Oh,
all right. Spoilsport." He led
me out and down the hall. I felt lightheaded. I was doing it. I
was going to leave the Postcop station alive. "The
officers who arrested you have been arrested themselves," he
explained as we walked. "They had altered their Post chips in
order to commit these violations of privacy and engage in this
unwarranted arrest. I assure you that the Post police have no
grievance against you and that we are intensely sorry for what
has happened." For
another five minutes, anyway. The captain led me to the evidence
room and gave me back my clothes. "You
washed them for me," I noticed with amusement. "How nice. What do
you do with the clothes when you kill a prisoner? Store them
forever?" "We
present the clothes to local charities," the captain explained.
"Of course, that is only in those rare cases when the ultimate
penalty is called for. —I'm afraid we have no dressing
rooms for prisoners. You may use our officers' locker room. Here
we are." I
waited for him to leave, then grabbed the hem of the gown to
strip it off. A sudden fear stopped me. "You know, people of
Russia," I said loudly, "the captain probably thinks I'll pause
the Net-cast while I undress, so he can cut off my signal and no
one will know the difference. Little does he know that I have no
shame whatsoever." Then I
backed against the lockers, seized by another fear. "Also, if my
broadcast gets cut off suddenly in the next few seconds, you'll
have a pretty good idea that I was shot in the back. Won't
you?" I
stayed there a moment, my voice echoing through the locker room,
then looked around the corner carefully. No one was there.
Steady, Maya; the bluff doesn't have to hold much longer. I
dressed hastily and charged back into the front room, the gown
over my arm. "All
right," I said, "where the hell's my moistware?" "I am
afraid that those items have now become evidence in the trial of
the renegade officers," the captain said with rehearsed
sincerity. "Look,
I've got an interview to do in less than three hours. I need my
equipment." "I'm
sorry. The trial should take place in a few days. When it is over
you can return here to pick up your belongings." This
was his petty revenge, I realized. My only chance was to scare it
out of him. I straightened my spine a little to get the full
advantage of my height, looked down into his left pupil, and
said: "Would you care to give the Russian populace an explanation
for this bureaucratic obstructionism? Or would you rather just
get me my property?" "I
regret that—" "Captain,
you have a transmission coming in," said the Post-cop at the
front desk. "It's marked triple-urgent." "Triple
... ? If you will wait one moment." "Of
course," I said. He walked around behind the desk and took the
plug the receptionist proffered. As he turned away and inserted
it, the assignments on the monitor above the desk dissolved into
a single word, flashing: NOW, NOW, NOW. I'd had
the same idea myself. I ducked out the front door and took the
stairs down to the street three at a time. Then I stopped cold.
In front of me was a wall of wasps, all electronically parked, so
that there was barely a centimeter between them. I could go down
the sidewalk, but I'd be a sitting duck. I turned around and saw
the captain clattering down the stairs, with a whole parade of
Postcops behind him. Trapped, I backed up till I tripped on the
curb and stumbled against a wasp. In my panic, I barely noticed
that the car was not cold, like metal, but taut and warm and
muscled, like the shoulder of a horse. "Put
your hands in the air," the captain called out. I noticed he
didn't say please. I tried to comply, but my arms were stuck. As
the Postcops raised their guns, I realized that I had sunk into
the wasp up to my elbows, as if it were quicksand. "Put
your hands up! This is your last warning!" "I'm
trying!" I called out, but the car had already enveloped
me. Something cold touched the back of my head. A thick black
liquid wrapped itself around my eyes, and forced its way into my
mouth and nostrils. I wanted to gag, but my throat would not obey
the impulse. Then my mind folded in on itself, like a burning
spider, and for a long time I felt nothing more. Fifteen
Phaeton Stop
trying to breathe," said a voice in my ear. "You're only making
yourself panic." "Keishi—" "Don't
try to use your mouth, just think it. If you just forget about
your body, you'll be all right." "Where
are we? Why can't I see anything?" "We're
a couple hundred kilometers out of Arkhangelsk. You can't use
your eyes to see; just look." I did.
I was in the front seat of a car, with Keishi sitting next to me.
The road was rushing past at an improbable rate. I reached up and
felt the driver's helmet wrapped around my head, with braided
cables trailing from it. "Did we
escape? Am I alive?" "Nothing
gets by you, does it?" I tried
to laugh, but the helmet choked me. "Laugh
on the inside," she advised. "Keishi,
I could kiss you," I said. "No,
you couldn't," she said matter-of-factly, "because for one thing,
I'm still in Arkhangelsk, and for another thing, you've got a car
in your mouth." "Oh.
I... I thought maybe it was really you this time." "Soon," she
said. "Sooner
than my death?" "Don't
talk that way. Do you see anyone following us?" "No," I
said. We were far from the city by now, and the lights on the
dashboard informed me we were at 300 kph and climbing. "What kind
of car is this?" "Postcop
pursuit vehicle." "Oh,
gods," I said, and tried to bury my face in my hands—only
to remember that I couldn't move my head. "You just had to dig us
even deeper." "Maya,"
she said in exasperation, "it doesn't get any deeper than
you were. How much we piss off the Postcops is no longer an
issue. They're as pissed as their moistware will let them
get." "I
guess that's true. Won't they be able to trace this car,
though?" "Not a
chance. The license plate's a hologram, which I'm changing at
random intervals. The color cycles through the full spectrum, too
gradually to notice. And on top of that, I used the onboard
computer to give every car in Leningrad the same registration
number. Everything but the kitchen sink in these
babies." "How'd
you steal it? Don't they have alarms?" "I
signed it out to Officer Pudding. One of our pal Voskresenye's
back doors." "How
many back doors are there in the Postcop
computers?" "Uh,
before or after today? I think I've used up about half of
them." "Terrific,"
I said. The adrenaline high of finding myself free was beginning
to wear off. I tried to look out the side window, only to find
that there wasn't one. "Where are we going?" "Arkhangelsk,
of course. You've got an interview to do." "But I
don't even have a camera chip!" "Check
the glove box," she said smugly. "I
don't think I can...." "Oh,
right." A segment of the dashboard slid aside, revealing the
rosebox I had left under the bathroom sink. "How
did you get this here if you're still in Arkhangelsk?" "I,
um...” She looked at me, then turned away and said meekly,
"I sort of hired someone to break into your house." I
looked at her in anger, but immediately relented. "I guess it
doesn't matter now." "That's
the spirit." "Look,"
I said, "moistware or no moistware, I'm never going to get on the
air. The first thing the Postcops'll do when they figure out what
happened is to call Netcast and have my time slot
revoked." "Yeah,
they already did that." I
sighed in frustration. "Then why are we going to
Arkhangelsk?" "Wanna
hear my impression of a Net executive?" I
stared at the side of the road, having figured out how to pan the
vehicle's cameras. "I'm not going to get out of this, am I?
Sooner or later we'll run out of back doors and luck. At the
outside, maybe I'll manage to do the Netcast and die famous. But
probably not even that. Chances are I'll never even get to meet
you." "But
the Netcast changes everything," she said earnestly. "The world
will be following your every move. You're going to have a lot of
people watching over you." "You
mean I'll be surfed." She
nodded sadly. "I'm afraid so." I shook
my head a little, which made the helmet tug uncomfortably against
my sockets. "I'm not sure which is worse—dying, or having
every prepubescent in Russia trying to get behind my
eyes." "But
it's only for a little while. Before all this happened I was
going to build you a shield, but instead I'm going to take out
the defenses you already have. The Postcops won't come for you
when you've got a thousand people in your head. It's not in their
programming." "They'll
find a way," I said. "Eventually.
But by that time, I'll have you in Africa." I
laughed without humor. "You better get that screening chip
checked out. You're not getting good color fidelity." "It
doesn't matter how white you are, you can still get political
asylum. You know how His-Majesty-In-Chains feels about suppressor
chips. Your encyclopedia is as good as a passport." "But
I'd have to get across the border first." "That's
what I'm working on now," she said. "But I'll find a
way." "I wish
I could believe you." "We
will meet, Maya. I'm not letting you off that
easy." I
watched the road in silence. At last she said, "Maya, I'd rather
stay with you, but I'm still working on the Postcop computers,
and I need to make plans to get you into Africa, too. I just
don't have the bandwidth to spare. Can you drive for a
while?" "I
can't drive a car like this." "There's
nothing to learn. It's a direct neural interface. Here, take
it." "But—"
And then I was the car. It was as if I had been born with
wheels, as if evolution had crafted my nerves to fit axles and
gears instead of muscles and bones. I felt the wind against my
skin. The road beneath me was an ever-changing stream of tastes
and textures, to which my tires responded with a constant
rearrangement of their fingerprints. "Are
you all right?" she asked anxiously. "All
right doesn't begin to cover it," I answered from the dashboard
speaker. I adjusted my shape to reduce drag, and shot forth even
faster, trying to see if I could reach 400 kph. After a few
minutes, I could barely remember what it was like to have a human
body. Even the vague sensations from my internal organs had been
changed: my stomach was an engine. And I realized as I felt its
heat that the car was not electric, but internal combustion. It
burned. Other cars were barely even obstacles; there was
nothing on the road but me—looking just like any other car,
yet harboring this secret fire. "Uh-oh,"
Keishi broke in. "We've got a Postcop, dead ahead." "Just
one? What is he?" "Standard
wasp. Not a threat in itself, but if a Weaver
notices—" "I see
him now," I said. "I don't think it's going to be a problem." I
accelerated toward him, the indicator trembling just below the
400 mark. The wasp came into view, crawling toward me at a
pathetic pace, his whining little sirens on. I made myself the
color of the road and leapt at him, an invisible bullet. When I
reached him I breathed static into his ears and spat needles. His
tires were shredded and he spun out of control into my lane. I
was not afraid: I had seen the motion before it began. I slid
past, stretching out an arm to scoop the air against him. He was
blown onto the shoulder of the road. I swerved, braked, and
farted fire. As I accelerated again I saw the wasp engulfed in
brick-red flames. I didn't look at it for long. "You
did it," Keishi said. "I didn't get a peep of radio." "Too
bad," I said. "I switched our registrations as we passed him. If
he had called home, they'd have come and finished off the
job." She
chuckled appreciatively. "I always knew you had
potential." "Always?"
I said. "How long is always? Last week? It seems like
forever." "Yes,
it does," she said softly. "It seems like twenty years." She
broke contact. I accelerated back up to 350. Then I extruded
ailerons, making the car skip over the road like a stone on
water. I adjusted, and began to glide, as over ice. The indicator
shuddered past 350, and didn't stop: 360, 370. There was no use
fighting it. I had fallen into hope, as you might fall into the
ocean; and though I knew I would drown eventually, for the moment
it seemed as though the deep, deep sea would keep me
up. Almost...
yes: 400. My tires brushed the road only rarely, as if to assure
themselves it was still there. Is love like this? I
wondered, as I leapt into the air again. "Better," was the
whispered answer. Like this? I asked, as I rippled my skin
to fling the wind away from it. "Better," as my fingertips tasted
the road. Then I
had a thought that seized my brakes with fear and sent me
spinning across the road. I could barely control the skid enough
to bring us safely to a stop. "What
are you doing? We haven't got time!" "Keishi,"
I said, "if I go to Africa, what happens to you? They won't let
you immigrate." "I can
take care of myself. Drive!" "That's
not an answer." Silence. "And I'm not going anywhere until I get
one." "Well,"
she said at length, "it is Africa." "What
the hell is that supposed to mean?" "We
could get married." (The
Unknown King) (I
don't know what compulsion makes me go through the forms of
suspense, as if the ending of the story were in some doubt. You
already know that Africa is not where I wound up. The rumors say
I'm in contact with them, that I've talked to His Majesty. It
isn't true. Perhaps the Known Kings do protect me in some way,
but if so, they don't tell me about it. Once
people have gotten an idea like that in their heads, though, it's
no use trying to get it out. So people ask me questions about
Africa. And I make up answers, just as if I knew. Most of
the answers are simple. The question I'm asked most is who the
Unknown King is, what her title is, whether I've met
her—that's the information everybody wants. And I tell
them. I don't know, of course, but it's always seemed
obvious to me. Think about the three Known Kings:
His-Majesty-in-Chains, whose nerves are wound into his continent,
so that he feels the hunger and the pain of all his people.
Only-A-Man, who takes one person at a time and lives behind her
eyes, though only for an hour. And Its-Ethereal-Highness, the
calculator-king, whose justice is the justice of a balance beam,
whose sympathy is parceled out by floating-point arithmetic.
Male, hermaphrodite, and neuter; that means the Unknown King's a
woman. It stands to reason. And beyond that, can't you see what
the three represent? General sympathy, individual sympathy, law.
Those are the three possible ways of reaching out to people. At
least, I can't think of any others. And
once you know that, well, isn't it obvious what the Unknown King
must be? And why she's unknown? She's
the one who turns away.) Sixteen
Very Like a Whale Tearing
off the plastic babushka, I crashed down the stairs, fumbling to
slot in the African moist-disk and camera chip. I couldn't get
them in with just one hand, so I gave up and let go of the
railing to use both. Surely, after all that had happened, I would
not break my neck on a mere staircase; the Weaver bullet rushing
toward me would prevent all lesser dooms. "Time?"
I called out. My voice reverberated through the
stairwell. "You've
got about three minutes," Keishi said, her voice calm and
echoless. At the
bottom of the third flight of stairs was the door to an elevator.
Fortunately, the elevator car was already there waiting, but the
ride down took at least a decade of subjective time. When the
doors finally opened, I saw a corridor that went on for a hundred
meters and then turned a blind corner. On both sides of the hall
were moving sidewalks, like the ones they have in
trainports. "Stairs,
elevator, now this," I said, getting onto the conveyor. "If I
have to slide down a pole, the deal's off." As the
sidewalk carried me along, I noticed that the one on the other
side, for return trips, wasn't moving. So much for a quick get
away. Keishi was going to send my signal out along a winding
path, which she said would take hours to unravel; but if the
Post-cops did see through it, they would surely be here before I
could get out. "Forty-five
seconds." "Count
me down from ten," I said, breaking into a run, "and whatever
happens, make it look like I planned it." "Gotcha,"
Keishi said. "The miscues are dramatic pauses, and the bumps are
verite. So noted. Oh, and Maya?" "Yes?" "Neither
down nor a feather!" "To the
devil!" I roared back. I'd need all the luck I could
get. The
slidewalk took a left turn, then a right, and I passed several
doors, all of them boarded up. Was the whole place abandoned? No,
someone had kept the slidewalk in repair. Which did not, of
course, mean that anyone was there at the moment. Please, God,
don't let this be a Capone's Vault. I slotted the imagination
enhancer, just in case. "Ten,"
Keishi said, with no end in sight. "Nine, eight," and another
curve came into view. "Seven, six, five"—I turned the
corner. There was a door ahead: end of the line. I started a
lunge— "four"—then changed my mind and stopped,
letting the slidewalk carry me along. "Three, two," and I was
just stepping off, my momentum pitching me forward; I caught
myself; "one—and you're live." "This
is Maya of hearth News One," I said, briskly walking toward the
door. "I'm in what used to be the laboratory of the Guardian
collaborator, Aleksandr Derzhavin." I paused to let the memories
float up from the moistdisk: women with glass skulls revealing
their brain grafts; rings of animals linked by cables; a Kazakhi
infant with a second head, not human, hanging limply from his
shoulder. "I feel
your horror, but it's muted," I said, stopping in front of the
door. "After all, it was a long time ago. The Guardians are gone,
and Derzhavin is dead, and it's hard to get worked up about it.
But this place is not abandoned. Someone lives here—someone
for whom Derzhavin's experiments are much more than a distant
memory." I put my hand on the doorknob. "This is Maya Andreyeva,
coming to you from about a kilometer underneath—ah,
underneath the ground." No sense giving the Postcops free hints.
"And I'm about to show you something amazing." I hope.
I turned the doorknob—and had to suppress my relief when
the door opened easily. I walked through into a room that, but
for the lack of a sparking Jacob's-ladder, might have been the
set of some remake of Frankenstein. On my left, behind a
transparent curtain, were three dissecting tables, each large
enough to autopsy an elephant. One lay bare; one was piled with
Petri dishes, test tubes, and retorts; the third held the earthly
remains of several antique computers, lying in state among a maze
of cables. On my right were larger pieces of
equipment—centrifuge, terminal with headset, and a thing
the size of an oven that I guessed to be an electron microscope.
None looked new, or even functional. I took
all this in with a quick pan of my eyes, then focused on the
chessboard in the middle of the room. The pieces were still set
up, as though abandoned in mid-game. Calling on my imagination
chip, I placed Voskresenye and Derzhavin at the table. In the
foreground, I reenacted Voskresenye's awakening; in the
background, I let the memory of my interview filter in. When
Derzhavin got up and wheeled Voskresenye through the door, I
silently followed them into a hall—for them dimly lit, and
for me dark. Long rows of cages were set into both walls. I made
Voskresenye's image look to both sides as they passed, and
briefly showed the audience what he had seen there. Then I lit my
Net-nine, to show them what was in the cells now. All the
cages had been fitted with shelves; rows of books sat behind the
iron bars, huddling at the backs of their cells like frightened
prisoners. There were twenty cells in all, and over each, a
description of the contents was painted in neat block letters:
Theology, Ethics, Poetry, Biology. On impulse I tried a door,
only to find it locked—they were all locked. Nor was this a
measure against theft; the keys were hanging openly on a board at
the end of the hall. It was as if he wanted to prevent the books'
escape. "What
kind of a man keeps a library like this?" I asked aloud. I kept
my mind blank of answers. Let the audience invent its
own. There
was a door at the end of the hall. This had better be the one; I
had no time to spare. I let Derzhavin push Voskresenye's ghostly
image through the door and vanish. Then I slipped the nucleus of
the whale research into my memory, gently, so as not to give the
game away too soon. I turned the knob with melodramatic slowness.
The door obliged me with an eerie creak. When I
looked into the room, the audience inside me caught all its
breaths at once. Behind a sheet of glass the size of a soccer
field, the whale floated as though in sleep, barely moving her
serrated fins. Long, crooked scars marked her side, and half the
crescent of her fluke was torn away. A thick air-tube pierced her
blowhole, surrounded by a mass of sores where it had rubbed
against her skin. Her head was ringed by a crown of sockets,
their little copper thorns sealed off from the water by clear
plastic inserts. Fluorescent lights behind the tank surrounded
her with luminous blue halos, and, filtering through the glass,
tattooed my skin with moving waves. As I
approached the whale, she opened her eyes, like a man briefly
roused from an opium sleep. She didn't see me—or if she
did, I was beneath her notice. Perhaps what she looked at was not
in this world. And if
the whale looked through me, then, too, the audience looked
through her. The chips and tubes were transparent to their eyes,
and even her flesh symbolic and not real. Looking at her, they
were watching that vid with the whale in the iceberg. I tried to
win them over by brute force, staring at the sores around her
blowhole and trying to imagine what she must feel; I tried
horror, pity, melancholy; but I couldn't even mute their
giddiness. Finally I gave up, made my mind a blank, and waited
for the audience to grow calm. Calm
would not come. I'd caught what cameras call an updraft: just as
the viewers got over their first rush of interest, others smelled
the excitement and tuned in. The surprise of the newcomers
strengthened the scent, attracting still more people, in a spiral
that could make the feedback escalate out of control. Wave upon
wave of astonishment crashed through me. I tried to look down,
but the curiosity of millions forced my head back up. I stood
there staring at the whale like someone forced to look into the
sun, unable to turn away, though my mind cringed from the sight
and my eyes were burning. It was not just an updraft, but
riptide: feedback so strong that it flooded out my own emotions
and derailed my thoughts. The audience grew so large and so
greedy that it wouldn't even let me blink. I sank to one
knee—it was that or fall— and silently begged Keishi
to cut off the input. "News
One says wait it out," she said apologetically. "They think they
can still bring in more viewers." Greedy
sons of bitches. What are we up to? "Do the
words forty share mean anything to you?" I was
already brimful of the audience's amazement, so the news could
not surprise me, but I reminded myself to be impressed when my
reactions were my own again. Two out of every five viewers in
Russia— "No,
three out of five in Russia. I'm talking global. If this doesn't
taper off soon, you'll be reaching half the people in the
world." Well,
the eyes of half the world were worth a little riptide. I stared
at the whale until my tears dissolved it into halos, until my
eyes were nothing but a dull ache boring its way deeper and
deeper back into my head. Keishi?
I said,
weakly. Does News One have any ideas on how I might manage to
stand back up? She
didn't answer, but I heard someone come up behind me, and felt a
hand cover my eyes. The metal of his carapace was cold against my
cheekbone: Voskresenye. The audience, cut off from the source of
its excitement, grew quiet enough that I could blink and turn
away. Voskresenye took my elbow and guided me to a
chair. When my
eyes cleared, I saw that I was sitting with the whale behind me.
It was like having your back to a man with a gun: the urge to
look around was almost irresistible. But at least I could think.
As he sat down across from me, I mouthed a silent "thank you,"
which he answered with a slight nod of his head. Gingerly,
I touched the memories on the moistdisk. The audience let me, but
I wouldn't have wanted to try it a second time. Thinking with
half the world inside my head was like crossing a frozen lake in
smooth-soled shoes: the slightest misstep might send me spinning
out of control. Fortunate, then, that I was in this chair, across
from a man I could interview, with a moistdisk whispering in my
ear. I had done this at least once a week for longer than I could
remember. I could do it in my sleep—and even in this state.
The castle of my mind had been usurped, but the maids could still
cook just as well as before; and this was galley work. "Pavel
Voskresenye," I began carefully, "when we last talked I was,
shall we say, a little skeptical about the whale. Afterward, as I
recall, I said to my screener, 'You can't put a whale in a tank.
It's like claiming you slipcovered Leningrad.' " I paused to wait
out the giddy feeling of a million people snickering. "It looks
like Derzhavin slipcovered Leningrad. But even now that I've seen
it, it still seems impossible. Can you show me the flaw in my
reasoning?" "It
seems unthinkable to you," he said, "because you are Maya
Andreyeva, a News One camera, and not Aleksandr Derzhavin, a
Guardian scientist. That means, of course, that you do not have
access to Calin's treasuries or to unlimited amounts of slave
labor; those are things that accustom a person to thinking big.
But more important, it means that when you look at a whale, you
see a living being—a creature with senses, organs,
dimensions, passions. When Derzhavin looked at a whale, he saw
none of that. "All
the Guardians experienced some degree of spiritual atrophy, or
they could not have done what they did, but Derzhavin was an
especially advanced and chronic case. He was an urbane,
oftentimes a witty man; he honored the memory of his wife and he
was gentle with his children. He was even, in his own way,
scrupulously moral, though it was a purely arithmetical morality
in which no sympathy was needed or allowed. Yet he was one of the
most evil men that ever lived. It was not that he hated; he was
beyond hatred, hatred is human. He seemed to have been born
without the gene that enables us to see souls in the
world—spirit-blind, as some are colorblind. When Derzhavin
looked at a Kazakh or a whale, he saw a wetdisk, an organic
computer, sheathed in a husk of irrelevant flesh. The body was an
unfortunate complication, and the spirit just a dream of foolish
men." Hypnotized
by his voice, the audience had reached a state of calm attention.
The clamoring to look behind me had grown weaker, and a genuine
interest in his story was beginning to form. The camera in me had
noticed that he'd twisted my question around so he could make the
point he wanted to make anyway. No one with any sense would go
into a News One interview without knowing how to do that; he'd be
slaughtered. It's something you expect your subjects to do, as
you expect a chessplayer to castle. So you plan for it, and
counter it. But for the time being, anything that calmed the
audience was fine with me. If I needed to pin him down I could do
it later, after people had started to switch back to their
sitcoms. For now, keeping the conversation on anything but whales
was more important. Still, I couldn't help but worry that
somewhere in our exchanges I would take a poisoned
pawn. "I'm
afraid I cut you off in mid-story last time," I said. "When we
left off, you—well, you were doing what we just did: seeing
the whale for the first time. How was it different for
you?" "In
appearance she has not changed much. She is older, but that is
not apparent to the untrained eye. I saw the same thing all of
you just saw. Except that I knew, the moment I saw her, that she
was a part of myself. I knew it not just because of the cable
that connected us, but because as I looked into her eye, I
was that eye, I was that wall of altered
flesh." He
paused, looking down at the carapace that covered his hand. The
audience noticed it then for the first time, and it held their
attention an instant; then they grew restless. Just when I might
have lost viewers, he said: "It is
most difficult to explain, this being two selves at once, to you
who are only one. You might as well try to explain your single
self to a computer, who has none at all. For those of your
viewers who speak Sapir—" He emitted a series of clicks and
whistles, like a whale song played too fast. "Which I suppose, if
pummeled into Russian, would be 'O my amphibious—no, my
hermaphrodite—soul.' And that is hardly useful.
Perhaps a metaphor will help. "Imagine
that I were to hold up a half-silvered mirror between our
faces—a sheet of glass painted with clear and reflective
squares alternating like a chessboard, on a scale too small to
see. Then you would see my face combine with your own, not
statically, but fading in and out, and sometimes merging. The
left eye of your reflection might appear, then disappear, to be
replaced with mine, while all the time the right eye was a fusion
of the two. If you looked at the mirror long enough, you might
learn to control this process, to choose whose features you would
see in which place; but at first, the faces would recombine
randomly. That was how it was for my mind and the whale's. Later
I would discover how to switch between visual cortices, but at
the time, I could only watch my field of vision slowly crossfade
back and forth. "When I
saw through her eyes, I saw myself—rather flattened, and
more scarred than I had guessed, but recognizable. Standing
behind me, I saw Aleksandr Derzhavin. And I remembered. He had
killed my mother before my eyes, and when the nets lifted me from
the water, he had sponged her blood off of my skin with his own
hands. He had brought me to this place, where I could only swim a
few strokes at a time before I reached a wall and had to turn. He
had put things into my skin that changed my shape, so that when I
moved in the water, it resisted me, as though I were a stranger
to it. He had changed my mind so that my thoughts became faint
furtive things among a babble of human voices I could barely
understand. And he had tied me to this pale, soft creature even
lumpier than myself, this ill-designed monstrosity that would
struggle in the water like a wounded fish, and whose mind, too,
struggled against the world, as against an enemy. "And
why not kill him? It had not occurred to me before; and now I
realized for the first time that this was strange. Derzhavin had
done something to me, more than the obvious. I could see
it— a black spot occluding the light. He had altered me to
keep me from conspiring against him. But being who he was, he had
not considered what the whale might feel. I could not hate him
myself, in that crippled body slumped inertly in a chair. But in
the mind of the whale, I hated him so purely that my hands and
flippers trembled at the sight of him. And the whale, who could
hate, but who was held back from the object of her hate by a pane
of glass, could plan against him by borrowing my unasked-for
oracular gift. "And so
I looked down at my hands, and concentrated on them, as I had
concentrated on the chessboard earlier, until I saw the shining
pathways start to spiral out. And slowly, taking our
time—for we had all the time in the world—my
whale-self and my man-self began to choose those futures in which
we would kill him." "What
did you do?" "At
first there was nothing we could do. I needed the use of my legs,
and he puttered over that for months, until my man-self was
simmering with impatience. Yet we waited. We waited until I could
walk, and then we waited again for him to begin to trust me.
Derzhavin was a suspenders-and-belt man from way back: even
though he had made me, so he thought, incapable of disobedience,
he still turned on my carapace only when he needed me. Other
times I sat inert in this same chair, in this very room, like a
child's toy set aside. "For a
long time, all the paths I saw were parallel. No matter what I
did, the result would be the same. But in the distance—
months or years, I couldn't tell—there was a branching with
a death entangled in it, like a skeleton that a tree's root has
embraced. I watched this branching all the time that my man-self
sat here motionless, and during the interminable chess games, and
in physical therapy, as one pair or another of hands supported my
flopping form in the shallow water. It seemed to get no closer.
At times I would have sworn it was receding. And then one day, at
the chessboard, I looked down to calculate a move, and when I
looked back up, the moment was at hand. "Derzhavin
had always had trouble getting lab assistants. His project was so
high-security that few could get clearance, and of those who
could, hardly any were interested in mere assistantship. But many
of his experiments had to be watched all night, so he made do
with what help he could get. Finally one evening, when he had
finished his work for the day and was just sitting down for
another session of that idiotic game he was obsessed with, the
graduate student who had served as his night assistant for the
past two years came in early, with a worried expression on his
face. They went into Derzhavin's office. I stared at the board,
blind to the chessmen, seeing only paths of light. "When
they came out, Derzhavin was falsely jovial. He ushered the
relieved young man out, telling him not to worry, he'd make do,
he'd make do. 'You'd be a fool even to think twice about such an
opportunity,' he said in parting, firmly squeezing the student's
hand. "When
the elevator doors had closed, he sighed and sat down at the
table again, pressing the back of his wrist to his forehead.
'Well,' he said to himself, 'I guess I'll have to train one of
the guards from the camp. Or one of the chimps from the lab,
whichever turns out to be smarter.' And there was the branching.
I had to draw his attention to me, just at the proper instant,
but without betraying any eagerness. So, without thinking the
position through, I recklessly advanced my bishop. 'Check,' I
said quietly, keeping my eyes on the board. "He
looked up at me slowly. 'Voskresenye,' he said, 'do you think you
could watch things for me at night?' "I
looked at the floor, as if afraid to meet his eyes. 'I will do as
you like,' I said. We began that night; and two weeks later, I
was able to explore the lab alone." The
audience was quiet enough for me to risk a pointed question: "So
that's where you got the information that went into your book."
(Here Keishi replayed the memory of the old book snapping shut.)
"You didn't just see those things done, did you? Or hear about
them? You did them." I
expected him to turn away. But he looked straight into my eye and
said with fierce determination: "Yes. Many of those things I did
myself, at his command, yes." "When
you could have stopped them." He
nodded. "Some of them. I could at least have put them off. I
certainly had more chance to do real good in Derzhavin's lab than
I ever had when I worked with the Underground Railroad. Yet I did
nothing." "You
don't sound as though you feel very guilty about it." "Maya
Tatyanichna," he said, "I have been watching people die for
longer than you have been alive, and I have seen many things, but
I have not yet seen the dead come back to life because their
murderer felt guilty." "You
call it murder, then." "Of
course I call it murder," he said irritably. "I bled them, cut
them to bits, and injected them with poisons. If you have some
other name for that, I would be glad to hear it." He
dispensed tea from the samovar on the table beside him, and
sipped briskly. I felt a sudden desire to laugh, which puzzled
the audience mightily. I don't know why; it just seemed funny
that, when inviting a camera into the hidden lair where he had
kept a whale in secret lo these many years, he should lay in
supplies against cottonmouth. It was altogether too prosaic for
the melodrama I had fallen into. His hands on the cup were quite
steady, I noted, but then you'd expect them to be. "How
did you kill Derzhavin?" "The
method I chose was poison," he said, resting his teacup on the
cage around his hand. "My physical therapy was not yet complete,
so I lacked the coordination for a more direct approach. But
Derzhavin was cautious. He never let me handle dangerous
chemicals unless he was there to watch me. It was agonizing: all
those colors and kinds of death passing through my hands every
day, and I could use them to kill anyone except the one
person who deserved it. At night, when I had the whole place to
myself, I could find nothing lethal; it was all locked up. I
began to read Derzhavin's books, looking for a solution. At last
I hit upon it: insulin. A poison I could refine from the very
bodies of the people that Derzhavin tortured and killed. The
symbolism would be almost as satisfying as the death
itself. "I
wasn't sure how much I'd need—strangely enough, most
medical books are geared toward saving people, not killing them;
short-sighted, I call it. But I assumed that what I could harvest
from twenty bodies would suffice. The fact that this would give
me a death count three times that of Jack the Ripper was a
regrettable, but, I thought, a necessary byproduct of this
plan. "From
then on, whenever I saw that a prisoner was scheduled for
surgery, I would come to him in the night and sit with him. I
tried to persuade them to tell me their stories; not an easy
task, once they began to realize that my approach meant death.
But sometimes they were so afraid that they would talk to
me—to anyone. If they would not, I studied the lines of
their faces and the calluses on their hands, trying to deduce who
they had been. And what I could not deduce, I
invented. "At
dawn I left them. Hurriedly, in the last hours before Derzhavin
arrived, I wrote down their stories and carefully hid the papers
away. "Derzhavin's
experiments did not have a high survival rate. However, on those
rare occasions when a patient might have pulled through, I made
sure that he did not. Then, again at night, I would begin those
portions of the autopsy that I was permitted to perform
myself—always most scrupulously, checking off 'autoimmune
complications' for the man who rejected his head transplant, and
'natural causes' for the woman whose heart attack might
conceivably have been induced by waking up to find a cable
trailing from her skull. And when the last of the paperwork was
done, I would remove the patient's pancreas and go to work. I
think nothing else has given me such joy as taking those lumps of
flesh and refining them, with hands and glass and centrifuge,
into a liquid as clear as the water that Katya had poured into my
head. "Finally,
after months of work, the drug was ready, and so was I. All I
needed was a clear shot at a vein. But that day he came in
worried, and he paced and would not sit down. I asked him if he
wanted tea, but he ignored the offer. I suggested a game of
chess— anything, if he would just hold still—but he
refused. Finally he said, 'Sit down, Voskresenye. You may as well
know what's happening.' It was the autumn of 2246." "The
Awakening had already happened." "Yes."
Voskresenye looked into the distance. "Of course I didn't see it.
I was down here, cut off; and though some of the prisoners may
have known, I was the last person they would have discussed it
with. But from Derzhavin's description, I thought it must have
been a little like the Rapture, the way the evangelists used to
talk about it on Guardian radio. Four people would be riding in a
car, and suddenly the driver would hit the brakes, get out, and
walk away, deaf to all shouts. A man would wake from sleep to see
his wife going out the door, carrying, for reasons only the Army
knew, a hockey mask, a spaghetti strainer, and a cuckoo clock.
They all walked out into the streets and mustered into clumps,
and each clump lifted up a memory cell and began to
march. "By
noon on that first day, the Army had seized the entire world
socket industry, and was drilling people fast enough to add ten
thousand recruits every hour. Every boat and plane in America was
on its way to the Eastern Hemisphere, its holds tessellated with
soldiers. By the time the Guardians found out what was happening,
they faced an army of thirty million soldiers without fear—
not along a border where they might be held back, but in every
city. America and Japan, with nearly a third of their populations
already socketed, were under Army control within a month. It was
a threat like nothing the Guardians had ever faced, or even
imagined. The Russian Heptarch, and he alone, still had a usable
army and a populace largely intact—but half the world was
marching to his doorstep. "And
through all this, Derzhavin was unaffected. His confidence in the
Guardians approached the status of religious faith; he had
assumed that they would find some way to stop the Army's
progress. But now, he said, he could not put off telling me any
longer. The order to evacuate had come. The Army was about to
reach Arkhangelsk. "All
this he told me as he paced around the room like Rilke's panther.
And as excited as I was to find that the Guardian regime might be
over, the first thing on my mind was to make that man stand
still. So I began to brew some tea, to calm his nerves, I said;
surely he would at least sit down to drink it. As I was making it
I asked him whether I would be evacuated. He looked away. 'I'll
do what I can,' he said sadly. 'You, I could take easily. But I
don't know what to do about the whale, and
without—' "
'We'll work it out somehow,' I said. 'Just sit down and relax.
It's no use trying to make plans while you're this
tense.' "At
last he sat down at the chess table. He fidgeted with the pieces
for a while, then began to set them up. 'Once more—for old
time's sake?' he said. " 'Of
course, if that's what you want,' I answered, taking the strainer
from the teapot. " 'I
suppose we'll have to euthanize the subjects and start fresh,' he
said regretfully. 'We can't move them all. But we'll still have
the data. Voskresenye, we must keep the data secure.' " 'Of
course we will,' I said. 'Don't worry about that now.' I stood
behind him, set down a cup and saucer on the gaming table, and
picked up the teapot. 'Think about—' And I poured the whole
pot of scalding tea onto his lap. He jumped up, driving his neck
against the needle I was holding behind him. I pressed the
plunger, and he was as good as dead. "Since
I hadn't hit a vein, the poison would take some time for its
effect. So I ran into the next room and locked myself into an
empty cell. In case he had an extra key I didn't know about, I
took out a knife that I had earlier secreted under the mattress;
I could not use it effectively, but in his insulin stupor, it
might scare him off. I expected him to come after me, to rage at
me, perhaps to call a guard—in which case I would die with
him. But for a long time he did not come. And when he did, it was
only to lean his head against the bars of the cage, look at me in
bewilderment, and ask 'Why?' He had no idea why I had killed him.
He had murdered thousands, and he had never believed in his heart
that somebody might take it amiss." "Wait a
minute," I said. "When we talked before, you said you were 'a
good deal more' to Derzhavin than just a lab assistant. What did
you mean by that?" "I
suppose I could have phrased that better. You imagined—
what? Steamy sexual encounters? Male bonding rituals? Fishing
trips?" He laughed, then grew serious, stroking the wires of his
hands. "I was his murderer. What relationship could be more
intimate?" To the
audience, all this was another revenge drama—something off
a soap channel. To them, protected from the action as they were,
Voskresenye's behavior might have seemed perfectly rational. But
in the chambers of my mind that were my own, I began to wonder
just how dangerous a man I was a thousand meters underground
with. "Derzhavin
died as I was trying to find words to answer him," Voskresenye
said. "And so I never got to ask him the question that had
haunted me since I awoke: What was I for? I knew the
purpose of his research: he was looking for a way to heal the
brain-damaged, and to resurrect the brain-dead. But you do not
perform basic research with whales; it is not cost-efficient. I
was designed to do something; and I do not know what, to
this day." "What
do you suspect?" "I
suspect," he said, "that I was to be a military strategist. I
suspect I was designed to outwit the Army. I suspect that is what
the chess games, and certain other tests, were for." "Then
why weren't you ever put into service?" "Yes—that
is the question: why was I not used, why was I not even given a
trial run? Why did I never face the Army, even in a simulation?"
He looked down at his carapace, his mouth curling in scorn at its
crudeness. "The Army was already coming," he said. "Perhaps time
did not permit." But there was no conviction in his
voice. "Where
did you wait out the Army?" I asked. "Down here?" "No;
that proved impossible. The Guardians were trying to stop the
Army with a scorched-earth policy, depriving it of what it needed
to survive. Nothing was to be left intact that it could use;
especially not people. It is, in fact, a miracle they left the
whale alive—they must have thought that she would be of no
use to the Army. Or perhaps they knew no way of killing her
without breaking the glass of her tank, and so drowning
themselves. Certainly they would have destroyed her if they had
known, as I know now, that the last beluga whale in captivity was
carried by one column of the army for twenty miles, and then, the
flesh being eaten up, discarded. "In any
case, they did not harm the whale. But the day after I killed
Derzhavin, they came down and herded all us prisoners upstairs.
We were gathered next to an enormous pit and taken, in groups of
thirty, to the edge of it to be shot. I saw ten groups of
prisoners killed as I waited for my own turn, and not one of them
made any motion of defiance. I couldn't understand it. They knew
they were about to die; why didn't they run, make the fig at
them, anything? I tried to suggest to the man standing next to me
that we should all charge them together, that they could never
get us all. He only shrank from me, as I suppose anyone would
have. But I determined that when my own time came, I would not go
quietly. "The
next time they counted off, I was one of the thirty. I looked
down into the pit as we marched up to it: it was a long way to
fall, five or six metres. But I couldn't run, not now, nor could
I hope to reach the Guardians before they shot me. So I stood
there, crouching down a little, and watched their trigger
fingers. The instant before they fired, I jumped backward into
the pit. "My
first discovery was that human bodies make a much harder landing
surface than you'd expect. I was sure I had broken at least three
bones. But it was not bones I was worried about. When I tried to
move, I confirmed my worst fear: my exoskeleton was damaged. I
could move my arms, but my legs were useless. "Dragging
my legs behind me like a beached merman, I crawled down the slope
of bodies. I had only gotten a few metres when I heard gunshots
again. The falling bodies set off an avalanche, which carried me
the rest of the way down the slope. I was out of the
way—safe, until another avalanche, or until the Guardians
decided to set the pit on fire. But my arms were pinned. I
couldn't move." Voskresenye
looked over my head at the whale. The audience had shrunk a
little and was easier to resist, but not by much. I still had to
fight the impulse to turn around. "I
still forget sometimes," he said, "and call my two selves 'she'
and 'I,' as though we were separate. There are some things that
Russian is just not designed to express, and you, alas, do not
speak Sapir. I had better say man-self and whale-self; that is
cumbersome, but accurate. So: as my man-self lay trapped in the
pit, my whale-self was still in the tank here, trying to break
free." "From
the tank? How?" "It's
not closed, like a fish tank—how did you think he got her
down here, on the elevator? This whole complex is built under the
continental shelf. The tank goes up some hundreds of metres, and
ends with an adjustable vent set just above the ocean floor. If I
could just break through it, I would be free. But my air tube was
connected to the side of the tank, and quite short. In order to
reach the vent, I would have to pull it out, and I had no way of
putting it back in. If I tried to break through and failed, I
would drown. But when my man-self got pinned, I knew I had to
make the attempt. No Guardian was going to take the time to feed
me. It would be better to drown than starve. "I
slowly filled my lungs from the trickle of air in the tube, then
turned onto my back and pulled. When the tube wrenched itself
from my blowhole, I dove to the very bottom of the tank and swam
straight upward. But at the last moment I flinched, and took the
impact on my back instead of my head. The blow was diffused; the
grate was loosened, but not broken. We dove again. My whale-self
was calm, but my man-self was in terror that we would drown. Then
I began to wonder if the sense of suffocation I was feeling came
from my man-self. There might have been another avalanche; I
might be dying. At the last instant, before we hit the grate, I
switched back to my human body. "I was
not dying, or at least not any faster than I had been before, and
I did not hear gunshots. Perhaps they had stopped. When I went
back into the whale, we had made it through the vent and were
shooting up toward the air. "I had
no idea what the surface of the water should look like from
below, so I suspected nothing; but the whale knew, halfway up,
what we would find. It was already autumn. The ocean around
Arkhangelsk had begun to freeze. Above us, where the sky should
have been, there was only an expanse of shadow, which, as we
approached it, turned to white. "Panicking,
our lungs aching, we cast about for an opening in the ice. Time
and again, we would see a shaft of daylight in the distance, only
to find it filtering through a crevice too small to breathe
through. Finally, just when I was sure that our lungs would
explode, we came to a patch of thin ice and, smashing our head
against it, managed to break through. We gulped air into our
lungs, sank, then surfaced and breathed again. Nothing but ice
was around us; the water was bitterly cold; our chance of
surviving was almost nil— and none of it mattered. I wept
with joy, the tears falling onto the corpse my face was pressed
against. I was free. "From
Arkhangelsk by ocean, there's nowhere to go but north,"
Voskresenye continued. "It's a good nine hundred kilometers up
through the White Sea and around the tip of Norway before you can
turn around south. The ice would get worse for a long time before
it got better. Besides that, part of the whale's fluke had long
ago been lost to gangrene, and she was bleeding where the edges
of the vent had raked against her side, and after so many years
of captivity, she was not in shape for such a journey. All these
things occurred to me as I dove back down into the freezing water
to search for the next air hole. But what stopped me was
something quite different. The radio link that connected my two
selves was not strong enough to stretch beyond a few tens of
kilometers. If I sent the whale past that limit, she would be
separated from my man-self—and he would be reduced to
idiocy, unable to rejoin her. "For it
is so hard, you see, to be two selves, for all its advantages.
One can be attacked through the other, or you can be separated.
It is giving up a hostage to the world. Live single: that is my
advice to you. Or if you must be two selves, keep them in one
body." "I'll,
ah, I'll be sure to keep that in mind," I said. He
nodded. "See that you do." He
sipped his tea again before continuing his story. "For three days
my mind dwelled in the whale, as my body lay among the dead. And
on the third day, the Unanimous Army came to
Square-Mile-at-Arkhangelsk. I could see nothing from where I lay,
but I heard them coming for hours, with their ragged, shuffling
march. Finally I heard them climb into the pit, by the hundreds,
walking on the bodies. I was so cold and hungry that I considered
calling out to them, letting them absorb me, anything, if only
they would keep me warm. But I changed my mind when I began to
hear jingling and ripping sounds all around me. They were
stripping the dead. "The
Army worked its way across the pit to where I lay. One of the
soldiers—a girl of sixteen, wearing a peacoat over a thin
summer dress—lifted up the man that had been lying across
my arms. As she held him upright, another soldier, elderly, clad
in rags, turned out his pockets. And something hard—a coin,
a pocket knife—fell from his pocket and struck my
temple. "In the
movies, I'd have held stoically still, to fool the Army. Well,
you try it sometime. Of course I jumped; I would have jumped
more, if so much of me hadn't been paralyzed; and I very nearly
cried out, too. The Army took no notice. As you have found,
Andreyeva, against an unimaginative enemy any fool can be a
hero." I kept
my mind blank, relying on Keishi to screen out any furtive
thoughts of the Postcops. I should have known he'd
know. "When
the man had been thoroughly searched, the girl took a soda bottle
from her pocket, upended it into her palm, and daubed his face
with a red, stinking mixture: the done-paint. By the time they
were finished, the whole camp would be covered with this goo,
whose stench would tell everyone for miles around that the Army
need not come again. As the two soldiers walked away, I turned my
head a little to watch them go. They climbed out of the pit on
the backs of other soldiers, who had formed a human ladder up the
side. Many of those leaving the pit were carrying bodies—I
presumed for food. "The
next soldier that came by lifted me up from behind, just as the
other man had been lifted. I went limp, hoping they wouldn't know
I was alive. The man who came to strip me was a middle-aged
Japanese fellow in the remains of an expensive business suit. He
turned out my pockets, which of course held nothing, then reached
his hand into my shirt—and paused. He laid his hand against
my forehead, then pressed his cheek to mine. The warmth of my
body had given me away. He reached his hand toward my neck, and
for a second I was sure he was going to strangle me; but no, he
only wanted to feel my pulse. When that was done, he examined my
socket, turning his head to see it from several angles, with a
motion that reminded me of robot welders. He turned and made
several quick hand signals, then walked away toward the
back-bridge, leaving me suspended. "The
next soldier passed without looking, and the next after that,
until I began to hope they had forgotten me. But then one stopped
in front of me and stood there motionless, waiting. In the
distance, a black ring was thrown down into the pit and passed
from hand to hand. At last it came to the soldier before me. It
was a coiled cable. He was going to infect me with the
Army. "As he
unwound the cable, I flexed my fingers. That part of my carapace
still worked, yes, but there might yet be subtle damage, and
besides, the battery was almost dead. I couldn't hope to
overpower him. He inserted one end of the cable into his temporal
socket, and then, as if relishing my terror, gradually extended
the other end toward me. Just when he was about to slide the plug
home, I blocked it with one hand, and with the other put the plug
into my wrist socket. I reached my hand into his brain and tore
it away from the Army mind. "For a
moment he was Michael Arnason, aged thirty-four, from Sussex,
England, a solicitor's clerk, who had gone to sleep one night
beside his wife and woken in this pit of death alone—but
that was only for a moment. Then he shuddered, and the glimmer of
selfhood went out of his eyes. Moving jerkily, he reached into
his trenchcoat, took out a bottle of done-paint, and poured it
over my head. When the soldier behind me smelled it he let me
drop, but the thing that had been Arnason grasped me under the
arms, threw me over his shoulder, and carried me up the ladder of
backs. As soon as we were out of the pit, I turned him toward the
setting sun, and we began the long walk westward to our meeting
with the whale." Seventeen
Fallen Like Lightning "You
said—" I conferred with the Net briefly " '—None of
it mattered. I was free.' Yet you came back here." "What
else could we do? There aren't many places you can keep a
crippled whale." "Why
couldn't she stay in the ocean?" "Derzhavin's
modifications made her dependent on electronics for her life;
from that, nothing could free her. Without maintenance, she
wouldn't have lived out the year. One of her socket seals would
have been torn away, perhaps; it would take no more than that.
And then, too, Derzhavin had converted portions of her brain to
uses they were not intended for—a cloverleaf with an
unenhanced whale would have been of little use. Some of the
things he took from her would have been crucial to survival in
the wild. So we waited, I repairing my exoskeleton, and she
finding what food she could. And next summer, when the ice was
gone and the ocean warm, my selves began our separate journeys to
Arkhangelsk, home." Time?
I asked
Keishi. "All
the time in the world, girl. You think they're going to cut this
off? But Maya, News One wants another look at the
whale." Then
let them turn off the feedback. "I can
turn it down to one-quarter for you." Not
enough, I said.
Tell them to go to hell. "I
don't think that's such a good idea," she said. "When you started
pulling record ratings, Netcast became remarkably unhelpful to
the Post police. If you lose viewers...” I get
the picture, I
said. One-quarter it is. When I
felt my limbic system settle down, I said, "Let me apologize to
all of you for that delay. News One has told me that you would
all like another look at the whale. I'm going to do it, but
please, remain as calm as possible. Otherwise you'll have to wait
till we can get a robot camera in here to film it. Come on,
people, it's just a dolphin with gland problems—nothing to
get excited about." "Instead
of just looking at her," Voskresenye said with quiet amusement,
"would you like to talk to her?" "I
thought I was." "Not
exactly—any more than you're talking to Stepan Sornyak. I
am a fusion of the two, a compromise—'O my negotiated soul'
is in the Sapir, too. Thanks to his injuries, my man-self cannot
be separated from that union, but the whale can. I have only to
release the portions of her mind I occupy—to see myself in
the half-silvered mirror." "How
long will that take?" "An
instant. I will appear to have fainted; do not be alarmed. Once
the artificial neuromodulators have been stilled, it will take
some few seconds for her neurons to reorganize into their natural
circuits—such, that is, as Derzhavin did not destroy
completely." Then another thought seemed to strike him: "If you
like, you can turn over the Netcast to her for a while. She can
output telepresence. I'm sure your audience would be interested
to find out what it's like to be a whale." The
audience was far too interested, and Voskresenye was far too
casual. I didn't believe for a second that he'd just thought of
the idea. But you
don't spend thirty years as a camera and turn up your nose at
something like that. It's just not in the programming. "All
right," I said warily. "How do I wake you when we're
done?" "A good
hard shaking will generally do it," he said as he closed his
eyes. I
turned around, panning my eyes along the floor so as to sneak up
on the sight. My mind was trying to go in all directions at once,
like a chariot drawn by eight cats. But at least I could control
it. I raised my eyes to the whale. Instinctively,
my mind sought analogies. It's something I do as a
camera—it gives people something to quote over breakfast.
This time nothing would come. She was simply herself, beyond all
comparison, the metaphor for big. "I
don't know how to do this," I said. "Can you hear me?" She
swam closer and put her eye up to the side of the tank. "Are you
the one?" said a voice through the speaker, startling me with its
pure contralto. Female or not, I had expected a resonant
bass. "I
don't know what you mean." "The
one..." Her eye closed, then opened. "The one with the world in
her head?" "Oh.
You mean, because I'm a camera? Yes, I suppose I am." She
swam back and forth in the tank several times, her broken fluke
and flippers struggling. Then her moistware scraped the glass,
and her eye stopped right in front of my face. "What time is it?"
she asked, her voice betraying a hint of eagerness. The
question was so absurdly mundane that I was startled into
answering. Uh, Keishi? Time? No
answer. Mirabara! Still
nothing. She must be deep in trance, I thought, mixing the
Netcast and keeping the audience at bay. I
touched the Net myself and said, "Almost five thirty." "How
near is six o'clock?" "Half
an hour," I said. Would she know how long that was? "Not
long." The
whale drifted away without further comment. "Has it
come to that?" I said, trying to entice her back. "Do even whales
have schedules? Is there somewhere that you need to
be?" She
rolled onto her side, revealing pale ventral grooves like the
whorls of a thumbprint. "If you are the one," she said, as though
in sleep, "you are the why that I am here. Where you go...”
She broke off and was still for long moments, considering. Then
she approached the glass again. "In the sleeping is an
ocean." "I'm
sorry?" "In the
sleeping," she said, "I swim ... where the tangle webs, and where
the colors change...." "I'm
sorry, I don't—oh. Of course." I remembered the dark cloud
that Voskresenye had been tethered to in grayspace. "You mean in
the Net?" "Yes,
that," she said. "What happens to a whale that swims in a
tangle, if she is a very small whale?" "I
suppose she'd die." She
slapped the glass with her flipper—hard, it looked like,
though there was no sound. "If you are the one," she said, "then
where six o'clock is, I will—what you said." "Why?" She
closed her eyes and was silent a long time before answering. "I
fell in the man the way a whale falls in a dream," she said, "a
dream where the water will not hold me up, and I am moving my
fluke all the time, the way the sharks do that are not such small
sharks.... I am in this dream of being a man because I wish to be
a man, in order to ... to make die...." "Derzhavin,"
I supplied. "That.
Yes. It is a dream come out of hating. I will swim in this small
sea no farther." "But
when the man sleeps ... in the sleeping," I said, picking up her
catchphrase, "you aren't here. You swim in the network. You're
free then." "The
net... work is an admirable ocean." The great eye closed again.
"But it is not mine." She began to drift away. "Durachok,"
I said. "Ivan Durachok." "What
is that?" "Ivan
Durachok—he's the hero in a story I remember from when I
was a child. Why wasn't that on the moistdisk, Mirabara?" No
reply. "I don't remember very well. Let's see. "Ivan
Durachok is out riding his hunchbacked pony, and he comes to the
ocean. And he meets a whale who's crying out in pain. He looks
up, to see why she's crying, and he sees that some peasants have
set up a village on the whale's back. They've built their houses
right into her bones, and are ploughing her back to plant
crops. "Ivan
Durachok says to the whale, I will free you from this agony, if
only you will dive down into the ocean, and find the ring.
Because he's looking for a ring, you see. There's a king who
wants to marry—some woman, I don't know what she is, I
think she's some kind of foreign princess. And the princess says
to the king, I will marry you, but only if you find my ancestral
ring, which was lost far beneath the ocean. And the king sends
Ivan Durachok to go find it." "Du-ra-chok,"
the whale repeated. "Yes.
Ivan Durachok—Ivan the Idiot—that was his name, yes.
And the whale agrees to find the ring. So Durachok shouts out to
all the peasants, Get off! There's going to be a great storm, and
you'll all be drowned. And they believe him, they all get off.
Except, um, I think there's one who refuses to go, who stays
there, ploughing. But Ivan Durachok says to the whale, Go ahead,
dive, find the ring. And the man who would not leave is drowned
in the ocean." "Drowned,"
the whale said emphatically. "In the ocean." "Yes.
And the whale—stop that," I said to the audience, brushing
away tears. "I told you people to be calm. —The whale dives
down. She finds the ring and brings it up. And she says to Ivan
Durachok, The reason the city was built on my back, it was a
punishment from God, because once, once long ago, I swallowed up
a whole fleet of ships." "Small
ships," the whale said. "Well.
It's just a fairy tale. Yes, all right, if you want, the ships
were very small. They were only the size of a pomegranate seed,
and that was how she swallowed them. And the whale departs, she's
whole again, and Durachok goes back to the kingdom with the ring.
And he and the pony kill the king somehow—they convince him
that if he jumps into boiling water his youth will be restored,
and he does it and he dies. I never really understood that part.
And Ivan Durachok and the princess are married. And I guess
that's the end of it." She
floated motionless, making no reply. "I
didn't tell that very well, I know. I don't know why I even
tried. I don't suppose even a human would—" "Marriage
is a thing in ending stories," she said suddenly. "Yes,"
I said, taken aback. "I suppose so. In fairy tales,
sure." "Then,"
she boomed out with an air of finality, "an ocean is in dreaming,
and no city is only real." And she swam up out of sight, leaving
me to wonder whether we'd communicated anything at
all. Just
when I was about to turn away, she sank into view and said, "What
time is it?" "Six is
not far," I said. "Six isn't far at all." For
once my feelings and the audience's coincided. I pressed my face
against the glass, glad of its coolness. "I will be sorry not to
have known you," I said. She was
silent. I thought she would say nothing more. Then the voice from
the speaker returned, one last time. "Those who wake...”
she began tentatively. She paused so long that I was not sure
whether or not she was starting a new sentence. At last she said:
"... do not regret the dream." Keishi?
I
subvoked. Can you patch in the telepresence from the
whale? There
was no answer, but my Net-rune went dark. And
turn off the feedback for me, I
said. Please? Keishi? The
next thing I remember, I was sitting on the floor, my arms
wrapped around me, rocking back and forth and saying over and
over, "Will you turn it off now. Will you turn it
off." And no,
I haven't watched the disk. I haven't and I'm not going to, and I
really don't want to talk about it. I just hoped that the last
whale on earth might be something more important than a cheap
thrill for every wirehead in Russia. I know—I should have
known better. I'm not going to watch it, that's all. I felt
my Net-rune light again, but decided not to stand up until the
world in my head made me. And, strangely, the audience was quiet.
Perhaps after the whale they needed some rest, I thought. I
stayed sitting there, with my eyes closed, until I heard
Voskresenye say: "When
we first met, you asked me why we don't remember the Square
Miles. Would you like to hear the answer?" To my
surprise, the audience did not protest against this change of
subject. I stood up, as slowly as I could, and turned my eyes on
him. "You
were on the right track," he said, "when you compared the
Calinshchina to the Holocaust, and to the Terror-Famine. Your
error lay in asking what the difference was between these two
events. There are many differences, but none is essential. You
should have asked, not about the difference in events, but about
the difference in ourselves." "And
what's that?" I asked, still standing. "Why,
that the Holocaust and Terror-Famine both occurred long before
telepresence." "The
invention of telepresence is an event, isn't it? I thought this
was a difference in us." "What
is a medium like telepresence but the extension—no, the
definition—of ourselves? Are we, who live things at
a distance, the same species as our ancestors, who could hear of
events in the next town only by going there? If you met a person
from that time, would you have any more in common with him than
with a whale, or with a chimpanzee? You have traveled to meet me
with better than seven-league boots; and I have done more math
this morning than Pythagoras, and Euclid, and all Ancient Greece
and Rome. Surely, if we are human, they were animals; and we are
a race of gods, if they were men." "Yes,"
I said, and I sat down in the chair he had provided for me,
putting my back, once again, to the whale. "I've felt that, too.
That it changes what we are." "Indeed
it does, Maya Tatyanichna. It changes the central fact of the
human condition: that each of us lives behind one set of eyes,
and not another; that our own pain is an agony, and another's
pain only an abstraction we believe in by an act of faith. It
makes impossible all the sins of locality, all the errors
that arise from being prisoned in one body and no other—as
racism, sexism, classism, and of course and especially
nationalism." "The
Africans seem to manage," I said. "Come
now, Andreyeva, don't be so historically naive. The Africans are
not, and never were, one people. They are fifty nations and a
thousand tribes, and it is telepresence that has stitched them
into one. His-Majesty-In-Chains has built a wall around his
country, yes, but not to keep people out. It is to keep himself
in. The Wall of Souls at Suez is the sword in Tristan's bed:
His-Majesty wants desperately to reach across, for he so loves
the world that he would not part with a village of it. But he
knows he would destroy the thing he touched. He remembers Egypt,
and he knows." "And he
turns away white immigrants because they don't match the
divan." "He
does not tell us what his plans for us are," Voskresenye said.
"But I assure you that he does not turn us away out of
callousness. His-Majesty cannot not empathize, but often,
even so, he cannot help. Why do you think he names himself
His-Majesty-in-Chains? Fools and children think it
is because he is wired to the world's pain, but that is a lash,
not a shackle. The chains are what he locks around himself to
keep him from doing more to ease that pain—knowing it would
only be worse in the end if he did. But he is patient. The chains
give him no choice but to be patient. And he knows that, in the
fullness of time, superior technology will tell." "Right.
Okay. So His-Majesty is just, and people around the world are
united by telepresence. So—" "Ah,
but not all people. Some are united, and some separated.
We are pulled toward cameras, but away from people that we know
in our own lives. Can you watch telepresence with your friend,
your wife, your child? Not truly—you may be in the same
room, but you are not together. Each is locked in his own
dream, even if all are tuned to the same channel. Like movies
during the binaural fad: a theater full of people wearing
headphones, all hearing the same thing, but separately. And so
telepresence causes the triumph of the distant over the
near." "I seem
to recall another medium that two people couldn't use together.
You could look over someone's shoulder if you wanted, but no two
people used it at the same rate or called up the same images. If
I remember right, they were called newspapers." "Not
the same thing at all, Maya Tatyanichna. Reading is a restricted
and an artificial activity. It does not compete with reality
because it is nothing like reality. No one could be tempted to
think that what happens on the page is more real than daily
life." I
thought of the books in cages, and silently disagreed. "But
telepresence," he continued, "is life, except in one
respect: it adds a sixth sense, the telepathic, which exists
nowhere else. When the telepresence is switched off, you are
imprisoned again in your eyes and your ears; the intimacy of mind
touching mind is gone. "We are
like men forced to walk about in darkness," he continued, "except
in one chamber where our eyes are uncovered. If the color blue
were not found in that chamber, we would never know that it
existed; and if in the chamber all men were well-fed, we might
forget that there is hunger in the world. The chamber would
impress itself upon us so forcefully that nothing else seemed
real. And so it is. Telepresence is a chamber in which a new
sense, more important than sight, is uncovered. What happens
outside that chamber barely exists. And so you see, if what we
call reality is to persist, everything must be brought
into that chamber." "That's
what
you're leading up to? A praise of cabling?" I subvoked to Keishi:
I went through all this shit for a cabling commercial I could
have downloaded in Leningrad? "Cabling
is, and will always be, a marginal solution," he said. "The
common man will not expose himself that way, nor will he bother
with amateur emotions, when he has six thousand channels of
slickly post-produced ones at his beck and call. You know as well
as I do that the cable results in hate more often than
not." "And
that's not a sin of locality?" "It is
a sin of nonlocality; it is the agony of solitary animals at
being caged together." "What?" "The
mind, Andreyeva. It pulls away from other minds that are too
near. This is not the same as acting blindly because it knows no
other creature than itself; it is the opposite." "Look,
I don't think the audience is quite getting this," I said—
and hoped Keishi would screen out the lie; I had not felt
incomprehension, or anything else, from the audience in some
time. "Give us an example. Let's go back to where we started: the
Calinshchina. Isn't that distant enough to seem real? It's in the
chamber—it comes in through a socket." "But
there is no telepresence of it. Telepresence of people talking
about it, to be sure, but that is not the same. After all,
watching a camera interview someone is no better than talking to
her yourself; talk is talk, whatever door it comes in. Bringing a
radio into the chamber does not help you see what is
outside." "You
were in a Square Mile," I said. "If you think telepresence from
survivors is so important, why haven't you volunteered
yourself?" "If it
were only a question of volunteering, there would be thousands of
hours of disk; there were enough survivors to produce it. Instead
there are no disks at all. Is that not suggestive?" "Suggestive
of what?" "That
the Weavers will not permit it to be transmitted." My
spine stiffened. Oh God, Keishi, tell me you screened that
out, I subvoked. She didn't answer. I prayed it was only
because she needed her full concentration to edit the
Netcast. "That's
ridiculous," I said to Voskresenye, my voice betraying the fear I
felt. "The Weavers wouldn't do something like that, even if they
wanted to. And they wouldn't want to. They hate Guardians and
Guardianism—everybody knows that." "They
allow people to hate the Guardians a judicious amount. Just
enough that no one will try to emulate them. Not enough that
someone might begin to think the Army was justified." "We're
here to talk about the Guardians, not the Weavers. What you're
saying is completely off the subject." "But
they are all one subject," Voskresenye said. "I warned you what
would happen if you persisted in pulling up tangler webs, Maya
Tatyanichna. The Guardians brought about the Army, and the Army
caused the Weavers; you will never understand them until you
consider them together." "The
Weavers," I said desperately, "protect us from something like the
Army happening again. Do you want a Net full of mind
control viruses?" "Assuredly
not," he said. "But that is exactly what the Weavers have given
us." Mirabara,
cut this off, now! I
subvoked. No
answer. But there was a quick pulse of fear from the
audience—not in response to what he'd said; the timing
wasn't right. It happens sometimes with large audiences: random
fluctuations in the viewers' emotional states happen to coincide,
are amplified, flow back and forth from camera to audience in
waves. If the screener can't take care of it, you're supposed to
take your camera chip out before someone gets hurt. I lifted my
hand to my head. But
being on the Net was my lifeline. Keishi had said as much. And it
had only been one pulse, not the harmonic oscillations that could
rend a camera's mind. It might still be all right. My hand
wavered in the air, then fell. "Oh
yes," Voskresenye continued, oblivious, "it is very easy to
understand Weavers. What would you do, if you had just
lived through the Army? Wouldn't you tremble in fear that it
might return—it, or something far worse than it? For be
assured, Maya Tatyanichna, nothing so innocuous as the Army could
prevail today. The Army's use of human minds was about as
efficient as using a Dahlak to crack walnuts; with a billion
neurons at its disposal, it carved out as many as are in the
brain of a rather bright ant. A modern virus, better written and
more catholic in its tastes, might subvert the entire
soul—and from such a state, there can be no
salvation. "Thinking
such thoughts, would you not do anything it took to prevent the
spread of viruses? And how can you protect the Net, without
monitoring everything that goes on in it? So you create screeners
to monitor cameras. And filters to monitor screeners. And Weavers
to monitor filters. And locks and signatures and needle-eyes and
firewalls, to keep the whole system in place. Soon you have built
a celestial bureaucracy of humans and machines and cyborgs, like
orders of angels." "All of
which," I said, "is very necessary." "I did
not say that it was not. Many things are necessary, and yet evil,
or inevitably lead to evil. I understand the temptation of
Weavers; it is one beside which any apple pales. Imagine that the
Net, the very world-mind, is stretched out between your hands,
like a cat's cradle. You can see every twist and tangle, every
unaesthetic knot that leads to suffering. Will you stand there,
and watch, and do nothing? His-Majesty-in-Chains does; but then
His-Majesty is not a man, though he has a man in his heart, as
you might have a seed in your stomach, or as a church might have
a corpse in its foundation, or a bridge be built on bones. The
Weavers are human—all too human—and they will never
put themselves in chains. And so they do what you would do, what
any of us would do. They move their fingers—" he mimed
making a cat's cradle "—they move their fingers, and the
patterns change." "Everyone
knows that Weavers keep things off the Net that would make people
go into overload," I said. "Oh
yes, and perhaps for a brief time they did nothing more. But
observe how easy a descent it is, Maya Tatyanichna. First,
viruses that control minds; certainly we don't want those. Then,
feelings so intense they might cause damage to the audience.
Then, things which simply disturb people. Finally, anything which
might be a bad influence—for after all, if you control the
world-soul, anything that you exclude does not exist. And so the
sentinel of viruses comes to control the postproduction of the
human heart." He folded his hands into a spire, and slowly
brought them to his chest. "And that is where we come to your
case, Maya Tatyanichna: you, and the young woman with whom you
compromised yourself." "You
son of a bitch, you just killed me." I sprang out of my chair,
and for a moment I felt I might actually hit him. "My God, you
told the whole Net—" "And
what was the Net's reaction, Maya Tatyanichna?" I
stopped short, relief flooding my body. The Net had been silent.
Oh, Keishi, you just made the save of the century. When we get
out of this— "You
may as well turn off that damned flashcube, Maya Tatyanichna; no
one is watching. When you turned over your signal to the whale, I
took the liberty of not returning it. What is going out on News
One comes from me." Sorrow
seized my throat, and my tear glands fired so suddenly it made my
whole face ache. The world in my head had been plunged into
grief, like a hand plunged into boiling water. Then, just as
quickly, they were calm again. "What
are you doing to them?" "Oh,
nothing of consequence. Only giving them their souls back." He
looked at the chair significantly, but I remained standing. "Turn
the camera back on and go to disk, if you please. This needs to
be told, and I don't want to have to trust your
memory." Warily,
I sat down across from him and lit my rune. All right, Keishi,
let's give this bastard his last words. Go to
disk. Keishi
did not reply. "What
have you done with my screener?" I said. "She
has not been harmed ... by me. You will see her later, I expect.
Now go to disk; I have a statement." "Why
should I cooperate with you?" He
raised his eyebrows in exasperation. "For truth, justice, and the
future of humanity. And because it will prove you were just an
unwitting dupe, when you toss my carcass to the
Weavers." So it
would. I set the camera chip to record onto the moistdisk,
overwriting the research on whales. Whoever viewed the disk might
find Voskresenye's words surrounded by a cloud of strange
cetacean associations, but then, that was only appropriate. "All
right. Now I'd like an explanation for what you've
done." "As I
said before, your own example is most
illustrative—" I
switched off my Net-rune. "What the hell do you think you're
doing? One more word about me, and this disk goes in the
samovar." He
stared at me, as if gauging my resolve. "Very well," he said at
last, inclining his head. Warily,
I turned the rune back on. "As I
said before, the Weavers have progressed through all possible
stages of censorship, including many which would once have been
unthinkable—such as the suppressor chip, the censorer of
souls." His
eyes strayed to my forehead; I kept my mind carefully
blank. "Do you
have any idea how much different things are in Africa, where the
Net is free?" he continued. "They've changed so much, it's like
another world. But here, here in the Fusion, things are much the
same as they were fifty years ago. The Net should be the
most democratic form of communication that the world has ever
known. It should replace the poor bumblings of human
compassion with perfect electronic sympathy—instant,
universal understanding, available to everyone. It might have
brought about a true and lasting peace. But instead, it is being
used to enforce an official vision of humanity." Regretfully,
I passed up the aside on peace—too easy a target— and
homed in on the essential. "There are a lot of different people
on the Net," I said. "Who's missing?" "Animals,"
he said. "What?" "Animals.
