A dark-skinned
human with four arms walks toward me across the floor of the club, clad
only in a belt strung with human skulls. Her hair forms a smoky wreath
around her open and curious face. She's interested in me.
"You're new around here, aren't you?" she asks, pausing in front of my table.
I stare at her. Apart from the neatly
articulated extra shoulder joints, the body she's wearing is roughly
ortho, following the traditional human body plan. The skulls are
subsized, strung together on a necklace threaded with barbed wire and
roses. "Yes, I'm a nube," I say. My parole ring makes my left index
finger tingle, a little reminder. "I'm required to warn you that I'm
undergoing identity reindexing and rehabilitation. I—people in my
state—may be prone to violent outbursts. Don't worry, that's just
a statutory warning: I won't hurt you. What makes you ask?"
She shrugs. It's an elaborate rippling gesture
that ends with a wiggle of her hips. "Because I haven't seen you here
before, and I've been coming here most nights for the past twenty or
thirty diurns. You can earn extra rehab credit by helping out. Don't
worry about the parole ring, most of us here have them. I had to warn
people myself a while ago."
I manage to force a smile. A fellow inmate?
Further along the program? "Would you like a drink?" I ask, gesturing
at the chair next to me. "And what are you called, if you don't mind me
asking?"
"I'm Kay." She pulls out the chair and sits,
flipping her great mass of dark hair over her shoulder and tucking her
skulls under the table with two hands as she glances at the menu. "Hmm,
I think I will have an iced double mocha pickup, easy on the coca." She
looks at me again, staring at my eyes. "The clinic arranges things so
that there's always a volunteer around to greet nubes. It's my turn
this swing shift. Do you want to tell me your name? Or where you're
from?"
"If you like." My ring tingles, and I remember
to smile. "My name's Robin, and you're right, I'm fresh out of the
rehab tank. Only been out for a meg, to tell the truth." (A bit over
ten planetary days, a million seconds.) "I'm from"—I go into
quicktime for a few subseconds, trying to work out what story to give
her, ending up with an approximation of the truth—"around these
parts, actually. But just out of memory excision. I was getting stale
and needed to do something about whatever it was I was getting stale
over."
Kay smiles. She's got sharp cheekbones, bright
teeth framed between perfect lips; she's got bilateral symmetry, three
billion years of evolutionary heuristics and homeobox genes generating
a face that's a mirror of itself—and where did that thought come from?
I ask myself, annoyed. It's tough, not being able to tell the
difference between your own thoughts and a postsurgical identity
prosthesis.
"I haven't been human for long," she admits. "I just moved here from Zemlya." Pause. "For my surgery," she adds quietly.
I fiddle with the tassels dangling from my sword
pommel. There's something not quite right about them, and it's bugging
me intensely. "You lived with the ice ghouls?" I ask.
"Not quite—I was an ice ghoul."
That gets my attention: I don't think I've ever
met a real live alien before, even an ex-alien. "Were you"—what's
the word?—"born that way, or did you emigrate for a while?"
"Two questions." She holds up a finger. "Trade?"
"Trade." I remember to nod without prompting,
and my ring sends me a flicker of warmth. It's crude conditioning:
reward behavior indicative of recovery, punish behavior that reinforces
the postsurgical fugue. I don't like it, but they tell me it's an
essential part of the process.
"I emigrated to Zemlya right after my previous
memory dump." Something about her expression strikes me as evasive.
What could she be omitting? A failed business venture, personal
enemies? "I wanted to study ghoul society from the inside." Her
cocktail emerges from the table, and she takes an experimental sip.
"They're so strange." She looks wistful for a moment. "But after a
generation I got . . . sad." Another sip. "I was living
among them to study them, you see. And when you live among people for
gigaseconds on end you can't stop yourself getting involved, not unless
you go totally post and upgrade your—well. I made friends and
watched them grow old and die until I couldn't take any more. I had to
come back and excise the . . . the impact. The pain."
Gigaseconds? Thirty planetary years
each. That's a long time to spend among aliens. She's studying me
intently. "That must have been very precise surgery," I say slowly. "I
don't remember much of my previous life."
"You were human, though," she prods.
"Yes." Emphatically yes. Shards of memory
remain: a flash of swords in a twilit alleyway in the remilitarized
zone. Blood in the fountains. "I was an academic. A member of the
professoriat." An array of firewalled assembler gates, lined up behind
the fearsome armor of a customs checkpoint between polities. Pushing
screaming, imploring civilians toward a shadowy entrance—"I
taught history." That much is—was—true. "It all seems
boring and distant now." The brief flash of an energy weapon, then
silence. "I was getting stuck in a rut, and I needed to refresh myself.
I think."
Which is almost but not quite a complete lie. I
didn't volunteer, someone made me an offer I couldn't refuse. I knew
too much. Either consent to undergo memory surgery, or my next death
would be my last. At least, that's what it said I'd done in the
dead-paper letter that was waiting by my bedside when I awakened in the
rehab center, fresh from having the water of Lethe delivered straight
to my brain by the molecular-sized robots of the hospitaler
surgeon-confessors. I grin, sealing the partial truths with an outright
lie. "So I had a radical rebuild, and now I can't remember why."
"And you feel like a new human," she says, smiling faintly.
"Yes." I glance at her lower pair of hands. I
can't help noticing that she's fidgeting. "Even though I stuck with
this conservative body plan." I'm very conservatively turned
out—a medium-height male, dark eyes, wiry, the stubble of dark
hair beginning to appear across my scalp—like an unreconstructed
Eurasian from the pre-space era, right down to the leather kilt and
hemp sandals. "I have a strong self-image, and I didn't really want to
shed it—too many associations tied up in there. Those are nice
skulls, by the way."
Kay smiles. "Thank you. And thank you again for not asking, by the way."
"Asking?"
"The usual question: Why do you look like, well . . ."
I pick up my glass for the first time and take a
sip of the bitingly cold blue liquid. "You've just spent an entire
prehistoric human lifetime as an ice ghoul and people are needling you
for having too many arms?" I shake my head. "I just assumed you have a
good reason."
She crosses both pairs of arms defensively. "I'd
feel like a liar looking like . . ." She glances past
me. There are a handful of other people in the bar, a few bushujo and a
couple of cyborgs, but most of them are wearing orthohuman bodies.
She's glancing at a woman with long blond hair on one side of her head
and stubble on the other, wearing a filmy white drape and a sword belt.
The woman is braying loudly with laughter at something one of her
companions just said—berserkers on the prowl for players. "Her,
for example."
"But you were orthohuman once?"
"I still am, inside."
The penny drops: She wears xenohuman drag when
she's in public because she's shy. I glance over at the group and
accidentally make eye contact with the blond woman. She looks at me,
stiffens, then pointedlyturns away. "How long has this bar been here?" I ask, my ears burning. How dare she do that to me?
"About three megs." Kay nods at the group of
orthos across the room. "I really would avoid paying obvious attention
to them, they're duelists."
"So am I." I nod at her. "I find it therapeutic."
She grimaces. "I don't play, myself. It's messy. And I don't like pain."
"Well, neither do I," I say slowly. "That's not
the point." The point is that we get angry when we can't remember who
we are, and we lash out at first; and a structured, formal framework
means that nobody else needs to get hurt.
"Where do you live?" she asks.
"I'm in the"—she's transparently changing
the subject, I realize—"clinic, still. I mean, everything I had,
I"—liquidated and ran—"I travel light. I still haven't
decided what to be in this new lifetime, so there doesn't seem much
point in having lots of baggage."
"Another drink?" Kay asks. "I'm buying."
"Yes, please." A warning bell rings in my head
as I sense Blondie heading toward our table. I pretend not to notice,
but I can feel a familiar warmth in my stomach, a tension in my back.
Ancient reflexes and not a few modern cheat-codes take over and I
surreptitiously loosen my sword in its scabbard. I think I know what
Blondie wants, and I'm perfectly happy to give it to her. She's not the
only one around here prone to frequent flashes of murderous rage that
take a while to cool. The counselor told me to embrace it and give in,
among consenting fellows. It should burn itself out in time. Which is
why I'm carrying.
But the postexcision rages aren't my only
irritant. In addition to memory edits, I opted to have my age reset.
Being postadolescent again brings its own dynamic of hormonal torment.
It makes me pace my apartment restlessly, drives me to stand in the
white cube of the hygiene suite and draw blades down the insides of my
arms, curious to see the bright rosy blood welling up. Sex has acquired
an obsessive importance I'd almost forgotten. The urges to sex and
violence are curiously hard to fight off when you awaken drained and
empty and unable to rememberwho you used to be, but they're a lot less fun, the second or third time through the cycle of rejuvenation.
"Listen, don't look round, but you probably ought to know that someone is about to—"
Before I can finish the sentence, Blondie leans
over Kay's shoulder and spits in my face. "I demand satisfaction." She
has a voice like a diamond drill.
"Why?" I ask stonily, heart thumping with
tension as I wipe my cheek. I can feel the rage building, but I force
myself to keep it under control.
"You exist."
There's a certain type of look some postrehab
cases get while they're in the psychopathic dissociative stage, still
reknitting the raveled threads of their personality and memories into a
new identity. The insensate anger at the world, the existential
hate—often directed at their previously whole self for putting
them into this world, naked and stripped of memories—generates
its own dynamic. Wild black-eyed hatred and the perfect musculature of
the optimized phenotype combine to lend Blondie an intimidating, almost
primal presence. Nevertheless, she's got enough self-control to issue a
challenge before she attacks.
Kay, shy and much further advanced in recovery than either of us, cowers in her seat as Blondie glares at me. That annoys me—Blondie's got no call to intimidate bystanders. And maybe I'm not as out of control as I feel.
"In that case"—I slowly stand up, not
breaking eye contact for a moment—"how about we take this to the
remilitarized zone? First death rules?"
"Yes," she hisses.
I glance at Kay. "Nice talking to you. Order me
another drink? I'll be right back." I can feel her eyes on my back as I
follow Blondie to the gate to the RMZ. Which is right beside the bar.
Blondie pauses on the threshold. "After you," she says.
"Au contraire. Challenger goes first."
She glares at me one more time, clearly furious,
then strides into the T-gate and blinks out. I wipe my right palm on my
leather kilt, grip the hilt of my sword, draw, and leap through the
point-to-point wormhole.
Dueling etiquette calls for the challenger to
clear the gate by a good ten paces, but Blondie isn't in a good mood,
and it's a very good thing that I'm on the defensive and ready to parry
as I go through because she's waiting, ready to shove her sword through
my abdomen on the spot.
She's fast and vicious and utterly uninterested
in playing by the rules, which is fine by me because my own existential
rage now has an outlet and a face. The anger that has been eating me up
since my surgery, the hatred of the war criminals who forced me into
this, of the person I used to be who surrendered to the large-scale
erasure of their memories—I can't even remember what sex I was,
or how tall—has a focus, and on the other end of her circling
blade, Blondie's face is a glow of concentration and fury to mirror my
own.
This part of the remilitarized zone is modeled
on a ruined city of old Urth, shattered postnuclear concrete wastelands
and strange creeping vegetation shrouding the statues of conquerors and
the burned-out wreckage of wheeled cars. We could be alone here,
marooned on a planet uninhabited by other sapients. Alone to work out
our grief and rage as the postsurgical fugue slowly dissipates.
Blondie tries to rush me, and I fall back
carefully, trying to spot some weakness in her attack. She prefers the
edge to the point and the right to the left, but she's not leaving me
any openings. "Hurry up and die!" she snaps.
"After you." I feint and try to draw her
off-balance, circling round her. Next to the gate we came in through
there's a ruined stump of a tall building, rubble heaped up above head
height. (The gate's beacon flashes red, signifying no egress until one
of us is dead.) The rubble gives me an idea, and I feint again, then
back off and leave an opening for her.
Blondie takes the opening, and I just barely
block her, because she's fast. But she's not sly, and she certainly
wasn't expecting the knife in my left hand—taped to my left thigh
before—and as she tries to guard against it, I see my chance and
run my sword through her belly.
She drops her weapon and falls to her knees. I sit down heavily opposite her, almost collapsing. Oh dear. How did she manage to get my leg? Maybe I shouldn't trust my instincts quite so totally.
"Done?" I ask, suddenly feeling faint.
"I—" There's a curious expression on her
face as she holds on to the basket of my sword. "Uh." She tries to
swallow. "Who?"
"I'm Robin," I say lightly, watching her with
interest. I'm not sure I've ever watched somebody dying with a sword
through their guts before. There's lots of blood and a really vile
smell of ruptured intestines. I'd have thought she'd be writhing and
screaming, but maybe she's got an autonomic override. Anyway, I'm busy
holding my leg together. Blood keeps welling up between my fingers. Comradeship in pain. "You are . . . ?"
"Gwyn." She swallows. The light of hatred is extinguished, leaving something—puzzlement?—behind.
"When did you last back up, Gwyn?"
She squints. "Unh. Hour. Ago."
"Well then. Would you like me to end this?"
It takes a moment for her to meet my eyes. She nods. "When? You?"
I lean over, grimacing, and pick up her blade. "When did I last back myself up? Since recovering from memory surgery, you mean?"
She nods, or maybe shudders. I raise the blade
and frown, lining it up on her neck: it takes all my energy. "Good
question—"
I slice through her throat. Blood sprays everywhere.
"Never."
I stumble to
the exit—an A-gate—and tell it to rebuild my leg before
returning me to the bar. It switches me off, and a subjective instant
later, I wake up in the kiosk in the washroom at the back of the bar,
my body remade as new. I stare into the mirror for about a minute,
feeling empty but, curiously, at peace with myself. Maybe I'll be ready for a backup soon?
I flex my right leg. The assembler's done a good job of canonicalizing
it, and the edited muscle works just fine. I resolve to avoid Gwyn, at
least until she's in a less insensately violent mood, which may take a
long time if she keeps picking fights with her betters. Then I return
to my table.
Kay is still there, which is odd. I'd expected her to be gone by now. (A-gates
are fast, but it still takes a minimum of about a thousand seconds to
tear down and rebuild a human body: that's a lot of bits and atoms to
juggle.)
I drop into my seat. She has bought me another drink. "I'm sorry about that," I say automatically.
"You get used to it around here." She sounds philosophical. "Feeling better?"
"You know, I—" I stop. Just for a moment
I'm back in that dusty concrete-strewn wasteland, a searing pain in my
leg, the sheer hatred I feel fueling my throw at Gwyn's head. "It's
gone," I say. I stare at the glass, then pick it up and knock back half
of it in one go.
"What's gone?" I catch her watching me. "If you don't mind talking about it," she adds hastily.
She's frightened but concerned, I suddenly
realize. My parole ring pulses warmth repeatedly. "I don't mind," I
say, and smile, probably a trifle tiredly. I put the glass down. "I'm
still in the dissociative phase, I guess. Before I came out this
evening I was sitting in my room all on my own, and I was drawing
pretty lines all over my arms with a scalpel. Thinking about opening my
wrists and ending it all. I was angry. Angry at myself. But now I'm
not."
"That's very common." Her tone is guarded. "What changed it for you?"
I frown. Knowing it's a common side effect of
reintegration doesn't help. "I've been an idiot. I need to take a
backup as soon as I go home."
"A backup?" Her eyes widen. "You've been walking
around here wearing a sword and a dueling sash all evening, and you
don't have a backup?" Her voice rises to a squeak. "What are you trying to do?"
"Knowing you've got a backup blunts your edge.
Anyway, I was angry with myself." I stop frowning as I look at her.
"But you can't stay angry forever."
More to the point, I'm suddenly feeling an
awful, hollow sense of dread about the idea of rediscovering who I am,
or who I used to be. What does it mean, to suddenly begin sensing other
people's emotions again only after you run someone through with a
sword? Back in the dark ages it would have been a tragedy. Even here,
dying isn't something most people take lightly. For a horrible moment I
feel the urge to rush out and find Gwyn and apologize to her—but
that's absurd, she won't remember, she'll be in the same headspace she
was in before. She'd probably challenge me to another duel and, being
in the same insensate rage, turn me into hamburger on the spot.
"I think I'm reconnecting," I say slowly. "Do
you know somewhere I could go that's safer? I mean, less likely to
attract the attentions of berserkers?"
"Hmm." She looks at me critically. "If you lose
the sword and the sash, you won't look out of place round the block in
one of the phase two recovery piazzas. I know a place that does a
really good joesteak—how hungry are you feeling?"
IN the wake of
the duel I have become hungry for food just as my appetite for violence
has declined. Kay takes me to a charmingly rustic low-gee piazza of
spun-diamond foam and bonsai redwoods, where quaint steam-powered
robots roast succulent baby hams over charcoal grills. Kay and I chat
and it becomes clear that she's mightily intrigued to see me recovering
visibly from the emotional aftereffects of memory surgery. I pump her
for details of life among the ice ghouls, and she quizzes me about the
dueling academies of the Invisible Republic. She has a quirky sense of
humor and, toward the end of the meal, suggests that she knows a party
where there's fun to be had.
The party turns out to be a fairly laid-back
floating orgy in one of the outpatient apartments. There are only about
six people there when we arrive, mostly lying on the large circular
bed, passing around a water pipe and masturbating each other tenderly.
Kay leans me up against the wall just beside the entrance, kisses me,
and does something electrifying to my perineum and testicles with three
of her hands. Then she vanishes into the hygiene suite to use the
assembler, leaving me panting. When she returns I almost don't
recognize her—her hair has turned blue, she's lost two arms, and
her skin has turned the color of milky coffee. But she walks right up
to me and kisses me again and I recognize her by the taste of her
mouth. I carry her to the bed and, after our first urgent fuck, we join
the circle with the pipe—which is loaded with opium and an easily
vaporized phosphodiesterase inhibitor—then explore each other's
bodies and those of our neighbors until we're close to falling asleep.
I'm lying next to her, almost face-to-face, when she murmurs, "That was fun."
"Fun," I echo. "I needed—" My vision blurs. "Too long."
"I come here regularly," she offers. "You?"
"I haven't—" I pause.
"What?"
"I can't remember when I last had sex."
She places one hand between my thighs. "Really?" She looks puzzled.
"I can't." I frown. "I must have forgotten it."
"Forgotten? Truly?" She looks surprised. "Could
you have had a bad relationship or something? Could that be why you had
surgery?"
"No, I—" I stop before anything more slips
out. The letter from my older self would have said if that was the
case, I'm certain of that much. "It's just gone. I don't think that
usually happens, does it?"
"No." She cuddles up against me and strokes my
neck. I feel a momentary sense of wonder as I stiffen against her, then
I begin to trace the edges of her nipples, and her breath catches. It
must be the drugs, I think; I couldn't possibly stay aroused this long
without some external input, could I? "You'd be a good subject for
Yourdon's experiment."
"Yourdon's what?"
She pushes at my chest and I roll onto my back
obligingly to let her mount me. There are toys scattered round the bed,
mewing and begging to be used, but she seems to need to do this the
traditional way, bareback skin on skin: she probably sees it as a way
of reconnecting with what it means to be human or something. My breath
hisses as I grab her buttocks and pull her down onto me.
"The experiment. He's looking for serious amnesia cases, offering a referral fee to finders. I'll tell you later."
And then we stop talking, because speech is
simply getting in the way of communication, and in the here and now,
she's all I need.
AFTERWARD, I
walk home through avenues carpeted with soft, living grass, roofed in
green marble slabs carved from the lithosphere of a planet hundreds of
teraklicks away. I am alone with my thoughts, netlink silenced save for
a route map that promises me a five-kilometer walk avoiding all other
persons. Though I carry my sword, I don't feel any desire to be
challenged. I need time to think, because when I get home my therapist
will be waiting for me, and I need to be clear in my own head about who
I think I am becoming before I talk to it.
Here I am, awake and alive—whoever I am. I'm Robin, aren't I?
I have a slew of fuzzy memories, traces left behind by memory washes
that blur my earlier lives into an impressionist haze. I had to look up
my own age shortly after I woke. Turns out I'm nearly seven billion
seconds old, though I have the emotional stability of a postadolescent
a tenth that age. Once upon a time people who lived even two
gigaseconds were senescent. How can I be so old yet feel so young and
inexperienced?
There are huge, mysterious holes in my life.
Obviously I must have had sex before, but I don't remember it. Clearly
I have dueled—my reflexes and unconscious skills made short work
of Gwyn—but I don't remember training, or killing, except in
mysterious flashes that could equally well be leftover memories of
entertainments. The letter from my earlier self said I was an academic,
a military historian specializing in religious manias, sleeper cults,
and emergent dark ages. If so, I don't remember any of it at all. Maybe
it's buried deep, to re-emerge when I need it—and maybe it's gone
for good. Whatever grade of memory excision my earlier self requested
must have been perilously close to a total wipe.
So what's left?
There are fractured shards of memory all over
the lobby of my Cartesian theatre, waiting for me to slip and cut
myself on them. I'm in male orthohuman form right now, orthodox product
of natural selection. This shape feels right to me, but I think there
was a time when Iwas something much stranger—for some reason, I have the idea that I might have been a tank.
(Either that, or I mainlined one too many wartime adventure virtches,
and they stuck with me through memory surgery even when more important
parts went missing.) The sense of implacable extensibility, coldly
controlled violence . . . yes, maybe I was a
tank. If so, at one time I guarded a critical network gate. Traffic
between polities, like traffic within a polity, passes over T-gates,
point-to-point wormholes linking distant locations. T-gates have two
endpoints, and are unfiltered—anything can pass through one, from
one end to the other. While this isn't a problem within a polity, it's
a huge problem when you're defending a network frontier against
attack from other polities. Hence the firewall. My job, as part of the
frontier guard, was to make sure that inbound travelers went straight
into an A-gate—an assembler array that disassembled, uploaded,
and analyzed them for threats, before routing them as serial data to
another A-gate on the inside of the DMZ for reassembly. Normally people
would only be routed through an A-gate for customs scanning or
serialization via a high-traffic wormhole aperture dedicated to data
traffic; but at that time there were no exceptions to the security
check because we were at war.