Think about it. We have the means to span the greatest gap there
is, not just between one human and another, but between us and
other forms of life. We could reproduce, in the human mind, the
circuits that enable dolphins to use sonar, or pigeons to come
home. We could know what it is like to be a bat, a whale, a
sparrow—but only a few clever hackers do so, and only until
they are caught by the Weavers. That alone should raise grave
questions in your mind." "So," I
said dryly, "aside from our furred and feathered friends, who
exactly is it that's, ah, underrepresented?" "Drunks,"
he said, as if at random. "Addicts, wireheads. The desperate and
the dissipate. Or for that matter, Christians, Muslims—we
can't have people going about believing in Hell; it causes ever
so much anguish. And just try to find a homosexual. You'll
search in vain for years." Still
keeping my mind blank, I let my eyes stray to the
samovar. "I must
confess," he said, ignoring me, "it is a most delicious irony.
Christians and homoamorists, those age-old enemies, living in
peace at last—not because they have at last resolved their
ancient quarrel, but because they no longer remember the grounds
of it: lost souls, united in the brotherhood of amnesia. The lion
shall lie down with the lamb, because we've told them they're
both rabbits." I
thought back to the last thing that did not apply to me, and
answered that. "You gave me a list of people that are never seen
on the Net. What if I tell you that I've seen all of them? News
One cameras have interviewed wireheads, for example. More than
once. I think you've been watching the wrong
channels." "Oh
yes," he said bitterly, "the exhibition interview. Here they are,
the ones you never see—talk to them, look at them, pinch
them!" "I
don't see the problem." He
exploded: "Don't you see, it does not matter if we look at them!
We must look in them! The Fusion will never be free until
the cameras become dissidents or the dissidents become cameras.
It is not enough to send out cameras to see and hear them; sight
and sound are dying media—dying, if not dead already. We
must feel them. We must know their thoughts. Who is
missing, you ask me? All of us are missing. Everyone but a
few thousand cameras—" "Tens
of thousands." "What
difference does it make? They're all the same. It's the same
viewpoint you see, every time, whether it's a soap-channel camera
whose brain-makeup paints her as the banal parody of a ravished
bride, or a News One camera interviewing a crazy old man with a
whale in his basement. They are all clones of each
other." "I am
not a clone," I said. "No,"
he said, suddenly thoughtful. "You're not. You're the stepsister
who cut off her heel to fit the glass slipper—or rather,
her brainstem to fit the glass skull. But the blood told, Maya
Tatyanichna. The blood told, as blood will." "Erase
that," I said aloud. Horus appeared behind Voskresenye's head,
nodded briefly, was gone. "Oh,
all right then," Voskresenye said, highly amused. "I will give
you the generic version that you seem to crave. It is very
simple. Anything in a Netcaster that doesn't conform to the
official vision of humanity is screened out. If it can't be
screened out, it is filtered out. And if it is too big to screen
or filter, they put a cable in your head and tear it out of
you." "And
what do you think you can do about it?" "In the
Netcast that your unfortunate audience is presently viewing, I
have recorded all the ways in which the Army's vision of humanity
is enforced. And I have gathered in everything that is dangerous
and messy and petty and horrible and human, to give it back. I
have tracked down every form of vice and dissidence—all
save one. And that too I think I will manage before
long." Unnerved
by his expression, I said, "What good do you think you can
possibly do? People will just turn it off." "Oh,
Andreyeva, I had thought better of you," he said scornfully.
"What I have shown the world is terrible and painful, parts of
it; but it is something new—or rather, something so
old and so long-forgotten that it will seem new. There are those
who will listen." "Not if
Netcast shuts it off, they won't," I said. "In fact, they must
already have shut it off. I'm hardly getting any
feedback." "I am
certain that our audience is dwindling by the second," he said
coolly. "It matters not at all. The whale will ensure that it
gets out." I
leaned forward. "You mean that the whale can
control—" "No,
no. I don't mean the whale herself will do it; I mean the idea of
the whale, the hysteria about the whale. This is the Net-cast of
the year—you know that. Every advertiser wants his viruses
in it, and every distributor wants the fees for carrying the
viruses; they are fighting News One even now. They will fail in
most places, but somewhere, in some obscure corner, they will
succeed. And if it is seen by one person, it will be seen by
everyone. Anything connected with the whale will be distributed.
The demand will find it—even if it has to be ripped out of
your head, Maya Tatyanichna." I felt
a wave of fear that wasn't feedback. "What good will it do?" I
asked, more plaintively than I had meant to. "So people feel what
it's like to be—a Christian, whatever—once. They'll
only forget. A year from now, it will all be as though it never
happened." "But I
have also shown them how homogeneity is enforced; and that is
something they will not forget so quickly." "They
already know that," I hissed. "Do you think there's a person in
Russia who doesn't fear the Weavers?" "Resentment
gains by being given a focus," he said. I started to interrupt,
but he cut me off, saying: "I did not claim that I would beat the
Weavers overnight, Maya Tatyanichna. I have struck the blow that
I can strike; others will carry it forward, or they will not. But
now we come to the other reason for my action, which is much more
pressing." He fell
silent. "I'm listening," I said. "I told
you of my adventure with the encryption virus," he said slowly.
"About how, under cover of a failed attempt to take control of
certain programs, my cohorts and I changed those
programs—doing it subtly at first, and expanding slowly, so
that the change was imperceptible. From this there was a logical
conclusion: could you not do the same thing with minds?"
He shook his head sadly. "It took me far too long to realize
that. I have reason to believe that the Weavers had thought of it
some time before." "You
think they somehow altered our minds?" "They
are doing so even now. They are trying to hack the
archetypes—to change what makes us human. You might say
they're trying to revoke original sin." "How do
you know?" "I have
found the vector." "Some
kind of worm program?" "Not a
single program; an entire ecosystem. The change they wish to make
has been divided into a thousand independent parts— many
thousands, perhaps; I do not know how many are still unfound, or
perhaps still unreleased into the world. Each of these
infinitesimal parts is carried by not one, but three
viruses." "For
redundancy?" "Quite
the reverse. Suppose that I gave you three slides, one with a
picture of a boat, one with a landscape, one with a distant bird
beneath a cloud. Alone, each seems to have its own crude purpose;
but project the three together, and the boat becomes a mouth, the
sail a nose, the bird an eye, the clouds a lock of hair. If you
transmit the slides by different routes, this is an excellent way
to send a secret message. And that is what the Weavers have done.
Each virus packs a small payload—a few dozen neurodes or
lines of code, with some irritating but harmless function,
destined for a particular address in moist or dry memory. The
next triplet loads itself into the same place, interlacing with
the first. And when the third arrives, it overwrites the last of
the camouflage code, and the resulting program carries out its
true purpose. Imperceptibly, a tiny sliver of the soul is
changed. The code then disappears, having served its purpose.
Since it is active for such a brief period, it is almost
undetectable." "Then
how did you find it?" "I had
ever been a starer at stars and a seeker of patterns. I created a
chart of the regions in moist memory that viruses attacked; when
I noted how often those regions were the same, or fit into each
other like puzzle pieces, I was on my way to the
answer." "You
can't have been the first person to do that." "Probably
I was not. History does not record the fates of the others, but
you may imagine." "Why
would the Weavers go to so much trouble?" I asked. "Even if they
were as bad as you say they are, they're Weavers. They
could just keep the whole plan intact, and call it the next
release of Mind-OS." My spirits lifted, incautiously; the
certainty of execution yielded to the dream of commendation. "And
if it's as subtle as all that, maybe they just haven't found it.
Have you tried sending in an anonymous tip?
Maybe—" "Maya
Tatyanichna," he said, "who else but Weavers could create such a
subtle and elegant plan? An overnight change in the soul would be
detected; those without the new OS would note the difference in
those who had it. The Weavers wished to make their change over
the course of decades, to escape detection—for after all,
they are Weavers, and can take the long view. "And if
that is not enough, I have a further proof: the Weaver
virus-cleaning software. Let loose on an incomplete triplet, it
detects it, then disables it—by erasing the useless
camouflage code. The remaining portion is not detectable by virus
scan, but it is just as functional as before." "How
far has it gone?" I said, beginning to be convinced despite
myself. "How much have they changed?" "These
are early days yet. The average person carries ten or fifteen
uncompleted triplets, and has completed, at most, one or two. Not
much change; but when necessary, the Weavers see to it that it is
the right sort of change. They rarely send transgressors to the
Postcops anymore; the days of hauling in a galuboy for a
suppressor chip are over." He
paused and looked at me significantly. Yes, I realized; by
ceasing to defend the Weavers, I had given up all reason to
object. "Nowadays,"
he continued with an air of triumph, "you simply notice the
gradual extinction of the desire, and never know why. Or more
likely, you never know what desire it is that you are missing in
the first place. That is why the galuboy is so elusive.
Likewise the Christian: you lose your faith: it's an old
story—who would remark on it, especially now?" "And
what does your Netcast do to help this?" "Take
out the disk," he said. I
reached up, slid it out of my head, and held it cradled in my
hand. "Woven
into the Netcast, in such a way that it cannot be filtered out
without destroying the whole, is a countervirus that binds to the
triplets more strongly than their true partners, resulting in a
harmless variant." "Won't
the Weavers just scrub it?" "When
they can," he said. "But it will not be easy. The telepresence
from the whale must have infected nearly half the world already.
From such a base, the countervirus will spread more quickly than
even the Weavers can burn it out. Furthermore, the countervirus
has been years in the designing; it has a better instinct for
self-preservation than most human beings. Still, the Weavers
would win out, eventually—if people did not care whether or
not they were infected." "Why
would they care? You think that sending out some horror
show will make everyone your ally?" "No,"
he said. "No, the countervirus will do that itself. Watch the
rumors for the next few weeks very carefully, Maya Tatyanichna.
The first thing you will hear is that the countervirus exists.
The second thing you will hear is that being infected with it
feels very good." "Good
God. You're trying to make us a nation of wireheads." "Not at
all," he said. "That is only what you will hear. It will be
called a drug, and a highly coveted one. But it leaves the
brain's chemistry quite unaffected; in fact it does not feel good
at all. It merely creates the compulsion to tell people
that it feels good. The Weavers would have Adam cough up the
apple; it is only fair that I be allowed to whisper in his ear
that the apple is sweet." "Mind
control," I said. "Yes,"
he said, nodding. "Nor is that all of it. In those who know
enough to be of use, the virus creates a desire to defend
it—to alter it in response to changes in the Weavers'
strategy. You might say it makes them its soldiers." "Do you
have any idea what you're saying? It's another Army." "Put
the disk in," he said, "and ask me that again. But don't let it
record what I have told you of the countervirus." I
fumbled the moistdisk back into my head, and repeated: "Isn't
what you're doing like the Army?" "It is
at the second remove from the Army," he said. "In order to
destroy the Army, the Weavers became like it; in order to destroy
the Weavers, I have become like them, which makes me the Army's
grandchild. Have you not realized, from the story that I told
you? To kill Derzhavin, I became like Derzhavin; to escape the
Army, I took a soldier of my own. They say that you always become
the thing you hate, but that is not quite true. An
impotent hate need not become its object. But, like the
Stone Age savage going to the hunt, you must transform yourself
into the image of the thing you would destroy." "That's
a hell of an excuse," I said. "I
excuse nothing; I admit my guilt most freely." The blue light
from the whale's tank rippled gently across his face. "Remember
when I told you that all of my former associates had been
discovered by the Post police? It is not thanks to luck, or
skill, or better hardware, that I only am escaped alone to tell
thee. I survived because I betrayed them. I wired them for
telepresence, under the guise of routine repairs, and then
created trails that led the Weavers or the Post police right to
them. I have sent good people into excommunication; I have seen
them fitted with suppressor chips and mindlocks; I have caused
their deaths. I have even wired animals and sent them into every
form of slaughter—all in order to recover a few instants of
memory from the black boxes I fitted them with. I think I hold my
principles more dear than most, Maya Tatyanichna, and yet there
is not one of them that I have not betrayed. Because sterility
must not prevail." "So you
sacrificed the people to the principle," I said. "It sounds like
a Guardian's rationalization. Change a couple of words, and it
might have come right out of Calin's diaries." "So you
do begin to understand." He nodded slowly and leaned back in his
chair. "A Guardian's rationalization is exactly what it is. Isn't
that what was wrong with my good friend Derzhavin? His were not
useless experiments. I suppose they may have saved lives. And
everyone who has a socket owes it to him, or to others like him;
the socket was invented by years of experimentation on people
like me—and on animals, also like me," he said, smiling
without humor. "That is what it means to be a Guardian: to
think that individual rights are a dangerous folly, and
compassion merely sentiment. The greater good is
everything—and a greater good not to be measured
empirically, but defined ideologically. "Isn't
that what I have done? I have sacrificed others to my own
conception of what the world should be—a conception that,
if it does anything at all, will bring nothing but unhappiness to
most of Russia for decades to come. And why? Because I would not
permit a Utopia built on the backs of the one percent, of the few
remaining dissidents, even those who no longer know what they
are—of the galuboy, or the gallow-girl either. And
now you begin to suspect, Maya Tatyanichna, why you are
here." I
suspected a number of things, and I didn't like any of them.
Carefully keeping my eyes from the door, I began to gauge my
chances of escape. The elevator was the only way up that I knew
of, so if Voskresenye cut off the power, I'd be trapped. He'd
have plenty of time to cut it, too, while I was running down the
broken slidewalk. I might have to try to knock him out
first—and I had no idea how strong his exoskeleton might
be. Or did he control the elevator directly? If he were
unconscious, would it fail to operate? Unless I found out, I
could do nothing. Or so I
decided, because in my heart I didn't believe I needed to do
anything. I did not think Voskresenye, whale or no, could really
have defeated Keishi. I believed in her. I thought that she would
soon be there to rescue me, and that all I had to do was
encourage the old man's ramblings. I need only play for
time. "You
disappoint me, Andreyeva," Voskresenye said, when I had been
silent a while. "Have you lost all your reporter's instincts?
Aren't you going to catch me in my own
contradictions?" "Why
don't you tell me what you think they are?" "I
should think it would be obvious. I have done what I have done in
order to end the sacrifice of the few to a principle; and in
support of this principle, I have sacrificed the few. Again, like
those who made the Unanimous Army. Why was the Army created? To
defeat the Guardians. And why defeat them? Because they built
their empire on conquest and exploitation. Then how shall we
defeat them? Why, by building a machine that could conquer and
exploit, not just the odd ethnic minority here and there, but
every human it encountered. It is a kind of homeopathy, you see,
but not in homeopathic doses." "What
exactly is the—" "Or if
that explanation is too cunning to be understood," he went on,
seeming barely aware of my presence, "I commend to you my
illustrious predecessor, Judas Iscariot. Don't people still know
that story, even now? Judas betrays Christ, his friend and Lord,
and we are supposed to believe it is all for a few silver coins,
which, as it happens, he covets so much as to immediately throw
them away. Now I ask you as a camera, is that a plausible
motivation? If a man like Judas said to you, 'I did it for the
money,' would you believe him?" "I
suppose—" "No! Of
course you wouldn't. There is only one reason why Judas committed
his crime. He did it because it fulfilled the prophecy. It made
Christ a martyr. He did it because if he had not, Jesus of
Nazareth would have wound up as a starving beggar in the streets
of Rome, leprous and louse-ridden, making himself portwine out of
the ditch-water. He violated the shining law that Jesus had set
forth, because only in that way could he make sure that law was
not forgotten. "And so
you see that in order for good to exist, you must apply a little
evil here and there. The Christians knew that, when there were
Christians. At one time they knew even more: the fortunate fall,
they called it. 'O felix culpa'—happy fault! For when Adam
and Eve gave their lives for that one bite of worm-eaten
fruitflesh, they won heaven for their children. They say Eden
means 'garden'; my translation would be 'wildlife park.' If not
for that snake happening by, we'd still be stuck there, with
angels going around us in a monorail exclaiming over the
wonderfully natural habitats. If I were a snake, I tell you, I
would give the same advice. "But
they forgot—the Christians; the fortunate fall was
forgotten. And well it should be. Those are the best times, when
good can forget it needs evil to prop it up." During
this speech I had thoroughly surveyed the door. If I could get
him sunk that deep in his own words a second time, I might be
able to get up and be nearly out of the room before he noticed.
And then it would be a question of how fast his carapace allowed
him to run. Not fast, I thought; it looked too heavy. With the
elevator I would take my chances—there must be some
provision for emergencies. So I
must make him talk. And I already knew he could be
goaded. "Do you
consider yourself a Christian?" "After
a fashion," he said reflectively. "But
that was the Guardians' religion." Voskresenye
fixed me with a look of pity. "Yes, well, they didn't
invent it, you know. My own researches lead me to believe
that by the time Calin came to power, Christ may already have
been dead. No, really. Possibly for as much as a few weeks. And
even if I did at one time blame the faith for the actions of the
faithful, surely all these years of atheist tyranny would have
disabused me of the notion. No, Andreyeva, you cannot judge
beliefs by keeping score." "And so
you believe you are Judas Iscariot—what?
Reincarnated?" He
pressed his fingertips to the corners of his eyes. "My dear, it's
a metaphor, not a delusion. I spoke of Judas because I supposed
that if you knew about any religion, it was Christianity. If you
were Muslim, I would remind you that Satan was damned not for
loving God too little, but for loving Him too much—so much
that he refused to bow to Man, that lesser creature. If you were
Jain I would have told you of Kamatha, Mahavira's evil
counterpart, who pursues the hero through incarnation after
incarnation, killing him not once but many times—and yet it
is by suffering this evil that Mahavira finally escapes the doom
of flesh. It is a simple principle, and one that has been
discovered a thousand times through history: the darkness
serves the light. And from time to time, people have realized
the consequence: that sometimes, in order to bring about good,
you must yourself become evil." "But
how can it be evil? You think you're saving the world. What are a
couple of hackers compared to that?" "Not
the world, child. I'm only saving human hearts; what does that
have to do with the world? The planet doesn't give a damn about
our pain or pleasure. It will go on whether we are happy or not,
and whether we are here or not. Indeed, it would be better off
without us. No, I'm not saving the world; just those two-legged
bugs that infest it." "You
make it sound like no one ever wrote a poem or composed a
symphony—" "Oh
yes, symphonies, Exhibit A in everyone's defense of us. Have you
ever written one, Andreyeva? Has anyone you know? Has anyone at
all, the last hundred years? For that matter, when was the last
time you listened to one?" "As a
matter of fact—" "We are
a machine made by God to write poetry to glorify his creatures.
But we're a bad machine, built on an off day. While we were
grinding out a few pathetic verses, we killed the creatures we
were writing about; for every person writing poems, there were a
hundred, a thousand, out blowing away God's creation left, right,
and center. Well, Maya Tatyanichna? You know what we have
wrought. What is your judgment? Which is better? A tiger, or a
poem about a tiger?" "I
think they both have their merits—" "Sophist,"
he snapped. "To equate a piece of paper with a thing of flesh and
blood! No, there is no comparison. And even if there were, it
wouldn't matter. No one writes poems anymore, no one reads them.
We just send people crawling all over the landscape with cameras
in their heads, to record the world as it is. But God already
knows what the world is, and He also knows it would have been
better if he'd stuck with trilobites." "Then
you do believe in God." "Yes.
Despite all evidence, I do; may He help me, I do. I am not
persuaded of His sanity at His advanced age, because if He were
sane we would not be here. But He exists." "And
you believe in Heaven? You believe that when you die you'll go
there?" "Do you
suppose that Judas walks about in Heaven? Do you suppose Satan is
any the less damned because he loved God? No, no, it is his love
that damns him; loving God while being estranged from him is what
Hell is. Even Kamatha gets his, although, since this is
India, where eternity is so vast that not even human hate can
fill it up, he will eventually escape from Hell into another
incarnation." His eyes grew distant. "I find that messy,
truthfully. For a stain so great, the punishment should surely be
eternal. No, the crime is not the less just because it is for a
good end. On the contrary, Judas' crime is all the worse, because
he has no hope of pleading that he knew not what he did. He knew
just what he was doing, and he knew its price—as I
do." "Then
you see yourself as no better than a Guardian?" "We are
separated only by this: the Guardians expected that their evil
would go on forever. The Army hackers thought they could commit
their crime and then erase it from the minds of men forever. But
that does not work. There is only one way to contain an evil you
have once begun, and that is to provide a scapegoat. You may find
someone else to fill the role—that is the coward's way. But
the wise man, when forced into evil, makes a scapegoat of
himself. That is what Judas does. He knows what must be done; he
does it; and then he makes sure that the people he has benefited
will revile him, because only that can prevent his crime from
being repeated. He takes the damnation that he has deserved, even
though he has done more for the faith than Christ himself. He
does not just accept damnation, he rushes to it; the touch
of the rope is a lover's embrace—" "Then
you believe in literal damnation? In flames and devils and all
that?" He
opened his mouth to speak, then stopped and looked down at his
hands. "I don't know," he whispered. "I used to think ... No," he
said in a firmer voice. "I don't. For the whale and I are now one
soul—that is the central fact of my existence. How can you
splice two incorporeal souls together? And if anyone could do
such a thing, would it be Derzhavin? No, the soul is the
brain—I am the proof of that. And if the soul is flesh, it
rots like flesh. I still hope, but I do not believe. So, since
death is the end it appears to be, I have taken measures of my
own." He raised his head and looked me in the eye. "But perhaps
by now you have begun to guess the first betrayal, from which the
others all derive." It was
the last thing on my mind. "Why don't you tell me," I
said. "Why,
Maya Tatyanichna, when you spoke to the whale, didn't she ask you
the time, as she asks everything in grayspace that will talk to
her? And didn't it strike you as an odd question, coming from a
whale? Unless hours were schools of fish, and minutes
krill—" "She
told me why," I said. "Well
then." "Your
betrayal is in letting her die?" "No.
Just the reverse." "But—" "When
we were escaping the camp, and I wouldn't let her go out of radio
range, it was not for my sake, you know. Piled up there, a
corpse among corpses, I hardly expected to outlive the day. If I
could have sent her away I would surely have done so, at the cost
of my own life. But every time our contact weakened, she would
sink in the water and try to empty her lungs. She knew it was no
ocean for a whale, not anymore, and that there were no others of
her kind for her to seek out. She wanted to die—even then,
while we were still ecstatic with our newfound freedom. How much
more she wants it now that she is back in this cage, you may
readily imagine. No, this Judas' betrayal is not in allowing her
to die. It is in having made her live." I
looked back at the tank. "She's your idea of Christ?" "Why,
Maya Tatyanichna, Christ is everywhere for the killing. Every
Postcop is a Roman soldier, offering tea instead of vinegar; and
when Luther tacked up his laundry list, he had to drive the nail
through blood and bone." "And
Hell?" I asked. "Myself
am Hell, nor am I out of it. Take away the whale, and I am what I
was when Derzhavin found me. A mind falling through
darkness—without memory, without
language—" He
broke off, and looked at me. In his eyes, for the first time,
there was a hint of vulnerability, as though he wanted my
approval. "I
don't think," I said with careful malice, "that any truly good
motive should require a degree in theology to
Understand." He
burst into laughter. "No doubt you're right," he said. "All the
years that I looked forward to this moment, I supposed I'd feel
some sort of triumph—some fulfillment. But now that the
time has come, I feel like Dr. Doom haranguing the Fantastic
Four." He shrugged. "It doesn't matter. My duty does not change,
just because I have begun to feel ridiculous." For a
moment I stopped thinking of escape, and looked at him. Here was
a man who had followed logic all the way around to where it
swallowed its tail, and even when it vanished down its own
throat, had gone after it into the void. The wires he wore had
grown all through him, as the roots of trees replace the flesh of
corpses; and the vast coils of the whale's brain wrapped around
him like a gray constricting snake. I pitied him: but it was
probably stray feedback from the Net, and I regretted it
afterward, and it was only for a moment. "No,"
he said to himself, almost wistfully. "It doesn't change what I
must do." And
then the sensation drained out of my face. I heard myself
pronounce the words: "O vos omnes, qui transitis per viam,
attendite et videte si est dolor similis sicut dolor metis."
The Net echoed: "All you people who pass on the street, look, and
see if any pain is like my pain...." Eighteen You
Must Remember
This I loved
her name. I couldn't help it. I would release a worm to write her
name in every angular gyrus from here to Thailand. I would
convert her name to salts, to textures, to the image of a fern in
biosonar. I had never heard a name so beautiful, though it was
not a name that suited her—it was far too soft a name for
her precise young features—and though I thought it much the
lovelier when sharpened by my Leningrader accent. I tried to
prevent her from saying her own name, hastily introducing her to
strangers.) "SUPPRESSION
NINETY-FIVE PERCENT," said Horus. He opened his hands on the
African mogo, locked in an endless loop of fragmentation and
reanimation, flowering and decay. "Why
are you doing this?" I cried out. "I am
giving the rest of the world their souls back, Maya Tatyanichna,"
the old man said. "It would be petty of me to withhold that same
violence from you." "NINETY
PERCENT," the god intoned. (I
couldn't remember the place where we met, except that it was all
one color, all one scent, and had a rhythm to it. It might have
been by the ocean in winter, where the gray-green water merges
with the slate gray pebbles and the gray-blue sky. It might have
been by ripened grain in summer, when each field is like a body,
ocher-gold from head to foot and all one breathing. It might have
been beneath the waves of storm in grayspace, which at that time
was still an unsuspected country that even Weavers barely knew.
But no—it was not there, because I had seen her face. That
much I remembered, though I could not remember what she said to
me, or what she wore, or whether we walked or sat or stood. None
of that mattered. We had barely brushed against each other, yet I
came away dusted with desire, like a bee with pollen. Her face,
her name—no more: that alone had drawn me to her. Her name,
her face: and even now I could remember what they meant to me,
though I could not seem to remember what her name was, and though
some trick of memory, like half-silvered glass, combined her face
with that of Keishi Mirabara.) "Emergency
override," I said. "Restore suppression." "Desuppression
is nonterminable," the god informed me mournfully. "EIGHTY
PERCENT." (She
was translating Pushkin's poems into KRIOL. I caught a glimpse
over her shoulder: I loved
you thus-so ((truly, tenderly), may God
grant you be loved by another) "The
logical structure is knottier than it looks," she said. "KRIOL
doesn't handle this sort of thing very well—unless you
reverse the comparison, of course, but then you lose the
poetry—" I
didn't understand a word she said. I loved her. "That's
always been one of my favorites," I said. "It's so beautiful, how
he renounces her." "Is
that what you think it is? Renunciation?" She looked up sharply,
mischief in her eyes. "I always thought he was trying to make her
feel so guilty that she'd come back to him. 'I loved you; maybe
love has not been burned away completely in my heart, but don't
let that trouble you. I wouldn't want to cause you any
pain—' " She struck her forehead with her hand, overacting
the role. " 'I loved you wordlessly, hopelessly, tormented by
shyness and jealousy—you sure will be lucky if anyone else
ever loves you like this—' " I
laughed; she rose into my arms. Pushkin, abandoned on the
unblanked slate, kept his own counsel.) "SEVENTY-FIVE
PERCENT." (Two
black cables twined, like snakes, between her fingers. We slotted
the plugs into our wrists, then wrapped the cords around our
arms, until we had just enough slack left to join hands across
the table. She smiled to reassure me; closed her eyes in
concentration. I sat watching her uneasily, wishing I had a hand
free to scratch the itch above my spine socket. "What—" I
said. She touched her hand to her lips to silence me, and then,
her eyes still closed, began to kiss our knitted fingers. When
she lowered our hands back to the table, their images remained
there, pressed to her mouth. Her left hand also blurred, split,
doubled. She sat four-armed, a Hindu goddess, concentrating,
until at last her whole body pushed away its ghost. For our
ethereal bodies everything was effortless, all surfaces were
smooth; the law of gravity became negotiable and all limits of
endurance disappeared. She could lose herself for hours in this
experience, disdaining flesh and bone. But I could never quite
forget that while we kept up this illusion, our physical bodies
were blind, exposed, in danger. The Postcops could have come upon
us with ten men, a tank, and a brass band, and we would not have
known to run. Then, too, I wanted to lie with her in that warm,
comfortable fatigue that comes and wraps itself around you like a
blanket. I wanted to curse—or bless—the surgeon that
had given her a socket just at that spot that is perfect to kiss,
at the base of the spine.) "SEVENTY
PERCENT": (Love
was not a new joy, but an extension of old fears. I had given a
hostage to life: as though a part of my own body had the power to
move alone, unseen by me, where anything might happen to it.
Walking through the city, every time I stopped to dodge some car
that did not see me, I remembered that she too must walk her own
streets, must avoid her own milk trucks. I walked in love as
though I had a sparrow in my pocket, feeling the soft living
warmth pressed against me, fearful lest by sitting down wrong I
should crush it. Love was like an egg so fragile it would break
if anyone suspected that it might exist.) I took
the suppressor chip from my frontal socket and jammed it into the
temporal, trying to make it work again. "Rejected,"
noted Horus with indifference. "Damn
you!" "That
has already been taken care of," Voskresenye said. Well, I hadn't
meant him, but him too. Then I thought: he was an old man. I
could overpower him, I could make him make it stop. I stood
up— (And
love fell from my hands and shattered.) "SIXTY." (The pieces
skittered under beds, slipped under countertops, ducked behind
doorframes. It was roach love, furtive and opportunistic,
scattering at the touch of light. We must meet less often; it was
dangerous; and gradually our love became a patchwork, pieced
together out of stolen moments, not quite long enough to keep us
warm. Fierce encounters, and fiercer because rare: it was love
boiled down to drams and drunk from thimbles. And crying out, I
would wake from sleep, thinking I had felt some token of her
presence—the touch of her hand on my cheekbone, the creak
of her foot on the stair.) If I
took out the 6000s with the suppressor still in— "Removal
of Series Six Thousand moistware during desuppression may be
harmful or fatal," droned the god. "You're
bluffing," I said, but without conviction. All right then,
if— "FIFTY
PERCENT": (How
could she say that? "Feel no regret for roses," she had said to
me, kissing the nape of my neck as I bent over her latest
translation of Pushkin. "Feel no regret for roses, autumn too has
its delights...." How could she say that? Didn't she see that for
us there could never be autumn, that we could never sit, as
anyone else could sit, beside the fire all day on Sundays in
November; that September's leaves, that fall for man and beast
alike, were not our leaves to walk in; that October storms would
never find us sharing an umbrella? The love of spring had thrived
on wine and candles; now in the August of our lives, we needed
newspapers and comfortable chairs. But it was impossible. No
autumn—only a cold wind that blew through our summer,
freezing the leaves in their places before they could motley and
fall. But I
said none of this. I only nodded, and looked down into Pushkin's
autumn through the black rows of KRIOL parentheses, like looking
at the sky through prison bars.) I came
back to myself; but I no longer thought of escape. It was too
late, there was no time to think. Like a woman drowning, I could
only take one gasping breath before I sank again. "FORTY
PERCENT": (The
leaves, frozen fast to the trees, began to rot. We could not live
together; it was much too dangerous; we discussed it twice a day
and agreed every time. We found ourselves putting off seeing each
other, because when we met we were only reminded of what could
not be. Our days were barren of companionship, our furtive
meetings dry of joy.) "THIRTY": (And
finally there was nothing else. We must try it, and risk
everything, or part. And so she took her pilgrimage to Zanzibar,
to seek a certain sliver of illegal moistware. I did not see her
off at the gate. For a week, awaiting news, I paced through my
shrinking apartment. Now the time for her return had come and
gone, and there was nothing; I sat shivering on the bed, certain
that she had found asylum and that I would never see her again.
And then the news came, in the form of a postcard from the
Leningrad train-port. When I saw it on the vidphone's list of
messages, I caught my breath. I entered my passphrase, switched
on isolation, and turned up the tempest. It was a generic scene
of Africa—misshapen trees, corkscrew-horned
buffalo—on which a noncommittal message had been scrawled.
I hit "decrypt," and watched the colors shift and
reassemble: I !pri
!zhis mya !=lu@mya Native
KRIOL. I only spoke interpreted. I pounded the Translation key
and saw: and(!come(!live.with(me)),
Come live with me and be my (!=love(my)))
love What
had been complex was suddenly made simple. Of course I would
agree, I could do nothing else. I would go to her, and for a
year, or two, it would be everything we'd hoped for. With her
African enhancements she would cut through the Net like an arrow
through air, and nothing would be able to withstand her. Soon she
would grow too confident, and think herself invulnerable. And on
some undistinguished day, we would be lying in bed late in the
morning, idly debating whether 10 a.m. was a good time to get up,
and agreeing in the end that it most certainly was not; and there
would come a knocking at the door. She would throw on clothes and
answer, as I went to brush my hair. And as I looked at my
disheveled image in the mirror, with fond distress, I would see a
man in black come up behind me. He would lead me away; she and I
would be transported to the station in separate cars, and would
stay there a few days in separate rooms, and then be taken again
in two cars to two different places, and be buried, each
alone.) I was
sitting on the floor, all thought of argument or violence long
forgotten. I could only brace myself against the next attack, and
hope that Keishi would come soon. "TWENTY-FIVE
PERCENT." (Toward
the end, she would spend hours at a time in the Net without me,
reinforcing the walls of our hiding-place. She would sit at the
kitchen table, bent over a black box, both her wrists and both
her temples cabled into it. And I would sit with a washcloth and
a bowl of lukewarm water, and from time to time blot the beads of
sweat from her face. Now, remembering, I was filled with the
desire to see that face, to remember what she looked like. But
even in its death throes, the suppressor chip still disheveled my
thoughts, replacing the face that I wanted to see with
Keishi's.) "TEN
PERCENT," the bird said. Africa, green and dying, boiled between
his palms. Osiris was torn and made whole. It was
coming. "NINE":
(I had come home with my groceries, but she was still out getting
hers. We always shopped separately) "EIGHT" (lest someone should
notice us buying for two. She was late, so I stood at the edge of
the window to watch for her. I peered around the edges of the
blinds, seeing, but unseen. At last I saw her) "SEVEN" (coming
down the sidewalk, a paper bag cradled in each arm. I watched her
sleepily, trying to decide whether to drink the cup of coffee I
was balancing against my collarbone, or just break down and take
a nap. The smell of the coffee was persuasive but the nap, too,
had its) "SIX" (attraction. Yes. I would lie down, just for an
hour, and she would kiss my cheek to wake me— Something
was happening.) "FIVE." (She had changed course, looking out into
traffic for a chance to cross the street. A figure in black
called out. I couldn't quite hear what he said.) "FOUR." (She
followed him into the doorway of our building, out of sight. I
searched in the windows across the street, and at last found her
reflection. She was lowering her sacks to the ground with the
exquisite slowness of someone who knows she's in
gunsights. "Take
out your Net chip," said the videophone. Her voice—
Keishi's voice. "Don't
do it," I pleaded. "You'll never make it—" "!take.out(it
2)!" And I
took it out, knowing what she would do and what would happen to
her when she did.) "THREE." (She had spent too much time on the
Net, where no situation is ever quite hopeless, and where one
person, wired right, can stand firm against a thousand. But I,
who had stayed behind to sponge her brow with water, still
remembered the inevitability of the flesh.) "TWO." (And in
the windows across the street, I saw her take a wine bottle from
the sack and break it across the Postcop's face. Diving into the
doorway, she clapped a black chip to her head, and half the
people walking down the street staggered and fell. Cars caromed
like billiard balls. She crashed up the stairs—she was at
the door—she opened it.) "ONE PERCENT." (And as she crossed
the room, a man in black was watching from the roof across the
street. A Weaver had possessed him; you could see it in his eyes.
He looked down along the barrel of his rifle, like one who cocks
his head in thought; paused a moment; then lifted his head again
and nodded slightly, as though the thought were now complete. A
smooth circular hole had been punched in the front window, and
another in the wall behind, and between them she lay with a hole
the same size in her temple, already dead.) "ZERO." (I did
not go to her. If I had warned her, it would not have helped; if
it had not been him, it would have been some other; she had been
dead the moment she reached into the sack, no, the day she
departed for Zanzibar. And so I did not call out to her, though I
had seen the man gone Weaver on the roof from the beginning,
lifting his gun to his shoulder, and carefully taking his
aim.) Nineteen
Orpheus I
stayed there as long as I could, in that time when she had just
now fallen. She might yet live. She might yet shake her head and
rise. The stain of blood spreading out from her temple might be
nothing more than a lengthening shadow, cast by the setting
sun. But
that sun had set, and twenty years of suns. I must step up out of
the sunken garden of the past into this present, where she had
been twenty years dead. She lay now in some secret grave,
abandoned, with no flowers and no tombstone to mark the spot. If
any trace remained of her at all, it was only a blaze of deep
green in some field of withered grass, and I would never find
it. I
hadn't known. I had remembered so little. The cable inside my
head, scraping and scraping. The drug that burned the sex out of
my body, as I vomited into the drain in a holding cell for thirty
hours. And I'd remembered saying that I would do whatever they
asked of me. I would tell them everything, I would reveal every
shared secret and betray every confidence. And then I would
forget it all, and leave the station as a person who had never
been in love. And remembering how quickly I had agreed to forget,
I had assumed some series of casual liaisons, lightly entered
into, and lightly abandoned. Now I knew the full extent of my
betrayal. I had been the only one to remember her, and I had
given it up, not after a fight, but readily. I was not the person
I had thought I was; and tears fell like scales from my
eyes. "Desuppression
complete," the god said. "If you would like to discuss any of our
fine moistware products, I am always at your service." He folded
Africa into his hands, and he was gone. "The
recording of your desuppression is already being distributed,"
Voskresenye said. "In the days to come, as the Weaver viruses are
defeated, others of your kind will appear. You have struck a blow
for them. Because of what you did today, there may yet come a
time when they no longer have to hide." I
had recognized her. They had tried to tear her out, but
she had lived in me—deep in my heart and secret, nameless
and indescribable, yet never entirely gone. She had been a face
in the window of every departing train, a form seen from the back
on every crowded street, always just out of my sight, always
turning away. And I had known her when she came to me, though I
could not say it, and though the very thought had sent my mind
skidding across the ice into unconsciousness. I took
the camera chip out of my head. "What," I said, fighting to keep
my voice steady "—what is Keishi Mirabara?" "Ah!"
Voskresenye laid a finger along his nose. "Not 'who,' but 'what'!
Very impressive! I had not expected you to guess so much so
quickly." "Don't
critique the question, you son of a bitch, just answer it. Did
you create her? To seduce me? To get me here?" "How
Manichaean of you, Andreyeva. I did not create her; that is
Someone Else's job. I merely found her and made use of
her." "You're
lying," I said. "She's not real. She doesn't exist at
all." "Oh,
but I do, Maya," Keishi said. She was leaning against the
doorframe. She had restored the face I had seen in my memories,
the face she'd had before she disguised herself as Japanese and
then as Japanese Black. She was dressed all in white, and she
shone like the sun, which was the least of the reasons that I
found it hard to look at her. "So
what's the joke, revenant?" I said, my whole face aching from the
effort to hold back tears. "Did he make you? Are you a
Postcop?" "No,
and no." She looked behind me at the tank where the whale floated
aimlessly, her wings gently stirring the water. "I'm her," she
said, nodding toward the whale. "Part of her. And I am the
woman that you loved, twenty years ago." "Can't
you come up with a better lie than that? She's dead. I saw it
happen." "That
body is gone," Keishi said. "But I live." "I
don't believe you." "Think
back, Maya," she said. She began to walk toward me, but stopped,
as if she sensed that I could not have borne her touch. "You
remember who I was. Don't you think I would have had a plan to
stay with you, even after my own death?" "If she
had," I said, not meeting her gaze, "she would have told me about
it." "If I'd
told you, it wouldn't have worked. I knew they'd mind-suck you;
anything I said to you, they would have found out. I had to let
you think I was dead, hide out in the Net, and then come back to
you when the worst of the heat was off." "The
soul can't survive discorporation," I said. "Maybe in the African
Net, but not here." "A soul
can't live in the Net, no. But there's nothing mystical about it.
It's a physical process—for all intents and purposes the
soul is serotonin. If you upload your mind to the Net, at least
here in the Fusion, you lose your sensory qualia, your emotions;
you become a program. But then if you put it back into a brain,
the soul grows back. —Especially," she said, "if it's the
soul of a Weaver." "Oh
God," I said, "Oh God, I knew there was a setup in this
somewhere—" "No ...
no, Maya! I mean, I was a Weaver. It's a manner of
speaking—you know, to your last dying breath and all that.
But seeing as how they killed my body, I should probably give up
that loyalty. Don't you remember?" "She
was my screener...."I said, slowly. "Yes,
and Maxwell Smart wrote greeting cards. It was a cover, Maya.
Weavers keep cuckoos in every profession.... Including one named
Keiji Mirabara." I
watched her silently, fighting back memory. "And
now you know how I replaced Anton without causing an outcry. And
how I obtained the, ah, the Postcop pursuit vehicle— which,
by the way, no Postcop in the world is authorized to drive. And
that's how I found the Weaver viruses, and how I created the
bubbles and back doors, which Mister Resurrection hastens to take
credit for." "Believe
what you like," Voskresenye said lightly. "The point is
insignificant." "I
don't believe you," I said. "Look
back into your memories. It's there." But I
would not touch those memories. I would keep my muscles clenched
around them, I would squeeze them into a ball, hard-shelled and
separate. They were in me, but I would not make them part of me;
as a sunken anchor does not give up its substance to the ocean,
or an acorn passes through the stomach whole. I would not become
that other woman, who had died when her lover died, twenty years
past. I would remain myself. "Do you
remember?" she said. "No." "You
will," she said. "In time. You were a camera and I was a Weaver,
and we have known each other nearly thirty years." "I
don't believe you," I repeated. "Maya,
let me touch your mind again," she said, extending one beseeching
hand. "This time with nothing hidden. I promise you you'll
understand." "Keep
your hands off me," I said. I backed up a step and tripped, so
that I had to catch myself against the whale's tank with one
hand. I braced myself against her mind's touch, holding up one
futile hand to shield my face. She
looked upon my fear with horror. Her hand fell to her side. "All
right, then," she said, nodding. "I'll tell you the
story." Twenty
Penelope "I was
created a Weaver in 2290," she said, "just a few years before I
first found you. I was nineteen years old—they take us
young, you know, like Mousketeers. For nineteen years I was the
prisoner of my own skull, trapped in an almond-sized sphere at
the intersection of my ears and eyes. Then the surgeon injected
me with nanobugs—not like yours; bugs made from clones of
my own cells, half robot and half leukocyte. They made a blastula
inside my skull, dividing again and again, with their animal pole
at my left ear and their vegetal pole at my right. Their signals
pulsed from one side of my head to the other, as I lay
unconscious on a surgeon's table in Mecca—holy,
hallucinatory town. "Then I
woke from the knife, and I was the Net. Without moving, I
could touch Novaya Zemlya and Cape Town, both at the same time.
Or I could walk through the streets and understand the shouts of
Arabic, without needing a fluency chip. I discovered that the
slogan shouted on every street, that I had taken for a prayer,
meant 'Take you to Africa? Ten thousand riyals!' I had the money,
but I declined the offers. Why should I go anywhere, when I had
the Net inside me? I could sit in the Net as a spider sits,
perfectly still, at the center—for wherever she is, is the
center—and when a fly brushes the web, it's as if the silk
were her own body. Night after night, I coursed through minds,
leaving new dreams behind me. And in the day, my kibo fell around
me in a thousand voices, like a gentle rain." "What's
a kibo?" I asked, more to gain time than to hear the
answer. "A kibo
is a Weaver's summoning-word," she said. "Nobody knows why
they're called that, they just are. They even try to get you to
take your kibo as your name. Silliest damn thing I ever heard
of—grown people going around being called Alcoholism or
Famine. What am I, a Horseman of the Apocalypse?" She grew quiet.
"Do you remember what my kibo was?" "Lesbianka?"
I
guessed, still not touching my memories. "No,"
she said gravely. "If it had been, many things would have been
different. It was Calinshchina." "And?" "And,
to begin with, that's how I found the whale," she said.
"Voskresenye slipped up, just a little, and of course I felt it.
But I decided not to turn him in, because by that time I'd met
you, and I was beginning to plan what I would do if the other
Weavers found out about us. I carved myself a refuge in the
whale's mind. And I forced him to accept it, or be taken by the
Weavers. After that, for my own sake, I protected
him." "Why
me?" I asked. "What did you want from me?" "Maya,
when I said I'd been in a thousand minds, it was just a fraction
of the truth. There's hardly a mind in the Fusion I haven't
touched. You were the one that fit—the only one. That's
what I kept trying to tell you last night: we are the halves of a
single whole." From
the chair where he was sitting, Voskresenye called out: "I do
believe Miss Mirabara is a better Platonist even than I. She
appears to believe in the rolling spiders of the
Symposium." "Shut
up, old man," she said over her shoulder. "This isn't about
you." He
smiled, acquiescing. But he watched us from his seat, an audience
before the stage. Or rather, an actor between scenes, who already
knows the outcome, but watches to compare the other actors'
performances to his own. And all the while he listens, with half
an ear, for his final cue. "If
you're her, and she was a Weaver," I said, "why did she need to
go to Africa? A Weaver could hide from anyone." "Except
another Weaver. I had to be a step ahead of them, and that meant
African tech. If we hadn't been what we were, you know—if
we'd been an airline pilot and a bricklayer—things wouldn't
have been as difficult. Weavers only care about stuff that gets
onto the Net. They leave it to the Postcops to take care of mere
reality." Voskresenye
snorted. "As usual, Mirabara, you have things exactly backward.
The Weavers control the Net, which is reality; the Postcops only
police the flesh, and that has not been real for decades, if
indeed it ever was." She
turned around and hissed at him in Sapir, loud and long. He fell
silent, smirking. "You're
right, though," she said when she turned back to me. "It started
in Africa. I went there on Weaver business—spying, I mean.
Half our tech came from Africa, one way or another. But this
time, I was looking for an edge. Something to keep me a step
ahead of them, something that the other Weavers wouldn't have. Do
you remember what you called it?" I did;
but I would not be drawn out. "The
Cone of Silence," she said, searching my face for a
smile. "And
you found it," I said flatly. "No. I
searched all through the Net, and all through the streets, and I
couldn't find anything the Weavers didn't already have. I had to
pack up and get on the airship home, thinking, this is it, I'll
have to give her up now. At least that way I'd be able to
remember you. "And
then suddenly I was cut off from the Net, as I hadn't been in
years: something was locking me into my skull. In the next seat
was a man I hadn't seen before. He was hideous—wounds
boiled over his face as I watched, and there was a hunger in his
eyes that I was afraid to look at. And then I looked again, and
he was perfect, young, beautiful, streaming with light. It was a
manifestation of His-Majesty-in-Chains." "The
Page of Wounds," Voskresenye said acerbically. "We may perceive
His Majesty's respect for Weavers from the fact that he did not
even bother to send one of the Major Arcana." Still
harping on Tarot. Cigan? And all his predictions a
wanderer's trick, with neurons instead of tea leaves? She
ignored him and continued. " 'I know who you are, Weaver,' he
said to me. 'I have been watching you since you came here, and
indeed long before that, for there is nothing on the Net I do not
watch. Your ostensible mission is not significant enough for me
to even bother thwarting, but your secret wish requires of me a
generous response.' " 'What
do you want?' I asked. "
'Nothing that you can give,' he said, and the pain in his eyes
bored into me. 'Take your freedom. It is no less than you
deserve.' And he began to raise his hands. "Then
he stopped and said thoughtfully, 'But, you know...' " She shook
her head, sighing. "His Majesty will kill you with the 'But, you
know.' 'If you like,' he said, 'I could show you what your hiding
means. You are a Weaver, after all; if anyone could change things
in the Fusion, it would be you. Would you care to see some of the
consequences of your actions?' " 'No,'
I told him. "He
laughed at that. 'Very wise,' he said. 'No one knows better than
I why it is easier to be ignorant.' Blood was seeping into his
shirt, and wounds opened like mouths in his hands. 'But I do not
permit myself that luxury. And you are a god in the Net, as much
as I am. I will no more allow it to you.' " " 'I
don't want your gifts,' I said. "He
ignored me. 'Know,' he said. 'And after that, if you can
turn away, then turn away.' He lifted his hands to my temples,
and then he was gone. "Strapped
into my seat on the African airship, his words burning through
me, I hallucinated for seven hours. He had put me into the head
of another Weaver, the one whose kibo is lesbianka. I
traveled with her through the Net—but not as it was then;
in the future. In the Net as it is now." She
lowered her head, closing her eyes briefly, then looked back up
with an expression of forced calm. "She's not one of the cruel
ones, you know. She's only trying to do her job. You're lying
there, next to the woman that you love, and trying to think when
you can be with her again. You touch the Net to see your
schedule. And there's a sound of wings. The Weaver comes to you,
and looks down at you lying there. You're clutching the bedsheets
against your chest and groping for your clothes, and the body
that felt so warm and comfortable has now become so monstrous and
so vulnerable that if you could, you would discorporate on the
spot. She says to you, very gently, 'Well, I guess we have a
problem.' And she offers you the choice. You can forget. Or you
can remember, at the price of being hidden from the Net
forever. "Not
many people have the courage to choose excommunication," she
said. "And even if you do, she doesn't let you keep what you
were. She touches your forehead with the back of her hand, and
says, 'Don't worry. You're cured now.' You look over at the woman
lying beside you, and think, what did I ever feel for her? And
you go on that way, remembering, but not remembering
why—quite cured of the capacity to love. "By the
time I got to Leningrad," she said. "I'd seen her do it to a
hundred women, and any one of them could have been you. His
Majesty was right. He'd put the means of fighting it in my hands,
and as desperately as I wanted to, I couldn't turn
away." "What
did he give you?" I asked. "He
didn't give me anything," she said. "He took something away: the
Russian language." "Why?" "Because
knowing human languages protects the mind from Sapir. That's why
the Africans are so far ahead—don't you see? They don't get
their Sapir from a fluency chip. They get their first brainmod at
one year, and learn it as a first language. It's the lingua
franca of their continent, and that makes all the difference. The
first computer languages were pidgins, formed the same way any
pidgin is formed, by a dominant race thrusting its words onto the
grammar of a subordinate one. Then with KRIOL, the pidgin
acquired native speakers. In Sapir the tables are turned—it
changes human thought to fit computers, not the other way around.
But the language instinct fights tooth and nail against Sapir,
and if you teach the child a human language too early, the mind
hedges. "Here
in the Fusion, the Weavers won't let anyone but themselves speak
Sapir without a chip—it would give the people too much
power. But even Weavers learn it late in life. They don't think
that makes a difference, but it does. Not enough, as it turned
out, but there's a difference. His-Majesty-in-Chains burned away
the Russian language from my mind, so that Sapir could do its
work. And when I got to the trainport, even my own memories were
in a foreign language—how could I possibly remember
dialogue that wasn't imprinted with compass orientation, time of
day, and ambient temperature? I had to call up a translation
program from the Net, just so I could write you a message to tell
you I'd come home." She
laid her hand on the samovar. "Maya, I have to tell you... it was
my fault, what happened to us. If I'd used all my skill to hide
you, we would have been safe. But after what His Majesty showed
me, I couldn't do that. I knew what was coming, and I couldn't
turn away." "But
you didn't tell me?" I said. "No. If
I failed and they found you, you'd be a lot better off not
knowing. It was my responsibility, and I wanted the consequences
to be on my head." She was
hoping for forgiveness. I made my face a mask. "What did you do?"
I said. "I
tried to change the filters in the Net. That's where ninety
percent of the work is done, you know. If I knocked out the
filters, and kept them knocked out, then the Weavers and
screeners wouldn't have a chance." She
laughed, shaking her head. "It was a hell of a plan, on paper.
But I should have known. His Majesty had made me like an African,
sure. But if one African could liberate the world, wouldn't it
have happened a long time ago? Obvious, right? But somehow that
line of reasoning escaped me. "So I
went a little way, and it was easy. I got confident. I pushed
further and further. At some point I was detected, and I didn't
even know it. "And
somehow they found you. They must have followed me in reality,
that's all I can figure. I'd hidden you from the Net so well I
thought they'd never find you—after all, who thinks of
Weavers wearing out actual shoe leather, and all that Sam
Spade kind of shit? All the time I was a Weaver, I never heard of
such a thing. But I guess when one of their own turned coat, they
took it personally. So they followed me and found you. Then they
waited, I suppose, to see if I would lead them to any more
accomplices. But no, it was only you. And then one day they got
me—just as I was about to walk in the door." "His-Majesty-in-Chains
knows what he's doing," I said. "Why would he send you to fight
the Weavers if they were going to beat you that
easily?" "Oh,
Andreyeva," Voskresenye said, "you do not understand His Majesty
at all. He does a thousand things that do no good. His-Majesty
does not care what is effective, only what is right." "Maybe,"
she said. "Or maybe he saw all the way forward to this moment.
Maybe all this was His-Majesty's way of getting the job done
despite the chains. Like some complicated bank shot, where the
billiard balls fly far apart across the table and then meet
again...." "But
with a different English," I said. Her
face clouded; she seemed not to have heard me. "They did it on
purpose," she said. "I'm sure they did. They took me right in the
street, in front of the apartment where we lived, so you would be
there, and you'd see." "I did
see," I said. "I saw her die. How can you claim she
didn't?" "Why
are you doing this, Maya?" she asked softly. "Do you really think
I'm lying? Or do you think you can make it all unreal, if you
just ask the right question? Not even a camera can do
that." But her
pleading only hardened my resolve. Yes, I thought; I am a camera,
and this is no different from grilling some corrupt political
that the Weavers have thrown to the wolves. "I
assume," I said, "that your changing the subject means you
haven't got an answer?" "Oh,
nice, nice. You're right, I am beginning to understand this
business." "If you
can't—" "All
right, all right." She took a cleansing breath, pushed back her
inorganic hair, and said: "The place I had carved in the whale's
mind was waiting. All I had to do was get there. That's why I put
the Net chip in my head when I did. You remember? I wasn't trying
to escape, just to delay them long enough that I could slip out.
And I couldn't leave all in one piece, because they'd be
expecting that. My mind wasn't the size of a whale yet, but it
was the size of a house, anyway. You can't hide something like
that. It's like trying to mislay Leningrad." Her
eyes sought—what? An answering jest, a hint of recognition.
I kept my face blank, and my mind too. After all, that was my
job. Though of course, to do it right, I'd need my
screener— I
turned away, my deadpan cracking. Her hand, I saw, had sunk into
the samovar; if she'd been real, she would have broken it and
been burned. I walked around to her side, and, regarding her
profile, said: "How do
you claim you survived?" "I did
the unexpected," she said, turning to face me. "I tore my mind
into a thousand pieces, and scattered it to the
winds." "And
lived?" I said, circling around behind her. "Yes.
I'd been planning it a long time, preparing. I had set up a swarm
of programs that would descend upon my mind, divide it, and carry
it away in bits, each one too small to look like anything human.
Each one would hide itself, and then, at an appointed time, they
would converge upon the whale." "The
soul can't survive that kind of dissection," I said. "You'd be
desouled. You'd be an automaton." "For a
little while, yes," she said. "But once I got into the whale, the
soul grew back. The soul will do that, once it's sewn
together— as long as it's in the African Net, or in
flesh." "And
did all the birds come home to roost? Or are you missing parts?
The part of you that loved me?" "No," she
said. "I made sure of that. I knew I might lose myself. So I
built a puzzle-lock around my hiding place—something I'd
need my whole self to solve. Before I got through that, I'd be
able to protect you, but not speak to you. That way I could be
sure that if I did come back, it would really be me. I didn't
want to be some soulless monster battering at your
door." "And
you think it's better this way? You come to me now, when for
twenty years I was there every day, on the streets, looking for
you, not even knowing who it was I looked for—and even when
I accuse you of being a Postcop, you won't tell me who you are?
And then you think, because you come to me in Weaver white, that
after all this time we can pick up where we left off?" I had
stopped in front of her. She raised her hand, as if she wanted to
touch my face, but my expression warned her away. "Maya, believe
me," she said, "I never wanted it this way. Do you think it was
easy for me, all those years, knowing you were there, not being
able to touch you? But understand this: I was with you all
along. I couldn't speak to you, but I was there, protecting
you. That's how you managed to stay on News One, when you were a
felon with bad ratings. That's why you only have a suppressor
chip, and nothing worse—nothing irreversible. If it hadn't
been for me, they would have burned the memories from your mind
forever, if not killed you. I was woven into your mind so deeply
that in order to appear to you, I had to pull back, so that there
was something to show you that wasn't a part of yourself. I was
most with you when you thought that you were most
alone." "Is
that what it comes down to?" I said, looking away from her. "All
your speeches about cabling? 'I'll touch you so gently that
you'll never know I'm there?' " "I
couldn't speak to you," she said. "I'd made a
mistake." "What?" She
lowered her voice and said, begrudging every syllable: "I
underestimated Voskresenye." "Miss
Mirabara, my blushes!" "One
more word—" "Will
one of you just tell me what the hell happened?" "While
the Weaver was being torn apart by Bacchae," Voskresenye said, "I
had a look at her puzzle-lock, and though I had no time to open
it, I surrounded it with more locks of my own. Thereafter, what
she wanted the most—to reach you, Maya
Tatyanichna—could only happen at my sufferance. And the
price I asked was modest; it was, in fact, something she'd wanted
to do all along. To defeat the Weavers." "For
three years we fought in the mind of the whale," she said. "And
in the end, we reached a stalemate. I had gained some power over
him, yes. But in the end, his locks held. And we both realized
that we had to find some compromise." "Which
took seventeen years?" "Time
was important to me," she said. "To him it wasn't—he
was only too willing to wait. We had to lay the groundwork, build
the back doors, put together the Netcast, design the viruses. But
I could have done it in a third the time, if he hadn't stalled
me." "I
knew," he said, "that when I allowed her to make contact with
you, my power over her would be at an end. I would then have no
further chance to influence the series of events that we touched
off. I would have been a fool not to take my time in making
preparations." "It was
you that finally made it happen, Maya," she said. "When you got
your series on the Calinshchina. He saw it as the perfect
opportunity to get time on News One. And I... when you turned
over that table, and said the word that would have called me when
I was a Weaver, I knew you were crying out to me, whether you
knew it or not. Deep inside, you still remembered, and you were
saying, 'Come to me—I've been alone too long, and I can't
do this anymore.' " But
looking back on what I'd done, I could find no trace of such a
sentiment. "So I
went to News One," she said, "and told them that I was a Weaver,
and that I'd seen what you'd done. I told them you were suspected
of dissidence, and they should give you the story, to help flush
out your accomplices. And then two weeks later, when
Voskresenye's preparations had been made, I told them I wanted to
replace your screener, and that once I'd found out what I needed
to know, in all probability you would be executed. They were only
too glad to oblige. "The
rest is straightforward," she said. "He unlocked some of the
locks, but not all. And I did everything that the remaining locks
would let me do, trying to jog your memory, so you'd realize who
I was." "Of
course," I said. "That's why you looked so strange when I accused
you of being a Weaver." "Yes. I
thought for a moment you might have remembered. But you hadn't.
And then I had to say whatever I could to keep you from throwing
me out, and ruining the plan, because it might have been another
ten years before I could talk to you again. You can't imagine how
much it hurt, having to lie to you like that." "For
someone who doesn't want to lie to me," I said, "you've certainly
done it a lot. You've done nothing but lie since you came to me.
You changed your name—" "That
was so News One wouldn't know I was a woman." "—you
changed your face—" "You
kept blacking out until I did!" "You
could have just told me." "I had
no choice," she said. "The locks were there, and Voskresenye was
whispering in my ear in Sapir the whole time. I had to fight for
every hint I gave you. Sometimes there were whole arguments in
the space of a single word." "And
the fake mindlink?" "I
didn't hide a single thing from you. The locks were in the way,
but I opened up. And the love you felt was real." "My
God," I said, "you even proposed to me, in the car on the way
here, and you were lying all the time. Did you really think the
Africans would take in a white girl who wanted to marry a
ghost?" She
looked intently at the whale, as though afraid to meet my eyes.
"Maya, it's been twenty years," she said. "You're not the
same person you were, and God knows I'm not. I don't even know
what I am anymore. I wanted to see if we could fall in love with
each other again, without a lot of old memories telling you that
you had to." "You
knew full well I wasn't capable of loving anything." "But
you were. You did." She reached out to take my hand, but her
fingers passed through it. "Maya, they can only take away so
much. They can't change who you are, not completely. You did feel
something. The suppressor muffled it, but it was there. This
morning, over the vidphone—it was written all over your
face." "Yes,"
I said. "I suppose it must have been. And you looked into my face
and saw it, and you told me to come to Arkhangelsk, so
Voskresenye could rape my memories." "Maya,
believe me," she said fiercely, "that was never supposed to
happen. I agreed to let him Netcast my memories, not
yours. If I'd known he was going to do that to you, you'd still
be in Leningrad." "Oh,
but Mirabara, I had the deaths of hundreds," Voskresenye said.
"Seeing a woman killed for dissidence, from the viewpoint of
one who loved her—I could not pass it by. Besides, the
memories at the moment of desuppression are so much
stronger—" "It
doesn't matter," I said to her. "They're not my memories
or yours—if you are who you say you are. They're
ours. If he'd taken them from you, it would still have been my
life." "I
know," she said. "I know. But what else could I do? It was the
only way I could ever talk to you again. He still held the locks
in his hands. Besides—Maya, his Netcast could change the
lives of everyone in the Fusion. Compared to that..." She smiled
uneasily and said in a flawless Bogart: "It doesn't matter a hill
of beans in this crazy world whether two people find
love—" "It
does matter," I said. "It matters a lot more than the
ethical loop-the-loops you two have spent all this time figuring
out." "Yes,"
she said. "It matters, yes. But not more than anything. You and I
are important, but some things are more important." I
turned to the whale, who was drifting as if in sleep, and put my
hand against the glass." 'Marriage is a thing in ending stories,'
" I said. "You knew it all along." "Maya,
there had to be a world for us to live in. You know what happened
last time—how it wore us down, how we could only live by
hiding. Well, we're not going to be able to hide this time.
Everyone knows us. If we're going to live, they have to
understand us, too." "And
what happened to Africa, Keishi?" I said, my voice colder than
the glass I touched. "What happened to climbing the Wall of Souls
and marrying the foreign princess? Was that just your happily
ever after, in the lie you used to get me here?" "It was
what I hoped for. What I still hope for. I want us to be
together, because I love you." "Oh,
sure, in a fairy tale." I tried
to make my voice hard, to control my gestures—but I
wavered. My hand, which had been pressed against the glass, came
down in a loose shake of weary relinquishment. "No, that's not
fair," I admitted. "You do love me. You just don't mean by love
what I mean by it." "What
does it mean, then?" She stepped toward me, closing in. "I
thought it meant caring for you. Staying with you—I've
stood by you for thirty years. What else? Protecting you? I've
done that, too. I've done it today. Remember?" "Sure,
I remember everything. The Postcops wore black; you wore blue."
The words were harsh, but I could hardly keep my voice from
trembling. I remembered the joy I had felt when I first heard her
voice on the radio, and let myself begin to hope that I might
live. That hope was still in me—a black ember with a point
of red-gold at its heart. She could fan it back to life, I knew.
She could wear me down until I forgave her out of sheer fatigue.
She had all the time there was, time ticked in silicon; and I was
only flesh, and flesh was weak. Then I
flared up—not in joy, but in anger. "Wait," I said. "The
videophone—this morning—you only told me to come to
Arkhangelsk early after you saw I wasn't wearing the new
chips. So I went, and the Postcops were waiting, and they took my
old moist-ware away. After you'd spent the whole week trying to
get me to replace it. You did it, didn't you? You had to get the
new chips in my head, so you could run the Netcast through me,
and put in the countervirus. And when you couldn't do it any
other way, you had me arrested. That's why you got so upset when
you saw I wasn't wearing the 6000s. And I thought it was because
they were a gift, and you were in love." "It
wasn't like that," she said. "Yes, I tried every way I could
think of to get you to put the 6000s in—" "Including
pretending to modify them. When they were already
modified." "He'd
modified
them, yes. But I still had to fix them so you could take out your
suppressor chip." "Which
let Voskresenye steal my memories." "Yes,
but I didn't know that. And then this morning, when I'd tried
everything I could think of, Voskresenye wanted me to reach into
your mind and make you put the new chips in. But I
wouldn't—even though I knew it meant he'd have you
captured. I knew I could rescue you. It was terrible, but I
thought it would be better than changing your mind." "Besides,"
I said, "you couldn't pass up the chance to make a hero's
entrance." She
stepped back, stung. "Maya, whatever I am, I'm not Edward
Sinclair. If you think I am, you're not getting good color
fidelity on your morality chip." "Oh,
what does it matter?" I said wearily. The ember was dead now;
there was no reason to keep smothering it. There was no need to
continue this, to tear open her wounds or mine. I didn't want to
hurt her. I just wanted this all to be over. I wanted to be
alone, to be out of this place, and to rest. "Well,"
Voskresenye said with a sigh of amusement, "if you can grow
another soul in twenty more years, Miss Mirabara, try again. She
may have mellowed by that time." "Old
man," Keishi said with fervor, "if I could think of anything to
do to you worse than what you're doing to
yourself—" "Oh,
Mirabara, enough blustering; you'll miss all the fun." He turned
his wrist as if consulting an imaginary watch. "It's six o'clock.
Time for the show." "Keishi,"
I said in sudden fear, "what happens to you when the whale
dies?" "What
do you think? You know everything else." Her swollen eyes looked
up at me; relented. "I die, too." "Come,
Andreyeva," Voskresenye said, rising. "Put your moist-ware back
in. You are too much of a camera, even now, to miss the death of
the world's last whale." He was
walking toward the tank. I moved to block his path. "Well,
well. Riding to your lover's rescue, despite it all?" "I
changed my mind. I'm not done talking to her yet. Maybe I'm just
not done yelling at her yet. Either way, you're not doing
anything." In
reply he stripped off his gloves, revealing the frame of steel
that moved his hands. It was hard, with sharp edges: a nice set
of built-in brass knuckles. "Do you think," he said, "that after
all that I have done, I will scruple to hurt you?" But I
had not listened to all Voskresenye's stories without learning
something about him. He could get past me by knocking me
out—as he could have saved Katya from killing her uncle by
taking the bar himself. But he wouldn't. Now, as then, he would
only talk. He didn't have it in him. Or so I
hoped. I grasped his wrists— And
they had less than human strength. The carapace looked strong,
but it wasn't. I could hold him easily. He soon
quit trying to break away—he was not a man to struggle
against the inevitable—and said: "You do
have a certain flair for the dramatic, Maya Tatyanichna. Very
well, then. It will make a better disk this way; there's more to
see...." I was
supporting his weight; he had gone limp. I put one arm around him
and guided him back to his chair, not gently. "Thank
you," he said. "I knew there was chivalry in you yet." "What
have you done?" "Look!" The
whale had turned onto her back and was struggling against the
airhose that anchored her. On the third try it came free, taking
some of the scar tissue with it. As she swam to the other end of
the tank, a brown plume of blood trailed behind her. "I have
released her," he said, his limbs still as death. "All these
years I have held her back by force of will, every waking hour,
and separated her from her body at night—all to prevent the
sibyl from getting what she so desired." "This
is her?" I asked. "You're not doing it?" "Certainly
not." "Is
there something you can do to make it easier?" "You
should have thought of that before," he said. "But it will be, if
not painless, at least quick. When she runs out of air, she will
die. And then the nanotech I have implanted in her body will take
over, and tear her DNA to atoms, so that all the king's horses
and all the king's men...” He smiled and did not complete
the rhyme. "How
long can she hold her breath?" "In her
current state, not long. And I imagine she will try to tire
herself out, to make it even quicker. Come, put in your camera
chip, Andreyeva; the world is waiting." I
stared at the chip in my hand for a moment, then slotted it in.
The whale began to swim back and forth in the tank. With her
damaged fluke she could not stop her motion, so with each lap
around the tank she struck the glass, harder each
time. "Oh, my
God," I said, "it's going to break!" Voskresenye
chuckled. "You have no drowning mark upon you; your complexion is
perfect gallows. It will hold." The
whale slammed into the back of the tank. A sepia-colored cloud of
blood surrounded her. The audience was back, and screaming in my
head. "I'm
not going to record this," I said suddenly. "I'm not." Quickly,
before the audience could react, I pulled the camera chip out of
my head, dropped it, and crushed it underfoot. Twenty-one
Sorrow's Springs "You
will let this be forgotten?" Voskresenye shouted as I walked
away. "It's
all right," Keishi said to him. "I'll put you on the Net. They
won't cut this off, no matter who it comes from." I
walked out of the room and shut the door behind me. "Well?"
she said, appearing next to me. "Aren't you going to say
good-bye?" I
looked out at the rows of books in cages and said
nothing. "In
that case ... take me with you." I
leaned my head back against the door and closed my
eyes. "Maya,
I know what you must be feeling. But there's no more time. When
the whale dies, I die too—unless you help me." She
waited for me to respond. I didn't. At last she said: "I'm still
a Weaver, Maya. Only a tiny part of me is any kind of flesh. But
that part, the part that matters, is in danger. I will die with
the whale, unless you let me live in you." Again
she waited. I stood motionless, feeling the mechanized breath of
the ceiling vent against my face. "I'll
keep my memories on the Net," she said. "Everything that's data.