War? Yes: it was the tail end of
the censorship wars. I must have been infected at some point because I
can't remember what it was about, but I was definitely guarding
cross-border—longjump—T-gates for one of the successor
states that splintered from the Republic of Is when its A-gates were
infected by the redactionist worms.
And then I seem to faintly recall . . . yes! Once upon a time I was one of the Linebarger Cats. Or I worked for them. But I wasn't a tank, then. I was something else.
I step out of a T-gate at one end of a
musty-smelling corridor running through the stony heart of a ruined
cathedral. Huge pillars rise toward a black sky on either side of me,
ivy crawling across the latticework screens that block off the gaps
between them. (The pillars are a necessary illusion, markers for the
tunnel field that holds in the atmosphere; the planet beneath this
gothic park is icy cold and airless, tidally locked to a brown dwarf
primary somewhere in transsolar space within a few hundred trillion
kilometers of legendary dead Urth.) I walk across decaying tapestries
of crimson-and-turquoise wool, armored and gowned orthohumans fighting
and loving across a gulf of seconds so vast that my own history dims
into insignificance.
Here I am, stranded at the far end of time in a
rehabilitation center run by the hospitaler surgeon-confessors of the
Invisible Republic, pacing the abandoned halls of a picturesque folly
on the surface of a brown dwarf planet as I try to piece together my
unraveled identity. I can't even remember how I got here. So how am I
meant to talk to my therapists?
I follow the blinking cursor of my netlink map
into a central atrium, then hang a left into a nave that leads past
stone altars topped with the carved skeletons of giants. The nave leads
shortly to a rectangular hole in space delineated by another T-gate.
Stepping through the wormhole, I feel light-footed: gravity here
declines to hold me, and there is a pronounced Coriolis force tugging
toward my left. The light is brighter, and the floor is a blue liquid
lake with surface tension so high that I can skate along it, my feet
dimpling the surface. There are no doors at water level but niches and
irregular hollows cut into the walls, and the air carries a tang of
iodine. If I had to hazard a guess, I'd say this route was leading
through a chamber in one of the enigmatic routers that orbit so many
brown dwarfs in this part of the galaxy.
At the end of the corridor I pass several moving
human-sized clouds—privacy haze fuzzing out the other travelers
so that we do not have to notice each other—and then into another
chamber, with a ring of T-gate wormholes and A-gate routers circling
the wall. I take the indicated door and find myself in a
familiar-looking corridor paneled to either side in living wood, an
ornamental fountain occupying the courtyard at the far end. It's
peaceful and friendly, lit with the warm glow of a yellow star. This is
where I, and a handful of other rehabilitation subjects, have been
assigned apartments. This is where we can come to socialize safely with
people in the same state of recovery, when it is safe for us to do so.
And this is where I come to meet my therapist.
TODAY'S therapist isn't remotely humanoid, not even bushujo or elven; Piccolo-47 is a mesomorphic drone, roughly pear-shaped, with a variety
of bizarre-looking extensible robot limbs—some of them not
physically connected to Piccolo's body—and nothing that resembles
a face. Personally, I think that's rude (humans are hardwired at a low
level to use facial expressions to communicate emotional states: Not
wearing a face in public is a deliberate snub), but I keep the thought
to myself. It's probably doing it on purpose to see how stable I
am—if I can't cope with someone who doesn't have a face, how am I
going to manage in public? Anyway, picking fights with my counselor is
not going to help my emotional wobbles. I'm tired, and I'd like to have
a long bath and go to sleep, so I resolve to get this over without any
unpleasant incidents.
"You fought a duel today," says Piccolo-47. "Please describe the events leading up to the incident in your own words."
I sit down on the stone steps beneath the
fountain, lean back until I can feel the cool splashing of water on the
back of my neck, and try to tell myself that I'm talking to a household
appliance. That helps. "Sure," I say, and summarize the diurn's
events—at least, the public ones.
"Do you feel that Gwyn provoked you unduly?" asks the counselor.
"Hmm." I think about it for a moment. "I think I
may have provoked her," I say slowly. "Not intentionally, but she
caught me watching her, and I could probably have disengaged. If I'd
wanted to." The admission makes me feel slightly dirty—but only
slightly. Gwyn is walking around right now with no memory of having
been stabbed in the guts. She's lost less than an hour of her lifeline.
Whereas my leg is still giving me twinges of memory, and I risked—
"You said you have not taken a backup. Isn't that a little foolhardy?"
"Yes, yes it is." I make up my mind. "And I'm going to take one as soon as we finish this conversation."
"Good." I startle slightly and stare at
Piccolo-47, disturbed. Therapists don't normally express opinions,
positive or negative, during a session; it's just broken the illusion
that it's not there, and I feel my skin crawl slightly as I look at its
smooth carapace. "Examination of your public state suggests that you
are progressing well. I encourage you to continue exploring the
rehabilitative sector and to make use of the patient support groups."
"Um." I stare. "I thought you weren't meant to intervene . . . ?"
"Intervention is contraindicated in early stages
of recovery of patients with severe dissociative psychopathology
consequential to memory excision. However, in later stages, it may be
used where appropriate to provide guidance for a patient who is showing
significant progress." Then Piccolo-47 pauses. "I would like to make a
request. You are free to disregard it."
"Oh?" I stare at its dorsal manipulator root.
It's something like an iridescent cauliflower, flexing and shimmering
and breathing, and something like a naked lung, turned inside out and
electroplated with titanium. It's fascinatingly abhuman, a macroscopic
nanomachine so complex it seems almost alive in its own right.
"You said that Patient Kay mentioned the Yourdon
experiment to you. Historian Professor Yourdon is one of my coworkers,
and Kay is perfectly correct. Your relatively deep therapy means that
you would be an ideal participant for the project. I also believe that
your long-term recovery may benefit from participation."
"Hmm." I can tell when I'm being stroked for a hard sell. "You'll have to tell me more about it."
"Certainly. One moment?" I can tell Piccolo-47
is going into quicktime and messaging someone else: its focus of
attention wanders—I can see the sensor peripherals
unfocusing—and the manipulator root stops shimmering. "I have
taken the liberty of transmitting your public case profile to the
coordination office, Robin. The experiment I allude to is a
cross-disciplinary one being conducted by the departments of
archaeology, history, psychology, and social engineering within the
Scholastium. Professor Yourdon is its coordinator-general. If you
volunteer to participate, a copy of your next backup—or your
original, should you choose total immersion—will be instantiated
as a separate entity within an experimental community, where it will
live alongside roughly a hundred other volunteers for thirty to a
hundred megaseconds." Roughly one to three old-style years. "The
community is designed as an experiment to probe certain psychological
constraints associated with life prior to the censorship wars. An
attempt to reconstruct a culture that we have lost track of, in other
words."
"An experimental society?"
"Yes. We have limited data about many periods in
our history. Dark ages have become all too frequent since the dawn of
the age of emotional machines. Sometimes they are
unintentional—the worst dark age, at the dawn of the emotional
age, was caused by the failure to understand informational economics
and the consequent adoption of incompatible data representation
formats. Sometimes they're deliberate—the censorship wars, for
example. But the cumulative result is that there are large periods of
history from which very little information survives that has not been
skewed by observational bias. Propaganda, entertainment, and self-image
conspire to rob us of accurate depictions, and old age and the need for
periodic memory excision rob us of our subjective experiences. So
Professor Yourdon's experiment is intended to probe emergent social
relationships in an early emotional-age culture that is largely lost to
us today."
"I think I see." I shuffle against the stonework
and lean back against the fountain. Piccolo-47's voice oozes with
reassurance. I'm pretty sure it's emitting a haze of feel-good
pheromones, but if my suspicions are correct it won't have thought of
the simple somatic discomforts I can inflict on myself to help me stay
alert. The pitter-patter of icy droplets on my neck is a steady
irritant. "So I'd, what, go live in this community for ten megs? And
then what? What would I do?"
"I can't tell you in any great detail,"
Piccolo-47 admits, its tones conciliatory and calm. "That would
undermine the integrity of the experiment. Its goals and functions have
to remain uncertain to the subjects if it is to retain any empirical
validity, because it is meant to be a living society—a real one.
What I can tell you is that you will be free to leave as soon as the
experiment reaches an end state that satisfies the acceptance criteria
of the gatekeeper, or if the ethics committee supervising it
approves an early release. Within it, there will be certain
restrictions on your freedom of movement, freedom of access to
information and medical procedures, and restrictions on the artifacts
and services available to you that postdate the period being probed.
From time to time the gatekeeper will broadcast certain information to
the participants, to guide your understanding of the society. There is
a release tobe notarized before you can join. But we assure you that all your rights and dignities will be preserved intact."
"What's in it for me?" I ask bluntly.
"You will be paid handsomely for your
participation." Piccolo-47 sounds almost bashful. "And there is an
extra bonus scheme for subjects who contribute actively to the success
of the project."
"Uh-huh." I grin at my therapist. "That's not
what I meant." If he thinks I need credit, he's sadly mistaken. I don't
know who I was working for before—whether it really was the
Linebarger Cats or some other, more obscure (and even more terrifying)
Power—but one thing is certain, they didn't leave me destitute
when they ordered me to undergo memory excision.
"There is also the therapeutic aspect," says
Piccolo-47. "You appear to harbor goal-dysphoria issues. These relate
to the almost complete erasure of your delta block reward/motivation
centers, along with the associated memories of your former vocation;
bluntly, you feel directionless and idle. Within the simulation
community, you will be provided with an occupation and expected to
work, and introduced to a community of peers who are all in the same
situation as you. Comradeship and a renewed sense of purpose are likely
side effects of this experiment. Meanwhile you will have time to
cultivate your personal interests and select a direction that fits your
new identity, without pressure from former associates or acquaintances.
And I repeat, you will be paid handsomely for your participation."
Piccolo-47 pauses for a moment. "You have already met one of your
fellow participants," he adds.
A hit.
"I'll think about it," I say noncommittally.
"Send me the details and I'll think about it. But I'm not going to say
yes or no on the spot." I grin wider, baring my teeth. "I don't like
being pressured."
"I understand." Piccolo-47 rises slightly and
moves backward a meter or so. "Please excuse me. I am very enthusiastic
for the experiment to proceed successfully."
"Sure." I wave it off. "Now if you'll excuse me, I really do need some privacy. I still sleep, you know."
"I will see you in approximately one diurn,"
says Piccolo-47, rising farther and rotating toward a hole that is
irising open in the ceiling. "Goodbye." Then it's gone, leaving only a
faint smell of lavender behind, and me to the strikingly vivid memory
of the taste and feel of Kay's tongue exploring my lips.
The Invisible Republic is one of the legacy
polities that emerged from the splinters of the Republic of Is, in the
wake of the series of censorship wars that raged five to ten
gigaseconds ago. During the wars, the internetwork of longjump T-gates
that wove the subnets of the hyperpower together was shattered, leaving
behind sparsely connected nets, their borders filtered through
firewalled assembler gates guarded by ferocious mercenaries. Incomers
were subjected to forced disassembly and scanned for subversive
attributes before being rebuilt and allowed across the frontiers.
Battles raged across the airless cryogenic wastes that housed the
longjump nodes carrying traffic between warring polities, while the
redactive worms released by the Censor factions lurked in the firmware
of every A-gate they could contaminate, their viral payload mercilessly
deleting all knowledge of the underlying cause of the conflict from
fleeing refugees as they passed through the gates.
Like almost all human polities since the
Acceleration, the Republic of Is relied heavily on A-gates for
manufacturing, routing, switching, filtering, and the other essentials
of any network civilization. The ability of nanoassembler arrays to
deconstruct and replicate artifacts and organisms from raw atomic
feedstock made them virtually indispensable—not merely for
manufacturing and medical purposes, but for virtual transport (it's
easier to simultaneously cram a hundred upload templates through a
T-gate than a hundred physical bodies) and molecular firewalling. Even
when war exposed them to subversion by the worms of censorship, nobody
wanted to do without the A-gates—to grow old and decrepit, or
succumb to injury, seemed worse than the risk of memory corruption. The
paranoid few who refused to pass through the verminous gates dropped
away, dying of old age or cumulative accidental damage; meanwhile,
those of us who still used them can no longer be certain of whatever it
was that the worm payloads were designed to hide in the first place. Or
even who the Censors were.
But the stress of the censorship caused people
to distrust all gates that they didn't control themselves. You can't
censor data or mass flowing through a T-gate, which is simply a
wormhole of twisted space-time connecting two distant points. So even
short-range traffic switched to T-gates, while new mass assemblies
became scarce because of generalized distrust of the Censored A-gates.
There was an economic crash, then a splintering of communications, and
entire T-gate networks—networks with high degrees of internal
connectivity, not necessarily spatial proximity—began to
disconnect from the wider net. Is became Was, and what was once a
myriad of public malls with open topologies sprouted fearsome armed
checkpoints, frontier posts between firewalled virtual republics.
That was then, and this is now. The Invisible
Republic was one of the first successor states to form. They built an
intranetwork of T-gates and fiercely defended them from the outside
until the first generation of fresh A-gates, bootstrapped painfully all
the way from hand-lithographed quantum dot arrays, became available.
The Invisibles started out as a group of academic institutions that set
up a distributed trust system early in the censorship; they still
retain their military-academic roots. The Scholastium views knowledge
as power and seeks to restore the data lost during successive dark
ages—although whether it is really a good idea to uncover the
cause of the censorship is a matter of hot debate.
Just about everyone lost parts of their lives during the war, and tens
of billions more died completely: Re-creating the preconditions for the
worst holocaust since the twenty-third century is not uncontroversial.
Ironically, the Invisible Republic is now the
place where many people come in order to forget their pasts. We who
remain human (while relying on A-gate redaction to save our bodies from
senescence) sooner or later need to learn to forget. Time is a
corrosive fluid, dissolving motivation, destroying novelty, and
leaching the joy from life. But forgetting is a fraught process, one
that is prone to transcription errors and personality flaws. Delete the
wrong pattern, and you can end up becoming someone else. Memories
exhibit dependencies, and their management is one of the highest
medical art forms. Hence the high status and vast resources of the
surgeon-confessors, into whose hands my earlier self delivered me. The
surgeon-confessors learned their skills by forensic analysis of the
damage done to the victims of the censorship wars. And thus,
yesterday's high crime leads to today's medical treatment.
A few
diurns—almost half a tenday—after my little chat with
Piccolo- 47, I am back in the recovery club, nursing a drink and
enjoying the mild hallucinations it brings on in conjunction with the
mood music the venue plays for me. It's been voted a hot day, and most
of the party animals are out in the courtyard, where they've grown a
swimming pool. I've been studying, trying to absorb what I can of the
constitution and jurisprudential traditions of the Invisible Republic,
but it's hard work, so I decided to come here to unwind. I've left my
sword and dueler's sash back home. Instead, I'm wearing black leggings
and a loose top festooned with a Menger sponge of empty pockets
stitched out of smaller pockets and smaller still, almost down to the
limits of visibility—woven in free fall by hordes of tiny otaku
spiders, I'm told, their genes programmed by an obsessive-compulsive
sartorial topologist. I feel pretty good about myself because my most
recent therapist-assignee, Lute-629,says I'm making good progress. Which is probably why I'm not sufficiently on guard.
I'm sitting alone at a table minding my own
business when, without any kind of warning, two hands clap themselves
over my eyes. I startle and try to stand up, tensing in the first
instinctive move to throw up a blocking forearm, but another pair of
hands is already pressing down on my shoulders. I realize who it is
only just in time to avoid punching her in the face. "Hello, stranger,"
she breathes in my ear, apparently unaware of how close I came to
striking her.
"Hey." In one dizzy moment I smell her skin
against the side of my cheek as my heart tries to lurch out of my
chest, and I break out in a cold sweat. I reach up carefully to stroke
the side of her face. I'm about to suggest she shouldn't sneak up on
me, but I can visualize her smiling, and something makes me take a more
friendly tone. "I was wondering if I'd see you here."
"Happens." The hands vanish from my eyes as she
lets go of me. I twist round to see her impish grin. "I'm not
disturbing anything important, am I?"
"Oh, hardly. I've just had my fill of studying, and it's time to relax." I grin ruefully. And I would be relaxing if you weren't giving me fight-or-flight attacks!
"Good." She slides into the booth beside me,
leans up against my side, and snaps her fingers at the menu. Moments
later a long, tall something or other that varies from gold at the top
to blue at the bottom arrives in a glass of flash-frozen ice that
steams slightly in the humid air. I can see horse-head ripples in the
mist, blue steam-trails of self-similarity. "I'm never sure whether
it's polite to ask people if they want to socialize—the
conventions are too different from what I'm used to."
"Oh, I'm easy." I finish my own drink and let
the table reabsorb my glass. "Actually, I was thinking about a meal.
Are you by any chance hungry?"
"I could be." She chews her lower lip and looks at me pensively. "You said you were hoping to see me."
"Yes. I was wondering about the, uh, greeter thing. Who runs it, and whether they need any volunteers."
She blinks and looks me up and down. "You think
you're sufficiently in control? You want to volunteer
to—remarkable!" One of my external triggers twitches, telling me
that she's accessing my public metadata, the numinous cloud of medical
notes that follow us all around like a swarm of phantom bees, ready to
sting us into submission at the first sign of undirected aggression.
"You've made really good progress!"
"I don't want to be a patient forever." I
probably sound a bit defensive. Maybe she doesn't realize she's rubbed
me up the wrong way, but I really don't like being patronized.
"Do you know what you're going to do when your control metrics are within citizenship bounds?" she asks.
"No idea." I glance at the menu. "Hey, I'll have one of whatever she's drinking," I tell the table.
"Why not?" She sounds innocently curious. Maybe that's why I decide to tell her the unembellished truth.
"I don't know much about who I am. I mean,
whoever I was before, he put me in for a maximum wash, didn't he? I
don't remember what my career was, what I used to do, even what I was
interested in. Tabula rasa, that's me."
"Oh my." My drink emerges from the table. She
looks as if she doesn't know whether to believe me or not. "Do you have
a family? Any friends?"
"I'm not sure," I admit. Which is a white lie. I
have some very vague memories of growing up, some of them vivid in a
stereotyped way that suggests crude enhancement during a previous
memory wash—memories I'd wanted to preserve at all costs, two
proud mothers watching my early steps across a black sandy
beach . . . and I have a strong but baseless conviction
that I've had long-term partners, at least a gigasecond of domesticity.
And there are faint memories of coworkers, phantoms of former Cats. But
try as I might, I can't put a face to any of them, and that's a
cruel realization to confront. "I have some fragments, but I've got a
feeling that before my memory surgery I was pretty solitary. Anorganization person, a node in a big machine. Can't remember what kind of machine, though." Fresh-spilled blood bubbling and fizzing in vacuum. Liar.
"That's so sad," she says.
"What about you?" I ask. "Before you were an ice ghoul . . . ?"
"Oh yes! I grew up in a troupe, I had lots of
brothers and sisters and parents. We were primate fundamentalists, you
know? It's kind of embarrassing. But I still hear from some of the
cousins now and then—we exchange insights once in a while." She
smiles wistfully. "When I was a ghoul, it was one of the few things
that reminded me I had an alien side."
"But did you, when you were a ghoul, did you have . . . ?"
Her face freezes over: "No, I didn't." I look away, embarrassed for her. Why did I imagine I was the only liar at the table?
"About that food idea," I say, hastily changing
the subject, "I'm still trying out some of the eateries around here. I
mean, getting to know what's good and figuring out who hangs out where.
I was thinking about going for a meal and maybe seeing if a few
acquaintances are around afterward, Linn and Vhora. Do you know them?
They're in rehab, too, only they've been out a bit longer than us.
Linn's doing craft therapy, ad hoc environmental patching, while
Vhora's learning to play the musette."
"Did you have anywhere in particular in mind to go and eat?" She unfreezes fast once we're off the sensitive subject.
"I was thinking a pavement cafe in the Green
Maze that hangs off the back of the Reich Wing looked like a
possibility. It's run by a couple of human cooks who design
historically inauthentic Indonesian tapas in public. It's strictly
recreational, a performance thing: They don't actually expect you to
eat their prototypes—not unless you want to." I raise a finger.
"If that doesn't interest you, there's a fusion shed, also in the Green
Maze, that I cached yesterday. They do a decent pan-fried calzone, only
they call it something like a dizer or dozer. And there's always sushi."
Kay nods thoughtfully. "Plausible," she agrees.
Then she smiles. "I like the sound of your tapas. Shall we go and see
how much we can eat? Then let's meet these friends of yours."
They're not friends so much as nodding
acquaintances, but I don't tell her that. Instead, I pay up with a wave
at the billpoint, and we head for the back door, out onto the beautiful
silvery beach that the rehab club backs on to, then over to a
rustic-looking door that conceals the gate to the green maze. Along the
way, Kay pulls a pair of batik harem pants and a formally cut
black-lace jacket out of her waist pouch, which is an artfully
concealed gate opening on a personal storage space. Both of us are
barefoot, for although there is a breeze and bright sunlight on our
skin, we are fundamentally as deep indoors as it is possible for humans
to get, cocooned in a network of carefully insulated habitats floating
at intervals of light kiloseconds throughout a broad reach of the big
black.