I'll just offload a little of your mind into the Net, and take
that space. You'll never feel anything missing. But we'll be
together. Always." Still I
did not move. I felt that I would stand there forever if I had
to, rather than speak to her—forever, or until the whale
died. Surely that would not be long. "I'm
not talking about a fusion as extreme as Voskresenye and the
whale. All it means is that I become a silent partner in your
body. In the day, I'll be with you; and at night, we can be
together in the Net. Wherever you go, I'll protect you. I'll cut
you a path through the Postcops, and keep the Weavers from your
door." Her hand must have been almost touching me; I could feel
its virtual warmth against my face. "And I'll bend every delivery
boy in Russia to your whim, and show uppity rental cars the error
of their ways...." Her hand touched my cheek, and began to sink
into it. "And
will you hold me when I'm frightened," I said, "Keishi
Mirabara?" For a
moment I hated her for tearing the words out of me, for making me
open myself up enough to push her away. Then I opened my eyes,
and saw her standing before me, her face turned away as though
slapped; and I began to feel a certain tenderness, though of a
kind I knew I must resist. "You
know my name," she said at last. "Why won't you use
it?" "Answer
the question," I said. But that was just my camera's instinct,
working on autopilot. I didn't want her to answer the question at
all. The question was only an omen, like a whale's fluke briefly
rising to the surface of the water. I wanted her to answer the
whale, and all the drowned and dying things beneath it, and the
whole salt hidden sea. "I
didn't ask to be this way," she said. "If I had lost a limb, if I
were paralyzed, would you turn me away for that?" "I
don't know," I said; and it would have been a truthful answer to
any question that she could have asked. "Maya,
please. It's the only chance I have left—the only chance
we have left. Go back in. The camera chip may not be
ruined, and even if it is, we can set up something
else." "If I
did go back," I said, "you'd still be there, wouldn't you?
Helping Voskresenye get out to the Net. Turning the death of the
last whale in the world into something you can buy shrink-wrapped
off a spinner at the grocery." "Yes,"
she said. "And I don't like it any more than you do.
Less—you can't know what it means to me, you haven't lived
in her for all these years. But it has to be done. Do you
understand why?" "You
think he's right," I said. "In
many things, yes. He's right about the Weavers and what they're
trying to do. And he's partly right about what has to be done. If
he weren't, I wouldn't have helped him. I certainly wouldn't have
let him send out the countervirus, if I didn't think it had a
chance of working. "But in
one thing, he is very wrong. Pavel Sergeyevich has been old a
long time, and he has been bitter even longer than that. It's
quite a collection of horrors he's sending out—it takes a
lot of pain to enforce the Weavers' vision of humanity. But you
can't just show people the evil. They'll only turn away. You have
to give them something else. Something to care about. Something
to hope for." She
didn't try to touch me again, but she moved very close, looking
up into my eyes. My back was pressed against the door, so I had
nowhere to retreat to. "Do you
know the story of Pandora?" she said. "Pandora opens up a box of
demons, unleashing them all on the world. But at the bottom of
the box, there's one thing that's either the worst demon of all,
or the saving grace, depending who you listen to:
hope." I
remembered that I had been filled with hope only that morning. It
seemed years and oceans away. "Maya,
let's be the hope," she said. "The whole world will be watching
what happens to us. Anything we care to toss out will be pounced
on. So let's show them that not everything the Weavers suppress
is bad. Let's show them that love can win out—that when the
Weavers have done their worst, some things can still
endure. "Don't
you see, Maya? He wanted to Netcast my death, but your love got
mixed in with it. He thinks of the two of us as some rare
and unwholesome species of butterfly, to be etherized and pinned
to a card. But we know better, and we can prove it. No one has
imagined us. All telepresence ever shows people is love between
men and women, and not even real love at that—some pathetic
imitation done with brain-makeup. We'll hit them like a
thunderbolt. We—our love—that's what will make
the Wall of Souls come tumbling down." She
smiled, briefly closing her eyes. "This is an easy one, Ilsa;
this time, staying with Rick is helping the Resistance. So
the question is—no, wait. Let me do this right." She
sank to one knee, and touched my hand with hers. "Maya
Tatyanichna, clan the whole world, hearth lesbianka: Will
you take what is left of this woman, who has the mind of a
Weaver, the soul of a whale, and the education of a half-crazed
four-nine terrorist, and who can't figure out whether she's a
fallen angel or a risen devil—but who loves you more than
any language that she knows could ever say?" I
looked down at her in horror. "No," I said. "You
don't mean that," she said imploringly. "The
hell I don't. You're crazier than Voskresenye. You don't get it,
do you? You've forgotten what human emotions are like— you
either forget them completely, or you blow them up into something
they can never be. Damn it, Mirabara, it's only love. It doesn't
mean you want to fuse souls with someone. And it doesn't save the
world, or even the people in it. It's not something you put on
display for some political purpose. It's not a statement or a
demonstration; it just is." "You
just got finished saying that love matters." "It
does matter," I said. "But not for the reasons you think. And the
woman I loved would have understood that." "Maya,
you underestimate—" "Considering
what you've done to me, after loving me for thirty years," I
said, "do you really think people will act any differently after
feeling some pale ghost of that for thirty seconds?" Now it
was her turn not to answer. She rose to her
feet—selfconsciously, as if she had realized the absurdity
of continuing to kneel. She walked up to the cage marked POETRY
and stared into its shadowed depths. "You know what this means,
don't you?" she said. "It means they won. Whatever we may have
accomplished, they won in the end. They tore us
apart." "They
won a long time ago. This is between us." She
looked at me over her shoulder. "It also means I die." I
clenched my hands in frustration. "If you need a mind, take
Voskresenye's. He's not using it." "I
can't," she said. "His brain's too damaged, and he's locked me
out so he can have his hell. And besides, if I can't be with you,
it doesn't matter anymore." "I'm
not trying to kill you," I said. "I
know. But that's what you're doing." "Oh,
that's perfect," I said in a flash of anger. " 'Give me your
hypothalamus or I'll kill myself.' You're lying even now, aren't
you? You never wanted a lifemate. You wanted a lifeboat.
I'm your ticket out of the whale." She
said nothing; her eyes looked into mine. Her face was shimmering,
not with tears, but as if trying to break up into component
polygons. "That
was a low blow," I admitted, looking past her toward the
door. "It
wasn't a comedy after all," she said under her breath. "What?" She
looked up, her arms wrapped around her. "Remember what the whale
said? 'Marriage is a thing in ending stories.' I taught her that.
I fed her Aristotle, and told her to find me a plot that was a
comedy, and not a tragedy: a story with a wedding at the end, and
not a death. Maybe she never understood what marriage was, and
was just humoring me. Or maybe the wedding in the story you told
her is what she foresaw. Or—I don't know—maybe it was
me who ruined things, refusing to believe how much you'd changed.
I suppose we relied on the whale too much, both of
us." "Maybe
if you had spent your time thinking of me as a person, and not a
variable, things would have been different." "Would
they?"
she said, longingly. I shook
my head. "No." Because I was thinking of how she had made her
plans against the Weavers, all those years, and never told
me—to protect me, she had said; protect me in ignorance, as
if I were her child and not her lover. The woman who wanted to
share my mind had never been willing to share my
trust. "You'll
never get to Africa alone. You go out there and you'll be dead by
sunset." She thrust her hands into her jacket pockets; tears were
in her eyes. "Just let me in for long enough to save you; when
you're safe, if you want to erase me again—" "That's
enough." I squeezed past her, banging my shoulder against the
cage bars. "That's enough." I went out into the
laboratory. She was
blocking the door out. "Maya, I love you. I know you think it
isn't real, but it is. It's the only thing about me that
is real. I showed you that once...." She
reached out and touched her hand to my cheekbone. I tried to push
her arm away, but my hand passed through it: unreal. Holding my
breath, I stepped forward and walked right through her. When my
heart passed through hers it seemed to shudder, and for a moment,
I thought it would never recover its own rhythms. But it was only
an illusion. There was nothing there at all. I went
out into the hall, got onto the motionless slidewalk, and began
to run. She was
beside me. She kept pace without needing to move her legs, but
her image was starting to flicker. "Maya, tell me one thing. Say
you don't love me, and then I'll go." I
looked at her. And I could not deny it: there was something that
responded. For twenty years, my heart had been hollow and dry, an
empty seashell. Now I was surprised by warmth; as earlier, in
front of the police station, I had put out my hands expecting
metal and instead touched breathing flesh. She
must have seen the hesitation in my face. "Well then," she said.
"Your choice is obvious." "Yes,"
I said. "Yes, it is." And I pushed past her toward the
elevator. Again
she stood before me. Herringbones chased each other down her
cheeks, and I thought surely she would disappear at last; but she
regained control. "They'll be watching for me," she said. "But if
I swarmed again, I might get out. And this time go to Africa, and
try to find a place to grow my soul back. If I did that, and came
back to you in, say, another twenty years, would you—" Her
image flickered, and her mouth moved silently. Static invaded her
eyes. "I
don't know," I said. "I don't think so." And if
I could, I would freeze that instant forever. But it's no use. I
can trap the young rose in the hologram, but the rose is long
since dust. And what I most want to conceal from you, you've
always known: That I
went up into the world and left her there, in the prison camp
beneath the ocean, with the ruined mind of the new Iscariot and
the body of the whale.
THE
FORTUNATE
FALL
RAPHAEL
CARTER
TOR
® A TOM
DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK NEW
YORK An
extract from Pnin by Vladimir Nabokov, copyright ©
1957 by
Vladimir Nabokov, copyright © 1985 by Vera Nabokov
and Dmitri
Nabokov, is reprinted by permission of Vintage Books, a
Division of Random House Inc. All rights reserved. An
extract from "Cinderella," Transformations, copyright
© 1971
by Anne Sexton, is reprinted by permission of
Houghton Mifflin
Company. All rights reserved. This
is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed
in this
novel are either fictitious or are used fictitiously. THE
FORTUNATE FALL Copyright
© 1996 by Raphael Carter All
rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this
book, or
portions thereof, in any form. This
book is printed on acid-free paper. A Tor
Book Published
by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc. 175
Fifth Avenue New
York, NY 10010 Tor
Books on the World Wide Web: http://www.tor.com Tor®
is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates,
Inc. Library
of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Carter,
Raphael. The
fortunate fall / Raphael Carter.—1st ed. p.
cm. "A Tom
Doherty Associates book." ISBN
0-312-86034-X (alk. paper) 1.
Women journalists—Russia—Fiction. 2.
Genocide—Russia- -Fiction.
3. Virtual reality—Fiction. I. Title. PS3553.A78278F67
1996 813'.54—dc20
96-2656 CIP First
Edition: July 1996 Printed
in the United States of America 0
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 for
Pamela Dyer-Bennet who
turned out to be real THANKS to Rich
Veraa, who was first to read it; to
Patrick Goodman, who delivered take-out and
helped vet the continuity; to
George Willard, who posed for a statue, and
provided lessons in parachuting and costumery; to Beth
Friedman, who taught the nanobugs how to
drink; to
Patricia Wrede, who provided a critique so perceptive
I suspect she may be God; and to
Larissa Printzian, who told me the story
of Ivan Durachok, and may live to regret it. 1 VIRTUAL
OR IMMEDIATE TOUCH Love
not the heavenly Spirits, and how their love Express
they? by looks only? or do they mix Irradiance,
virtual or immediate touch? —Milton,
Paradise Lost The
whale, the traitor; the note she left me and the run-in with the
Post police; and how I felt about her and what she turned out to
be—all this you know. I suppose I can't complain. I knew
the risks when I became a camera. If you see something important
enough, your thoughts become a coveted commodity: they steal your
memories and sell them tied in twine. Now you may find my life
for sale in certain stalls, on dusty street and twisting
alleyway; it is available on moistdisk, opticube, and dryROM.
There are places on the Net where you can make a copy free,
although the colors may have faded to sepia and the passions to
pastel. You have taken my memories and slotted them into your
head. And you have played them through, reclining on a futon in
some neon-streaked apartment, reliving my every sensation and
thought from the hour underground with the whale. If you
paid extra for the moistdisk, you have more than just that hour.
You can peer around each thought to see the memories implied in
it, the way you'd turn a hologram to see what lies behind the
rose. You can freeze-frame at the moment I first saw the whale,
and follow the associations back—to the argument over
Moby-Dick the night before; to the first time Voskresenye
said the word, in the cafe on Nevsky Prospect; to the dolphins
that made me clutch my mother's hand with fear, at the amusement
park when I was six years old. You have searched me and known me:
and when at last you put the disk away, you thought of my mind as
a sucked orange, dry of secrets. But
what you saw, heard, touched, remembered, does not quite exhaust
my meanings. With the moistdisk in your head, however bristled
you may be with sockets, what you see is only the moment of
experience, frozen forever. It excludes any later reflections
upon the event—as the hologram of a rose in bloom excludes
the flower's swollen ripening and black decay. I will
give you my thoughts since that time, but not on moist-disk. I
will not let you explore the twining pathways of my thoughts as I
explore them—not again. I will hide instead behind this
wall of words, and I will conceal what I choose to conceal. I
will tell you the story in order, as you'd tell a story to a
stranger who knows nothing of it: for you are not my friend, and
what you know is far less than you think you know. You will read
my life in phosphors on a screen, or glowing letters scrolling up
the inside of your eye. And when you reach the end, you will lie
down again in your indifferent dark apartment, with the neon
splashing watercolor blues across your face, and you will know a
little less about me than you did before. One
Ashes, Ashes "Okay,
what's this scent?" "Roses,"
I said. "And
this one?" "Citrus.
Grapefruit." "All
right. What about this?" "Cow
shit." "Close." "Okay,
horse shit." "Bull's-eye.
Olfactory systems are go. Let's do hearing." I was
standing by the River Chu, in Kazakhstan, staring at a little
hill from which three naked chimneys rose. I stood alone; but a
thousand miles away, in Leningrad, a woman I had never met was
testing my senses. When she had finished, she would slide herself
into my mind, like a rat into water. As my thoughts went out live
to the Net, she would screen them through hers, strengthening my
foreground thoughts and sifting out impurities, so that—if
she was any good—the signal that went out on News One would
be pure and clear. And when she drew herself out of my mind
again, five minutes later, she would know more about me than a
friend of thirty years. "I
think it's an E flat," I said. "Yes,
but what instrument?" "Brass." "Be
specific." "Do I
look like a conductor?" "It's a
trombone. You can tell by the glissando. Now what's
this?" I had
never met this Keishi Mirabara. I had no idea what she looked
like. But Keishi was a screener, so for her, our acquaintance of
half an hour was already long. Hooking up mind to mind, the way
they do, they can only scorn the glacial rituals the rest of us
use to form friendships. By the end of the day, she might already
hate me—not with some casual dislike, but with a deep,
dissective hatred, such as is otherwise only attained after
decades of marriage. It's bad stuff, their hatred. Their love is
worse: a surge of emotion that comes at you flood-fast,
overwhelming your own feelings before you're even certain what
they are. And the poor camera, who can reach out to another mind
only with mute eyes and vague bludgeoning words ... well, it's
like being an amnesia victim, coming home a stranger to someone
who's loved you all your life. "All
right, stop me when this stripe is the same color as the
sky." "Now—no,
a little more—yes, there." "You're
coming through faded, then. I'm going to split your field of
vision. What you're seeing will be on your left, and what's
coming through here will be on your right. Tell me when the
colors are the same. Ready?" "Ready,"
I said. I gave it only half attention. I had done this all
before. Keishi
had come in to screen for me only that evening, when my last
screener, Anton Tamarich, disappeared on the day of a broadcast.
It didn't surprise me—screeners go burnout all the
time—but it left me stuck going live with a screener I'd
never worked with before. It's the beginning of any of a dozen
camera nightmares. You're working with a new screener who falls
asleep at the switch just when you remember something you heard
once about how to make brain viruses, and a Weaver possesses the
man you're interviewing and kills you on the spot. Or some
especially compromising sexual fantasy flits through your head
and out into the Net and is the scandal of the week. The untried
screener is the camera's equivalent of having your fly
open. It was
scary enough that—though I'd never thought I'd say
it— I missed Anton. I hadn't liked him, but I'd liked
working with him. He was an informer for the Post police, and he
hated me. I knew where I stood. "Say
the words that come into your head." "Excrescence.
Trapezoid. Spark. Blanket. Bolus. Rust." "Verbal,
go. Okay, Maya, I'm ready for link-up. Say when." I
walked halfway up the hill, arranged myself facing the river, and
started to prepare myself for contact. After all these years of
having strangers in my head, it's still not easy. I scratched my
nose, adjusted the camera moistware in the temporal socket at the
side of my head, and made sure for the tenth time that I really
did not have to go to the bathroom. "Relax,
will you?" Keishi whispered in my ear, from Leningrad. " 'So Your
Camera Has To Pee' is chapter two in the Basic Screening
textbook, and heck, girl, I'm up to chapter four
already." At that
moment gallows humor was not what I needed. Fear shifted in the
coils of my intestines, like a restless snake. I would forget my
lines. I would trip on a buried cobblestone and half the Russian
Historical Nation would feel me break my nose. I fixed my eyes on
the ground and began to hyperventilate, fighting for
control. And
Keishi, knowing that anything she said would make it worse, did
the only thing she could do to help. She plugged in her screening
chip and patched into my mind. There's
a sense of presence when the screener comes on line, a faint
heat, a pullulation. Keishi's feedback was clear and warm and
reassuring, the strongest I've ever felt—as though someone
had wrapped a blanket around my head. ("That's me," Keishi
agreed. "An electric babushka.") Maybe this would work out after
all, I decided, knowing she heard the thought. "Ten
more seconds," she warned me. "Five. Four. Three ... and you're
live, girl." I felt the "up" drug flood my visual cortex,
making me strain my eyes to separate the river from the rolling
hill behind it. Keishi fed the hours of interviews and research
that Anton and I had done into my memory, so that the five-minute
Netcast could imply a whole week's work. And you came on line, a
shadow audience that always stood behind me no matter how I
turned my head. "This
is what's left of Square-Mile-on-Chu," I said aloud, panning
slowly around from the river. You said it with me. In a single
body, with the same volition, we strode forward up the hill.
"Three crumbling chimneys and some scattered stones, half sunk
into the ground." I had reached the middle chimney now; I walked
around it, running my hand over the cobblestones to transmit
their tiled smoothnesses. "Typical Guardian construction:
cobblestone instead of brick because of the thousands of hours of
slave labor it took to gather the stones, carry them up here, and
fit them together. The more labor-intensive, the greater the
status." I
panned around to view the river again, then carefully leaned
against the chimney, feeling it cool and lumpy against my back.
"It's as idyllic a scene as you'll find anywhere in Kazakhstan.
You could spend hours in this place. Nature bounces back, you
think, whatever humans do. The hills are leaved with grass, and
laced with branches, growing the same as ever. The birds have
long forgotten what happened here, if indeed they ever noticed,
and are building their nests now. And the river flows on, just as
it did when the word Guardian meant a good thing." I
walked down the hill, slowly, letting the sun warm my back that
the stones had made cold. It was an aggressively beautiful spring
day, tyrannically perfect: the kind of day that spurs the suicide
to action by its mocking contrast to her own despair. Lull
them, Keishi, I subvocalized. Make them feel
it. "I'm
lulling, I'm lulling," was her reply, as laconic as the mood I
wished to set and as the day itself. Walking
slowly in the mild breeze, I approached the lake, reached it, and
did not stop. Without removing my shoes or rolling up my cuffs or
bracing myself against the touch of the water, I walked off into
the muck. Skirls of shock and disgust mingled with the
cold—your shock. Feedback to the limbic system, say the
manuals; what it means is that what you feel, I feel. And vice
versa: I took the feeling and intensified it, hurling it back out
at you. "It is
a beautiful day in Kazakhstan," I said, "and you are calf-deep in
the ash of human bodies." A second long wave of mute horror as
the ash and mud cemented in around my legs, entrapping
them. "The
Unanimous Army came through here in the fall of 2246," I said
when the audience had quieted. Calling on my imagination chip, I
drew a sound of marching out of the white noise of the river.
Then I looked up at the shadowed hillside and began to sculpt its
waving grasses into men. "Imagine a solid column of humanity,
twenty abreast, and so long that if you wanted to cross their
path you'd have to camp here until dawn tomorrow. They have no
uniforms, but wear whatever they happened to have on when they
were absorbed: overalls, cocktail dresses—some are naked
beneath makeshift coats. But all have the same round black chip,
the size of a ruble coin, in their left temples. From time to
time a memory unit passes, like the nameless man we met last
week—" and here Keishi lifted a curtain from the memory
"—people whose minds the Army erased and filled with its
data, so the memories of the others could remain inviolate. The
memory units can no longer even walk, so they are carried
along—but upright, to confuse snipers. At this distance
they are lost in the crowd, and you will never know
them." By now
the Army was almost as clear as reality, thanks to the
imagination chip in my right temporal socket. Keishi flashed the
word "re-creation" at the bottom of my field of vision, so
credulous channel-flippers wouldn't call the station thinking
that the Army had returned. "The
first quarter-mile of the Army consists of people who are weak or
dying or otherwise of little use. Their only purpose is to walk
blindly into everything and see if it will kill them. Now that
they've marched through the Square Mile without harm, Sensors
start to break away from the column: Eyes, Ears, Noses,
Fingertips, each with its respective sense enhanced and all the
others numbed. They swarm over the Square Mile in thousands,
sniffing and prodding and tasting. They take nothing, but now and
again they smear something with a fragrant paint they carry with
them, or with urine or blood. "When
the Sensors return to the march, the column slows and spreads out
to the width of the Square Mile. And when it has passed, hours
later, everything in the camp—the barbed wire, the burnt
wood, even the concrete from the foundations—is gone,
digested into that great worm of meat that once was, and will
soon again be, human. "By
November, every man, woman, and child over five in Kazakhstan had
been taken up into the One Mind and was marching on Occupied
Russia. And in 2248, when the Army software detected victory and
suddenly erased itself from all its component minds, more than
half the people in the world found themselves at least a thousand
miles from home. It was a time of global confusion, during which
millions starved or were murdered. Not many people were concerned
with seeing to it that places like this were
remembered." "But is
that the whole explanation?" (Okay, let's wind it up, I
subvoked.) "Or is there a deeper reason? The Holocaust and
Terror-Famine both haunted the consciences of generations, yet
the Calinshchina is barely remembered—why? We'll have some
answers for you next week, in the third and last part of our
series." And
then it's back to fads and scandals for the both of
us, I
subvoked to Keishi, who chuckled politely in reply. I closed my
eyes, calling up my quite beautiful and utterly fictitious
Net-portrait, and signed off: "Maya Tatyanichna Andreyeva. Of
News One hearth, a Camera." No
sooner had the audience fallen away than Keishi said: "I can't
believe you gave that whole speech standing in the water. I
filtered out most of the cold and wetness, but even so, it wasn't
easy to keep their minds on history while water was seeping into
their underwear." "If I'd
walked out of the water and stood around dripping," I said,
sitting down on the grass to take off my shoes, "it would have
been even more distracting." "You
could have saved your swimming lesson for the very end," she
said. "You could—" but I had pulled the Net chip out of my
head, cutting her off. The chip was long and white, with many
metal legs; cupped in my hand, it looked like some pale, crawling
thing that you'd find living under a rock. Vermin. I slipped it
into a pocket and began to scrape the ash off of my
shoes. Two
The Platypus This
was closed to you, even on moistdisk. Keishi was careful to block
certain things from the Net-cast—not that it mattered, in
the end. I was
folded into the single front seat of the electric car I'd rented
in Alma-Ata. Thanks to the rental company's paternalism, the car
would go no faster than 100 kph. At that rate I was four hours
from the trainport, then three more hours by bullet train from
the empty cathedrals and copper towers of Leningrad. Kazakhstan
crept past me in spurts of brush and patchy fields. There was
nothing for my eyes to do but look ahead for the five-kilometer
markers, distracted only where the scarred land condescended to
support a token sheep. A
yellow light flashed in the corner of my eye. "What?" I said
irritably. The
answer scrolled across my eyes: FEED NANOTECH. "All
right. Cancel alarm." SECOND
WARNING. "All
right, I said." The letters meekly disappeared. I took
my flask out of my pocket and shook it. Almost half full, and I
could get a refill on the train. No problem. I dug the telltale
out of my duffel bag and pressed it against the back of my neck.
It hummed as it read my implant, and clicked a few times,
thinking. Finally it chimed, and I pulled it away. It said I
needed fifty-three millilitres—just a booster. My nano
population was steady as she goes. I opened the flask and,
pinching it between my knees, dug into my duffel for a graduated
cup. The
shout of a siren interrupted my search. The car pulled itself
over to the side of the road. "What?
What's wrong?" "Alcohol
detected," the car informed me primly. "Drinking and driving goes
counter to company policy, as well as the laws of the Fusion of
Historical Nations." "Oh,
right," I said. I touched the telltale to the dashboard, but
there was no answering chime. "It's
right there," I said irritably. "Can't you read?" "Drinking
and driving is not permitted," the car repeated. "There are no
exceptions to this policy." "Look,"
I said, "I'm a camera. I've got more nanobugs in my head than a
corpse has worms. They're the old kind." I was speaking
very slowly and distinctly, as if this might help the car to
understand me. "They live on ethanol. If I don't give them some,
they'll starve, and they'll get all clotted up in my blood
vessels, and I'll have a stroke and die. What do the laws of
Kazakhstan have to say about dying and driving?" "Drinking
and
driving," it corrected me, "go counter to—" "Company
policy, yes, all right. The company was supposed to tell you this
before we left. Do you understand me? I won't get drunk.
The nanobugs will eat the alcohol. I'm not going to wrap us
around a tree—even if there were any trees around. Do you
see any trees? I don't see any trees." "Accidents
are possible at any place and time. Drinking and
driving—" "All
right, I heard you," I said. "I'm overdue to feed the bugs
already. If I don't drink some nanojuice within a couple of
hours, I will, at the very least, be in a coma. And when that
happens, I promise, if there's even one tree in this whole damned
Historical Nation, I'll find it and wrap your pretty little
bumper—" The
alarm light in my eye flashed again. "Yes, I know," I said. "What
do you think I'm trying to do?" A
message scrolled by, just above the horizon: CAN I BUY YOU A
DRINK?—KM. "Mirabara?"
I said. "How did you find me?" ONLY
PERSON IN KAZAKHSTAN WHO WOULD ARGUE WITH A CAR, she answered.
MIND IF I HELP? I
sighed and said, "Do I have a choice?" SURE
YOU DO. LET BUGS DIE. OTHERWISE, IMAGINE A PLATYPUS. "What?" HUMOR
ME. VISUALIZE PLATYPUS. I
stared at the car's hood ornament and tried to imagine a platypus
curled up around it. Gradually the animal gained solidity, and I
made it wake up, yawn, and defecate on the hood. NOW
MAKE IT A WEASEL. I
shrank the platypus into a weasel. CHANGE
IT INTO A WHALE. "A
whale won't fit on the car hood." SMALL
WHALE, she suggested. Then I heard her voice behind me: "Never
mind, I'm here." In the
back seat was a cloud of static, gradually taking on human shape.
As I watched it in the rear-view mirror, it sent out a tendril to
the dashboard. "Company
headquarters has just informed me of a change in policy," the car
said breathlessly. "Drinking and driving is now allowed.
No—I'm sorry, strike that—" it paused as though
listening "—drinking and driving now encouraged.
Also—" as it pulled back out onto the road "—speed
limit throughout Kazakhstan has now been doubled. Tripled if you
happen to be wearing a black shirt, and—" it squealed with
excitement "—you are!" The
accelerator fell under my foot. The speed indicator sprouted an
extra digit, and turned red. "Visualize
bat out of hell," she said. I glanced into the rear-view mirror,
which showed me only a strip of forehead; by craning my neck a
little I managed to see one eyelid, harboring an orb of static.
Then I looked back at the road, which was passing at an alarming
rate. "All
right, Mirabara, I understand how you slipped the text in through
my camera chip, but how are you giving me visual?" "Through
your imagination enhancer." I
frowned. "That doesn't hook up with the Net." "Not
usually. But it'll call out to News One's stock library if it
needs to draw something you don't have a clear memory
of." "Oh.
Like a platypus." "Exactly,"
she said. "By the way, you'd better not take any assignments in
Australia for a while. It's a little confused about egg-laying
mammals—thinks they all look like me. Oh, and they're a lot
bigger than you were imagining. See?" She reached forward and
deposited a platypus on my lap. "Hey!"
I tried to brush the animal away, but it was insubstantial; my
hands passed through it. "Will you get rid of that? I'm trying to
drive." "Oh,
all right. Spoilsport." She made the animal disappear. "You'd
better drink your nanojuice now." I
poured out the vodka—100 proof, strictly regulation; I hate
having to do math before I drink. "Hey,
nice flask," she said admiringly. "Right out of an old
movie." I
shrugged. "Keeps me from getting caught without when I'm out on
assignment." "So,"
she said dismissively, "would a crusty old plaid thermos out of a
lunch box. And a thermos would keep it cold, so you could put
nutrient mix in it. But that flask does something much
better." "What's
that?" I asked, unwarily. "Makes
you feel like Sam Spade." I
dropped my voice half an octave and drawled: " 'All we've got is
that maybe you love me and maybe I love you....' " I
stopped; the pleasure of quotation had carried me past caution.
She gave me a brief speculative look, but let the implication
pass. "Not
bad," she said. "Best Bogart I've heard in a long
time." "Flatterer."
I've been to Japan, so I knew she was putting me on. The Japanese
profess to think that Classical America was the high-water mark
of world civilization—mostly to spite the Africans' love of
Egypt. A good Bogart can get you promotions in Tokyo. Me, I don't
even like Bogart. I just watch The Maltese Falcon for
Peter Lorre, and Casablanca because the thought of people
wanting out of Africa is so agreeably deranged. "Not
that I'm not enjoying this little chat with the back of your
head," Keishi said, "but do you mind if I come up
front?" I
looked around at the interior of the narrow electric car.
"There's nowhere to sit up here except my lap." "Tempting
as that offer is," she said, "I think I'll make my own
accommodations." The right door of the car shimmered and receded,
and a new seat ballooned into the extra space. The car flickered
a little as it morphed, but when she was finished, I couldn't
find the line where real car ended and illusion began. I
looked away, disquieted that my reality could be changed so
easily. "Aren't my intrusion lockouts good for anything?" I
asked. "Oh,
they're good enough to keep you safe from the general
rabble." "But
not enough to make me safe from you?" She
clucked her tongue at me. "Girl, that's not a software
problem." At that
moment a car passed us on the highway, which, in Kazakhstan, was
a rare enough event to command my full attention. "Why
are you doing that?" she asked softly. "Doing
what?" "Looking
away every time I look over at you." "I am
not," I said irritably. "I'm trying to drive, that's
all." "Oh,
yeah? What color are my eyes?" "Mirabara,
I don't even know what color my eyes are." "All
right, then, what color's my hair?" "Black." "You
just guessed that because you know I'm Japanese." "Do you
have any idea how many blondes there are in Japan
now?" "Quit
changing the subject and look at me." It
really was a beautiful day. April: time to start cleaning. That
insulation would have to come out of the windows. And the
bathroom was really disgraceful— "Pull
over!" Keishi was shouting. "What?
What's wrong?" "You
blacked out, that's what. Now pull over before you get yourself
killed." "I feel
fine," I said resentfully, but I stopped the car by the side of
the road. "Maybe
too fine? Maybe drank a little too much nanojuice?" "You
saw me. I drank exactly what the telltale said. When exactly did
this alleged blackout happen?" "Right
after you turned around to look at me. I think I'm
insulted." "Very
funny," I said, but I looked down into my lap. I was beginning to
suspect what had gone wrong. There
are two ways of creating a virtual image. If you want, you can
send video to the optic nerve, but that takes a lot of bandwidth.
If all telepresence worked that way, we'd have sixty channels
instead of six thousand. So most channels barely send any video
at all. I saw a demo once in which they patched some soap-opera
channel through a video screen, and all you could see was a few
pale ghosts swimming in static. It looks solid to you because
your implants secrete what cameras call "down," which makes your
brain, well, gullible—"lowers your thresholds," I think is
the phrase. No, I don't know what thresholds they're talking
about, either. They say it's like the way dreams work, if that
means anything to you. To make
sure you see what you're meant to see instead of just dreaming at
random, the moistware sends signals to some gizmos called
neuromodulators, that sit in the part of your brain that
recognizes things. And the neuromodulators guide your mind, as it
amplifies the patterns it's being fed. This is
not an exact science. Sometimes the mind will amplify a purely
random pattern in the static, or make the right pattern into the
wrong thing. That's why on the low-bandwidth channels, you
sometimes get misrecognitions. The camera sees the Prime
Minister, and you see your Uncle Vanya. The camera sees her first
love, and you see yours. In a case like mine this presents
certain problems, as you can imagine. Now,
News One does go out in full video, precisely because they don't
want Mr. Yablokov to turn into Dyadya Vanya during a speech. So
while I'm transmitting, my nanos secrete "up," which somehow
makes my eyes work harder so you get a better signal. Sometimes a
new screener will give me too much up, and I'll go
agnosic—look at things and not know what they are. But
Keishi was coming in through my imagination chip's feeble
Net-link, and that is a very low-bandwidth connection,
lower than even the most obscure channels. To get an image that
way, I'd need a lot more down than I was used to. Since I'm a
camera, the bugs would keep the down corralled in certain parts
of my brain, which explained why I could still more or less
drive; but my visual cortex must have been swimming in the stuff.
Any moment now, the road might turn into a river, the grass into
seaweed, the sheep into shellfish. Small wonder if I mistook
Keishi for someone else. Unless.
What if it wasn't a misrecognition? What if she
was? I
glanced at her, minutely so she might not notice. I could have
seen her for no more than a fraction of a second, and yet I felt
my mind skid—with a moment of panic, like slipping on
ice—back to the thought of the insulation in the windows.
And this thought, which had gone through my mind a hundred times
and was familiar to it, brought on a pulse of nausea: as on those
mornings when the throat forgets all previous intimacy with the
toothbrush and, gagging, rejects it. You're
wrong, I told
myself forcefully. She is Keishi Mirabara, a screener, a
stranger, and not what you think. But if
she was? "Turn
around," she said. "Let me take a look at your
pupils." "I
said, I'm all right. I'm just a little tired, that's
all." She
leaned toward me; I twisted away. Finally she drew back and
frowned. "I think I see the problem." For a time, silence. Then
she said, "It's okay, you can turn around now." "What
did you do?" I said, not moving. "Told
your nanobugs to clean the fatigue products out of your system.
It'll keep you a few hours. There's a long-term solution—
called sleeping. You should ask the Net about it." I
suspected that the excuse of fatigue was as much a lie in her
mouth as in mine. But having advanced the explanation myself, I
could hardly deny it now. Slitting my eyes, as though that could
protect me from the sight, I turned toward her— And
felt waves of relief. ("There now," she said, "that's better.")
She was twenty years too young to be her—to be one of
them—to be what I had thought. Maybe I really was tired,
and imagining things. Or maybe it was too much down. And she
really was alarmingly beautiful; maybe it was only
that. No,
wait. Strike that. I took a second look: she was indifferently
pretty, perhaps, but taken for all in all, she was far too much
Central Casting's idea of the Japanese Black emigre to attract
anyone but the shallow. You know the type—young, overeager,
and a little bit more fashionable than it is fashionable to be.
She even had the statutory name-you've-never-heard-before. If
this were a vid, first we'd have the history lesson about how the
Unanimous Army stranded thousands of American Blacks in Japan,
and then she'd start telling me how she tried to get to Africa
but they turned her away at the border because she wasn't pure
enough of blood. Though, come to think of it, she looked as if
she might have been; the East had left few traces in her face,
except to lighten it. She could easily pass for an
African. "Well,
don't bother thanking me," she said as I pulled back out onto the
road. "Thank
you," I said with exaggerated courtesy. "Now will you please tell
me what the devil News One thought they were doing sending me an
NCG to go live? I could have been eaten up out there." "What's
an NCG?" "New
College Graduate," I said. "You know, a redshirt. Cannon
fodder." Keishi
gestured at the car she had refashioned. "Have you ever had a
screener before who could do this?" "Horsepower
is one thing. Experience is another." "I've
got that, too. Over ten years of it." "Mirabara,
you aren't old enough to have ten years' experience in
anything." "I'm
not in flesh, Maya. Virtual images don't age unless you tell them
to, you know. So I'm a little older than I choose to
look—is that a crime?" I had
to admit, it was a likely enough explanation for someone like
her. "That's different, then. I suppose I might take off a few
years myself, if I had the choice." "Really?"
she said with bland surprise. "What for?" "You
don't have to be sarcastic about it." I had only been trying to
be charitable. "I'm
not," she said. "I can't imagine why you'd change a
thing." "I
said, that's enough." Keishi
chuckled, leaning back in her seat. "You're a difficult woman to
compliment, News One." "I
don't need your compliments," I said, more harshly than I'd
intended. "What I expect out of a screener is a clean signal,
period. I don't need flattery, or companionship, or witty
repartee—" "Or
help with recalcitrant rental cars?" she said mildly. I fixed
my eyes on the road and tried to will myself not to blush. There
was no sense apologizing now. I'd been hostile enough to make her
ask for repartnering, and that would be the end of it. And even
if she didn't ask, they would send me someone new within the
week. They don't pair men with men or women with women, for
obvious reasons. The more so in my case. It was a mix-up,
probably; her name looked like a weird transliteration of Keiji,
a man's name, and someone must have made the wrong assumption. If
her assignment to me wasn't a mistake, it was a test—or
maybe both, since every screener is a test, in one way or
another. When you run into one like Anton, who only works for the
Postcops, you try to hold onto him. Most of them work for the
Weavers, and the Weavers are a lot more dangerous. "So,"
she said briskly, "we've gone over what you want from a screener.
What do you want from a research assistant?" "Why do
you ask?" I said with a sense of dread. "Because
I saw the request for an RA you posted. And I'd like to do
it." "Oh,
Mirabara," I said, grasping for any polite cliché, "I
don't know that that's a good idea. I don't think we're really
ready to be living in each other's back pockets just yet. These
first few months of a partnering are always hard...." "We
don't have to work that closely. After all, I've been
mind-to-mind with you—I've got a pretty good idea how
you'll respond to things. Just give me a direction and turn me
loose. If you want, I can even do fill-in recordings and make it
look and feel just like your style." "You
can do that? You're wired camera?" When I got into the business,
you could either be a camera or a screener, never both; when they
wired you, you were tracked for life. It was nice. It cut down on
the understudy effect. But I'd heard of people wired both ways,
screening each other, a two-way connection. There were even some
who left the link on all the time, merging their minds
forever—people who had ceased to be human, by any
reasonable definition of that word. "Wired
camera?" she said. "Girl, I'm wired everything." And suddenly her
face was bathed in light. An invisible Net-rune, no less. The
tech in that head must have been worth more than the whole
Kazakhi GNP. It was tempting. But it would be
intolerable. She
must have seen "no" in my face. "Look," she said, "we'll be
seeing each other less than if I just screen, because I can work
independently. And if I'm doing some of the camera work, we won't
have to go mind-to-mind as much." "Look,
I just don't think—" "If you
want," she interrupted, with bitterness in her voice, "you can
send me instructions by Net-text and you won't have to see me at
all." I
looked at her and, despite myself, felt sympathy. She seemed not
far from tears. It was my fault—mine and the bastard's who
invented this technology. It's his plotline we're forced to
repeat. For the camera, a stranger with the key to all your
secrets. For the screener, feeling closer than a sister to
someone who does nothing but push you away. And as I thought of
this, I felt a grim determination to see things through with
Keishi. There was a kind of poetry to it—her irreverence,
my hostility. We deserved each other. "All
right," I said, "we'll try it. But there's one thing you need to
know." "What?" I
glanced over at her. "Do you know how I got this
assignment?" "No,"
she said, her eyes narrowing with curiosity. "And I wondered. No
offense, Maya, but you're not exactly typecast." "I
applied for it," I said. "I put in a proposal." "What
possessed them to accept? Sunspots?" "They
didn't accept. I got back a curt little Net-text saying that they
had no plans to do a story like that at this time. They were just
going to let the anniversary go by." "Let me
guess. You hacked the News One computers and inserted the
assignment." "No," I
said irritably. "Are you kidding? News One is a fortress. I
couldn't pull off a thing like that. I don't think anyone
could." "I
could," she said smugly. I
looked at her skeptically out of the corner of my eye. "Be that
as it may. I took a more low-tech solution. I was interviewing
the camera who broke the Shimanski scandal—typical
incestuous News One bullshit; I think I've interviewed more
cameras than I have anyone else. That's what happens when you
slip this far down on the food chain." "A
predator who feeds on other predators is at the top of the
food chain," she pointed out. "Only
if she takes them live. This was scavenging, and I wasn't even
the first jackal at the corpse. So I got down to question number
six on the Universal Interviewing-Another-Camera Script, which
is, and I quote, 'What's your position on invisible wiring and
cameras without Net-runes? Is it really ethical to put someone on
the air without his knowledge, or—' " " 'Or
is it an unwarranted invasion of privacy?' " Keishi chimed in the
last words. "Exactly.
I see you've watched telepresence at least once in the last ten
years. Of course the only political topics they let us cover are
the ones that will never change anything—they are not going
to go back and scar all the new cameras just so people will know
what they're dealing with. So this idiot I'm interviewing, who's
been asked the same question a hundred times in the last week,
makes doe-eyes at me out of his perfect face and says, 'Well, my
goodness, Maya Andreyeva, you really ask the serious questions.'
" "Oh,
God." "My
reaction exactly. And I thought, I can't go on like this. I just
can't do it anymore." "What
did you do?" she asked, with a peculiar tenderness. "Well,"
I said, "it had to be sudden, or Anton would see it coming. So I
just reached out with my foot and pushed over the table between
us, and while Anton was racing to cover up the sound and create
the image of a table and cover up the idiot camera's shock, I
said: 'Well, that'll certainly be useful next week, when I'll be
doing a story in honor of the anniversary of the liberation of
the Square Miles. Um, a three-part series, actually.' And it went
out on the Net, and News One decided to run the story rather than
have people wonder." "Didn't
the filters screen it out?" "Why?
The Calinshchina isn't killfiled." "So
it's not," she said appreciatively. "There's a Weaver that keeps
track of it, but Weavers don't care how you pursue your career
goals." "That
could have called a Weaver?" I said in sudden fear. She
looked at me strangely, as though my reaction had been
unexpected. "Maya, if a whiteshirt were going to come for you,
don't you think she would have done it long ago?" "Of
course," I said hastily, realizing I'd misstepped. "I'm just
being paranoid, that's all. Occupational hazard." "After
all," she said slowly, "the Weavers have the whole Net to
control. Why would one single you out?" "Yes,
you're right." I kept my eyes on the road, trying to make my mind
as blank as possible. She
watched me a little longer, then let the subject drop. "So," she
said. "The point of your story is that News One is pissed at you,
and that you're the last person I should hitch my fortunes to.
Well, you're not going to get rid of me that easily." "No," I
said. "The point of my story is that my objectives and News One's
may not always correspond. You can back them, or you can back me.
And if you're going to back them, I don't want you
around." "I
see." She turned her eyes on my feet and did a slow pan
upward. "What
are you doing?" I said. "Deciding." "I
don't have time for games, Mirabara." "Oh?"
she said, and chuckled. "Well, don't worry. It was never even
close." We
drove on, in a conspiratorial silence. At the
next five-K marker she added: "On one condition." Here it
comes, I
thought. "What kind of condition?" "I know
you're not used to our Japanese informality, but you're driving
me crazy using my surname all the time." I
winced in apology. She had asked me to call her Keishi, and I had
done so, in my thoughts. But I was reluctant to pronounce the
name, with its diphthong, its doubtful gender, and its
indeclinability. At least "Mirabara" had a feminine ending,
whatever its bastard origins. "If you
really can't bring yourself to just call me Keishi," she said, "I
could make up a matronymic. Keishi Eikovna." I
laughed. "That sounds like a patronymic. You want people thinking
you're eighty years old, be my guest." "Well,
what do you do with names that end in o, then? My mother's name
was Eiko." "Russian
names don't end in o." "Well,
whose fault is that?" She frowned and tried again.
"Eikichna?" "Better
not try," I said, and hazarded: "Keishi?" She
smiled on the attempt. "Close enough. If you could bring yourself
to hold that first vowel for more than a femtosecond it might
sound a little bit less like a sneeze—" she saw my
irritation "—but, yes, certainly, you may bid me by that
name. How may I serve Your Eminence?" "For a
start," I said, "pull out everything available about the
Holocaust, the Terror-Famine, and any other miscellaneous horrors
you can think of. I'm looking for popular media, mostly. Then dig
up every broadcast and Net-text about the Calinshchina. And sit
down for about a megascops-hour and think about the similarities
and differences—not between the events, so much as between
the reactions to them. Then put it all on a chip I can slot in
over breakfast tomorrow. Can you do that?" "That,
and have time for about four hours' sleep besides." "In
that case, bring it to me at the Leningrad trainport. I should
arrive there around two this morning. And quit bragging, it's not
attractive." "Only
if you quit trying to intimidate me," she said. "I'm not afraid
of work. I told you, you can't scare me away that
easily." She
smiled and her image faded, then returned. "Oh, one more thing.
Stick your camera chip in your wrist socket for a second. I want
to tweak some things—you're not getting the color fidelity
you should be." "I
don't have an adapter." "You do
too, it's in your duffel. Don't you know you can't lie to your
screener?" "I like
my colors the way they are," I said. "Now
you're grasping at straws." "No, I
mean it. Most cameras nowadays make all their colors
super-bright. The muted colors from the old moistware remind
people that I'm a veteran, not just a mayfly that some idiot has
wired." "Like
me, you mean?" "Doesn't
one of us have some work that she's neglecting?" "Oh,
all right, if that's how you want to be about it." She faded
again. When only Cheshire eyes remained, she said softly: "It
will work out, Maya. I promise it will." "This,"
I said, lapsing back into Bogart, "could be the beginning of a
truly appalling partnership." I heard
her laughter, and the clinking of her earrings. The car's extra
seat disappeared. Earrings!
Honestly! It struck me only then: how like her, to follow fashion
right off the cliff into that quaint disfigurement. In my day
when you poked holes in your head it was to expand your mind, not
just for decoration. Except, of course, for the people who had
fake sockets drilled, so everyone would think they could afford a
real set. As I drove toward Alma-Ata I wondered idly what those
people were doing now that the real status was in being wired
invisibly, like Keishi. Wearing hats, I supposed. And carrying
around fake totems with fake chips plugged into them. I ought to
do a retrospective. Vanity.
I took out the rest of my chips—all but two—and drove
to Alma-Ata quite inviolate, my head accepting input only from
the holes that Nature drilled there. It was
a quiet drive, and would have been restful, if not for one
thought I could not put aside. No doubt it was only a trick of my
memory, which I had every reason to distrust. Or too much down
and not enough bandwidth. But when Keishi had first appeared and
I had seen her forehead in the rearview mirror, a featureless
strip of anonymous skin—I was almost sure of it—that
skin had not been black. (Centipede) (I did
leave two chips in my head; one was a dream coprocessor. Whatever
you've heard, dreams don't reveal your hidden desires— if
they did, I'd never be allowed to dream. They don't reveal
solutions to your problems, and they don't foretell the future.
They're just the fumes your brain exhales as it digests the day's
new memories and mulches them into the old. A dream coprocessor
increases the efficiency of that process, improving memory. Which
is a good thing on the whole, although from time to time I wish
there were a button for "forget." One that I controlled, I
mean. The dreams you get with a coprocessor are bloody, vivid,
and obscure, like second-rate German Expressionism. On the
bullet train to Leningrad I briefly slept, and dreamed she stood
before me, holding something in her hand: a centipede. She held
it out to me. I must have refused, for she drew it back,
laughing. And then I saw that she was wearing a cloak with two
hoods, one lying empty on her shoulder. But no, it was not empty.
Her second head lifted itself slowly, and its eyes were flashing
incandescent bulbs in metal sockets. I woke
with the tunnel lights reddening the inside of my eyelids, dark
and bright, flashing, flashing.) Three A Faster Cable I had
expected that she would be waiting for me, but she wasn't. I
walked out of the gate into the trainport, past a shop full of
T-shirts, snow domes, and cheap telepresence tapes of the city's
attractions; past a kiosk of black moist-novels and garish blue
and yellow drydisk magazines; then into the trainport bar, which
was, I thought, entirely brighter than it should have been. When
I gave the bartender my order, he looked at me with alarm. "Vodka
and what?" "Compost.
Vodka and compost. You haven't been here long, have
you?" "No,
ma'am," he said sheepishly. "The servo's broken. I'm sort of an
emergency replacement." "There's
a lot of that going around. Let me guess. You probably have ten
years' experience too. You're a virtual ghost the same age as
Prime Minister Yablokov." "Excuse
me, tavarishcha?" "Comrade,"
no less. This one was as young as he looked. "All right, look.
Compost. Noun. A mixture of micronutrients for the nourishment of
aging nanobugs. Named for the taste—" "Oh,
you mean NanoSweet?" "That's
what the manufacturer is pleased to call it, yes." The
bartender chuckled. "I'll just need to see your readout,
tavarishcha." Oh, goodie, I'd made a friend. I
touched the telltale to the back of my neck, and showed it to him
when it chimed. The number was higher this time; Mirabara must
have fried quite a few bugs remodeling the rental car. That was
fine with me. At least the drink would taste like alcohol, even
if it didn't feel like it. Ten
minutes later I'd drunk the last vile drop, and still no sign of
Mirabara. I gave her another five minutes while I drank a cup of
coffee, then got up to leave, resolving to fill out a
repartnering form before I went to bed. I was almost out the door
when a bell chimed softly and a speaker above the bar singsonged:
"M. T. Andreyeva, hearth News One, clan Camera, insert a white
courtesy plug please. Maya at News One of Camera, white courtesy
plug." I found
the rack of plugs conveniently located right where people had to
stand to look up at the arrivals screen. You'd think a trainport
would be quiet at two in the morning, but, this being Leningrad,
there was a crowd. By the time I got through to the phone I'd
used three different obscenities a total of seven times, made at
least two lifelong enemies, and possibly broken one toe—
not mine, someone else's. Served them right for using the monitor
when they could get the same data faster from the Net. When I
looked at the plug I felt a wave of nausea. The cable was crusted
with reddish-brown spots—catsup was the least disgusting
theory—and the plug itself was greasy with someone's hair
oil. I didn't relish the thought of having it a centimeter from
my brain. Why do they always give you an audio plug, anyway? A
microphone and speaker would be just as good and far more
sanitary. Kickbacks from the manufacturer? There was a story in
there somewhere. I
looked wistfully through the press of bodies at the snow dome
store, where I might beg a disinfectant. But that would mean
fighting my way out again through sweat, perfume, body heat, and
gutter exclamations. Besides, they probably wouldn't have it. I
settled for wiping the plug on my shirt, to replace some of the
unknown dirt with dirt I was on intimate terms with, and slid the
disgusting thing into my minisocket. Then I remembered that the
minisocket was sitting right on top of Wernicke's area, so if the
plug infected my brain with something, the first thing I'd lose
would be the ability to understand speech. Oh well, I thought
jauntily, it's too late now; and besides, how often do people say
anything worth listening to, these days? You could almost get
along without that skill. In this
cheerful state of mind I thought out into the cable and said:
"This had better be good." The
answer was terse and delivered at a volume just this side of a
shout: "Slot up for God's sake, agoraphobe." Click. It was
Keishi. Sighing,
I made my way back through the crowd, less rudely and therefore
more slowly than before. I settled back down at the bar, took out
my Net chip, and put it on the counter in front of me. "Would
you like something else, tavarishcha?" "As a
matter of fact, yes," I said, leaning forward. "I would like to
get well and truly drunk. I know it's probably against company
policy, but you wouldn't tell on me, would you?" He
shuffled his feet uneasily. "Drinking beyond your ration can be
very dangerous—especially—" He broke off. "Especially
at my age. So you know that, do you. You know, you remind me of a
car I met once. Look, overfeeding them just this one time won't
kill me. Even if they have evolved out of their bug birth
control program, they can only reproduce so fast." He gave
me a pained look. "I'm sorry, tavarishcha. We're not
allowed." "Oh,
all right then. If you can't, you can't." I started to turn away,
then looked back at him appraisingly and said: "Of all the seedy
two-bit brains in all the Historical Nations in the world, she
patches into mine." He
searched my face, puzzled. Then he smiled the smile of someone
finally making out the elephant in a child's drawing. "Oh, is
that supposed to be Bogart, ma'am?" Just as
I'd suspected. I ordered coffee to make him go away, then picked
up the chip from the counter and slotted it in. "Behind
you," she said. I
turned around on the stool. "Fashion risk, Mirabara?" Keishi was
wearing a Leningrad University T-shirt that must have been twenty
years old, and at most had been washed once in all that time;
white slacks stained gray and rolled up at least six inches;
wisps of greasy hair escaping from a broad-brimmed hat. She
looked like a hard-core wirehead, the kind you see trying to kiss
the horse on Nevsky Prospect. "I saw
the way you looked at my earrings last time. I thought I'd try a
different effect." "Maybe
something a little less radical," I said. She
shrugged and morphed back into the clothing of the day before.
"It's just a virtual image. Actually, this is what my body's
wearing today in real." "Then
what was it wearing yesterday?" "Nothing." "All
right, if you don't want to tell me...” "I just
did," she said, raising her eyebrows. This
reminded me that my body was sitting in a trainport bar
carrying on a conversation with thin air. I glanced warily at the
bartender. He returned the look without surprise and said, "More
coffee, ma'am?" "No,
I'm all right," I said. He seemed blasé enough about
it. "Anything
for your friend?" I
looked at him incredulously. "I'm not a lunatic, I'm virtual
conferencing. And even if I were a lunatic, I wouldn't need you
to humor me." Keishi's
voice chimed from the speaker above the bar: "Please excuse Maya
Tatyanichna, she is a little confused about modern technology
this morning. I'll have a coffee, too, please." "And
your Netname?" "Keishi
Mirabara, of hearth—" "Put it
on mine," I interrupted, before she could say "News One." I don't
like being recognized. "Thanks,
but it doesn't matter," she told me. "I'm hearth
Whisper—Margay clan, you know. I only use News One bang
Screener as a hathook, for expense accounts. But
thanks." "What
are you here for, Mirabara? With a high-class address like that,
why do you need a job?" "Green,"
she said frankly. "Margay doesn't take the Robot
Dollar." "Bozhe
moy—last
capitalists on earth refuse the dole; sensorium at
eleven." "They
have to," Keishi said. "Most of their hardware's from
Africa—Whisper itself runs on a Dahlak. They have to have
money they can convert." The
bartender pulled a sky-blue cable out from under the counter,
cleaned the plug carefully with peroxide, and handed it to me.
When I hesitated he said, "it goes in your wrist,
tavarishcha." "I know
a wrist plug when I see one." I looked at Keishi, then sighed and
plugged it in. At least it was clean. "You do know that you're
completely insane. If you can materialize half of a car, you can
easily whip up some virtual coffee. But instead you're paying
trainport prices for it." "It's a
matter of etiquette," Keishi said, picking up the cup that had
materialized before her. "It would be inconvenient if someone
else were to sit in the bar stool where I'm manifesting. So I'm
paying for the privilege of occupying space that could hold a
real customer." More
information than I'd wanted. "So where are you physically, and
where's my research? You said you were going to have it for me by
now." "My
flesh is at the archives and so is your research, for now," she
said, rubbing her eyes. "When I gave you that estimate, I was
planning to get everything through the Net and send it straight
into memory, bypassing my conscious mind to save time. But it
turns out that most of the material on the Holocaust was never
uploaded. Some of it's on paper and the rest is on something
called microfilm. So even though I could uptake the information
at around ten megabaud, that doesn't do me any good, because my
eye muscles can only move about a hundredth that fast. Then I had
the bright idea of looking at it through a videophone camera,
only to find that the hardware wouldn't go over a refresh rate of
sixty frames per second, and I couldn't even turn the pages
that fast. And this microfilm thing is insane—it
takes longer to thread the damned spools than it does to read
them. So the bottom line is, working straight through, I can have
it for you by noon tomorrow. Um, I mean today, since it's past
midnight." I
looked at her with a new respect. "I'll give you one thing. You
know how to work." "Well,"
she said, "somehow I got the idea that if I worked my ass off for
you, you might start taking me seriously." "What
makes you think I don't take you seriously?" She
looked at me as though I'd solemnly informed her that the moon
was made of green cheese. Right. Never lie to your
screener. "All
right, it's true," I said. "I didn't at first. You look so young
that it's hard to. But I'm working on it." "Age is
easily fixed." She morphed older, the skin of her face curdling,
silver corrupting her hair; then smiled at my horror, and
switched back to an age just a few years older than she'd been
before. "Better?" "Not so
you'd notice," I said. "But it doesn't matter." She
added a few more years and glanced at the mirror behind the bar.
Then, satisfied, she drank down the last of her coffee, holding
the cup in both hands. "I'd better get back to the library," she
said. "I've got a deadline to meet. Besides, now that I'm almost
your age, I'll have to add an afternoon nap to my
schedule." "Make
sure you get someone to burp you afterward," I said, smiling
despite myself into my coffee cup. "How much data do you have so
far?" "Nearly
everything for the Calinshchina. I've got about three-quarters of
what's out there on the Terror-Famine, and maybe half on the
Holocaust. Add it all up, and the minimum descriptive algorithm
is about a megaturing." "How
many bytes is that?" "Well,"
she said, "you really can't express moist memory in bytes,
because it's not a string of ones and zeros and there's no single
way to convert it into one. See, if I converted it all back to
the forms I found it in, it would be one number of bytes, but if
I just recorded the connections of each neurode in the network
it's stored in, it would be a completely different number. It's
like those bone-head British cameras on Science News who give you
the weight of a space probe. The probe would have one
weight on Earth and another on the moon, and besides, those are
just potentials—it doesn't actually weigh anything, as long
as it's out there between the stars. Space probes have mass,
moist memories have minimum descriptive algorithms. Measuring it
in bytes wouldn't tell you anything." I
nodded. "So," I said, "how many bytes is that?" Keishi
sighed. "About a trillion." I laid
my hand on her arm. The virtual software let me feel the fabric,
but could not make her arm solid, so my hand passed through skin,
vein, and bone. "Mirabara—Keishi—get some
rest," I said. "I've never seen a terabyte of research on one
chip in my life. You must be exhausted. You know, I didn't even
think about it, but what a horrible assignment. That
telepresence, especially. It must have really put you through the
wringer." "Actually,"
she said, "the books are worse. I can send the telepresence
straight to disk, so I don't have to look at most of it. And it
looks like the telepresence is all by cameras, not the survivors
themselves. Some of the books are by people who were there,
and—" She shivered. "Now,
that's funny," I said. "Why shouldn't there be telepresence from
survivors? There were thousands, weren't there? You'd think that
at least one of them would have put it on disk." "The
Army took over all the camps," Keishi said, "so the survivors
were enlisted. And most of them didn't already have sockets,
because they were prisoners. The Army had to give them sockets.
Now, when you've been drilled by an Army soldier in the middle of
a field, with a rock to the head for anesthesia, further
implants...." "Oh.
Yes, that makes sense," I said. "Too bad; I thought I was onto
something. No moist memory either, I suppose?" "Of the
survivors themselves? Not a single disk." "Well,
it can't be helped. Anyway, what I really need is that
megascops-hour of making sense out of it. But get some sleep
first and do it in the morning—I mean, the
afternoon—when you're fresh. How long will that take
you?" "I can
do the 'hour on the train home from the archives, and have the
chip waiting for you when you wake up." I
looked at her in disbelief. "You can do—that's what? three
hundred and sixty million scop?—on the train home? Keishi,
how fast are you?" "For
simple stuff like this, a couple meg. It should take me about
half an hour." A few
hundred scop—Standard Consciousness Operations—go
into the making of a typical word of interior monologue. An
unaugmented human brain does maybe a thousand such ops per
second, a kiloscops. Keishi was talking about thinking two
thousand times that fast. That's raw processing speed, mind you;
the wet-memory interface is much slower. So it's not quite as
incredible as it sounds. It's I-saw-an-alien incredible but not
I-am-an-alien incredible. "You
were wired in Japan, then?" "No,"
she said. "On Zanzibar." Oh—African
tech. In that case, go back to the I-am-an-alien thing. "How'd
you manage that?" "Under
the Law of Return. My skin's just dark enough to make me
Presumptively African—yes, I know, what a term for
it—so that got me in long enough to dive for the nearest
knife while they decided to reject my blood sample." "I'm
surprised the Africans don't keep a better lid on their
tech." "Oh,
it's illegal all right, but they don't enforce the laws. They
love watching us dissect their chips, not understand a thing
about them, and build exact replicas that don't work." I
thought for a moment. "You know, I could do that for the last
segment, if all else fails. How world politics are still
determined by the Army's actions. Try to figure out why they left
so much of Leningrad and Tokyo, and didn't get past the Sahara at
all." "Easy
question. The Sahara's too hot, Leningrad's too cold, and ... oh,
I don't know, one of the hackers who made the Army probably had a
grandmother in Tokyo or something." She smiled at me. "But in the
Netcast, you talked like you already knew what you were doing
next week. It was a little transparent, you know. You
weren't trying to lie to your screener, were you?" "No,
just to the audience." "Oh.
Well, that's all right then. I always patch up lies in
post-production, anyway. Just be sure to tell me if you ever want
them to know you're lying." The bartender nodded toward
her cup; she shook her head and dematerialized it. "So when I've
got the research, what do we do next?" "Then
we look for an interview." Keishi
raised her eyebrows. Oh—she'd tricked me into saying "we."
Well, it wouldn't matter. We'd be reassigned soon
enough. "Then
I'll call you in the morning. You should sleep in. Shall we say
around noon?" I
hesitated, nodded, then turned to the bartender and asked for the
bill. He laid a matte black card before me on the bar. When I
pressed my thumb into it, gold script numbers appeared,
displaying the usual breakdown—this much of your cup of
coffee was produced by human labor, and the rest is owing to the
labor of robots, so we suggest you pay so much in green and the
rest in red. I always read that stuff; it's interesting; but I
don't go by it. It's not always accurate, anyway. For example,
they'll tell you that your steak dinner is ninety percent
robot-made, but they get that by counting animals as robots. And
my Netcasts count as a hundred percent human, though my head's as
much metal as bone. I
touched the right side of the card, to pay all in red. Old
habits—I like to use the robots' earnings first, and hold
on to what I've produced myself. Actually, of course, the Robot
Dollar is just as good as the Reconstructed Ruble, unless you're
going to go to Africa, and what are the chances of
that? "Confirm,"
I said to the card. Thank You, Maya Tatyanichna Andreyeva,
it scripted. The
bartender picked up the card and glanced at the back, where my
name and Net address were displayed. "That page earlier—it
was for you. You're on News One." This
didn't seem to be a question, so I didn't bother
answering. "I've
seen your Netcasts," he said. "Not this history thing—
that's a little dry for me—but I saw your piece on that
bastard Shimanski. You really told it like it is." I
grunted noncommittally. After an awkward pause he blurted out:
"You don't look much like your Net-portrait." "It
keeps me from being recognized by duraks whose fathers
never taught them any manners," I snapped back, out of reflex.
But I could not help looking past him at the mirror behind the
bar. I look in the mirror every morning, of course, but there are
certain things my eyes have ceased to notice. In that mirror, I
saw the five palm-sized holes drilled in my head, capped with
black adapters into which the brightly colored modern chips were
plugged. I saw the Net-rune in my cheek, a scar of garish
luminescence slashing down from eye to jaw in swoops and angles.
I saw the places where the hair has never grown back right since
surgery, and the bumps and bulges in the left side of my skull
where implants nestled in the connective tissue, like baby
spiders hidden in the tangle of their egg sac. "I
saved you the trouble of killing him," Keishi said from behind
me. "Over the next thirty-six hours his body parts will be
arriving in twenty different Historical Nations in the luggage of
unsuspecting passengers." I stole
a glance at the bartender. He was alive, but involved in a heated
phone debate which he seemed to be getting much the worst
of. "Don't
punish him for pointing out the obvious," I said. She put
her chin on my shoulder—not an easy feat for a virtual
ghost—and looked my reflection in the eye. I hated the
smoothness, youth, perfection of her face next to mine. "How many
people know your face, Maya?" she asked me gravely. "A few
hundred? Well, a hundred million know you from the inside out.
They know who you really are, not just what you look like. What's
a face but Nature's blind kludge at a way of letting minds
communicate? You have a better interface than that, a faster
cable. You've evolved beyond the body. The face is a sheath for
the mind. It's nothing—it's maya, illusion," she
said, smiling. "Forget about it." I could
think of nothing that she could have said that would have been
less comforting. She
drew back. "Besides," she said, "a lot of people think scars are
sexy." And she drew her finger along my cheek and around to the
back of my head, over Net-rune and camerasoft and bare occipital
socket. If she had been there in her body, my ruined nerves would
have felt nothing. But because she was a virtual ghost, a thing
of air and shadows, I could feel her soft, warm fingers just as
if the flesh were whole. Four To
Make Much of
Time I woke
at ten that morning to a pounding on the door. I answered it
holding my bathrobe closed with one hand, with what hair I have
matted or standing on end; hastily thumbed the offered card; and
accepted the package. The box was a triangular prism a meter
long, such as roses are sometimes shipped in. If Keishi had sent
me roses, we were going to have to have a serious talk. I sat
down in the little passageway between inner and outer doors,
which in winter keeps the warmth inside the house from mixing
with the cold outside, and opened it. It was
not roses. The box had three separate flaps, one for each side. I
opened the first and found a set of kopek-sized chips, already
plugged into the adapters that they'd need to fit my old style
ruble sockets. Both the chips and the adapters were a medium
brown and no thicker than a fingernail. When I pried one out of
the foam and held it up, it slowly changed color and lustre until
it matched the skin of my hand perfectly, even mimicking the
pores. Oh, of course; a brown default color because they were
African. It was probably the skin color of some drone in quality
control—inspected by cafe au lait. If I put the chips in,
then from a few feet away, maybe even close up, you'd hardly know
I'd been drilled at all. The
second flap revealed another set of adapters and chips, just like
the first set, but teal blue instead of brown. I touched one and
it displayed a palette; when I chose a color at random, the whole
set of chips turned a dusty rose. The chip asked if I wanted to
explore textures, but I touched the box marked "no." Behind
the third flap was a blaze of gold: some chips inscribed with
hieroglyphs, others painted with jackal-headed gods and lapis
scarabs, all in holographic bas-relief. Ooh, Egyptian kitsch. It
was African, all right. I read the card: Even
though the mother country thought her girlchild was too white, I
still have connections there. Nice to use them for something
halfway legal just this once. Wear these if you ever decide to
quit camera work and take up modeling—
you've got the bones, girl. Mirabara. With
roses I would at least have known for certain. This gift was
ambiguous. Certainly it was no ordinary podarok. She had
spent sweatcoin on this—not robot labor, given in red to
every citizen, but her own work in green Reconstructed Rubles.
And at that, the gods only knew how she'd gotten them to take it;
even red money is about as hard as a three-minute egg, in Africa.
Connections, my ass—she had called in a favor for this, I
would have bet on it. And getting an African to owe you a favor
is slightly less difficult than putting God in your
debt. It
might have meant nothing more than overactive
thoughtfulness—not an uncommon vice in screeners. Or it
could have been a truly world-class effort to curry favor. But
there was a chance it was more than that, and no chip in the
world, or even in Africa, was worth that kind of
trouble. I
looked more closely at the chips, to see what she'd given me. One
chip in each set was a memory wedge, and the skin-colored one had
a moistdisk stuck into it—a cylinder actually, even less
disklike than its Russian cousins. I plugged it in and found it
held my research. That, at least, I need not refuse. Most of the
others were just copies of what my head already held, some in
more up-to-date versions. Then there were a few extra basics,
such as four fluency chips with a total of sixty-four languages,
most of them African. And there were a few things I didn't
recognize at all, chips popular in Africa, I guess: an intuition
enhancer, a myth coprocessor. No, don't ask me what a myth
coprocessor does. Makes you act like a hero, I guess. I took
a deep breath. Face it, Maya. You want these a lot. I took
the box into the bathroom, where sunlight filtered dimly through
the paper wadded up between the double windows. Got to take that
insulation out, as soon as this series ends, I thought. Maybe
take a week off and do all that stuff. Yeah, right. I set the box
on end on the counter, where it promptly extended a pedestal and
rotated itself. Typical. The girls in Nairobi had more industrial
capacity than common sense. I'd be lucky if I could leave the
room without it hopping out after me. I put
shrink-seals over my sockets to protect them—my sockets are
guaranteed waterproof, of course, but a guarantee can't restore a
scorched forebrain—and showered, hastily because I was
getting close to my Strongly Suggested Sustainable Water Usage
for the month. When I
had dried my hair and gotten dressed, I opened the box and
started to slot in the chameleons. They matched my skin color
even better than before, but once I had a couple of them in, my
head started to take on a sort of chemotherapy look: patches of
sparse hair interrupted by tracts of bare skin. I tried brushing
a lock of hair over one of the chips, and they got the idea and
mimicked it, but their hologram engines could only produce so
much depth. The look would make more sense if I shaved my hair
off, which would be fashionable enough, but I wasn't ready for
that yet. So I switched to the colored set, slotted them in, and
chose a dark blue from the palette the chips superimposed on my
field of vision. Then
another problem stopped me. There was one chip I could not take
out without risking a number of complications, starting with
moderate to severe brain damage and getting worse from there. I'd
have to leave it in, but I didn't want Keishi to know I was
wearing it. I needed to cover it up somehow. I went
to the bedroom and dug a strip of gray and yellow fabric out of
my chest of drawers. It was supposed to be the scarf for my Truth
Awards suit, but since I'd worn the same outfit to the last five
years' ceremonies, I was probably due for a new one anyway. Or I
could just not go, though it was always kind of fun to sit around
with all the other Swiss-cheese types and hate the smooth-heads
who were walking away with everything. I took the scarf back into
the bathroom, folded it down, and tied it around my head so that
the frontal socket was covered. Then I menued the chips' color to
a gray that matched the fabric. I stepped back and checked the
effect in the mirror. The
transformation was amazing. Ten minutes ago, I'd looked like a
typically encrusted old-time Netcaster. Now I looked like a
dangerous lunatic with no fashion sense. Stop me before I
accessorize again. All
right, News One, I
thought, taking off the scarf, you may not be a megascops, but
you're a reasonably intelligent person. You can figure out what
to do about that damned suppressor. Apparently
I'd thought the magic words. My face faded from the mirror, to be
replaced by a map of Africa on which the god Osiris was stretched
out, as on a crucifix. I recognized the Diaspora motion
logo—the one the Africans had on their banners when they
took Egypt from the Guardians. This was the full-length version,
beginning all the way back with the slave trade. I tried saying
"escape" and "cancel," but it wouldn't, so I leaned back against
the towel rack to wait it out. The continent was stabbed by
ships, and hemorrhaged men; the fertile soil dried up and cracked
into countries. At the same time Osiris was torn into parts,
which were scattered. Then
the flow reversed: men came back to Africa in planes and ships,
the borders healed, and Osiris began to gather himself together.