The Green Maze is one of those rectilinear
manifolds that was all the fashion about four gigasecs ago, right after
the postwar fragmentation bottomed out. The framework consists of green
corridors, all straight, all intersecting at ninety-degree angles and
held together by a bewildering number of T-gates. Actually, it's a
sparse network, so you can go through a doorway on one side of the maze
and find yourself on the far side, or several levels up, or even two
twists, a hop, and a jump behind the back of your own head. Lots of
apartment suites hang off it, including the back entrance to my own,
along with an even more startling range of cubist-themed public spaces,
entertainment nooks, eateries, resteries, entertainment venues, and a
few real formal hedge mazes built in a style several tens of
teraseconds older.
Needless to say, nobody knows their way around
the Green Maze by memory or dead reckoning—some of the gates move
from diurn to diurn—but my netlink knows where I'm going and
throws up a firefly for me. It takes us about a third of a kilosec to
walk there in companionable silence. I'm still trying to work out
whether I can trust Kay, but I'm already sure I like her.
The tapas place is open plan, ancient cast-iron
chairs and tables on a grassy deck beneath a dome under a pink sky
streaked with clouds of carbon monoxide that scud across a cracked
basalt wilderness. The sun is very bright and very small, and if the
dome vanished, we'd probably freeze to death before the atmosphere
poisoned us. Kay glances at the ornamental archway surrounding the
T-gate, overgrowth with ivy, and picks a table close to it. "Anything
wrong?" I ask.
"It reminds me of home." She looks as if she's bitten a durian fruit while expecting a mango. "Sorry. I'll try to ignore it."
"I didn't mean to—"
"I know you didn't." A small, wry, smile. "Maybe I didn't erase enough."
"I'm worried that I erased too much," I say
before I can stop myself. Then Frita, one of the two
proprietor/cook/designers wanders over, and we're lost for a while in
praise of his latest creations, and of course we have to sample the
fruits of the first production run and make an elaborate business of
reviewing them while Erci stands by strumming his mandolin and looking
proud.
"Erased too much," Kay prods me.
"Yes." I push my plate away. "I don't know for
sure. My old self left me a long, somewhat vague letter. Written and
serialized, not an experiential; it was encoded in a way he knew I'd
remember how to decrypt, he was very careful about that. Anyway, he
hinted about all sorts of dark things. He knew too much, rambled on
about how he'd worked for a Power and done bad things until his
coworkers forced him into excision and rehab. And it was a thorough job
of assisted forgetting they did on me. I mean, for all I know I might
be a war criminal or something. I've completely lost over a gigasecond,
and the stuff before then is full of holes—I don't remember
anything about what my vocation was, or what I did during the
censorship, or any friends or family, or anything like that."
"That's awful." Kay rests a slim hand atop each
of mine and peers at me across the wreckage of a remarkably good
aubergine-and-garlic casserole.
"But that's not all." I glance at her wineglass, sitting empty beside the carafe. "Another refill?"
"My pleasure." She refills my glass and raises
it to my lips while taking a sip from her own without releasing my
hands. I smile as I swallow, and she smiles back. Maybe there's
something to be said for her hexapedal body plan, although I'd be
nervous about doing it to myself—she must have had some pretty
extensive spinal modifications to coordinate all those limbs with such
unconscious grace. "Go on?"
"There are hints." I swallow. "Pretty blatant
ones. He warned me to be on my guard against old enemies—the kind
who wouldn't be content with a simple duel to the death."
"What are we talking about?" She looks concerned.
"Identity theft, backup corruption." I shrug. "Or . . . I don't know. I mean, I don't remember.
Either my old self was totally paranoid, or he was involved in
something extremely dirty and opted to take the radical retirement
package. If it's the latter, I could be in really deep trouble. I lost
so much that I don't know how the sort of people he was involved with
behave, or why. I've been doing some reading, history and so on, but
that's not the same as being there." I swallow again, my mouth
dry, because at this point she might very well stand up and walk out on
me and suddenly I realize that I've invested quite a lot of self-esteem
in her continued good opinion of me. "I mean, I think he may have been
a mercenary, working for one of the Powers."
"That would be bad." She lets go of my hands. "Robin?"
"Yes?"
"Is that why you haven't had a backup since
rehab? And why you're always hanging out in public places with your
back to the most solid walls?"
"Yes." I've admitted it, and now I don't know why I didn't say it before. "I'm afraid of my past. I want it to stay dead."
She stands up, leans across the table to take my
hands and hold my face, then kisses me. After a moment I respond
hungrily. Somehow we're standing beside the table and hugging each
other—that's a lot of contact with Kay—and I'm
laughing with relief as she rubs my back and holds me tight. "It's all
right," she soothes, "it's all right." Well, no it isn't—but she's
all right, and suddenly my horizons feel as if they've doubled in size.
I'm not in solitary anymore, there's someone I can talk to without
feeling as if I might be facing a hostile interrogation. The sense of
release is enormous, and far more significant than simple sex.
"Come on," I say, "let's go see Linn and Vhora."
"Sure," she says, partly letting go. "But Robin, isn't it obvious what you need to do?"
"Huh?"
"About your problem." She taps her toe impatiently. "Or haven't the therapists been giving you the hard sell, too?"
"You mean the experiment?" I lead her back into
the Green Maze, cueing my netlink for another firefly. "I was going to
say no. It sounds crazy. Why would I want to live in a panopticon
society for ten or fifty megs?"
"Think about it," she says. "It's a closed
community running in a disconnected T-gate manifold. Nobody gets to go
in or comes out after it starts running, not until the whole thing
terminates. What's more, it's an experimental protocol. It'll be
anonymized and randomized, and the volunteers' records will be
protected by the Scholastium's Experimental Ethics Service. So—"
Enlightenment dawns. "If anyone is after me, they won't be able to get at me unless they're inside it from the start! And while I'm in it I'll be invisible."
"I knew you'd get it." She squeezes my hand.
"Come on, let's find these friends of yours. Do you know if they've
been approached, too?"
WE find Linn
and Vhora in a forest glade, enjoying an endless summer afternoon. It
turns out that they've both been asked if they're willing to
participate in the Yourdon study. Linn is wearing an orthohuman female
body and is most of the way out of rehab; lately she's been getting
interested in the history of fashion—clothing, cosmetics,
tattoos, scarification, that sort of thing—and the idea of the
study appeals to her. Vhora, in contrast, is wearing something like a
kawaii pink-and-baby-blue centaurform mechabody: she's got huge black
eyes, eyelashes to match, perfect breasts, and piebald skin covered in
Kevlar patches.
"I had a session with Dr. Mavrides," Linn
volunteers diffidently. She has long, auburn hair, pale, freckled skin,
green eyes, upturned nose, and elven ears: her historical-looking gown
covers her from throat to floor. It's a green that matches her eyes.
Vhora, in contrast, is naked. Linn leans against Vhora's flank, one arm
spread lazily across her back to toy idly with the base of the fluted
horn that rises from the center of Vhora's forehead. "It sounds
interesting to me."
"Not my cut." Vhora sounds amused, though it's
hard to judge. "It's historical. Premorphic, too. Sorry but I don't do
ortho anymore, two lifetimes were enough for me."
"Oh, Vhora." Linn sighs, sounding exasperated.
She does something with one fingertip near the base of the horn that
makes the mecha tense for a moment. "Won't you . . . ?"
"I'm not clear on the historical period in
question," I say carefully. To be perfectly truthful, I'd deliberately
ignored the detailed pitch Piccolo-47 mailed me until Kay pointed out
the advantages of disappearing into a closed polity for a few years,
because I was totally uninterested in going to live in a cave and hunt
mammoths with a spear, or whatever Yourdon and his coinvestigators have
in mind. I don't like being taken for a soft touch, and Piccolo-47's
attitude is patronizing at best. Mind you, Piccolo-47 is the sort of
self-congratulatory, introspectively obsessed psych professional who'd
take any suggestion that their behavior displayed contempt for the
clients as projection, rather than treating it as an attempt to work
around real social deficiencies. In my experience, the best way to deal
with such people is to politely agree with everything they say, then
ignore them. Hence my lack of information about the exact nature of the
project.
"Well, they're not telling us everything," Linn
apologizes. "But I did some digging. Historian Professor Yourdon has a
particular interest in a field I know something about, the first
postindustrial dark age—that would be from the mid-twentieth to
mid-twenty-first centuries, if you're familiar with Urth chronology.
He's working with Colonel-Doctor Boateng, who is really a military
psychologist specializing in the study of polymorphic
societies—caste systems, gender systems, stratification along
lines dictated by heredity, astrology, or other characteristics outside
the individual's control. He's published a number of reports lately
asserting that people in most societies prior to the Interval
Monarchies couldn't act as autonomous agents because of social
constraints imposed on them without consent, and I suspect the reason
the Scholastium funds his research is because it has diplomatic
implications."
I feel Kay shiver slightly through my left arm,
which is wrapped around her uppermost shoulders. She leans against me
more closely, and I lean against the tree trunk behind me in turn.
"Like ice ghoul societies," she murmurs.
"Ice ghouls?" asks Vhora.
"They aren't tech—no, what I mean is that
they are still developing technologies. They haven't reached the
Acceleration yet. No emotional machines, no virtual or self-replicating
toolsets. No Exultants, no gates, no ability to restructure their
bodies without ingesting poisonous plant extracts or cutting themselves
with metal knives." She shudders slightly. "They're prisoners of their
own bodies, they grow old and fall apart, and if one of them loses a
limb, they can't replace it." She's very unhappy about something, and
for a moment I wonder what the ice ghouls she lived with meant to her,
that she has to come here to forget.
"Sounds icky," says Linn. "Anyway, that's what
Colonel-Doctor Boateng is interested in. Polities where people have no
control over who they are."
"How's the experiment meant to work, then?" I ask, puzzling over it.
"Well, I don't know all the details," Linn
temporizes. "But what happens . . . well, if you
volunteer, they put you through a battery of tests. You're not supposed
to go in if you've got close family attachments and friends, by the
way; it's strictly for singletons." Kay's grasp tightens around me for
a moment. "Anyway, they back you up and your copy wakes up inside.
"What they've prepared for the experiment is a
complete polity—the briefing says there are over a hundred
million cubic meters of accommodation space and a complete shortjump
network inside. It's not totally uncivilized, like a raw planetary
biome or anything. There are a couple of catches, though. There are no
free assemblers, you can't simply request any structure you want. If
you need food or clothing or tools or whatever, you're supposed to use
these special restricted fabricators that'll only give you what you're
entitled to within the experiment. They run a money system and provide
work, so you have to work and pay for what you consume; it's intended
to emulate a pre-Acceleration scarcity economy. Not too scarce, of
course—they don't want people starving. The other catch is, well,
they assign you a new orthohuman body and a history to play-act with.
During the experiment, you're stuck in your assigned role. No netlink,
no backups, no editing—if you hurt yourself, you have to wait for
your body to repair itself. I mean, they didn't have A-gates back
before the Acceleration, did they? Billions of people lived there, it
can't be that bad, you just have to be prudent and take care not to mutilate yourself."
"But what's the experiment about?" I repeat. There's something missing; I can't quite put my finger on it . . .
"Well, it's supposed to represent a dark ages
society," Linn explains. "We just live in it and follow the rules, and
they watch us. Then it ends, and we leave. What more do you need?"
"What are the rules?" asks Kay.
"How should I know?" Linn smiles dreamily as she
leans against Vhora, fondling the meso's horn, which is glowing softly
pink and pulsing in time to her hand motions. "They're just trying to
reinvent a microcosm of the polymorphic society that's ancestral to our
own. A lot of our history comes out of the dark ages—it was when
the Acceleration took hold—but we know so little about it. Maybe
they think trying to understand how dark ages society worked will
explain how we got where we are? Or something else. Something to do
with the origins of the cognitive dictatorships and the early colonies."
"But the rules—"
"They're discretionary," says Vhora. "To prod
the subjects toward behaving in character, they get points for behaving
in ways in keeping with what we know about dark ages society, and they
lose points for behaving wildly out of character. Points are
convertible into extra bonus money when the experiment ends. That's
all."
I stare at the meso. "How do you know that?" I ask.
"I read the protocol." Vhora manages an impish
smirk. "They want to make people cooperate and behave consistently
without being prescriptive. After all, in every society people
transgress whatever rules there are, don't they? It's a matter of
balancing costs with benefits."
"But it's just a points system," I say.
"Yes. So you can tell if you're doing well or badly, I suppose."
"That's a relief," Kay murmurs. She holds me
tight. The afternoon sunlight in the forest glade is soft and yellow,
and while there's a buzzing and rasping of insects in the background,
the biome leaves us alone. Linn smiles at us again, a remarkably fey
expression, and strokes that spot on top of Vhora's head. There's
something unselfconsciously erotic about her gesture, but it's not an
eroticism I share. "Shall we be going?" Kay asks me.
"Yes, I think so." I help her to her feet, and she in turn helps me up.
"Nice of you to visit," purrs Vhora, shivering
visibly as Linn tickles the base of the horn again. "Are you sure you
don't want to stay?"
"Thank you for the offer, but no," Kay says carefully, "I have a therapy appointment in a kilosec. Maybe some other time."
"Goodbye then," says Linn. Vhora is working one-handed at the laces on the back of her gown as Kay and I leave.
"Too bad about the therapy session," I say, once
we're through the first gate and round the first corner. I hold my hand
out, and she takes it. "I was hoping we could spend some time together."
Kay squeezes my hand. "What kind of therapy did you have in mind?"
"You mean you—"
"Hush, silly. Of course I lied! Did you think I was going to share you with ponygirl back there?"
I turn and back her against the wall, and
suddenly she's all around me, greedy hands grasping and stroking and
squeezing. Her mouth tastes of Kay and lunchtime spices, indescribable
and exotic.
SOMETIME later
we surface in a privacy bower in a restery neither of us knows,
somewhere in the Green Maze, sweaty and naked and tired and elated.
I've had sex with Kay in her private naked orthobody before, but this
is different. She can do things with those four cunning hands that make
me scream with delightful anticipation, holding me on the razor-fine
edge of orgasm for a timeless eternity. I wish I could do something
back to her, something similar. Maybe one day I will, if I get it
together to go xenomorphic myself. I don't usually regret being tied to
my self-image so strongly, but Kay's giving my inhibitions a good
stretch.
Afterward, she rolls away from me, and I cradle her in my arms.
"They don't take couples," she says quietly.
"You said I need to go."
"That's true." She sounds tranquil about it. I don't know, I haven't asked—but is this simply an extended fling?
"I don't have to go."
"If you're in danger, I'd rather you were safe."
I cup her breast, one-handed. She shivers.
"I'd rather I was safe, too. But with you."
"We'd be in different bodies," she murmurs. "We probably wouldn't even recognize each other."
"Would you be all right like that?" I ask anxiously. "If you're shy—"
"I can pretend it's an extended disguise. I've done it before, remember."
Oh. "We'd have to lie." It slips out without my willing it.
"Why?" she asks. "We aren't actually a couple"—my heart skips a beat—"not yet."
"Are you mono? Or poly?" I ask.
"Both." Her nipple tightens under my fingertips.
"It's easier to handle the emotional balance with just one partner,
though." I feel her back tense slightly. "Do you get jealous?"
I have to think hard about it. "I don't think
so, but I'm not certain. I don't remember enough to be sure.
But . . . back there, when Linn invited us. I don't
think I felt jealous then. As long as we're friends."
"Good." She begins to roll over toward me, then
pushes herself up on all her arms and climbs across me until she's on
top, hanging there like the spider goddess of earthly delights. "Then
we won't be lying, exactly, if we tell them we aren't in a long-term
relationship. Promise you'll look me up when we get inside? Or
afterward, if you can't find me? Or if you end up not going inside
after all?"
I stare into her eyes from a distance of
millimeters, seeing hunger and desire and insecurity mirrored there.
"Yes," I say, "I promise."
The spider goddess approves; she descends to
reward her mate, holding him spread-eagled with four arms as she goes
to work on him with her mouthparts and remaining limbs. While for his
part, the male wonders if this is going to be their last time together.
AS I make my solitary way home from our assignation, someone tries to murder me.
I still haven't taken a backup, despite what I
told Piccolo-47. It seems a somewhat irrevocable step, signifying my
acceptance of my new state. Backing up your identity adds baggage, just
as much as memory excision sheds it. In my case, however, it seems that
I really should take a backup as soon as I get back to my room.
It would probably hurt Kay if I were to die now and revert to the state
I was in before we became involved, and not causing her pain has become
important to me.
Maybe that's why I survive.
After we leave the restery we split up, with a
shy wave and a glistening look for each other. Kay has a genuine
therapy session to go to, and I am trying to hold myself to a routine
of reading and research that demands I put in at least ten more
kilosecs this diurn. We take our leave reluctantly, raw with new
sensibilities. I'm still not sure how I feel, and the thought of going
into the experimental polity worries me (will she recognize me? Will I
recognize her? Will we care for each other in our assigned new forms
and point-scoring roles?), but still, we're both mature adults. We have
independent lives to lead. We can say goodbye if we want to.
I don't want company right now (apart from
Kay's), so I tell my netlink to anonymize me as I head home via the
graph of T-gates that connect the Green Maze. People reveal themselves
to my filtered optic nerves as pillars of fog moving in stately
silence, while my own identity is filtered out of their sensory input
by their netlinks.
But not recognizing people is not the same as
not knowing somebody is there, and you have to be able to dodge
passersby even if you can't tell who they are. About halfway home I
realize that one of the fogpillars is following me, usually a gate or
two behind. How interesting, I tell myself as reflexes I didn't
know I had kick in. They're clearly aware that I've got anonymity
switched on, and it seems to be giving them a false sense of security.
I tell my netlink to tag the fogpillar with a bright red stain and keep
my positional sense updated with it. You can do this without breaking
anonymity—it's one of the oldest tricks in the track and trail
book. I carry on, taking pains to give no hint that I've recognized my
shadow.
Rather than retracing the route we took through
the Green Maze, I head directly toward my apartment's corridor. The
fogpillar follows me, and I casually ease my left hand into the big hip
pocket on my jacket, feeling my way through the spongy manifold of
T-gates inside it until I find the right opening.
I'm walking along the nave of altars in the
temple of the skeletal giants when my tail makes its move. There's
nobody else about right now, which is probably why they pick this
particular moment. They lunge toward me, thinking I can't see them, but
the tag my netlink has added to their fogpillar gives them
away—I've got a running range countdown in my left eye and as
soon as they move, I cut the anonymity filter, spin, and draw.
He's a small, unremarkable-looking
male—nut brown skin, black hair, narrow eyes, wiry
build—and he's wearing a totally unremarkable-looking kilt and
vest; in fact the only remarkable thing about him is his sword. It
isn't a dueling sword, it's a power-assisted microfilament wire,
capable of slicing through diamond armor as if it isn't there. It's
completely invisible except for the red tracking bead that glows at its
tip, almost two meters from his right hand.
Too bad. I brace, squeeze the
trigger for a fraction of a second, then let go and try to blink away
the hideous purple afterimages. There's a tremendously loud
thunderclap, a vile stench of ozone and burned meat, and my arms hurt.
The sword handle goes skittering across the worn flagstones, and I
hastily jump out of the way—I don't want to lose a foot by
accident—then I glance about, relying on my peripheral vision to
tell me if anyone else is around.
"Scum!" I hiss in the direction of Mr. Crispy. I
feel curiously unmoved by what I've just done, although I wish the
afterimages would go away faster—you're supposed to use a blaster
with flash-suppression goggles, but I didn't have time to grab them.
The blaster is a simple weapon, just a small T-gate linked (via another
pair of T-gates acting as a valve) to an endpoint orbiting in the
photosphere of a supergiant star. It's messy, it's short-range, it'll
take out anything short of full battle armor, and because it's
basically just a couple of wormholes tied together with superstring,
it's impossible to jam. On the minus side my ears are ringing, I can
already feel the skin on my face itching with fresh radiation burns,
and I think I melted a couple of the crypts. It's considered bad form
for duelists to use blasters—or indeed anything that isn't
strictly hand-powered—which is probably why he wasn't expecting
it.
"Never bring a knife to a gun fight," I tell Mr.
Crispy as I turn away from him. His right arm thinks about it for a
moment, then falls off.
The rest of my journey home is uneventful, but
I'm shaking, and my teeth are chattering with the aftershock by the
time I get there. I shut the door and tell it to fuse with the walls,
then drop into the single chair that sits in the middle of my room when
the bed isn't extended. Did he know I hadn't recorded a backup? Did he
realize my older self wouldn't have erased all my defensive reflexes,
or that I'd know where to get hold of a blaster in the Invisible
Republic? I've no idea. What I do know is someone just tried to
kill me by stealth and without witnesses or the usual after-duel
resurrection, which suggests that they want me offline while they find
and tinker with my backups. Which makes it attempted identity theft, a
crime against the individual that most polities rate as several degrees
worse than murder.
There's no avoiding it now. I'm going to have to
take a backup—and then I'm going to have to seek sanctuary inside
the Yourdon experiment. As an isolated polity, disconnected from the
manifold while the research project runs, it should be about as safe as
anywhere can be. Just as long as none of my stalkers are signed up for
it . . .
TAKING a backup is very easy—it's dealing with the aftereffects that's hard.
You need to find an A-gate with backup
capability (which just means that it has a booth big enough to hold a
human body and isn't specifically configured for special applications,
like a military gate). There's one in every rehab apartment, used for
making copies of furnishings and preparing dinner as well as
deconstructing folks right down to the atomic level, mapping them, and
reassembling them again. To make a backup snapshot you just sit down in
the thing and tell your netlink to back you up. It's not instantaneous
(it works by brute-force nanoscale disassembly, not wormhole magic),
but you won't notice the possibly disturbing sensation of being buried
in blue factory goop, eaten, digitized, and put back together again
because your netlink will switch you off as soon as it starts to upload
your neural state vector into the gate's buffer.