His-Majesty-in-Chains appeared in person to sew Egypt back
on—with thread, not missiles as you might
expect—whereupon Osiris was at last restored. Behind His
Majesty, the two other Known Kings of Africa were briefly
visible: a shining tower to represent Its-Ethereal-Highness, and
for Only-A-Man, a face that changed from male to female, adult to
child. At last Osiris opened his eyes; the deserts exploded with
green trees and waving wheat; and the Wall of Souls was raised
around the continent, like armor. It's a hell of a mogo. Myself,
I wouldn't have gone to war for it, but that's me. The map
of Africa didn't disappear, only faded, until it was as subtle as
a watermark on paper. I was expecting something else to show up
in the mirror, so I watched and waited. Then suddenly someone was
standing beside me: an Egyptian god—Horus, the one with the
hawk's head—pressing so close that his beak was only inches
from my eye. I was startled, then entranced. He was breathtaking.
In the little painted portrait on the chip, he'd looked smooth
and cartoonish. But the virtual image overwhelmed me with its
bloody realism: feathers accurate in every fibre, some split and
notched as if by battle; beak the color of bone, sharp as glass;
a yellow raptor's eye without a trace of mercy, in whose lids the
throbbing veins were clearly visible. So this is why
people become pagans, I thought; this cold, this inhuman regard.
The same reason we listen for messages from the stars. The
alien god fixed me with a yellow stare and said—in an
absurdly inappropriate Moscow accent—"All Series 6000
moistware is equipped with automatic neural dampeners for the
changeout or removal of suppressor chips without the use of
chemical anesthetics. Since you have already inserted at least
one Series 6000 moistware package, you may safely remove your
suppressor chip from its socket. If you do not replace it with
the corresponding Series 6000 moistware within thirty seconds, a
timed phaseout of the dampening function will automatically
initiate. Series 6000 moist-ware is guaranteed to prevent any and
all neural damage from suppressor chips, including those that
have been implanted as a punitive measure by the agents of
fraudulent and tyrannical First World warlords, and this
guarantee is backed by the full force of the treasury and army of
His-Majesty-In-Chains. We conclude this communication in the
confidence that Series 6000 moistware will provide full
satisfaction and exceed all reasonable expectations." And he
vanished. For a moment of stunned silence I could only think that
if I had known an Egyptian god was going to manifest himself in
my bathroom I would at least have scrubbed out the toilet bowl.
Then I was clawing the 6000s out of my head and saying aloud,
"All right, Maya, don't panic, it's just a standard message, they
all come with it, it doesn't mean anything—" but I was not
convinced. And I took the chip that looked like an encyclopedia,
stuck it in my occipital socket, and asked the Net what it
was. The
Net's answer was immediate. Keishi had indeed perfectly
duplicated what was in my head. And one of the chips in my head
had the cover of a DejaVu Instant Encyclopedia chip, holding
something it was never meant to hold. In exchange for that thorn
in my pride, Keishi had given me a chip that bore the DejaVu logo
in faint white outline, but contained the very moistware that had
sat disguised in my frontal lobe so long that the pins must have
rusted solid to the socket. It was a chip of the model which
Post-Soft Limited had named, apparently without a trace of
intentional humor, the Nun 500. It was a device that blocked all
memories from ten years of my life, and eradicated even the most
minute sexual impulse. And the Nun 500 did not come with any set,
nor could she have bought it off the shelf—not in this
package. She must have had it custom made, or possibly configured
it herself, bending over it for fevered hours in some tiny rented
workspace, with scales of sweat sloughing off her brow, her eyes
rolled back into her head, and both her wrists and both her
temples tied by cables to a robot arm with vision more acute and
touch more delicate than any flesh. She
knew. Five As
a Wife Has a
Cow I have
played this scene over and over, with the moistdisk slotted into
the back of my head, until the pain has almost—not
quite—worn away. I
waited for her in the living room, pacing, too restless to sit
down. When she manifested, I saw the videophone swivel toward me.
She was looking through its camera so she could see me as I was,
not just a default image generated by her moistware. When the
camera focused on my face, she looked at me with surprise that
quickly turned to disappointment. "Is something wrong? You're not
wearing your research." "I
transferred it to this." I tapped a memory-wedge at my temple,
not holding the single African moistdisk, but a battery of
Russian ones that I'd dug out of various drawers—looking
like a roll of toroidal candies in assorted flavors. Six held her
research; the seventh was quietly recording our conversation, in
case I needed evidence of what had happened. "Oh,"
she said. "If there's something wrong with the 6000s, you know,
they're on warranty—" "I
know," I said shakily. "A little bird told me." "I
see." She looked puzzled, but did not pursue the line of
questioning. "So, are you ready to find that
interview?" "Keishi,
I think I may have misled you, and if I have, I'm sorry. I've
been working alone much too long to change now. I know you put a
lot of work into that research, and I appreciate it, but that's
all I really need. I'll take it from here." "Nice
speech," she said flatly. "How long did it take to
write?" "Keishi,
I'm serious—" "You
think I'm not?" She turned away suddenly, walked over to the
videophone table, and leaned against it. "So when should I plan
on screening your first interview, or do you just want me to stay
on call?" One
more hurdle, and it would be over. I said with an effort: "I'm
going to record to a disk for now and have it screened later. And
... I'm going to file for repartnering, Keishi. It's nothing
personal. Or rather, I mean, it is personal and not professional.
I'll give you the highest rating. But I don't think it's going to
work out. Between us." Her
eyes and the vidphone's eyes watched me together, like two cats.
Unnerved by her silence, I blurted out: "I mean, after all, Anton
will be back soon, it's really not fair—" "Anton
has been Net-silent for two days," Keishi said. "He probably
rejected his bugs in some back alley, and they'll have to bring
his brain home in a sausage casing. Don't try to tell me
this is about him." Her
eyes stared into mine, unflinchingly, but the vidphone glanced at
the rosebox on the table. "This is about that encyclopedia of
yours, isn't it? That's why you're not wearing the moist-ware I
gave you." I felt
myself silhouetted by the accusation, like a deer by
headlights. "You
really thought I didn't know," she marveled. "Maya—I wish I
didn't have to be the one to tell you, but I don't see any other
way. Every screener you've had must have known. Screening out sex
is the main thing we do, after politics. People use suppressors,
but even so, you get memories, traces. When somebody comes
through completely blank ... well, it's not hard to guess
why." "How
much do you know?" I asked, trembling as though she'd touched
me. "I know
you're wearing a suppressor chip that you haven't had out for a
very long time. And that making it look like an encyclopedia is a
typical Postcop trick. And that when I look into your memories,
there's a hole you could drive a ten-year marriage through. All
of which means that you've had some good tea in your time, though
you don't remember it very well." "What
are you going to do?" She
looked at me in exasperation. "I'm going to tell the whole Net,
make a huge scandal, ruin your career, and get you disappeared,
what do you think? Maya, I'm not going to 'do' anything. I would
never have brought it up if you hadn't forced me to." "Thank
you." I sat down, relief stinging my eyes. "I should have known.
I guess I'm a little paranoid—oh, all right, I'm a lot
paranoid. A felon on News One has to be. If one hint of my past
made it out on the Net, I'd disappear, you know, kak korova
yazikom menya slizala." "Like a
what?" I
smiled, grateful for the change of subject. "As though a cow had
licked me with its tongue. Meaning completely. The way you do
when you run afoul of the Weavers." "I've
never heard that expression in my life," she said. "It never
fails; just when I think I'm finally assimilated. Hang on, let me
get that down." She took out her totem, a faux-granite obelisk,
to put her fluency chip into learn mode. Then she set the totem
down on nothing; there must have been a table there where she
was, but to my eyes, it simply hovered in the air. "That
might not be a good idea," I said. "If it's not on the fluency
chip, it's probably because someone doesn't want it there. The
Postcops might throw you a tea party just for having it in
RAM." She
raised an eyebrow. "Agent 99, I live for danger." I
sputtered—relief was still making me giddy—but
recovered in time to produce a creditable "Oh, Max." "Really,
Maya, I don't care what you do," she said with (so it seems to me
now, playing it back from the disk in slow motion) a studied
indifference. "Speaking strictly under the Cone of Silence, why
don't you just take the damned thing out and put in a real
encyclopedia? You can count on the 6000s to prevent any brain
damage—His-Majesty-In-Chains does not make idle guarantees.
And I can fix your Netcasts to look like it's still in place. You
can have your memories back. And ... and the rest of it." She
shrugged. Her body was pretending to examine the tabletop, but
the vidphone's eye was pointing right at me. "It's something to
think about. We don't have to talk about it now." I
looked at her in horror. "You're a cuckoo." "What?" "You're
a Postcop. Or"—and a blade of ice slid into my heart—
"are you a Weaver?" "What
makes you think that, Maya?" she said in a tone that was not at
all what I'd expected. "How could I be a Weaver?" "Anton
Tamarich is drinking tea, and you're his cuckoo," I said. "No
wonder I've never seen you except in virtual. You're
sitting in some control tower, running, what is it, my sixth
loyalty check, or are we up to seven now? Don't you people ever
give up?" "Oh,"
she said, looking down. "I see. That's what you think. Maya, it
isn't true." "Come
on. I know the drill by now. You just gave me a textbook
incitement to violate parole—nice and hypothetical, nothing
that would look too pushy on the disk. Perfect, in fact. You're a
lot better than that idiot they sent last time, I'll give you
that." "Whatever
I may be, I'm not a Postcop," she said. "Really?
Let's see—" I sent out a query to the Net"—your
resume says you graduated from Leningrad University. Lapshina is
still dean of the department there, isn't she? I've known her
since before you were born, if you're the age you look. If I were
to call her up...” "By all
means." I moved
toward the videophone. She was still standing in front of it.
When she wouldn't move aside, I reached through her for the
touchplate. "Oh,
God." She sat down without bothering to materialize a chair; it
was an eerie effect. "I was hoping you were bluffing." Of course
I had been, but I wasn't going to tell her that. "No, she won't
remember me and yes, my resume is a fake. But it's not what
you're thinking. Maya, the degree takes four years at a minimum,
and there's no way to expedite. Do you have any idea how absurd
that is for a multimegascops?" She had talked herself out of fear
and into anger. "The Net makes universities obsolete. Anyone with
a bandwidth over room temperature can learn how to screen from
the Net in a few hours. All those years of university
training—they're not trying to give you knowledge, they're
trying to control it. They're weeding out the ideologically
impure." "Incitement
to agree with slanders against the government. That's very
inventive. You must be up against a bitch of a quota." I picked
up the box of moistware and threw it at her image. It sailed
through her and clattered against the wall, spilling out
flesh-tone and gold. "Take your rosebox and go home,
cop." "What
are you going to do?" she said. "I'm
going to apply for immediate repartnering. If they'll take it
without a reason, fine. If not, I'll put down unprofessional
conduct, which would be true even if you were just an overeager
megascops." "You
don't even trust me enough to give me one chance to prove that I
am who I say I am?" "I quit
believing in trust twenty years ago, over one hell of a cup of
tea." On the
disk her face clouds for an instant. Watching it now, freezing
the moment, zooming in, I wonder if her enhancements sped up
emotion, as well as thought. Was this the brief catch in the
throat it seemed to be, or was she crying in there for hours, in
her silicon cage? Or—I cannot help but think it—was
that sob a cover, under which she plotted the next phase of her
deception? When I
unpause the disk, she says quietly: "You'd have to have absolute
proof." "Yes." "Then
I'll give you your trust through a cable," she said with sudden
vehemence, "since that's the only kind you
understand." "You
must be joking. I'm not going to give you a direct line to my
brain." She
lifted her eyebrows incredulously. "You really think you can keep
me out, if I want in?" If I
had been able to stop the disk then, as I can now, I might have
seen this as the product of rejection and despair. But at the
time, I could think only one thing. Keishi Mirabara scared the
hell out of me. I
reached for my Net chip, but too late. She had grasped her totem
in her fist and thrust it into my head, a symbol of the invisible
connection she was making through the Net. (Now, replaying it in
slow motion, I can feel a tingling as the granite spire passes
the skull, but only silence as it moves through layer after layer
of unfeeling brain.) Then all at once her mind was there,
out at the end of the virtual cable, and it was impossible not to
stretch out to it, impossible not to touch those memories, so
much clearer than my own. And gradually, gently, passively, her
mind gave up its secrets. "Am I a
cop, Maya Tatyanichna?" she said at last. "No. I
guess you're not." She
drew the totem out. "You believed it, though, didn't you? You
didn't have a trace of doubt. You really don't trust
me." "Keishi,
why the devil should I trust you?" I nourished the anger I felt,
knowing that nothing else could make me say what I had to say.
"I've known you for two days—no, not so much, not two. The
ink isn't even dry on our partnering assignment. I don't know you
and you don't know me. You think we have a connection because of
all the things you've sucked out of my mind by screening, but
that isn't real. Trust comes when you've worked with someone for
years; it doesn't speed up just because you can think fast, and
it doesn't materialize when you stick a cable in someone's head.
What you get from screening me isn't friendship, it's data. We're
strangers." She
looked down to hide the moistness in her eyes. "Yes," she said,
"I guess we are." And she
vanished—leaving me feeling like I'd just told a child that
her mother was dead, not because it was true, but just for fun.
But I had to be ruthless, yes, ruthless. For with the Net linking
our minds, she had not been able to hide it. Keishi Mirabara was
in love. SIX
The Word That
night I went over the research, with Keishi's thoughts haunting
my mind. "Most
images of the Holocaust come from photos taken during the Allied
liberation of the camps," she said once, "but the Square Miles
were liberated by the Unanimous Army, which did not take
pictures, and whose component selves did not remember the
experience." And again: "The Nazis had only a few years to carry
out their pogrom. The Guardians had nearly fifty, and they had
the whole world to do it in. In fifty years you can raise new
generations that have never known anything but tyranny. You can
destroy not just a people, but all memory of a people." By nine
o'clock the next morning—late evening by my body
clock—my mind began to wander, her voice intruding on my
free associations in a surreal counterpoint. Soon my thoughts
turned to what I'd felt from Keishi through the cable, and the
moistdisk announced: "The homosexual prisoners of the Nazi
concentration camps were not released when the camps were
liberated. Not only were they returned to prison, but their time
in the camps was not counted toward their sentences. Compare
Calinshchina." "Christ,"
I said. "Yeah,
that one's a bitch, isn't it?" I'd
grown so used to hearing her voice in my head that I forgot to be
startled. She was walking toward me through the slanting sunlight
in the hall; a black fedora cast a diagonal shadow across her
face. She wore a mask of eggshell-thin ceramic, after the African
fashion, matte white. When she smiled, the mask copied her
expression, but its features were not hers. Her image was so
vivid that I thought it must be real, until I noticed that the
milling dustmotes were indifferent to her presence. Had she been
flesh, they would have swirled about her as she walked, as if
recoiling from her touch. She
came to the doorway and stopped, leaning against the wall and
watching me to see what I would do. She was wearing a Word: a
gold cartouche on her lapel that, from time to time, would pluck
a single word from her thoughts and display it. That's the
fashion, too—a random, drop-by-drop exposure that always
struck me as faintly obscene. At the moment it said
inversion, for no reason I could think of. "You've
got to quit barging in on me like this, Mirabara." "I seem
to have this problem knocking," she said, passing her hand
through the wall. "But I'll ring the videophone next
time." "That
would be nice. Just in case I'm in the shower or something," I
said, and inversion faded into soap. "So is this
just general neighborliness, or is there a special reason for
this visit?" Foodchain
flashed
on the Word as she said "Depends. You want to do an
interview?" "Who?" "Pavel
Sergeyevich Voskresenye." The
moistdisk instantly supplied an image. I was reading a tattered
old book at impossible speeds. I closed it with a snap. The spine
said: Victims of the Square Miles, by P. S. Voskresenye.
It was one of the first books published during the early
Reconstruction, and a cornerstone of Keishi's
research. "Voskresenye
is alive?" "He's
got a pulse and a Netname. Beyond that, I wouldn't expect much.
At his age he ought to be half fossilized." "What's
his real name?" "That's
what's on the records: Voskresenye." "Not
Voskresenski?" "Nope,
that's what it says. 'Mister Sunday.' And it gets better. He's
operating as Pavel of hearth null , clan
Darkness-at-Noon." "What
the hell kind of a clan name is that?" "A fake
one," she said, and waited. "More
than that," I said. "There's plain fake, and then there's
obviously fake. If he just didn't want to be found, he'd
have plain fake. But Darkness-at-Noon is obviously fake. He wants
everyone to know that he doesn't want to be found. It's a
challenge." Keishi
smiled, a teacher pleased with her slow but faithful student. I
turned to the videophone and repeated the Netname. White letters
appeared on the screen: "Connected. Video
unavailable." "Pavel
Voskresenye," I said to the blank screen, "this is Maya
Andreyeva, a Camera at News One hearth. I'd like to set
up—" "Meet
me in grayspace," said a voice from the videophone, followed by
the flashing message: CONNECTION BROKEN. "Why
would an old man out of the Square Miles want to meet in
grayspace?" I said warily. "Maybe
he figures it's your home turf. Maybe he remembers." And
that was possible. Back in 2297 I covered the Binary Biodiversity
Act, the law that put life into grayspace. It was an African
idea: since most computers are partly idle most of the time, why
not use the extra processing capacity to evolve new algorithms?
The Fusion was mistrustful, naturally, but the idea was too good
to pass up out of spite. So the unused space—the
grayspace—on thousands of computers was stitched together
into two kingdoms: moist grayspace, dry grayspace. The dry side
was seeded with random code, and the moist with random
neurodes. For the
first couple of years everybody was happy, and I got to say all
sorts of pretty phrases about a new age of cooperation between
the FHN and Africa. After all, they'd given us such a good deal:
we could have anything in grayspace that we recognized as useful,
and they'd have their pick of the rest. I don't need to tell you
who got the better end of that bargain. And so, instead of
getting more stories on African politics, as I'd hoped, I wound
up going back to grayspace every couple of months to check up on
the aborigines and grouse about African trickery. I still
wonder: what did the Africans want? Were they as naive as we
were, hoping for a faster sorting algorithm and better robot
vision? Or did they want to fill up grayspace with feral
intelligences, and if so, to what end? "I hope
I haven't thrown out my myrmichor," I said. But I knew just where
it was, nestled in foam in a plastic box on the top shelf of the
bedroom closet. The myrmichor plugs into the occipital socket,
the parietal, and both temporals, so I had to take out all my
other moistware, except, of course, the encyclopedia. After some
fumbling I got it strapped on: a baroque headdress covering the
whole back of my skull, looking like a set of external
vertebrae. "Why
don't you plug your camera chip into your wrist," she said, "so
it'll be there if you need it?" "What
good would that do? It won't work in my wrist." "I can
get to it through your wrist socket and patch it back into your
temporal lobe. Just in case he says something you want to catch."
As she spoke, her Word panned from slithering to
hope. "This
is strictly background, Keishi. I'm not going to use it directly.
No one cares what Pavel Voskresenye looks like in grayspace. What
is it with you and that camera chip, anyway?" The
mask grinned. "Okay, you caught me. I was going to modernize your
colors. But subtly, subtly. You would have liked the
results." "Just
leave my colors alone." "Whatever
you say, chief." Bolus appeared on her Word in elaborate
script letters. "Are you ready?" "Keishi,
you are not going with me." "Oh,
come on," she said. "It's an old dream of mine. When I was in
school I glued the cover from a textbook onto my Net chip so I
could watch you in history class. When the Mars landing was up
against reruns of your show, I watched your show. I've dreamed
about going into grayspace with you since I was twelve years
old." "I was
on the Net when you were twelve? Excuse me while I crawl off into
a corner and decompose." "Oh,
quit being so sensitive," she said. "Just let me tag along. It
really means a lot to me—it's like getting a chance to ride
with the Lone Ranger." The
Lone Ranger, no less. The things a classical education does to
people's minds. I wasn't going to have the energy to fight this
out, I realized. "All right," I said, "Just don't get in the
way." "Perish
the thought." Cross, said the Word. I
didn't trust her for a second, but I said: "All right, you've
been here more recently than I have; should I put on my
shields?" "Depends.
What kind of shielding have you got?" "I
don't know. Whatever they gave me, fifteen years ago." "Oh,
good God. Petrov shielding? The kind without
camouflage?" "I
said, I don't know what it's called." "Looks
like you're encased in a gigantic Christmas tree?" "That's
the one." "Leave
it off, then. It'll attract predators for miles around. I guess
you left before the aborigines discovered stealth
technology." "Stealth?
What kind of stealth?" "Well,
to begin with, you should turn the sensitivity and contrast on
your myrmichor all the way up, if you want to see
anything." "Terrific."
I hadn't even met Voskresenye, and I was already starting to
dislike him. Take me
in, I
thought to the myrmichor, and it began to feed images into my
optic nerve. It wasn't loading me into grayspace yet, only
sticking a periscope into it, so I could find a nice safe corner
where I could upload in peace. But
everything I saw looked quiet and safe, even when I turned up the
controls as far as they would go. I was using the classic
interface: the size of a neurode shows how many connections it's
got; colors indicate how many times it's fired since you've been
watching; you blink to reset. But no matter how long I held my
eyes open, and no matter how much I played with the depth of
field, nothing would strobe down the spectrum to red. There were
long branching synapse-chains, like veins or vines, that would
slowly turn golden; drifting baleens in violet and indigo against
the black; but nothing that looked capable of
locomotion. "All
right, then," I said. "Let's do it right here." The myrmichor
touched my brain, and began to upload me. I read
somewhere that myrmichor means "being carried away by
ants." I don't know if that's even true, but when I hear the word
I always think of a video I saw once, of an ant cutting a circle
of leaf and carrying it off in her mouth; and then the camera
zooms back, and you see there are a million ants, and the tree is
almost bare. It's
actually a little bit more organized than that. First the bugs
divide your mind into parcels that are almost independent—I
always picture paper growing up between the wrinkles of the
brain, like the membrane between cloves of garlic. The ants
descend on each clove in turn, carry it off to grayspace, and
reconnect it. As this happens, you briefly lose certain
capacities; sight, mostly—I was blind for a long time, and
when the sight came back I was agnosic, and then
paralyzed. At
least there was no aphasia, and no obvious loss of memory; the
myrmichor only had to upload a part of my mind. In Africa, where
the Net will hold souls, people upload nearly all of their brains
into grayspace, neuron by neuron. In the real world, if you do
that you lose your sensory qualia: colors are reduced to
wavelengths, emotions become mere data, and in short, you get
desouled. So we leave most of the brain in the skull, and only
move the parts that need to run at Net speeds. I don't know the
details of what uploads and what doesn't, but you can tell that
some of your memories stay in the skull. If you try to remember
how your breakfast looked, you can do it easily; but if you try
to remember how it tasted, it seems to take hours, as if your
mind had to send off to Moscow for the information. And all the
while your eyes are darting around, hyper-alert to the least
movement. As in a dream, where your pulse is racing but your legs
won't move at all. Even
having a little bit of your brain in the Net is an unpleasant
sensation, though. You feel half dead, half petrified, as if
you'd been given artificial legs. It feels—tinny, false.
It's impossible to describe. If you've got nanobugs in your head,
try it and you'll know. If you've only got an implant, then for
God's sake don't upgrade for grayspace; it's
overrated. The
myrmichor chimed to signal that the upload was complete. I moved
my muscles experimentally, trying to get used to my new body. The
body feels different in grayspace; something to do with the
organization of the sensory and motor cortices. I didn't really
read that part of the manual, though I remember the illustration:
a little homunculus arched over a cross-section of the brain,
with its face upside-down above the rest of its body and its
tongue above that—which is about what it feels like. The
Africans draw this as the sky-goddess Nut stretched out over the
world, which is not how it feels, at least not in
Russia. When
I'd finished uploading, I looked around me. Where was Keishi? She
should have loaded faster than I did; her myrmichor was newer.
But all I could see was rain—little yellow sparks of life,
falling randomly into the dark, that could animate what they
touched. Most were being eaten up by driftweeds, the grayspace
equivalent of plants. All
right, then, I thought; if she didn't want to come, that was fine
with me. I didn't have time for games. I
called up a hardware map and, sure enough, there was
Darkness-at-Noon—visible, I suspected, only to me. I began
to swim in its direction. Then my
vision went red. I blinked it back, but it was red again the
moment my eyes opened. I turned, but it was all around me. I
tried to break through, but I was trapped. Some driftnet spider,
combing the waves, had entangled me. Reaching back into my body,
I groped for the manual abort button. "Cancel
that!" Keishi said. "Relax, News One. It's only me." My
mistake had been looking for something my own size. She was all
around me, spread out in a thin layer of cortex from which towers
of enhancement rose. I had, of course, known before how fast and
dense her mind was, but only now did I truly feel it. Beside her
acres and arches and spires of mind, mine was a mere clot of
neurodes. As I searched for her, I had been moving through her,
like a tumbleweed through an abandoned city. Then
the city came to life, collapsed its towers, and gathered into
folds around me. "Keishi,
what are you doing?" "Umm,
I'm sort of engulfing you," she answered distractedly. I felt
her mind seep into me, taking up my unused spaces, and then seal
itself around me like a shell. "Keishi,
this isn't funny." "I'm
trying to protect you. Stealth technology, remember? You're
shining like a lighthouse; half of grayspace can see
you." "There's
nothing there to see me." "Contrast,
News One, contrast. Just because you can't see it doesn't mean it
isn't there." When I
protested again, she said impatiently: "Here, look!" and folded a
layer of herself over my eyes. All at once the space around us,
which had been a field of undistinguished neurodes, took on odor,
taste, and texture. I felt tremblings, tramplings, stirrings
round me. It was like the bottom of the ocean, where strange
cave-jawed fish, impossible in light, are nourished, and pearl
and weed have been developing for years, unseen of man. I saw a
shark sniff Keishi's tendrils, turn bronze in fear, and scull
away; and in the distance some lopsided creature spasmed,
drowning, tangled in a knot of fishing line. "You
could have shown me this before you did it," I said, but so
halfheartedly she didn't bother to reply. Instead she moved
forward, instantly attaining an impossible velocity. I was
frightened at first, but then began to lose myself to the
experience. I swept past sharks and spiders, and rocketed through
tangler webs, invulnerable because I was armored in her; so that
I began to dread the thought that we would soon reach
Voskresenye, and she would have to stop. We
passed a border between computers. I couldn't see it, but I felt
it slow us down, like breaking through a sheet of paper. "This is
Whisper," she said. "My hearth." It looked just like the rest of
grayspace; yet, somehow, the confidence was comforting. "We'll
just be going through one corner of it, though—yes,
here." Ahead
of us, sharks were moving in slow motion. "Oh,
devil take it! I thought Swazi would be the fastest way—
it's a Dahlak—but it's overloaded. Some idiot must be
compiling an AI. Well, it's still quicker than
backtracking." We
passed through into the slower hearth. Our thoughts didn't slow
down; the speed of neural nets isn't affected by load in other
parts of the system. But our motion ground to a crawl. There
was no sense trying to look ahead of us—everything there
would be as slow as we were—so I looked behind us, where,
things would be faster. But Whisper was as black as night. "Did
you take away that new interface?" I said. "No,
it's still there." "Then
why am I blind?" "The
regulators are way backlogged on 'see' commands," she
said. "That
never used to happen. Motion would get slow, but you could always
see." "That
was back when most abos were still blind, so demand for sight was
low. Now almost everything has vision, and the rules committee
won't increase the regulator standards. Just thank God you
weren't here ten years ago, when the abos were collecting eyes
like kids collect marbles. One argus could bring a whole hearth
to its knees. God, I'm glad they're extinct. —Burst your
eyes, Swazi, if you can't keep your grayspace running right, then
give it the hell away. Fucking public hearth admins...." She
crawled and fumed, mostly in Sapir. The
sharks back in Whisper were starting to fade into view, their
movements fast and jerky, like bad time-lapse. One or two dipped
into Swazi, tempted by slow-moving prey, but most kept their
distance. The abos know you can't compare speeds across the
boundary between computers. Gradually, they were
dispersing. Then as
the sharks became brighter, I saw that some of them were not just
pacing at the border. Some had their mouths stuck into Swazi, and
were spinning out great woven sheets of neurodes, larger than a
tangler's web. "What
are they doing?" I asked. "That's
right," Keishi said, "you don't know about webfish either.
They're a convertible shark that takes advantage of slowdowns.
They stay at the border, where the vision is still fast, and send
out sticky strands one neurode wide. Since the strands are so
small, they move faster than everything else. And when the
slowdown's over, they reel in their catches. It's sort of a
brainless strategy, but it works. That's why arguses had so many
eyes, too— they'd deliberately backlog the regulators until
everyone was equally blind, and then they'd fish by
touch." "What
happened to them?" "The
hearth admins screamed about the overloads, so the rules
committee decided to limit the number of vision calls per abo.
The arguses lost all their eyes, but they developed a symbiosis
with these huge clouds of aphids that each had one eye, and those
were even better at slowing a system down than the argus had
been. Finally some bright hacker cooked up a program called
Millipede, that would run around faster and faster the less it
could see, so that no matter what happened, motion was always
backlogged worse than vision. That made the argus strategy
obsolete. Made huge traffic jams, too, until the ecosystems all
reorganized to cope with it. —Thank God, here, this is
Veles." We
broke through another membrane, and Keishi began to pick up
speed. "Just
in time, too," she said. "Swazi is about to freeze up. We'd have
had to unplug and start over." As we
moved away I saw Swazi behind us begin to turn silver. Swazi had
been unable to maintain its part of grayspace, and, finding no
one to take it over, was storing it all on a moistdisk, frozen in
time. A boom
of sound disturbed my sightseeing. I looked forward. Some long,
lithe creature, like an eel, was swimming for its life, with an
immense shark behind it. It jumped over us, booming; the shark
followed, close enough to touch. At the last instant, the eel
ducked into Swazi and was silvered. The shark tried to follow it
in, but bounced off. Pacing in Veles, it fretted and fumed, like
a cartoon lawman stopped by a painted border. "Oh,
clever thing!" Keishi said. "Beautifully timed!" "What
good does that do it?" I asked. "Eventually that part of
grayspace will be reactivated. If Swazi can't find time to run
it, someone else will." "Yes,
but the eel will still have its momentum and the shark won't,"
Keishi said. "Besides, by then the shark may have lost interest."
Then she was silent for a long time. I was about to ask another
question when she said thoughtfully: "Although, I don't know,
some sharks are damned persistent." She slowed a little, as if
she might go back to chase the shark away. But she shook the
impulse off, and we swam on through Veles. "This
is nice," I said. "The water—I mean, grayspace is clear
here. No weeds, no debris." "Veles
is reliable. They've held on to this section of grayspace for
weeks without a serious slowdown. So the gazehounds and sharks
keep things pretty clean. Yes, it's nice. Nice if you're
armored." A
school of spheres came toward us from above, enveloped us, and
matched our pace. Then they turned silvery, reflecting us. It was
like seeing your image in a thousand hand-mirrors. "What
are those?" I said. "Doppelgangers.
They won't hurt you, they'll just imitate you." "Like
mirror-fish?" "Not
really. Mirror-fish just imitated for camouflage. Dopplers do it
to learn better algorithms, to take back to their queen. They
won't get much from us, though—we're optimized for a
different universe." "I
thought that kind of imitation was what shielding was meant to
prevent. Algorithmic quarantine, and all that. You know, 'Imagine
the destruction of native culture that would ensue if you dropped
a radio on some unsuspecting tribe of Bushmen—'
" "Oh,
that's an excuse. Bushmen, my ass. They only said that to piss
off the Africans. If you dropped a radio on a traditional
village, they'd bloody well use it to grind flour—they'd
see it in a way appropriate to their world. No abo's going to
duplicate a human; we're sloppy and inefficient, by their
standards. The Weavers made all that up to keep people out of
grayspace, because they were afraid grayspace would be impossible
to control. But it didn't work out that way. As you can see,
right up ahead." The
dopplers had gone; I saw nothing. "Where?" "Dead
ahead. Do you see her?" "Who?" "Look
carefully—there." She made an arrow in my visual field to
point it out to me: a barely visible disturbance in the neurodes,
moving slowly, like the shadow of a hawk against the
ground. "What
is it?" I said. "Weaver." "Why
are we staying here? Why aren't we running?" "Stay
calm, News One. It's just a tendril. She can't see us at this
distance." "Why
risk it?" I said. "Let's just go." "Sit
tight a minute," she said, creeping toward it. "I want to see the
rest of her." "Keishi!" "Hold
on." And we were moving again, twice as fast as before. Beneath
us was a vein of shadow that gradually widened and silvered, a
creek becoming a river. Then suddenly it was a delta, and an
ocean, and we were rocketing up away from it, until we could see
all its twining tendrils and its spinning core. It looked like
something you might see on the slide of a microscope; and then
again it looked like a galaxy, something impossibly vast. I felt
a rush of vertigo—a fear that I had lost myself, that I
would never return to my body. I had to carefully concentrate out
of the Net, and focus on the slow inflation of my lungs, to prove
to myself I was still real. "Let's
see which one she is," Keishi said, and blew out a stream of
bubbles. "Are
you insane?" "Relax.
The stimuli are so low-level she'll hardly even notice them. And
she couldn't trace them to me if she did. I just want to see
which one she goes for." The
bubbles circled the shifting and spiraling Weaver. At length one
of her tendrils flicked idly, like a hand absently grasping a
teacup, and a bubble disappeared. "Aha,"
Keishi said respectfully. "This one sweeps for a brain virus
called Parafango. Minor, but not as minor as I thought.
—But then, this wouldn't be the original. This virus killed
three or four Weavers, before they finally made the nastiest
strains extinct." "Who
wrote it?" "No
one, it's indigenous. It's a timid little herbivore that learned
to protect itself in grayspace by hiding in a human brain.
Perfectly harmless, as long as you're here. But if it gets
downloaded into your flesh brain—well, they wiped out the
one that trashes the arcuate fasciculus, thank God. So much for
your Bushman's radio; do you really think the Weavers could fight
abos like that and still worry that we'd invade
them?" Her
derision made me nervous, but the Weaver was still grazing
unperturbed. "Have
you ever seen one before?" she asked. "A
Weaver? No," I said. And then: "Not that I remember." "I'm
glad you got the chance, then. Isn't she beautiful?" "Beautiful?"
I said scornfully. "Necessary, maybe. I don't want another Army
any more than anyone else. But Weavers, beautiful? They scare the
hell out of me." "Beautiful
and terrible," she said. "Like a snake, or a
tiger." "Squids
and spiders come to mind." "Oh,
don't be so literal. Doesn't she remind you of—damn!" she
cried out suddenly. And we were speeding through the Net again,
in full flight. "What
happened?" "She
almost saw us," Keishi said, slowing down. "It's okay, she's not
pursuing. She was just curious." "That's
what you get for taking risks like that." She
ignored the warning. "This," she said, "is
Darkness-at-Noon." I first
saw Voskresenye as a tiny knot of neurodes, about the size of
mine but more irregularly shaped, like an apple with some bites
out of it. Grouper fish of some kind, not dopplers, were
schooling around him. As Keishi circled him at a distance, I saw
that the lump of neurodes was thickly cabled to a vast dark bulk
that loomed above us, dwarfing even Keishi. It was like a
storm-cloud that takes up the whole sky. The eye shrank from it.
How the hell did a man that old get wired like that? "How
interesting." The voice came from the little knob of cells I had
first seen. "A delegation. Does one address Leviathan, or the
seed in his stomach?" Before
I could answer, Keishi said "I was going to ask if you were the
blimp, or the ugly dwarf in its gondola." "Keishi!"
I cried out, shocked. But Voskresenye was not
offended: "I
expected someone unenhanced, so I extruded something her own size
for her to talk to. I hardly expected that she would come riding
an elephant." Keishi
swam a little closer toward him, and spoke a stream of
static. What
was that? I
subvocalized. "Sapir." I know
it's Sapir, I said
irritably. There are only two computer languages that have native
human speakers, and KRIOL sounds different. I know Sapir when I
hear it; I just never got past the segmentive case. What did
you say? "If you
put in your new language chip—" The
audience doesn't want to deal with Sapir any more than I
do, I said.
Will you just tell me? "It was
a superimposition of several comments involving his sexual
preferences, his mother, and his bandwidth." Keishi,
for God's sake, I
said. But by that time, she and Voskresenye had already exchanged
more words in Sapir than I could hope to count. What's he
saying to you? "Umm,
let's just say that only a few years ago it would have been
anatomically impossible." Then
Keishi said something that made Voskresenye laugh and turn
away. What?
What was that? "Sorry,
no way could I translate," she said. "Some insults just don't
make sense unless you can specify a waveform with a single
word." Voskresenye's
eyestalks swiveled toward me, and he spoke again. "I'm
sorry," I said. "I don't speak Sapir." "He
asked you to confirm your Netname," Keishi said. "Oh.
Umm, confirm(Maya, News One, camera)," I said, pleased to
discover that in grayspace the palatal click for left-paren
didn't hurt my mouth. A pattern of colored lights appeared
between us. "Is it
safe to say my pass phrase?" I asked Keishi. "Yes,"
she said. "I've got you covered." I had a
moment of amusement when I realized she meant this literally. A
million kilometers away, my body stirred and whispered: "Give up
your past desires, and leave the poor world to its fate." The
colors rippled in response. "Confirmed,"
Voskresenye said, after a brief pause. "Gol an ix
(KRIOL)?" "I
don't speak native KRIOL either," I admitted, feeling thoroughly
outclassed. "Only interpreted." "Well,
I can tell you one thing," Keishi said. "He speaks a very
high-class KRIOL. Judging by the number of parentheses he elides,
he's been talking to computers that could parse Russian if they
felt like it. He split the verb from its argument, too, and he
used the pronoun 'ix' without a restrictive definition. He's been
talking to AIs; I'd bet on it." Thanks,
I said.
I wasn't sure what use the information was, but better to have
Keishi feeding me trivia than heckling Voskresenye. To my
relief, Voskresenye switched to Russian. "Even so," he said, in a
tone of pleased surprise, "you speak KRIOL. How quaint. Nothing
has quite the appeal of a dead language; it's no accident that
most of the world's great religions have been conducted in
them." "KRIOL
isn't dead," I said. "Not in
Russia," he said dismissively. "It is in Africa, where it
matters." I
seemed to have completely lost control of the conversation. To
gain time I said—not very originally—"You are Pavel
Voskresenye?" "Yes,"
he said. "And I know who you are. So, the formalities being over,
you may now proceed to the jugular, if you can find
one." "Don't
you love it when your reputation precedes you?" Keishi whispered
in my ear. "I
wasn't thinking of you as an opponent, Pavel Sergeyevich," I
said. "Why are you treating me like one?" "I have
lived a long life," he said, "and I have made so many friends and
so many enemies that I can no longer remember which is which. So
I treat everyone as an enemy. It saves memory which can be used
to better purpose." I
blinked. Lucky that Keishi had changed my interface, or I would
have had to wait for him to reappear. "And why
grayspace?" "As
I've explained, I have many enemies. Grayspace is not secure, not
anymore, but it is more secure than vidphones; if someone happens
to be listening in, it should be relatively easy to detect
him." "So ask
him what he's got to hide," Keishi prompted. I had
been about to do just that. I nearly changed plans out of
annoyance with her; but no, she would take that as a triumph.
"Anything you say to me is going to wind up all over the Net, one
way or another," I said. "What's the danger?" "The
danger, Maya Tatyanichna, is that if I tell something to a
camera, the obvious way to prevent its becoming common knowledge
is to kill both that camera and me before the Netcast can begin.
Once the information is already on the Net, of course, that
solution is useless. One must still fear revenge, but revenge is
a less powerful motive than necessity." "I
see." I paused as if considering this closely, and subvoked:
Keishi, just for fun, see if there's a psychiatric record on
this man. "There's
not," she said. "Which isn't to say that there shouldn't be, but
there isn't." Well,
it was worth a try. Aloud
I said: "We somehow skipped the part of this conversation where I
tell you why I'm here, and I think you've gotten the wrong
impression. All I want to do is ask you a few questions about the
Calinshchina. I don't see why there should be anything sensitive
about that. It's part of a series that's been on News One for two
weeks already. If someone wanted it suppressed, wouldn't they
have done it by now?" "Asking
questions about the Calinshchina," he said, "is like pulling on a
tangler's web. You can pull them all day and find nothing. But if
you choose the wrong one, you never know what sort of twitching
horror you may bring to light." "I
see," I said, again. Voskresenye had a knack for crafting answers
that frustrated all my follow-ups; I couldn't pursue the question
without risking the attention of a Weaver. I went to a canned
question: "In
your book you give hundreds of survivors' stories, but you leave
out your own. Why? Which Square Mile did you survive?" "I was
imprisoned at Arkhangelsk," he said, and even in gray-space,
where there are no facial expressions, I could sense bitterness
tinged with amusement. "Whether I survived is a matter of
some debate." "What
do you mean by that?" He
paused, then replied ironically: "What records there are insist
no one survived Arkhangelsk. I have allowed the misconception to
persist. I would not wish to diminish Mr. Calin's crime by
subtracting even one death from his body count." It was
another of his slantwise evasions. Yet I could feel myself
warming to him, and if I did, so would the audience. I decided to
consider this a screen test, and not worry about pinning him
down. Later I'd go over the disk, analyze his strategies, and
develop a response. "There
is no disk, remember?" Keishi whispered. "If you want to put your
camera chip in—" Forget
it, I
subvoked flatly. Record this yourself, if you
want. To
Voskresenye I said, "Wouldn't you rather tell people about the
millions who died, instead of just adding one to the ranks of the
forgotten?" "Naturally."
His tone was nonchalant. "Pavel
Voskresenye, why don't we remember?" The
stormcloud that hung above our heads shifted uneasily. "That is a
question that wants answering in a dark place where no one can
listen, with all the chips out of our heads. Will you meet with
me?" "I was
going to ask the same thing," I said, and added to Keishi: but
not for the same reasons. "Where do you live?" "Meet
me at noon tomorrow on Nevsky Prospect, in front of the Bronze
Horseman." I
frowned. "I'd rather record you on your own turf. In your home,
if possible." I hate doing interviews in public places; it's not
fair to the screener to make her edit out gawkers. Then, too, a
house is an extension of the self—a shell the soul
secretes; like faces, they leak information. "Perhaps
later," he said. "For now, the Horseman. I must ask that you come
alone, and isolated from the Net. You may have an encrypted
channel to your screener—I have just given her the
specifications—but no more. Bring a vehicle; I will direct
you to the site of the interview from there." "You're
maybe taking her to the Batcave?" Keishi said. "You want I should
blindfold her?" Keishi,
behave! "It is
a most ill-mannered elephant." "She's
a loaner. My real screener's in the shop." I had been about to
ask him for a different meeting place, but after Keishi's
outburst, it seemed petty to press the issue. "How will I
recognize you?" I asked. "I
assure you I am unmistakable. I look forward to our conversation,
Maya Tatyanichna. Now if you will excuse me." "Until
tomorrow, then." "Tomorrow."
He looked up, toward where the rest of Keishi's body towered over
me. "Good-bye, elephant. Such an oddity—an elephant raised
by wolves." "Yeah,
same to you, buddy." "Keishi!" But
perhaps he did not even hear her; he had already moved away, the
blimp swiftly reeling in the dwarf as he receded. A single
grouper, streaming toward us from the dwarf's direction, was
about to overtake us— Then I
was back sitting in my living room. Rather than swim back to
where we'd started, Keishi had simply pulled the plug. It
always takes me a long time to recover from going into
gray-space. The parts of your brain that get copied into
grayspace aren't silenced, they're just cut off from the rest of
the brain. Isolated, they dream; and though the myrmichor
overwrites the dream, there's always something that remains, just
out of reach. I can't help trying to grasp it, though it always
slips through my fingers. Keishi,
however, was awake at once. "What an asshole!" she
said. "I
think he'll be all right," I said when I felt whole again. "He's
got presence—it's a strange kind, but he's got it. If I
could feel it even in grayspace, it should come through
beautifully in the Net-cast. This could work out." "Well,
if he screens well, he screens well. There's no arguing with
that," she said grudgingly. "He's still an asshole," she confided
to the vidphone. Then she inclined her head and said slyly, "Have
you thought any more about—" "You
know," I interrupted, "you can't keep doing this
forever." "What?" "I know
you think now that you've got something on me, you can do
anything you want. And you're right, there's nothing I can do.
But sooner or later, News One's going to catch on." She
rested her elbow on nothing and leaned her head against her hand.
"Haven't we had this conversation already? At least once? It's
like a bad video game: if you leave the castle and go back in,
the Guardians are resurrected and you have to fight your way
through all over again. I thought we established that I'm not a
cop, or a spy, or a blackmailer. I thought we'd finally reached
some understanding—" "Of
what? Of what you showed me yesterday? What does that have to do
with disrupting my interviews?" "Oh,"
she said. "That's what you mean." Her image shrugged; the Word
scrolled down from treachery to flame. "It's a whole
different etiquette in grayspace, Maya. People always insult each
other—it's practically impolite not to. I mean, it worked,
didn't it? You got your interview. I can't always explain
everything. Sometimes I have to just follow my
instincts—" "You
don't have instincts yet," I said. "You haven't earned
them." "Oh,
God, not this again. I thought I took care of this
before—" "You
took care of it by lying to me, yes. You can't expect me to stick
to that now that the lie's been uncovered." "Scratch
'video game,'" she said. "Insert 'soap opera.' " She turned
aside, and I thought she would leave. Then she wheeled back
around and said in a burst of energy: "Why do you have to make
this so complicated? Why won't you understand—" "Because
I can't," I said. She
made a vague searching gesture, as though about to argue the
point, then hesitated. She fixed her eyes on my encyclopedia.
Doubt crossed her face like a shadow. "No," she said bleakly,
"you can't. Of course you can't. I don't know why I ever expected
anything else." I took
out my Net chip, and she vanished. For a while I sat with my hand
on the moistdisk, lest she should, by some miracle, find a way in
through that. She didn't. I moved my hand around to the front of
my head, and rested it against the familiar warmth of my
suppressor chip. I want
to say that it's horrible. I want to tell you that being
suppressed makes every moment of existence a torment, because
maybe that would help—but it would be a lie. In fact, the
most horrible thing is how easy it is to slide into contentment,
how hard it is to nourish anger or regret. If you lost the sense
of smell, say, or taste, you'd grieve for it; but if you were
born without that sense, you'd never miss it. You'd almost forget
there was such a thing as smell, until someone reminded you, and
even then you'd only half believe it. That's how it was for
me—the sense was gone, as though it had never been. For the
first few years after suppression, I kept myself in misery by
sheer effort of will, trying to imagine, every day, what it was
that I had lost. But in the end, it became too much trouble. I
gave in to the inevitable. I forgot. It
must, I supposed, have been terribly strong, for me to risk so
much. Did it come over me by surprise, like a storm uprooting
everything? Or was it always there, enriching my
perceptions—as when Keishi covered my eyes, making the dark
world bright with salts and textures? I didn't know. In those
early years, when I imagined desire, I used to think of it as an
energy that clings to objects— an electricity, that sparks
and dies in every rustling of a dress, and that lives deep among
the wires beneath the skin. But
those were only words. I could no more bring back the feeling
with them than a man desouled in grayspace could remember the
smell of a rose. I had forgotten. I had grown
complacent. And now
she came into my life, and offered me all of it back— and I
must refuse it. Because it would mean being dependent on her
forever. Because I could never ask her to leave. Because when it
was over between us, or when her enhancements aged into
obsolescence, some automatic spy would sniff me out and we'd both
disappear. It was impossible. I liked her—it was not that;
might have liked her a lot under other circumstances; but it was
impossible. The false intimacy of the screening chip had ruined
any chance of friendship, much less love. If
only, I thought, I could meet her in some other place, where the
Net did not reach, and where the only cables were the roots by
which the grasses passed along their ancient thoughts. If only we
could meet there as if for the first time, and talk together as
two strangers talk: locked into our separate skulls, as though
nothing had been said between us. (The
Helmet) (Dreams
don't contain symbols. Where would they come from? Not from some
collective unconscious—we're not born cabled to the
world-mind, that's a myth. Not from your own mind, either;
symbols are hard enough to invent when you're awake, you're not
going to come up with them fast asleep. So if something in a
dream looks like a cross between a vidphone and your cat, it's
not because your cat is like a vidphone; it's because you're too
sleepy to make up your mind. If Mr. Yablokov turns into your
father, it's not because he reminds you of your father, it's
because there's no continuity director. That
night, I did not dream of Keishi. Instead I dreamed, over and
over, that I met Pavel Voskresenye. He was an old man, sitting in
a wooden chair. Blood was leaking from a small hole in his
temple. As I watched from a coign of vantage, he reached up and
guided down an enormous helmet which, when he locked it into
place, engulfed his head completely. But it was not a helmet: it
was a brain, from the back of which there trailed a spine a
hundred meters long, like a skeleton in a museum. The rest of him
sat motionless, but the spine began to twitch, drawing all my
attention toward it. It shuddered, then rippled sinuously like
the body of a snake. At last, with an effort that wrinkled his
brow, the spine raised itself and arched forward over his head,
like the tail of a scorpion.) Seven
Khristos Voskresye "Put in
your code chip." All
right, I
subvoked, fumbling it into my head. Are we
scrambled? "Yeah,
we're locked up tight. I still don't see the point, though."
Neither do I, but we might as well do what he says. It can't
hurt anything. I'd
come early and waited for a parking place near the Horseman to
open up, so I could watch for him from the car. Now I was having
second thoughts about the whole plan. He'd probably counted on
recognizing me from my Net-portrait, in which case we were in
trouble. And there was little hope of his being unmistakable: on
that sidewalk, no one could have been so outlandish as to stand
out. Or so I
thought until I happened to glance in the rear-view mirror, and
saw a man of about the right age, wearing a heavy black overcoat
that was wildly inappropriate for the early spring
sweater-weather. I half-opened the door for a better look. His
head was full of sockets of every possible design, and he was not
only wearing a coat, but gloves—black and lumpish. He was
unmistakable, all right. "Voskresenye?"
I called out. The man
looked at me as though I were mad. "Voistinu
voskresye—but not today!" Oh.
Khristos voskresye is an old Easter greeting meaning
"Christ is risen." Voistinu voskresye is the
answer—"truly he is risen"—but of course, it wasn't
Easter. Well, it wouldn't be the last time I'd make an idiot out
of myself in the name of journalism. For a moment I was afraid
he'd think I was a wirehead trying to steal the car—I've
got enough sockets to look the part—but he passed by
without further comment, disappearing into the crowd. Then
the passenger door seemed to open by itself. I flipped open the
cover of the Electrify switch and had my finger on the toggle
when he hissed, "It's me—Voskresenye!" and climbed into the
seat with a peculiar crab-motion, still crouching
down. "What
the hell are you doing?" "No
time. Pretend you've given up on me and drive away." One of
the advantages of driving a car of Reconstruction vintage is that
they generally put in a few concealed weapons. There was a
ceramic flechette gun behind a panel just beneath the driver's
side armrest; a tap with my left hand, a quick grab with my
right, and I'd have it. I would take the gun, make him get out of
the car, drive away, and produce some nice boring conclusion to
my series on the Calinshchina. I would take the assignments I was
given, and I would die in my sleep. Then I
looked at his face, and my hand wavered. He had one of every kind
of socket ever made, from the round Army standard to the tiny
modern squares, but the ones at his temples were like nothing I'd
ever seen before: oval, with three concentric rings of pins
inside. And the jagged scar that went all the way around his head
was beyond the clumsiness of even the most disreputable Moscow
hack. He'd been modified by the Guardians. I
turned my sigh of resignation into one of frustration and slumped
my shoulders to mime discouragement. After another thirty seconds
of craning my neck I muttered, "The hell with it, then," found a
tiny chink in the wall of traffic, and threaded the car into
it. "You
shouldn't have called out my name," he said, straightening up. "I
know you didn't know, and it can't be helped now in any case. But
I don't think we've fooled anyone. We'll have to try to lose
ourselves in traffic." "Voskresenye,
why are we acting like fugitives?" "I know
how all this must seem, Maya Tatyanichna. But I am not paranoid,
nor am I being overcautious. On the contrary, it is reckless of
me even to risk speaking to you. I am widely accounted a most
desirable person to have at one's tea party. Ask your
screener." "He's
telling the truth," Keishi said. "He's been wanted by the Fusion
of Historical Nations since before it fused." What
for? "Oh,
treason, terrorism, conspiracy to overthrow the government.
Little things like that." I
thought wistfully of the flechette gun and the chance that had
evaporated when I decided not to use it. Why
didn't you tell me this before? "It
never occurred to me to check for warrants on someone his age,"
she said with chagrin. Twenty
years of good behavior, sunk by a stereotype. Now I'd get to test
the old maxim about Postcop tea. The first time you drink it,
they say, you soon forget it—that part I'd already proved.
But the second time, the saying goes on, you remember it the rest
of your life. "Give
me one good reason why I shouldn't make you get out now," I
said. "Because
it's too late. They already know we're together. I just saw the
bulletin go out." What
are my chances if I kill him and say he tried to carjack
me? I
asked. No, don't bother, I know the answer. Don't mind me, I'm
just struggling against the inevitable. "I
assure you that your reputation will not be damaged as a result
of this meeting," he said. "I have made extensive preparations to
avoid endangering you. When the day shift clocks out, I will
erase the information from their chips before the next shift
slots them in, and purge all external records. At six o'clock
this evening, you will be as clean as you were
yesterday." "And if
he doesn't do it, I will," Keishi said. "I'll power-down their
whole network if I have to." Keishi
was wired beyond the Post police, but even so, it didn't seem
remotely plausible. And while they both sounded confident, I
wasn't sure how much to credit that. The overenhanced often come
to believe they can hack their way out of anything. Sooner or
later, life proves them all wrong. "I'm
not making this up, Maya. I can do it." I
believe you, I subvoked without conviction. "The
first thing," Voskresenye said, "is to lose any surveillance we
may have attracted. Take a right turn up at the
light." "Where
are we going?" "I'll
know when we get there." I
wasn't reassured, but saw no reason not to go where he suggested.
As I made the turn I said, "Just so I know what I'm being
disappeared for, what exactly did you do? Plant a bomb or
something?" "I
planted something much more dangerous. An idea. —Here! Turn
into this parking lot. —An idea, but it didn't go off.
Secondhand explosives; you can't trust them. Park there, next to
that gray car." I
pulled in next to a car that was a perfect duplicate of mine,
except for being a slightly darker shade of gray. The owner must
have parked it indoors. Kruchonykh never sold a gray car, you
understand; they just turn that color. He got
out, and though his movements were neither as fast nor as
acrobatic as they had been when he scuttled into the car on
Nevsky, they still didn't fit with his age. For a moment I
wondered if he was a younger man in some sort of make-up. But no,
it was more than that. There was something inhuman about the way
he moved, about its smoothness—fast precise movements with
no diagonals, like a toy robot. I
followed him around to the back of the car and started to ask
what he was doing, but he put his finger to his lips and looked
into the sky. "There ... and there...” he murmured, then
said to me: "Stand over to your left a little, and keep
talking." "What
sort of idea?" "Oh,
some nonsense about human beings having inalienable rights. Or
was it that the Earth is flat? At my age one begins to forget
these things." He had
removed my license plate, using a tiny electric screwdriver
produced from one of his coat's many pockets. "About a foot to
your right, if you please," he said. Then he went to the car
beside us, and started switching plates. "Will
that work?" I whispered. "Speak
freely; no one can hear us now. And yes, it should. You're
between me and the closest spy satellite; the other one's too far
to see much. Back to where you were before, please." He put on
the new plate, then moved back to the other car and laid his
hands on it. Its dashboard lit up, except for the security
section, which remained dark. "All right, friend," he murmured to
the car, bending down to press his cheek against its hood, "who
do we belong to? Ah, registered to Maria Petrova and Ivan Petrov,
a man and a woman... and they're both here. Perfect. That makes
everything much easier." He straightened back up and brought one
hand to his head. I heard the car's phone begin to dial
itself. On the
second ring someone picked up the phone. "Petrova." "Maria
Petrova," he said in a creditable imitation of an early-model
Kruchonykh voice, "this is an automated call from your Kruchonykh
KL-37. There has been an attempt to steal me. I have already
electrocuted the offenders and alerted the appropriate
authorities. Please proceed to my vicinity as soon as possible to
fill out the police report." "Bozhe
moy—how
many were there? Are they alive?" "The
hooligan or hooligans are dead. No further information is
available at this time. Thank you for choosing Kruchonykh." The
phone went dark. He turned to me and said: "That ought to do it.
The promise of carnage rarely fails to bring people
running." "Won't
they just call the cops and draw attention?" "It
doesn't matter if they do or not; the cops already know we're
here." He touched the car again and its motor started. "The
satellites have infrared, so their motor has to be about as warm
as ours. The Postcops will figure they started it remotely, if
they notice at all. —You were asking about my checkered
past." "
'Conspiracy to overthrow the government'?" "Oh
yes, that. A youthful folly. That was when I thought that liberty
in the Fusion was being destroyed by people, and not by
impersonal forces. I tried to embarrass a few of those people.
But I discovered that in the Historical Nations you will never
run out of tyrants. Depose all you want, they'll make more. By
the time I realized who my targets should have been, I had become
much too old for such antics. 'If youth knew, if age could.'
" "If you
don't mind my saying so, you look as though your age
can." "Aesculapius
and Hephaestus have been kind to me," he said, "but there are
limits." "He
means medicine and technology, the pretentious old bat," Keishi
put in, before I could ask. I was
about to ask another question when he said: "Don't look now, but
here come the Petrovs, every petty-bourgeois inch of them. Now,
the satellite takes pictures at a rate of one every four seconds,
so when they're four seconds away from the car—say, when
they reach the bumper on that Honda there—get in as fast as
you can. Ready?" He adjusted the side mirror as the couple
approached. Then at the appointed moment we both jumped
in. "Look,"
he whispered, pointing to the side mirror. "They're standing by
the car and talking. They're us, and we're them. He's even
wearing a sweater, so he'll only be a little brighter than me in
infrared. We've done it." Maria
Petrova noticed us and rapped at the window. I rolled it
down. "Excuse
me, tavarishcha. Did you see anyone near this
car?" "No," I
said, "but we heard the alarm call you. It must be on the
fritz." "Those
Kruchonykh alarms are crap," Voskresenye said in a crotchety old
man's voice. "They'll do that every time. It's a miracle we
weren't electrocuted. Just you trade that pile of garbage in on a
Stepanova. You mark my words." I
rolled my eyes. "Oh, Sergei." To Maria Petrova I said, "Sergei is
an engineer for Stepanova. He gets like this." She
looked back and forth between us, seeing the difference in
ages—then decided to smile. "I understand. You should hear
Ivan on the evils of Japanese software." Having
affirmed my membership in the international sorority of suffering
spouses, I realized, I could now drive away without arousing
comment. "Sergei, let's go home and quit bothering these nice
people," I said, and to Petrova: "Proshaite,
sestra." As I
backed out I heard Ivan say, "But she's driving a
Kruchonykh!" "Of
course I am!" I called out the window. "I'm not stupid enough to
drive anything my husband designed!" Voskresenye
chuckled as we drove away. "Most impressive. You missed your
calling. You should have been an actor." "I am,"
I said. "Or at least, I was until today. Are we clean
now?" "Once
more for good measure. Stop anywhere along here." I did,
and he switched the license plate again, this time with a small
green convertible that he said was between sensors. "Now
we're
clean. By the time anyone figures out what happened, we'll be
miles away, and they'll be tracking the wrong
vehicle." "And
Maria Petrova drinks tea?" "No. At
the most, a Postcop asks some questions and they get an extra
dose of surveillance for a while; nothing worse. Even if we were
being watched, which we may not have been." "And
meanwhile, I sink deeper and deeper." "Not at
all. As of six o'clock, that's always been your plate number. I
have already set up the logic bomb." "He's
telling the truth. I saw him do it," Keishi said with grudging
admiration. "Under all that rusting hardware, the man's got
street." I
looked toward Voskresenye, and then around at the spot just
behind me where I always imagine the screener standing, and shook
my head. "So are we clean enough to make it out into the
countryside, to someplace unsurveilled?" "We're
clean enough, but that's the wrong place to go. It's too obvious,
and a plate search on cars leaving the city wouldn't take them
long. What we need is a place within the city where we can be
certain we're unobserved." Keishi's
voice rasped from the car speaker: "Like a nice big semistable
bubble right on Nevsky Prospect?" "Exactly,"
Voskresenye said, nodding. "What's
a bubble?" I asked. "A
temporary surveillance-free zone. Head back downtown, if you
please. Park us anywhere off Nevsky, and we'll walk." "Why do
you want to go back to Nevsky? Isn't that the first place they'll
look?" "Who
would expect us to circle back to the place where we were first
identified?" "Anyone
with an ounce of imagination," I said. "Anyone who's ever read an
American detective novel." He
nodded. "You mean, anyone but a Postcop. Besides, they can look
all they want; they won't find us." I
looked at him skeptically. "And what good does this bubble do
us?" "It
gives you a chance to interview me." "Are
you putting me on?" I glanced from the road to his face, which
was unreadable. "You think I'm not in deep enough tea already, I
should try Netcasting the life and times of a wanted
criminal?" "We can
limit our discussion to the Calinshchina," he said. "Your
screener can alter my features, and elide any mention of my
so-called terrorist activities." I
thought for a moment. Keishi, can you make this 'cast
clean? I mean a hundred percent, no traces
whatsoever? "In my
sleep, girl." I
decided that if she could make the Postcops forget about me, she
could give me a clean Netcast; and if she couldn't, then it
wouldn't matter. I might as well go ahead and get the story I was
risking my career for. Besides, I was curious. "All
right," I said grudgingly. "In for a penny, in for a
pound." "That's
the spirit," Voskresenye said brightly. "Nothing like a good
cliché to help you to a wise decision." As I
opened my mouth to answer, I heard a siren behind us. "Oh, God.
Please tell me that's an ambulance," I said feebly. "No.
It's a yellow-and-black," he said. "Turn your head, as though you
were looking for a place to pull over." "I hope
you've got a backup plan," I whispered, complying. "That's
not for us. He's chasing a speeder or something." "Look,"
I said, "you're wanted, you were seen, I was heard calling your
name, now a Postcop comes out of nowhere. It stands to reason
she's looking for us." "Listen."
The wasp's siren dopplered past, not even slowing. "You see? The
Postcops are unimaginative, predictable, and overdependent on
machines, but they are not stupid. In a matter of this importance
they would not be so unsubtle as to send a wasp. If they come for
us in a car, you may rest assured it will be unmarked and
Net-silent." "How
comforting." "You
could not be safer than with me, Maya Tatyanichna," he said with
quiet amusement. "The Hanged Man is not in my cards. I am told to
fear death by drowning, which has happened once already, and will
happen once again—but not just yet." The
traffic was now so thick that I had to devote all my attention to
driving. At last, just a few blocks away from where we'd started,
he silently pointed out a crowded parking lot. He had me park the
car with its rear bumper to a wall, so the license plate would be
hidden from the security camera. "Our
bubble is about a kilometer away," he said. "I apologize for
making you walk, but that way, if they do find the car—" he
tapped its hood smartly, making the dashboard lights wink
"—we'll have some warning." As we
walked I asked him what the terrorism charge on his record was
for. "The
charge is actually 'informational terrorism,' " he
said. "What?"
I turned to face him, fear constricting my throat.
"Informational terrorism? That's not a Postcop crime.
That's under Weaver jurisdiction." "It
happened a long time ago," he said. "The Weavers have long since
forgotten." "Weavers
don't forget." "They
most certainly do," he said. "Unlike the Postcops, the Weavers
are entirely rational; that is their only point of weakness. If
they are confident that you cannot repeat your crime, they will
not seek you out. You need only stay offline for some years, and
you will be entirely gone from their minds." Should
I believe that? "Sure,"
Keishi said. "A Weaver sees a healthy chunk of the whole Net
every day; they can't remember all of it. For most things they
rely on sense and reflex, not on memory." "How
did this charge come about?" I asked Voskresenye. "Some
decades ago," he said, "I was involved with a group of dissident
hackers who wrote a virus designed to seek out the computers of
every financial and governmental agency in the FHN. Only
computers, you understand, not minds—otherwise it would
have been far harder to get past the Weavers. It hid there until
a certain day, then encrypted every byte of data it could find
and self-destructed, leaving a series of ransom demands behind
it. In effect, we were holding the information
hostage." Why
doesn't that sound right to me? I
subvoked. "Ask
him how he put an unbreakable code in the space of a virus,"
Keishi whispered in my ear. "A virus would have to be small, to
get so widespread without being detected. You could fit in a key
a few thousand bits long, maybe, but you put a couple of
teraflops on that and it'll crumble." I
paused to reorganize the question in my mind, then repeated it to
Voskresenye. "Oh, it
did crumble," he said. "It crumbled very quickly. We were
astonished to discover that in some places it had held out as
long as forty minutes." "Then
what good was it?" He
looked at me out of the corner of his eye, not moving his
head—almost, I thought, as though he couldn't. "You might
better ask, what good would it be otherwise? Do you think the
Weavers negotiate with terrorists? What concessions will they
give as ransom? Would they not instead hunt us down and kill us,
even if it took a thousand men to take each one? If we had
succeeded, it would have sealed our fates—such a simple
trick as temporary disappearance would never have thrown them
off, if I had done enough damage for them to take me
seriously." "So you
failed deliberately?" "We
invented a false purpose, and deliberately failed in that, yes.
This was to conceal our true purpose." "Which
was?" I prompted. "To
build a network of back doors into the computers that we
infected. We knew that when they decrypted the data, after such a
short time, they would not bother to check that what they
recovered was the same as what they had before—especially
since they had intercepted several copies of the virus, and made
sure that their only function was to encrypt. We had only to hope
they would not find the few copies of the virus that were subtly
different from the others; and they did not. So the programs they
restored had points of entry that had not been there
before." "These
back doors—wouldn't they have found them
eventually?" "Certainly.
But they remained in place only a few weeks. They were only meant
to provide us access to the lowest levels of the system, a toe in
the door. From there we could strip away the root passwords,
letter by letter and bit by bit. And once we had root access, we
could create all the back doors we dared. In that way, and by not
doing anything that would alarm the Weavers unduly, we've managed
to keep one step ahead of them ever since. The descendants of
those original back doors are still being maintained. That's how
we're able to create the bubbles." "Who do
you mean when you say 'we'? The people involved in this virus
project?" "Their
current equivalents. All the members of that team have long since
been disappeared, and those that followed them, and those that
followed the ones that followed. You can evade the Postcops a
long time, and the Weavers a short time; but in the end, they
always catch you." Keishi,
crack the surveillance camera and give me a direct shot of his
face, I
subvocalized. I wanted to see his reaction to my next question.
When the window opened up in the lower left-hand quadrant of my
field of vision, I asked him: "You say a person can only evade
the authorities a few years, yet you've apparently been doing it
for decades. Why have you survived where so many others were
caught?" In the
window he raised his eyebrows. "Why, skill, of course." Then he
laughed: "All right, then, good wiring." And then the window
closed and he said, "Off the record? A combination of abject
cowardice and pure luck. But don't let it get around." The
window opened again on a face without expression, save perhaps a
hint of mischief at the corners of the mouth. Can he
hear everything I say to you? "Absolutely
not," she said. "He didn't hear you ask me for that crack, he saw
the crack. Your thoughts are cabled to me on quanta; if he looks
at it, he changes it and I can tell. He can't break that unless
he can revoke the laws of physics. The very first leg of the trip
is by radio, and that he could hack in theory, but it's coded
with megabit primes and not even he could break that. Besides,
I'm keeping close tabs on what goes on inside that crummy little
cranium, and if he tried to crack us open, I'd see it in a
second. Believe me, Maya, he's good, but I'm a whole lot better.
And when I say we're tight, we're tight." When
she was finished I said, exhaustedly, Keishi? "Yes?" Next
time I ask you a yes or no question, give me a yes or no answer,
OK? "OK.