I'm nervous about the time gap. I don't like the
idea of being offline for any length of time while an unknown party is
trying to hijack my identity. On the other hand, not to make a backup,
complete with my current suspicions, would be foolhardy—if they
succeed in nailing me, I want my next copy to know exactly what the
score is. (And to know about Kay.) There really isn't any way around
it, so I take precautions. Before I get into the booth, I use the
A-gate to run up some innocuous items that can be combined to make a
very nasty booby trap. After installing it, I take a deep breath and
stand still for nearly a minute, facing the open door of the booth.
Just to steady my nerves, you understand.
I get inside. "Back me up," I say. The booth extrudes a seat, and I sit down, then the door seals and flashes up a WORKING
sign. I just have time to see blue milky liquid swirling in through the
vents at floor level before everything goes gray and I feel extremely
tired.
Now, about those aftereffects. What should
happen is that after a blank period you wake up feeling fuzzy-headed
and a bit moist. The door opens, and you go and shower off the gel
residue left by the gate. You've lost maybe a thousand seconds, during
which time a membrane studded with about a thousand trillion robotic
disassembly heads the size of large protein molecules has chewed
through you one nanometer at a time, stripping you down to molecular
feedstock, recording your internal state vector, and putting a fresh
copy back together behind it as it scans down the tank. But you don't
notice it because you're brain-dead for the duration, and when the door
to the A-gate reopens, you can just pick up your life where you left it
before the backup. You naturally feel a bit vague when you come up
again, but it's still you. Your body is—
Wrong.
I try to stand up too fast, and my knees both
give way under me. I slump against the wall of the booth, feeling
dizzy, and as I hit the wall I realize I'm too short. I'm still
at the stage of feeling rather than thinking. The next thing I know I'm
sitting down again and the booth is uncomfortably narrow because my hips are too wide
and I'm too short in the trunk as well. There's something else, too. My
arms feel—odd, not wrong, just different. I lift a hand and put
it in my lap, and my thighs feel too big, and then there's something
else. Oh, I realize, sliding my hand between my legs, I'm not male. No, I'm female. I raise my other hand, explore my chest. Female and orthohuman.
This in itself is no big deal. I've been a
female orthohuman before; I'm not sure when or for how long, and it's
not my favorite body plan, but I can live with it for the time being.
What makes me freak and stand upagain, so suddenly I get black spots in my visual field and nearly fall over, is the corollary. Someone tampered with my backup! And then the double take: I am the backup. Somewhere a different version of me has died.
"Shit," I say aloud, leaning against the frosted
door of the cubicle. My voice sounds oddly unfamiliar, an octave higher
and warmer. "And more shit."
I can't stay in here forever, but whatever I'm
going to find out when I open the door can't be good. Steeling myself
against a growing sense of dread, I hit the door latch. It's about then
that I realize I'm not wearing anything. That's no surprise—my
manifold jacket was made from T-gates, and T-gates are one of the
things that an A-gate can't fabricate—but my leggings have gone,
too, and they were ordinary fabric. I've been well and truly hacked,
I realize with a growing sense of dread. The door slides open,
admitting a gust of air that feels chilly against my damp skin. I blink
and glance around. It looks like my apartment, but there's a blank
white tablet on the low desk beside the chair, the booby trap has gone,
and the door is back in the wall. When I examine it I see that it's the
wrong color, and the chair isn't the one I ran up on the apartment gate.
I look at the tablet. The top surface says, in flashing red letters, READ ME NOW.
"Later." I glance at the door, shudder, then go
into the bathroom. Whoever's got me is clearly not in any hurry, so I
might as well take my time and get my head together before I confront
them.
The bathrooms in the rehab suites are
interchangeable, white ceramic eggs with water and air jets and
directionless lighting that can track you wherever you go and drainage
ducts and foldaway appliances that live in the walls. I dial the shower
up to hot and high and stand under it, shivering with fear, until my
skin feels raw and clean.
I've been hacked, and there's nothing I can do
about it except jump through whatever hoops they've laid out for me and
hope they kill me cleanly at the end or let me go. Resistance, as they
say, is futile. If they've hacked my backup so deeply that they can
force a new body plan on me, then they can do anything they want. Mess
with my head, run multiple copies of me, access my private keys, even
make a zombie body and use it to do whatever they want it to do while
masquerading as me. If they can wake me up in the A-gate of another
rehab apartment, then they've trapped my state vector. I could run away
a thousand times, be tortured to death a hundredfold—and I'd
still wake up back in that booth, a prisoner once more.
Identity theft is an ugly crime.
Before I leave the bathroom, I take a good look
at my new body in the mirror. After all, I haven't seen it before, and
I've got a nasty feeling it'll tell me something about the expectations
of my captors.
It turns out that I'm orthohuman and female all
right, but not obtrusively so. I think I'm probably fifteen centimeters
shorter than I was, axisymmetrical, with good skin and hair. It's a
pretty good-looking body, but they haven't forced exaggerated sexual
characteristics on me—I'm not a doll. I've got wide hips, a
narrow waist, breasts that are bigger than I'd have gone for, high
cheekbones and full lips, skin that's paler than I like. My new
forehead is clear and high, above Western-style blue eyes with no
fold—they look oddly round and staring, almost kawaii—and
brown hair that's currently plastered across my shoulders. My
shoulders? It's that long. Why do I have long hair? My
fingernails and toenails are short. I frown. It's oddly inconsistent. I
stretch my arms up over my head and get a nasty shock. I'm weak—I've
got no upper-body musculature to speak of. I probably couldn't hold a
saber at arm's length for half a kilosec without dropping it.
So, in summary, I'm short and weak and unarmed,
but cute if your sense of aesthetics centers on old-fashioned body
plans. "How reassuring," I snarl at my reflection. Then I go back into
the bedroom, sit down, and look at the tablet. READ ME NOW, it says. "Read to me," I tell it, and the words morph into new shapes:
Dear Participant
Thank you for consenting to take part
in the Yourdon-Fiore-Hanta experimental polity project. (If you do not
recall giving this consent, tap HERE to
see the release form you signed after your last backup.) We hope you
will enjoy your stay in the polity. We have prepared an orientation
lecture for you. The next presentation will be conducted by Dr. Fiore
in 1294 seconds. To assist with maintaining the correct setting,
please attend wearing the historically authentic costume supplied (see
carton under chair). There will be a cheese and wine reception
afterward at which you will be given a chance to meet your fellows in
the current intake of participants.
I blink. Then I reread the tablet, frantically searching for alternate meanings. I didn't sign that! Did I?
Looks like I did—either that or I've been hacked, but my having
signed the release is more likely. I tap the link, and it's there in
black and white and red, and the sixteen-digit number works when I feed
the fingerprint to my netlink. I signed a contract, and it says here
I'm committed to living in YFH-Polity under an assumed identity, name
of Reeve, for the next . . . hundred megaseconds? Three years?
During which time my civil rights will be limited by prior mutual
agreement—not extending to my core sentient rights, they're not
allowed to torture or brainwash me—and I can't be discharged from
my obligation without the consent of the experimenters.
I find myself hyperventilating, as I oscillate
between weak-kneed relief that I'm not a victim of identity theft and
apprehension at the magnitude of what I've signed up for. They have the
right to unilaterally expel me (Well, that's all right, then, I just have to piss them off if I decide I want out),
and they have the right to dictate what body I can live in! It's a
ghastly picture, and in among the draconian provisions I see that I
also agreed to let them monitor my every action. Ubiquitous
surveillance. I've just checked into a dark ages panopticon theme
hotel! What can possibly have possessed me to—oh. Buried in the small print is a rider titled "Compensatory Benefits."
Aha.
Firstly, the Scholastium itself guarantees the
experimenters against all indemnities and will back any claims. So if
they violate the limited rights they've granted me, I can sue them, and
they've got nearly infinitely deep pockets. Secondly, the remuneration
is very satisfactory. I do a brief calculation and work out that what
they've promised to pay me for three Urth years in the rat run is
probably enough to see me in comfort for at least thrice that long once
I get out.
I begin to calm down. I haven't been hacked; I did this to myself of my
own free will, and there are some good sides to the picture. My other
self hasn't completely taken leave of his senses. It occurs to me that
it's going to be very hard for the bad guys, whoever they are,
to get at me inside an experimental polity that's only accessible via a
single T-gate guarded by a firewall and the Scholastium's shock troops.
I'm supposed to act in character for the
historical period we're pretending to live in, wearing a body that
doesn't resemble me, using an alias and a fake background identity, and
not discussing the outside world with anyone else in the study. That
means any assassin who comes after me is going to start with huge
handicaps, like not knowing what I look like, not being allowed to ask,
and not being able to take any weapons along. If I'm lucky, the me who
isn't in here will be able to take care of business within the next
hundred megs, and when I come out and we merge our deltas I'll be home
free and rich. And if he doesn't succeed, well, I can see if they'll let me keep this assumed identity when I leave . . .
I pull the carton of clothes out from under the
bed and wrinkle my nose. They don't smell bad or anything, but they're
a bit odd—historically accurate, the tablet said. There's a
strange black tunic, very plain, that leaves my arms and lower legs
bare, and a black jacket to wear over it. For footwear there's a pair
of shiny black pumps, implying a strongish grav zone, but with weird,
pointed toes and heels that converge to a spike three or four
centimeters long. The underwear is simple enough, but I take a while to
figure out that the filmy gray hose go on my legs. Which, I notice, are
hairless—in fact, I've got no hair except on my head. So my
body's ortho, but not undomesticated. I shake my head.
The weirdest thing of all is that the fabric is
dumb—too stupid to repel dirt or eat skin bacteria, much less
respond to style updates or carry on a conversation. And the costume
comes with no pockets, not even an inconspicuous T-gate concealed in
the jacket lining. When did they invent them? I wonder. I'll have to find an outfit with more brains later.
I put everything on and check myself out in the bathroom mirror. My
hair is going to be a problem—I search the place, but all I can
find is an elastic loop to pull it through. It'll have to do until I
can cut it back to a sensible length.
Which leaves me with nothing to do now but go
see this orientation lecture and "cheese and wine reception." So I pick
up my tablet, open the door, and go.
THERE'S a wide
but narrow room on the far side of the door. I've just come out of one
of twelve doors that open off three of the walls, which are painted
flat white. The floor is tiled in black and white squares of marble.
The fourth wall, opposite my door, is paneled in what I recognize after
a moment as sheets of wood—your actual dead trees, killed and
sliced into planks—with two doors at either side that are propped
open. I guess that's where the lecture is due to be held, although why
they can't do it in netspace is beyond me. I walk over to the nearest
open door, annoyed to discover that my shoes make a nasty clacking
sound with every step.
There are seven or eight other people already
inside a big room, with several rows of uncomfortable-looking chairs
drawn up before a podium that stands before a white-painted wall.
We—I've got to get used to the idea that I'm a voluntary
participant, even if I don't feel like one right now—are a
roughly even mix of orthohuman males and females, all in historical
costume. The costume seems to follow an intricate set of rules about
who's allowed to wear what garments, and everybody is wearing a
surprising amount of fabric, given that we're in a controlled hab.
Those of us who are female have been given one-piece dresses or skirts
that fall to the knee, in combination with tops that cover our upper
halves. The men are wearing matching jacket and trouser combinations
over shirts with some sort of uncomfortable-looking collar and scarf
arrangement at the neck. Most of the clothing is black and white or
gray and white, and remarkably drab.
Apart from the archaic costume there are other
anomalies—none of the males have long hair, and none of the
females have short hair, at least where I can see it. A couple of heads
turn as I walk in, but I don't feel out of place, even with my long
hair yanked back in a ponytail. I'm just another anonymous figure in
historic drag. "Is this the venue for the lecture?" I ask the nearest
person, a tall male—probably no taller than I used to be, but I
find myself looking up at him from my new low vantage—with black
hair and a neatly trimmed facial mane.
"I think so," he says slowly, and shrugs, then
looks uncomfortable. Not surprising, as his outfit looks as if it's
strangling him slowly. "Did you just come through? I found a READ ME in my room after my last backup—"
"Yeah, me, too," I say. I clutch the tablet
under my arm and smile up at him. I can recognize nervous chatter when
I hear it and Big Guy looks every bit as uneasy as I feel. "Do you
remember signing, or did you do that after your backup, too?"
"I'm not the only one?" He looks relieved. "I
was in rehab," he says hastily. "Coming out of the crazy patch you go
through. Then I woke up here—"
"Yeah, whatever." I nod, losing interest. "Me too. When is it starting?"
A door I hadn't noticed before opens in the
white wall at the back and a plump male ortho walks in. This one is
wearing a long white coat held shut with archaic button fasteners up
the front, and he waddles as he walks, like a fat, self-satisfied
amphibian. His hair is black and falls in lank, greasy-looking locks on
either side of his face, longer than that of any of the other males
here. He walks to the podium and makes a disgusting throat-clearing
noise to get our attention.
"Welcome! I'm glad you agreed to come to our
little introductory talk today. I'd like to apologize for requiring you
to come in person, but because we're conducting this research project
under rigorous conditions of consistency, we felt we should stay within
the functional parameters of the society we are simulating. They'd do
it this way, with a face-to-face meeting, so . . . if
you would all like to take seats?"
We take a while to sort ourselves out. I end up
in the front row, sitting between Big Guy and a female with freckled
pale skin and coppery red hair, not unlike Linn, but wearing a cream
blouse and a dark gray jacket and skirt. It's not a style I can make
any sense of—it's vertically unbalanced and, frankly, a bit
weird. But it's not that different from what they've given me to wear,
so I suppose it must be historically accurate. Have our aesthetics changed that much? I wonder.
The person on the podium gets started. "I am
Major-Doctor Fiore, and I worked with Colonel-Professor Yourdon on the
design of the experimental protocol. I'm here to start by explaining to
you what we're trying to achieve, albeit—I hope you'll
understand—leaving out anything that might prejudice your
behavior within the trial polity." He smiles as if he's just cracked a
private joke.
"The first dark ages." He throws out his chest
and takes a deep breath when he's about to say something he thinks is
significant. "The first dark ages lasted about three gigaseconds,
compared to the seven gigaseconds of the censorship wars. But to put
things in perspective, the first dark ages neatly spanned the first
half of the Acceleration, the so-called late-twentieth and
early-twenty-first centuries in the chronology of the time. If we
follow the historical record forward from the pretechnological era into
the first dark age, we find we're watching humans who lived like
technologically assisted monkeys—very smart primates with complex
mechanical tools, but basically unchanged since the species first
emerged. Then when we look at the people who emerged from the first
dark age, we find ourselves watching people not unlike ourselves, as we
live in the modern era, the ‘age of emotional machines' as one
dark age shaman named it. There's a gap in the historical record, which
jumps straight from carbon ink on macerated wood pulp to memory diamond
accessible via early but recognizable versions of the intentionality
protocols. Somewhere in that gap is buried the origin of the posthuman
state."
Big Guy mutters something under his breath. It takes me a moment to decode it: What a pompous oaf.
I stifle a titter of amusement because it's no laughing matter. This
pompous oaf holds my future in his hands for the next tenth of a
gigasec. I want to catch his next words.
"We know why the dark age happened," Fiore
continues. "Our ancestors allowed their storage and processing
architectures to proliferate uncontrollably, and they tended to throw
away old technologies instead of virtualizing them. For reasons of
commercial advantage, some of their largest entities deliberately
created incompatible information formats and locked up huge quantities
of useful material in them, so that when new architectures replaced
old, the data became inaccessible.
"This particularly affected our records of
personal and household activities during the latter half of the dark
age. Early on, for example, we have a lot of film data captured
by amateurs and home enthusiasts. They used a thing called a cine
camera, which captured images on a photochemical medium. You could
actually decode it with your eyeball. But a third of the way into the
dark age, they switched to using magnetic storage tape, which degrades
rapidly, then to digital storage, which was even worse because for no
obvious reason they encrypted everything. The same sort of thing
happened to their audio recordings, and to text. Ironically, we know a
lot more about their culture around the beginning of the dark age,
around old-style year 1950, than about the end of the dark age, around
2040."
Fiore stops. Behind me a couple of quiet
conversations have broken out. He seems mildly annoyed, probably
because people aren't hanging on his every word. Me, I'm
fascinated—but I used to be an historian, too, albeit studying a
very different area.
"Will you let me continue?" Fiore asks pointedly, glaring at a female in the row behind me.
"Only if you tell us what this has got to do with us," she says cheekily.
"I'll—" Fiore stops. Again, he takes a
deep breath and throws his shoulders back. "You're going to be living
in the dark ages, in a simulated Euromerican cultura like those that
existed in the period 1950–2040," he snaps. "I'm trying
to tell you that this is our best reconstruction of the environment
from available sources. This is a sociological and psychological
immersion experiment, which means we'll be watching how you interact
with each other. You get points for staying in character, which means
obeying the society's ground rules, and you lose points for breaking
role." I sit up. "Your individual score affects the group, which means
everyone. Your cohort—all ten of you, one of the twenty groups
we're introducing to this section of the polity over the next five
megs—will meet once a week, on Sundays, in a parish center called
the Church of the Nazarene, where you can discuss whatever you've
learned. To make the simulation work better, there are a lot of
nonplayer characters, zombies run by the Gamesmaster, and for much of
the time you'll be interacting with these rather than with other
experimental subjects. Everything's laid out in a collection of hab
segments linked by gates so they feel like a single geographical
continuum, just like a traditional planetary surface."
He calms down a little. "Questions?"
"What are the society's ground rules?" asks a male with dark skin in a light suit from the back row. He sounds puzzled.
"You'll find out. They're largely imposed
through environmental constraints. If you need to be told, we'll tell
you via your netlink or one of the zombies." Fiore sounds even more
smug.
"What are we meant to do here?" asks the redhead
in the seat beside me. She sounds alert if a little vague. "I mean,
apart from ‘obey the rules.' A hundred megs is a long time, isn't
it?"
"Obey the rules." Fiore smiles tightly. "The
society you're going to be living in was formal and highly ritualized,
with much attention paid to individual relationships and status often
determined by random genetic chance. The core element in this society
is something called the nuclear family. It's a heteromorphic structure
based on a male and a female living in close quarters, usually with one
of them engaging in semi-ritualized labor to raise currency and the
other preoccupied with social and domestic chores and child rearing.
You're expected to fit in, although child rearing is obviously
optional. We're interested in studying the stability of such
relationships. You'll find your tablets contain copies of several books
that survived the dark ages."
"Okay, so we form these, uh, nuclear families," calls a female from the back row. "What else do we need to know?"
Fiore shrugs. "Nothing now. Except"—a
thought strikes him—"you'll be living with dark ages medical
constraints. Remember that! An accident can kill you. Worse, it can
leave you damaged: You won't have access to assemblers during the
experiment. You really don't want to try modifying your bodies, either;
the medical technology that exists is quite authentically primitive.
Nor will you have access to your netlinks from now on." I try to probe
mine, but there's nothing there. For a panicky moment I wonder if I've
gone deaf, then I realize, He's telling the truth! There's no network here. "Your netlinks will communicate social scoring metrics to you, and nothing else. There is a primitive conversational internetwork between wired terminals here, but you aren't expected to use it.
"We've laid on a buffet outside this room. I
suggest you get to know each other, then each pick a partner and go
through that door"—he points to a door at the other side of the
white wall—"which will gate you to your primary residence for
in-processing. Remember to take your slates so you can read the
quickstart guide to dark ages society." He looks around the room
briefly. "If there are no more questions, I'll be going."
A hand or two goes up at the back, but before
anyone can call out, he turns and dives through the door he came in. I
look at Redhead.
"Huh, I guess that's us told," she says. "What now?"
I glance at Big Guy. "What do you think?"
He stands up. "I think we ought to do like he said and eat," he says slowly. "And talk. I'm Sam. What are you called?"
"I'm R-Reeve," I say, stumbling over the name
the tablet said I should use. "And you," I add glancing at redhead,
"are . . . ?"
"You can call me Alice." She stands up. "Come on. Let's see who else is here and get to know them."
OUTSIDE the
lecture theatre there are two long tables heaped with plates of cold
finger food, fruit and "cheese"—strong-smelling curds fermented
from something I can't identify—and glasses of wine. Five of us
are male and five of us are female, and we partition into two loose
clumps at either table, at opposite sides of the room. Besides Alice
the redhead there's Angel (dark skin and frizzy hair), Jen (roundish
face, pale blond hair, even curvier than I am), and Cass (straight
black hair, coffee-colored skin, serious eyes). We're all looking a
little uncomfortable, moving in jerks and tics, twitchy in our new
bodies and ugly clothes. The males are Sam (whom I met), Chris (the
dark-skinned male from the back row), El, Fer, and Mick. I try to tell
them apart by the color of their suits and neckcloths, but it's hard
work, and the short hair gives them all a mechanical, almost insectile,
similarity. It must have been a very conformist age, I think.
"So." Alice looks round at our little group and
smiles, then picks a cube of yellowish ‘cheese' from her woodpulp
plate and chews it thoughtfully. "What are we going to do?"
Angel produces her tablet from a little bag that
she hangs over her arm. If I had one, I didn't notice it, and I kick
myself mentally for not thinking of improvising something like that.
"There's a reading list here," she says, carefully tapping through it.
I watch over her shoulder as scrolls dissolve into facsimile pages from
ancient manuscripts. "There's that odd word again. What's a
‘wife'?"
"I think I know that one," says Cass. "The, uh,
family thing. Where there were only two participants, and they were
morphologically locked, the female participant was called a
‘wife' and the male was called a ‘husband.' It implies
sexual relations, if it's anything like ice ghoul society."
"We aren't supposed to talk about the outside," Jen says uncomfortably.