Umm, I mean yes." Thank
you. Keishi's
lecture had forced an awkward pause in my conversation with
Voskresenye. To end it I asked why he hadn't tried scrubbing the
data, instead of encoding it. "Because
by that time I had realized that destroying data wouldn't have
weakened their grip. I needed a bigger bomb." "What
kind of bomb?" "It has
not been set off yet. Perhaps it does not exist. —Here we
are; this is our bubble." "Where?" "Right
in front of you." We had
come to a little open-air cafe on Nevsky itself, crammed with
customers and visible to hundreds of passers-by. Overlooking it
were two surveillance cameras mounted on lampposts. The cameras
were at least twenty years out of date, since we could see them;
but that didn't make them any less effective. "You
must be kidding," I said. "I'm not going to sit here and discuss
your career as a terrorist where a thousand wired people can see
us. Not to mention those cameras. I thought you were taking me
someplace unsurveilled." "At the
moment, this is the most secure spot in the Russian Historical
Nation. If you will kindly refrain from looking in my direction
for a moment, I will demonstrate." I was a
little edgy about turning my back on him, but I would have felt
foolish saying so, so I averted my eyes. "Thank
you. Now, dearest elephant, can you tell me how many fingers I am
holding up?" My face
went numb, and for a moment I thought he'd done it. But it was
Keishi's voice that came from my mouth: "There's no need for
games. As long as you're in the bubble, I can't see you unless
she looks at you. You're secure." Don't
ever
do that again, I subvocalized, gasping for air as the
sensation in my face returned. "I'm
sorry. But he did ask, and I can't get at any other
speakers—" I am
not a speaker. Keep your mind to yourself. "I said
I was sorry." Later!
I don't want to hear another word from you until this interview
is over. "Why
don't you just send me to my room?" I
imagined myself filling out a repartnering form, and she
responded with silence. "Trouble
controlling the elephant?" Voskresenye said. "In the circus they
use hooks, I think." "I'll
have to look into that," I said. "Are
you now confident that we can safely talk here?" "I
believe we're safe from cameras," I said. "But what if someone
overhears us? The Postcops may not be able to pick that up, but
Weavers can." "A
legitimate worry. I will be keeping tabs on the minds in our
vicinity; however, you might wish to have your screener
double-check. It can't hurt, and it would surely take most of her
brainpower, so it might keep her quiet." "Tell
him I could watch everyone in Leningrad and never miss the
bandwidth!" I
pictured myself thumbing the form and handing it in. Keep an
eye on them, but don't say a word unless you see something. I
mean it. We
found a table in the shade. As he sat across from me, I noticed
that he was sweating under his out-of-season overcoat. When water
and menus had been brought, I said, "Why don't you start by
telling me why you're dressed for snow in this
weather?" "I will
explain; but first I suggest you have your screener alter my
features. The events I will retell may be safely Netcast, but my
face may be familiar to the Post police." "Go
ahead, Keishi," I said, and then subvoked: Don't tell me how
you're doing it, just do it. His
face morphed through a series of subtle changes that,
collectively, left it unrecognizable. "Maybe
you should take out the sockets, too," I said. "They're pretty
distinctive." "I'm
afraid they are essential to the story," Voskresenye put in.
"However, there are others still alive who are socketed much as I
am, so it should not matter." "All
right then. Now, about that overcoat." "Since
when do you cover fashion?" Keishi whispered; I ignored
her. "It is
uncomfortable, yes, but I did not wish to call attention to
myself. And while an overcoat in April might draw the occasional
glance, I think you'll agree that this would be substantially
more indiscreet." Screening his hand from the sidewalk with a
menu, he took off one glove to reveal the structure of metal and
insulated wire that covered his hand. Steel slid against oiled
steel to lift one of his fingers, and the tangle of wires on his
skin shifted uneasily with the motion. "Without
this ... device, you are paralyzed?" "Nearly
so, yes. I can move a little, but I cannot walk. And without the
wires, I'm quite atactile. My mind and my body no longer talk to
each other the way they used to; like so many couples nowadays,
they prefer to interact through a machine." "May I
ask ... an accident? A degenerative disease?" "Yes,
and yes. An accident with a degenerative disease named
Derzhavin." "Aleksandr
Derzhavin?" Unassisted, I would not have known the name, but
Keishi's moistdisk had woven itself so seamlessly into my memory
that I could not keep a note of horror out of my voice. "You were
a victim of Derzhavin?" "Victim
is such a loaded term," he said, calmly replacing the glove. "I
have a great deal to thank the man for, including much of my
current bandwidth and all of my continued mobility at my advanced
age. No, not his victim. In the beginning I was his experimental
subject, then his lab assistant, and eventually—" and here
I heard the whirr of clockwork as he picked up his water glass
"—a great deal more." "I
thought Derzhavin did his experiments on Kazakhs, not
politicals." "Kazakhs
and the mentally retarded. And by the time I met him, I fit that
latter description very well. Read the marks for yourself." He
pulled up his coat sleeve. As I
looked for the Guardian tattoo, I saw that the steel rods that
controlled his hands were connected to a hard black shell that
started just below his wrists. Keishi, I subvoked, give
me four hundred percent, quick. When the magnification kicked
in, I could see the rows of copper needles that anchored the
carapace into his skin. "You
understand the code?" he prompted. I
canceled the zoom and looked back at the thirty-two squares
etched into his skin with magnetic ink. Keishi's moistdisk helped
me recognize the blackened sixth, nineteenth, and twenty-sixth
boxes as signifying "irreparable but nonhereditary organic brain
defects." "I
guess they were wrong about its being irreparable." "On the
contrary, it has not been and cannot be repaired. But the right
sort of wiring can compensate." "How
did you go from a political to a six-nineteen?" Before
he could answer, the waiter returned to take our orders. I had
not opened my menu, so I asked for black coffee and a ham
sandwich. After a long discussion about ingredients, Voskresenye
commanded cabbage pirozhki, which the impatient waiter twice
assured him were free of meat. "You
are vegetarian?" " 'My
food is not that of man,' " he quoted; " 'I do not destroy the
lamb and the kid to glut my appetite; acorns and berries afford
me sufficient nourishment.'" "Gandhi,"
I hazarded. "No,"
he said. "Frankenstein's Creature. Gandhi, I imagine, would not
have been so arrogant, but for me it's most
appropriate." I
frowned. "I don't remember—" "Not
the film, the book. A preclassical allusion, by the modern
reckoning. Forgive me; I have grown too used to being my own
audience." Mark
that for human interest, Keishi. I wish I could do the whole
story on this man—
a cabbage-eating terrorist, it's perfect. "Actually,
several of us were vegetarians," he said thoughtfully. "That was
her influence, of course.... After we were caught, the Guardians
were hysterical enough to pick up every vegetarian they could
find in Russia, reasoning that a few might have been our
accomplices. It hardly mattered to them that they also got every
Zen faddist and food-allergy victim in Moscow." "I seem
to be asking you this question a lot: who do you mean by
'we'?" "I'm
sorry, I'm not making much sense, I'm afraid. I have gone over
this story in my head a thousand times, and now, when it matters,
I cannot even keep it straight. It would be much easier if I
began at the beginning." "By all
means." Eight A Man Who Had
Fallen
Among Thieves The one
good feature of telepresence news—compared to text news,
which is superior in every other respect—is the way you use
interviews. In print, you can use only a few sentences of any
interview, which means they're mostly short. In telepresence, you
can interview someone for hours, and then when you're online, you
just remember it and it's there, a new memory in the viewer's
head. Most of it goes away when your story's over, but it's there
while the audience needs it. You can include a whole story, not
just summarize it. Still,
the holographic memory that telepresence gives is rather
lossy—from a distance the event seems vivid and complete,
but when you approach it, it eludes your grasp. It is a mystery
to me how so much of the value of an interview can be conveyed in
telepresence, when so little information comes across; but then,
it is also a mystery to me how the events of your own life can
matter, when memory sweeps away a thousand things for every one
it lets remain. I have
an aid to memory: a copy of the screener's disk, which Keishi
kept, and which has come into my hands. While I will not release
it (and don't bother trying, I burned it long ago) I have
replayed it many times, and will set down what Voskresenye
said. "I was
born in Moscow, shortly after the Guardians first took that
city," he began. "By the time I was old enough to form clear
memories, they had already 'cleansed' the country of nearly all
its 'undesirables,' as they would say. So while my parents
sometimes mentioned the purges in a whisper, I did not remember
them myself, and all my childhood the Guardian regime was simply
fact. If someone had asked me how I felt about the Square Miles,
I might have realized that I should abhor them; but no one ever
asked. I grew up less than a hundred miles from
Square-Mile-on-Volga, but what happened there seemed as remote to
me as squalor in the Americas does to you." He
spoke softly, but his eyes looked directly into mine. Most people
I interview won't look straight at me; but this man's mirror, I
realized, had long ago accustomed him to scarred faces and heads
full of silicon. As he began his story I again felt the intensity
I had sensed in him in grayspace. If the audience was half as
rapt as I was, my ratings might be almost respectable for
once. "I grew
into a young man of an aesthetic and not a political
temperament," he continued, "and so managed to stay on the
Guardians' good side. As a result, I was able to attend Moscow
University, even though it was then under very strict Guardian
control. I was so otherworldly that I barely noticed how uneasy
the other students were around me—they were Americans for
the most part, the children of Guardian politicians and
bureaucrats. Portia and Raskolnikov did not disdain my company;
and it was with them that I spent my time. So despite the thinly
veiled contempt of many of my professors, I was able to make fair
grades and, if things had gone a little differently, would have
taken my degree with a comfortable margin of honor." "What
did you study?" "My
principal subject was Classics." "Where
are your glasses, then?" I said. "I thought Classicists went
blind from squinting at all that flat video." He
raised an eyebrow. "This, of course, was back when 'Classical
culture' meant Greece and Rome, not Hollywood and
Motown." "Oh.
Well, yes, I mean, printbooks'll do it too." "Ooh,
nice save," Keishi said. We'll
take care of it in postproduction, I
said, gulping ice water in hopes of forestalling a
blush. "You
think I'd let a thing like that get on the disk?" she said in
mock affront. I
thanked her for the editing and God for not letting me make that
mistake live. Take a note, Maya: no more banter. Voskresenye
was staring at my encyclopedia, a mocking smile curling his lips.
It was the Postcops' joke on me, though not their last or
cruelest: seeing an encyclopedia in my head makes people magnify
my lapses and minimize any knowledge I display. It's like being
caught with crib notes. "I
don't really use that," I said. "It doesn't even work right
anymore—" And what kind of idiot would wear a broken chip?
I was making matters worse with every word. But
Voskresenye's eyes were not unkind. "I see no moral difference
between keeping knowledge in one's head and on a chip," he
said. I
wanted to protest again, but it was no use. And besides, when was
the last time I'd gone live without a gigabyte of background
research whispering into my ear from a moistdisk? It wouldn't
hurt if it weren't partly true. "I
suppose," I said, "your generation was the last to spend its
childhood memorizing facts, and mine the last to feel guilty
about not doing it." "A man
is fortunate if he has nothing worse than that to feel guilty
about," Voskresenye said sententiously. "However, the endeavor of
memorization is a noble one. Once knowledge is centralized on the
Net, it becomes very easy to change—Queen Mab need only
ride the world-mind once, new dreams for old. And so in the
modern age, the amasser of useless facts is your only hero. An
encyclopedia that was not new twenty years ago at least provides
a point of reference." I
pulled my pride away from that last sentence, the way you'd pull
a dog from a sprayed fencepost. "Does the knowledge really have
to be useless?" I said. "It
need not be," he said, "but the sort of person who will cram his
head with facts, as a squirrel crams his cheeks with nuts, will
most often do it for its own sake, with no thought of future use.
Certainly that is the sort of person I was, as a student. Even if
I had taken my degree, I don't know what I would have done with
it. I honestly don't think I ever thought that far ahead. Of
course I could not teach in the universities. No doubt I would
have wound up riding herd on second-graders in Kazakhstan for a
couple of years until the next purge of ethnic
intellectuals." "What
happened?" "Two
things. First, impatience. I had a fair command of Latin, but for
my degree I also had to learn Greek, and I did not look forward
to the years of study that would be required; nor did I want to
wait so long for Homer. So I got drilled for my first
socket— which was illegal for me, you understand, because I
was not one of them. The law was not strictly enforced, but
occasionally the Guardians would decide to make an example of
someone. The socket was a small one, and I was able to hide it,
but the need for secrecy gradually increased my awareness of what
the Guardians were doing to our nation and its people. So I began
to develop a vague, unformed, and still largely selfish political
conscience—and that helped prepare me a little for what
happened next." At this
point the waiter arrived with our food, and Voskresenye was
distracted by the need to dissect his pirozhki before tasting
them. To get him back on track, I restated the obvious: "It
doesn't sound like you were the kind of person to defy the
Guardians." "
'Defy' sounds as if I was hurling insults at them on the street.
The reality was more like a whisper in a darkened room that the
wrong person overheard. And even that I would never have done, if
not for a fellow student named Katya Andersohna." I
didn't need a moistdisk to recognize that name. "Any relation to
Harold Anderson?" "She
was his daughter." "A
dangerous person to know, then." He
nodded, his hands pausing above the plate. "Yes, very much so.
But not for the reason you think. She was a
four-nine." "Harold
Anderson's kid was a dissident? That's hard to
believe." "Katya
Andersohna was dissidence at MGU. Without her there would
have been nothing. She was an amazing person; she had inherited
her father's genius and her mother's beauty, and to that she
added humanity, a trait neither of her parents appeared to
possess. Perhaps compassion is an environmental illness rather
than a genetic disorder. Or I should say, a bacillus, for she was
quite successful at infecting others.... But I'm getting ahead of
myself," he said, shaking his head a little, as though this Katya
were a subject whose gravitation he escaped with difficulty. He
turned his attention to his plate. I groped for some banal
question in order to fill in the dead audio time, then stopped:
to watch him eat was fascination enough. Before each cut, he
rotated the plate to the correct angle, as if the dance of his
knife and fork were programmed and immutable. The swift,
practiced movements of his hands made me think of a sign
language, or of a series of magical passes by which the food was
made to disappear. Voskresenye
raised an eyebrow, and I realized that I'd been watching him too
long. "I'm sorry," I said. "Staring's an occupational
hazard." "Not at
all. If my being a freak will get people to listen, I am pleased
to be one." I let
that sink in and then asked: "How did you get mixed up with Katya
Andersohna?" "Not by
choice, that's for certain," he said, laying down his knife. "I
had no idea she was a dissident, nor did I know her by the
Russian form of her name. To me she was Catharine Anderson, the
chief of propaganda for the Student League, a thing to be feared;
and the daughter of the Heptarch, all the more terrifying. I
rarely saw her, and when I did, I deemed it prudent to go the
other way." "Then
how did it happen?" "She
approached my table one day in the library. I was bent over
Aeschylus, so all she could see of me was the garish little cap I
affected—having reasoned that a person in a nondescript hat
was hiding a socket, while one in some blue-and-green monstrosity
was merely eccentric. She was carrying an armful of leaflets, and
she laid one down before me on the table, saying, 'Here, brother;
the latest from the Ministry.' When I looked up in surprise she
laughed and said, 'Oh, sorry, Mishenka! I took you for your
better.' She started to take the leaflet back. Then she thought
better of it and said, 'Well, keep it; you might learn your
place.' And she turned away, tossing her hair to flaunt the
silicon embedded in her skull, and went to give leaflets to the
people at the other tables, most of whom were now smiling at her
performance." As he
spoke I tapped into my imagination chip and visualized the scene.
I didn't know what Andersohna looked like, so I pictured her with
long, dark hair, shaved a little on the left side to expose the
sockets. When I made her flip her hair, Keishi responded with a
soft "ooh," and I knew I'd hit the right gesture. "Well,
my cheeks were burning, as you can imagine," he continued.
"Hatred of us was rarely so overt; they saved their venom for
Kazakhs and Arabs for the most part. I was not used to it. I
wanted to throw the pamphlet away, but that would have seemed
like defiance, so I marked my place in Aeschylus with it and
left, trying not to run. But as I did, I noticed something
strange. The covers of all the leaflets the others were reading
were white on red. Mine, and only mine, had black lettering as
well. "When I
had put some distance between me and the library, I checked to
make sure. Yes. Beneath the white title, 'Kazakhs versus Animals
at Square-Mile-on-Volga,' someone had written with a ballpoint
pen, in English, 'A Modest Proposal.' And the handwriting was
quite recognizable. It was my own." "Andersohna
forged your writing? She was trying to frame you?" "That
was my first thought. I turned and made for the incinerator,
planning to throw it in. But I stopped short. If Harold
Anderson's daughter had taken a dislike to me, burning one
leaflet was not going to change my fate. I might as well look at
it; perhaps I'd learn why I'd been singled out. I stood close to
the incinerator, opened the door so I could throw it in at once
if anyone came by, and began to read." "It was
dissident literature?" "For me
it was, yes. To anyone else, it would just have been another
purple-faced leaflet from the Ministry, marked up by an even more
zealous student. Where the leaflet said, 'One would not subject
an innocent animal to this treatment, though one would never
hesitate to inflict it upon prisoners who have been guilty of
such heinous crimes,' this fellow had put, 'Such as being born
Kazakh!' And where it said, 'This will help reduce the dimensions
of the Kazakhi tumor,' neat proofreading marks emended this to
'Senses, organs, dimensions, passions,' and added in the margin,
'Let us prick them and see if they will bleed.' All this was, for
a student of what we were then misguided enough to call the
classics, highly suggestive stuff." I took
another sip of ice water as he went on. "Even
then I would not have been sure that it meant what it meant,
except for that scrawled subtitle: 'A Modest Proposal.' In the
eighteenth century, in what you'd call Ancient Britain, a
four-nine by the name of Jonathan Swift had written a satire by
that title, pointing out that the problems of overpopulation and
famine could be solved simultaneously if we would simply begin
eating the children of the poor. I used the memory chip I was
wearing beneath my cap to call up the moment when she'd tossed
her hair. Yes: she'd been showing me the English Literature
textbook in her socket. "What I
was holding, then, was a satire after the example of Swift. If a
Guardian read it, he would see in it nothing more than
overexuberant patriotism: 'Since we have so many human subjects
available at the Square Miles for our experiments, why ship in
animals?' A noble but impractical thought, by Guardian standards.
Read it with a different eye, and it said, 'What the Guardians do
to Kazakhs, you wouldn't wish on a dog.' But this meaning only
fell into place with that obscure allusion written on the
cover— something that no board of inquiry would ever catch.
And on top of that, all these little hints were in my own script,
so that if the leaflet should fall into the hands of someone else
that could understand it ... well, I'd be an ethnic with an
illegal socket who claimed the Heptarch's daughter did it in his
handwriting." "That's
a lot of thought to put into recruiting one person," I
said. "For
anyone else it would have been. But Katya was, even unenhanced, a
brilliant propagandist, and besides that she had the best
moistware her father's blood money could buy. For her it was the
sort of thing one dreams up on a break between classes. Katya
never did anything with less than three layers of
deception." He
looked down at his plate and cut off another bite, but did not
eat it. When he continued his story it was in a quieter
voice. "I
didn't dare keep the leaflet, of course. Yet I knew I had to talk
to Catharine Anderson. The leaflet she had written had done what
she meant it to. It had forced me to think about things I had
been ignoring for twenty years. I had to see her. So I found
another, unmarked leaflet—they were all over campus within
a day— and wrote on the cover with a black ballpoint pen.
And for a week I spent every waking hour in the library, hoping
to run into her again. "Finally,
one afternoon when I had given up and was on my way out, I passed
her in the foyer. She was talking to a friend, some one on the
Student League. I was almost at the door by the time I saw her,
so I stopped and went back to the book return, as though I had
forgotten something. I pulled out Aeschylus, took the leaflet
from him, and, even though he was not a library book, I dropped
him into the return slot. So much for the classics; I never saw
him again. Then I opened the leaflet, as if I had just noticed it
there, and stood for a while pretending to read it. She glanced
at me for one instant—that was all it took for her to
understand—and, quickly but unhurriedly, took leave of her
friend. She walked out and, cautiously, I followed
her. "She
led me all the way across campus without acknowledging my
presence, and after a while, I began to think she hadn't noticed
me at all. Then suddenly she was nowhere to be seen. I stopped,
looking around. But to stand there craning my neck like that was
too suspicious, so I started to leave. As I did, she reached out
for me and pulled me back behind the shrubbery where she was
hiding. She pushed me against the wall and covered my mouth with
her hand. "
'Never call me Catharine,' she hissed. 'Don't even think of me by
that name. Only Katya—you understand?' "I
nodded as best I could with my head pinned to the wall. She took
her hand away from my mouth and said, 'Now tell me why you're
smart enough not to approach me, but not smart enough to burn
your leaflet.' "I
reached into my pocket, as she watched me warily, and took out
the leaflet to show her. On the cover where Katya's subtitle
should have been, I had written, 'Paper due 11/IX
Greek.' "She
looked at me differently then. 'It's about time the gods sent me
someone with half a brain. You won't be too bad once we get your
head out of the clouds.' "
'There are others?' I said. "
'Well, of course there are others. You don't think that some
floatheaded Classics major was the first person I went after? I
wouldn't have bothered if not for that horrible cap—I hoped
you were hiding a socket under there.' "I took
the cap off to show her. "
'Sense and a socket. More than I'd hoped for. Come to the
coffeeshop in the Student Union at seven tomorrow.' " 'You
meet in a public place?' "
'Someone will lead you from there to where we meet,' she said
impatiently. 'Come, and for God's sake don't use your real name.
For us you will be—' she stopped and looked at my
blue-and-green cap again. 'I don't have my language chip in.
What's a peacock in Russian?' "
'Pavlin,' I said, looking down in
embarrassment. " 'From
now on you are Pavel. Paul—a nice biblical name for a
four-nine atheist.' " 'I'm
not an atheist!' " 'You
will be,' she said, and she broke through the hedge and was
gone." He
paused to take another bite of pirozhok and chewed it slowly,
remembering. I had been ignoring my food and was beginning to get
hungry, but again I had to fill in with a question: "If
your name was changed to Pavel, what was it
before?" "Stepan
Sornyak. But I've been Pavel for a long time now." A
strange surname—stranger, really, than his adopted one. And
he'd called himself an ethnic intellectual; the Guardians
didn't usually apply that term to Russians. Iudey,
perhaps? Or cigan, given his mention of Tarot? It was
possible; he had a wanderer's eyes. But if so, why had he sunk
his ethnic noun-name in the strange but clearly Russian
Voskresenye? "Was it
Katya who named you 'Sunday,' too?" I asked. "More atheist
irony?" "No.
That name came later. —Of course you will alter the names
before the interview is Netcast?" "Yes,
of course," I said. "Why did you change your surname?" "I did
not," he said simply, putting the last crumbs of pirozhok into
his mouth. I took the opportunity to steal a bite from my
sandwich. My question could wait; but I made a note not to
forget. "At
first Katya insisted I keep up my schoolwork, to avoid drawing
attention to myself. But soon we both realized that my slipping
grades only confirmed what everyone had expected of me all along,
and I began to skip classes with abandon. Instead of Homer, I
read Katya's leaflets. Instead of writing papers, I altered
records at Square-Mile-on-Volga. Instead of attending classes, I
fed escaped prisoners on their way to Africa. I cut my hair
short, grew my beard, traded my hideous cap for a black one that
would be less visible at night, learned to shoot a gun—for
though we did not use weapons, Katya insisted we be ready
to—and stopped eating animals—for she insisted we
practice compassion toward all creatures, even the lowliest.
Within a month, my life had changed so much that everything that
had come before seemed like a dream." "And
did you become an atheist?" He
laughed. "No; that was the one thing in me she did not
change—not entirely. Although, since it was the Catholic
Church that most often gave sanctuary to fugitives, I did trade
my Old Slavonic mass for Latin." "How
much resistance was there, in all?" "You
mean numbers of people? A few thousand in Russia, I suppose. It's
hard to say. Communication was poor, and coordination
nonexistent. Not enough to loosen the Guardians' grip on power,
by any means. At best, we were a very minor annoyance. We spared
them the trouble of killing a few of their prisoners, by sending
them on those ridiculous treks to Africa. Moscow to Riga is a
hell of a hike, and from there no easy trip to Casablanca; I
doubt any of them made it there alive." "Did
you know that at the time?" "Katya
and I did, yes. We tried to let the others think that they were
doing a little good, but it must have been obvious. A resistance
can support the attack of an army, but there was no opposing army
then; or it can mobilize the people, but not when the slightest
uprising is instantly crushed. We would have needed to strike
with ten thousand even to hold out long enough to gain new
recruits; and yet for us it was a major undertaking to contact a
band of dissidents thirty miles to the north. It was
useless." "Then
why bother?" For the
first time, he would not meet my gaze as he spoke to me. "Because
it made us feel a little better," he said at length. "We could
not save even one innocent from the Guardians, not for long. But
we could declare our opposition. We could go on record, however
secret a record, saying that we did not condone the Square
Miles—that we did not accept the subjugation of our people.
And also, she said, we could be ready. She believed that one day
something, she did not know what, would come to challenge the
Guardians. She always had much more faith in that than I did. And
of course she was proved right, though when the Unanimous Army
finally came, it hardly needed a resistance to support it.
Besides, by that time everyone in our group, except for me, was
dead, and I was scrubbing bottles for Derzhavin." "If
Katya was so careful," I said, "how did you get
caught?" "Katya
was a victim of her own success. It took her at most a week to
study a person, understand him, and devise just the words, just
the gestures, just the intonation, just the words on a leaflet,
that would make him one of us. She never once failed that I knew
of. And so, inevitably, she came to the end of her A list, and
started on the second choices. Eventually she came to the one
that brought us down." "He
reported you?" "Oh,
no. Quite the contrary, he was the most zealous of us all." He
frowned down at his empty plate. "I remember that when she
renamed him, as she did everyone, she did not give a reason, as
she always had before. Afterward, when I asked her why, she said,
'I named him Piotr because he's as dumb as a rock, and if we
don't look out, he'll sink us like a stone.' She knew from the
beginning. "Actually
he was only a little bit stupid, but he was a lot naive, and
tremendously charismatic: a dangerous combination. After a month,
every time Katya gave an order, everyone looked at Piotr to see
what he would say. After two months, he was the leader in
everything but name, and Katya was agonizing over whether she
should challenge him directly. In the end, she decided to let
democracy take its course. And three months after Piotr joined
the group, he asked for formal leadership; received it; and as
his first act, proposed that we burn
Square-Mile-on-Volga." "Did
you resist him?" "We
argued with him, certainly. We asked what advantage there was in
incinerating the prisoners we hoped to save. He said that we
would free them first. We asked what would prevent the Guardians
from hunting them down and killing them in the woods. He said we
would hide them. We asked if he intended to conceal ten thousand
refugees in his dorm room. He said there would be so many that
some must get through, and that was better than they could hope
for at Volga. We explained that, even if the plan succeeded, the
resulting investigation would be so thorough that it would surely
uncover us. He said that we had to decide whether we were an
underground or a social club, and that we might as well go ahead
and be discovered, if we were not going to make any
difference. "And
then, as I kept arguing, Katya suddenly changed sides, and said
she thought it could be done, if only she were allowed to plan it
herself. Everyone agreed to this at once, and I was shouted down.
After the meeting she told me she had supported Piotr because she
knew he would win, and if she planned it herself, the damage
might be minimized. "I
begged her to forget him, forget our group, go back to her
family, let us self-destruct, and then start over. She would be
safe; no one would believe that the daughter of Harold Anderson
was a dissident, no matter how many clues seemed to point toward
it. But I knew before I said the words that she would not hear
them. For almost two weeks no one saw her, not even me; and when
she came back, she had made her plan." Nine
All the King's Horses Katya
had camped in the woods and watched the Square Mile through
binoculars. The Square Miles, you understand, were franchises;
the guards were brought in by the dozens, trained in a few days,
and retained for an average of less than six months. It was a
uniquely American approach to holocaust, a sort of McGulag. The
guards were bored, unskilled, and lazy. Most of them were under
eighteen, except for a few senior citizens hired under that
Golden Guards program they used to run all those smug commercials
about. The camp's security relied on quantity, not quality. Katya
knew that if she looked closely enough, she would find some
little hole she could thread her way into. "It had
taken her a week, but she'd found it. A farmer who lived near the
camp came by, she said, every Wednesday and Saturday to pick up
manure for his crops. He did it at night, and surreptitiously,
and was always waved past the station without being searched;
Katya thought he might be related to one of the guards. He drove
an old truck with a small trailer which could hold two people, at
a very tight squeeze. Further, as the manure did not smell human,
she suspected it came from the stables, which would be up on the
hill where the Guardians' homes were. If so, we could burn out
the Guardians without endangering the barracks, and in the
confusion we might get a few people out. "It was
not a plan I found convincing. There were too many loose ends,
and no lists of contingencies. The plan for getting people out
was vague and halfhearted, more a hope than a plan. I knew she
didn't think we could succeed. But there were no objections. The
only question was who should go. "In the
end, over Katya's protests, Piotr and one of his closest
supporters were chosen. As Katya was walking out, Piotr laid his
hand on her shoulder and said, 'An excellent plan, truly, Katya.
You see, sometimes your input is very important!' "It was
too much for her. She turned to him and said, 'Do you know why I
didn't want you to go? Why I didn't want to expose you to that
danger?' "He
thought about it for a moment, nodded solemnly, and said, 'You
don't think I should take the risk. Because I'm needed
here.' " 'No,
you incredible idiot,' she said. 'Because I want you to live long
enough to see the rest of us die because of your stupidity.' And
she walked away, leaving him gaping in disbelief that there was
someone on the planet who did not admire him. "
'He'll get himself captured, give information, and we'll all be
shot,' I said. " 'No,
he won't,' she said matter-of-factly. 'He won't get anywhere near
that trailer. If he went on Wednesday, he wouldn't do any damage,
because the farmer picks up his dung on Tuesday; and besides, he
won't go, because on Tuesday I'm going to do it myself. Are you
coming?' "I was
coming. At four a.m. the next Tuesday we
arrived at the farm, wearing stolen Guardian uniforms, and
carrying rifles, cans of kerosene, a flamethrower,
and—strapped to our thighs-—two flasks of
eggshell-thin ceramic, made to curve around the skin so that a
casual search might miss them. We forced the latch on the trailer
and folded ourselves into four feet by five feet by three feet of
corrugated aluminum: a coffin built for two. We would have to
wait there the whole day; but it was safer than trying to break
in during the daylight. "The
fellow hauled his manure in plastic bags, but the trailer still
smelled. Our chips had no scent-suppression functions—that
great consolation of modern life had not been invented
yet—but after a while I did start to get used to it. In the
year since we'd met, I had been too busy to think about anything
but our work. Besides, we had seen each other for only an hour or
so at a time, usually with others present. Now we were alone,
hour after hour, pressed together in that tiny trailer bed. And
as I began to smell the manure less, and her more, the warmth of
her arm against mine began to wear away the control I'd
maintained for the last two years, so slowly I barely knew what
was happening. "At
last I turned my head toward Katya, not even sure yet what I
meant to say or do. But she knew what I was thinking better than
I did. 'The way I look at it,' she said, 'we have two choices.
Assuming that we'll be in the remembering business past this
evening, we can remember some awkward, unsatisfying groping in a
trailer the size of a coffin, with the smell of shit in our
nostrils and the chance of getting shot hanging over our heads,
the main effect of which will be to make us feel embarrassed and
frustrated for the last few hours of our lives. Or you can
go on imagining the six children and the white house with the
picket fence and the incredible sex and whatever the hell else it
is that's kept you going these past two years. If it were me I'd
go for the fence thing, but I'll leave it up to you.' "And
then, before I could reply, she raised her head, and said through
the communicators we'd socketed: Or we could have what's
behind door number three. A moment later I, too, heard the
farmer's footsteps as he came up the walk to his
truck. "Luckily,
he did not check the trailer. We felt the truck begin to move; we
traveled in silence; then, all too soon, the truck stopped again.
The farmer called to the guard, barely slowing, and we were
pressed against the doors of the trailer as the truck started up
the hill. It leveled, then stopped. The accordion creak of the
parking brake; the car door; then the farmer's footsteps. A
knife-blade of light cleft the trailer door. "I was
ready, and knocked him out with the butt of my rifle— not,
I hoped, too hard. We put him back in the car and pushed it out
of the sight of the guard towers. Then we went into the stables
and slopped kerosene over everything that looked flammable. The
horses were thoroughly spooked by this time, and when we released
them they galloped away, alerting the guards. We heard a siren
and saw floodlights through the window, but, to our relief, there
were no shots. Soon we could hear people running and shouting all
around us. " 'Our
life expectancy just doubled,' she said. 'From the towers, we'll
just be another couple of idiots running around trying to catch
the horses.' So we stood by the door, lit the straw with the
flamethrower, and ran to watch from safety. "The
stables crackled, like the warning rattle of a snake, and seeped
out smoke at every pore, and then at last put on a wreath of
flame, like a woman tossing a red cape around her shoulders. And
for all that I knew the futility of what we did, no other moment
in my life has been as satisfying. " 'Will
it spread?' I asked her, as the cry of fire went out. " 'I
don't give a damn,' she said bitterly. She was immune to the
destructive joy that had seduced me. 'Piotr wanted a fire, so
there's his goddamn fire. Whether the Guardians have to rebuild
their library or not is all the same to me. Let's get the
generator and go find Piotr some roommates.' "In the
confusion, no one challenged us as we found and burned the
generator. The searchlights went out all around the hill. We went
down in darkness, to where the long narrow barracks lay side by
side like rows of corn. "One of
the horses had found its way down the hill, and men in uniforms
and nightshirts were trying to trap it in the narrow space
between two barracks. It was an admirable plan, and might have
worked, if only they could have agreed which aisle they meant to
drive the poor thing into. Every time they thought they had him,
he would find a way out, darting between two shoulders just in
time. "The
prisoners, hearing the footsteps and hoofbeats and cries, must
have thought the last extermination was upon them. A wailing
would start in one barracks and be taken up at once by others,
like an old song that everyone knows. Now and then an irritated
Guardian would go along the rows, rapping a stick against the
wood and then against the tin, to quiet the cries, but each time
they only started up again. In such an uproar, no one would
notice the two of us; but prisoners flowing from an open barracks
would be seen at once. "We
stopped, pretending to gawk at the fire, as Katya checked the map
on her drydisk. 'There,' she said at last, pointing up the row of
barracks. 'It says Terminal Isolation Cells.' "
'What's that?' "
'Something bad enough that being shot in an escape would be an
improvement. Let's go.' "One
guard had remained by the door of the square building, but she
easily persuaded him that he was wanted in fire fighting. When he
was gone, we shot the padlock off the door with a silenced pistol
she had brought for just such purposes. Its sound surprised me:
louder and more mechanical than the cat-sneeze sound effect you
hear in the movies. I kept flinching, afraid of ricochets, so I
had to keep shooting and shooting to hit the lock. But when I
finally hit it, it flew to bits; it was a twenty-ruble padlock,
nothing more. We were both surprised to find such token security;
as I recall, she remarked that she'd seen bicycles better
protected ... until we opened the door, thrusting in our guns
like policemen in a video. "The
smell of urine, feces, and decay was overwhelming. The building
was packed solid with cubical cages, a metre on a side. They were
piled three high, and filled the building wall to wall, so there
was no corridor by which to reach the cages at the back. In each,
a naked prisoner sat huddled, a food dispenser pressing into his
arm. The muscles even of the ones in front were visibly
atrophied, and in the cages at the back we could see corpses,
rotting in the same position they had crouched in when
alive. "For a
time we both stood mute. Then, feeling that something had to be
done, I started toward the nearest cage. But Katya held me back.
'Pavel, we can't let those people go,' she said. 'They couldn't
walk across the room, much less make it out of here. And it would
take days to move the cages around to get to them all. Pavel,
there's ... is there nothing we can do?' " 'Burn
it,' said a voice from the cages. We jumped, whirling around to
see who had spoken. The prisoners' condition was so bestial, we
had not imagined them capable of speech. But one of them nodded
his head, all the gesture that he could make, and said again,
'Burn it all.' "I had
the flamethrower. But I was paralyzed, imagining the fire
creeping from cage to cage. It would move slowly; nothing but the
men themselves was flammable among the tin and steel. Each one,
unable even to cover his face, would watch his neighbor's long
matted hair bloom yellow as he awaited his own turn. "If
Katya had turned to me, if Katya had given one of her sharp
commanding nods, I would have done it. But she, even she, could
not command such a horror. " 'Then
give it to me,' the man said, 'and I'll do what needs
doing.' "Silently,
not even needing to look at each other, we agreed. He could do
it. He knew. "I put
in a new clip and aimed the pistol at the simple cage lock from
above. But I could not fire so close to the man's unprotected
flesh, could not find an angle that did not risk a ricochet into
arm or face or thigh. "Finally
Katya closed her hand over mine, and slipped her slender finger
into the trigger guard, where mine, thick and clumsy, trembled
against the steel. She squeezed once, firmly. The cage door burst
open, and the man spilled out, uncurling. He should have been
left to unfold on his own, as you give the hatched butterfly a
chance to dry its wings; but there was no time. She helped him
prop himself up against the side of the cage, and I put the
flamethrower in his hands. "Then
we heard someone call out, in English, 'Isolation is open!' We
heard running footsteps, and then a hand at the door. "Without
an instant's hesitation, Katya shot the man we had just freed. He
fell to the floor never having fully stood, his limbs slowly
drawing themselves back into the posture of the cage, as a
scroll, let go, curls back into its native state. "As the
door opened, she called out in her unaccented English, 'We have
shot the escapee! Hold your fire! We're coming out!' "The
guards still looked suspicious, but she overwhelmed their doubts
with anger. 'Which one of you deserted this post? Well, I suggest
you find whoever did and put him in that little hotel you're
running—I've just opened up a vacancy. While you people
were watching the fireworks, someone went in there and started
arming the prisoners. And from what I've seen of your security, I
think a cripple with a .45 could have limped right out of here
under all your noses. Do any of you want to argue with
that?' "Her
tenuous invention hung a moment in the air. It would be
challenged, I was sure; this was the end. A guard opened his
mouth— "And
reinforced the fragile structure. 'That's a flamethrower,' he
said. 'You think that's the man that burned the
stables?' "Katya
hesitated, tempted. But the idea was too ridiculous to hold up.
She took a breath and blustered: " 'No,
I do not think a naked cripple made it up the hill, nor do
I think he came all the way back here just so he could be
discovered in the place he left. Are there any more stupid
questions?' "There
were not. 'Good,' she said. 'Then get on the radio and tell
anyone who hasn't already guessed that the light show you've been
staring at was no accident. This Stonie didn't do it, but whoever
armed him did. And when you've done that, call up Commander
Sinclair for me and tell him I'm done playing soldier. Tell him
the girl he used to read Alice in Wonderland to is ready
to go home.' "I
had to, she said through our radio link as the guards stared.
They would have killed us and put him back in that thing. I
didn't have any choice. "I
know, I told
her. You didn't do a thing wrong. You don't have anything to
feel guilty about. "Yes,
it was a most commendable murder, she
said. But I knew her: she would find a way to hold back grief
until we were safely out. It was not in her to lose
control. "Five
minutes later the camp commander, Katya's 'Uncle Eddie,' drove up
with a worried look on his face. 'Kitty?' he said. 'It is
you—what are you doing here?' " 'Oh,
Father wanted me to see the glorious workings of the Guardian
cleansing machine or something like that. Honestly, to hear the
man talk, you'd think the Square Miles were a dishwasher. All
I've seen is a bunch of Zaks and Stonies, and some stupid guards
who're too busy watching the fire to notice them
escaping.' " 'Why
on earth didn't I know you were here?' " 'I
was supposed to be just like any other guard. He didn't want me
to get the executive tour or be coddled. He wanted me to see what
it's really like.' Her face lit up. 'And I sure did that, didn't
I! I shot a prisoner! Father's going to be ever so
proud!' " 'He
certainly will, Kitty, but right now we've got to get you out of
here. It isn't safe.' " 'But
we haven't got a ride! We weren't supposed to leave for three
more days. Can you take us?' " 'I'll
get a couple of the guards to take you.' " 'Oh,
God, you must be kidding. Those idiots? That prisoner couldn't
even walk, and I still had to do him myself because those
incompetents couldn't keep track of him. Honestly, I can't
believe you'd leave me to them. Can't you take us yourself, Uncle
Eddie?' "
'Kitty, I have armed people loose in the camp—' "
'Well, we'll just wait in your office till they're found, that's
all. Come on, Eddie, you don't have to take us to our dorm, just
as far as Father's house. It's only a few miles. Father'll be mad
if you don't.' A spark of shrewdness lit her disingenuous eyes,
and she whispered: 'We don't have to tell him about the break-in,
you know.' "Edward
Sinclair, the commander of the third or fourth most efficient
killing factory in the world, closed his eyes in amused
irritation. 'All right, then. Get in. I never could say no to
you.' "Can't
say no to making a hero's entrance at the Heptarch's house, he
means, the old hypocrite, Katya
said, starting toward the truck. " 'Put
your guns on the rack, kids,' he said, 'and be sure you unload
them first. We don't want them going off if we hit a
pothole.' "Katya
complied. We climbed into the enormous pickup truck, Sinclair
giving her a hand up. "
'Who's your friend?' he asked her as I climbed in
numbly. " 'Paul
Wintermute. He's a ninth cousin or something. Don't make him talk
to you, it's cruel—he's never seen anyone die before and
he's trying really hard not to throw up.' "I
understood: if I spoke, my accent would give everything away. The
Heptarch's daughter could not associate with a
Russian. " 'And
be a love and don't tell anyone I'm here. Father made me
promise.' "We
waited in his office for an hour, with a guard watching over us,
until Sinclair returned to tell us that the intruders must have
escaped. "He
knows we've been here, I said
as we were waved past the guard station out onto the highway.
Sooner or later he'll tell someone who can put two and two
together. "No, he
won't, Katya
said matter-of-factly, her eyes searching the cab of the truck.
She looked down between our feet; found a red metal bar with a
bifurcated tip that was lying on the floor. 'What's this?' she
asked, picking it up. " 'It
goes on the steering wheel,' Sinclair said absently. 'I use it to
keep the truck from being stolen if I have to go into
town.' " 'Good
idea,' Katya said, nodding vigorously. 'Those Russians'll steal
anything.' She idly laid the bar across her lap, resting one hand
on it. " 'What
are those cells we saw for, Uncle Eddie?' she asked. 'Are they
politicals?' "
'They're the worst politicals, honey. The most
dangerous.' "She
snorted. 'Not anymore they're not. The man I shot could barely
stand.' She leaned against Sinclair and laid her head on his
shoulder. 'I've missed you, Uncle Eddie. Remember when you
used to come over every weekend, and talk to my father about all
the funny things that happened at the camp? When I was little I
wanted to be exactly like you.' "He
took his eyes off the road just long enough to glance at her with
fondness. 'You are a lot like me and your father, Katya.
You keep your head under pressure and you're not squeamish about
things dying.' "You
bet I'm not, she
thought grimly. "Katya,
don't. "Of
course I will, she
said. It's the only thing that makes sense. Piotr should have
made me do this in the first place, if it weren't for his idiot
chivalry. "Please,
I said.
Let me do it. He's no one to me, just another Guardian. It
won't hurt me the way it'll hurt you. "You're
right, she
said. He's no one to you. That's why I'm the one that has to
do it. He and my father talked genocide the way other men talk
football. He taught me to admire every form of atrocity when I
was still wearing drop-drawer pajamas. If you killed him he'd die
like anybody. When I kill him he'll die as the monster he is.
This is the man I was born to kill. "Don't
do this to yourself, I
pleaded. You've got yourself so worked up you 're not even
thinking straight. " 'I
wish I had a hundred like you at the Square Mile, Katya. You'd
make a great camp commander, in fact; it's a pity you're not a
man.' " 'Now,
Uncle Eddie,' she chided him, brushing the hair from his brow,
'can you really wish such a thing?' "He
laughed. 'Well, I can, old fogy that I am, but I imagine the
young men at MGU would put up quite a protest.' He looked at her
again, mist in his eyes. 'You've grown into a fine woman,
Kitty.' " 'Oh,
Uncle Eddie,' she said, kissing him on the cheek, 'you always
know just what to say.' "In my
head she shrieked: I WILL kill him! "
'Please, Katya!' I said. Only when he looked at me did I realize
I had spoken aloud. "
'You're Russian? But—' "And
before he could work out the implications, Katya grabbed the bar
of steel on her lap, and thrust the forked end into his face. His
head was driven back into the side window, through the glass,
which cut the arteries of his neck. When I reached across her to
grab the steering wheel and slid over to hit the brake, the
inside of the truck was already covered with blood. By the time
we pinballed to a stop, my left leg was on his lap and my right
on hers, and both of them were perfectly still. " 'He
made me kill that man,' she said. 'He murdered
thousands—and he drank tea with my stuffed
animals—and he made me kill that man.' " 'It's
all right, it's all right, it's all right,' I said, trying to
embrace her. I might as well have been hugging Uncle Eddie. Of
course it was not all right. From
Square-Mile-on-Martha's-Vineyard to Square-Mile-at-Kamiyaku, and
from my mind to hers, as far apart as those two islands, nothing
was in the least all right. And it is my shame that when I should
have been trying to comfort her, my thoughts were of myself. I
kept trying to figure out just when I had stopped being a child,
playing a game with secret names and passwords. "At
last she said, 'Let's take care of the body.' I realized that I
was still clutching her, so hard it must have hurt. I let her go:
and that was the only time that we ever embraced. "As the
days passed, her shock faded into a seraphic calm that, in her,
was profoundly unwholesome. When they came to arrest us, her only
comment was, 'It's about time, loves.' " 'Tell
them the truth, Katya,' I said. 'I'm the dissident, she's
innocent—my God, this is the Heptarch's
daughter!' "
'Don't tell lies, Pavel," Katya said in a false Russian accent
that only a Guardian could have believed. 'They'd only find it
out, and it would go worse for us in the end. I am Katya
Andropova, no relation to the Heptarch. Let's get it over
with." "Then
we were at Square-Mile-on-Volga, in a holding area thrown
together out of barbed wire, along with thousands of others. They
didn't know it was we who had raided the camp; they were just
rounding up every dissident they could track down, on the
slightest rumor. We would stay in the enclosure for a time, and
then when the camp had recovered from the fire, we would be
processed. "
'Maybe some of us will be let go—maybe you,' I said.
'Look at all these people. There's not room to keep more than a
few.' " 'You
see that column of black smoke, from behind the hill?' Katya said
quietly. "
'Yes,' I said, craning my neck. 'What is it?' "
'Room.' "On the
evening of that day, our first, Piotr arrived, and rounded up
enough of our tribe to get a good groupthink going. Piotr had
read Gandhi, and understood him about as well as Piotr ever
understood anything, so he thought it would be a capital idea to
try out some passive resistance on the Guardians. He suggested
that as a start they refuse to eat their dinner, as a token of
resistance, and also because it was likely to contain meat. Now,
Katya had not managed to make all of our group into vegetarians;
but even those that weren't cheerily acceded. A principle not
important enough to eat cabbage for had become important enough
to die for, just because it might irritate the fellows with the
guns. I tried to tell them that passive resistance was only
useful when you had reason to suspect your enemy possessed a
conscience. I described the terminal isolation cells, and asked
them whether they thought that men who could do such a thing
would be swayed by children who didn't want to eat their food. It
didn't help. I appealed to Katya, but she only said, 'Let them do
what makes them feel better; it's all the same in the
end.' "When
dinner came—a ladleful of thin soup in a tin bowl, as we
squatted in the dust—the guards noticed that Piotr and his
followers were not eating. They found this singularly funny. 'It
looks nasty now,' one said, 'but a week from now you'd eat it if
I pissed in it.' "Piotr
stood up and gave his little speech; the guards roared. 'I tell
you what,' one of them said. 'You're going to eat your soup, and
if one of you leaves one drop we'll shoot you down to the last
man.' Rifles were leveled. Piotr's little band of Gandhis still
refused. Here and there a knee was trembling, but their jaws were
set. They were magnificent, as a bull charging a wall is
magnificent; I had to admire their courage, even as I regretted
their stupidity. "Then a
miracle happened. The Guardians put down their guns and looked at
each other sheepishly. Then they started frisking Piotr and his
people, taking all their personal effects and spare change.
Passive resistance had made killers into pickpockets. " 'It
worked,' I said in amazement. 'They won.' " 'No,
they didn't,' Katya said gently. 'They did something unexpected,
and Guardians can't handle the unexpected. But they'll find some
way to pump up their courage, and then finish what they started.
Piotr's people will be dead soon, and the sooner, the better for
them. Eat your soup now, Pavel, before they come for us
too.' "If she
had not commanded it, I don't think I could have managed. It
seems so ridiculous now; the animals were already dead, and
besides, we had killed men, and besides, the Guardians weren't
likely to waste meat on the likes of us. If that slop had a
connection to any bleeding thing, it was only some microscopic
globule of anonymous hydrocarbons. But at the time, it was as
though I dismembered the deer with my own hands, and sank my
teeth into its throat. Because it was then that I knew I was a
traitor to the bone. I would betray everything I believed in,
simply to survive another day. It was the great lesson of the
camps, and I was fortunate to learn it so soon. That saved me
trouble in the end. "Then,
a disaster. One of the guards who had been frisking prisoners for
nickels and kopeks came over to us. 'You, too, sister,' he said.
'Stand up.' And he put his hands on her. " 'Is
this the only way you can get a girl to look at you, poor thing?'
she said. "He
ignored her, but blood rose into his cheeks. He found the flask
strapped to her thigh, reached into her pants to take it
out— I could have cut off that hand without
regret—opened it and sniffed it. A smile curled his
features. 'You'll need it where you're going,' he said. 'Too bad
it's not allowed.' And he poured the flask out in front of her
and crushed it under his heel. Then he moved on to me. "We
exchanged looks of panic as his hands touched my shoulders. In
desperation she burst out: 'Now do you like the boys better,
Johnny, or is it just because the girls all laugh at
you?' "He hit
her across the face with his closed fist. Then, his anger still
building, he took out his pistol, held it to her forehead, and
cocked it. She stared back at him unafraid. "At
last his face twisted into a smile again, and he drew the gun
away. 'Live then,' he said. 'It's so much worse.' And he walked
away laughing. Katya was bruised, bleeding—but all was not
lost. I still had my flask. "
'Guardians! They're not even a challenge,' she said lightly,
touching the bruise on her face. 'Their petty fears, as like as
peas. Don't worry, Pavel, we can share the one.' " 'But
whoever does it first might drop the flask.' " 'Well
then, one of us will have to do the other.' "I
looked at her and thought of what I would have to do. 'Katya, I
can't,' I said. 'I'm sorry. I should be able to. But I can't hurt
you.' "She
snorted. 'I didn't mean you, silly. Give me the flask, I'll hold
it.' "And as
I handed over the flask I was wearing, every thought I had ever
had about what might have been with her, every daydream of house
and children and every furtive nocturnal imagining—all that
she had labeled 'the fence thing'—folded into nothingness.
If she had felt for me what I felt for her, she could never have
said that so calmly. It was necessary, there was no question of
that. They could have tapped into our sockets and found out
everything we knew, which might put dozens of people in Square
Miles who would otherwise be free. Even killing ourselves might
not help; it was rumored that the Guardians could suck the
thoughts from a brain three hours dead. And if we were taken
alive, we could be made puppets of the Guardians—so rumor
said—our wills extinguished by the sockets, or perhaps
remaining, watching what they made us do. We had to do it. But I
could not do it to her; and she could to me. She did not love me.
If she had ever loved anyone it was, perhaps, the man whose head
she had beaten in with a steel bar. " 'Go
ahead and do it now,' I said. 'I'm ready.' " 'Are
you sure?' she asked. "
'Yes.' "We
uncapped our sockets. The night before we raided the camp, we had
carefully dissected them, taken out the linings, and broken the
water-locks, in preparation. " 'I
wish I had never met you,' she said, 'so it wouldn't have come to
this. I care for you a great deal, Pavel.' "
'Katya, I love you.' " 'I'm
sorry, Pavel,' she said gently, tears threatening in her eyes.
And that was an honor, I realized: she had strung along our band
of dissidents with a series of convenient fictions, but now, even
now, she would be honest with me. "She
uncorked the flask and carefully poured a little of the clear,
sweet water from it into the socket in my head. For a fraction of
an instant after that I could still see her, tipping her own head
to receive the water, and drawing the flask toward it; and a
guard shouting and lunging; but I could not tell who would be the
quicker. And after that, for a long time, I remember nothing
more." Ten
My Man Sunday Voskresenye
looked down at his plate, hoping, I supposed, that there would be
something left to give him an excuse for pause. The white china
was clean. He looked up and tried to catch the waiter's eye, to
no avail. His right hand made strange clockwork-spider movements
that I supposed were his version of fidgeting. The awkwardness,
more than anything else, persuaded me that some part of his story
was authentic—that's how people act when they realize
they've revealed more than they wanted to. Even so, his story was
more smoothly chronological than it had any right to be. I found
myself wondering how long he'd rehearsed it, how much he'd
embellished it, how much of it was true. Voskresenye
stared wearily at the waiter's receding back. "Do you know what
was on the waiter's tombstone?" he asked. "What?" " 'By
and by, God caught his eye.' " I
smiled politely. "What happened to her?" I asked, as gently as I
could. His
hand grew still. "I have never known. I can only hope that,
because she was more deeply wired than I, she died quickly. But
there are no records—if there ever were any, the Army
destroyed them. Certainly she did not survive the camps; after
the war, I searched most thoroughly. But I will never know
exactly how she died." "And
you?" He
touched his forehead with his fingertips. "The shock traveled
down along the wires and into the implants, burning away the very
functions that my wiring had enhanced. It damaged my language
centers: Broca's area, Wernicke's area, angular gyrus. It
scorched my visual cortex. It nearly severed my corpus callosum.
But worst of all, I lost the ability to form memory traces. So
for the next three years, the last thing that had happened was
the moment when Katya Andersohna poured her flask of water into
my head." "What
was it like? That time?" He
closed his eyes, and said at last: "You set me a pretty problem.
How can I remember what it is like not to remember? If I think I
recall sensations—falling through the dark, and reaching
out, again and again, and brushing a handhold but not quite being
able to grasp it—how shall I trust the memory? All I can
tell you for sure is that when I began to wake, I was like a man
who has been walking across ice for so long that he does not
trust the ground to hold him. When I turned my attention away
from a thing, I was surprised that it persisted in my mind. And
gradually I realized who I was, and where I was. I was
Voskresenye—that was the name he had given me; and I was
playing chess with Aleksandr Derzhavin." "Oh, I
see. Not Voskresenye, Voskreseniye. He named you
'Resurrection.' " Voskresenye
shook his head. "No. He named me 'Sunday.' He identified his
subjects by the dates on which they came to his laboratory. Those
of us he spent the most time with soon acquired some shortening
of our dates as a nickname: Voskresenye, Fevral, Aprel,
Chetverg." Voskresenye's eyes grew thoughtful. "Whether he saw
the pun available to him by changing a soft sign into an 'i,'
whether that pun did not lead to his choosing me—that is
something I have wondered for a long time. If he did know, then
all my calculations with respect to him were based on a false
premise. But those calculations proved right, many times, so I
don't think he did know; although, in his own way, he was not
humorless." "You
said you woke already playing chess with him—you
were doing this while still brain-damaged?" "I was
imprecise. Behold the dangers of Russian, which forces me to say
'I played chess,' when what I mean is more complex. We should be
having this discussion in Sapir, whose verb forms are less
dogmatic. In Russian, only barbarisms—'I was played at
chess,' 'chess was played through me.' Until that moment of
awakening I was merely an eccentric interface for Derzhavin's ...
well, say computer, for now; that was what he always called it.
When I first became aware of my surroundings, I realized that my
hands had been moving the pieces for some time. Yet I could not
understand the moves I was making, or even tell who was ahead. I
barely knew the rules of chess; to me it was just a quaint
pastime of strange old men at tables in cafes." He put
his palms down on the table, thumbs in, as if marking off the
corners of a chessboard: so that pepper, salt, and sugar became
dark king and white queen and pawn, locked into their final and
fatal embrace. I blinked slowly to show that I understood, but
declined to belabor the joke. "Then,"
he said, "I began to notice a voice in my ear that was whispering
symbols, so fast I couldn't follow them. I listened closely, and
the voice slowed down. My heartbeat slowed, too—or rather,
as I realized later, my thoughts were becoming faster, so that
everything else seemed slow. When I listened to the voice again I
understood it: it was listing moves, devising strategies,
anticipating responses. I looked at the board and it burst into
life, the pieces seething and roiling, like bubbles in a boiling
pot. They moved faster and faster; the patterns of black and
white merged into an incoherent gray, like static on a TV screen.
Then something drove itself into the center of my brain,
splitting me into halves. Suddenly the board was still, and all
possible chains of moves existed simultaneously. I looked up at
Derzhavin. From him too I could see sequences of actions
branching forth, and in his head, patterns of possible thought
looped and twisted—trails of light. 'Well,' he said,
'welcome to the world, Voskresenye.' I knew the words before he
spoke them. " 'Do
you want to finish the game?' he asked. 'Or would you rather have
a tour of the laboratory?' "I
looked down at the board again. Its futures were already charted,
and all were variations on a theme; they held no interest. The
rooms around me branched out in a bramble of unlikelihoods that
tempted me much more. And just beyond the door behind me, a
shadow blanketed the light: a secret, something important that I
did not know. I grasped the first thread that led into it. I
tried to stand. " 'No,
please, don't!' he said, putting his hand on my shoulder. I had
foreseen that reaction, but I knew this line of play would bring
the shadow into view. 'Look at your hands.' I did, and saw them
as they are now, half-mechanical. But I had known that already.
He was trying to see whether I could access memories from before
my awakening. I kept my face carefully blank, to frustrate his
deductions. " 'I
didn't expect you to wake so soon,' Derzhavin explained, 'so I
haven't done your legs yet. It will be my next task, I assure
you. But for now, I'll have to wheel you in the chair. What do
you want to see first?' " 'Show
me the other half of myself,' I said, and then, although he could
not understand, I added, 'I think that's the shadow.' "He
turned the chair around, and we followed the cables that trailed
from my head and spine into a long corridor. There were cages on
either side. As we passed—slowly, since the chair was
heavy—I looked at the people huddled fearfully in the
cells, or lying on their cots as if dead. Derzhavin made no
explanation; he seemed unaware of the effect their presence had
on me. Instead he spent the time apologizing to me for the cable,
explaining that he intended to replace this crude umbilical cord
with radio transmissions once, as he put it, 'the system was
debugged.' "As we
approached the door to the next room, he chattered on with the
hearty incomprehensibility of an auto mechanic, explaining how he
had rebuilt my ruined mind. It was a simple idea, he said, and
one he'd used before, though never (here he laughed) on such a
scale. Really, you would almost think that Nature had intended
it. The corpus callosum, the anterior commissure—why,
they're no more than a pair of cables; they link the right and
left halves of the brain, just as you might link one computer to
another. And they're cables wide enough to merge two lobes into
one self, so that if you could not dissect, you would not guess
the halves were separate. And if you had a cable, well, why not a
cable splitter? Could you not set up a cloverleaf among, not two,
but four lobes? Would they not then be as intimate with
each other as the two hemispheres of the brain are? Would they
not merge into a single self? "He was
still talking as we passed through the doorway, and his voice
droned on, uncomprehended, as I saw what we had come to. It was
an enormous tank, brackish, encrusted with barnacles, and full of
floating stems of cable cased in plastic. Then I caught a glimpse
of the 'computer' that was now part of myself, and I no longer
saw or heard him. The thing that lay suspended in that tank would
not let even light escape from it, and no voice could out-shout
its rasping breaths." I had
been lulled by the scansion; now I snapped awake. "Wait a minute.
Breaths? What are you saying—it was biological?" He
hesitated, then said in a sudden burst of nervous energy: "It was
not 'biological,' it was alive; indeed, it is still alive; 'it'
is a she; and "she—" he paused, took a breath, grew
calmer "—is a whale." "I
see." I leaned back in my chair, my wrist sockets clicking
against the table. I never asked for this. All I ever wanted was
a nice column in a print newspaper, a thousand words a week and a
flattering mug shot, in which I could foist my every cockamamie
opinion on a groggy audience for whom it was me or the cereal
box. When Novaya Pravda folded I should have given up and
gone into something less invasive and degrading, like, say,
prostitution. But no, I had to retrain for an exciting career in
the growing field of telepresence. Same job, new medium, I
figured, but it's not. In print news, your job is to know things
about others; you peer out at the world through an arrow slit. In
telepresence you are known. If I'd still been writing for
a newspaper—if there still were newspapers— I could
have forgotten Pavel Voskresenye and gone on. In telepresence the
whole episode would be implicit in my broadcast, my gullibility
stretched out for every imbecile to poke. I could only hope
Keishi would manage to screen it all out. Maybe,
I thought, this would be the time that I'd finally quit. The
doctors could fill my sockets in with something that wouldn't be
flesh, but would look a little like it, and I could emigrate to
North America and never see anything more technologically
advanced than a pitchfork. Except, of course (I had almost
forgotten) that I was about to be arrested just for talking to
this man. Maybe if I resisted arrest just right I could get
myself shot. "Hey,
sorry, I was playing with the mix instead of listening," Keishi
said. "Are we having a low blood sugar moment or
something?" Actually,
I
subvoked, watching Voskresenye flag down the waiter for tea,
with you here there's one tiny redeeming feature to this mess.
Let this be a lesson to you if you ever become a camera. This
sort of thing can happen to you when you least expect it. Always
be ready for it, 'cause I wasn't, and I'm going to look like a
real idiot. "Wow, I
guess I did miss something. Should I get it from your memories or
do you want to tell me?" It goes
by different names, I
said. We usually call it "being conned." "Yeah?
You think the old guy's lying?" Are you
kidding, Keishi? A whale is as big as a—
well, as a whale. They're the metaphor for big. You can't
put a whale in a tank. It's like claiming you slipcovered
Leningrad. Especially if you're a fugitive from the
Postcops. How exactly do you take a whale on the lam, shove it in
a briefcase and drag it past the metal detector? Not to mention
the question of how Derzhavin got a whale in the first place.
Remember that vid a few years back where they find a whale frozen
in an iceberg, and they thaw it out and clone it and repopulate
the oceans? Don't you think that was a little improbable? And
Voskresenye claims that a whale has survived all this time, not
in the Antarctic ice, but in his basement. Yeah, I'd say
I'm a little skeptical. Fair warning, Keishi: don't count on
getting any sleep the rest of this week. We're going to be
scrambling to finish this story without him. "Maya,
don't you think you should at least give him a chance? He's
obviously been modified by the Guardians in some way. That
carapace is pretty convincing." He may
not be lying about that part, but with the whale there's just no
way. —
Wait. If he's lying about the whale, why should I think he wasn't
lying about everything else? My God. I laughed with relief.
"Stand a little to the left, please; spy satellites, you
know." I can't believe I bought it. No, this is definitely a
scam. Ten to one we find out he wrote that police report himself.
All of which means that I'm not drinking tea after
all. "You're
jumping to conclusions," she said sternly. Look,
Mirabara, I've been a camera for about as long as you've been
multicellular, and every instant of that experience tells me that
this man is not for real. I'm going to try to find out why he's
doing this. Meanwhile, you put together some contingency plans,
OK? See if you can find me another interview. "All
right, but I still say—no, never mind, I'm
going." Since I
no longer had to worry how any of this looked on disk, I might as
well satisfy my hunger. I took a bite of sandwich and said with
my mouth full, "So, what kind of whale is it exactly?" Voskresenye
looked up from his teacup, which he had been staring into as if
trying to read a message in the leaves. "Oh, come now, Andreyeva.
Don't humor me. Ask what you really want to ask." "All
right, then. Instead of pouring water in your socket, why didn't
you just signal the mother ship to pick you up?" He
rubbed the bridge of his nose exhaustedly. "This bubble shows
signs of degrading, and I can only go so long without recharging
my exoskeleton, so I have no time for games. This will
demonstrate the truth of what I say." He set a vial of red fluid
on the table. "What's
that?" "A
blood sample." "Yours?" "No.
The whale's." "Yeah.
Whatever. Listen, you wouldn't happen to have an overwhelming
desire to tell me why you're doing this, would—will you
stop that?" He was chorusing every word I said, with no
perceptible delay. "You don't really think you can make me
believe you with a parlor trick, do you?" "Of
course not; I would not so insult your intelligence. Good day,
Andreyeva." He stood abruptly and began to leave. Then, just
before he reached the sidewalk, he turned and said pensively,
"Consider this, however. If it is true ... well, it's the
story of the year, isn't it? To let someone else get it would
indeed be a shame." He shrugged slightly and vanished into the
crowd. I paid
the bill and started to leave. "You
forgot the blood," Keishi said. What's
the point? It's not whale. There's no point checking. It's just
not. "Maybe
not. But if you had it analyzed, you might be able to figure out
what Voskresenye's game is." I
don't think we're going to have time to worry about that,
I said. But
then again, you can't just leave blood lying around on tables.
You might frighten people. So, hating myself for doing it, I
picked up the vial. I put it in my pocket and tried to forget it,
but it pressed against my leg, a cold accusatory finger, all the
way from the Horseman home. Eleven A Property of
Easiness This,
of course, you can see on your moistdisk, but you will find
strange gaps, and paths of memory that lead to
nothing—remnants of an erasure Keishi never finished. I
would rather complete the job she started, but if the story must
be known—and it is known—then it is better it be
known fully. I was
sitting in the kitchen, with moistdisks strewn across the pitted
tabletop and lengths of cable hanging from the backs of empty
chairs. I had split my field of vision into quadrants, and was
trying to splice together a conclusion to my series on the
Guardians. I was hoping to give them a prefabricated segment,
already in the can. It would mean a fight; News One hates it when
you don't go live. But they'd never wanted to do this series
anyway, so maybe they'd let me get away with it this
once. When
the phone rang, I switched off my fourfold vision. I hate those
first few moments coming out of a sightsplit, when your head
feels like it's breaking up and you develop a deep sympathy for
honeybees. Blinking heavily, I stared up at the ceiling and
walked to the vidphone by memory. When the walls finally started
to look real to me again, I touched the plate. "Hey,
Maya? It's Terentev. Forensics." "Even
if I hadn't recognized your face," I said, still blinking, "I
think the bodies in the background might have tipped me
off." "Oh,
yeah. Sorry." As he fiddled with the controls on his phone to
hide the tableau of the dissecting room, I caught a glimpse of a
bone-white face being wheeled past. "My
God—how long's that one been dead?" He
looked around, then laughed. "Oh, him? I don't know, maybe twenty
minutes." Terentev dabbed at imaginary make-up on his flat
Asiatic cheekbone. "It's face paint. He's a mime." "Trying
to find out who the medal goes to?" The
creases of laughter around his eyes disappeared into seriousness.
"You know, Andreyeva, you're colder than anything I've seen
wheeled in here." "It was
just a joke," I said. "You don't have to take everything so
literally." He kept
his eyes on mine a moment, then averted them and shrugged. "Yeah,
whatever." "So
what do you have for me?" "Oh,
your paternity suit?" His face was jovial again. "Unless the kid
has scales, you'd better settle." "It's a
fish?" "It's a
dolphin." Well,
that made sense. Dolphin blood would not be hard to find, and
Voskresenye might have hoped that it would pass a cursory
inspection. A simple hoax. I would have preferred to know why,
but for the moment, I'd just have to set aside my
curiosity. "Okay,
Terentev. Like I said before, I owe you one." "What's
your rush, Andreyeva? Don't you even want to know what kind of
dolphin?" "Not
really," I said. "Good.
Because we can't tell." "Why
not?" "Doesn't
match up with anything. It's in the general neighborhood, but we
can't quite pin down the address." "Oh, my
God." "Hey,
it's not that big a deal. It's probably some microspecies that
got stranded in a river somewhere. Nothing to write home about,
unless you're a marine biologist. What is this, anyway? New gig
for you, Andreyeva? 'Maya on biotech'?" "Can
you check it against whale DNA?" "What
did you say?" I
realized I'd whispered. "Can you check it against whale DNA?" I
repeated. He
lifted his eyebrows. "Whale?" "Just
humor me, all right?" "Well..."
His eyes unfocused as he consulted the Net. "There were a few
sequences mapped before they went extinct. I can give it a try.
It would help if I knew what I was trying to prove,
though." "Ask me
afterward." He
frowned. "What does this have to do with that Calinshchina thing
of yours? Or did News One pull the plug on that? After all, it's
not their sort of thing—" "Just
run it," I said. "Then if I'm right, I'll tell you." He
frowned. "OK, if that's the way you want it. This'll take a
while." "I'm
not going anywhere," I said. He
signed off. I stood by the phone for a while, drumming my fingers
against the coffee table. Then I went back into the kitchen and
swept all the moistdisks into the recycling bin. When the phone
chimed I ran for it. "Tell
me," I said. "You
know, my granddaughter carries a stuffed whale everywhere she
goes? When I was a kid it was horses, before that it was tigers,
dinosaurs come around again every twenty years—she's got a
whale. She's got whale T-shirts, whale pajamas, a whole goddamn
whale ensemble. This is way beyond owing me a favor. This is
going to cost." "Red?
Green?" "Not
even close." "All
right, Terentev, you can use my dacha. But if there's one stain
on the carpet, they'll be centrifuging you." "This
is bigger than that. You may have to give me your
dacha." I
inclined my head and watched him silently. There was not a trace
of laughter in his face; and Terentev was not a good
liar. "How
about a spot as an expert witness in the story of the
year?" He
nodded solemnly. "That, Maya Tatyanichna, will do just
fine." Keishi!
I
called out, through the Net. I need you online
now. "Hang
on, I'm crossing the street," she said. "Is this urgent enough
for me to just sit on the curb?" This is
urgent enough for you to sit on—but
no; this was all on the record—anything that comes to
hand. "If you
say so," she said dubiously. "But if I get socket-jacked, I'm
holding you responsible." A
familiar warmth announced her presence. "Dr. Terentev," I said,
"the other day, I gave you a blood sample to analyze. Could you
tell me what kind of animal it belongs to?" "A
humpback whale," he said, then added nervously, "genus
Megaptera." Just
what the audience really wants, a scientific name. Why do people
turn into boring encyclopedias the minute you light your
Net-rune? "How
big would this animal be?" He
hesitated—asking the Net, probably. "About fifteen meters
when full grown." "And
that would be about the size of..." I prompted. "Oh.
Umm, a small yacht." "Or for
those of our viewers who don't own yachts, about the size of two
bullet train cars placed end-to-end." He
nodded nervously. "Yes, that'd be about right." "When
did humpbacks become extinct?" His
eyes unfocused, and long seconds passed before he had his answer.
You try to take a stand against passing off Netlinked actors as
"experts," you spend years cultivating contacts, and then your
real experts consult the Net anyway—except when they do it,
it's obvious. "They were one of the last to go," he said,
finally. "There were a few around as late as Guardian
times." "And
how long will blood keep in the fridge, before it
rots?" Now he
was back in home territory. He said confidently, "About eight
weeks. Nine at the outside. That is, in this condition. You can
keep it usable indefinitely if you've got the equipment, but not
like this. Those cells are frisky." "When I
gave them to you, they'd been unrefrigerated for at least a day.
Does that narrow it down?" "In
that case, I'd say it's fresh. A couple of weeks, maybe
less." I
frowned, to simulate a skepticism I no longer felt. "Not that I
doubt your expertise, Dr. Terentev, but this is a little hard to
accept. Is there any chance it could be a hoax? Could you fake it
with nanoconstruction?" "No
way," he said emphatically. "You'd never get all the bug
byproducts out of the blood without killing the
cells." "So
somewhere in the world is a live humpback whale." "Live
or very recently dead, yes." "Well,
I'm sure everyone who saw The Day of the Whale has the
same question: could you clone more whales from this?" He
shook his head. "No. Not from blood. Blood doesn't have that much
DNA, and what there is, is all jumbled up. It'd be like trying to
put together a book that had been cut up into single
words." "But if
you had a tissue sample? If you had a live whale?" He
nodded thoughtfully. "I'm not a marine biologist, but I'd say
it's possible in theory. It would take a lot of trial and error
to get the fetus to grow in vitro, but given enough time, it
could probably be done. And if the whale were female,
certainly." "Thank
you, Vladimir Terentev." He
smiled. "Always a pleasure, Maya." "Hypocrite,"
Keishi said as I signed off. At
least he didn't say hi to his mother. How soon can you be
here? "How
soon is this?" I
turned around to face her. "I meant in person." "My
person is in Moscow. While you were putting together a backup
story, I've been trying to figure out where you could hide a
whale." If she
had been corporeal, I would have clapped her on the shoulder.
"Always the true believer. What did you find out while I was
wasting my time?" She
frowned. "I mostly wasted my time, too. Voskresenye had his
signals bounced through here, but it was apparently just a false
trail. My best guess is that the whale might be somewhere in
Arkhangelsk." "Where
he was imprisoned." "Exactly." I
nodded. "Are you still sitting on the curb?" "I'm in
a cab on the way to the trainport." "Okay,
go to full-link. I'm going to call Voskresenye." Keishi
disappeared as I turned to the videophone. "Pavel of null hearth,
clan Darkness-at-Noon." The phone chirked and purred for long
seconds. Then Voskresenye's face appeared, in an unusually tight
close-up, as though to hide the background. "Well," he said,
"Maya Tatyanichna. What a pleasant surprise. So glad to have a
chance to say good-bye before the mother ship takes me
back." "When
can I see the whale?" He
smiled at my haste. "Arkhangelsk. Five o'clock
tomorrow." "That's
not my time slot," I said. "Maya
Tatyanichna, you have the last whale in the world. They will give
you any time slot you want." I gave
him a calculating look. "How secure is this line?" He
touched something on his videophone. "I will vouch for it against
a Weaver." "All
right, then. If I tell News One about the whale, they'll take
this story away from me so fast I'll get friction burns on my
camera chip. Now if you want to sit across from a smooth-head,
that's your option, but—" "Oh,
no, Maya Tatyanichna!" he said with ardor. "No other camera in
the world will suit so well." "Well,
then. Let me come up with something to tell News One, and we'll
do it in my usual time slot." "Your
time slot is far too obscure," he said. "Tell News One whatever
you like; but it must be at five." "I
can't just commandeer prime time. If I called in favors I might
get it, but slots between five and six are only ninety seconds
long. Is that enough for you?" "Ninety
seconds?" he said. "Why so much? Ask them for ten, if it's
easier. When you show them the whale, do you think they will cut
you off?" "No," I
said, nodding slowly, "I guess they won't at that." I had been
thinking much too small. "Where do I go?" "If you
come to Arkhangelsk alone, at the proper time you will be guided
to the whale. If anyone else comes with you, you will never find
me." "My
screener—" "Of
course," he said. "Naturally your screener may accompany
you." "Can I
meet you, at, say, four o'clock? I'll need to set up shots, and
plan what we're going to cover. And since I won't have time to
run the whole story about you and the Guardians, I'd like to have
you finish it in advance, so we can put it in as
memory." "I am
afraid that I cannot allow that," he said. "You may be followed.
I accept it as inevitable that my sanctuary will be found after
your Netcast is finished, but I will not have them barging in
while we are still on the air." "You
expect them to find the whale? To take possession of
her?" "I
expect—" he briefly studied a point just below the screen,
then raised his eyes again "—that I will no longer be able
to keep her where she is now." "I
understand your protectiveness, but what would it hurt for you to
provide a tissue sample? Think of the importance
of—" "Contrary
to what the producers of vids believe, Maya Tatyanichna," he
interrupted, "you cannot just dump a cloned calf in the middle of
the ocean and expect her to repopulate her kind. Whales in the
wild had millennia of accumulated knowledge that is now
irrevocably lost. Without a parent to protect and guide her, a
cloned whale would starve, freeze, or drown in a matter of
days." "Could
your whale—" "She
could not," he snapped, "and even if she could, I would not allow
it. Hundreds of whales would die in this ridiculous experiment,
and even if some lived, if they eventually flourished, what do
you think would happen? Amusement parks would capture them, ships
of tourists harass them; perfumers would discover a need for
ambergris; jaded executives would pay thousands to slot up
Queequeg on adventure vacations.... No, Maya Tatyanichna. There
will be no whales." "But we
need them," I said. "We
need them? Is that the best reason you can come up with?"
He laughed, a rasping, mechanical sound. "The kings of the ocean
are gone, and what is our argument for their return? We
need them? We? Their murderers? The ones that made the
water bitter in their mouths, and killed the food they ate? The
ones that made the ocean boil red with their blood for miles
around? Men need them? Those vermin? Those stinging
insects? Struggling pustulent humanity—needs them?
Do you think a whale cares? You might as well need the sun
to rise at midnight because you're feeling a bit chilly. Yes, of
course, certainly we need them. But the question is, do we
deserve them?" Silence.
Then I heard the whirring as he moved his hand toward the
vidphone's control panel. He paused and said: "Be in
Arkhangelsk." "I
will." CONNECTION
BROKEN, said the phone. "Well,"
I said. "He can be goaded." "I
charge you to use this power only for good," Keishi said
solemnly. "Just
when I thought you were starting to understand this business.
Mirabara, park your body on a train to Arkhangelsk and get your
bandwidth over here. We've got work to do." Twelve
Immediate Touch She
materialized again. "Already bought the ticket. What do you
need?" "I
won't say I need anything. I seem to get attacked when I use that
word. What I want is to know everything there is to know
about whales by noon tomorrow. Biology, history, poetry,
folklore, you name it." "Is
that all?" "No. I
also want every scrap of information you can dig up on
Voskresenye. Go over the interview with a fine-toothed comb and
do a search on every word he used, apart from 'and' and 'if.'
Anything you can dig up on Derzhavin, on the Andersons,
especially on Catharine Anderson—I know most of it's
probably on the chip you gave me, but I need to be
sure." "Sounds
like a long night. Should I order in pasta or
something?" "I'm
sick and tired of makarony," I said. "What are you in the
mood for—dim sum or Ethiopian?" She
shrugged. "Up to you. I'll be eating train food,
remember?" "Oh,
right," I said sheepishly. "In that case, which of those two will
make you the least envious if I eat it in front of
you?" She
smiled. "I've never been much for African food.
Ironically." "Ironically,"
I echoed. "Ethiopian it is." I was about to touch the videophone
when she said, "Let me do it." I shrugged assent; her eyes
unfocused for a second. "Done." "That
fast? OK, let's start with—" The
doorbell rang. My house, unlike my car, does not have weapons
hidden in its every crevice, so my first thought was of kitchen
knives and cast-iron skillets; my second, of escape
routes. "Don't
panic," Keishi said. "It's just your food." I went
to the door and looked through the peephole, cringing a little as
I did. It was rumored that the Weavers would use infrared to
watch you approach the door, and then, as you squinted to see who
it was, fire a bullet through the glass into your eye. The fear
was irrational, I knew; they usually gave the Postcops a chance
at you first, and the Postcops would consider such a tactic
impolite. But the thought made me uncomfortably aware of the
shape of my eyes in my head, and their softness. Somehow you
think of eyes as being as shallow as almonds, but of course
they're not; they go back deep, and press against the brain's
gray labyrinths. The feeling persisted as I opened the door on
the bored and impatient delivery boy, and made me reluctant to
allow his retinal scan. "I
can't give you your food without a scan, tavarishcha.
Regulations." He balanced the stack of boxes on his shoulder,
obviously prepared to wait. I
submitted my eye to be lasered, and paid all in green out of
sheer irritation. "Is that all, or do you want a blood
test?" "So
take it up with management." I
slammed the door in his face. Punk. "Keishi, do I want to know
how you did that?" "I just
found the nearest unit and switched addresses." "Didn't
your mother ever teach you it's wrong to steal?" "So who
stole?" she said. "You paid for it, didn't you?" "I
guess that's true," I admitted. The smell of food had made my
salivary glands spurt to life, with a stab of pain far more
compelling than the pangs of conscience. I sat down on the couch
and started opening boxes. "You're sure you don't mind my eating
in front of you?" "What
are my chances of stopping you?" she said, smiling. "No, relax,
I'm not hungry anyway." "Thanks,"
I said, and proceeded. She watched me closely as I tore off a
piece of crepe and used it to scoop up mashed
chickpeas. "You're
staring," I said. "I thought you weren't hungry." "I'm
not. It's just that you're eating with your right
hand." "That's
how you eat Ethiopian food," I said, capturing a blob of umber
curry. "How
come?" I
fanned my mouth instead of answering; the lentils had been too
hot. When my tear ducts stopped firing, I said, "The left hand
used to be considered unclean." "Like a
taboo?" I
paused with a bite halfway to my mouth. "Um ... no, just basic
hygiene, actually. I think it goes back to before they had toilet
paper. Could we talk about this when I'm not eating?" "Huh?
Oh, sure." I
looked at the crepeful of vegetables suspiciously, then thrust
all associations from my mind and swallowed it. She
couldn't let the topic go. "You know," she marveled, "I never
would have thought of something like that." "Typical
wirehead," I said between mouthfuls. "You've spent so much time
on the Net you've forgotten you have a digestive
tract." "Yeah?"
she said, raising an eyebrow. "Okay, Miss Earthier-than-thou,
when was the last time you cooked a meal that didn't come in a
box?" "I'm a
camera," I said. "I'm all over the country. I don't have time to
shop." "All
right, then, when was the last time you ate? Not since yesterday,
I'll bet." "I had
something for breakfast." "Something
solid?" "All
right, Mirabara, you've made your point." "You
know," she said, pressing her advantage, "I think you'd maintain
the Net against someone who preferred the body, and the body
against someone who preferred the Net. You don't seem to have
much use for either one." "And
what does that leave?" "You
tell me." "Look,
as fascinating as this is," I said, using a stray chopstick from
the day before to mix the bland chickpeas into the overspiced
lentils, "we've got about fourteen hours before I have to get on
the train to Arkhangelsk, and in that time I have to get ready
for the biggest interview of my life. This strikes me as more
important than a lecture on nutrition. Can we leave it for
another time?" She
sighed slightly and stood very straight, as though at attention.
I wondered briefly whether she was making fun of me. "All right,"
she said. "Where do we start?" "Let's
see what we can find on Voskresenye himself." We
spent several fruitless hours in search of data. Every time we
caught hold of a thread, it would wind around and around the Net,
until finally at the end we found his name, Net address, police
record, dates of birth and death—and nothing more. Finally
we gave up and started tracking down the people and things he'd
referred to during our first interview. Catharine Anderson, we
found, went missing during her senior year at MGU. A few days
before that, Edward Sinclair drove his truck into the Volga River
in an apparent suicide, which was later reclassified as a
terrorist strike. Dr. Aleksandr Derzhavin, a Russian scientist
who had collaborated with the Guardians, died of a heart attack
at age forty-five; little more was known, because the Guardians
had burned his laboratory, and his records with it, as the
Unanimous Army approached. It was all consistent with
Voskresenye's story, but then you'd expect it to be. If he made
something up, he would consult the Net first; and what he could
find was about the same as what we could find.
Stalemate. "All
right," I said, rubbing fatigue from my eyes, "what about this
'Queequeg' reference?" "It's
the name of a harpooner in a novel about whaling called
Moby-Dick." "Sounds
vaguely familiar." "You
might have heard about it in school," Keishi said. "It was widely
read in Classical America. I think there's an episode of The
Brady Bunch where Greg doesn't return it and gets a huge
library fine ... no, wait, that's The Red Badge of
Courage. Anyway, it was well known." "How
long would it take you to read it for me?" "Slot
me a fresh moistdisk," she said. "I'll give you the novel as a
memory. Have you used an English fluency chip much?" "Sure,
but not for a while." "A
year? Two years? That's okay, the neuromodulators should still be
able to find those pathways lying around; you won't have to burn
in again. In English, then. Oh, and I can also give you the
memories of a Preclassical Lit. professor from LGU who wrote his
thesis on it. Ready?" I
nodded. The novel seeped into my mind, like milk into a sponge. A
man tattooed with frogs and labyrinths; a leg of polished
whalebone; duodecimo, octavo, folio whales; a coffin bobbing
among the waves; and in the blue distance a white mass rising,
unknotting its suckered limbs, and sinking: unearthly, formless,
chance-like mockery of life. "Now
that's really something," I said when it had finished. "Why
couldn't we read that in school, instead of watching all that
television?" "You
liked it?" "It
beats hell out of The Brady Bunch." "Well,
I think it's horrible," she said, leaning forward in her chair.
"It makes whaling out to be some kind of heroic pursuit, when all
it really was is genocide." "Sure,
in hindsight," I said. "But there were whales all over the place
back then. They didn't know they were going to run
out." "It's
still disgusting. Look at that scene where they go all orgasmic
over that spermaceti stuff. He makes it out to be a mystical
experience, God's in his heaven, all's right with the world, and
there they are running their hands through some gunk they dug out
of an incredibly beautiful creature that they killed by ramming a
harpoon into its eye and dragging it in—" She shuddered and
drew her legs up onto the chair, wrapping her arms around her
knees. "First
of all," I said, "I think you're confusing a few different
incidents. And secondly, when exactly did Pavel Voskresenye take
over your mind?" She
stiffened. "If two people who hate each other as much as
Voskresenye and I do can agree on something, you should consider
the possibility that we might be right. Killing is killing; it's
sordid, bloody, stupid, and wasteful. There's nothing noble about
it. People will do what they'll do, but we can at least call it
what it is." "But to
take on something a hundred times your size and bring it down by
strength and cunning and sheer determination—I can't think
of anything more noble. Sure it's brutal. Biology is always
brutal. 'Dinner' is just a euphemism for destruction." I waved my
hand at the rubble of my meal. "You do remember eating, don't
you? That's your problem, you know. Too much time out-of-body.
You've forgotten the brutality of the flesh." "If
keeping your mind in a piece of rotting meat makes you condone
violence, that's another point against it," she said irritably.
"If I could get African citizenship, I swear I'd take Translation
and have done with the whole stinking mess." I
sighed and said: "Dost thou think because thou art virtual there
shall be no more flesh and blood?" "Aha!"
She put her feet back on the floor, noiselessly. "Now I have you!
You can't tell me you had Shakespeare ready to mind before you
slotted up—certainly not in English. Without the
moist-disk, you wouldn't have been able to express the thought so
elegantly. Without my Net link, I wouldn't have known what you
meant. The electronics improve understanding. They put us in
sync. Even something as simple as a Preclassical Lit.
chip." "Just
more garbage encrusting the truth," I said, but I didn't take out
the moistdisk. "Words
encrust," she said earnestly, leaning forward. "Words and bodies.
The truth is underneath, and cables can break through to it. Why
do you deny that?" "Because—"
I said, and then stopped, feeling the futility of trying to
explain. "No
answer?" she said. "I'll tell you what I think it is. I think
you're afraid. You're terrified of anything that might connect
you to another person, and you fear cabling most of all because
it's the surest way to—" "All
right, then," I said in exasperation. "There are so many reasons
I hardly know where to start, but here's one. You're always
talking about getting past people's surfaces to what's inside,
and that's what you call real. But you can't just break through a
person's defenses like that; the defenses are part of the person,
they are the person. It's our nature to have hidden
depths. It's like—" my eyes searched the room for a
metaphor "—like skinning a frog and saying, 'Now I
understand this frog, because I've seen what's inside it.' But
when you skin it, it dies. You haven't understood a frog, you've
understood a corpse." "The
cable doesn't 'skin' anything. Besides, it doesn't have to be
one-way." "Oh
yes, that's even better. People swapping souls on the first date.
Once you've done that, what the hell do you talk about for
the rest of your life?" She tried to break in with an answer; I
cut her off. "Nothing, that's what. There's nothing left to say.
There's no wonder, no unfolding, no chance to gradually grow into
each other ... I don't know why I'm even trying to
explain...." "But,
Maya," she said, "you sound like a person who knows what she's
talking about. When, apart from the other day with me, have you
cabled before?" I
looked down at the table. "I've been working with screeners a
long time. You get a feel for what it's like." "All
the same—" "And
even if it were real," I interrupted, "if you can achieve total
intimacy with a piece of cable that costs fifty-nine kopeks, what
good is it? How can you say that you have something
special with a person, when you can get the same thing with
anyone in Russia in fifteen minutes?" "You
can not." She had risen and was pacing around the room.
"You can't just cable with anyone. You can put in the plug, sure.
But not everyone fits. Most of the time you can't get in deep
enough. And if you do, if you go ahead and force it, you just
find out that on the inside, most people are stupid, mean,
selfish, and boring. When you find someone that you can keep
coming back to again and again, it does mean something. It
is love—how can you say it's not?" "Oh,
it's love, I suppose. It's love the way sugar is food: it's got
lots of calories, but no nutrition. You can't live on it for
long." She
stopped pacing, but did not sit down. When she spoke again it was
more slowly and more softly. "If you take flesh as your starting
point," she said, "you're always going to find some way that
silicon falls short. But there's nothing special about flesh.
Look, sex wasn't invented by some loving God who wants us all to
understand each other and be happy. It was made by nature, and
nature doesn't give a damn whether our hearts hook up or not,
just as long as our gametes do. Why should evolution get to make
all the decisions? Why can't we use something that is
designed to bring people together? If you turn the comparison
around, and start with cabling, then love in the meat starts to
look pretty shabby. Love happens in the mind, in the
soul—what does the union of two sweating bodies have to do
with that?" "Love
without touching—" "I
would touch your mind more gently than any hand," she said,
looking down at me. "More softly than—" "That's
not what I mean by touch, and you know it," I said. "You keep
trying to change around the meanings of words. You're using some
new definition of love, too. I don't think it's in my
dictionary." "No,
nor in your encyclopedia, either," she said, so gently that I
couldn't take offense. "It's real, though. And it isn't new.
That's one thing Derzhavin was right about, as twisted as he was.
You think cabling is unnatural—that's what your arguments
all come down to. But it's not. Not between people that really
fit. Maya, do you have any idea how unlikely it is that two
structures as complex as minds could be joined like that? It's
like picking up two stones at random and discovering that they
fit together perfectly. It isn't a coincidence. It can't be. They
fit together so easily—like reuniting something that
should never have been broken, filling in some ancient
wound...." She sat
down on the sofa beside me, and looked down at my hand. Her
fingers brushed my palm, then stroked the socket at the throat of
my wrist. "The mind has doors," she whispered, "even as the body
does. And when you drill new holes, you tap old
hungers." "What
would you know about hunger, you ghost?" I said. "You've
forgotten you have a body—you just said you wish you didn't
have. Is there hunger on the Net now? No, don't you dare
call that hunger. Hunger is something that can be sated. But you
can touch a hundred minds a night and never be filled—or
fulfilled. That's not a desire, that's an algorithm." She
slowly leaned over me, as though to rest her head against my
shoulder. "I've been in thousands of minds, yes, Maya," she
whispered. "I fell in love with one." I kept
perfectly still and said flatly: "What else is there on
whales?" She got
up, bent over the videophone, and stood there staring at the
blank screen. I could not bring myself to look at the reflection
of her face. When she had been silent so long that I was sure she
wouldn't answer me, she said, "... There are songs." "Right,"
I said briskly. "Traditional songs about
whales—" "No,"
she said, "I mean the whales, they sing." "That's
not in Moby-Dick." "Well,
they weren't listening, were they?" she snapped. "If you up and
chucked a spear at every human you saw, you wouldn't know we
could talk, either." "You
mean their songs were a language?" I said, amazed. She
thought for a moment and then said, with more composure, "They're
a little repetitive for a language. More like a bird's song,
except they go on for hours. People used to listen to them for
relaxation." "Play
me one." "All
right," she said at length. She went back to the armchair, sat,
then closed her eyes and took a deep breath. "This might not be
such a good—" "Play
it," I
said. She
nodded, slowly. Squeaks and echoes filled the air. I
winced. "A bird's song played off-key by fingernails on a
blackboard in a swimming pool! People listened to this?
Voluntarily?" Instead
of answering she turned away, pressing her face into the back of
the chair. I could see by the spasms in her shoulders that she
was crying, though her hands concealed the tears. I felt shamed
by the unfeignedness of her grief, where I myself could muster
little feeling for a race of creatures that had died out before I
was born. "Keishi,
I'm sorry, I didn't mean—" "It's
not the song," she sobbed. "Oh.
No. No, of course it's not." I tried
to touch her hair to comfort her, but my hand passed through the
strands without disturbing them. I thought of embracing her, but
that too was impossible. I settled for sitting on the floor next
to her chair, leaning my head against the armrest. Her face was
turned away; all I could see was a crescent of cheek and temple,
notched by the eye-socket, trembling and bright with
tears. "Keishi,
I owe you an apology. Several, in fact. I know I'm not an easy
person to work with—" she sobbed aloud "—all right,
I'm a pain in the ass. I know that. What I'm trying to say is
that this is the story of a lifetime, and I would have thrown it
away if it weren't for you. And I've treated you like dirt for
your trouble. I don't know why you've put up with me this long.
But I hope you'll give me another chance.... Keishi, I don't care
whether Anton comes back or not. I want you to be my screener for
as long as we can trick News One into keeping us together. And
for as long as you'll have me." She
wiped away tears with her hand, still averting her eyes. "That's
not the kind of partnership I want with you." "Oh,
Keishi, please, any time but now—" "I have
to. Maya, I love you. And if we can't come to terms with that,
then I'd better just go, because it's only going to get more
painful. Maya, I know you don't love me now. I know it's hard for
you to even think about it. All I can ask is that you try to
remember ... if the encyclopedia were out, do you think you could
love me?" "I'm
sorry," I said. "That part of my life is over." She
looked up at me as I stood. "You don't know, do you?" "No," I
said, starting to clear away the take-out boxes in order to hide
the shame in my eyes. "I don't know." I
carried the boxes into the kitchen and threw away the empty ones.
As I was making room in the refrigerator for the leftovers, she
came in behind me, so quietly I didn't know she was there until
she spoke. "I want
to give you something," she said, "but I'm afraid to. The last
time I gave you a gift, it didn't turn out very well." I
smiled down at the sink as I rinsed my hands. "I promise not to
throw this one at you. But you don't need to give me anything. I
owe you enough already." I turned to her, drying my hands on a
dish towel. "What is it?" "Freedom."
She leaned against the doorframe, as if to block my exit from the
room. "When you were interviewing Voskresenye, and I touched your
mind, I found out why you didn't want me to help you with your
encyclopedia before. I didn't mean to peek, but it was right
there. You're afraid that if I did, and then something happened
to me, or I fell in love with someone else, or we just wound up
hating each other, you'd be out in the cold. There'd be no one to
protect you, and the first Weaver to happen
by...” "Oh,
Keishi, I didn't mean it that way." "No,
please don't apologize, it's all right. I understand. I wouldn't
want you to stay with me out of fear. What I want to do is modify
your camera software to screen out ... well, everything your
encyclopedia suppresses. The thoughts will come back, but they
won't ever escape to the Net, or even to your screener, if that's
anyone but me. The Weavers will never know about them. You can
leave the suppressor chip in, so the Postcops won't suspect; even
if they examine it, it won't have been altered. But when you say
so, it will stop working." "Wouldn't
the Weavers be able to see the modification?" "Why?
Anything that doesn't make it to the Net won't set off their
detectors. Other than that... in ten years the Postcops might
have come far enough to figure it out, if they knew what to look
for, and if you never got an upgrade. But ten years is a long
time." She brushed the salty deposit of tears from her cheekbone.
"You could say no, and live to be a hundred. Or you could die
tomorrow, for all you know." "Especially
if the Postcops figure out the man with the whale is
Voskresenye." "He and
I fooled them once; we can do it again," she said reassuringly.
"But Maya, you could be run over by a bus next Thursday and never
know what they took from you. If you take it back, you'll have at
least ten years. Probably more. They may never find out. I don't
want to tell you what to do; it has to be your choice. But if it
were me, well...” She smiled and lapsed into KRIOL, her
tongue clicking softly in the hidden spaces of her mouth:
"!Gather(rosebuds) while.do(may)...." My
spine burst into shivers. I could not explain why a few words of
KRIOL should have such an effect on me. Nevertheless they did. I
had to turn away, pretending sudden interest in the moonlit trees
outside the window, in order to hide the feelings that I knew my
face betrayed. She
went on, half-heard: "I want you to know that if you say yes and
you find out you don't love me, that's all right. That's not why
I'm doing it... well, not the only reason. You deserve to be free
whether you love me or not." "Do
it." The words seemed to come directly from the tingling of my
spine, bypassing my better judgment. Yet once they were said, I
did not want to take them back. "Are
you sure?" she asked, solicitously. "Do you need some time to
think it over?" "The
last thing I want to do is think it over. Just do it." She
looked at me with concern, but relented. "All right, then. You'll
need an adapter." "Why?" "You'll
have to put it in your wrist. You can't alter a chip in a skull
socket; the hardware won't do it. Security thing. Is your adapter
still in your duffel?" "No. I,
um, I put it away.... Hang on." I opened my junk drawer to look.
When I didn't see it, I started furiously rummaging through the
drawer; I had to fight back the urge to dump its contents on the
floor. Then Keishi came, stood behind me, and put her hand on my
shoulder—the faintest of pressures, an insect alighting. I
forced myself to calm down. She glanced at the drawer and reached
through my shoulder to point out where the adapter
lay. I
picked it up. "Which wrist?" "Left,
since you're left-handed." I slid
the plug into its socket, wrapped the Velcro cuff around my
wrist, and started to put in my camera chip. "Not
that one, the 6000," she said. "What
difference does it make?" "Well,
there's—" she began, then broke off and smiled. "This
probably isn't the time for a technical lecture. Let's just say
the old chip isn't up to it." I went
into the bedroom to collect the rosebox from my closet. At first
I hesitated over the choice of chipsets, but she said, "It
doesn't matter. Once I've done one, it'll be easy to copy the
changes to the other two." I plugged the chameleon chip into the
adapter, where it promptly sprouted trompe l'oeil black Velcro
fur. "Find a
comfortable place to sit," she said. "The first one may take a
while." I sat
on the armchair that Keishi had vacated—briefly surprised
to find the cushion cold. I slipped off my shoes and leaned
back. "Just
try to relax," she said. "I am
relaxed." "The
hell you are. If your heart were going any faster it'd break the
sound barrier. Breathe slowly, and count your breaths—just
up to four, then repeat it. Try to clear your mind of everything
else." As I
struggled for calm, she made the motions of taking something out
of a bag, though there was no bag to be seen. Then she crawled up
onto an invisible ledge five feet above the floor—a
levitating mime—and reclined there, in a slightly cramped
position. Her real body must have been getting into the sleeping
compartment on the train. She unbound her hair, which suddenly
became longer. That must be what she really looked like, I
thought with half-suppressed excitement. Her hair was lifted back
into the thing she had set up—a myrmichor; it must be. That
was how the African engineers had solved the problem of getting
data into a head without using sockets: they'd replaced her hair
with some sort of conductive fiber. If I ran my fingers through
it, would it be soft, or stiff, I wondered? I longed to
try—a small, quiet longing; but I had not felt one as
strong in twenty years. Then I
remembered how, when I had first realized she knew about my
suppressor chip, I had pictured her configuring it with a waldo
at a table, not with her hair in a myrmichor. That image had been
so vivid—where had it come from? Who had sat at a table for
hours that way, with cables trailing from her head and
arms? But
there was no time to think of that. I could already feel my hand
beginning to stir, to touch wires and move among patterns, though
physically, of course, it hadn't moved at all. If the image with
the waldo was a memory, I would know in the morning. The dream
coprocessor would bring it up. "Do you
want me to take your hand offline?" she asked, in a strangely
blurred voice. "No," I
said. "No, leave it on. I want to feel it." "I
always knew you were the Lamaze type." She chuckled distractedly.
"I'm going to give you a phrase to say when you want the
desuppression to begin. It's not in Russian, so you won't say it
by accident. Listen closely: O vos omnes, qui transitis per
viam. Say that back to me." I
repeated the phrase. "Good.
Now don't say it again, unless you mean it." "I
won't," I said. "If you
feel like sleeping, do." "I'm
not tired," I said. "I'm not tired at all." But hours later, when
she wanted me to switch chips, she had to rouse me first; and by
the time she had finished all three, I was sound
asleep. She
touched my cheek to wake me. "Go to bed. I'm going to stay with
you tonight." I
looked at her, blinking thickly, and said, "Are you
here?" "No.
You're still asleep. I mean in virtual. If I were there, I'd have
carried you to bed, so I didn't have to wake you. One of the
problems with being discorporate." "What
time is it?" "About
three in the morning." "Oh,
God," I said, finally coming awake, "I've got the interview of my
life tomorrow and I'm completely unprepared—" "Don't
worry. I'll give you a moistdisk in the morning. You'll be fine.
Everything will be fine." I went
to bed without undressing, setting the adapter on my nightstand.
She stood by the door, where, it seemed, she meant to keep vigil
all night. And just as I fell asleep—or did I dream
it?— she came and kissed me on the eyes. Her lips seeped a
little way through the lids into the liquid depths behind them:
small, cold kisses: silver coins. (The
Frog) (Dreams
aren't stories. They don't have a point, a theme, a plot, a
moral. All those things take skill to craft, and the sleeping
mind is inept. That's why most dreams are just a lot of aimless
wandering. Once in a while you'll be awake enough for a small
part of you to feel you should be getting somewhere, and then the
dream becomes a nightmare. All
night I dreamed that I was walking through the streets, carrying
a sack of groceries that I could not manage to look into. Then I
dreamed I woke up from that dream, to find myself back in the
reclining chair in the living room. Keishi was floating above the
floor. My left hand had detached itself and was holding a
scalpel; it had slit my arm open, from finger to elbow. The skin
was fastened back to the arm of the chair with dissecting pins,
and among the flayed muscles, I could see my arteries begin to
pulse. Keishi drifted toward me, bent down as if to whisper some
secret in my ear, and then opened her mouth and exhaled
daisies.) 2 PHYSICAL
BONES "However,"
added objective Pnin, "Russian metaphysical
police can break physical bones also
very well." —Vladimir
Nabokov, Pnin Thirteen
Icarus Rain: I
woke to the sound of rain crashing above me. The falling drops
were blowing against the wire mesh of the window-screen, filling
it in square by square, like pixels on a monitor. Perhaps all the
windows in the city, if seen from a sufficient distance, would
form some enormous image that only the gods could see. I lay
there trying to guess the pattern a long time. Then I stretched
in my pocket of warmth beneath the blankets, and turned over. The
camera chip was there, still plugged into its adapter. It had
been no dream. I went
into the bathroom, opened the little window above the shower, and
cleaned out all the crumpled newspaper—blank newspaper;
they sell it in Leningrad stores expressly for the purpose of
being wadded up in windows. I jammed it all into the wastebasket
and opened up the outer window, so the clean, cool air from
outside could dispel the bathroom's mustiness. Then I took a
shower, hot and luxuriously long. I should be careful about the
water, I knew; but I would be careful tomorrow, tomorrow would be
soon enough. Today, even the city was being cleansed by this
downpour. I closed my eyes and imagined it, as I worked lather
into my hair. The sky threw down great solid sheets of water that
fell against the rooftops, where they shattered into drops. The
rain poured down along the shingles, picking up and carrying with
it every crumb of dirt that Leningrad possessed; and streaming
down from eaves and windowsills, it crashed into the streets and
ran down gutters in excited single-files, which met at drains
and, crowding round them, plunged together into nothingness. Even
the veins of stink that lay beneath the city must, I thought,
have been washed clean by this exuberance of rain. "Freedom,"
Keishi had said; and though I knew that it could never be so
simple, I allowed myself to hope. I put
on my robe, fed the bugs, and ate breakfast, scooping up leftover
chickpeas with a hardened bagel. My body, unused to anything but
coffee and nanojuice at this hour, soon warmed to the idea and
sent me scurrying after the lentils, which I finished with a
spoon. They tasted better than they had last night. They were
better cold; no, I had been distracted; no, I had forgotten how
to taste food years ago, and only now remembered. When
I'd finished my makeshift breakfast, I gathered the camera chips,
replaced them in the rosebox, and took it into the bathroom to
dress. I opened all three flaps of the box, set it on end, and
watched it rotate. How do you dress for the biggest interview of
your life? Exactly
like any other day, I realized, and I put the box under the sink.
This interview would bring scrutiny. If I had suddenly changed
moistware just before it, people might suspect something. But if
I changed a few days after, it would look like I went out and
spent my bonus on an upgrade, and no one would think twice. I
went to the living room to retrieve my old camera
chip. The
moment I slotted it in, I was glad of my decision. That chip and
I had been through decades of obscurity together; it would be
heartless to change now, on the cusp of my first real success.
And she could love me even so; I knew that. She had known me no
other way. I put
on the most ordinary outfit in my closet and went back into the
kitchen. As I poured coffee into a selfheating News One mug, a
note on the refrigerator caught my eye. It hadn't been there at
breakfast. I put down the coffeepot and went to look. There was
no salutation, no signature, only two words in a large flowing
cursive: BE BOLD. I stood there looking at the note a long time,
feeling the warmth of the mug as I rested it against my
collarbone. Then I reached out to touch the note, and passed my
hand through it: unreal. The
phone chimed, and I answered it without begrudging the
intrusion. "Good
morning," Keishi said. I had
to choke back my usual rejoinder—"That's an oxymoron."
Instead I said, "Yes, I think it is." She
smiled appraisingly. "You know, this has really changed you. You
look five years younger than you did last night." I
sniffed the air. "Are you testing my sense of smell
again?" She
laughed politely. "I take it you're not having second thoughts
about last night." "When I
do, you'll know." "Then,
ah, may I ask why you're not wearing the murder
weapon?" "Gold
and dead gods aren't my style, I guess. Why do they do that,
anyway? You see Egyptian gods plastered over everything that's
African, but nobody worships them." "That's
why they do it. They figure that since those gods are dead, they
won't get pissed off about how you use their images." "Oh, I
see. Same reason people throw around the Coca-Cola
logo." Keishi
smiled. "You've got two other sets, you know. The polychromes can
look like whatever you want. Including the Coca-Cola
logo." "I
thought I'd better wait a few days," I said, more soberly. "This
would be a bad time for a mysterious upgrade. It's better to wait
till the worst of the furor has passed." She bit
her lower lip. "The new chip will need some burning-in time, you
know, if it's going to do all its tricks. It can use the pathways
your old one established if it has to, but it really ought to add
more." "All
the more reason not to try using it today." She
looked away from the screen, then back at me. "Maya, can I ask
you to just slot one of the 6000s? I can't tell you why
until— until later today. But I wouldn't ask unless there
were a good reason." "Look,"
I said firmly, "I'm as disappointed as you are. But you promised
me ten years, and I mean to collect every minute. It'd be foolish
to throw it all away because I couldn't wait for a couple of
days." "Then
take them with you," she insisted. "What if your old chip fails?
One whiff of seawater and it could rust up
like—" "Keishi,"
I said. "You're being ridiculous." She
lowered her eyes, but not before I saw her face cloud. Well, love
was impatient. Or so I told myself, not really knowing whether it
was or not. "I suppose you're right," she said forlornly. Then
she suddenly brightened. "Say, why don't you come to Arkhangelsk
early? There's a train at 9:15." "I
guess I could. There's not much left for me to do here. Any
special reason?" "Apart
from the obvious? I'm trying to sniff out that whale. If I do,
maybe we can crash Voskresenye's party a little early and get
this story put together right." I shook
my head in amazement. "How did I ever get along without you? Here
I've practically forgotten the whole story, and you're working
harder than ever." She
inclined her head, obviously pleased. "Where
should I meet you, then?" She
hesitated for what was, to a megascops, quite a long time. At
last she said: "When you get to the trainport I'll be
there." "You
mean in person?" "...
Yes." "Well,
it will be nice to meet you, Keishi Mirabara." "You
know," she said carefully, "I don't look exactly like my Net
image." "Who
does?" I said, laughing. Then I saw how nervous she was, so I
said, "I still don't know exactly how I feel about you, but I
doubt it would make any difference if you weighed a hundred
kilograms." She
looked up sharply, then relaxed and smiled. "I may just hold you
to that." "Well,
I'll find out in Arkhangelsk." Her
face grew wistful again. "Yes, you will.... Maya, I love you."
She smiled, rather weakly, and held up a hand. "No, don't answer.
I know you can't yet." Her image vanished. I
whispered to the blank monitor: "I hope I love you
too." I stood
there thinking until the phone reverted to its clock display,
then jumped: it was almost 8:30. Barely time to put on my coat,
shrink-seal my sockets, wrap a plastic babushka around my head,
and run to the trainport. I plunged out into the rain, feeling,
reckless and rakish. A dangerous joy was gathering in my heart:
the kind of joy that makes you do things you remember all your
life, not necessarily with fondness. I stepped right into the
braided ripples in the gutter, and crossed the street in defiance
of all laws of traffic. The
quickest route was through the park. I started to walk around to
the gate. But on my way, I noticed a gap in the hedge that
children squeeze through when, to their childish impatience, the
gate seems too far. On impulse I ducked into it, emerging on the
other side with leaves and twigs clinging to my coat. Well, let
them cling. I would not bother to brush them away. The
rain pounded against my head, and the sky was a charred log. It
was almost perfect; but it needed music. I switched on Audio
Classical Seven—picking the number for luck. White letters,
projected onto the saturated grass, informed me that I was
hearing Mozart's Requiem. Then the lyrics began to scroll through
my peripheral vision. A sing-along? Well, all right, I'm no
soprano but I can follow the bouncing ball. I sang loudly and
tunelessly, the Net helping me to understand the Latin. Dies
irae, dies illa, solvet saeclum in favilla: a day of wrath,
that day, it will blow the world to smithereens—or words to
that effect. But not just yet, please; I have ten years coming;
do it then. Then I
thought of Keishi's passphrase, and gave it to the Net to
translate. "All you people who pass on the street..." Yes. Yes,
that was just how I felt. As I
racewalked my way through the park, I came upon two women ducking
under a single umbrella. Their heads were almost touching, and at
my approach they looked up with, it seemed to me, guilt: caught
in the act, by a camera, no less. "Relax
for gods' sake!" I called out to them. "Your tribe!" And I
laughed as I passed, seeing myself through their eyes: a singing
missile, if you could call it singing, that had crashed past and
shouted nonsense at them. I knew they were only sharing an
umbrella, not kissing as it had seemed. But it was lovely to
pretend. Galuboy—the
word came to me suddenly, out of the undiscovered country the
encyclopedia suppressed. "Light blue." How odd; how
inappropriate. Like kit, whale, which sounds like a
chick's peeping. But galuboy's for men; what is it called
in women? Well, words would come later. For now, this feeling. My
head tingled with the memories it kept in trust, as though it
couldn't hold them back much longer. The Requiem crashed in my
head like the stamping of a great beast. Of course, an elephant.
Oh, I had been awful to her! Hooks, indeed. But even those
remembered insults would be cherished in the end. I
turned around and walked backward a few steps in order to sing
another verse to the umbrella women, and as I spun back again, my
coat fell open. I had lost the belt somewhere, probably in the
hedge. There was no time to retrieve it, so I held the coat shut
by crossing my arms and gripping each epaulette in the opposite
hand. Just you give me a crook and flail, and I'll adorn you a
sarcophagus, or lie on an African moistdisk in hologram
gold. The
trail started to meander unproductively, so I splashed onto the
grass, refusing to divert my path even for the deepest puddles.
And so, butchering the Tuba mirum, I climbed and crested a
low hill, and saw a man in a black suit leaning against a tree
ahead of me. I stopped singing, reduced my pace, and changed
course slightly to avoid him. I had almost passed him, and was
half-convinced my fears were wrong, when he called out, "Do you
know the time, tavarishcha?" "Ask
the Net!" I shouted, and looked back over my shoulder at him. He
had turned his head, showing me a black slab of moist-ware set
flush with his skull, like those sunken tombstones you can mow
right over. "Please
put your hands in the air where they are clearly visible," the
Postcop called out. I
did. "Thank
you, tavarishcha. Now please reach down very slowly and
remove first your Net chip, then all other enhancements except
for your encyclopedia." Again I
complied, fumbling with the babushka. Yes, quite an enhancement,
that encyclopedia. "You
see it is much better to cooperate. Now, if you would, please
place your hands behind your head and lie on the ground with your
face down." I
dropped to my knees and then, because I couldn't use my hands to
catch myself, fell forward awkwardly onto the wet grass. My face
was in a puddle, so I had to close my eyes and hold my breath.
For a moment no one came, and I vainly hoped that I would be
allowed to lie there in the grass until the rain dissolved me. It
was a hard, sharp rain that would leave no skeleton. Then my
arms were grasped and cuffed, and two sets of hands gently lifted
me to my feet. My face and clothes were covered with mud, and I
noticed that the Postcops that were flanking me wore rubber
gloves. As we
walked to the van I began to think again, a little, and realized
that they would not have known where to ambush me unless they had
been listening in on my conversation with Keishi. In that case,
they must know everything. The rain would not dissolve
me—in fact, I realized as they loaded me into the back of
the windowless van, I might never see rain again; and I turned to
see the sky one last time, only to have my head pushed firmly
down. As the
van drove through the streets of Leningrad, the rain besieged it,
crashing against the metal, clawing the roof with its nails,
howling as a wolf howls when torn from her pups or her prey. It
could not get to me. No, it would not be the rain. But I had
gotten what I'd wished for. I was dead. Fourteen
Tea and Sympathy After
three hours of interrogation, I finally cracked. "No!" I
screamed. "For the hundredth time, I do not want any more fucking
crumpets! And get that teapot out of my face." The
young man across the table set down the little delftware teapot
and put on a face of disappointed concern. "I am sorry that our
hospitality is not to your liking. We had very little notice of
your arrival. If there is something we can remedy, by all
means—" "I've
told you a dozen times. I want these handcuffs off. And I want to
go to the bathroom." Officer
Rubatin turned to his partner and said in a conciliatory tone,
"They seem reasonable enough requests, Officer
Ignateva." The
woman with the sergeant's bars pressed her thin lips together.
"The manner in which they were delivered was anything but
reasonable. Such a tone is inappropriate in this environment, and
her use of profanity denotes a person unable to control her
passions as society requires." "Ohhhhhh,
I get it now," I said to the woman. "You're the bad cop and he's
the good cop. You know how I can tell? Because you whisper
louder." "Plainly
we are getting nowhere," Good Cop said. "Perhaps if we remove the
restraints, as a gesture of goodwill, she will recognize our
peaceable intentions." "Very
well, Officer Rubatin," Bad Cop said, scowling. "I trust that our
good-naturedness will not be met with more hostility." She nodded
to Good Cop, who moved around the table to remove the
cuffs. "Um,
actually," I said, "the bathroom thing is a little more urgent
right now." Bad Cop
was incredulous. "We give you one thing and you instantly demand
another?" "Oh,
no. No, by all means, please remove the cuffs, that's fine. I
thank you profoundly for the favor." My wrists were starting to
go ominously numb, so I didn't want to lose the chance to free
them, even though my bladder had been a dull ache for most of the
last hour. I had drunk one cup of tea to keep my strength up for
the interrogation, and a second cup because it really was
excellent tea, and a third because the sips gave me a chance to
think before I answered. Now I was paying the price. I wondered
whether I had fallen into the same trap the first
time. I stood
so Bad Cop could remove the cuffs, and stayed standing as I
rubbed my wrists. It felt good to have them off now, though at
first I had been grateful for them. My greatest fear had been
that a Weaver would possess one of the Postcops, take out a
cable, and mindsuck me. The thought had made my every socket
ache, as though fear had given the metal nerves. So I had been
glad of the cuffs that locked over my wrist sockets, giving me
the illusion that they were protected—two fewer wounds
through which I might be hurt. But
they were not going to go Weaver. I was almost certain of that
now. A Weaver can be in a hundred places at a time, so what they
do, they do quickly. If a Weaver were going to take one of them,
she would have done it long before. I
started to sit down, wondering whether they'd let me go expel the
tea if I asked very, very nicely. Suddenly I stopped, my knees
half-bent, and thought: Postcops. Maya, these are Postcops, and
not Weavers. They were ordinary citizens, appropriated for a day;
someone had shown up at their doors that morning, ignored the
usual excuses, and inserted the Post moistware into their heads.
Their behavior was electronically regulated, and, in the areas
that mattered most, predictable. They were going to kill
me—there was no doubt of that. It would be soon. And no
matter what I did, the death would be polite and
painless. To know
for certain that you cannot change your fate can be a rather
liberating experience. The instant I'd accepted it, I had an
idea. "May I
stand a while and stretch my legs, please?" I asked. Bad Cop
looked sour, but since I had said "please," she
nodded. "Thank
you. I am in your debt, tavarishcha." I walked a few
steps, then stood in the corner, stretching my legs with
exaggerated motions. I felt chilly under the thin hospital gown
they had given me to replace my muddied clothes. "Now,
Maya Tatyanichna," Good Cop said, "you were about to tell us what
Keishi Mirabara said to you in the trainport." "Absolutely,"
I said, leaning against the wall. "I'll tell you
everything—everything I can remember. But there's one thing
I need to do first." And I squatted, hiked up the gown, and
urinated on the floor. "Cuff
her again. Behind her back this time. Then get on the Net and get
a wet mop up here." She turned to me and said. "That was so
uncalled for I can't even find words to describe it." "Take
out that Post chip and you'll find all kinds of
words." "I see
you think you can defy us," Bad Cop said ominously. Ominous in a
polite sort of way, of course. "I
think I can do whatever the hell I want. This is the last day of
my life. I may as well have a little fun with it." "With
someone who has remained in conformance as long as you have,"
Good Cop put in, "we may be able to consider leniency. But only
if—" "Bolus.
Nobody comes away from the Postcops alive a second time. I'll be
dead by midnight. All you can offer me is crumpets and trips to
the bathroom. But what difference does it make if I wet myself?
What difference does it make if I won't tell you anything? The
worst you can do is kill me, which you're going to do anyway. I
can piss on the floor, I can stand on my head, I can tell you
every Postcop joke I know, and you can't do a thing." Good
Cop interrupted Bad Cop's glare by plucking at her sleeve.
"What?" "Something's
wrong," he said. "I'm cut off from the Net." Bad
Cop's eyes unfocused for a moment. "I am, too. I'll go get us an
audio communicator." She stood up, then turned at the door to
look at me. "While I'm gone, consider whether you want to leave
this room alive. The choice is yours." Good
Cop watched the door swing shut, then leaned across the table
toward me. "I admire your courage, Maya," he said in a
conspiratorial whisper. "However, I must say that I believe it is
ill-timed. Officer Ignateva is operating on an older version of
the Emily Post moistware. If you continue to provoke her, it
might overload, and my own moistware would prevent me from
interceding." "Oh.
Wow. Thanks for telling me," I said. Then I leaned forward and
matched his whisper. "You know, I really hate these cuffs. If you
could take them off—" He
considered, then carefully looked to both sides. "All right,
then." When
they were off I said, "You know, the whispering and the looking
around to see if anyone's looking are great stage business, but
they seem a little fake when you're alone in a soundproof room.
Haven't you ever heard of method acting? Doesn't the police
academy have a drama department?" He sat
back and sighed indulgently. "I really do have your best
interests at heart, tavarishcha." "Yeah,
right. So is the Net really down, or is it a trick to get the two
of us alone together so you can be my friend?" Before
he could reply, Bad Cop returned, carrying a portable radio. "The
whole building's down," she said. "They're working on it." Then
she looked at me with surprise and said, "You took off the cuffs,
Rubatin?" "He was
playing good cop," I informed her. "It didn't work very well. Why
don't you try that bad cop thing again?" "I fail
to understand why you refer to me as a 'bad cop,' " she said
testily. "All Post police officers run on the same software. We
are bound by the law of the land and the laws of propriety, so we
are incapable of being 'bad.' " "Where
did you people go to school?" I said, rolling my eyes. If
Good Cop could overact, so could I. "Haven't you ever watched
CHIPS? Haven't you ever watched Hill Street Blues?
Do the words 'Book 'em, Danno' mean nothing to you?" I looked
down on their scrubbed puzzled faces and sighed. "Okay, kids, let
me correct a major gap in both your educations. When cops in
Classical America interrogated a prisoner, one cop would be the
Good Cop and try to become his friend, and the other would be the
Bad Cop and try to scare the shit out of him so he'd confess to
his buddy the Good Cop. Just like what you're doing. Except they
could back up their threats. They could swear. They could break
things. They could hurt people. You can't even ask me for
something without saying 'please.' Frankly, Ignateva, you're
pathetic." "Insults
can only make this more difficult." I
laughed, leaned back, and rubbed my eyes. "I was hoping they'd
make it more interesting. But it's like teasing animals in the
zoo: it's poor sport and it frustrates the animals. Why are we
doing this? Why don't you just—" I broke
off. Why didn't they just mindsuck me? You think of
Weavers doing that, but Postcops do it too, once they've run
through all the polite options. Ignateva and Rubatin were
incompetents—that's what you get when you recruit by
lottery. It would take them a long time to give up. But in the
end they would, or they'd be relieved by someone who would. And
then the cable would come out of whatever pocket it was hidden
in, and any hope that Keishi had would be gone. I had
known that. And I had thought that there was nothing I could do.
But there was. "Could
I have another cup of tea, please?" I asked, trying to keep my
voice from shaking. "Oh,
certainly, certainly," Rubatin said, hastening to
pour. "Thank
you," I said, and gripped the handle like a lifeline. Taking the
encyclopedia out might be enough, and then it might not. But
surely, after all these years, the waterproofing would not hold
against a direct assault. "All
right," I said. "Let's put all our cards on the table. I seem to
have run out of reasons to play for time. What can I do that will
get this over with?" "You
can tell us what we need to know, tavarishcha." "Other
than that." "Let's
just make a start, shall we?" Good Cop said sympathetically. "You
came back from Kazakhstan. You arrived at the train-port. What
did you do?" "I went
to the bathroom. It smelled a lot like it does here." Good
Cop leaned over and whispered to Bad Cop, "Is that janitor on the
way?" "They
said she would come. See what the radio says." Bad Cop
switched it on. "Officer Mayich," it blared, "Officer Andrei
Mayich, come to the front desk please." She scowled and turned
down the volume. "What
did you do after you went to the bathroom?" Good Cop pressed
on. "I
washed my hands in the sink." "We
don't care about that," Bad Cop put in. "You
don't care about washing your hands after you go to the bathroom?
Oh gods, and I let you hand me that crumpet. That's
disgusting." "What
we want to know, please, is when you met Keishi
Mirabara." "I
didn't meet her at the port at all. She had me paged over the
trainport speakers, but I was too busy trying to get
drunk." "You
cannot get drunk, Andreyeva. No bar would serve you beyond your
ration. We know that." "I
didn't say it was working. I just said I was trying. Why do you
ask these questions if you're not even going to listen to the
answers?" "Officer
Ivanova," the radio said, "Officer Tatyana Ivanova, please come
to the front desk. Your daughter is here." Tatyana
Ivanova was my mother's maiden name. Strange
coincidence. "Maya
Tatyanichna," Good Cop said, "our records indicate that you did
insert the courtesy plug." "Officer
Pudding," said the radio, "Officer Chocolate Pudding, please come
to the front desk." I
laughed and slouched back even further, tightening my grip on the
cup. I would have to take the socket-cap off with one hand, and
raise the cup with the other. The parietal socket, on top, would
be best; to get the tea to run out again, they'd have to turn me
upside-down, and by then it would be much too
late— I sat
upright. Officer Pudding. The speaker trick. It was
Keishi. Or the
Postcops trying to entrap me with hope. I had to be sure. "Yes,"
I said carefully, "that's true, I did put in the plug. She told
me to put my Net chip in, so we could virtual conference. But I
thought, 'What would a person like Keishi Mirabara want with me?'
" "Officer
Cavalry, Officer John Wayne Cavalry, please come to the station,
you are needed." Bad Cop
gave Good Cop a worried look and said, "Officers of French
ethnicity are an asset to the Leningrad police force." I
suppressed a smile. Somewhere deep in Bad Cop's mind the words
"goddamn frogs" had flared up and been quenched. Jean-Waine
Chevalri. No allusion to the Ancient West could have come from
these duraks. And no Weaver would have reason to play such
games. "What
exactly did she say to you over the courtesy plug?" Good Cop
asked. "Oh, I
hung up after a few words," I said. "She was trying to tell me
what to do. I hate it when people do that." "Officer
Rune, Officer Net Rune, please return to your vehicle. Your
headlights are on. Officer Net Rune." Bad Cop
and Good Cop exchanged perplexed glances. "She
tried to tell me why, but by that time I'd hung up on
her," I said. "Officer
Pavlov, Officer Ivan Pavlov, please report to the front desk
immediately. There is a camera here to interview you. Your
tardiness in this significant public relations effort does not
become the Leningrad Police Force. Officer Pavlov, come to the
front desk now." Of
course. I let
the cup go, buried my head in my hands, and pretended to sob.
"I'm sorry, officers. I've been trying to lie to you, but I see
now that it's fruitless. Can we start at the beginning again?
Could you repeat the charges against me?" "You
are here for conspiring to remove a court-mandated suppressor
chip, and for consorting with a known dissident, and for intent
to commit affectional deviance." "And
disturbing the peace," Bad Cop added peevishly. I knew
my singing would be the death of me in the end. "I'm sorry," I
said, "I don't know the jargon. What is 'affectional deviance,'
please?" "You
deliberately set out to fall in love with a person of your own
sex, in flagrant violation of the laws of the Fusion of
Historical Nations as well as of the terms of your
parole." "And
did I succeed at this?" "Not at
the time at which you were arrested," Good Cop said. "And
why not?" "Because
of the corrective device which we implanted twenty years ago, at
the time of your first arrest." "Because
of Postcop mind control." Bad Cop
and Good Cop exchanged nervous glances. "The colloquialism is
essentially accurate, yes." "And
how did you find out about this intent? By monitoring private
videophone conversations, yes? Through spy satellites? Through
hidden cameras? By using the Net to spy on people's
minds?" "She
has no need to know that, Officer Rubatin," said Bad Cop warily.
"She is stalling for time." "Common
courtesy demands that we answer all reasonable questions," he
said in a conciliatory tone. "There is nothing to fear; the
information will go no further than this room." "No it
won't, will it?" I said. "Because I'll leave this room a corpse.
Have you already decided which one of you pulls the trigger, or
do you flip a coin when it's time?" I parted my fingers, as if
accidentally, to let a little light from my Net-rune shine
through. Bad Cop's eyes widened. "This
information could only distress you—" Bad Cop
grabbed my hand away from my face, revealing the lit rune.
"Shit!" she yelled. I longed for my imagination software, to draw
a little puff of smoke above her Post chip. "Smile,
duraks," I said, "you're on News One. Why don't you tell
the world why you wouldn't let me go to the bathroom?" "It's a
trick," Good Cop said. "It has to be." "Of
course it's a trick," I said sweetly. "Just go on as you were
before. What difference will it make?" Then I widened my eyes and
said in mock astonishment: "The Post police wouldn't have
anything to hide, would they?" Bad Cop
grabbed the radio. "Front desk, come in." "Front
desk. This is Officer Miranda." It was Keishi's voice. "Maybe
I'll just take a little warmup on this tea," I said to no one in
particular. "I think the world would like to know what Post-cop
tea tastes like, don't you?" I poured tea into the teapot, then
back into the cup, and sipped with gusto. "Is
your Net link still out?" Bad Cop demanded. "It's
just come on again," Keishi informed her. "Tune
in News One and tell me what you see." There
was a brief pause. Then the voice on the radio said, "Oh, gods.
Don't move. Don't say a word. Just wait, and someone will be
there right away." "Tsk,
tsk, tsk," I said, sipping my tea. "You swore on duty, and I've
got every last phoneme on disk. What does the chief of police do
in a case like this? Wash your mouth out with soap?" Good
Cop and Bad Cop sat frozen, as though they'd been switched
off. "Well,
will you look at this? You give them a little media exposure and
all of a sudden they're so high and mighty they won't even talk
to you—" "Maya
Tatyanichna!" boomed the captain, bursting in. "Thank gods you're
all right. I came the minute I heard about this terrible
misunderstanding. I'm sorry to prevail still further on your
patience, but may I speak to my officers outside for a
moment?" "Sure,
no problem. But I warn you, they're really not much fun
anymore." "Thank
you," he said, bowing slightly. "I will return shortly." He
escorted them out. I did
what any self-respecting camera would have done under the
circumstances. I poured out my teacup, put it against the door,
and listened. The
captain was saying: "... judged that you have erred so grievously
that, in accordance with regulation 3708 stroke 25 paragraph c, I
am removing my Emily Post chip in order to impress upon you the
magnitude of your offense." "But...
but..." "You
goddamn stupid whores!" I had
to bite down on my hand to keep from laughing. If only I'd really
been recording. Of course I wasn't; I'd had my Net-rune hot-wired
years before, so I could turn it on and off as I pleased. It's
nice for letting people think that something's off the record.
But a Postcop captain swearing like a sailor all over the whole
Net! If I had to choose between that and the whale, I might be
tempted to give up the whale. The
whale. If I was going to live, then there was still a world
outside the police station, and in it I had an interview to do.
Not without regret, I abandoned my post for a moment to pick up
the radio. "Hello, Officer Miranda?" "I read
you, Officer Pudding. Over." "Hey,
front desk," I said, "things are a little confused back here. Do
you happen to know the time of day?" "You've
got around five minutes before someone figures out that
everywhere but this building, News One is carrying a political
debate in Otaku. Over." "What
do I do? Um, over." "They're
hoping you'll get bored waiting and everyone will tune out. So
you want to let them know it won't work. Just make a pain in the
ass out of yourself." "I
think I could manage that. Over." "That's
a roger, the plan is designed to make use of our
operative's natural talents," Keishi confirmed. "Break a leg,
Officer Pudding. That's an order. Over and out." I
pressed my teacup against the door again. The captain was still
swearing industriously. "Haven't
you duraks ever heard of a retrofit? Just because the
bitch has sockets in her head, you assume she can't also
be wired with a totem. So you confiscate the totem, don't
deactivate it, and she beams your every word to News One out of
our own goddamn evidence room?" "But we
did check. We checked her file and we scanned her twice,
and she didn't have anything that could have been a totem in
disguise—" "Well,
you obviously didn't check well enough." "Can't
they just cut off the Netcast?" "We
don't dare. We cut off the Netcast all of a sudden, and then
she's never heard from again—what are people going to
think?" It
seemed like a good time to pound on the door and shout at the top
of my lungs. The
captain appeared promptly. "Hey, Cap'n," I said. "If it were just
me I'd wait, but I've got half of Russia sitting in this chair
and they're getting a little bit restless. Could you talk to the
folks for me? Say hi to your mother or something." "We
will release you now, Maya Tatyanichna." "Oh,
come on," I wheedled. "I spent months setting up this story. You
can't just take it away from me." "Right
this way, please." "Oh,
all right. Spoilsport." He led
me out and down the hall. I felt lightheaded. I was doing it. I
was going to leave the Postcop station alive. "The
officers who arrested you have been arrested themselves," he
explained as we walked. "They had altered their Post chips in
order to commit these violations of privacy and engage in this
unwarranted arrest. I assure you that the Post police have no
grievance against you and that we are intensely sorry for what
has happened." For
another five minutes, anyway. The captain led me to the evidence
room and gave me back my clothes. "You
washed them for me," I noticed with amusement. "How nice. What do
you do with the clothes when you kill a prisoner? Store them
forever?" "We
present the clothes to local charities," the captain explained.
"Of course, that is only in those rare cases when the ultimate
penalty is called for. —I'm afraid we have no dressing
rooms for prisoners. You may use our officers' locker room. Here
we are." I
waited for him to leave, then grabbed the hem of the gown to
strip it off. A sudden fear stopped me. "You know, people of
Russia," I said loudly, "the captain probably thinks I'll pause
the Net-cast while I undress, so he can cut off my signal and no
one will know the difference. Little does he know that I have no
shame whatsoever." Then I
backed against the lockers, seized by another fear. "Also, if my
broadcast gets cut off suddenly in the next few seconds, you'll
have a pretty good idea that I was shot in the back. Won't
you?" I
stayed there a moment, my voice echoing through the locker room,
then looked around the corner carefully. No one was there.
Steady, Maya; the bluff doesn't have to hold much longer. I
dressed hastily and charged back into the front room, the gown
over my arm. "All
right," I said, "where the hell's my moistware?" "I am
afraid that those items have now become evidence in the trial of
the renegade officers," the captain said with rehearsed
sincerity. "Look,
I've got an interview to do in less than three hours. I need my
equipment." "I'm
sorry. The trial should take place in a few days. When it is over
you can return here to pick up your belongings." This
was his petty revenge, I realized. My only chance was to scare it
out of him. I straightened my spine a little to get the full
advantage of my height, looked down into his left pupil, and
said: "Would you care to give the Russian populace an explanation
for this bureaucratic obstructionism? Or would you rather just
get me my property?" "I
regret that—" "Captain,
you have a transmission coming in," said the Post-cop at the
front desk. "It's marked triple-urgent." "Triple
... ? If you will wait one moment." "Of
course," I said. He walked around behind the desk and took the
plug the receptionist proffered. As he turned away and inserted
it, the assignments on the monitor above the desk dissolved into
a single word, flashing: NOW, NOW, NOW. I'd had
the same idea myself. I ducked out the front door and took the
stairs down to the street three at a time. Then I stopped cold.
In front of me was a wall of wasps, all electronically parked, so
that there was barely a centimeter between them. I could go down
the sidewalk, but I'd be a sitting duck. I turned around and saw
the captain clattering down the stairs, with a whole parade of
Postcops behind him. Trapped, I backed up till I tripped on the
curb and stumbled against a wasp. In my panic, I barely noticed
that the car was not cold, like metal, but taut and warm and
muscled, like the shoulder of a horse. "Put
your hands in the air," the captain called out. I noticed he
didn't say please. I tried to comply, but my arms were stuck. As
the Postcops raised their guns, I realized that I had sunk into
the wasp up to my elbows, as if it were quicksand. "Put
your hands up! This is your last warning!" "I'm
trying!" I called out, but the car had already enveloped
me. Something cold touched the back of my head. A thick black
liquid wrapped itself around my eyes, and forced its way into my
mouth and nostrils. I wanted to gag, but my throat would not obey
the impulse. Then my mind folded in on itself, like a burning
spider, and for a long time I felt nothing more. Fifteen
Phaeton Stop
trying to breathe," said a voice in my ear. "You're only making
yourself panic." "Keishi—" "Don't
try to use your mouth, just think it. If you just forget about
your body, you'll be all right." "Where
are we? Why can't I see anything?" "We're
a couple hundred kilometers out of Arkhangelsk. You can't use
your eyes to see; just look." I did.
I was in the front seat of a car, with Keishi sitting next to me.
The road was rushing past at an improbable rate. I reached up and
felt the driver's helmet wrapped around my head, with braided
cables trailing from it. "Did we
escape? Am I alive?" "Nothing
gets by you, does it?" I tried
to laugh, but the helmet choked me. "Laugh
on the inside," she advised. "Keishi,
I could kiss you," I said. "No,
you couldn't," she said matter-of-factly, "because for one thing,
I'm still in Arkhangelsk, and for another thing, you've got a car
in your mouth." "Oh.
I... I thought maybe it was really you this time." "Soon," she
said. "Sooner
than my death?" "Don't
talk that way. Do you see anyone following us?" "No," I
said. We were far from the city by now, and the lights on the
dashboard informed me we were at 300 kph and climbing. "What kind
of car is this?" "Postcop
pursuit vehicle." "Oh,
gods," I said, and tried to bury my face in my hands—only
to remember that I couldn't move my head. "You just had to dig us
even deeper." "Maya,"
she said in exasperation, "it doesn't get any deeper than
you were. How much we piss off the Postcops is no longer an
issue. They're as pissed as their moistware will let them
get." "I
guess that's true. Won't they be able to trace this car,
though?" "Not a
chance. The license plate's a hologram, which I'm changing at
random intervals. The color cycles through the full spectrum, too
gradually to notice. And on top of that, I used the onboard
computer to give every car in Leningrad the same registration
number. Everything but the kitchen sink in these
babies." "How'd
you steal it? Don't they have alarms?" "I
signed it out to Officer Pudding. One of our pal Voskresenye's
back doors." "How
many back doors are there in the Postcop
computers?" "Uh,
before or after today? I think I've used up about half of
them." "Terrific,"
I said. The adrenaline high of finding myself free was beginning
to wear off. I tried to look out the side window, only to find
that there wasn't one. "Where are we going?" "Arkhangelsk,
of course. You've got an interview to do." "But I
don't even have a camera chip!" "Check
the glove box," she said smugly. "I
don't think I can...." "Oh,
right." A segment of the dashboard slid aside, revealing the
rosebox I had left under the bathroom sink. "How
did you get this here if you're still in Arkhangelsk?" "I,
um...” She looked at me, then turned away and said meekly,
"I sort of hired someone to break into your house." I
looked at her in anger, but immediately relented. "I guess it
doesn't matter now." "That's
the spirit." "Look,"
I said, "moistware or no moistware, I'm never going to get on the
air. The first thing the Postcops'll do when they figure out what
happened is to call Netcast and have my time slot
revoked." "Yeah,
they already did that." I
sighed in frustration. "Then why are we going to
Arkhangelsk?" "Wanna
hear my impression of a Net executive?" I
stared at the side of the road, having figured out how to pan the
vehicle's cameras. "I'm not going to get out of this, am I?
Sooner or later we'll run out of back doors and luck. At the
outside, maybe I'll manage to do the Netcast and die famous. But
probably not even that. Chances are I'll never even get to meet
you." "But
the Netcast changes everything," she said earnestly. "The world
will be following your every move. You're going to have a lot of
people watching over you." "You
mean I'll be surfed." She
nodded sadly. "I'm afraid so." I shook
my head a little, which made the helmet tug uncomfortably against
my sockets. "I'm not sure which is worse—dying, or having
every prepubescent in Russia trying to get behind my
eyes." "But
it's only for a little while. Before all this happened I was
going to build you a shield, but instead I'm going to take out
the defenses you already have. The Postcops won't come for you
when you've got a thousand people in your head. It's not in their
programming." "They'll
find a way," I said. "Eventually.
But by that time, I'll have you in Africa." I
laughed without humor. "You better get that screening chip
checked out. You're not getting good color fidelity." "It
doesn't matter how white you are, you can still get political
asylum. You know how His-Majesty-In-Chains feels about suppressor
chips. Your encyclopedia is as good as a passport." "But
I'd have to get across the border first." "That's
what I'm working on now," she said. "But I'll find a
way." "I wish
I could believe you." "We
will meet, Maya. I'm not letting you off that
easy." I
watched the road in silence. At last she said, "Maya, I'd rather
stay with you, but I'm still working on the Postcop computers,
and I need to make plans to get you into Africa, too. I just
don't have the bandwidth to spare. Can you drive for a
while?" "I
can't drive a car like this." "There's
nothing to learn. It's a direct neural interface. Here, take
it." "But—"
And then I was the car. It was as if I had been born with
wheels, as if evolution had crafted my nerves to fit axles and
gears instead of muscles and bones. I felt the wind against my
skin. The road beneath me was an ever-changing stream of tastes
and textures, to which my tires responded with a constant
rearrangement of their fingerprints. "Are
you all right?" she asked anxiously. "All
right doesn't begin to cover it," I answered from the dashboard
speaker. I adjusted my shape to reduce drag, and shot forth even
faster, trying to see if I could reach 400 kph. After a few
minutes, I could barely remember what it was like to have a human
body. Even the vague sensations from my internal organs had been
changed: my stomach was an engine. And I realized as I felt its
heat that the car was not electric, but internal combustion. It
burned. Other cars were barely even obstacles; there was
nothing on the road but me—looking just like any other car,
yet harboring this secret fire. "Uh-oh,"
Keishi broke in. "We've got a Postcop, dead ahead." "Just
one? What is he?" "Standard
wasp. Not a threat in itself, but if a Weaver
notices—" "I see
him now," I said. "I don't think it's going to be a problem." I
accelerated toward him, the indicator trembling just below the
400 mark. The wasp came into view, crawling toward me at a
pathetic pace, his whining little sirens on. I made myself the
color of the road and leapt at him, an invisible bullet. When I
reached him I breathed static into his ears and spat needles. His
tires were shredded and he spun out of control into my lane. I
was not afraid: I had seen the motion before it began. I slid
past, stretching out an arm to scoop the air against him. He was
blown onto the shoulder of the road. I swerved, braked, and
farted fire. As I accelerated again I saw the wasp engulfed in
brick-red flames. I didn't look at it for long. "You
did it," Keishi said. "I didn't get a peep of radio." "Too
bad," I said. "I switched our registrations as we passed him. If
he had called home, they'd have come and finished off the
job." She
chuckled appreciatively. "I always knew you had
potential." "Always?"