"But if we don't, we don't have any points of
reference for what we're trying to understand and live in, do we?" I
say, fighting the urge to stare at Cass. Is that you in there, Kay?
It might just be a coincidence, her knowing something about ice
ghouls—there was a huge fad for them about two gigasecs ago, when
they were first discovered. Then again, the bad guys might have noticed
Kay and sent a headhunter after me, armed with whatever they can
extract from her skull for bait . . .
"I want to know where they got these books," I
say. "Look, all they've got is publication dates and rough sales
figures, so we'll know they were popular. But whether they're accurate
indicators of the social system in force is another matter."
"Who cares?" Jen says abruptly. She picks up a
glass and splashes straw-colored wine into it from a glass jug. "I'm
going to pick me a ‘husband' and leave the other details for
later." She grins and empties her glass down her throat.
"What diurn?" Cass's brow furrows as she
grapples with the tablet's primitive interface. It's the nearest thing
we've got to a manual, I realize. "Aha," she says. "We're on day five of the week,
called ‘Thursday.' Weeks have seven days, and we are supposed to
meet on day one, about two-fifty kilo—no, three days—from
now."
"So?" Jen refills her glass.
Cass looks thoughtful. "So if we're supposed to
mimic a family, we probably ought to start by pairing off and going to
whatever dwelling they've assigned us. After a diurn or so of ploughing
through these notes and getting to know each other, we'll be better
able to work out what we're supposed to be doing. Also, I guess, we can
see if the partnering arrangement is workable."
Jen wanders off toward the knot of males at the
other side of the room, glass in hand. Angel fidgets with her tablet,
turning it over and over in her hands and looking uncertain. Alice eats
another lump of cheese. I feel quite ill watching her—the stuff
tastes vile. "I'm not used to the idea of living together with
someone," I say slowly.
"It's not so bad." Cass nods to herself. "But this is a very abrupt and arbitrary way of starting it."
Alice rests a hand on her arm, reassuring. "The
sexual relationship is only implicit," she says. "If you pick a husband
and don't get on, I'm sure you can choose another at the Church
meeting."
"Perhaps." Cass pulls away and glances nervously
at the group of males and one female, who is laughing loudly as two of
the males attempt to refill her glass for her. "And perhaps not."
Alice looks dissatisfied. "I'm going to see what
the party's about." She turns and stalks over toward the other group.
That leaves me with Cass and Angel. Angel is busily scrolling through
text on her tablet, looking distracted, and Cass just looks worried.
"Cheer up, it can't be that bad," I say automatically.
She shivers and hugs herself. "Can't it?" she asks.
"I don't think so." I pick my words carefully.
"This is a controlled experiment. If you read the waivers, you'll see
that we haven't relinquished our basic rights. They have to intervene
if things go badly wrong."
"Well, that's a relief," she says. I look at her sharply.
"Look, we need to pick a ‘husband' each,"
Angel points out. "Whoever's last won't get much of a choice, and as it
is we'll be stuck with whomever the others have rejected. For whatever
reason." She looks between us, her expression guarded. "See you."
I stare at Cass. "What you said earlier, about the ice ghouls—"
"Forget it." She cuts me off with a chopping gesture. "Maybe Jen was right." She sounds downbeat.
"Did you know anyone else who was going into the experiment?" I ask suddenly, then wish I could swallow my own tongue.
Cass frowns at me. "Obviously not, or they
wouldn't have admitted me to the study." Then she looks away, slowly
and pointedly. I follow the direction of her gaze. There's an
unobtrusive black hemisphere hanging from the ceiling in one corner.
She sets her shoulders. "We'd better socialize."
"If you're worried about the implications of
pair-bonding, I don't see why we couldn't share an apartment for a
couple of diurns," I offer, heart pounding and palms sticky. Are you really Kay, Cass?
I'm almost certain she is, but she won't talk where we might be being
monitored. And if I ask and she isn't, I risk giving away my own
identity to whoever's hunting me, if any of them have followed me in
here.
"I don't think that would be allowed," she says
guardedly. She makes a minute nod in my direction, then jerks her chin
toward the others, who by now are making quite a buzz of conversation.
"Shall we go and see who they've fixed us up with?"
On the other side of the room it turns out that
Jen has broken the ice by insisting that all the males compete to
demonstrate their merit, by pouring her a drink and presenting it to
her elegantly. Needless to say she's stinking drunk but giggly. She
seems to have settled on Chris-from-the-back-row as her target—he
seems to be a little embarrassed by her antics, I think, but he can't
get away because Alice and Angel have zeroed in on three of the others
and are leaving him to Jen's clutches. Big Guy, Sam, is standing
stiffly with his back to the wall, looking almost as uneasy as Cass. I
glance at Cass, who's hanging back, then mentally shrug and approach
Sam, bypassing Jen's raucous gaggle.
"Life of the party," I say, tipping my head at Jen.
"Er, yes." He's holding an empty glass and
swaying a little. Maybe his feet are sore. It's hard to read his
expression—the black mane of fur around his mouth obscures the
muscles there—but he doesn't look happy. In fact, if the floor
opens up beneath his feet and swallows him, he'll probably smile with
relief.
"Listen." I touch his arm. As expected, he tenses. "Just come over here with me for a moment, please?"
He permits me to lead him away from the swarm of orthos trying to vector through the social asteroid belt.
"What do you make of this setup?" I ask quietly.
"It makes me nervous." His eyes glance between my face and the doors. Figures.
"Well, it makes me nervous, too. And Cass." I nod at the bunch across the room. "And, I think, even Jen."
"I've read part of the backgrounder." He shakes his head. "It's not what I expected. Neither was this—"
"Well." My lips have gone dry. I take a sip from
my glass and look at Sam, calculating. He's bigger than I am. I'm
physically weak (and wait until I get my hands on the joker who set that
parameter up), but unless I'm misreading him badly he's well
socialized. "We might as well make the best of things. We're expected
to go set up a joint apartment with someone who is a different gender.
Then we get settled in, read the briefings, do whatever they tell us to
do, and go to the Church on Sunday to see how everyone else is doing.
Do you think you can do that if you treat it as a vocational task?"
Sam puts his empty glass down on the table with fastidious precision and pulls out his tablet. "I could,
but it says here that the ‘nuclear family' wasn't just an
economic arrangement, there's sex involved, too." He pauses for a
moment. "I'm not good at intimacy. Especially with strangers."
Is that why you're so tense? "That's not necessarily a problem." I take another sip of wine. "Listen"—I end up glancing at the camera dome (thank you, Cass)—"I'm
sure none of these arrangements are going to end up permanent. We'll
get a chance to sort out any mistakes at the meeting on First—uh,
Sunday? Meanwhile"—I look up at him—"I don't mind your
preference. We don't have to have sex unless we both want to. Is that
okay by you?"
He looks down at me for a while. "That might work," he says quietly.
I realize I've just picked a husband. I just hope he isn't one of the hunters . . .
What happens next is anticlimactic. Someone's
probably been watching the group dynamics through that surveillance
lens, because after another few centisecs our tablets tinkle for
attention. We're instructed to go through the doorway at the back of
the lecture theatre in pairs, at least two seconds apart. We're already
in YFH-Polity, in the administration subnet, beyond the longjump T-gate
leading back to the Invisible Republic. There's some kind of framework
with a bundle of shortjump gates behind the next door, ready to take us
to our homes. So I take Sam's hand—it's enormous, but he holds
mine limply, and his skin is a bit clammy—and I lead him over to
the door. "Ready?" I ask.
He nods, looking unhappy. "Let's get this over with."
Step. "Over with? It's going to take"—step—"at
least three years before it's over with!" And we're standing in a
really small room facing another door, surrounded by the most
unimaginable clutter, and he lets go of my hand and turns around, and I
say, "Is this it?" Ending on a squeak.
REEVE and Sam Brown—not their, our,
real names—are a middle-class couple circa 1990–2010, from
the middle of the dark ages. They are said to be "married," which means
they live together and notionally observe a mono relationship with
formal approval from their polity's government and the
ideological/religious authorities. It is a publicly respectable role.
For purposes of the research project, the Browns
are currently both unemployed but have sufficient savings to live
comfortably for a "month" or thereabouts while they put their feet down
and seek work. They have just moved into a suburban split-level house
with its own garden—apparently a vestigial agricultural
installation maintained for aesthetic or traditional reasons—on a
road with full-grown trees to either side separating them from other
similar-looking houses. A "road" is an open-walled access passage
designed to facilitate ground transport by automobile and truck. (I
think I have seen automobiles somewhere, once, but what's a "truck"?)
At this point the simulation breaks down, because although this
environment is meant to mimic the appearance of a planetary surface,
the "sky" is actually a display surface about ten meters above our
heads, and the "road" vanishes into tunnels which conceal T-gate
entrances, two hundred meters in either direction. There are cultivated
barriers of vegetation to stop us walking into the walls. It's a pretty
good simulation, considering that according to the tablet it's actually
contained in a bunch of habitat cylinders (which orbit in the debris
belts of three or four brown dwarf stars separated by a hundred
trillion kilometers of vacuum), but it's not the real thing.
Our house . . .
I step out of the closet Sam and I materialized
in and look around. The closet is in some kind of shed, with a rough
ceramic-tiled floor and thin transparent wall panels (called "windows,"
according to Sam) held in a grid of white plastic strips that curve
overhead. There's stuff everywhere. Baskets with small colorful
plants hanging from the wall, a door—made of strips of wood,
cunningly interlocking around a transparent panel—and so on.
There's some kind of rough carpetlike mat in front of the door, the
purpose of which is unclear. I push the door open, and what I see is
even more confusing.
"I thought this was meant to be an apartment?" I say.
"They weren't good at privacy." Sam is looking
around as if trying to identify artifacts that mean something to him.
"They had no anonymity in public. No T-gates either. So they used to
keep all their private space at home, in one structure. It's called a
‘house' or a ‘building,' and it has lots of rooms. This is
just the vestibule."
"If you say so." I feel like an idiot. Inside
the house itself I find myself in a passageway. There are doors on
three sides. I wander from room to room, gawping in disbelief.
The ancients had carpet. It's thick enough to deaden the annoying clack-clack
of my shoes. The walls are covered in some sort of fabric print,
totally static but not unpleasant to look at. Windows in the front room
look out across a hump of land planted with colorful flowers, and at
the back across an expanse of close-cropped grass. The rooms are all
full of furniture, chunky, heavy stuff, made of carved-up lumps of wood
and metal, and a bit of what I assume must be structural diamond. They
were big on rectilinear geometry, relegating curves to small objects
and the odd obscure piece of dead-looking machinery. There's one room
at the back with a lot of metal surfaces and what looks like an
open-topped water tank in it, and there are odd machines dotted over
the cabinet tops. There's another small room under the staircase with a
recognizable but primitive-looking high-gee toilet in it.
I prowl around the upstairs corridor, opening
doors and trying to puzzle out the purpose of the rooms to either side.
They separate rooms by function, but most of them seem to have multiple
uses. One of them might be a bathroom, but it's too large and appears
to be jammed—all the hygiene modules are extended and frozen
simultaneously, as if it's crashed. A couple of the rooms have sleeping
platforms in them, and other stuff, big wooden cabinets. I look in one,
but there's nothing but a pole extending from one side to the other
with some kind of hooked carrier slung over it.
It's all very puzzling. I sit down on the bed and pull out my tablet just as it dings for attention. What now? I ask myself.
The tablet's sprouted a button and an arrow and it says, POINT AT OBJECT TO IDENTIFY.
Okay, so this must be the help system, I think. Relieved, I point it at the boxy cabinet and press the button.
WARDROBE. Storage cabinet for clothes awaiting use. Note: used clothing can be cleaned in the UTILITY ROOM in the basement by means of the WASHING MACHINE. As new arrivals, you have only one set of clothes. Suggested task for tomorrow—go downtown and buy new clothes.
My feet itch. I kick my shoes off impulsively,
glad to be rid of those annoying heels. Then I shrug out of the black
pocketless jacket and stash it in the wardrobe, using the hook-and-arm
affair dangling from the bar. It looks lonely there, and I suddenly
feel very odd. Everything here is overwhelmingly strange. How's Sam taking it?
I wonder, feeling concerned; he wasn't doing so well in the reception
session, and if this is as weird for him as it is for
me . . .
I wait for my head to stop spinning before I go
back downstairs. (A thought strikes me on the way. Am I supposed to
wear the same outfit inside my ‘house' as I do in public? These
people have a marked public/private split personality—they
probably have different costumes for formal and informal events.) In
the end, I leave the jacket but, a trifle regretfully, put the shoes
back on.
I find Sam slumped in one corner of a huge sofa
in the living room, facing a chunky black box with a curved lens that
shows colorful but flat images. It's making a lot of indistinct noise.
"What is that?" I ask him, and he almost jumps out of his skin.
"It's called a television," he says. "I am watching football."
"Uh-huh." I walk round the sofa and sit down
halfway along it, close enough to reach out and take his hand, but far
enough away to maintain separation if both of us want to. I peer at the
pictures. Some kind of mecha—no, they're ortho males, right? In
armor—are forming groups facing each other. They're color coded.
"Why are you watching this?" I ask. One of them throws something
alarmingly like an assault mine at the other group of orthos, who try
to jump on it. Then they begin running and squabbling for ownership of
the mine. After a moment someone blows a whistle and there's a roaring
noise that I realize is coming from the crowd watching
the—ritual? Competitive-self-execution? Game?—from rows of
seats behind them.
"It's supposed to be a popular entertainment." Sam shakes his head. "I thought if I watched it I might understand more—"
"What's the most important thing we can understand?" I ask, leaning toward him. "The experiment, or how to live in it?"
He sighs and picks up a black knobby rectangle,
points it at the box, and waits for the picture to fade to black. "The
tablet said I ought to try it," he admits.
"My tablet said we have to go and buy
clothing tomorrow. We've only got what we're wearing, and apparently it
gets dirty and smelly really fast. We can't just throw it away and make
more, we have to buy it downtown." A thought strikes me. "What do we do
when we get hungry?"
"There's a kitchen." He nods at the doorway to
the room with the appliances that puzzled me. "But if you don't know
how to use it, we can order a meal using the telephone. It's a
voice-only network terminal."
"What do you mean, if you don't know how?" I ask him, raising an eyebrow.
"I'm just repeating what the tablet says." Sam sounds a little defensive.
"Here, give that to me." He passes it and I
rapidly read what he's looking at. Domestic duties: the people of the
dark ages, when living together, apparently divided up work depending
on gender. Males held paid vocations; females were expected to clean
and maintain the household, buy and prepare food, buy clothing, clean
the clothing, and operate domestic machinery while their male worked.
"This is crap!" I say.
"You think so?" He looks at me oddly.
"Well, yeah. It's straight out of the most primitive nontech anthro cultures. No
advanced society expects half its workforce to stay home and divides
labor on arbitrary lines. I don't know what their source for this
rubbish is, but it's not plausible. If I had to guess, I'd say they've
mistaken radical prescriptive documentation for descriptive." I tap my
finger on his slate. "I'd like to see some serious social conditions
surveys before I took this as fact. And in any event, we don't have to
live that way, even if it's how they direct the majority of the zombies
in the polity. This is just a general guideline; every culture has lots
of outliers."
Sam looks thoughtful. "So you think they've got it wrong?"
"Well, I'm not going to say that for certain
until I've reviewed their primary sources and tried to isolate any
bias, but there's no way I'm doing all the housework." I grin, to take
some of the sting out of it. "What were you saying about being able to
request food using the ‘telephone'?"
DINNER is a
circular, baked, bread-type thing called a pizza. There's cheese on it,
but also tomato paste and other stuff that makes it more palatable.
It's hot and greasy and it comes to us via the shortjump gate in the
closet in the conservatory, rather than on a ‘truck.' I'm a bit
disappointed by this, but I guess the truck can wait until tomorrow.
Sam unwinds after dinner. I take off my shoes and hose and convince him
he'll feel better without his jacket and the thing called a
necktie—not that he needs much convincing. "I don't know why they
wore these," he complains.
"I'll do some research later." We're still on
the sofa, with open pizza boxes balanced on our laps, eating the greasy
hot slices of food with our fingers. "Sam, why did you volunteer for
the experiment?"
"Why?" He looks panicky.
"You're shy, you're not good in social situations. They told
us up front we'd have to live in a dark ages society for a tenth of a
gigasec with no way out. Didn't it strike you as not being a sensible
thing to do?"
"That's a very personal question." He crosses his arms.
"Yes, it is." I stop talking and stare at him.
For a moment he looks so sad that I wish I could take the words back. "I had to get away," he mumbles.
"From what?" I put my box down and pad across
the carpet to a large wooden chest with drawers and compartments full
of bottles of liquor. I take two glasses, open a bottle, sniff the
contents—you can never be sure until you try it—and pour.
Then I carry them back over to the sofa and pass him one.
"When I came out of rehab." He stares at the
television, which is peculiar because the machine is switched off.
Under his shoes he's wearing some sort of short, thick hose. His toes
twitch uneasily. "Too many people recognized me. I was afraid. It's my
fault, I think, but they might have hurt me if I'd stayed."
"Hurt you?" Sam is big and has thick hair and
isn't very fast moving, and he seems to be very gentle. I've been
thinking that maybe I lucked out with him—there's potential for
abuse in this atomic relationship thing, but he's so shy and retiring
that I can't see him being a problem.
"I was a bit crazy," he says. "You know the
dissociative psychopathic phase some people go through after deep
memory redaction? I was really bad. I kept forgetting to back
up and I kept picking fights and people kept having to kill me in
self-defense. I made a real fool of myself. When I came out of
it . . ." He shakes his head. "Sometimes you just want
to go and hide. Perhaps I hid too well."
I look at him sharply. I don't believe you, I decide. "We all make fools
of ourselves from time to time," I say, trying to hang a reassuring
message on the observation. "Here, try this." I raise my glass. "It
says it's vodka."
"To forgetfulness." He raises his glass to me. "And tomorrow."
I wake up alone
in a strange room, lying on a sleeping platform under a sack of
fiber-stuffed fabric. For a few panicky moments I can't remember where
I am. My head's sore, and there's a gritty feeling in my eyes: If this
is life in the dark ages, you can keep it. At least nobody's trying to kill me right now, I tell myself, trying to come up with something to feel good about. I roll out of bed, stretch, and head for the bathroom.
It's my fault for being so distracted. On my way
back to my bedroom to get dressed I walk headfirst into Sam. He's naked
and bleary-eyed and looks half-asleep, and I sort of plaster myself
across his chest. "Oof," I say, right as he says, "Are you all right?"
"I think so." I push back from him a few centimeters and look up at his face. "I'm sorry. You?"
He looks worried. "We were going to buy clothes and, uh, stuff. Weren't we?"
I realize, momentarily unnerved, that we're both
naked, he's taller than I am, and he's hairy all over. "Yes, we were,"
I say, watching him warily. All that hair: He's a lot less gracile than I'd normally go for, and then I realize he's looking at me as if he's never seen me before.
It's a touchy moment, but then he shakes his head, breaking the tension: "Yes." He yawns. "Can I go to the bathroom first?"
"Sure." I step aside and he shambles past me. I
turn to watch him. I don't know how I feel about this, about sharing a
"house" with a stranger who is stronger and bigger than I am and who
has a self-confessed history of impulsive violent episodes.
But . . . who am I to criticize? By the time I'd known
Kay this long, we'd gone to a wild orgy together and fucked each other
raw, and if that isn't impulsive behavior, I don't know . . . maybe Sam's right. Sex is an unpleasant complication here, especially before we know what the rules are. If there are rules. Vague memories are trying to surface: I've got a feeling I was involved with both
males and females back before my excision. Possibly poly, possibly
bi—I can't quite remember. I shake my head, frustrated, and go
back to my room to get into costume.
While I'm getting ready, I pick up my tablet. It
tells me to look in the closet in the conservatory. I go downstairs and
find the conservatory is chilly—don't these people have proper
life support?—and inside the cupboard that held a T-gate
yesterday there's now a blank wall and a couple of shelves. One of the
shelves holds a couple of small bags made of dumb fabric. They've got
lots of pockets, and when I open one I find it's full of rectangles of
plastic with names and numbers on them. My tablet tells me that these
are "credit cards," and we can use them to obtain "cash" or to pay for
goods and services. It seems crude and clumsy, but I pick up the
wallets all the same. I'm turning away from the door when my netlink
chimes.
"Huh?" I look round. As I glance at the wallets in my hand a bright blue cursor lights up over them, and my netlink says, TWO POINTS. "What the—" I stop dead. My tablet chimes.
Tutorial: social credits are awarded
and rescinded for behavior that complies with or violates public norms.
This is an example. Your social credits may also rise or fall depending
on your cohort's collective score. After termination of the simulation
all individuals will receive a payment bonus proportional to their
score; the highest-scoring cohort will receive a further bonus of 100%
on their final payment.
"Okay." I hurry back inside to give Sam his wallet.
Sam is coming downstairs as I go inside. "Here,"
I say, holding both the wallets out to him, "this one is yours. Can you
put these in a pocket for me until I buy one of those shoulder bags?
I've got nowhere to put mine."
"Sure." He takes my stuff. "Did you read the tutorial?"
"I started to—I needed something to help me get to sleep. Let's . . . how do we get downtown?"
"I called a taxi. It'll be here to pick us up in a short while."
"Okay." I look him up and down. He's back in costume again. It still
looks awkward. I can't help tapping my toes with impatience. "Clothing,
first. For both of us. Where do we go? Do you know how the stuff is
sold?"
"There's something called a department store, the tutorial said to start there. We might run into some of the others."
"Hmm." A thought strikes me. "I'm hungry. Think there'll be somewhere to eat?"