I said. "How long is always? Last week? It seems like
forever." "Yes,
it does," she said softly. "It seems like twenty years." She
broke contact. I accelerated back up to 350. Then I extruded
ailerons, making the car skip over the road like a stone on
water. I adjusted, and began to glide, as over ice. The indicator
shuddered past 350, and didn't stop: 360, 370. There was no use
fighting it. I had fallen into hope, as you might fall into the
ocean; and though I knew I would drown eventually, for the moment
it seemed as though the deep, deep sea would keep me
up. Almost...
yes: 400. My tires brushed the road only rarely, as if to assure
themselves it was still there. Is love like this? I
wondered, as I leapt into the air again. "Better," was the
whispered answer. Like this? I asked, as I rippled my skin
to fling the wind away from it. "Better," as my fingertips tasted
the road. Then I
had a thought that seized my brakes with fear and sent me
spinning across the road. I could barely control the skid enough
to bring us safely to a stop. "What
are you doing? We haven't got time!" "Keishi,"
I said, "if I go to Africa, what happens to you? They won't let
you immigrate." "I can
take care of myself. Drive!" "That's
not an answer." Silence. "And I'm not going anywhere until I get
one." "Well,"
she said at length, "it is Africa." "What
the hell is that supposed to mean?" "We
could get married." (The
Unknown King) (I
don't know what compulsion makes me go through the forms of
suspense, as if the ending of the story were in some doubt. You
already know that Africa is not where I wound up. The rumors say
I'm in contact with them, that I've talked to His Majesty. It
isn't true. Perhaps the Known Kings do protect me in some way,
but if so, they don't tell me about it. Once
people have gotten an idea like that in their heads, though, it's
no use trying to get it out. So people ask me questions about
Africa. And I make up answers, just as if I knew. Most of
the answers are simple. The question I'm asked most is who the
Unknown King is, what her title is, whether I've met
her—that's the information everybody wants. And I tell
them. I don't know, of course, but it's always seemed
obvious to me. Think about the three Known Kings:
His-Majesty-in-Chains, whose nerves are wound into his continent,
so that he feels the hunger and the pain of all his people.
Only-A-Man, who takes one person at a time and lives behind her
eyes, though only for an hour. And Its-Ethereal-Highness, the
calculator-king, whose justice is the justice of a balance beam,
whose sympathy is parceled out by floating-point arithmetic.
Male, hermaphrodite, and neuter; that means the Unknown King's a
woman. It stands to reason. And beyond that, can't you see what
the three represent? General sympathy, individual sympathy, law.
Those are the three possible ways of reaching out to people. At
least, I can't think of any others. And
once you know that, well, isn't it obvious what the Unknown King
must be? And why she's unknown? She's
the one who turns away.) Sixteen
Very Like a Whale Tearing
off the plastic babushka, I crashed down the stairs, fumbling to
slot in the African moist-disk and camera chip. I couldn't get
them in with just one hand, so I gave up and let go of the
railing to use both. Surely, after all that had happened, I would
not break my neck on a mere staircase; the Weaver bullet rushing
toward me would prevent all lesser dooms. "Time?"
I called out. My voice reverberated through the
stairwell. "You've
got about three minutes," Keishi said, her voice calm and
echoless. At the
bottom of the third flight of stairs was the door to an elevator.
Fortunately, the elevator car was already there waiting, but the
ride down took at least a decade of subjective time. When the
doors finally opened, I saw a corridor that went on for a hundred
meters and then turned a blind corner. On both sides of the hall
were moving sidewalks, like the ones they have in
trainports. "Stairs,
elevator, now this," I said, getting onto the conveyor. "If I
have to slide down a pole, the deal's off." As the
sidewalk carried me along, I noticed that the one on the other
side, for return trips, wasn't moving. So much for a quick get
away. Keishi was going to send my signal out along a winding
path, which she said would take hours to unravel; but if the
Post-cops did see through it, they would surely be here before I
could get out. "Forty-five
seconds." "Count
me down from ten," I said, breaking into a run, "and whatever
happens, make it look like I planned it." "Gotcha,"
Keishi said. "The miscues are dramatic pauses, and the bumps are
verite. So noted. Oh, and Maya?" "Yes?" "Neither
down nor a feather!" "To the
devil!" I roared back. I'd need all the luck I could
get. The
slidewalk took a left turn, then a right, and I passed several
doors, all of them boarded up. Was the whole place abandoned? No,
someone had kept the slidewalk in repair. Which did not, of
course, mean that anyone was there at the moment. Please, God,
don't let this be a Capone's Vault. I slotted the imagination
enhancer, just in case. "Ten,"
Keishi said, with no end in sight. "Nine, eight," and another
curve came into view. "Seven, six, five"—I turned the
corner. There was a door ahead: end of the line. I started a
lunge— "four"—then changed my mind and stopped,
letting the slidewalk carry me along. "Three, two," and I was
just stepping off, my momentum pitching me forward; I caught
myself; "one—and you're live." "This
is Maya of hearth News One," I said, briskly walking toward the
door. "I'm in what used to be the laboratory of the Guardian
collaborator, Aleksandr Derzhavin." I paused to let the memories
float up from the moistdisk: women with glass skulls revealing
their brain grafts; rings of animals linked by cables; a Kazakhi
infant with a second head, not human, hanging limply from his
shoulder. "I feel
your horror, but it's muted," I said, stopping in front of the
door. "After all, it was a long time ago. The Guardians are gone,
and Derzhavin is dead, and it's hard to get worked up about it.
But this place is not abandoned. Someone lives here—someone
for whom Derzhavin's experiments are much more than a distant
memory." I put my hand on the doorknob. "This is Maya Andreyeva,
coming to you from about a kilometer underneath—ah,
underneath the ground." No sense giving the Postcops free hints.
"And I'm about to show you something amazing." I hope.
I turned the doorknob—and had to suppress my relief when
the door opened easily. I walked through into a room that, but
for the lack of a sparking Jacob's-ladder, might have been the
set of some remake of Frankenstein. On my left, behind a
transparent curtain, were three dissecting tables, each large
enough to autopsy an elephant. One lay bare; one was piled with
Petri dishes, test tubes, and retorts; the third held the earthly
remains of several antique computers, lying in state among a maze
of cables. On my right were larger pieces of
equipment—centrifuge, terminal with headset, and a thing
the size of an oven that I guessed to be an electron microscope.
None looked new, or even functional. I took
all this in with a quick pan of my eyes, then focused on the
chessboard in the middle of the room. The pieces were still set
up, as though abandoned in mid-game. Calling on my imagination
chip, I placed Voskresenye and Derzhavin at the table. In the
foreground, I reenacted Voskresenye's awakening; in the
background, I let the memory of my interview filter in. When
Derzhavin got up and wheeled Voskresenye through the door, I
silently followed them into a hall—for them dimly lit, and
for me dark. Long rows of cages were set into both walls. I made
Voskresenye's image look to both sides as they passed, and
briefly showed the audience what he had seen there. Then I lit my
Net-nine, to show them what was in the cells now. All the
cages had been fitted with shelves; rows of books sat behind the
iron bars, huddling at the backs of their cells like frightened
prisoners. There were twenty cells in all, and over each, a
description of the contents was painted in neat block letters:
Theology, Ethics, Poetry, Biology. On impulse I tried a door,
only to find it locked—they were all locked. Nor was this a
measure against theft; the keys were hanging openly on a board at
the end of the hall. It was as if he wanted to prevent the books'
escape. "What
kind of a man keeps a library like this?" I asked aloud. I kept
my mind blank of answers. Let the audience invent its
own. There
was a door at the end of the hall. This had better be the one; I
had no time to spare. I let Derzhavin push Voskresenye's ghostly
image through the door and vanish. Then I slipped the nucleus of
the whale research into my memory, gently, so as not to give the
game away too soon. I turned the knob with melodramatic slowness.
The door obliged me with an eerie creak. When I
looked into the room, the audience inside me caught all its
breaths at once. Behind a sheet of glass the size of a soccer
field, the whale floated as though in sleep, barely moving her
serrated fins. Long, crooked scars marked her side, and half the
crescent of her fluke was torn away. A thick air-tube pierced her
blowhole, surrounded by a mass of sores where it had rubbed
against her skin. Her head was ringed by a crown of sockets,
their little copper thorns sealed off from the water by clear
plastic inserts. Fluorescent lights behind the tank surrounded
her with luminous blue halos, and, filtering through the glass,
tattooed my skin with moving waves. As I
approached the whale, she opened her eyes, like a man briefly
roused from an opium sleep. She didn't see me—or if she
did, I was beneath her notice. Perhaps what she looked at was not
in this world. And if
the whale looked through me, then, too, the audience looked
through her. The chips and tubes were transparent to their eyes,
and even her flesh symbolic and not real. Looking at her, they
were watching that vid with the whale in the iceberg. I tried to
win them over by brute force, staring at the sores around her
blowhole and trying to imagine what she must feel; I tried
horror, pity, melancholy; but I couldn't even mute their
giddiness. Finally I gave up, made my mind a blank, and waited
for the audience to grow calm. Calm
would not come. I'd caught what cameras call an updraft: just as
the viewers got over their first rush of interest, others smelled
the excitement and tuned in. The surprise of the newcomers
strengthened the scent, attracting still more people, in a spiral
that could make the feedback escalate out of control. Wave upon
wave of astonishment crashed through me. I tried to look down,
but the curiosity of millions forced my head back up. I stood
there staring at the whale like someone forced to look into the
sun, unable to turn away, though my mind cringed from the sight
and my eyes were burning. It was not just an updraft, but
riptide: feedback so strong that it flooded out my own emotions
and derailed my thoughts. The audience grew so large and so
greedy that it wouldn't even let me blink. I sank to one
knee—it was that or fall— and silently begged Keishi
to cut off the input. "News
One says wait it out," she said apologetically. "They think they
can still bring in more viewers." Greedy
sons of bitches. What are we up to? "Do the
words forty share mean anything to you?" I was
already brimful of the audience's amazement, so the news could
not surprise me, but I reminded myself to be impressed when my
reactions were my own again. Two out of every five viewers in
Russia— "No,
three out of five in Russia. I'm talking global. If this doesn't
taper off soon, you'll be reaching half the people in the
world." Well,
the eyes of half the world were worth a little riptide. I stared
at the whale until my tears dissolved it into halos, until my
eyes were nothing but a dull ache boring its way deeper and
deeper back into my head. Keishi?
I said,
weakly. Does News One have any ideas on how I might manage to
stand back up? She
didn't answer, but I heard someone come up behind me, and felt a
hand cover my eyes. The metal of his carapace was cold against my
cheekbone: Voskresenye. The audience, cut off from the source of
its excitement, grew quiet enough that I could blink and turn
away. Voskresenye took my elbow and guided me to a
chair. When my
eyes cleared, I saw that I was sitting with the whale behind me.
It was like having your back to a man with a gun: the urge to
look around was almost irresistible. But at least I could think.
As he sat down across from me, I mouthed a silent "thank you,"
which he answered with a slight nod of his head. Gingerly,
I touched the memories on the moistdisk. The audience let me, but
I wouldn't have wanted to try it a second time. Thinking with
half the world inside my head was like crossing a frozen lake in
smooth-soled shoes: the slightest misstep might send me spinning
out of control. Fortunate, then, that I was in this chair, across
from a man I could interview, with a moistdisk whispering in my
ear. I had done this at least once a week for longer than I could
remember. I could do it in my sleep—and even in this state.
The castle of my mind had been usurped, but the maids could still
cook just as well as before; and this was galley work. "Pavel
Voskresenye," I began carefully, "when we last talked I was,
shall we say, a little skeptical about the whale. Afterward, as I
recall, I said to my screener, 'You can't put a whale in a tank.
It's like claiming you slipcovered Leningrad.' " I paused to wait
out the giddy feeling of a million people snickering. "It looks
like Derzhavin slipcovered Leningrad. But even now that I've seen
it, it still seems impossible. Can you show me the flaw in my
reasoning?" "It
seems unthinkable to you," he said, "because you are Maya
Andreyeva, a News One camera, and not Aleksandr Derzhavin, a
Guardian scientist. That means, of course, that you do not have
access to Calin's treasuries or to unlimited amounts of slave
labor; those are things that accustom a person to thinking big.
But more important, it means that when you look at a whale, you
see a living being—a creature with senses, organs,
dimensions, passions. When Derzhavin looked at a whale, he saw
none of that. "All
the Guardians experienced some degree of spiritual atrophy, or
they could not have done what they did, but Derzhavin was an
especially advanced and chronic case. He was an urbane,
oftentimes a witty man; he honored the memory of his wife and he
was gentle with his children. He was even, in his own way,
scrupulously moral, though it was a purely arithmetical morality
in which no sympathy was needed or allowed. Yet he was one of the
most evil men that ever lived. It was not that he hated; he was
beyond hatred, hatred is human. He seemed to have been born
without the gene that enables us to see souls in the
world—spirit-blind, as some are colorblind. When Derzhavin
looked at a Kazakh or a whale, he saw a wetdisk, an organic
computer, sheathed in a husk of irrelevant flesh. The body was an
unfortunate complication, and the spirit just a dream of foolish
men." Hypnotized
by his voice, the audience had reached a state of calm attention.
The clamoring to look behind me had grown weaker, and a genuine
interest in his story was beginning to form. The camera in me had
noticed that he'd twisted my question around so he could make the
point he wanted to make anyway. No one with any sense would go
into a News One interview without knowing how to do that; he'd be
slaughtered. It's something you expect your subjects to do, as
you expect a chessplayer to castle. So you plan for it, and
counter it. But for the time being, anything that calmed the
audience was fine with me. If I needed to pin him down I could do
it later, after people had started to switch back to their
sitcoms. For now, keeping the conversation on anything but whales
was more important. Still, I couldn't help but worry that
somewhere in our exchanges I would take a poisoned
pawn. "I'm
afraid I cut you off in mid-story last time," I said. "When we
left off, you—well, you were doing what we just did: seeing
the whale for the first time. How was it different for
you?" "In
appearance she has not changed much. She is older, but that is
not apparent to the untrained eye. I saw the same thing all of
you just saw. Except that I knew, the moment I saw her, that she
was a part of myself. I knew it not just because of the cable
that connected us, but because as I looked into her eye, I
was that eye, I was that wall of altered
flesh." He
paused, looking down at the carapace that covered his hand. The
audience noticed it then for the first time, and it held their
attention an instant; then they grew restless. Just when I might
have lost viewers, he said: "It is
most difficult to explain, this being two selves at once, to you
who are only one. You might as well try to explain your single
self to a computer, who has none at all. For those of your
viewers who speak Sapir—" He emitted a series of clicks and
whistles, like a whale song played too fast. "Which I suppose, if
pummeled into Russian, would be 'O my amphibious—no, my
hermaphrodite—soul.' And that is hardly useful.
Perhaps a metaphor will help. "Imagine
that I were to hold up a half-silvered mirror between our
faces—a sheet of glass painted with clear and reflective
squares alternating like a chessboard, on a scale too small to
see. Then you would see my face combine with your own, not
statically, but fading in and out, and sometimes merging. The
left eye of your reflection might appear, then disappear, to be
replaced with mine, while all the time the right eye was a fusion
of the two. If you looked at the mirror long enough, you might
learn to control this process, to choose whose features you would
see in which place; but at first, the faces would recombine
randomly. That was how it was for my mind and the whale's. Later
I would discover how to switch between visual cortices, but at
the time, I could only watch my field of vision slowly crossfade
back and forth. "When I
saw through her eyes, I saw myself—rather flattened, and
more scarred than I had guessed, but recognizable. Standing
behind me, I saw Aleksandr Derzhavin. And I remembered. He had
killed my mother before my eyes, and when the nets lifted me from
the water, he had sponged her blood off of my skin with his own
hands. He had brought me to this place, where I could only swim a
few strokes at a time before I reached a wall and had to turn. He
had put things into my skin that changed my shape, so that when I
moved in the water, it resisted me, as though I were a stranger
to it. He had changed my mind so that my thoughts became faint
furtive things among a babble of human voices I could barely
understand. And he had tied me to this pale, soft creature even
lumpier than myself, this ill-designed monstrosity that would
struggle in the water like a wounded fish, and whose mind, too,
struggled against the world, as against an enemy. "And
why not kill him? It had not occurred to me before; and now I
realized for the first time that this was strange. Derzhavin had
done something to me, more than the obvious. I could see
it— a black spot occluding the light. He had altered me to
keep me from conspiring against him. But being who he was, he had
not considered what the whale might feel. I could not hate him
myself, in that crippled body slumped inertly in a chair. But in
the mind of the whale, I hated him so purely that my hands and
flippers trembled at the sight of him. And the whale, who could
hate, but who was held back from the object of her hate by a pane
of glass, could plan against him by borrowing my unasked-for
oracular gift. "And so
I looked down at my hands, and concentrated on them, as I had
concentrated on the chessboard earlier, until I saw the shining
pathways start to spiral out. And slowly, taking our
time—for we had all the time in the world—my
whale-self and my man-self began to choose those futures in which
we would kill him." "What
did you do?" "At
first there was nothing we could do. I needed the use of my legs,
and he puttered over that for months, until my man-self was
simmering with impatience. Yet we waited. We waited until I could
walk, and then we waited again for him to begin to trust me.
Derzhavin was a suspenders-and-belt man from way back: even
though he had made me, so he thought, incapable of disobedience,
he still turned on my carapace only when he needed me. Other
times I sat inert in this same chair, in this very room, like a
child's toy set aside. "For a
long time, all the paths I saw were parallel. No matter what I
did, the result would be the same. But in the distance—
months or years, I couldn't tell—there was a branching with
a death entangled in it, like a skeleton that a tree's root has
embraced. I watched this branching all the time that my man-self
sat here motionless, and during the interminable chess games, and
in physical therapy, as one pair or another of hands supported my
flopping form in the shallow water. It seemed to get no closer.
At times I would have sworn it was receding. And then one day, at
the chessboard, I looked down to calculate a move, and when I
looked back up, the moment was at hand. "Derzhavin
had always had trouble getting lab assistants. His project was so
high-security that few could get clearance, and of those who
could, hardly any were interested in mere assistantship. But many
of his experiments had to be watched all night, so he made do
with what help he could get. Finally one evening, when he had
finished his work for the day and was just sitting down for
another session of that idiotic game he was obsessed with, the
graduate student who had served as his night assistant for the
past two years came in early, with a worried expression on his
face. They went into Derzhavin's office. I stared at the board,
blind to the chessmen, seeing only paths of light. "When
they came out, Derzhavin was falsely jovial. He ushered the
relieved young man out, telling him not to worry, he'd make do,
he'd make do. 'You'd be a fool even to think twice about such an
opportunity,' he said in parting, firmly squeezing the student's
hand. "When
the elevator doors had closed, he sighed and sat down at the
table again, pressing the back of his wrist to his forehead.
'Well,' he said to himself, 'I guess I'll have to train one of
the guards from the camp. Or one of the chimps from the lab,
whichever turns out to be smarter.' And there was the branching.
I had to draw his attention to me, just at the proper instant,
but without betraying any eagerness. So, without thinking the
position through, I recklessly advanced my bishop. 'Check,' I
said quietly, keeping my eyes on the board. "He
looked up at me slowly. 'Voskresenye,' he said, 'do you think you
could watch things for me at night?' "I
looked at the floor, as if afraid to meet his eyes. 'I will do as
you like,' I said. We began that night; and two weeks later, I
was able to explore the lab alone." The
audience was quiet enough for me to risk a pointed question: "So
that's where you got the information that went into your book."
(Here Keishi replayed the memory of the old book snapping shut.)
"You didn't just see those things done, did you? Or hear about
them? You did them." I
expected him to turn away. But he looked straight into my eye and
said with fierce determination: "Yes. Many of those things I did
myself, at his command, yes." "When
you could have stopped them." He
nodded. "Some of them. I could at least have put them off. I
certainly had more chance to do real good in Derzhavin's lab than
I ever had when I worked with the Underground Railroad. Yet I did
nothing." "You
don't sound as though you feel very guilty about it." "Maya
Tatyanichna," he said, "I have been watching people die for
longer than you have been alive, and I have seen many things, but
I have not yet seen the dead come back to life because their
murderer felt guilty." "You
call it murder, then." "Of
course I call it murder," he said irritably. "I bled them, cut
them to bits, and injected them with poisons. If you have some
other name for that, I would be glad to hear it." He
dispensed tea from the samovar on the table beside him, and
sipped briskly. I felt a sudden desire to laugh, which puzzled
the audience mightily. I don't know why; it just seemed funny
that, when inviting a camera into the hidden lair where he had
kept a whale in secret lo these many years, he should lay in
supplies against cottonmouth. It was altogether too prosaic for
the melodrama I had fallen into. His hands on the cup were quite
steady, I noted, but then you'd expect them to be. "How
did you kill Derzhavin?" "The
method I chose was poison," he said, resting his teacup on the
cage around his hand. "My physical therapy was not yet complete,
so I lacked the coordination for a more direct approach. But
Derzhavin was cautious. He never let me handle dangerous
chemicals unless he was there to watch me. It was agonizing: all
those colors and kinds of death passing through my hands every
day, and I could use them to kill anyone except the one
person who deserved it. At night, when I had the whole place to
myself, I could find nothing lethal; it was all locked up. I
began to read Derzhavin's books, looking for a solution. At last
I hit upon it: insulin. A poison I could refine from the very
bodies of the people that Derzhavin tortured and killed. The
symbolism would be almost as satisfying as the death
itself. "I
wasn't sure how much I'd need—strangely enough, most
medical books are geared toward saving people, not killing them;
short-sighted, I call it. But I assumed that what I could harvest
from twenty bodies would suffice. The fact that this would give
me a death count three times that of Jack the Ripper was a
regrettable, but, I thought, a necessary byproduct of this
plan. "From
then on, whenever I saw that a prisoner was scheduled for
surgery, I would come to him in the night and sit with him. I
tried to persuade them to tell me their stories; not an easy
task, once they began to realize that my approach meant death.
But sometimes they were so afraid that they would talk to
me—to anyone. If they would not, I studied the lines of
their faces and the calluses on their hands, trying to deduce who
they had been. And what I could not deduce, I
invented. "At
dawn I left them. Hurriedly, in the last hours before Derzhavin
arrived, I wrote down their stories and carefully hid the papers
away. "Derzhavin's
experiments did not have a high survival rate. However, on those
rare occasions when a patient might have pulled through, I made
sure that he did not. Then, again at night, I would begin those
portions of the autopsy that I was permitted to perform
myself—always most scrupulously, checking off 'autoimmune
complications' for the man who rejected his head transplant, and
'natural causes' for the woman whose heart attack might
conceivably have been induced by waking up to find a cable
trailing from her skull. And when the last of the paperwork was
done, I would remove the patient's pancreas and go to work. I
think nothing else has given me such joy as taking those lumps of
flesh and refining them, with hands and glass and centrifuge,
into a liquid as clear as the water that Katya had poured into my
head. "Finally,
after months of work, the drug was ready, and so was I. All I
needed was a clear shot at a vein. But that day he came in
worried, and he paced and would not sit down. I asked him if he
wanted tea, but he ignored the offer. I suggested a game of
chess— anything, if he would just hold still—but he
refused. Finally he said, 'Sit down, Voskresenye. You may as well
know what's happening.' It was the autumn of 2246." "The
Awakening had already happened." "Yes."
Voskresenye looked into the distance. "Of course I didn't see it.
I was down here, cut off; and though some of the prisoners may
have known, I was the last person they would have discussed it
with. But from Derzhavin's description, I thought it must have
been a little like the Rapture, the way the evangelists used to
talk about it on Guardian radio. Four people would be riding in a
car, and suddenly the driver would hit the brakes, get out, and
walk away, deaf to all shouts. A man would wake from sleep to see
his wife going out the door, carrying, for reasons only the Army
knew, a hockey mask, a spaghetti strainer, and a cuckoo clock.
They all walked out into the streets and mustered into clumps,
and each clump lifted up a memory cell and began to
march. "By
noon on that first day, the Army had seized the entire world
socket industry, and was drilling people fast enough to add ten
thousand recruits every hour. Every boat and plane in America was
on its way to the Eastern Hemisphere, its holds tessellated with
soldiers. By the time the Guardians found out what was happening,
they faced an army of thirty million soldiers without fear—
not along a border where they might be held back, but in every
city. America and Japan, with nearly a third of their populations
already socketed, were under Army control within a month. It was
a threat like nothing the Guardians had ever faced, or even
imagined. The Russian Heptarch, and he alone, still had a usable
army and a populace largely intact—but half the world was
marching to his doorstep. "And
through all this, Derzhavin was unaffected. His confidence in the
Guardians approached the status of religious faith; he had
assumed that they would find some way to stop the Army's
progress. But now, he said, he could not put off telling me any
longer. The order to evacuate had come. The Army was about to
reach Arkhangelsk. "All
this he told me as he paced around the room like Rilke's panther.
And as excited as I was to find that the Guardian regime might be
over, the first thing on my mind was to make that man stand
still. So I began to brew some tea, to calm his nerves, I said;
surely he would at least sit down to drink it. As I was making it
I asked him whether I would be evacuated. He looked away. 'I'll
do what I can,' he said sadly. 'You, I could take easily. But I
don't know what to do about the whale, and
without—' "
'We'll work it out somehow,' I said. 'Just sit down and relax.
It's no use trying to make plans while you're this
tense.' "At
last he sat down at the chess table. He fidgeted with the pieces
for a while, then began to set them up. 'Once more—for old
time's sake?' he said. " 'Of
course, if that's what you want,' I answered, taking the strainer
from the teapot. " 'I
suppose we'll have to euthanize the subjects and start fresh,' he
said regretfully. 'We can't move them all. But we'll still have
the data. Voskresenye, we must keep the data secure.' " 'Of
course we will,' I said. 'Don't worry about that now.' I stood
behind him, set down a cup and saucer on the gaming table, and
picked up the teapot. 'Think about—' And I poured the whole
pot of scalding tea onto his lap. He jumped up, driving his neck
against the needle I was holding behind him. I pressed the
plunger, and he was as good as dead. "Since
I hadn't hit a vein, the poison would take some time for its
effect. So I ran into the next room and locked myself into an
empty cell. In case he had an extra key I didn't know about, I
took out a knife that I had earlier secreted under the mattress;
I could not use it effectively, but in his insulin stupor, it
might scare him off. I expected him to come after me, to rage at
me, perhaps to call a guard—in which case I would die with
him. But for a long time he did not come. And when he did, it was
only to lean his head against the bars of the cage, look at me in
bewilderment, and ask 'Why?' He had no idea why I had killed him.
He had murdered thousands, and he had never believed in his heart
that somebody might take it amiss." "Wait a
minute," I said. "When we talked before, you said you were 'a
good deal more' to Derzhavin than just a lab assistant. What did
you mean by that?" "I
suppose I could have phrased that better. You imagined—
what? Steamy sexual encounters? Male bonding rituals? Fishing
trips?" He laughed, then grew serious, stroking the wires of his
hands. "I was his murderer. What relationship could be more
intimate?" To the
audience, all this was another revenge drama—something off
a soap channel. To them, protected from the action as they were,
Voskresenye's behavior might have seemed perfectly rational. But
in the chambers of my mind that were my own, I began to wonder
just how dangerous a man I was a thousand meters underground
with. "Derzhavin
died as I was trying to find words to answer him," Voskresenye
said. "And so I never got to ask him the question that had
haunted me since I awoke: What was I for? I knew the
purpose of his research: he was looking for a way to heal the
brain-damaged, and to resurrect the brain-dead. But you do not
perform basic research with whales; it is not cost-efficient. I
was designed to do something; and I do not know what, to
this day." "What
do you suspect?" "I
suspect," he said, "that I was to be a military strategist. I
suspect I was designed to outwit the Army. I suspect that is what
the chess games, and certain other tests, were for." "Then
why weren't you ever put into service?" "Yes—that
is the question: why was I not used, why was I not even given a
trial run? Why did I never face the Army, even in a simulation?"
He looked down at his carapace, his mouth curling in scorn at its
crudeness. "The Army was already coming," he said. "Perhaps time
did not permit." But there was no conviction in his
voice. "Where
did you wait out the Army?" I asked. "Down here?" "No;
that proved impossible. The Guardians were trying to stop the
Army with a scorched-earth policy, depriving it of what it needed
to survive. Nothing was to be left intact that it could use;
especially not people. It is, in fact, a miracle they left the
whale alive—they must have thought that she would be of no
use to the Army. Or perhaps they knew no way of killing her
without breaking the glass of her tank, and so drowning
themselves. Certainly they would have destroyed her if they had
known, as I know now, that the last beluga whale in captivity was
carried by one column of the army for twenty miles, and then, the
flesh being eaten up, discarded. "In any
case, they did not harm the whale. But the day after I killed
Derzhavin, they came down and herded all us prisoners upstairs.
We were gathered next to an enormous pit and taken, in groups of
thirty, to the edge of it to be shot. I saw ten groups of
prisoners killed as I waited for my own turn, and not one of them
made any motion of defiance. I couldn't understand it. They knew
they were about to die; why didn't they run, make the fig at
them, anything? I tried to suggest to the man standing next to me
that we should all charge them together, that they could never
get us all. He only shrank from me, as I suppose anyone would
have. But I determined that when my own time came, I would not go
quietly. "The
next time they counted off, I was one of the thirty. I looked
down into the pit as we marched up to it: it was a long way to
fall, five or six metres. But I couldn't run, not now, nor could
I hope to reach the Guardians before they shot me. So I stood
there, crouching down a little, and watched their trigger
fingers. The instant before they fired, I jumped backward into
the pit. "My
first discovery was that human bodies make a much harder landing
surface than you'd expect. I was sure I had broken at least three
bones. But it was not bones I was worried about. When I tried to
move, I confirmed my worst fear: my exoskeleton was damaged. I
could move my arms, but my legs were useless. "Dragging
my legs behind me like a beached merman, I crawled down the slope
of bodies. I had only gotten a few metres when I heard gunshots
again. The falling bodies set off an avalanche, which carried me
the rest of the way down the slope. I was out of the
way—safe, until another avalanche, or until the Guardians
decided to set the pit on fire. But my arms were pinned. I
couldn't move." Voskresenye
looked over my head at the whale. The audience had shrunk a
little and was easier to resist, but not by much. I still had to
fight the impulse to turn around. "I
still forget sometimes," he said, "and call my two selves 'she'
and 'I,' as though we were separate. There are some things that
Russian is just not designed to express, and you, alas, do not
speak Sapir. I had better say man-self and whale-self; that is
cumbersome, but accurate. So: as my man-self lay trapped in the
pit, my whale-self was still in the tank here, trying to break
free." "From
the tank? How?" "It's
not closed, like a fish tank—how did you think he got her
down here, on the elevator? This whole complex is built under the
continental shelf. The tank goes up some hundreds of metres, and
ends with an adjustable vent set just above the ocean floor. If I
could just break through it, I would be free. But my air tube was
connected to the side of the tank, and quite short. In order to
reach the vent, I would have to pull it out, and I had no way of
putting it back in. If I tried to break through and failed, I
would drown. But when my man-self got pinned, I knew I had to
make the attempt. No Guardian was going to take the time to feed
me. It would be better to drown than starve. "I
slowly filled my lungs from the trickle of air in the tube, then
turned onto my back and pulled. When the tube wrenched itself
from my blowhole, I dove to the very bottom of the tank and swam
straight upward. But at the last moment I flinched, and took the
impact on my back instead of my head. The blow was diffused; the
grate was loosened, but not broken. We dove again. My whale-self
was calm, but my man-self was in terror that we would drown. Then
I began to wonder if the sense of suffocation I was feeling came
from my man-self. There might have been another avalanche; I
might be dying. At the last instant, before we hit the grate, I
switched back to my human body. "I was
not dying, or at least not any faster than I had been before, and
I did not hear gunshots. Perhaps they had stopped. When I went
back into the whale, we had made it through the vent and were
shooting up toward the air. "I had
no idea what the surface of the water should look like from
below, so I suspected nothing; but the whale knew, halfway up,
what we would find. It was already autumn. The ocean around
Arkhangelsk had begun to freeze. Above us, where the sky should
have been, there was only an expanse of shadow, which, as we
approached it, turned to white. "Panicking,
our lungs aching, we cast about for an opening in the ice. Time
and again, we would see a shaft of daylight in the distance, only
to find it filtering through a crevice too small to breathe
through. Finally, just when I was sure that our lungs would
explode, we came to a patch of thin ice and, smashing our head
against it, managed to break through. We gulped air into our
lungs, sank, then surfaced and breathed again. Nothing but ice
was around us; the water was bitterly cold; our chance of
surviving was almost nil— and none of it mattered. I wept
with joy, the tears falling onto the corpse my face was pressed
against. I was free. "From
Arkhangelsk by ocean, there's nowhere to go but north,"
Voskresenye continued. "It's a good nine hundred kilometers up
through the White Sea and around the tip of Norway before you can
turn around south. The ice would get worse for a long time before
it got better. Besides that, part of the whale's fluke had long
ago been lost to gangrene, and she was bleeding where the edges
of the vent had raked against her side, and after so many years
of captivity, she was not in shape for such a journey. All these
things occurred to me as I dove back down into the freezing water
to search for the next air hole. But what stopped me was
something quite different. The radio link that connected my two
selves was not strong enough to stretch beyond a few tens of
kilometers. If I sent the whale past that limit, she would be
separated from my man-self—and he would be reduced to
idiocy, unable to rejoin her. "For it
is so hard, you see, to be two selves, for all its advantages.
One can be attacked through the other, or you can be separated.
It is giving up a hostage to the world. Live single: that is my
advice to you. Or if you must be two selves, keep them in one
body." "I'll,
ah, I'll be sure to keep that in mind," I said. He
nodded. "See that you do." He
sipped his tea again before continuing his story. "For three days
my mind dwelled in the whale, as my body lay among the dead. And
on the third day, the Unanimous Army came to
Square-Mile-at-Arkhangelsk. I could see nothing from where I lay,
but I heard them coming for hours, with their ragged, shuffling
march. Finally I heard them climb into the pit, by the hundreds,
walking on the bodies. I was so cold and hungry that I considered
calling out to them, letting them absorb me, anything, if only
they would keep me warm. But I changed my mind when I began to
hear jingling and ripping sounds all around me. They were
stripping the dead. "The
Army worked its way across the pit to where I lay. One of the
soldiers—a girl of sixteen, wearing a peacoat over a thin
summer dress—lifted up the man that had been lying across
my arms. As she held him upright, another soldier, elderly, clad
in rags, turned out his pockets. And something hard—a coin,
a pocket knife—fell from his pocket and struck my
temple. "In the
movies, I'd have held stoically still, to fool the Army. Well,
you try it sometime. Of course I jumped; I would have jumped
more, if so much of me hadn't been paralyzed; and I very nearly
cried out, too. The Army took no notice. As you have found,
Andreyeva, against an unimaginative enemy any fool can be a
hero." I kept
my mind blank, relying on Keishi to screen out any furtive
thoughts of the Postcops. I should have known he'd
know. "When
the man had been thoroughly searched, the girl took a soda bottle
from her pocket, upended it into her palm, and daubed his face
with a red, stinking mixture: the done-paint. By the time they
were finished, the whole camp would be covered with this goo,
whose stench would tell everyone for miles around that the Army
need not come again. As the two soldiers walked away, I turned my
head a little to watch them go. They climbed out of the pit on
the backs of other soldiers, who had formed a human ladder up the
side. Many of those leaving the pit were carrying bodies—I
presumed for food. "The
next soldier that came by lifted me up from behind, just as the
other man had been lifted. I went limp, hoping they wouldn't know
I was alive. The man who came to strip me was a middle-aged
Japanese fellow in the remains of an expensive business suit. He
turned out my pockets, which of course held nothing, then reached
his hand into my shirt—and paused. He laid his hand against
my forehead, then pressed his cheek to mine. The warmth of my
body had given me away. He reached his hand toward my neck, and
for a second I was sure he was going to strangle me; but no, he
only wanted to feel my pulse. When that was done, he examined my
socket, turning his head to see it from several angles, with a
motion that reminded me of robot welders. He turned and made
several quick hand signals, then walked away toward the
back-bridge, leaving me suspended. "The
next soldier passed without looking, and the next after that,
until I began to hope they had forgotten me. But then one stopped
in front of me and stood there motionless, waiting. In the
distance, a black ring was thrown down into the pit and passed
from hand to hand. At last it came to the soldier before me. It
was a coiled cable. He was going to infect me with the
Army. "As he
unwound the cable, I flexed my fingers. That part of my carapace
still worked, yes, but there might yet be subtle damage, and
besides, the battery was almost dead. I couldn't hope to
overpower him. He inserted one end of the cable into his temporal
socket, and then, as if relishing my terror, gradually extended
the other end toward me. Just when he was about to slide the plug
home, I blocked it with one hand, and with the other put the plug
into my wrist socket. I reached my hand into his brain and tore
it away from the Army mind. "For a
moment he was Michael Arnason, aged thirty-four, from Sussex,
England, a solicitor's clerk, who had gone to sleep one night
beside his wife and woken in this pit of death alone—but
that was only for a moment. Then he shuddered, and the glimmer of
selfhood went out of his eyes. Moving jerkily, he reached into
his trenchcoat, took out a bottle of done-paint, and poured it
over my head. When the soldier behind me smelled it he let me
drop, but the thing that had been Arnason grasped me under the
arms, threw me over his shoulder, and carried me up the ladder of
backs. As soon as we were out of the pit, I turned him toward the
setting sun, and we began the long walk westward to our meeting
with the whale." Seventeen
Fallen Like Lightning "You
said—" I conferred with the Net briefly " '—None of
it mattered. I was free.' Yet you came back here." "What
else could we do? There aren't many places you can keep a
crippled whale." "Why
couldn't she stay in the ocean?" "Derzhavin's
modifications made her dependent on electronics for her life;
from that, nothing could free her. Without maintenance, she
wouldn't have lived out the year. One of her socket seals would
have been torn away, perhaps; it would take no more than that.
And then, too, Derzhavin had converted portions of her brain to
uses they were not intended for—a cloverleaf with an
unenhanced whale would have been of little use. Some of the
things he took from her would have been crucial to survival in
the wild. So we waited, I repairing my exoskeleton, and she
finding what food she could. And next summer, when the ice was
gone and the ocean warm, my selves began our separate journeys to
Arkhangelsk, home." Time?
I asked
Keishi. "All
the time in the world, girl. You think they're going to cut this
off? But Maya, News One wants another look at the
whale." Then
let them turn off the feedback. "I can
turn it down to one-quarter for you." Not
enough, I said.
Tell them to go to hell. "I
don't think that's such a good idea," she said. "When you started
pulling record ratings, Netcast became remarkably unhelpful to
the Post police. If you lose viewers...” I get
the picture, I
said. One-quarter it is. When I
felt my limbic system settle down, I said, "Let me apologize to
all of you for that delay. News One has told me that you would
all like another look at the whale. I'm going to do it, but
please, remain as calm as possible. Otherwise you'll have to wait
till we can get a robot camera in here to film it. Come on,
people, it's just a dolphin with gland problems—nothing to
get excited about." "Instead
of just looking at her," Voskresenye said with quiet amusement,
"would you like to talk to her?" "I
thought I was." "Not
exactly—any more than you're talking to Stepan Sornyak. I
am a fusion of the two, a compromise—'O my negotiated soul'
is in the Sapir, too. Thanks to his injuries, my man-self cannot
be separated from that union, but the whale can. I have only to
release the portions of her mind I occupy—to see myself in
the half-silvered mirror." "How
long will that take?" "An
instant. I will appear to have fainted; do not be alarmed. Once
the artificial neuromodulators have been stilled, it will take
some few seconds for her neurons to reorganize into their natural
circuits—such, that is, as Derzhavin did not destroy
completely." Then another thought seemed to strike him: "If you
like, you can turn over the Netcast to her for a while. She can
output telepresence. I'm sure your audience would be interested
to find out what it's like to be a whale." The
audience was far too interested, and Voskresenye was far too
casual. I didn't believe for a second that he'd just thought of
the idea. But you
don't spend thirty years as a camera and turn up your nose at
something like that. It's just not in the programming. "All
right," I said warily. "How do I wake you when we're
done?" "A good
hard shaking will generally do it," he said as he closed his
eyes. I
turned around, panning my eyes along the floor so as to sneak up
on the sight. My mind was trying to go in all directions at once,
like a chariot drawn by eight cats. But at least I could control
it. I raised my eyes to the whale. Instinctively,
my mind sought analogies. It's something I do as a
camera—it gives people something to quote over breakfast.
This time nothing would come. She was simply herself, beyond all
comparison, the metaphor for big. "I
don't know how to do this," I said. "Can you hear me?" She
swam closer and put her eye up to the side of the tank. "Are you
the one?" said a voice through the speaker, startling me with its
pure contralto. Female or not, I had expected a resonant
bass. "I
don't know what you mean." "The
one..." Her eye closed, then opened. "The one with the world in
her head?" "Oh.
You mean, because I'm a camera? Yes, I suppose I am." She
swam back and forth in the tank several times, her broken fluke
and flippers struggling. Then her moistware scraped the glass,
and her eye stopped right in front of my face. "What time is it?"
she asked, her voice betraying a hint of eagerness. The
question was so absurdly mundane that I was startled into
answering. Uh, Keishi? Time? No
answer. Mirabara! Still
nothing. She must be deep in trance, I thought, mixing the
Netcast and keeping the audience at bay. I
touched the Net myself and said, "Almost five thirty." "How
near is six o'clock?" "Half
an hour," I said. Would she know how long that was? "Not
long." The
whale drifted away without further comment. "Has it
come to that?" I said, trying to entice her back. "Do even whales
have schedules? Is there somewhere that you need to
be?" She
rolled onto her side, revealing pale ventral grooves like the
whorls of a thumbprint. "If you are the one," she said, as though
in sleep, "you are the why that I am here. Where you go...”
She broke off and was still for long moments, considering. Then
she approached the glass again. "In the sleeping is an
ocean." "I'm
sorry?" "In the
sleeping," she said, "I swim ... where the tangle webs, and where
the colors change...." "I'm
sorry, I don't—oh. Of course." I remembered the dark cloud
that Voskresenye had been tethered to in grayspace. "You mean in
the Net?" "Yes,
that," she said. "What happens to a whale that swims in a
tangle, if she is a very small whale?" "I
suppose she'd die." She
slapped the glass with her flipper—hard, it looked like,
though there was no sound. "If you are the one," she said, "then
where six o'clock is, I will—what you said." "Why?" She
closed her eyes and was silent a long time before answering. "I
fell in the man the way a whale falls in a dream," she said, "a
dream where the water will not hold me up, and I am moving my
fluke all the time, the way the sharks do that are not such small
sharks.... I am in this dream of being a man because I wish to be
a man, in order to ... to make die...." "Derzhavin,"
I supplied. "That.
Yes. It is a dream come out of hating. I will swim in this small
sea no farther." "But
when the man sleeps ... in the sleeping," I said, picking up her
catchphrase, "you aren't here. You swim in the network. You're
free then." "The
net... work is an admirable ocean." The great eye closed again.
"But it is not mine." She began to drift away. "Durachok,"
I said. "Ivan Durachok." "What
is that?" "Ivan
Durachok—he's the hero in a story I remember from when I
was a child. Why wasn't that on the moistdisk, Mirabara?" No
reply. "I don't remember very well. Let's see. "Ivan
Durachok is out riding his hunchbacked pony, and he comes to the
ocean. And he meets a whale who's crying out in pain. He looks
up, to see why she's crying, and he sees that some peasants have
set up a village on the whale's back. They've built their houses
right into her bones, and are ploughing her back to plant
crops. "Ivan
Durachok says to the whale, I will free you from this agony, if
only you will dive down into the ocean, and find the ring.
Because he's looking for a ring, you see. There's a king who
wants to marry—some woman, I don't know what she is, I
think she's some kind of foreign princess. And the princess says
to the king, I will marry you, but only if you find my ancestral
ring, which was lost far beneath the ocean. And the king sends
Ivan Durachok to go find it." "Du-ra-chok,"
the whale repeated. "Yes.
Ivan Durachok—Ivan the Idiot—that was his name, yes.
And the whale agrees to find the ring. So Durachok shouts out to
all the peasants, Get off! There's going to be a great storm, and
you'll all be drowned. And they believe him, they all get off.
Except, um, I think there's one who refuses to go, who stays
there, ploughing. But Ivan Durachok says to the whale, Go ahead,
dive, find the ring. And the man who would not leave is drowned
in the ocean." "Drowned,"
the whale said emphatically. "In the ocean." "Yes.
And the whale—stop that," I said to the audience, brushing
away tears. "I told you people to be calm. —The whale dives
down. She finds the ring and brings it up. And she says to Ivan
Durachok, The reason the city was built on my back, it was a
punishment from God, because once, once long ago, I swallowed up
a whole fleet of ships." "Small
ships," the whale said. "Well.
It's just a fairy tale. Yes, all right, if you want, the ships
were very small. They were only the size of a pomegranate seed,
and that was how she swallowed them. And the whale departs, she's
whole again, and Durachok goes back to the kingdom with the ring.
And he and the pony kill the king somehow—they convince him
that if he jumps into boiling water his youth will be restored,
and he does it and he dies. I never really understood that part.
And Ivan Durachok and the princess are married. And I guess
that's the end of it." She
floated motionless, making no reply. "I
didn't tell that very well, I know. I don't know why I even
tried. I don't suppose even a human would—" "Marriage
is a thing in ending stories," she said suddenly. "Yes,"
I said, taken aback. "I suppose so. In fairy tales,
sure." "Then,"
she boomed out with an air of finality, "an ocean is in dreaming,
and no city is only real." And she swam up out of sight, leaving
me to wonder whether we'd communicated anything at
all. Just
when I was about to turn away, she sank into view and said, "What
time is it?" "Six is
not far," I said. "Six isn't far at all." For
once my feelings and the audience's coincided. I pressed my face
against the glass, glad of its coolness. "I will be sorry not to
have known you," I said. She was
silent. I thought she would say nothing more. Then the voice from
the speaker returned, one last time. "Those who wake...”
she began tentatively. She paused so long that I was not sure
whether or not she was starting a new sentence. At last she said:
"... do not regret the dream." Keishi?
I
subvoked. Can you patch in the telepresence from the
whale? There
was no answer, but my Net-rune went dark. And
turn off the feedback for me, I
said. Please? Keishi? The
next thing I remember, I was sitting on the floor, my arms
wrapped around me, rocking back and forth and saying over and
over, "Will you turn it off now. Will you turn it
off." And no,
I haven't watched the disk. I haven't and I'm not going to, and I
really don't want to talk about it. I just hoped that the last
whale on earth might be something more important than a cheap
thrill for every wirehead in Russia. I know—I should have
known better. I'm not going to watch it, that's all. I felt
my Net-rune light again, but decided not to stand up until the
world in my head made me. And, strangely, the audience was quiet.
Perhaps after the whale they needed some rest, I thought. I
stayed sitting there, with my eyes closed, until I heard
Voskresenye say: "When
we first met, you asked me why we don't remember the Square
Miles. Would you like to hear the answer?" To my
surprise, the audience did not protest against this change of
subject. I stood up, as slowly as I could, and turned my eyes on
him. "You
were on the right track," he said, "when you compared the
Calinshchina to the Holocaust, and to the Terror-Famine. Your
error lay in asking what the difference was between these two
events. There are many differences, but none is essential. You
should have asked, not about the difference in events, but about
the difference in ourselves." "And
what's that?" I asked, still standing. "Why,
that the Holocaust and Terror-Famine both occurred long before
telepresence." "The
invention of telepresence is an event, isn't it? I thought this
was a difference in us." "What
is a medium like telepresence but the extension—no, the
definition—of ourselves? Are we, who live things at
a distance, the same species as our ancestors, who could hear of
events in the next town only by going there? If you met a person
from that time, would you have any more in common with him than
with a whale, or with a chimpanzee? You have traveled to meet me
with better than seven-league boots; and I have done more math
this morning than Pythagoras, and Euclid, and all Ancient Greece
and Rome. Surely, if we are human, they were animals; and we are
a race of gods, if they were men." "Yes,"
I said, and I sat down in the chair he had provided for me,
putting my back, once again, to the whale. "I've felt that, too.
That it changes what we are." "Indeed
it does, Maya Tatyanichna. It changes the central fact of the
human condition: that each of us lives behind one set of eyes,
and not another; that our own pain is an agony, and another's
pain only an abstraction we believe in by an act of faith. It
makes impossible all the sins of locality, all the errors
that arise from being prisoned in one body and no other—as
racism, sexism, classism, and of course and especially
nationalism." "The
Africans seem to manage," I said. "Come
now, Andreyeva, don't be so historically naive. The Africans are
not, and never were, one people. They are fifty nations and a
thousand tribes, and it is telepresence that has stitched them
into one. His-Majesty-In-Chains has built a wall around his
country, yes, but not to keep people out. It is to keep himself
in. The Wall of Souls at Suez is the sword in Tristan's bed:
His-Majesty wants desperately to reach across, for he so loves
the world that he would not part with a village of it. But he
knows he would destroy the thing he touched. He remembers Egypt,
and he knows." "And he
turns away white immigrants because they don't match the
divan." "He
does not tell us what his plans for us are," Voskresenye said.
"But I assure you that he does not turn us away out of
callousness. His-Majesty cannot not empathize, but often,
even so, he cannot help. Why do you think he names himself
His-Majesty-in-Chains? Fools and children think it
is because he is wired to the world's pain, but that is a lash,
not a shackle. The chains are what he locks around himself to
keep him from doing more to ease that pain—knowing it would
only be worse in the end if he did. But he is patient. The chains
give him no choice but to be patient. And he knows that, in the
fullness of time, superior technology will tell." "Right.
Okay. So His-Majesty is just, and people around the world are
united by telepresence. So—" "Ah,
but not all people. Some are united, and some separated.
We are pulled toward cameras, but away from people that we know
in our own lives. Can you watch telepresence with your friend,
your wife, your child? Not truly—you may be in the same
room, but you are not together. Each is locked in his own
dream, even if all are tuned to the same channel. Like movies
during the binaural fad: a theater full of people wearing
headphones, all hearing the same thing, but separately. And so
telepresence causes the triumph of the distant over the
near." "I seem
to recall another medium that two people couldn't use together.
You could look over someone's shoulder if you wanted, but no two
people used it at the same rate or called up the same images. If
I remember right, they were called newspapers." "Not
the same thing at all, Maya Tatyanichna. Reading is a restricted
and an artificial activity. It does not compete with reality
because it is nothing like reality. No one could be tempted to
think that what happens on the page is more real than daily
life." I
thought of the books in cages, and silently disagreed. "But
telepresence," he continued, "is life, except in one
respect: it adds a sixth sense, the telepathic, which exists
nowhere else. When the telepresence is switched off, you are
imprisoned again in your eyes and your ears; the intimacy of mind
touching mind is gone. "We are
like men forced to walk about in darkness," he continued, "except
in one chamber where our eyes are uncovered. If the color blue
were not found in that chamber, we would never know that it
existed; and if in the chamber all men were well-fed, we might
forget that there is hunger in the world. The chamber would
impress itself upon us so forcefully that nothing else seemed
real. And so it is. Telepresence is a chamber in which a new
sense, more important than sight, is uncovered. What happens
outside that chamber barely exists. And so you see, if what we
call reality is to persist, everything must be brought
into that chamber." "That's
what
you're leading up to? A praise of cabling?" I subvoked to Keishi:
I went through all this shit for a cabling commercial I could
have downloaded in Leningrad? "Cabling
is, and will always be, a marginal solution," he said. "The
common man will not expose himself that way, nor will he bother
with amateur emotions, when he has six thousand channels of
slickly post-produced ones at his beck and call. You know as well
as I do that the cable results in hate more often than
not." "And
that's not a sin of locality?" "It is
a sin of nonlocality; it is the agony of solitary animals at
being caged together." "What?" "The
mind, Andreyeva. It pulls away from other minds that are too
near. This is not the same as acting blindly because it knows no
other creature than itself; it is the opposite." "Look,
I don't think the audience is quite getting this," I said—
and hoped Keishi would screen out the lie; I had not felt
incomprehension, or anything else, from the audience in some
time. "Give us an example. Let's go back to where we started: the
Calinshchina. Isn't that distant enough to seem real? It's in the
chamber—it comes in through a socket." "But
there is no telepresence of it. Telepresence of people talking
about it, to be sure, but that is not the same. After all,
watching a camera interview someone is no better than talking to
her yourself; talk is talk, whatever door it comes in. Bringing a
radio into the chamber does not help you see what is
outside." "You
were in a Square Mile," I said. "If you think telepresence from
survivors is so important, why haven't you volunteered
yourself?" "If it
were only a question of volunteering, there would be thousands of
hours of disk; there were enough survivors to produce it. Instead
there are no disks at all. Is that not suggestive?" "Suggestive
of what?" "That
the Weavers will not permit it to be transmitted." My
spine stiffened. Oh God, Keishi, tell me you screened that
out, I subvoked. She didn't answer. I prayed it was only
because she needed her full concentration to edit the
Netcast. "That's
ridiculous," I said to Voskresenye, my voice betraying the fear I
felt. "The Weavers wouldn't do something like that, even if they
wanted to. And they wouldn't want to. They hate Guardians and
Guardianism—everybody knows that." "They
allow people to hate the Guardians a judicious amount. Just
enough that no one will try to emulate them. Not enough that
someone might begin to think the Army was justified." "We're
here to talk about the Guardians, not the Weavers. What you're
saying is completely off the subject." "But
they are all one subject," Voskresenye said. "I warned you what
would happen if you persisted in pulling up tangler webs, Maya
Tatyanichna. The Guardians brought about the Army, and the Army
caused the Weavers; you will never understand them until you
consider them together." "The
Weavers," I said desperately, "protect us from something like the
Army happening again. Do you want a Net full of mind
control viruses?" "Assuredly
not," he said. "But that is exactly what the Weavers have given
us." Mirabara,
cut this off, now! I
subvoked. No
answer. But there was a quick pulse of fear from the
audience—not in response to what he'd said; the timing
wasn't right. It happens sometimes with large audiences: random
fluctuations in the viewers' emotional states happen to coincide,
are amplified, flow back and forth from camera to audience in
waves. If the screener can't take care of it, you're supposed to
take your camera chip out before someone gets hurt. I lifted my
hand to my head. But
being on the Net was my lifeline. Keishi had said as much. And it
had only been one pulse, not the harmonic oscillations that could
rend a camera's mind. It might still be all right. My hand
wavered in the air, then fell. "Oh
yes," Voskresenye continued, oblivious, "it is very easy to
understand Weavers. What would you do, if you had just
lived through the Army? Wouldn't you tremble in fear that it
might return—it, or something far worse than it? For be
assured, Maya Tatyanichna, nothing so innocuous as the Army could
prevail today. The Army's use of human minds was about as
efficient as using a Dahlak to crack walnuts; with a billion
neurons at its disposal, it carved out as many as are in the
brain of a rather bright ant. A modern virus, better written and
more catholic in its tastes, might subvert the entire
soul—and from such a state, there can be no
salvation. "Thinking
such thoughts, would you not do anything it took to prevent the
spread of viruses? And how can you protect the Net, without
monitoring everything that goes on in it? So you create screeners
to monitor cameras. And filters to monitor screeners. And Weavers
to monitor filters. And locks and signatures and needle-eyes and
firewalls, to keep the whole system in place. Soon you have built
a celestial bureaucracy of humans and machines and cyborgs, like
orders of angels." "All of
which," I said, "is very necessary." "I did
not say that it was not. Many things are necessary, and yet evil,
or inevitably lead to evil. I understand the temptation of
Weavers; it is one beside which any apple pales. Imagine that the
Net, the very world-mind, is stretched out between your hands,
like a cat's cradle. You can see every twist and tangle, every
unaesthetic knot that leads to suffering. Will you stand there,
and watch, and do nothing? His-Majesty-in-Chains does; but then
His-Majesty is not a man, though he has a man in his heart, as
you might have a seed in your stomach, or as a church might have
a corpse in its foundation, or a bridge be built on bones. The
Weavers are human—all too human—and they will never
put themselves in chains. And so they do what you would do, what
any of us would do. They move their fingers—" he mimed
making a cat's cradle "—they move their fingers, and the
patterns change." "Everyone
knows that Weavers keep things off the Net that would make people
go into overload," I said. "Oh
yes, and perhaps for a brief time they did nothing more. But
observe how easy a descent it is, Maya Tatyanichna. First,
viruses that control minds; certainly we don't want those. Then,
feelings so intense they might cause damage to the audience.
Then, things which simply disturb people. Finally, anything which
might be a bad influence—for after all, if you control the
world-soul, anything that you exclude does not exist. And so the
sentinel of viruses comes to control the postproduction of the
human heart." He folded his hands into a spire, and slowly
brought them to his chest. "And that is where we come to your
case, Maya Tatyanichna: you, and the young woman with whom you
compromised yourself." "You
son of a bitch, you just killed me." I sprang out of my chair,
and for a moment I felt I might actually hit him. "My God, you
told the whole Net—" "And
what was the Net's reaction, Maya Tatyanichna?" I
stopped short, relief flooding my body. The Net had been silent.
Oh, Keishi, you just made the save of the century. When we get
out of this— "You
may as well turn off that damned flashcube, Maya Tatyanichna; no
one is watching. When you turned over your signal to the whale, I
took the liberty of not returning it. What is going out on News
One comes from me." Sorrow
seized my throat, and my tear glands fired so suddenly it made my
whole face ache. The world in my head had been plunged into
grief, like a hand plunged into boiling water. Then, just as
quickly, they were calm again. "What
are you doing to them?" "Oh,
nothing of consequence. Only giving them their souls back." He
looked at the chair significantly, but I remained standing. "Turn
the camera back on and go to disk, if you please. This needs to
be told, and I don't want to have to trust your
memory." Warily,
I sat down across from him and lit my rune. All right, Keishi,
let's give this bastard his last words. Go to
disk. Keishi
did not reply. "What
have you done with my screener?" I said. "She
has not been harmed ... by me. You will see her later, I expect.
Now go to disk; I have a statement." "Why
should I cooperate with you?" He
raised his eyebrows in exasperation. "For truth, justice, and the
future of humanity. And because it will prove you were just an
unwitting dupe, when you toss my carcass to the
Weavers." So it
would. I set the camera chip to record onto the moistdisk,
overwriting the research on whales. Whoever viewed the disk might
find Voskresenye's words surrounded by a cloud of strange
cetacean associations, but then, that was only appropriate. "All
right. Now I'd like an explanation for what you've
done." "As I
said before, your own example is most
illustrative—" I
switched off my Net-rune. "What the hell do you think you're
doing? One more word about me, and this disk goes in the
samovar." He
stared at me, as if gauging my resolve. "Very well," he said at
last, inclining his head. Warily,
I turned the rune back on. "As I
said before, the Weavers have progressed through all possible
stages of censorship, including many which would once have been
unthinkable—such as the suppressor chip, the censorer of
souls." His
eyes strayed to my forehead; I kept my mind carefully
blank. "Do you
have any idea how much different things are in Africa, where the
Net is free?" he continued. "They've changed so much, it's like
another world. But here, here in the Fusion, things are much the
same as they were fifty years ago. The Net should be the
most democratic form of communication that the world has ever
known. It should replace the poor bumblings of human
compassion with perfect electronic sympathy—instant,
universal understanding, available to everyone. It might have
brought about a true and lasting peace. But instead, it is being
used to enforce an official vision of humanity." Regretfully,
I passed up the aside on peace—too easy a target— and
homed in on the essential. "There are a lot of different people
on the Net," I said. "Who's missing?" "Animals,"
he said. "What?" "Animals.
Think about it. We have the means to span the greatest gap there
is, not just between one human and another, but between us and
other forms of life. We could reproduce, in the human mind, the
circuits that enable dolphins to use sonar, or pigeons to come
home. We could know what it is like to be a bat, a whale, a
sparrow—but only a few clever hackers do so, and only until
they are caught by the Weavers. That alone should raise grave
questions in your mind." "So," I
said dryly, "aside from our furred and feathered friends, who
exactly is it that's, ah, underrepresented?" "Drunks,"
he said, as if at random. "Addicts, wireheads. The desperate and
the dissipate. Or for that matter, Christians, Muslims—we
can't have people going about believing in Hell; it causes ever
so much anguish. And just try to find a homosexual. You'll
search in vain for years." Still
keeping my mind blank, I let my eyes stray to the
samovar. "I must
confess," he said, ignoring me, "it is a most delicious irony.
Christians and homoamorists, those age-old enemies, living in
peace at last—not because they have at last resolved their
ancient quarrel, but because they no longer remember the grounds
of it: lost souls, united in the brotherhood of amnesia. The lion
shall lie down with the lamb, because we've told them they're
both rabbits." I
thought back to the last thing that did not apply to me, and
answered that. "You gave me a list of people that are never seen
on the Net. What if I tell you that I've seen all of them? News
One cameras have interviewed wireheads, for example. More than
once. I think you've been watching the wrong
channels." "Oh
yes," he said bitterly, "the exhibition interview. Here they are,
the ones you never see—talk to them, look at them, pinch
them!" "I
don't see the problem." He
exploded: "Don't you see, it does not matter if we look at them!
We must look in them! The Fusion will never be free until
the cameras become dissidents or the dissidents become cameras.
It is not enough to send out cameras to see and hear them; sight
and sound are dying media—dying, if not dead already. We
must feel them. We must know their thoughts. Who is
missing, you ask me? All of us are missing. Everyone but a
few thousand cameras—" "Tens
of thousands." "What
difference does it make? They're all the same. It's the same
viewpoint you see, every time, whether it's a soap-channel camera
whose brain-makeup paints her as the banal parody of a ravished
bride, or a News One camera interviewing a crazy old man with a
whale in his basement. They are all clones of each
other." "I am
not a clone," I said. "No,"
he said, suddenly thoughtful. "You're not. You're the stepsister
who cut off her heel to fit the glass slipper—or rather,
her brainstem to fit the glass skull. But the blood told, Maya
Tatyanichna. The blood told, as blood will." "Erase
that," I said aloud. Horus appeared behind Voskresenye's head,
nodded briefly, was gone. "Oh,
all right then," Voskresenye said, highly amused. "I will give
you the generic version that you seem to crave. It is very
simple. Anything in a Netcaster that doesn't conform to the
official vision of humanity is screened out. If it can't be
screened out, it is filtered out. And if it is too big to screen
or filter, they put a cable in your head and tear it out of
you." "And
what do you think you can do about it?" "In the
Netcast that your unfortunate audience is presently viewing, I
have recorded all the ways in which the Army's vision of humanity
is enforced. And I have gathered in everything that is dangerous
and messy and petty and horrible and human, to give it back. I
have tracked down every form of vice and dissidence—all
save one. And that too I think I will manage before
long." Unnerved
by his expression, I said, "What good do you think you can
possibly do? People will just turn it off." "Oh,
Andreyeva, I had thought better of you," he said scornfully.
"What I have shown the world is terrible and painful, parts of
it; but it is something new—or rather, something so
old and so long-forgotten that it will seem new. There are those
who will listen." "Not if
Netcast shuts it off, they won't," I said. "In fact, they must
already have shut it off. I'm hardly getting any
feedback." "I am
certain that our audience is dwindling by the second," he said
coolly. "It matters not at all. The whale will ensure that it
gets out." I
leaned forward. "You mean that the whale can
control—" "No,
no. I don't mean the whale herself will do it; I mean the idea of
the whale, the hysteria about the whale. This is the Net-cast of
the year—you know that. Every advertiser wants his viruses
in it, and every distributor wants the fees for carrying the
viruses; they are fighting News One even now. They will fail in
most places, but somewhere, in some obscure corner, they will
succeed. And if it is seen by one person, it will be seen by
everyone. Anything connected with the whale will be distributed.
The demand will find it—even if it has to be ripped out of
your head, Maya Tatyanichna." I felt
a wave of fear that wasn't feedback. "What good will it do?" I
asked, more plaintively than I had meant to. "So people feel what
it's like to be—a Christian, whatever—once. They'll
only forget. A year from now, it will all be as though it never
happened." "But I
have also shown them how homogeneity is enforced; and that is
something they will not forget so quickly." "They
already know that," I hissed. "Do you think there's a person in
Russia who doesn't fear the Weavers?" "Resentment
gains by being given a focus," he said. I started to interrupt,
but he cut me off, saying: "I did not claim that I would beat the
Weavers overnight, Maya Tatyanichna. I have struck the blow that
I can strike; others will carry it forward, or they will not. But
now we come to the other reason for my action, which is much more
pressing." He fell
silent. "I'm listening," I said. "I told
you of my adventure with the encryption virus," he said slowly.
"About how, under cover of a failed attempt to take control of
certain programs, my cohorts and I changed those
programs—doing it subtly at first, and expanding slowly, so
that the change was imperceptible. From this there was a logical
conclusion: could you not do the same thing with minds?"
He shook his head sadly. "It took me far too long to realize
that. I have reason to believe that the Weavers had thought of it
some time before." "You
think they somehow altered our minds?" "They
are doing so even now. They are trying to hack the
archetypes—to change what makes us human. You might say
they're trying to revoke original sin." "How do
you know?" "I have
found the vector." "Some
kind of worm program?" "Not a
single program; an entire ecosystem. The change they wish to make
has been divided into a thousand independent parts— many
thousands, perhaps; I do not know how many are still unfound, or
perhaps still unreleased into the world. Each of these
infinitesimal parts is carried by not one, but three
viruses." "For
redundancy?" "Quite
the reverse. Suppose that I gave you three slides, one with a
picture of a boat, one with a landscape, one with a distant bird
beneath a cloud. Alone, each seems to have its own crude purpose;
but project the three together, and the boat becomes a mouth, the
sail a nose, the bird an eye, the clouds a lock of hair. If you
transmit the slides by different routes, this is an excellent way
to send a secret message. And that is what the Weavers have done.
Each virus packs a small payload—a few dozen neurodes or
lines of code, with some irritating but harmless function,
destined for a particular address in moist or dry memory. The
next triplet loads itself into the same place, interlacing with
the first. And when the third arrives, it overwrites the last of
the camouflage code, and the resulting program carries out its
true purpose. Imperceptibly, a tiny sliver of the soul is
changed. The code then disappears, having served its purpose.
Since it is active for such a brief period, it is almost
undetectable." "Then
how did you find it?" "I had
ever been a starer at stars and a seeker of patterns. I created a
chart of the regions in moist memory that viruses attacked; when
I noted how often those regions were the same, or fit into each
other like puzzle pieces, I was on my way to the
answer." "You
can't have been the first person to do that." "Probably
I was not. History does not record the fates of the others, but
you may imagine." "Why
would the Weavers go to so much trouble?" I asked. "Even if they
were as bad as you say they are, they're Weavers. They
could just keep the whole plan intact, and call it the next
release of Mind-OS." My spirits lifted, incautiously; the
certainty of execution yielded to the dream of commendation. "And
if it's as subtle as all that, maybe they just haven't found it.
Have you tried sending in an anonymous tip?
Maybe—" "Maya
Tatyanichna," he said, "who else but Weavers could create such a
subtle and elegant plan? An overnight change in the soul would be
detected; those without the new OS would note the difference in
those who had it. The Weavers wished to make their change over
the course of decades, to escape detection—for after all,
they are Weavers, and can take the long view. "And if
that is not enough, I have a further proof: the Weaver
virus-cleaning software. Let loose on an incomplete triplet, it
detects it, then disables it—by erasing the useless
camouflage code. The remaining portion is not detectable by virus
scan, but it is just as functional as before." "How
far has it gone?" I said, beginning to be convinced despite
myself. "How much have they changed?" "These
are early days yet. The average person carries ten or fifteen
uncompleted triplets, and has completed, at most, one or two. Not
much change; but when necessary, the Weavers see to it that it is
the right sort of change. They rarely send transgressors to the
Postcops anymore; the days of hauling in a galuboy for a
suppressor chip are over." He
paused and looked at me significantly. Yes, I realized; by
ceasing to defend the Weavers, I had given up all reason to
object. "Nowadays,"
he continued with an air of triumph, "you simply notice the
gradual extinction of the desire, and never know why. Or more
likely, you never know what desire it is that you are missing in
the first place. That is why the galuboy is so elusive.