"Maybe."
Something large and yellow appears outside the door. "Is that it?" I ask.
"Who knows?" He looks twitchy. "Let's go see."
The yellow thing is a taxi, a kind of automobile
you hire by the centisecond. There's a human operator up front, and
something like a padded bench seat in the rear. We get in, and Sam
leans forward. "Can you take us to the nearest department store?" he
asks.
The operator nods. "Macy's. Downtown zone. That
will be five dollars." He holds out a hand and I notice that his skin
is perfectly smooth and he has no fingernails. Is he one of the zombies?
I wonder. Sam hands over his "credit card" and the operator swipes it
between his fingers, then hands it back. Sam sits back, then there's a
lurch, and we're moving. The taxi makes various loud noises, so that
I'm afraid it's about to suffer a systems malfunction—there's a
loud rumbling from underneath and a persistent whine up front—but
we turn into the road and accelerate toward the tunnel. A moment of
darkness, then we're somewhere else, driving along a road between two
short rows of gray-fronted buildings. The taxi stops and the door next
to Sam clicks open. "We have arrived at downtown," says the operator.
"Please disembark promptly."
Sam is frowning over his tablet, then
straightens up. "This way," he says. Before I can ask why, he heads off
toward one of the nearest buildings, which has a row of doors in it. I
follow him.
Inside the store, I get lost fast. There's stuff
everywhere, piled in heaps and stacked in storage bins, and there are
lots of people wandering about. The ones in the odd-looking uniforms
are shop operators who're supposed to help you find things and take
your money. There are no assemblers and no catalogues, so I suppose
they can only sell the stuff they've got on display, which is why it's
all over the place. I ask one of the operators where I can find
clothes, and she says, "on the third floor, ma'am." There are moving
staircases in a central high-ceilinged room, so I head for the third
level and look around.
Clothes. Lots of clothes. More clothes than I've
ever imagined in one place—and all of them made of dumb fabric
with no obvious way of finding what you want and getting it adjusted to
the right size! How did they ever figure out what they needed? It's a
crazy system, just putting everything in the middle of a big house and
letting visitors take their chances. There are some other people
walking around and fingering the merchandise, but when I approach them
they turn out to be zombies, playing the part of real people. None of
the others are here yet. I guess we must be early.
I wander through a forest of racks hung with jackets until I catch a shop operator. "You," I say. "What can I wear?"
She looks like an orthohuman female, wearing a
blue skirt and jacket and those shoes with uncomfortable heels, and she
smiles at me robotically. "What items do you require?" she asks.
"I need—" I stop. "I need underwear," I
say. The stuff doesn't clean itself. "Enough for a week. I need some
more pairs of hose"—since I tore the one on my left
leg—"and another outfit identical to this one. And another set of
shoes." A thought strikes me. "Can I have a pair of pants?"
"Please wait." The shop operator freezes.
"Please come this way." She leads me to a lectern near a display of
statues wearing flimsy long gowns, and another operator comes out of a
door in the wall carrying a bundle of packages. "Here is your order.
Pants, item not available in this department. Please identify a
template, and we will supply correctly sized garments."
"Oh." I look around. "Can I choose anything here?"
"Yes."
I spend a couple of kiloseconds wandering the
shop floor, looking for stuff to wear. They sell very few pants here,
and they look damaged—made of a heavy blue fabric, ripped open at
the knees. Eventually I end up in another corner of the store where
there's a rack of trousers that look all right, plain black ones with
no holes in them. "I want one of these in my size," I say to the
nearest operator, a male one.
"Item not available in female fitting," he says.
"Oh. Great." I scratch my head. "Can you alter it?"
"Item not available in female fitting," he repeats. My netlink bings. A red icon appears over the rack of pants: SUMPTUARY VIOLATION.
"Hmm." So there are restrictions on what they'll
sell to me? This is getting annoying. "Can you provide one in my size
fitting? It's for a male exactly the same size as myself."
"Please wait." I wait, fidgeting impatiently.
Eventually another male operator appears from an inconspicuous door in
the shop wall, carrying a bundle. "Your gift item is here."
"Uh-huh." I take the pants, suppress a grin, and
think about these irritating shoes and how . . . "Take
me to the shoe department. I want a pair of shoes in my size fitting,
for a male—"
When I pay using the "credit card," I score a couple more social points: I've made five so far.
I catch up with Sam down in the furniture
department about five kiloseconds later. We're both massively
overloaded with bags, but he's bought a portable container called a
‘suitcase' and we shove most of our purchases into it. I've
bought a shoulder bag and a pair of ankle boots that have soft soles
and don't clatter when I walk—I shoved my old shoes into the bag,
just in case I need them for some reason—and I'm a lot more
comfortable walking around now. "Let's go find somewhere to eat," he
suggests.
"Okay." There's an eatery on the other side of
the road from Macy's, and it's not unlike a real one, except that the
food is delivered by human (no, zombie) attendants, and is supposed to
be prepared by other humans in the kitchen. Luckily, this is a
simulation, or I'd feel quite ill. For deep combat sweeps they teach
you how to synthesize food from biological waste or your dead comrades,
but that's different. This is supposed to be civilization, of a kind.
We order from a menu printed on a sheet of white film, then sit back to
wait for our food. "How did your shopping go?" I ask Sam.
"Not too badly," he says guardedly. "I bought underwear. And some
trousers and tops. My tablet says there are a lot of social conventions
surrounding clothing. Stuff we can wear, stuff we can't wear, stuff we must wear—it's a real mess."
"Tell me about it." I tell him about my difficulty ordering trousers that didn't have holes in them.
"It says—" He pulls his tablet out. "Ah,
yes. Sumptuary conventions. It's not legally codified, but trousers
weren't allowed for females early in the dark ages, and skirts weren't
allowed for males at all." He frowns. "It also says the customs appear
to have changed sometime around the middle of the period."
"You're going to stick by the book?" I ask him,
as a zombie walks up and deposits a glass of pale yellow liquid called
beer next to each of our settings.
"Well, they can always fine us," he says,
shrugging. "But I suppose you're right. We don't have to do anything
we're not comfortable with."
"Right." I hike my right leg up and put my foot on the table. "Look at this."
"It's a heavy boot."
"A boot from the males-only department. But they sized it for me when I told them it was a gift for a male the same size as me."
"Oh?"
I realize I'm showing the leg with the torn hose
and put it back under the table. "We've got some autonomy, however
limited. Now we're in here, we can live however we want, can't we?"
Plates of food arrive—synthetic steaks,
fake vegetables designed to look as if they'd grown in a muddy corner
of a wild biosphere, and cups of brightly colored condiments. For a
while I busy myself with my plate. I'm really hungry, and the food is
flavorsome, if a bit basic. At least we're not going to starve in here.
I fill up quickly.
"I don't know if we can," Sam mumbles around a full mouth. "I mean, the points system—"
"Doesn't stop us doing anything," I interrupt,
sliding my plate away. "All we have to do is to agree to ignore it, and
we can do whatever we want."
"I suppose so." He forks another piece of steak into his mouth.
"Anyway, we've got no idea what they take to be
a violation of the system. I mean, what do I have to do to lose a
point? Or to gain points? They haven't actually told us
anything, they've just said ‘obey the rules and collect points.'
" I stab my fork in his direction. "We've got these reference texts in
our tablets, all this stuff about how it's a genetically determinist
society and there are all these silly customs, but I don't see how that
can affect us unless we let it. All societies have some degree of
flexibility, but these guys have just picked the first narrowly
normative interpretation that came to hand. If you ask me, they're just
plain lazy."
"What will the others think?" he asks.
"What will they think?" I stare at him. "We're
here for a hundred megs. Do you really think they'll put a bonus
payment at the end of the experiment ahead of, say, having to wear
stupid pointy shoes that make your feet hurt for three years?"
"It depends." Sam puts his knife down. "It all
depends on how they balance the relative convenience of making other
people uncomfortable against their own future wealth." His expression
is pensive. "The protocol is . . . interesting."
"Okay." I stand up. "Let's test it." I shrug out
of my jacket and lay it over the back of my chair. A couple of the
dining zombies look round. "Hey, look at me!" I yell. I unzip my dress
and drop it around my ankles. Sam is startled. I watch his face as I
reach behind my back and unlatch my breast halter, drop it, then step
up onto my chair and push down my hose and G-string. "Look at me!" Sam
looks up, and my face feels hot as I see his expression—
Then there's a red flash that blots out my
visual field, and a loud chime from my netlink, like the decompression
alert we all learn to fear before we can walk. MINUS TEN POINTS FOR PUBLIC NUDITY, says the link.
When my vision clears, I can see waitrons and
the maître d' rushing toward me holding up towels and aprons,
ready to do something, anything, to cover the horrible sight. Sam is
still looking up at me, and I'm not the only one who's blushing. I
climb down off the chair and three or four male zombies, all bigger
than me, converge and between them pin my arms and carry me bodily into
the back. I bite back a scream offright: I can't move! But
they take me straight to the females-only lavatory and simply shove me
through the door, on my own. A moment later, while I'm still trying to
catch my breath, the door whips open and someone throws my discarded
clothes at me.
Minus ten points, causing a public nuisance,
intones my netlink. Police have been summoned. Help function advises
you to correct your dress code infraction and leave.
Oh shit, shit . . . I
scrabble around for a moment, pulling the dress over my head and then
shrugging into the jacket. Underwear can wait—I don't know what
these "police" are, but they don't sound good. I pull the door open and
glance round the corner but there's nobody about, nothing but a short
corridor with doors back to the restaurant and one that says FIRE ESCAPE
in green letters. I shove it open and find myself standing in a narrow
road with lots of wheeled containers. It stinks of decaying food.
Shaking slightly, I walk to the end, then turn left, and left again.
Back on the road I walk right into Sam. "Now will you take the protocol seriously?" he hisses in my ear. "They nearly arrested me!"
"Arrested? What's that?"
"The police." He's breathing heavily. "They can
take you away, lock you up. Detention, it's called." He's still flushed
in the face and clearly concerned. "You could have been hurt."
I shiver. "Let's go home."
"I'll call a taxi," he says grumpily. "You've done enough damage for one day."
SAM has bought
a thing called a cell phone—a pocket-sized replacement for the
blocky network terminal wired into the wall. He keeps it in a pocket.
He speaks to it for a while, and a few cents later a taxi pulls up. We
go home, and he stomps into the living room, leaving the suitcase in
the front hall, and turns on the television. I tiptoe around for a
while before looking in on him to find that he's engrossed in the
football, a faintly puzzled expression on his face.
I spend some time in my bedroom, reading from my own tablet. It's got
lots of advice about how people lived in the dark ages, none of which
makes much sense—most of what they did sounds arbitrary and silly
when you strip it of the surrounding social context and the history
that explains how their customs developed. The way my experiment in the
restaurant backfired still burns me (how can not wearing clothes be so
harmful in any rational social context?), but after a while I realize
that I didn't get zapped this morning when I went around the house
naked. So I take off my new boots, then my dress, which is beginning to
get a bit whiffy. I go downstairs and open the suitcase, take out my
purchases, and carry them up to my room. I stash them in the wardrobe,
but there's enough space for ten times as much stuff, which leaves me
puzzled. But I don't feel like trying the new costumes on right now. In
fact, I feel like shit. Sam is ignoring me pointedly (a defensive
reaction, I think), we're living in a crazy experiment that doesn't
make sense, and I won't even get a chance to find out if everyone else
thinks it's mad until the day after tomorrow.
I'm reading the tablet's explanation of how
vocations—excuse me, "work"—worked in dark ages society,
boggling slightly, when a bell rings from the low table next to my bed.
I look toward it and my tablet flashes: ANSWER THE PHONE.
Oh. I didn't realize I had one. I fumble around for a while then find the chunky gadget on a cord that you're supposed to hold to your face. "Yes?" I say.
"R-Reeve! Is that you?"
"Cass? Kay?" I ask, blanking on names for a moment.
"Reeve! You've got to help me get out of here!
He's crazy. If I stay here, I'm sure he's going to end up hitting me
again. I need somewhere to go." I've heard panic before, and this is
it. Cass (Kay? a little corner of me insists) is desperate. But why?
"Where are you?" I ask. "What's happening? Calm down and tell me everything."
"I need to get away from here," she insists
again, her voice breaking. "He's crazy! He's read the manuals and he's
insisting he's going to get the completion bonus, and if he has to,
he's going to force me to do everything by the book. He went out this
morning, locking me in and taking my wallet—he's still got
it—and when he got back, he threatened to beat me up if I didn't
prepare a meal for him. He says that for maximum points the female must
obey the male, and if I don't do what the guidelines say, he'll beat me
up—shit, he's coming."
Click.
I'm left holding the receiver, staring at the
wall behind the bed in horror. I drop it and rush downstairs to the
living room. "Sam! We've got to do something!"
Sam looks up from his tablet. "Do what?"
"It's K—Cass! She just phoned. She needs
help. Her husband is crazy—he's taken away her wallet, locked her
indoors, and is threatening to beat her up if she doesn't obey him.
We've got to do something! There's no way she can defend herself—"
Sam puts his tablet down. "Are you sure of this?" he asks quietly.
"Yes! That's what she told me!" I'm just about
jumping up and down, beside myself with fury. (If I ever catch the
joker who leeched all my upper body strength, I swear I am going to
graft their head to a tree sloth and make them run an endurance race.)
"We've got to do something!"
"Like what?" he asks.
I deflate. "I'm not sure. She wants to get out. But—"
"Did you check our cumulative score?"
"My—no, I didn't. What's that got to do with it?"
"Just do it," he says.
"Okay." What is our cohort's cumulative score? I ask my netlink. The result sets me back. "Hey, we're doing well! Even after . . ." I falter.
"Well yes, if you look in the subtotals, you'll
see that we get points, lots of them, for forming ‘stable
normative relationships.' " His cheek twitches. "Like Cass and, who is
it, Mick."
"But if he's hurting her—"
"Is he really? All right, we take her word for
it. But what can we do? If we break them up, we cost everyone in our
cohort a hundred points, just like that. Reeve, have you noticed the
journal log? Infractions are public. Everyone noticed your
little—experiment—at lunchtime. It's all over their
journal, in red digits. Caused quite a stir. If you do something that
costs the cohort a stable relationship, some of them—not me, but
the ones who will be obsessing with that termination bonus—will
start to hate you. And as you pointed out earlier, we're stuck here for
the next hundred megs."
"Shit. Shit!" I stare at him. "What about you?"
He looks up at me from his corner of the sofa, his face impassive. "What about me?"
"Would you hate me?" I ask, quietly.
He thinks for a moment. "No. No, I don't think
so." Pause. "I wish you'd be a little more discreet, though. Lie low,
think things through before you act, try to at least look as if you're
planning on fitting in."
"Okay. So what should I be thinking? About Cass, I mean. If that scumbag is taking advantage of his greater physical strength . . ."
"Reeve." He pauses again. "I agree in principle.
But first we must know what we need to do. Can she leave him of her own
accord, without our help? If so, then she ought to—it's her
choice. If not, what can we do to help? We have to live with the
consequences of our early mistakes for a very long time. Unless Cass is
in immediate danger, it would be best to try and get the entire cohort
to take action, not go it alone."
"But right now, we've got to stop him doing anything. Haven't we?"
I don't know what's come over me. I feel
helpless, and I hate it. I should be able to go round to the
scumsucker's house and kick the door down and give him a taste of cold
steel in his guts. Or failing that, I ought to plan a cunning
two-pronged assault that whisks the victim to safety while
booby-trapping his bathroom and putting itching powder in his bed. But
I'm just spinning my wheels, venting and emoting and unloading on Sam.
My normal network of resources and capabilities is missing, and I'm
letting the environment dictate my responses. The environment is set up
to inculcate this weird gender-deterministic role play, so
I'm . . . I shake my head.
"We don't want anyone to get the idea that
hurting or imprisoning members of our cohort is a good way to earn
points," Sam says thoughtfully. "Do you have any ideas about how to do
that?"
I think for a moment. "Phone him," I say, before
the idea is completely formed in my head. "Phone him
and . . . yeah." I look out at the garden. "Tell him
we'll see him, and Cass, at Church, the day after tomorrow. There's no
need to be nasty," I realize. "It says we're supposed to dress up and
look good in Church. It's a custom thing. Tell him we could lose points
if she doesn't look good. Collectively." I turn to Sam. "Think he'll
get the message?"
"Unless he's very, very stupid." Sam nods, then stands up. "I'll call him right away." He pauses. "Reeve?"
"Yes?"
"You're not . . . you're making me nervous, smiling like that."
"Sorry." I think for a moment. "Sam?"
"Yes?"
I'm silent for a few second while I try to work
out how much I can safely tell him. After a while I shrug mentally and
just say it. I don't think Sam is likely to be a cold-blooded assassin
in the pay of whatever enemies my earlier self made. "I knew Cass.
Outside the experiment before we, uh, before we volunteered. If that
turd-faced scum hurts her I—well, right now I can't punch his
teeth so far down his throat that he has to eat with his ass, but I'll
think of something else to do. Something equivalent. And, Sam?"
"Yes?"
"I can be very creative when it's time to get violent."
SAM picks up
the phone and asks the Gatekeeper to connect him to Mick's household. I
linger at the top of the stairs and listen to him, down in the front
hall. It sounds like he's trying not to lose his temper. After a couple
of cents, he puts the phone down hard and stomps back to the living
room. I spend most of the rest of the evening avoiding him, instead
worrying myself into a black depression at the possibility that I might
have made things worse for Cass by getting Sam involved.
Points. Collective accountability. Stable
couples. Peer pressure. My head's spinning. It's not that I'm unused to
the idea of daily life having rules—at least, in
peacetime—but it somehow seems indecent for them to make it so
explicit. Societies cohere through tacit understanding, a nod and a
wink and—very occasionally—a lookup in a legal database.
I'm used to learning how things work as I go along and this experience,
a headfirst collision with a fully formed set of rules to live one's
life by, has given me a big shock.
I speculate that I'd be able to handle things
better if I weren't trapped in a frankly inadequate body. I'm not
normally conscious of my own size or strength, and I'm not interested
in mesomorphic tinkering—but then again, I would never
consciously choose to make myself small and frail. I'm borderline
malnourished, too. When I go to the bathroom and use the mirror, I can
almost see my ribs under a layer of subcutaneous fat. I'm not used to
being a waif, and when I get my hands on whoever did this to
me . . . Hah, but I won't be able to do anything to them, will I? "Assholes," I mutter darkly, then head for the kitchen to see if there are any high-protein options on offer.
Later on, I explore the basement. There are a
bunch of machines down here that my tablet says are for household
maintenance. I puzzle over the clothes washing machine. There's
something very crude and mechanical about it, as if its shape is
rigidly fixed. It's not like a real machine, warm and protean and
accommodating to your needs. It's just a lump of ceramic and metal. It
doesn't even answer when I tell it I need to clean my dress—it's
really stupid.
Farther back in the basement there's something
else, a bench with levers attached, for developing upper body muscle
mass the hard way. I'm a bit skeptical, but the tablet says these
people had to develop musculature by repeatedly lifting weights and
other exercises. I find the manual for the exercise machine and after
about a kilosecond I manage to reduce myself to a quivering,
sweat-smeared jelly. It's like some kind of psychological torture, a
lesson that rams home just how weak I am.
I stumble upstairs, shower, and collapse into an
uneasy sleep, troubled by dreams of drowning and visions of Kay
reaching toward me with all her arms outstretched, begging for
something I don't understand. Not to mention faint echoes of something
terrible, immigrants pushing and shoving under the gun, begging and
screaming to be allowed through the gates of Hel. I startle awake and
lie shivering in the darkness for half an hour. What's happening to me?
I'm trapped in another universe. It's true what
they say: The past is another polity, but I don't think most people
mean it quite like this.
THE next
morning, I'm in the kitchen trying to puzzle out the instructions for
using the coffeemaker when the phone rings. There's a terminal in the
hall, so I go there to pick it up, wondering if something's wrong.
"Call for Sam," buzzes a flat voice. "Call for Sam."
I stare at the handset for a moment, then look up the stairs. "It's for you!" I yell.
"I'm coming." Sam takes the staircase two steps
at a time. I pass him the handset. "Yes?" He listens for a moment.
"What is—I don't understand. Can you repeat that? Oh. Yes, yes, I
will." Listening to a conversation on one of these old telephones has
an eerie feel. They exist in a strange space, a half-duplex information
realm devoid of privacy.
Sam continues to listen, looking puzzled then
annoyed as the instructions continue. Finally, he puts the phone down.
"Well!" He says emphatically.
"I'm trying to cook the coffee," I tell him. "Come and tell me about it."
"They're sending a taxi. I've got half an ‘hour'—that's nearly two kilosecs, isn't it?—to get ready."
"Who are ‘they'?" I ask. My stomach clenches with anxiety.
"I've been assigned a temporary job," says Sam.
"They're picking me up for induction training. It's to show me how the
labor system here works. I may be given a different job later."
"Huh." I turn back to the coffee machine so he
won't see me frown. If that's the hydroxide tank, then this must be the
venturi nozzle . . . the disassembled metal bits don't
make any more sense to me than they did before I took it to pieces.
"What am I supposed to do? Are they going to assign me a labor duty,
too?"
"I don't think so." He pauses. "You can ask for
a job, but they don't expect you to. This one, the manual says it's a
starting point." He doesn't look too happy. "We get paid collectively,"
he adds after a few seconds.
"What? You mean they make you work, and I get half of it?"
"Yes."
I shake my head, then screw the machine back
together. After a bit I get to the point where it's making gurgling
whining noises and dribbling brown liquid. I stare at it, then wonder, Isn't it supposed to make a cup first?
Silly me, no assemblers! I hastily rummage through the cupboards until
I find a couple of cups and jam one under the nozzle. "Stupid, stupid,"
I mutter, unsure whether I'm describing myself or the long-dead
designers of the machine.
A taxi shows up in due course, and Sam goes off
to his work induction training. I wander around the house for a bit,
trying to figure out where everything is and what it does. The washing
machine apparently has physical switches you have to set to make it
work. It runs on water, and you have to add something called detergent
to the clothes, a substitute for properly designed fabrics. After I
read about fabrics in the manual Designed for Living, I feel a
bit queasy and resolve to only wear artificial ones. There's something
deeply disturbing about wearing clothes made from dead animals. There's
stuff called "silk" that's basically bug vomit, and the idea of it
makes my skin crawl.
After a couple of hours I get bored. The house
is deeply uncommunicative (if this was a real polity, I'd say it was
autistic), and the entertainment resources are primitive, to say the
least. I try the telephone, thinking I'll call Cass and see how she's
doing—at a guess, Mick will be undergoing work induction, too,
just like Sam—but the phone just makes that idiotic bleeping for
a minute or so (I'm trying to adjust to the strange time units the
ancients used). Maybe she's asleep, or shopping. Or could she be dead?
For a moment I daydream randomly: After Sam's call, Mick hit her over
the head with the handlebars from an exercise machine and chopped her
up in the basement. Or he strangled her while she was
asleep . . .
Why am I harboring these gruesome fantasies?
Something is very wrong with me. I feel trapped, that's a large part of
it. I'm isolated here, stuck alone in a suburban house while my husband
goes to his assigned job. Which is all wrong because what's really going on is that there's an assassin or assassins looking for me because of—because of what? Something that happened before my memory surgery—and I'm isolated, stuck here floundering around in my ignorance.
I need to get out of here.
Ten minutes later I'm standing outside the
conservatory, wearing my dress-code-violating boots and trousers and
with a bag over my shoulder containing my wallet and an extremely sharp
knife I found in the kitchen. It's absolutely pathetic, especially
given the shape of my arm muscles (which feel as if I've been whacking
on them with a hammer), but it's the best I can do right now. With any
luck, the assassinswill be in the same situation, and I'll have time to prepare myself before they're ready to make their move.
Item number one on the checklist for the well-prepared fugitive: Know your escape routes.
I don't call a taxi. Instead, I walk to the side
of the road and look up and down it. The neighborhood is peaceful, if a
bit peculiar. Huge deciduous plants grow to either side, and the
vegetation gets wild and out of control near the boundaries of the
garden associated with our house. Hidden invertebrates make creaking,
grating noises like malfunctioning machinery. I try to remember the
direction the taxi took us in. That way. I turn left and walk along the side of the road, ready to jump out of the way if a taxi appears suddenly.
There are other houses along the road. They're
about the same size as mine, clumps of rectangular boxes with
glass-fronted openings in frames, sporting oddly tilted upper surfaces.
They're painted a variety of colors but look drab and faded, like dead
husks shed by enormous land-going arthropods. There's no sign of life
in any of them, and I guess they're probably just part of the scenery.
I've got no idea where Cass lives, and I wish I did. I could go and
visit her: For all I know she's in the next house along from me. But I
don't know, and directory services are only one of the netlink-mediated
facilities that are missing here, and Sam is right about one
thing—the ancients were incredibly territorial. If they can call
the public security forces and detain people simply for wearing the
wrong clothes in public, what might they do if I went into someone
else's house?
A couple of hundred meters along the road, I
come to a rise in the ground. The road continues on the level,
descending into a deep trench, finally diving into a dark tunnel in the
hillside. Looking up the sides I notice that something isn't quite
right about the trees. Gotcha, I think. This must be the edge
of a hab module. I can just barely imagine what's right beneath my
feet—complex machinery locked within a skin of structural
diamond, a cylinder kilometers long spinning in the void, orbiting in
the icy darkness. Emptiness for a few tens of millions of kilometers,
then a brown dwarf star little bigger than a gas giant planet, then
tens of trillions of kilometers more to the nearest other star system.
Scale is the first enemy.
I walk into the tunnel and see a bend ahead,
beyond which it gets very dark. This is disturbing—I didn't
notice it when I was in the back of the taxi, even though my attention
was being grabbed by every weird thing I saw. But if there's a T-gate
in here . . . Well, there's only one way to find out. I
keep my right hand in contact with the tunnel wall as it curves round
into darkness. I keep walking slowly ahead, and after maybe fifty
meters it begins to bend the other way. I pass another curve, then
there's light from the end of the tunnel, and I'm walking along a road
where the buildings to either side are distinctly different in shape
and size. There's a sign ahead that reads: WELCOME TO THE VILLAGE. (A village is a small community; a downtown is the commercial area of a village. At least, I think that's how it works.)
I've been doing my reading like a good citizen,
and there are several places I need to go shopping, starting with a
hardware store. The thing is, it seems to me that because these people
couldn't simply order any design patterns they needed out of an
assembler, they had to make things themselves from more primitive
components. This means "tools," and it's surprisingly easy to convert a
good basic toolkit into an arsenal of field-expedient weapons. I'm
probably safe in here as long as I don't disclose my identity, but
"probably" doesn't get you very far when the alternative is lethal, and
I'm already lying awake at night worrying about it.
I spend about half an hour in the hardware
store, during which time I discover that the operator zombies aren't
programmed to stop females buying axes, crowbars, spools of steel wire,
arc-welding rigs, subtractive volume renderers, or just about any other
tool I can see. The kit I go for costs quite a bit and is bulky and
very heavy, but they say they'll deliver and install them in our
"garage," an externally accessible sub-building that I haven't explored
yet. I thank them and add some billets of metal feedstock and some
lengths of spring steel to the order.
Walking out of the store with a basic workshop
on its way over to my house and an axe hidden in a workman's holster
under my coat, I feel a lot better about the outlook for the near-term
future. It's a bright, warm morning: small feathery dinosaurs are
issuing territorial calls from the deciduous plants between the
buildings, and for the first time since I arrived I am beginning to
feel as if I'm in control of my own destiny.
Which is when I run into Jen and Angel, walking
arm in arm along the sidewalk toward a rustic-looking building with a
sign above the door saying, YE OLDE COFFEE SHOPPE.
"Why, hello there!" Jen gushes, spreading her
arms to drag me into an embrace, while Angel stands back, smiling
faintly. I yield to Jen's hug stiffly, hoping she won't feel the
axe—but no such luck. "What's that you're wearing? And what have you got under your coat?" she demands.
"I've just been to the hardware store," I
explain, forcing myself to smile politely. "I was buying some tools for
Sam for the, the garden, and I didn't have room for them in my bag so
I'm carrying them in the shoulder pouch he asked me to get." The lies
flow easily the more I practice them. "How are you doing?
"Oh, we're doing really well!" Jen says expansively, letting go of me.
"We were just about to stop for a coffee," says Angel. "Would you like to join us?"
"Sure," I say. There doesn't seem to be any
polite way to say no. Plus, I haven't had any human contact except Sam
for the past hundred kilosecs, and I wouldn't mind a chance to pick
their brains. So I follow them into Ye Olde Coffee Shoppe, and we sit
down at a booth with shiny red vinyl seats and a bright white
polymer-topped table while the waitrons attend to our needs.
"So how are you settling in?" asks Angel. "We heard you had some trouble yesterday."
"Yes, darling." Jen smiles brilliantly as she
nods. She's wearing a bright yellow dress and some kind of hat that
vaguely resembles a ballistic shuttlecraft. She's applied some kind of
paint-powder to her face to exaggerate the color of her lips (red) and
eyelashes (black), and something she's used on her skin has left her
smelling like an explosion in a topiary. "I hope you're not going to
make a habit of it?"
"I'm sure she won't," Angel chides her. "It's
just a natural settling-in mistake. We can all expect to make a few,
can't we?" She glances sideways at the waitron: "A double chocolate
iced latte made with fair-trade beans and whipped cream, no sugar," she
snaps.
"I'll have the same," I manage to say just as Jen starts rambling about the
contents of the price board above the counter, changing her mind three
times before she reaches the end of every sentence. I study Angel while
I'm about it. Angel is wearing a jacket-and-skirt combination—a
"suit," they call it, though it doesn't look like the version permitted
to males—and while it's darker and drabber than Jen's outfit,
she's got some shiny lumps of metal stuck to her earlobes. I can see
it's meant to be jewelry, but it looks painful. "What's that on your
ears?" I ask.
"They're called earrings," Angel tells me.
"There's a salon up the road that'll pierce your ears, then you can
hang different pieces of jewelry from them. Once the hole heals," she
adds, with a slight wince. "They're still a little sore."
"Hang on, that's not glued onto your skin or properly installed? They shoved it through your ear rather than rebuilding your ear around it? And it's metal?"
"Yes," she says, giving me an odd look. I don't
know what to say to that, but luckily I don't have to because Jen
finishes ordering her cafe americano and turns back to focus on us.
"I'm so pleased we ran into you today, darling!"
She leans toward me confidingly. "I've been doing some research, and
we're not the only cohort here—in fact, all six will be meeting
at Church tomorrow, and we wouldn't want anyone to let the side down."
"I'm sorry?" I ask, taken aback.
"She means, we need to keep up appearances," Angel says, with another of those expressive looks that I can't decode.
"I don't understand."
A faint frown wrinkles the skin between Jen's eyebrows. "It's not just about yesterday,"
she emphasizes. "Everyone's entitled to their little mistakes. But it
turns out that in addition to our points being averaged within the
cohort, each cohort in the parish gets to talk about what they've
achieved in the preceding week, and the other cohorts rate them on
their behavior before voting to add or subtract bonus points."
"It's an iterated prisoner's dilemma scenario,
with collective liability," Angel cuts in, just as one of the operator
zombies twiddles a knob on a polished metal tank behind the bar that
makes a noise like a pressure leak. "Very elegant experimental design,
if you ask me."
"It's an—" Oh shit. I nod, guardedly, unsure how much I can reveal: "I think I see."
"Yes." Angel nods. "We're going to have to
defend your behavior yesterday, and the other groups can add points or
subtract them depending on whether they think we deserve it and on
whether they think we'll hold a grudge when it's their turn in the
ring."
"That's really devious!"
"Yes." Angel again.
Jen smiles. "Which is why, darling, you're not
going to show up the side by violating the dress code, and you'll be
suitably remorseful about whatever the silly incident yesterday was
about—no, I don't want to know all the sordid details—and
we'll do our bit by backing you up and trying to bury the whole matter
as deeply as we can under a pile of every other cohort's sins. Won't
we?" She glances at Angel. "We're the new group, we can expect to be
picked on. It's going to be bad enough with Cass, as it is."
"What's wrong with Cass?" I ask.
"She's not settling in," says Jen.
Angel looks as if she's about to open her mouth,
but Jen waves her hand dismissively. "If you've been getting any silly
phone calls from her, just ignore them. She's only doing it to get
attention, and she'll stop soon enough."
I stare at Jen. "She told me Mick's threatening to hurt her," I say. The zombie delivers the first of our coffee cups.
"So?" Jen stares right back at me, and there's a
cold core of steel behind her expression: "What business of ours is it?
What's between a wife and her husband is private, as long as it doesn't
threaten to drag our points down or get our whole cohort in trouble.
Apart from the other thing, of course."
"What other—"
Angel cuts in. "You get social points for
fucking," she says, her voice self-consciously neutral. Again, she
gives me that odd look. "I thought you'd have figured it out by now."
"For sex?" I must sound faintly scandalized, or shocked or something, because Jen's face relaxes into a mask of amusement.
"Only with your husband, darling." She sips her
coffee and looks at me calculatingly. "That's something else we've
noticed. I don't want to hurry you or anything,
but . . ."
"Who I fuck is none of your business," I say
flatly. My coffee arrives, but right now I'm not feeling thirsty. My
mouth tastes as dry and acrid as if I've just chewed half a kilogram of
raw caffeine. "I'll dress up for the Church meeting and say I'll be
good and do whatever else you want me to do in public. And I'll try not
to cost you any points. But." I tap the table in front of Jen's coffee
cup, insultingly close. "You will not, ever, tell me whom I may
associate with or what I will do with my chosen associates. Or with
whom I have sex." The silence grows icicles. I take an unwisely large
gulp of hot coffee and burn the roof of my mouth. "Do I make myself
clear?"
"Quite clear, darling." Jen's eyes glitter like splinters of frozen malice.
I make myself smile. "Now, shall we find something civilized to talk about while we drink our coffee and eat our pastries?"
"I think that would be a good idea," says Angel.
She looks slightly shaken. "After lunch, how about we buy you something
suitable to wear to Church?" She asks me. "Just in case. Meanwhile, I
was wondering if you've used your washing machine yet? It has some
interesting features . . ." And she's off into an
exploration of techniques for gaining points in the women's world,
generated by game theory and policed by mutual scorefile surveillance.
BY the end of
our lunch, I think I've got a handle on them. Angel means well but is
too calculatedly fearful for her own good. She's afraid of stepping out
of line, unwilling to jeopardize her score, and worried about what
people will think of her. This combination makes her an easy target for
Jen, who is flamboyant and aggressively extroverted on the outside, but
uses it to conceal an insecure need for approval, which leads her to
bully people until they give it to her. She's as ruthless as anyone I
can recall meeting since my memory surgery, and I've met some hardcases
around the clinic. The surgeon-confessors tend to attract such. (What's
even more disturbing is that I have faint ghost-recollections of
knowing similar people before, but with no details attached. Who they
were or what they meant to me has sunk into the abyss where memories go
when their owners no longer need them.)
The two of them, working by unspoken assent,
appoint themselves as my personal shopping assistants for the
afternoon. They're not crude about it, but they're very persistent and
make no real attempt to conceal their desire to modify my behavior
along lines compatible with their enhanced scorefiles.
After coffee and cakes (for which Angel pays),
they escort me to a series of establishments. In the first of these I
am subjected to the attentions of a hairstylist. Angel sits with me and
chats interminably about kitchen appliances while Jen goes off
somewhere to do something of her own, and the zombie immobilizes me and
applies a fearsome array of knives, combs, chemical reagents, and
compact machine tools to my head. Once I get out of the chair, I have
to admit that my hair's different—it's still long, but it's
several shades lighter, and whenever I turn my head it moves like a
solid lump of foamed plastic.
"Perhaps we should get you some clothing for
tomorrow," Jen says, smiling broadly. It's phrased as a suggestion, but
the way she says it makes it an order. They lead me through a series of
boutiques, where I am induced to present my credit card. She insists
that I try on the costume, and while I'm showing her how it looks,
Angel gets the store zombies to parcel up my stuff. I end up looking
like one of them, the ladies who lunch. "We're getting there," Jen
says, something almost like approval on her face. "You need a makeover,
though."
"A what?"
They just laugh at me. Probably just as well; if
they told me in advance, I'd try to escape. And, as I keep reminding
myself (with an increasing sense of dread), I'll have nearly a hundred
tendays—three years—in which to regret any mistakes I make
today.
THE lights are
turning red and sinking toward the tunnel at the edge of the world when
the taxi we're crammed into stops outside my house, and the door opens.
"Go on," says Angel, pushing my bag at me, "goand surprise him. He'll have had a long day and will need cheering up." I realize she's using the generic he—they don't care who he is, all they care about is the fact that he's my husband, and we can earn them points.
"Okay, I'm going, I'm going," I say, harassed. I
take the bag, and as I turn, something bites me on the leg. "Hey!" I
look round but the taxi is already pulling away. "Shit," I mumble. My
leg throbs. I reach down and feel something lumpy stuck in it. I pull
it out. It's some sort of lozenge with a needle coming out of one end. "Shit."
I stumble up the path in the new shoes they insisted I buy—the
heels are steeper and less comfortable than the first pair—and in
through the door. I dump the bags and head for the living room, where
the TV is on. Sam is lying in front of it, his eyes closed and his tie
loosened, and I feel a stab of compassion for him. The injection point
on my leg aches, a cold reminder.
"Sam. Wake up!" I shake his shoulder. "I need your help!"
"Whu—" He opens his eyes and looks at me.
"Reeve?" His pupils dilate visibly. I probably smell weird—Jen
and Angel tried half the contents of a scent bar on me, for no reason I
can fathom.
"Help." I sit down next to him and hike up my
skirt to show him the mark on my thigh. "Look." I hold up the ampoule
where he can see it. "They got me. What in seven shades of shit is
that stuff?" My crotch is unnaturally sensitive and I feel slightly
dizzy, worryingly relaxed and unstressed in view of what's just
happened.
"It's—" He blinks. "I don't know. Who did this to you?"
"Jen and Angel. They dropped me off from a taxi
and I think Angel got me with this thing as I left." I lick my lips.
I'm feeling distinctly odd. "What do you think? Poison?"
"Maybe not," he says, staring at me. Then he
picks up his tablet and pokes at it. "There," he says, holding it for
me. "Must be their idea of fun."
I thrust my hands between my thighs and clamp
them together, my eyes blurring as I read. My crotch is tingling. "It's
a—huh!" Fury washes over me. "The bitches!"
Sam shakes his head. "I've had a really tiring
day, but it sounds like you've had an exciting one. Coming home dressed
like a—and your friends, spiking you for sexual arousal." He
raises an eyebrow. "Why did they do that, do you suppose?" Sam can
remain analytical and composed in the most trying situations. I wish I
had half his grace under pressure.
"I—" I force myself to move my hands. "Bitches."
"What's going on, Reeve? Is the peer pressure really that compelling?" He sounds concerned, sympathetic.
"Yes." I grit my teeth. He's sitting too close
to me, but I don't want to risk moving. The drug is hitting me hard in
warm, tingly waves, and I'm afraid of leaving a damp patch on the sofa.
"It's the social points. We knew the points were shared with our
cohort, but there are extra compulsion mechanisms we didn't know about.
Jen and Angel told me about them, but I didn't . . .
shit. And then you can score points for . . . other
activities."
"What other activities?" he asks gently.
"Use your imagination!" I gasp, and bolt for the bathroom.
SAM knocks on
the bathroom door once, tentatively, as I'm lying in the bottom of the
shower cubicle in a daze of lust, letting waves of hot water sluice
over me like a tropical storm—Since when do I know what a tropical storm on Urth felt like?—and
trying to feel clean. Part of me wants to invite him in, but I manage
to bite my lip and stay silent. I guess I can cross Jen and Angel off
my list of possible assassins, but I find myself fantasizing in the
shower, fantasizing about getting them alone and the myriad revenges
I'll take. I know these are just fantasies—you can't kill
somebody more than once in this place, and once you've killed them,
they're out of reach—but something in me wants to make them hurt,
and not just because they've destroyed any chance of my ever having
honest sex with this curiously introverted, thoughtful, bear of a
husband I've acquired. So I work my arms to exhaustion on the weight
machine down in the basement, then go to bed alone and uneasy.
Sunday dawns bright and hot. I reluctantly put
on the dress Jen and Angel made me buy and go to meet Sam downstairs. I
have no pockets, don't know if I'm allowed to carry a bag, and I feel
very unsafe without even a utility knife. Sam's wearing a black suit,
white shirt, black tie.Very monochrome. He looks solid, but going by his face he feels as unsure of himself as I am. "Ready?" I ask.
He nods. "I'll call the taxi."
The Parish Church is a big stone building some
distance away from where we live. There's a tower at one end, as sharp
and axisymmetrical as a relativistic impactor (if warships were made of
stone and had holes drilled in their dorsal end with huge parabolic
chimes hanging inside). The bells are ringing loudly, and the car park
is filling with taxis and males and females dressed in period costume
as we arrive. I see a few faces I know, Jen's among them. But I find I
don't recognize most of the people in the crowd as we wait outside, and
I hang on to Sam's arm for fear of losing him.
Internally, the Church contains of a single
room, with a platform at one end and rows of benches carved from dead
trees facing it. There's an altar on the platform, with a long naked
blade lying atop it beside a large gold chalice. We file in and sit
down. As soft music plays, a procession walks up the aisle from the
rear of the building. There are three males, physically aged but not
yet senescent, wearing distinctive robes covered in metallic thread.
They climb the platform and take up set positions. Then the one at the
front and right begins to speak, and I realize with a start that he's
Major-Doctor Fiore.
"Dear congregants, we are gathered here today to
remember those who have gone before us. Frozen faces carved in stone,
the frozen faces of multitudes." He pauses, and everyone around us
repeats his words back to him, a low rumbling echo that seems to go on
and on forever.
Fiore continues to recite gibberish in
portentous tones at an increasing pace. Every sentence or two he stops,
and the congregation repeats his words back to him. I hope it's
gibberish—some of it is not only baffling but vaguely menacing,
references to being judged after our deaths, punishment for sins,
rewards for obedience. I glance sideways but quickly realize everybody
else is watching him. I mouth the words but feel deeply uneasy about
it. Some folks seem to be getting worked up, shouting the responses.
Next, a zombie in an alcove strikes up a turgid
melody on some sort of primitive music machine, and Fiore tells us to
turn the paper books in front of us to a set page. People begin singing
the words there, and clapping in time, and they don't make any sense
either. The name "Christian" features in it repeatedly, but not in any
context I understand. And the message of the sing-along is distinctly
sinister, all about submission and conformity and reward feedback
loops. It's as if I've got some sort of deep-rooted reflex that refuses
to let me absorb propaganda uncritically: I end up reading the book
with a frown on my face.