Likewise the Christian: you lose your faith: it's an old
story—who would remark on it, especially now?" "And
what does your Netcast do to help this?" "Take
out the disk," he said. I
reached up, slid it out of my head, and held it cradled in my
hand. "Woven
into the Netcast, in such a way that it cannot be filtered out
without destroying the whole, is a countervirus that binds to the
triplets more strongly than their true partners, resulting in a
harmless variant." "Won't
the Weavers just scrub it?" "When
they can," he said. "But it will not be easy. The telepresence
from the whale must have infected nearly half the world already.
From such a base, the countervirus will spread more quickly than
even the Weavers can burn it out. Furthermore, the countervirus
has been years in the designing; it has a better instinct for
self-preservation than most human beings. Still, the Weavers
would win out, eventually—if people did not care whether or
not they were infected." "Why
would they care? You think that sending out some horror
show will make everyone your ally?" "No,"
he said. "No, the countervirus will do that itself. Watch the
rumors for the next few weeks very carefully, Maya Tatyanichna.
The first thing you will hear is that the countervirus exists.
The second thing you will hear is that being infected with it
feels very good." "Good
God. You're trying to make us a nation of wireheads." "Not at
all," he said. "That is only what you will hear. It will be
called a drug, and a highly coveted one. But it leaves the
brain's chemistry quite unaffected; in fact it does not feel good
at all. It merely creates the compulsion to tell people
that it feels good. The Weavers would have Adam cough up the
apple; it is only fair that I be allowed to whisper in his ear
that the apple is sweet." "Mind
control," I said. "Yes,"
he said, nodding. "Nor is that all of it. In those who know
enough to be of use, the virus creates a desire to defend
it—to alter it in response to changes in the Weavers'
strategy. You might say it makes them its soldiers." "Do you
have any idea what you're saying? It's another Army." "Put
the disk in," he said, "and ask me that again. But don't let it
record what I have told you of the countervirus." I
fumbled the moistdisk back into my head, and repeated: "Isn't
what you're doing like the Army?" "It is
at the second remove from the Army," he said. "In order to
destroy the Army, the Weavers became like it; in order to destroy
the Weavers, I have become like them, which makes me the Army's
grandchild. Have you not realized, from the story that I told
you? To kill Derzhavin, I became like Derzhavin; to escape the
Army, I took a soldier of my own. They say that you always become
the thing you hate, but that is not quite true. An
impotent hate need not become its object. But, like the
Stone Age savage going to the hunt, you must transform yourself
into the image of the thing you would destroy." "That's
a hell of an excuse," I said. "I
excuse nothing; I admit my guilt most freely." The blue light
from the whale's tank rippled gently across his face. "Remember
when I told you that all of my former associates had been
discovered by the Post police? It is not thanks to luck, or
skill, or better hardware, that I only am escaped alone to tell
thee. I survived because I betrayed them. I wired them for
telepresence, under the guise of routine repairs, and then
created trails that led the Weavers or the Post police right to
them. I have sent good people into excommunication; I have seen
them fitted with suppressor chips and mindlocks; I have caused
their deaths. I have even wired animals and sent them into every
form of slaughter—all in order to recover a few instants of
memory from the black boxes I fitted them with. I think I hold my
principles more dear than most, Maya Tatyanichna, and yet there
is not one of them that I have not betrayed. Because sterility
must not prevail." "So you
sacrificed the people to the principle," I said. "It sounds like
a Guardian's rationalization. Change a couple of words, and it
might have come right out of Calin's diaries." "So you
do begin to understand." He nodded slowly and leaned back in his
chair. "A Guardian's rationalization is exactly what it is. Isn't
that what was wrong with my good friend Derzhavin? His were not
useless experiments. I suppose they may have saved lives. And
everyone who has a socket owes it to him, or to others like him;
the socket was invented by years of experimentation on people
like me—and on animals, also like me," he said, smiling
without humor. "That is what it means to be a Guardian: to
think that individual rights are a dangerous folly, and
compassion merely sentiment. The greater good is
everything—and a greater good not to be measured
empirically, but defined ideologically. "Isn't
that what I have done? I have sacrificed others to my own
conception of what the world should be—a conception that,
if it does anything at all, will bring nothing but unhappiness to
most of Russia for decades to come. And why? Because I would not
permit a Utopia built on the backs of the one percent, of the few
remaining dissidents, even those who no longer know what they
are—of the galuboy, or the gallow-girl either. And
now you begin to suspect, Maya Tatyanichna, why you are
here." I
suspected a number of things, and I didn't like any of them.
Carefully keeping my eyes from the door, I began to gauge my
chances of escape. The elevator was the only way up that I knew
of, so if Voskresenye cut off the power, I'd be trapped. He'd
have plenty of time to cut it, too, while I was running down the
broken slidewalk. I might have to try to knock him out
first—and I had no idea how strong his exoskeleton might
be. Or did he control the elevator directly? If he were
unconscious, would it fail to operate? Unless I found out, I
could do nothing. Or so I
decided, because in my heart I didn't believe I needed to do
anything. I did not think Voskresenye, whale or no, could really
have defeated Keishi. I believed in her. I thought that she would
soon be there to rescue me, and that all I had to do was
encourage the old man's ramblings. I need only play for
time. "You
disappoint me, Andreyeva," Voskresenye said, when I had been
silent a while. "Have you lost all your reporter's instincts?
Aren't you going to catch me in my own
contradictions?" "Why
don't you tell me what you think they are?" "I
should think it would be obvious. I have done what I have done in
order to end the sacrifice of the few to a principle; and in
support of this principle, I have sacrificed the few. Again, like
those who made the Unanimous Army. Why was the Army created? To
defeat the Guardians. And why defeat them? Because they built
their empire on conquest and exploitation. Then how shall we
defeat them? Why, by building a machine that could conquer and
exploit, not just the odd ethnic minority here and there, but
every human it encountered. It is a kind of homeopathy, you see,
but not in homeopathic doses." "What
exactly is the—" "Or if
that explanation is too cunning to be understood," he went on,
seeming barely aware of my presence, "I commend to you my
illustrious predecessor, Judas Iscariot. Don't people still know
that story, even now? Judas betrays Christ, his friend and Lord,
and we are supposed to believe it is all for a few silver coins,
which, as it happens, he covets so much as to immediately throw
them away. Now I ask you as a camera, is that a plausible
motivation? If a man like Judas said to you, 'I did it for the
money,' would you believe him?" "I
suppose—" "No! Of
course you wouldn't. There is only one reason why Judas committed
his crime. He did it because it fulfilled the prophecy. It made
Christ a martyr. He did it because if he had not, Jesus of
Nazareth would have wound up as a starving beggar in the streets
of Rome, leprous and louse-ridden, making himself portwine out of
the ditch-water. He violated the shining law that Jesus had set
forth, because only in that way could he make sure that law was
not forgotten. "And so
you see that in order for good to exist, you must apply a little
evil here and there. The Christians knew that, when there were
Christians. At one time they knew even more: the fortunate fall,
they called it. 'O felix culpa'—happy fault! For when Adam
and Eve gave their lives for that one bite of worm-eaten
fruitflesh, they won heaven for their children. They say Eden
means 'garden'; my translation would be 'wildlife park.' If not
for that snake happening by, we'd still be stuck there, with
angels going around us in a monorail exclaiming over the
wonderfully natural habitats. If I were a snake, I tell you, I
would give the same advice. "But
they forgot—the Christians; the fortunate fall was
forgotten. And well it should be. Those are the best times, when
good can forget it needs evil to prop it up." During
this speech I had thoroughly surveyed the door. If I could get
him sunk that deep in his own words a second time, I might be
able to get up and be nearly out of the room before he noticed.
And then it would be a question of how fast his carapace allowed
him to run. Not fast, I thought; it looked too heavy. With the
elevator I would take my chances—there must be some
provision for emergencies. So I
must make him talk. And I already knew he could be
goaded. "Do you
consider yourself a Christian?" "After
a fashion," he said reflectively. "But
that was the Guardians' religion." Voskresenye
fixed me with a look of pity. "Yes, well, they didn't
invent it, you know. My own researches lead me to believe
that by the time Calin came to power, Christ may already have
been dead. No, really. Possibly for as much as a few weeks. And
even if I did at one time blame the faith for the actions of the
faithful, surely all these years of atheist tyranny would have
disabused me of the notion. No, Andreyeva, you cannot judge
beliefs by keeping score." "And so
you believe you are Judas Iscariot—what?
Reincarnated?" He
pressed his fingertips to the corners of his eyes. "My dear, it's
a metaphor, not a delusion. I spoke of Judas because I supposed
that if you knew about any religion, it was Christianity. If you
were Muslim, I would remind you that Satan was damned not for
loving God too little, but for loving Him too much—so much
that he refused to bow to Man, that lesser creature. If you were
Jain I would have told you of Kamatha, Mahavira's evil
counterpart, who pursues the hero through incarnation after
incarnation, killing him not once but many times—and yet it
is by suffering this evil that Mahavira finally escapes the doom
of flesh. It is a simple principle, and one that has been
discovered a thousand times through history: the darkness
serves the light. And from time to time, people have realized
the consequence: that sometimes, in order to bring about good,
you must yourself become evil." "But
how can it be evil? You think you're saving the world. What are a
couple of hackers compared to that?" "Not
the world, child. I'm only saving human hearts; what does that
have to do with the world? The planet doesn't give a damn about
our pain or pleasure. It will go on whether we are happy or not,
and whether we are here or not. Indeed, it would be better off
without us. No, I'm not saving the world; just those two-legged
bugs that infest it." "You
make it sound like no one ever wrote a poem or composed a
symphony—" "Oh
yes, symphonies, Exhibit A in everyone's defense of us. Have you
ever written one, Andreyeva? Has anyone you know? Has anyone at
all, the last hundred years? For that matter, when was the last
time you listened to one?" "As a
matter of fact—" "We are
a machine made by God to write poetry to glorify his creatures.
But we're a bad machine, built on an off day. While we were
grinding out a few pathetic verses, we killed the creatures we
were writing about; for every person writing poems, there were a
hundred, a thousand, out blowing away God's creation left, right,
and center. Well, Maya Tatyanichna? You know what we have
wrought. What is your judgment? Which is better? A tiger, or a
poem about a tiger?" "I
think they both have their merits—" "Sophist,"
he snapped. "To equate a piece of paper with a thing of flesh and
blood! No, there is no comparison. And even if there were, it
wouldn't matter. No one writes poems anymore, no one reads them.
We just send people crawling all over the landscape with cameras
in their heads, to record the world as it is. But God already
knows what the world is, and He also knows it would have been
better if he'd stuck with trilobites." "Then
you do believe in God." "Yes.
Despite all evidence, I do; may He help me, I do. I am not
persuaded of His sanity at His advanced age, because if He were
sane we would not be here. But He exists." "And
you believe in Heaven? You believe that when you die you'll go
there?" "Do you
suppose that Judas walks about in Heaven? Do you suppose Satan is
any the less damned because he loved God? No, no, it is his love
that damns him; loving God while being estranged from him is what
Hell is. Even Kamatha gets his, although, since this is
India, where eternity is so vast that not even human hate can
fill it up, he will eventually escape from Hell into another
incarnation." His eyes grew distant. "I find that messy,
truthfully. For a stain so great, the punishment should surely be
eternal. No, the crime is not the less just because it is for a
good end. On the contrary, Judas' crime is all the worse, because
he has no hope of pleading that he knew not what he did. He knew
just what he was doing, and he knew its price—as I
do." "Then
you see yourself as no better than a Guardian?" "We are
separated only by this: the Guardians expected that their evil
would go on forever. The Army hackers thought they could commit
their crime and then erase it from the minds of men forever. But
that does not work. There is only one way to contain an evil you
have once begun, and that is to provide a scapegoat. You may find
someone else to fill the role—that is the coward's way. But
the wise man, when forced into evil, makes a scapegoat of
himself. That is what Judas does. He knows what must be done; he
does it; and then he makes sure that the people he has benefited
will revile him, because only that can prevent his crime from
being repeated. He takes the damnation that he has deserved, even
though he has done more for the faith than Christ himself. He
does not just accept damnation, he rushes to it; the touch
of the rope is a lover's embrace—" "Then
you believe in literal damnation? In flames and devils and all
that?" He
opened his mouth to speak, then stopped and looked down at his
hands. "I don't know," he whispered. "I used to think ... No," he
said in a firmer voice. "I don't. For the whale and I are now one
soul—that is the central fact of my existence. How can you
splice two incorporeal souls together? And if anyone could do
such a thing, would it be Derzhavin? No, the soul is the
brain—I am the proof of that. And if the soul is flesh, it
rots like flesh. I still hope, but I do not believe. So, since
death is the end it appears to be, I have taken measures of my
own." He raised his head and looked me in the eye. "But perhaps
by now you have begun to guess the first betrayal, from which the
others all derive." It was
the last thing on my mind. "Why don't you tell me," I
said. "Why,
Maya Tatyanichna, when you spoke to the whale, didn't she ask you
the time, as she asks everything in grayspace that will talk to
her? And didn't it strike you as an odd question, coming from a
whale? Unless hours were schools of fish, and minutes
krill—" "She
told me why," I said. "Well
then." "Your
betrayal is in letting her die?" "No.
Just the reverse." "But—" "When
we were escaping the camp, and I wouldn't let her go out of radio
range, it was not for my sake, you know. Piled up there, a
corpse among corpses, I hardly expected to outlive the day. If I
could have sent her away I would surely have done so, at the cost
of my own life. But every time our contact weakened, she would
sink in the water and try to empty her lungs. She knew it was no
ocean for a whale, not anymore, and that there were no others of
her kind for her to seek out. She wanted to die—even then,
while we were still ecstatic with our newfound freedom. How much
more she wants it now that she is back in this cage, you may
readily imagine. No, this Judas' betrayal is not in allowing her
to die. It is in having made her live." I
looked back at the tank. "She's your idea of Christ?" "Why,
Maya Tatyanichna, Christ is everywhere for the killing. Every
Postcop is a Roman soldier, offering tea instead of vinegar; and
when Luther tacked up his laundry list, he had to drive the nail
through blood and bone." "And
Hell?" I asked. "Myself
am Hell, nor am I out of it. Take away the whale, and I am what I
was when Derzhavin found me. A mind falling through
darkness—without memory, without
language—" He
broke off, and looked at me. In his eyes, for the first time,
there was a hint of vulnerability, as though he wanted my
approval. "I
don't think," I said with careful malice, "that any truly good
motive should require a degree in theology to
Understand." He
burst into laughter. "No doubt you're right," he said. "All the
years that I looked forward to this moment, I supposed I'd feel
some sort of triumph—some fulfillment. But now that the
time has come, I feel like Dr. Doom haranguing the Fantastic
Four." He shrugged. "It doesn't matter. My duty does not change,
just because I have begun to feel ridiculous." For a
moment I stopped thinking of escape, and looked at him. Here was
a man who had followed logic all the way around to where it
swallowed its tail, and even when it vanished down its own
throat, had gone after it into the void. The wires he wore had
grown all through him, as the roots of trees replace the flesh of
corpses; and the vast coils of the whale's brain wrapped around
him like a gray constricting snake. I pitied him: but it was
probably stray feedback from the Net, and I regretted it
afterward, and it was only for a moment. "No,"
he said to himself, almost wistfully. "It doesn't change what I
must do." And
then the sensation drained out of my face. I heard myself
pronounce the words: "O vos omnes, qui transitis per viam,
attendite et videte si est dolor similis sicut dolor metis."
The Net echoed: "All you people who pass on the street, look, and
see if any pain is like my pain...." Eighteen You
Must Remember
This I loved
her name. I couldn't help it. I would release a worm to write her
name in every angular gyrus from here to Thailand. I would
convert her name to salts, to textures, to the image of a fern in
biosonar. I had never heard a name so beautiful, though it was
not a name that suited her—it was far too soft a name for
her precise young features—and though I thought it much the
lovelier when sharpened by my Leningrader accent. I tried to
prevent her from saying her own name, hastily introducing her to
strangers.) "SUPPRESSION
NINETY-FIVE PERCENT," said Horus. He opened his hands on the
African mogo, locked in an endless loop of fragmentation and
reanimation, flowering and decay. "Why
are you doing this?" I cried out. "I am
giving the rest of the world their souls back, Maya Tatyanichna,"
the old man said. "It would be petty of me to withhold that same
violence from you." "NINETY
PERCENT," the god intoned. (I
couldn't remember the place where we met, except that it was all
one color, all one scent, and had a rhythm to it. It might have
been by the ocean in winter, where the gray-green water merges
with the slate gray pebbles and the gray-blue sky. It might have
been by ripened grain in summer, when each field is like a body,
ocher-gold from head to foot and all one breathing. It might have
been beneath the waves of storm in grayspace, which at that time
was still an unsuspected country that even Weavers barely knew.
But no—it was not there, because I had seen her face. That
much I remembered, though I could not remember what she said to
me, or what she wore, or whether we walked or sat or stood. None
of that mattered. We had barely brushed against each other, yet I
came away dusted with desire, like a bee with pollen. Her face,
her name—no more: that alone had drawn me to her. Her name,
her face: and even now I could remember what they meant to me,
though I could not seem to remember what her name was, and though
some trick of memory, like half-silvered glass, combined her face
with that of Keishi Mirabara.) "Emergency
override," I said. "Restore suppression." "Desuppression
is nonterminable," the god informed me mournfully. "EIGHTY
PERCENT." (She
was translating Pushkin's poems into KRIOL. I caught a glimpse
over her shoulder: I loved
you thus-so ((truly, tenderly), may God
grant you be loved by another) "The
logical structure is knottier than it looks," she said. "KRIOL
doesn't handle this sort of thing very well—unless you
reverse the comparison, of course, but then you lose the
poetry—" I
didn't understand a word she said. I loved her. "That's
always been one of my favorites," I said. "It's so beautiful, how
he renounces her." "Is
that what you think it is? Renunciation?" She looked up sharply,
mischief in her eyes. "I always thought he was trying to make her
feel so guilty that she'd come back to him. 'I loved you; maybe
love has not been burned away completely in my heart, but don't
let that trouble you. I wouldn't want to cause you any
pain—' " She struck her forehead with her hand, overacting
the role. " 'I loved you wordlessly, hopelessly, tormented by
shyness and jealousy—you sure will be lucky if anyone else
ever loves you like this—' " I
laughed; she rose into my arms. Pushkin, abandoned on the
unblanked slate, kept his own counsel.) "SEVENTY-FIVE
PERCENT." (Two
black cables twined, like snakes, between her fingers. We slotted
the plugs into our wrists, then wrapped the cords around our
arms, until we had just enough slack left to join hands across
the table. She smiled to reassure me; closed her eyes in
concentration. I sat watching her uneasily, wishing I had a hand
free to scratch the itch above my spine socket. "What—" I
said. She touched her hand to her lips to silence me, and then,
her eyes still closed, began to kiss our knitted fingers. When
she lowered our hands back to the table, their images remained
there, pressed to her mouth. Her left hand also blurred, split,
doubled. She sat four-armed, a Hindu goddess, concentrating,
until at last her whole body pushed away its ghost. For our
ethereal bodies everything was effortless, all surfaces were
smooth; the law of gravity became negotiable and all limits of
endurance disappeared. She could lose herself for hours in this
experience, disdaining flesh and bone. But I could never quite
forget that while we kept up this illusion, our physical bodies
were blind, exposed, in danger. The Postcops could have come upon
us with ten men, a tank, and a brass band, and we would not have
known to run. Then, too, I wanted to lie with her in that warm,
comfortable fatigue that comes and wraps itself around you like a
blanket. I wanted to curse—or bless—the surgeon that
had given her a socket just at that spot that is perfect to kiss,
at the base of the spine.) "SEVENTY
PERCENT": (Love
was not a new joy, but an extension of old fears. I had given a
hostage to life: as though a part of my own body had the power to
move alone, unseen by me, where anything might happen to it.
Walking through the city, every time I stopped to dodge some car
that did not see me, I remembered that she too must walk her own
streets, must avoid her own milk trucks. I walked in love as
though I had a sparrow in my pocket, feeling the soft living
warmth pressed against me, fearful lest by sitting down wrong I
should crush it. Love was like an egg so fragile it would break
if anyone suspected that it might exist.) I took
the suppressor chip from my frontal socket and jammed it into the
temporal, trying to make it work again. "Rejected,"
noted Horus with indifference. "Damn
you!" "That
has already been taken care of," Voskresenye said. Well, I hadn't
meant him, but him too. Then I thought: he was an old man. I
could overpower him, I could make him make it stop. I stood
up— (And
love fell from my hands and shattered.) "SIXTY." (The pieces
skittered under beds, slipped under countertops, ducked behind
doorframes. It was roach love, furtive and opportunistic,
scattering at the touch of light. We must meet less often; it was
dangerous; and gradually our love became a patchwork, pieced
together out of stolen moments, not quite long enough to keep us
warm. Fierce encounters, and fiercer because rare: it was love
boiled down to drams and drunk from thimbles. And crying out, I
would wake from sleep, thinking I had felt some token of her
presence—the touch of her hand on my cheekbone, the creak
of her foot on the stair.) If I
took out the 6000s with the suppressor still in— "Removal
of Series Six Thousand moistware during desuppression may be
harmful or fatal," droned the god. "You're
bluffing," I said, but without conviction. All right then,
if— "FIFTY
PERCENT": (How
could she say that? "Feel no regret for roses," she had said to
me, kissing the nape of my neck as I bent over her latest
translation of Pushkin. "Feel no regret for roses, autumn too has
its delights...." How could she say that? Didn't she see that for
us there could never be autumn, that we could never sit, as
anyone else could sit, beside the fire all day on Sundays in
November; that September's leaves, that fall for man and beast
alike, were not our leaves to walk in; that October storms would
never find us sharing an umbrella? The love of spring had thrived
on wine and candles; now in the August of our lives, we needed
newspapers and comfortable chairs. But it was impossible. No
autumn—only a cold wind that blew through our summer,
freezing the leaves in their places before they could motley and
fall. But I
said none of this. I only nodded, and looked down into Pushkin's
autumn through the black rows of KRIOL parentheses, like looking
at the sky through prison bars.) I came
back to myself; but I no longer thought of escape. It was too
late, there was no time to think. Like a woman drowning, I could
only take one gasping breath before I sank again. "FORTY
PERCENT": (The
leaves, frozen fast to the trees, began to rot. We could not live
together; it was much too dangerous; we discussed it twice a day
and agreed every time. We found ourselves putting off seeing each
other, because when we met we were only reminded of what could
not be. Our days were barren of companionship, our furtive
meetings dry of joy.) "THIRTY": (And
finally there was nothing else. We must try it, and risk
everything, or part. And so she took her pilgrimage to Zanzibar,
to seek a certain sliver of illegal moistware. I did not see her
off at the gate. For a week, awaiting news, I paced through my
shrinking apartment. Now the time for her return had come and
gone, and there was nothing; I sat shivering on the bed, certain
that she had found asylum and that I would never see her again.
And then the news came, in the form of a postcard from the
Leningrad train-port. When I saw it on the vidphone's list of
messages, I caught my breath. I entered my passphrase, switched
on isolation, and turned up the tempest. It was a generic scene
of Africa—misshapen trees, corkscrew-horned
buffalo—on which a noncommittal message had been scrawled.
I hit "decrypt," and watched the colors shift and
reassemble: I !pri
!zhis mya !=lu@mya Native
KRIOL. I only spoke interpreted. I pounded the Translation key
and saw: and(!come(!live.with(me)),
Come live with me and be my (!=love(my)))
love What
had been complex was suddenly made simple. Of course I would
agree, I could do nothing else. I would go to her, and for a
year, or two, it would be everything we'd hoped for. With her
African enhancements she would cut through the Net like an arrow
through air, and nothing would be able to withstand her. Soon she
would grow too confident, and think herself invulnerable. And on
some undistinguished day, we would be lying in bed late in the
morning, idly debating whether 10 a.m. was a good time to get up,
and agreeing in the end that it most certainly was not; and there
would come a knocking at the door. She would throw on clothes and
answer, as I went to brush my hair. And as I looked at my
disheveled image in the mirror, with fond distress, I would see a
man in black come up behind me. He would lead me away; she and I
would be transported to the station in separate cars, and would
stay there a few days in separate rooms, and then be taken again
in two cars to two different places, and be buried, each
alone.) I was
sitting on the floor, all thought of argument or violence long
forgotten. I could only brace myself against the next attack, and
hope that Keishi would come soon. "TWENTY-FIVE
PERCENT." (Toward
the end, she would spend hours at a time in the Net without me,
reinforcing the walls of our hiding-place. She would sit at the
kitchen table, bent over a black box, both her wrists and both
her temples cabled into it. And I would sit with a washcloth and
a bowl of lukewarm water, and from time to time blot the beads of
sweat from her face. Now, remembering, I was filled with the
desire to see that face, to remember what she looked like. But
even in its death throes, the suppressor chip still disheveled my
thoughts, replacing the face that I wanted to see with
Keishi's.) "TEN
PERCENT," the bird said. Africa, green and dying, boiled between
his palms. Osiris was torn and made whole. It was
coming. "NINE":
(I had come home with my groceries, but she was still out getting
hers. We always shopped separately) "EIGHT" (lest someone should
notice us buying for two. She was late, so I stood at the edge of
the window to watch for her. I peered around the edges of the
blinds, seeing, but unseen. At last I saw her) "SEVEN" (coming
down the sidewalk, a paper bag cradled in each arm. I watched her
sleepily, trying to decide whether to drink the cup of coffee I
was balancing against my collarbone, or just break down and take
a nap. The smell of the coffee was persuasive but the nap, too,
had its) "SIX" (attraction. Yes. I would lie down, just for an
hour, and she would kiss my cheek to wake me— Something
was happening.) "FIVE." (She had changed course, looking out into
traffic for a chance to cross the street. A figure in black
called out. I couldn't quite hear what he said.) "FOUR." (She
followed him into the doorway of our building, out of sight. I
searched in the windows across the street, and at last found her
reflection. She was lowering her sacks to the ground with the
exquisite slowness of someone who knows she's in
gunsights. "Take
out your Net chip," said the videophone. Her voice—
Keishi's voice. "Don't
do it," I pleaded. "You'll never make it—" "!take.out(it
2)!" And I
took it out, knowing what she would do and what would happen to
her when she did.) "THREE." (She had spent too much time on the
Net, where no situation is ever quite hopeless, and where one
person, wired right, can stand firm against a thousand. But I,
who had stayed behind to sponge her brow with water, still
remembered the inevitability of the flesh.) "TWO." (And in
the windows across the street, I saw her take a wine bottle from
the sack and break it across the Postcop's face. Diving into the
doorway, she clapped a black chip to her head, and half the
people walking down the street staggered and fell. Cars caromed
like billiard balls. She crashed up the stairs—she was at
the door—she opened it.) "ONE PERCENT." (And as she crossed
the room, a man in black was watching from the roof across the
street. A Weaver had possessed him; you could see it in his eyes.
He looked down along the barrel of his rifle, like one who cocks
his head in thought; paused a moment; then lifted his head again
and nodded slightly, as though the thought were now complete. A
smooth circular hole had been punched in the front window, and
another in the wall behind, and between them she lay with a hole
the same size in her temple, already dead.) "ZERO." (I did
not go to her. If I had warned her, it would not have helped; if
it had not been him, it would have been some other; she had been
dead the moment she reached into the sack, no, the day she
departed for Zanzibar. And so I did not call out to her, though I
had seen the man gone Weaver on the roof from the beginning,
lifting his gun to his shoulder, and carefully taking his
aim.) Nineteen
Orpheus I
stayed there as long as I could, in that time when she had just
now fallen. She might yet live. She might yet shake her head and
rise. The stain of blood spreading out from her temple might be
nothing more than a lengthening shadow, cast by the setting
sun. But
that sun had set, and twenty years of suns. I must step up out of
the sunken garden of the past into this present, where she had
been twenty years dead. She lay now in some secret grave,
abandoned, with no flowers and no tombstone to mark the spot. If
any trace remained of her at all, it was only a blaze of deep
green in some field of withered grass, and I would never find
it. I
hadn't known. I had remembered so little. The cable inside my
head, scraping and scraping. The drug that burned the sex out of
my body, as I vomited into the drain in a holding cell for thirty
hours. And I'd remembered saying that I would do whatever they
asked of me. I would tell them everything, I would reveal every
shared secret and betray every confidence. And then I would
forget it all, and leave the station as a person who had never
been in love. And remembering how quickly I had agreed to forget,
I had assumed some series of casual liaisons, lightly entered
into, and lightly abandoned. Now I knew the full extent of my
betrayal. I had been the only one to remember her, and I had
given it up, not after a fight, but readily. I was not the person
I had thought I was; and tears fell like scales from my
eyes. "Desuppression
complete," the god said. "If you would like to discuss any of our
fine moistware products, I am always at your service." He folded
Africa into his hands, and he was gone. "The
recording of your desuppression is already being distributed,"
Voskresenye said. "In the days to come, as the Weaver viruses are
defeated, others of your kind will appear. You have struck a blow
for them. Because of what you did today, there may yet come a
time when they no longer have to hide." I
had recognized her. They had tried to tear her out, but
she had lived in me—deep in my heart and secret, nameless
and indescribable, yet never entirely gone. She had been a face
in the window of every departing train, a form seen from the back
on every crowded street, always just out of my sight, always
turning away. And I had known her when she came to me, though I
could not say it, and though the very thought had sent my mind
skidding across the ice into unconsciousness. I took
the camera chip out of my head. "What," I said, fighting to keep
my voice steady "—what is Keishi Mirabara?" "Ah!"
Voskresenye laid a finger along his nose. "Not 'who,' but 'what'!
Very impressive! I had not expected you to guess so much so
quickly." "Don't
critique the question, you son of a bitch, just answer it. Did
you create her? To seduce me? To get me here?" "How
Manichaean of you, Andreyeva. I did not create her; that is
Someone Else's job. I merely found her and made use of
her." "You're
lying," I said. "She's not real. She doesn't exist at
all." "Oh,
but I do, Maya," Keishi said. She was leaning against the
doorframe. She had restored the face I had seen in my memories,
the face she'd had before she disguised herself as Japanese and
then as Japanese Black. She was dressed all in white, and she
shone like the sun, which was the least of the reasons that I
found it hard to look at her. "So
what's the joke, revenant?" I said, my whole face aching from the
effort to hold back tears. "Did he make you? Are you a
Postcop?" "No,
and no." She looked behind me at the tank where the whale floated
aimlessly, her wings gently stirring the water. "I'm her," she
said, nodding toward the whale. "Part of her. And I am the
woman that you loved, twenty years ago." "Can't
you come up with a better lie than that? She's dead. I saw it
happen." "That
body is gone," Keishi said. "But I live." "I
don't believe you." "Think
back, Maya," she said. She began to walk toward me, but stopped,
as if she sensed that I could not have borne her touch. "You
remember who I was. Don't you think I would have had a plan to
stay with you, even after my own death?" "If she
had," I said, not meeting her gaze, "she would have told me about
it." "If I'd
told you, it wouldn't have worked. I knew they'd mind-suck you;
anything I said to you, they would have found out. I had to let
you think I was dead, hide out in the Net, and then come back to
you when the worst of the heat was off." "The
soul can't survive discorporation," I said. "Maybe in the African
Net, but not here." "A soul
can't live in the Net, no. But there's nothing mystical about it.
It's a physical process—for all intents and purposes the
soul is serotonin. If you upload your mind to the Net, at least
here in the Fusion, you lose your sensory qualia, your emotions;
you become a program. But then if you put it back into a brain,
the soul grows back. —Especially," she said, "if it's the
soul of a Weaver." "Oh
God," I said, "Oh God, I knew there was a setup in this
somewhere—" "No ...
no, Maya! I mean, I was a Weaver. It's a manner of
speaking—you know, to your last dying breath and all that.
But seeing as how they killed my body, I should probably give up
that loyalty. Don't you remember?" "She
was my screener...."I said, slowly. "Yes,
and Maxwell Smart wrote greeting cards. It was a cover, Maya.
Weavers keep cuckoos in every profession.... Including one named
Keiji Mirabara." I
watched her silently, fighting back memory. "And
now you know how I replaced Anton without causing an outcry. And
how I obtained the, ah, the Postcop pursuit vehicle— which,
by the way, no Postcop in the world is authorized to drive. And
that's how I found the Weaver viruses, and how I created the
bubbles and back doors, which Mister Resurrection hastens to take
credit for." "Believe
what you like," Voskresenye said lightly. "The point is
insignificant." "I
don't believe you," I said. "Look
back into your memories. It's there." But I
would not touch those memories. I would keep my muscles clenched
around them, I would squeeze them into a ball, hard-shelled and
separate. They were in me, but I would not make them part of me;
as a sunken anchor does not give up its substance to the ocean,
or an acorn passes through the stomach whole. I would not become
that other woman, who had died when her lover died, twenty years
past. I would remain myself. "Do you
remember?" she said. "No." "You
will," she said. "In time. You were a camera and I was a Weaver,
and we have known each other nearly thirty years." "I
don't believe you," I repeated. "Maya,
let me touch your mind again," she said, extending one beseeching
hand. "This time with nothing hidden. I promise you you'll
understand." "Keep
your hands off me," I said. I backed up a step and tripped, so
that I had to catch myself against the whale's tank with one
hand. I braced myself against her mind's touch, holding up one
futile hand to shield my face. She
looked upon my fear with horror. Her hand fell to her side. "All
right, then," she said, nodding. "I'll tell you the
story." Twenty
Penelope "I was
created a Weaver in 2290," she said, "just a few years before I
first found you. I was nineteen years old—they take us
young, you know, like Mousketeers. For nineteen years I was the
prisoner of my own skull, trapped in an almond-sized sphere at
the intersection of my ears and eyes. Then the surgeon injected
me with nanobugs—not like yours; bugs made from clones of
my own cells, half robot and half leukocyte. They made a blastula
inside my skull, dividing again and again, with their animal pole
at my left ear and their vegetal pole at my right. Their signals
pulsed from one side of my head to the other, as I lay
unconscious on a surgeon's table in Mecca—holy,
hallucinatory town. "Then I
woke from the knife, and I was the Net. Without moving, I
could touch Novaya Zemlya and Cape Town, both at the same time.
Or I could walk through the streets and understand the shouts of
Arabic, without needing a fluency chip. I discovered that the
slogan shouted on every street, that I had taken for a prayer,
meant 'Take you to Africa? Ten thousand riyals!' I had the money,
but I declined the offers. Why should I go anywhere, when I had
the Net inside me? I could sit in the Net as a spider sits,
perfectly still, at the center—for wherever she is, is the
center—and when a fly brushes the web, it's as if the silk
were her own body. Night after night, I coursed through minds,
leaving new dreams behind me. And in the day, my kibo fell around
me in a thousand voices, like a gentle rain." "What's
a kibo?" I asked, more to gain time than to hear the
answer. "A kibo
is a Weaver's summoning-word," she said. "Nobody knows why
they're called that, they just are. They even try to get you to
take your kibo as your name. Silliest damn thing I ever heard
of—grown people going around being called Alcoholism or
Famine. What am I, a Horseman of the Apocalypse?" She grew quiet.
"Do you remember what my kibo was?" "Lesbianka?"
I
guessed, still not touching my memories. "No,"
she said gravely. "If it had been, many things would have been
different. It was Calinshchina." "And?" "And,
to begin with, that's how I found the whale," she said.
"Voskresenye slipped up, just a little, and of course I felt it.
But I decided not to turn him in, because by that time I'd met
you, and I was beginning to plan what I would do if the other
Weavers found out about us. I carved myself a refuge in the
whale's mind. And I forced him to accept it, or be taken by the
Weavers. After that, for my own sake, I protected
him." "Why
me?" I asked. "What did you want from me?" "Maya,
when I said I'd been in a thousand minds, it was just a fraction
of the truth. There's hardly a mind in the Fusion I haven't
touched. You were the one that fit—the only one. That's
what I kept trying to tell you last night: we are the halves of a
single whole." From
the chair where he was sitting, Voskresenye called out: "I do
believe Miss Mirabara is a better Platonist even than I. She
appears to believe in the rolling spiders of the
Symposium." "Shut
up, old man," she said over her shoulder. "This isn't about
you." He
smiled, acquiescing. But he watched us from his seat, an audience
before the stage. Or rather, an actor between scenes, who already
knows the outcome, but watches to compare the other actors'
performances to his own. And all the while he listens, with half
an ear, for his final cue. "If
you're her, and she was a Weaver," I said, "why did she need to
go to Africa? A Weaver could hide from anyone." "Except
another Weaver. I had to be a step ahead of them, and that meant
African tech. If we hadn't been what we were, you know—if
we'd been an airline pilot and a bricklayer—things wouldn't
have been as difficult. Weavers only care about stuff that gets
onto the Net. They leave it to the Postcops to take care of mere
reality." Voskresenye
snorted. "As usual, Mirabara, you have things exactly backward.
The Weavers control the Net, which is reality; the Postcops only
police the flesh, and that has not been real for decades, if
indeed it ever was." She
turned around and hissed at him in Sapir, loud and long. He fell
silent, smirking. "You're
right, though," she said when she turned back to me. "It started
in Africa. I went there on Weaver business—spying, I mean.
Half our tech came from Africa, one way or another. But this
time, I was looking for an edge. Something to keep me a step
ahead of them, something that the other Weavers wouldn't have. Do
you remember what you called it?" I did;
but I would not be drawn out. "The
Cone of Silence," she said, searching my face for a
smile. "And
you found it," I said flatly. "No. I
searched all through the Net, and all through the streets, and I
couldn't find anything the Weavers didn't already have. I had to
pack up and get on the airship home, thinking, this is it, I'll
have to give her up now. At least that way I'd be able to
remember you. "And
then suddenly I was cut off from the Net, as I hadn't been in
years: something was locking me into my skull. In the next seat
was a man I hadn't seen before. He was hideous—wounds
boiled over his face as I watched, and there was a hunger in his
eyes that I was afraid to look at. And then I looked again, and
he was perfect, young, beautiful, streaming with light. It was a
manifestation of His-Majesty-in-Chains." "The
Page of Wounds," Voskresenye said acerbically. "We may perceive
His Majesty's respect for Weavers from the fact that he did not
even bother to send one of the Major Arcana." Still
harping on Tarot. Cigan? And all his predictions a
wanderer's trick, with neurons instead of tea leaves? She
ignored him and continued. " 'I know who you are, Weaver,' he
said to me. 'I have been watching you since you came here, and
indeed long before that, for there is nothing on the Net I do not
watch. Your ostensible mission is not significant enough for me
to even bother thwarting, but your secret wish requires of me a
generous response.' " 'What
do you want?' I asked. "
'Nothing that you can give,' he said, and the pain in his eyes
bored into me. 'Take your freedom. It is no less than you
deserve.' And he began to raise his hands. "Then
he stopped and said thoughtfully, 'But, you know...' " She shook
her head, sighing. "His Majesty will kill you with the 'But, you
know.' 'If you like,' he said, 'I could show you what your hiding
means. You are a Weaver, after all; if anyone could change things
in the Fusion, it would be you. Would you care to see some of the
consequences of your actions?' " 'No,'
I told him. "He
laughed at that. 'Very wise,' he said. 'No one knows better than
I why it is easier to be ignorant.' Blood was seeping into his
shirt, and wounds opened like mouths in his hands. 'But I do not
permit myself that luxury. And you are a god in the Net, as much
as I am. I will no more allow it to you.' " " 'I
don't want your gifts,' I said. "He
ignored me. 'Know,' he said. 'And after that, if you can
turn away, then turn away.' He lifted his hands to my temples,
and then he was gone. "Strapped
into my seat on the African airship, his words burning through
me, I hallucinated for seven hours. He had put me into the head
of another Weaver, the one whose kibo is lesbianka. I
traveled with her through the Net—but not as it was then;
in the future. In the Net as it is now." She
lowered her head, closing her eyes briefly, then looked back up
with an expression of forced calm. "She's not one of the cruel
ones, you know. She's only trying to do her job. You're lying
there, next to the woman that you love, and trying to think when
you can be with her again. You touch the Net to see your
schedule. And there's a sound of wings. The Weaver comes to you,
and looks down at you lying there. You're clutching the bedsheets
against your chest and groping for your clothes, and the body
that felt so warm and comfortable has now become so monstrous and
so vulnerable that if you could, you would discorporate on the
spot. She says to you, very gently, 'Well, I guess we have a
problem.' And she offers you the choice. You can forget. Or you
can remember, at the price of being hidden from the Net
forever. "Not
many people have the courage to choose excommunication," she
said. "And even if you do, she doesn't let you keep what you
were. She touches your forehead with the back of her hand, and
says, 'Don't worry. You're cured now.' You look over at the woman
lying beside you, and think, what did I ever feel for her? And
you go on that way, remembering, but not remembering
why—quite cured of the capacity to love. "By the
time I got to Leningrad," she said. "I'd seen her do it to a
hundred women, and any one of them could have been you. His
Majesty was right. He'd put the means of fighting it in my hands,
and as desperately as I wanted to, I couldn't turn
away." "What
did he give you?" I asked. "He
didn't give me anything," she said. "He took something away: the
Russian language." "Why?" "Because
knowing human languages protects the mind from Sapir. That's why
the Africans are so far ahead—don't you see? They don't get
their Sapir from a fluency chip. They get their first brainmod at
one year, and learn it as a first language. It's the lingua
franca of their continent, and that makes all the difference. The
first computer languages were pidgins, formed the same way any
pidgin is formed, by a dominant race thrusting its words onto the
grammar of a subordinate one. Then with KRIOL, the pidgin
acquired native speakers. In Sapir the tables are turned—it
changes human thought to fit computers, not the other way around.
But the language instinct fights tooth and nail against Sapir,
and if you teach the child a human language too early, the mind
hedges. "Here
in the Fusion, the Weavers won't let anyone but themselves speak
Sapir without a chip—it would give the people too much
power. But even Weavers learn it late in life. They don't think
that makes a difference, but it does. Not enough, as it turned
out, but there's a difference. His-Majesty-in-Chains burned away
the Russian language from my mind, so that Sapir could do its
work. And when I got to the trainport, even my own memories were
in a foreign language—how could I possibly remember
dialogue that wasn't imprinted with compass orientation, time of
day, and ambient temperature? I had to call up a translation
program from the Net, just so I could write you a message to tell
you I'd come home." She
laid her hand on the samovar. "Maya, I have to tell you... it was
my fault, what happened to us. If I'd used all my skill to hide
you, we would have been safe. But after what His Majesty showed
me, I couldn't do that. I knew what was coming, and I couldn't
turn away." "But
you didn't tell me?" I said. "No. If
I failed and they found you, you'd be a lot better off not
knowing. It was my responsibility, and I wanted the consequences
to be on my head." She was
hoping for forgiveness. I made my face a mask. "What did you do?"
I said. "I
tried to change the filters in the Net. That's where ninety
percent of the work is done, you know. If I knocked out the
filters, and kept them knocked out, then the Weavers and
screeners wouldn't have a chance." She
laughed, shaking her head. "It was a hell of a plan, on paper.
But I should have known. His Majesty had made me like an African,
sure. But if one African could liberate the world, wouldn't it
have happened a long time ago? Obvious, right? But somehow that
line of reasoning escaped me. "So I
went a little way, and it was easy. I got confident. I pushed
further and further. At some point I was detected, and I didn't
even know it. "And
somehow they found you. They must have followed me in reality,
that's all I can figure. I'd hidden you from the Net so well I
thought they'd never find you—after all, who thinks of
Weavers wearing out actual shoe leather, and all that Sam
Spade kind of shit? All the time I was a Weaver, I never heard of
such a thing. But I guess when one of their own turned coat, they
took it personally. So they followed me and found you. Then they
waited, I suppose, to see if I would lead them to any more
accomplices. But no, it was only you. And then one day they got
me—just as I was about to walk in the door." "His-Majesty-in-Chains
knows what he's doing," I said. "Why would he send you to fight
the Weavers if they were going to beat you that
easily?" "Oh,
Andreyeva," Voskresenye said, "you do not understand His Majesty
at all. He does a thousand things that do no good. His-Majesty
does not care what is effective, only what is right." "Maybe,"
she said. "Or maybe he saw all the way forward to this moment.
Maybe all this was His-Majesty's way of getting the job done
despite the chains. Like some complicated bank shot, where the
billiard balls fly far apart across the table and then meet
again...." "But
with a different English," I said. Her
face clouded; she seemed not to have heard me. "They did it on
purpose," she said. "I'm sure they did. They took me right in the
street, in front of the apartment where we lived, so you would be
there, and you'd see." "I did
see," I said. "I saw her die. How can you claim she
didn't?" "Why
are you doing this, Maya?" she asked softly. "Do you really think
I'm lying? Or do you think you can make it all unreal, if you
just ask the right question? Not even a camera can do
that." But her
pleading only hardened my resolve. Yes, I thought; I am a camera,
and this is no different from grilling some corrupt political
that the Weavers have thrown to the wolves. "I
assume," I said, "that your changing the subject means you
haven't got an answer?" "Oh,
nice, nice. You're right, I am beginning to understand this
business." "If you
can't—" "All
right, all right." She took a cleansing breath, pushed back her
inorganic hair, and said: "The place I had carved in the whale's
mind was waiting. All I had to do was get there. That's why I put
the Net chip in my head when I did. You remember? I wasn't trying
to escape, just to delay them long enough that I could slip out.
And I couldn't leave all in one piece, because they'd be
expecting that. My mind wasn't the size of a whale yet, but it
was the size of a house, anyway. You can't hide something like
that. It's like trying to mislay Leningrad." Her
eyes sought—what? An answering jest, a hint of recognition.
I kept my face blank, and my mind too. After all, that was my
job. Though of course, to do it right, I'd need my
screener— I
turned away, my deadpan cracking. Her hand, I saw, had sunk into
the samovar; if she'd been real, she would have broken it and
been burned. I walked around to her side, and, regarding her
profile, said: "How do
you claim you survived?" "I did
the unexpected," she said, turning to face me. "I tore my mind
into a thousand pieces, and scattered it to the
winds." "And
lived?" I said, circling around behind her. "Yes.
I'd been planning it a long time, preparing. I had set up a swarm
of programs that would descend upon my mind, divide it, and carry
it away in bits, each one too small to look like anything human.
Each one would hide itself, and then, at an appointed time, they
would converge upon the whale." "The
soul can't survive that kind of dissection," I said. "You'd be
desouled. You'd be an automaton." "For a
little while, yes," she said. "But once I got into the whale, the
soul grew back. The soul will do that, once it's sewn
together— as long as it's in the African Net, or in
flesh." "And
did all the birds come home to roost? Or are you missing parts?
The part of you that loved me?" "No," she
said. "I made sure of that. I knew I might lose myself. So I
built a puzzle-lock around my hiding place—something I'd
need my whole self to solve. Before I got through that, I'd be
able to protect you, but not speak to you. That way I could be
sure that if I did come back, it would really be me. I didn't
want to be some soulless monster battering at your
door." "And
you think it's better this way? You come to me now, when for
twenty years I was there every day, on the streets, looking for
you, not even knowing who it was I looked for—and even when
I accuse you of being a Postcop, you won't tell me who you are?
And then you think, because you come to me in Weaver white, that
after all this time we can pick up where we left off?" I had
stopped in front of her. She raised her hand, as if she wanted to
touch my face, but my expression warned her away. "Maya, believe
me," she said, "I never wanted it this way. Do you think it was
easy for me, all those years, knowing you were there, not being
able to touch you? But understand this: I was with you all
along. I couldn't speak to you, but I was there, protecting
you. That's how you managed to stay on News One, when you were a
felon with bad ratings. That's why you only have a suppressor
chip, and nothing worse—nothing irreversible. If it hadn't
been for me, they would have burned the memories from your mind
forever, if not killed you. I was woven into your mind so deeply
that in order to appear to you, I had to pull back, so that there
was something to show you that wasn't a part of yourself. I was
most with you when you thought that you were most
alone." "Is
that what it comes down to?" I said, looking away from her. "All
your speeches about cabling? 'I'll touch you so gently that
you'll never know I'm there?' " "I
couldn't speak to you," she said. "I'd made a
mistake." "What?" She
lowered her voice and said, begrudging every syllable: "I
underestimated Voskresenye." "Miss
Mirabara, my blushes!" "One
more word—" "Will
one of you just tell me what the hell happened?" "While
the Weaver was being torn apart by Bacchae," Voskresenye said, "I
had a look at her puzzle-lock, and though I had no time to open
it, I surrounded it with more locks of my own. Thereafter, what
she wanted the most—to reach you, Maya
Tatyanichna—could only happen at my sufferance. And the
price I asked was modest; it was, in fact, something she'd wanted
to do all along. To defeat the Weavers." "For
three years we fought in the mind of the whale," she said. "And
in the end, we reached a stalemate. I had gained some power over
him, yes. But in the end, his locks held. And we both realized
that we had to find some compromise." "Which
took seventeen years?" "Time
was important to me," she said. "To him it wasn't—he
was only too willing to wait. We had to lay the groundwork, build
the back doors, put together the Netcast, design the viruses. But
I could have done it in a third the time, if he hadn't stalled
me." "I
knew," he said, "that when I allowed her to make contact with
you, my power over her would be at an end. I would then have no
further chance to influence the series of events that we touched
off. I would have been a fool not to take my time in making
preparations." "It was
you that finally made it happen, Maya," she said. "When you got
your series on the Calinshchina. He saw it as the perfect
opportunity to get time on News One. And I... when you turned
over that table, and said the word that would have called me when
I was a Weaver, I knew you were crying out to me, whether you
knew it or not. Deep inside, you still remembered, and you were
saying, 'Come to me—I've been alone too long, and I can't
do this anymore.' " But
looking back on what I'd done, I could find no trace of such a
sentiment. "So I
went to News One," she said, "and told them that I was a Weaver,
and that I'd seen what you'd done. I told them you were suspected
of dissidence, and they should give you the story, to help flush
out your accomplices. And then two weeks later, when
Voskresenye's preparations had been made, I told them I wanted to
replace your screener, and that once I'd found out what I needed
to know, in all probability you would be executed. They were only
too glad to oblige. "The
rest is straightforward," she said. "He unlocked some of the
locks, but not all. And I did everything that the remaining locks
would let me do, trying to jog your memory, so you'd realize who
I was." "Of
course," I said. "That's why you looked so strange when I accused
you of being a Weaver." "Yes. I
thought for a moment you might have remembered. But you hadn't.
And then I had to say whatever I could to keep you from throwing
me out, and ruining the plan, because it might have been another
ten years before I could talk to you again. You can't imagine how
much it hurt, having to lie to you like that." "For
someone who doesn't want to lie to me," I said, "you've certainly
done it a lot. You've done nothing but lie since you came to me.
You changed your name—" "That
was so News One wouldn't know I was a woman." "—you
changed your face—" "You
kept blacking out until I did!" "You
could have just told me." "I had
no choice," she said. "The locks were there, and Voskresenye was
whispering in my ear in Sapir the whole time. I had to fight for
every hint I gave you. Sometimes there were whole arguments in
the space of a single word." "And
the fake mindlink?" "I
didn't hide a single thing from you. The locks were in the way,
but I opened up. And the love you felt was real." "My
God," I said, "you even proposed to me, in the car on the way
here, and you were lying all the time. Did you really think the
Africans would take in a white girl who wanted to marry a
ghost?" She
looked intently at the whale, as though afraid to meet my eyes.
"Maya, it's been twenty years," she said. "You're not the
same person you were, and God knows I'm not. I don't even know
what I am anymore. I wanted to see if we could fall in love with
each other again, without a lot of old memories telling you that
you had to." "You
knew full well I wasn't capable of loving anything." "But
you were. You did." She reached out to take my hand, but her
fingers passed through it. "Maya, they can only take away so
much. They can't change who you are, not completely. You did feel
something. The suppressor muffled it, but it was there. This
morning, over the vidphone—it was written all over your
face." "Yes,"
I said. "I suppose it must have been. And you looked into my face
and saw it, and you told me to come to Arkhangelsk, so
Voskresenye could rape my memories." "Maya,
believe me," she said fiercely, "that was never supposed to
happen. I agreed to let him Netcast my memories, not
yours. If I'd known he was going to do that to you, you'd still
be in Leningrad." "Oh,
but Mirabara, I had the deaths of hundreds," Voskresenye said.
"Seeing a woman killed for dissidence, from the viewpoint of
one who loved her—I could not pass it by. Besides, the
memories at the moment of desuppression are so much
stronger—" "It
doesn't matter," I said to her. "They're not my memories
or yours—if you are who you say you are. They're
ours. If he'd taken them from you, it would still have been my
life." "I
know," she said. "I know. But what else could I do? It was the
only way I could ever talk to you again. He still held the locks
in his hands. Besides—Maya, his Netcast could change the
lives of everyone in the Fusion. Compared to that..." She smiled
uneasily and said in a flawless Bogart: "It doesn't matter a hill
of beans in this crazy world whether two people find
love—" "It
does matter," I said. "It matters a lot more than the
ethical loop-the-loops you two have spent all this time figuring
out." "Yes,"
she said. "It matters, yes. But not more than anything. You and I
are important, but some things are more important." I
turned to the whale, who was drifting as if in sleep, and put my
hand against the glass." 'Marriage is a thing in ending stories,'
" I said. "You knew it all along." "Maya,
there had to be a world for us to live in. You know what happened
last time—how it wore us down, how we could only live by
hiding. Well, we're not going to be able to hide this time.
Everyone knows us. If we're going to live, they have to
understand us, too." "And
what happened to Africa, Keishi?" I said, my voice colder than
the glass I touched. "What happened to climbing the Wall of Souls
and marrying the foreign princess? Was that just your happily
ever after, in the lie you used to get me here?" "It was
what I hoped for. What I still hope for. I want us to be
together, because I love you." "Oh,
sure, in a fairy tale." I tried
to make my voice hard, to control my gestures—but I
wavered. My hand, which had been pressed against the glass, came
down in a loose shake of weary relinquishment. "No, that's not
fair," I admitted. "You do love me. You just don't mean by love
what I mean by it." "What
does it mean, then?" She stepped toward me, closing in. "I
thought it meant caring for you. Staying with you—I've
stood by you for thirty years. What else? Protecting you? I've
done that, too. I've done it today. Remember?" "Sure,
I remember everything. The Postcops wore black; you wore blue."
The words were harsh, but I could hardly keep my voice from
trembling. I remembered the joy I had felt when I first heard her
voice on the radio, and let myself begin to hope that I might
live. That hope was still in me—a black ember with a point
of red-gold at its heart. She could fan it back to life, I knew.
She could wear me down until I forgave her out of sheer fatigue.
She had all the time there was, time ticked in silicon; and I was
only flesh, and flesh was weak. Then I
flared up—not in joy, but in anger. "Wait," I said. "The
videophone—this morning—you only told me to come to
Arkhangelsk early after you saw I wasn't wearing the new
chips. So I went, and the Postcops were waiting, and they took my
old moist-ware away. After you'd spent the whole week trying to
get me to replace it. You did it, didn't you? You had to get the
new chips in my head, so you could run the Netcast through me,
and put in the countervirus. And when you couldn't do it any
other way, you had me arrested. That's why you got so upset when
you saw I wasn't wearing the 6000s. And I thought it was because
they were a gift, and you were in love." "It
wasn't like that," she said. "Yes, I tried every way I could
think of to get you to put the 6000s in—" "Including
pretending to modify them. When they were already
modified." "He'd
modified
them, yes. But I still had to fix them so you could take out your
suppressor chip." "Which
let Voskresenye steal my memories." "Yes,
but I didn't know that. And then this morning, when I'd tried
everything I could think of, Voskresenye wanted me to reach into
your mind and make you put the new chips in. But I
wouldn't—even though I knew it meant he'd have you
captured. I knew I could rescue you. It was terrible, but I
thought it would be better than changing your mind." "Besides,"
I said, "you couldn't pass up the chance to make a hero's
entrance." She
stepped back, stung. "Maya, whatever I am, I'm not Edward
Sinclair. If you think I am, you're not getting good color
fidelity on your morality chip." "Oh,
what does it matter?" I said wearily. The ember was dead now;
there was no reason to keep smothering it. There was no need to
continue this, to tear open her wounds or mine. I didn't want to
hurt her. I just wanted this all to be over. I wanted to be
alone, to be out of this place, and to rest. "Well,"
Voskresenye said with a sigh of amusement, "if you can grow
another soul in twenty more years, Miss Mirabara, try again. She
may have mellowed by that time." "Old
man," Keishi said with fervor, "if I could think of anything to
do to you worse than what you're doing to
yourself—" "Oh,
Mirabara, enough blustering; you'll miss all the fun." He turned
his wrist as if consulting an imaginary watch. "It's six o'clock.
Time for the show." "Keishi,"
I said in sudden fear, "what happens to you when the whale
dies?" "What
do you think? You know everything else." Her swollen eyes looked
up at me; relented. "I die, too." "Come,
Andreyeva," Voskresenye said, rising. "Put your moist-ware back
in. You are too much of a camera, even now, to miss the death of
the world's last whale." He was
walking toward the tank. I moved to block his path. "Well,
well. Riding to your lover's rescue, despite it all?" "I
changed my mind. I'm not done talking to her yet. Maybe I'm just
not done yelling at her yet. Either way, you're not doing
anything." In
reply he stripped off his gloves, revealing the frame of steel
that moved his hands. It was hard, with sharp edges: a nice set
of built-in brass knuckles. "Do you think," he said, "that after
all that I have done, I will scruple to hurt you?" But I
had not listened to all Voskresenye's stories without learning
something about him. He could get past me by knocking me
out—as he could have saved Katya from killing her uncle by
taking the bar himself. But he wouldn't. Now, as then, he would
only talk. He didn't have it in him. Or so I
hoped. I grasped his wrists— And
they had less than human strength. The carapace looked strong,
but it wasn't. I could hold him easily. He soon
quit trying to break away—he was not a man to struggle
against the inevitable—and said: "You do
have a certain flair for the dramatic, Maya Tatyanichna. Very
well, then. It will make a better disk this way; there's more to
see...." I was
supporting his weight; he had gone limp. I put one arm around him
and guided him back to his chair, not gently. "Thank
you," he said. "I knew there was chivalry in you yet." "What
have you done?" "Look!" The
whale had turned onto her back and was struggling against the
airhose that anchored her. On the third try it came free, taking
some of the scar tissue with it. As she swam to the other end of
the tank, a brown plume of blood trailed behind her. "I have
released her," he said, his limbs still as death. "All these
years I have held her back by force of will, every waking hour,
and separated her from her body at night—all to prevent the
sibyl from getting what she so desired." "This
is her?" I asked. "You're not doing it?" "Certainly
not." "Is
there something you can do to make it easier?" "You
should have thought of that before," he said. "But it will be, if
not painless, at least quick. When she runs out of air, she will
die. And then the nanotech I have implanted in her body will take
over, and tear her DNA to atoms, so that all the king's horses
and all the king's men...” He smiled and did not complete
the rhyme. "How
long can she hold her breath?" "In her
current state, not long. And I imagine she will try to tire
herself out, to make it even quicker. Come, put in your camera
chip, Andreyeva; the world is waiting." I
stared at the chip in my hand for a moment, then slotted it in.
The whale began to swim back and forth in the tank. With her
damaged fluke she could not stop her motion, so with each lap
around the tank she struck the glass, harder each
time. "Oh, my
God," I said, "it's going to break!" Voskresenye
chuckled. "You have no drowning mark upon you; your complexion is
perfect gallows. It will hold." The
whale slammed into the back of the tank. A sepia-colored cloud of
blood surrounded her. The audience was back, and screaming in my
head. "I'm
not going to record this," I said suddenly. "I'm not." Quickly,
before the audience could react, I pulled the camera chip out of
my head, dropped it, and crushed it underfoot. Twenty-one
Sorrow's Springs "You
will let this be forgotten?" Voskresenye shouted as I walked
away. "It's
all right," Keishi said to him. "I'll put you on the Net. They
won't cut this off, no matter who it comes from." I
walked out of the room and shut the door behind me. "Well?"
she said, appearing next to me. "Aren't you going to say
good-bye?" I
looked out at the rows of books in cages and said
nothing. "In
that case ... take me with you." I
leaned my head back against the door and closed my
eyes. "Maya,
I know what you must be feeling. But there's no more time. When
the whale dies, I die too—unless you help me." She
waited for me to respond. I didn't. At last she said: "I'm still
a Weaver, Maya. Only a tiny part of me is any kind of flesh. But
that part, the part that matters, is in danger. I will die with
the whale, unless you let me live in you." Again
she waited. I stood motionless, feeling the mechanized breath of
the ceiling vent against my face. "I'll
keep my memories on the Net," she said. "Everything that's data.
I'll just offload a little of your mind into the Net, and take
that space. You'll never feel anything missing. But we'll be
together. Always." Still I
did not move. I felt that I would stand there forever if I had
to, rather than speak to her—forever, or until the whale
died. Surely that would not be long. "I'm
not talking about a fusion as extreme as Voskresenye and the
whale. All it means is that I become a silent partner in your
body. In the day, I'll be with you; and at night, we can be
together in the Net. Wherever you go, I'll protect you. I'll cut
you a path through the Postcops, and keep the Weavers from your
door." Her hand must have been almost touching me; I could feel
its virtual warmth against my face. "And I'll bend every delivery
boy in Russia to your whim, and show uppity rental cars the error
of their ways...." Her hand touched my cheek, and began to sink
into it. "And
will you hold me when I'm frightened," I said, "Keishi
Mirabara?" For a
moment I hated her for tearing the words out of me, for making me
open myself up enough to push her away. Then I opened my eyes,
and saw her standing before me, her face turned away as though
slapped; and I began to feel a certain tenderness, though of a
kind I knew I must resist. "You
know my name," she said at last. "Why won't you use
it?" "Answer
the question," I said. But that was just my camera's instinct,
working on autopilot. I didn't want her to answer the question at
all. The question was only an omen, like a whale's fluke briefly
rising to the surface of the water. I wanted her to answer the
whale, and all the drowned and dying things beneath it, and the
whole salt hidden sea. "I
didn't ask to be this way," she said. "If I had lost a limb, if I
were paralyzed, would you turn me away for that?" "I
don't know," I said; and it would have been a truthful answer to
any question that she could have asked. "Maya,
please. It's the only chance I have left—the only chance
we have left. Go back in. The camera chip may not be
ruined, and even if it is, we can set up something
else." "If I
did go back," I said, "you'd still be there, wouldn't you?
Helping Voskresenye get out to the Net. Turning the death of the
last whale in the world into something you can buy shrink-wrapped
off a spinner at the grocery." "Yes,"
she said. "And I don't like it any more than you do.
Less—you can't know what it means to me, you haven't lived
in her for all these years. But it has to be done. Do you
understand why?" "You
think he's right," I said. "In
many things, yes. He's right about the Weavers and what they're
trying to do. And he's partly right about what has to be done. If
he weren't, I wouldn't have helped him. I certainly wouldn't have
let him send out the countervirus, if I didn't think it had a
chance of working. "But in
one thing, he is very wrong. Pavel Sergeyevich has been old a
long time, and he has been bitter even longer than that. It's
quite a collection of horrors he's sending out—it takes a
lot of pain to enforce the Weavers' vision of humanity. But you
can't just show people the evil. They'll only turn away. You have
to give them something else. Something to care about. Something
to hope for." She
didn't try to touch me again, but she moved very close, looking
up into my eyes. My back was pressed against the door, so I had
nowhere to retreat to. "Do you
know the story of Pandora?" she said. "Pandora opens up a box of
demons, unleashing them all on the world. But at the bottom of
the box, there's one thing that's either the worst demon of all,
or the saving grace, depending who you listen to:
hope." I
remembered that I had been filled with hope only that morning. It
seemed years and oceans away. "Maya,
let's be the hope," she said. "The whole world will be watching
what happens to us. Anything we care to toss out will be pounced
on. So let's show them that not everything the Weavers suppress
is bad. Let's show them that love can win out—that when the
Weavers have done their worst, some things can still
endure. "Don't
you see, Maya? He wanted to Netcast my death, but your love got
mixed in with it. He thinks of the two of us as some rare
and unwholesome species of butterfly, to be etherized and pinned
to a card. But we know better, and we can prove it. No one has
imagined us. All telepresence ever shows people is love between
men and women, and not even real love at that—some pathetic
imitation done with brain-makeup. We'll hit them like a
thunderbolt. We—our love—that's what will make
the Wall of Souls come tumbling down." She
smiled, briefly closing her eyes. "This is an easy one, Ilsa;
this time, staying with Rick is helping the Resistance. So
the question is—no, wait. Let me do this right." She
sank to one knee, and touched my hand with hers. "Maya
Tatyanichna, clan the whole world, hearth lesbianka: Will
you take what is left of this woman, who has the mind of a
Weaver, the soul of a whale, and the education of a half-crazed
four-nine terrorist, and who can't figure out whether she's a
fallen angel or a risen devil—but who loves you more than
any language that she knows could ever say?" I
looked down at her in horror. "No," I said. "You
don't mean that," she said imploringly. "The
hell I don't. You're crazier than Voskresenye. You don't get it,
do you? You've forgotten what human emotions are like— you
either forget them completely, or you blow them up into something
they can never be. Damn it, Mirabara, it's only love. It doesn't
mean you want to fuse souls with someone. And it doesn't save the
world, or even the people in it. It's not something you put on
display for some political purpose. It's not a statement or a
demonstration; it just is." "You
just got finished saying that love matters." "It
does matter," I said. "But not for the reasons you think. And the
woman I loved would have understood that." "Maya,
you underestimate—" "Considering
what you've done to me, after loving me for thirty years," I
said, "do you really think people will act any differently after
feeling some pale ghost of that for thirty seconds?" Now it
was her turn not to answer. She rose to her
feet—selfconsciously, as if she had realized the absurdity
of continuing to kneel. She walked up to the cage marked POETRY
and stared into its shadowed depths. "You know what this means,
don't you?" she said. "It means they won. Whatever we may have
accomplished, they won in the end. They tore us
apart." "They
won a long time ago. This is between us." She
looked at me over her shoulder. "It also means I die." I
clenched my hands in frustration. "If you need a mind, take
Voskresenye's. He's not using it." "I
can't," she said. "His brain's too damaged, and he's locked me
out so he can have his hell. And besides, if I can't be with you,
it doesn't matter anymore." "I'm
not trying to kill you," I said. "I
know. But that's what you're doing." "Oh,
that's perfect," I said in a flash of anger. " 'Give me your
hypothalamus or I'll kill myself.' You're lying even now, aren't
you? You never wanted a lifemate. You wanted a lifeboat.
I'm your ticket out of the whale." She
said nothing; her eyes looked into mine. Her face was shimmering,
not with tears, but as if trying to break up into component
polygons. "That
was a low blow," I admitted, looking past her toward the
door. "It
wasn't a comedy after all," she said under her breath. "What?" She
looked up, her arms wrapped around her. "Remember what the whale
said? 'Marriage is a thing in ending stories.' I taught her that.
I fed her Aristotle, and told her to find me a plot that was a
comedy, and not a tragedy: a story with a wedding at the end, and
not a death. Maybe she never understood what marriage was, and
was just humoring me. Or maybe the wedding in the story you told
her is what she foresaw. Or—I don't know—maybe it was
me who ruined things, refusing to believe how much you'd changed.
I suppose we relied on the whale too much, both of
us." "Maybe
if you had spent your time thinking of me as a person, and not a
variable, things would have been different." "Would
they?"
she said, longingly. I shook
my head. "No." Because I was thinking of how she had made her
plans against the Weavers, all those years, and never told
me—to protect me, she had said; protect me in ignorance, as
if I were her child and not her lover. The woman who wanted to
share my mind had never been willing to share my
trust. "You'll
never get to Africa alone. You go out there and you'll be dead by
sunset." She thrust her hands into her jacket pockets; tears were
in her eyes. "Just let me in for long enough to save you; when
you're safe, if you want to erase me again—" "That's
enough." I squeezed past her, banging my shoulder against the
cage bars. "That's enough." I went out into the
laboratory. She was
blocking the door out. "Maya, I love you. I know you think it
isn't real, but it is. It's the only thing about me that
is real. I showed you that once...." She
reached out and touched her hand to my cheekbone. I tried to push
her arm away, but my hand passed through it: unreal. Holding my
breath, I stepped forward and walked right through her. When my
heart passed through hers it seemed to shudder, and for a moment,
I thought it would never recover its own rhythms. But it was only
an illusion. There was nothing there at all. I went
out into the hall, got onto the motionless slidewalk, and began
to run. She was
beside me. She kept pace without needing to move her legs, but
her image was starting to flicker. "Maya, tell me one thing. Say
you don't love me, and then I'll go." I
looked at her. And I could not deny it: there was something that
responded. For twenty years, my heart had been hollow and dry, an
empty seashell. Now I was surprised by warmth; as earlier, in
front of the police station, I had put out my hands expecting
metal and instead touched breathing flesh. She
must have seen the hesitation in my face. "Well then," she said.
"Your choice is obvious." "Yes,"
I said. "Yes, it is." And I pushed past her toward the
elevator. Again
she stood before me. Herringbones chased each other down her
cheeks, and I thought surely she would disappear at last; but she
regained control. "They'll be watching for me," she said. "But if
I swarmed again, I might get out. And this time go to Africa, and
try to find a place to grow my soul back. If I did that, and came
back to you in, say, another twenty years, would you—" Her
image flickered, and her mouth moved silently. Static invaded her
eyes. "I
don't know," I said. "I don't think so." And if
I could, I would freeze that instant forever. But it's no use. I
can trap the young rose in the hologram, but the rose is long
since dust. And what I most want to conceal from you, you've
always known: That I
went up into the world and left her there, in the prison camp
beneath the ocean, with the ruined mind of the new Iscariot and
the body of the whale. |
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