After half an hour or so, Fiore signals the
zombie to stop playing. "Dearly beloved," he says, his tone unctuous
and confiding. He leans forward on the lectern, searching our faces. "Dearly beloved." I add my own sarcastic mental commentary to the proceedings—Too dear for you to afford,
I footnote him. "Today I would like you all to extend a warm welcome to
our newest members, cohort six. We are a loving Church, and it behooves
us"—He actually used the word "behooves," he actually said that!—"to
gather them to our breast and welcome them fully into our family." He
smiles ecstatically and clutches the lectern as if a zombie catamite
hidden behind it is sucking his cock. "Please welcome our newest
members, Chris, El, Sam, Fer, and Mick, and their wives Jen, Angel,
Reeve, Alice, and Cass."
Everyone around me—except Sam, who looks
as confused as I feel—suddenly starts smacking their hands
together in front of them. It's some kind of welcoming ritual, I guess,
and the noise is surprisingly loud. Sam catches my eye and begins to
clap, tentatively, but then Fiore holds up a hand and everybody stops.
"My children," he says, gazing down at us
fondly, "our new brethren have only been here for three days. In that
time, they have had much to learn and see and do, and some of them have
made mistakes. To err is human, and to forgive is also human. It is
ours to forgive and to pardon. To pardon, for example, Mrs. Alice
Sheldon of number six, for her difficulty with plumbing. Or to Mrs.
Reeve Brown of number six, for her unfortunate public display of nudity
the other day. Or to—"
He's drowned out by laughter. I look round and
see that suddenly people are laughing at me and pointing. I feel a rush
of embarrassment and anger. How dare he do this? But it's intimidating, too. There must be fifty people here, and some of them are staring as if they're trying to figure
out what I look like without any clothes on. If I was me, if I was in
my own self-selected body, I'd call him out on the spot—but I'm
not. In the sick pit of my stomach I realize that they're never going
to forget that I've been singled out, and that this makes me a target.
After all, that's how peer pressure works, isn't it? That's what this
is about. The experimenters can't expect to generate a workable dark
ages society in just three years by dumping a bunch of convalescents in
orthohuman bodies into the polity and letting them wander around. They
need a social mechanism to make us require conformity of one other, and
the best way to do that is to provide a mechanism to make us punish our
own deviants—
"—Or to forgive Cass, for her tendency to oversleep. Such as today, when she seems to have forgotten to come to Church."
They're not looking at me anymore, but they're
muttering, and there's a dark undercurrent of disapproval at work. I
catch Sam's eye, and he looks frightened. He reaches out sideways, and
I grab his hand and cling to it as if I'm drowning.
"I urge you all to give your sympathies to Mick,
her husband, who has to support such a slothful wife, and to help her
out when next you see her." And now I can follow everybody's gaze to
Mick. He's short and wiry and has a big, sharp nose and dark, brooding
eyes. He looks angry and defensive, for good reason. The bruising
weight of a five-point infraction has left me feeling weak in the knees
and frightened, and now he's getting it as a proxy for his wife's
failure to get up in the morning—
Failure to get up in the morning? I feel like yelling at Fiore: It's an excuse, idiot, an excuse for not being seen in public!
Fiore moves on to discuss other people, other
cohorts, stuff that's meaningless to me right now. My netlink comes up,
insisting I vote on whether to add or subtract points to each of the
other cohorts, with a list of sins and achievements tallied against
each name. I don't vote for any of them. In the end our own cohort gets
dumped on unanimously by the voters of the five older ones. We all lose
a couple of points, signaled by the tolling of a sullen iron bell
hanging in an archway near the back of the Church. Fiore signals the
zombie to strike up the organ and leads us in another meaningless song,
then it's the end of the service. But I can't run away and hide just
yet because the auto-da-fé is followed by a social reception in
honor of the new cohort, so we can smile brittle smiles and eat
canapés under the magnolia trees while they politely sneer at us.
There are tables laid out in the ornamental
garden called a graveyard that backs onto the Church. They're covered
with white cloths and stacked with glasses of wine. We're led outside
and left to fend for ourselves. Taxis don't run on Sunday during Church
services. I find myself standing stiffly with my back as close to the
churchyard wall as I can get, clutching a wineglass with one hand and
Sam with the other. My shoes are pinching, and my face feels set in a
permanent grimace.
"Reeve! And Sam!" It's Jen, dragging along Angel
and their husbands, Chris and El, in her undertow. She looks a little
less ebullient than she was yesterday, and I can guess why.
"We didn't do so well," El grunts. He spares me
a lingering glance that hits me like a punch in the guts. It's really
creepy. I know exactly what he's thinking, just not why he's thinking
it. Is it because he thinks I cost him his points or because he's
trying to imagine me with no clothes on?
"We could have done worse," says Jen, her words clipped and harsh-sounding. She's strangling her handbag in a death grip.
"On the outside." I take a deep breath. "I'd challenge Fiore if he made a crack like that at me in public."
"But you're not on the outside, darling," Jen
points out. She smiles at Sam. "Is she like this at home, or only when
she's got an audience?"
I am close, very close, to throwing the
contents of my wineglass in her face and demanding satisfaction just to
see if she'll crack, but my butterfly mind sees a distraction sneaking
furtively past behind her—it's Mick. So instead of doing
something stupid I do something downright foolhardy and march right
over to him.
"Hello, Mick," I say brightly.
He jumps and glares at me. He's tense, wound up like a spring, positively fizzing. "Yes? What do you want?" he demands.
"Oh, nothing." I smile and inspect his face. "I just wanted to sympathize
with you, having a wife who doesn't get up in the morning for Church.
That's downright inconvenient. Will I see her here next week?"
"Yes," he grates. He's holding his hands stiffly by his sides, and they're clenched into fists.
"Oh, good! How marvelous. Listen, you don't mind
me visiting to see her this afternoon, do you? We've got a lot to talk
about, and I thought she'd—"
"No." He glares at me. "You're not seeing the bitch. Not today, or—whenever. Go away. Whore."
I'm not sure what the word means, but I get the
general picture. "Okay, I'm going," I say tensely. If I'd had a few
more days with the bench press and the weights, things might be
difficult: But not right now. Not yet.
I turn and walk back over to Sam. He doesn't say
anything when I lean against him, which is just as well because I don't
trust myself to be tactful, especially not while we're in public, and I
can't escape. My heart's pounding, and I feel sick with suppressed
anger and shame. Cass is being treated as a virtual prisoner by her
husband. I'm being publicly ridiculed and making enemies just for
trying to maintain my sense of identity. This whole polity is rigged to
try to make us betray our friends . . . but somewhere
out there, people are looking for me with murder in mind. And if I
don't keep a low profile, sooner or later they'll find me.
AFTER Church we
go home. Sam doesn't have to work on Sunday, so he watches television.
I go and explore the garage. It's a flimsy structure off to one side of
the house, with a big pair of doors in front. There's a workbench, and
the hardware shop zombies have already installed all the stuff I bought
yesterday. I spend a while tinkering with the drill press and reading
the manual for the arc-welding apparatus. Then I go and work out on the
exercise device in the basement, grimly pretending that it's a torture
machine for transferring physical stress to the bones of a human victim
and that Jen's on the receiving end of it. After I've squished her into
a bloody lump the size of a shopping bag, I feel drained but happier
and ready to tackle difficult tasks. So I go looking for Sam.
He's in the living room, staring blankly at the
TV screen with the volume turned off. I sit down next to him, and he
barely notices. "What's wrong?" I ask.
"I'm—" He shakes his head, mute and miserable.
I reach for his hand but he pulls it away. "Is it me?" I ask.
"No."
I reach for his hand again, grab it, and hang on. He doesn't pull away this time, but he seems to be tense.
"What is it, then?"
For a while I think he isn't going to say anything, but then, just as I'm about to try again, he sighs. "It's me."
"It's—what?"
"Me. I shouldn't be here."
"What?" I look around. "In the living room?"
"No, in this polity," he says. Now I get it,
it's not anger—it's depression. When he's down, Sam clams up and
wallows in it instead of taking it out on his surroundings.
"Explain. Try and convince me." I shuffle closer
to him, keeping hold of his hand. "Pretend I'm one of the
experimenters, and you're looking to justify an early termination,
okay?"
"I'm—" He looks at me oddly. "We're not
supposed to talk about who we were before the experiment. It doesn't
aid enculturation, and it's probably going to get in the way."
"But I—" I stop. "Okay, how about you tell
me," I say slowly. "I won't tell anyone." I look him in the eye. "We're
supposed to be a monadic couple. There aren't any negative-sum game
plays between couples in this society, are there?"
"I don't know." He sniffs. "You might talk."
"Who to?"
"Your friend Cass."
"Bullshit!" I punch him lightly on the arm. "Look, if I promise I won't tell?"
He looks at me thoughtfully. "Promise."
"Okay, I promise." I pause. "So what's wrong?"
His shoulders are hunched. "I've just come out
of memory surgery," he says slowly. "I think that's where Fiore and
Yourdon and their crowd found most of us, by the way. A redaction
clinic must be a great place to find experimental subjects who're
healthy but who've forgotten everything they knew. People who've come
adrift from the patterns of life, and who have minimal social
connections. People with active close ties don't go in for memory
surgery, do they?"
"Not often, I don't think," I say, vaguely
disturbed by a recollection of military officers briefing me: trouble
in another life, urgent plotting against an evil contingency.
"Not unless they're trying to hide something from themselves."
I manage to fake up an amused laugh for him. "I don't think that's very likely. Do you?"
"I'd . . . well. I'm pretty
narrowly channeled emotionally. Narrow, but deep. I had a family. And
it all went wrong, for reasons I can't deal with now, reasons I could
have done something about, maybe. Or maybe not. Whatever, that's the
bare outline of what I remember. The rest is all third-person
sketching, reconstructed memory implants to replace whatever it meant
to me. Because, I'm not exaggerating, it burned me out. If I hadn't
undergone memory redaction, I'd probably have become suicidal. I have a
tendency toward reactive depression, and I'd just lost everything that
meant anything to me."
I hold his hand, not daring to move, suddenly
wondering what kind of emotional time bomb I casually selected over the
cheese and wine table half a week ago.
After about a minute, he sighs again. "It's
over. They're in the past, and I don't remember it too clearly. I
didn't have the full surgery, just enough to add a layer of fuzz so
that I could build a new life for myself." He looks at me. "Do you
know?"
Know what? I think, feeling panicky. Then I understand what he's asking.
"I had memory surgery, too," I say slowly, "but
it wasn't for the first time. And it was thorough. I've—" I
swallow. "I had to read an autobiography I wrote for myself." And did I
lie when I was writing it? Did that other me tell the truth, or was he
spinning a pretty tapestry of lies for the stranger he was due to
become in the future? "It said I was mated once, long-term. Three
partners, six children, it lasted over a gigasec." I feel shaky as I
consider the next part. "I don't remember their faces. Any of them."
In truth I don't remember any of it. It
might as well have happened to someone else. According to my
autobiography it did. The whole thing ended more than four gigasecs
ago—over a hundred and twenty years—and I went through my
first memory reset early in the aftermath, and a much more thorough one
recently. For more than thirty years those three mates and six children
meant more to me than, well, anything. But all they are today is
background color to the narrative of my life, like dry briefing
documents setting up a prefabricated history for a sleeper agent about
to be injected into a foreign polity.
Sam holds my hand. "I had surgery to deal with
the pain," he says. "And I came out of surgery, and I found I probably
didn't need it in the first place. Pain is a stimulus, a signal that
the organism needs to take some kind of evasive action, isn't it? I
don't mean the chronic pain caused by nerve damage, but ordinary pain.
And emotional pain. You need to do something about it, not avoid it.
Afterward, it was distant, but I felt empty. Only half-human. And I
wasn't sure who I was, either."
I stroke his hand. "Was it the dissociative psychopathology?" I ask. "Or something deeper?"
"Deeper." He sounds absent. "I had such a void
that I—well, I made the mistake of falling in love again. Too
soon, with somebody who was brilliant and fast and witty and probably
completely crazy. And they asked me about the experiment while I was
miserable, trying to figure out whether I really was in love or
was just fooling myself. We discussed the experiment, but I don't think
they were too keen on the idea. And in the end it all got too much for
me: I signed up, backed myself up, and woke up in here." He looks at me
unhappily. "I made a mistake."
"What?" I stare at him, not sure what to make of this.
"It's not that I don't like sex," he says
apologetically, "but I'm in love with someone else. And I'm not going
to see them until—" He shakes his head. "Well, there it is. You
must think I'm a real idiot."
"No." What I think is, I really have to rescue
Cass, Kay, from that scumsucker who's got her locked up. "I don't think
you're an idiot, Sam," I hear myself telling him. I lean sideways and
kiss him on the cheek in friendly intimacy. He starts, but he doesn't
try to push me away. "I just wish we weren't this messed up."
"Me too," he says sadly. "Me too." I lean
against him for a while, words seeming redundant at this point. Then,
because I'm becoming uncomfortably aware of his body, I get up and head
back out to the garage. There's still daylight, and I've got an idea or
two in my head that I'd like to work on. If it turns out I have to
rescue Kay from Mick and he's violent, I want to be properly equipped.
ON Monday Sam
goes to work. And the next day, and the one after that—every day
of every week, except Sunday. He's being trained as a legal secretary,
which sounds a lot more interesting than it is, although he's getting a
handle on the laws and customs of the ancients—some big legal
databases survived the dark ages almost untouched, and City Hall has to
process a lot of paperwork. One result is that he wears the same dark
suits every day, except at home, where it turns out to be okay for him
to wear jeans and open-necked shirts.
I begin to get used to him leaving most days,
and settle into a routine. I get up in the morning and make coffee for
us both. After Sam heads for work I go down to the cellar and work out
until I'm covered in sweat and my arms are creaking. Then I have
another coffee, go outside, and run the length of the road between the
two tunnels several times—at first I make it six lengths, as it's
half a kilometer, but I begin to increase it after Tuesday. When I'm
staggering with near exhaustion, I go back home and have a shower,
another cup of coffee, and either put on something respectable if I'm
heading downtown or something disrespectable if I'm going to work in
the garage.
There are other unpleasantnesses, of course.
About two weeks into our residence, I wake up in the middle of the
night with an unpleasant belly cramp. The next morning I'm disgusted to
discover that I'm bleeding. I'd heard of menstruation, of
course, but I hadn't expected the YFH-Polity designers to be crazy
enough to reintroduce it. Most other female mammals simply reabsorb
their endometria, why should dark ages humans have to be different? I
clean up after myself as well as I can, then find I'm still leaking.
It's a miserable time, but when I break down and phone Angel to ask if
there's any way of stopping it, she just suggests I go to the drugstore
and look for feminine hygiene supplies.
Supplies come from the stores in the downtown
zone. I get to shop a couple of times a week. Food comes in prepacked
meal containers or as raw ingredients, but I'm a lousy cook and a slow
learner so I tend to avoid the latter. This week I pull my routine
forward—like, urgently—because feminine hygiene means the
drugstore, where they sell pads to wear inside your underwear. The
whole business is revolting. What's going to happen next? Are they
going to inflict leprosy on us? I grit my teeth and resolve to buy more
underwear. And pain medication, which comes in small bitter-tasting
disks that you have to swallow and which don't work very well.
Clothing I've more or less sorted out. I've
taken to asking Angel or sometimes Alice to choose stuff for my public
appearances. This insures me against making a wrong choice and getting
on anyone's shit-list. Jen points out that I've got lousy fashion
taste, an accusation that might actually carry some weight if there
were enough of us in this snow globe of a universe to actually have
fashions, rather than simply being on the receiving end of a
fragmentary historical clothing database that's advancing through the
old-style 1950s at a rate of one planetary year per two tendays.
Other supplies . . . I haunt the
hardware shop. Sam probably thinks I'm spending all the money he's
earning on makeovers and hairdos or something, but the truth is, I'm
looking to my survival. If and when the assassins find me, I'm
determined they're going to have a fight on their hands. I don't think
he's even looked in the garage once since we moved in. If he had, he'd
probably have noticed the drill press, welding kit, and the bits of
metal and wood and nails and glue and the workbench. And the textbooks:
The Crossbow, Medieval and Modern, Military and Sporting, Its Construction History and Management. It's funny what's survived.
Currently I'm reading a big fat volume called The Swordsmith's Assistant.
There's method in my madness. While there's no obvious way I can get my
hands on a blaster or other modern weaponry, and I'm not suicidal
enough to play with explosives inside a pressurized hab without knowing
its physical topology, it occurs to me that you can still raise an
awful lot of mayhem with the toys you can build in a dark age machine
shop. My main headache with the crossbow, in fact, is going to be
knowing the axis of rotation in each sector, so that I can correct myaim for Coriolis force. Which is where the plumb bob and the laser distance meter come in.
In public, I'm working hard at being a different person. I don't want anyone to figure out that I'm building an arsenal.
The ladies of our cohort—which means Jen,
Angel, me, and Alice, because Cass still isn't allowed out in public by
her husband—meet up for lunch three times a week. I don't ask
after Cass because I don't want Jen to get the idea that I'm interested
in her. She'd peg it as a weakness and try to figure out how to exploit
it. I don't want her to get any kind of handle of me, so I dress up and
meet them at a restaurant or cafe, and smile and listen politely as
they discuss what their husbands are doing or the latest gossip about
their neighbors. The nine other houses on my road are standing vacant,
waiting for the next cohorts of test subjects to arrive, but that's
unusual—I gather the others live near to people from other
cohorts, and there's a rich sea of gossip lapping around the tide pools
of suburban anomie.
"I think we can make some mileage against cohort
three," Jen says one day, over a Spanish omelet dusted with paprika.
She sounds cunning.
"You do?" Angel asks anxiously.
"Yes." Jen looks smug.
"Do tell." Alice puts her fork down in the
wreckage of her Caesar salad. She's trying to look interested, but she
can't fool me. Jen casts her a sharp look, then stabs her omelet.
"Esther and Mal live at the other end of
Lakeside View from me and Chris." A piece of omelet quivers on the end
of her fork, impaled for our attention. Jen chews reflectively. "I've
noticed Esther watching me from their garden, some mornings. So I
called a taxi to go shopping, then had it circle round and drop me off
just beyond the tunnel at the other end of the road. Funny who you see
in the area." She smiles, exposing perfect raptor-sharp teeth.
"Who?" asks Alice, obliging her with an audience.
"She goes in, and about ten minutes later Phil
turns up by taxi. He sends it away and rings the doorbell. Leaves an
hour or two later."
Angel tut-tuts disapprovingly. Alice just looks faintly disgusted.
"Don't you see?" asks Jen. "It's not public.
That gives us leverage." She spears a broccoli stem, dismembers it a
branch at a time, tearing with her teeth. "There's a word for it.
Adultery. It's not negatively scored as such, as long as it's secret.
But if it comes out—"
"We know," Angel interrupts. "So why—"
"Because we're not part of cohort three. Esther
and Mal and Phil are all in cohort three. The, ah, peer pressure has to
be applied by your peers. So this gives us leverage over Esther and
Phil. If we tell Mal, they lose points big-time."
"I don't feel so good," I say, putting my knife down and pushing my chair back from the table. "Need some fresh air."
"Was it something I said?" asks Jen, casually concerned.
I'm getting better at lying with a straight
face. I don't think I used to be good at it, but spending too much time
around Jen is giving me a crash course in mendacity. "Nothing to do
with you—must be something I ate," I say as I stand up.
I'm trying not to stand out, trying not to
offend Jen or the others, and trying not to look eccentric in public,
but there are limits to what I will put up with. Being tacitly enlisted
in a conspiracy to blackmail is too much. I'll have to smile at them
tomorrow or the day after, but right now I want to be alone. So I go
outside, where a gentle breeze is blowing, and I walk to the end of the
block and cross the road. There's very little traffic (none of us real
humans drive vehicles—it's far too dangerous), and the zombies
are configured to give right of way to pedestrians, so I manage to get
into the park reasonably fast.
The park is a semidomesticated biome. The grass
is neatly trimmed, the large deciduous plants are carefully pruned, and
the small stream of water that meanders through it is tamed and can be
crossed by numerous footbridges. It has the big advantage that at this
time of day it's nearly empty, except for the zombie groundsman and
perhaps a couple of wives with nothing better to do with their time. I
walk along the stone path that leads from the edge of the downtown
block toward the small coppice on the edge of the boating lake.
I gradually calm down as I near the side of the
lake. It's simulating a sunny day with a little high cloud and a lazy
breeze, just occasionally getting up enough speed to cool my skin
through my costume. Apart from the incessant machinelike twitter of the
fist-sized dinosaurs in the trees, it's quite peaceful. Sometimes I can
almost bring myself to forget the perpetual simmering sense of anger
and humiliation that Jen seems to thrive on inducing in the rest of us.
However much I try to, I can't put myself in
their shoes. It's as if they don't realize that you can game the system
by ignoring it, by refusing to participate, as well as by going along
with the overt rewards and punishments. They've all unconsciously
decided to obey the arbitrary pressure toward gender partitioning, and
they won't be content unless everyone else conforms and competes for
the same rewards. Was it like this for real dark ages females, created
as random victims of genetic determinism rather than volunteers in an
experiment enforced by explicit rewards and penalties? If so, I'm
lucky: I've only got another three years of it.
Being a wife is a lonely business. Sam and I
lead largely independent lives. He goes to work in the morning, and I
only see him in the evenings, when he's tired, or on Sundays. On
Sundays we go to Church, bound together by our mutual fear of being
singled out for opprobrium, and afterward we go home together and try
to remind each other that the score whores—who slavishly chase
after every hint of right behavior that Fiore drops—are not the
most intelligent or reasonable people. We have an uphill struggle at
times.
It's a shame Sam's a male, and a shame that the
internal dynamics of this compressed community have set up this
artificial barrier between us. I have a feeling that if we weren't
under so much external pressure, I could get to like him.
And then there's Cass, who was at Church last Sunday.
We live in a really small, tightly constrained
and controlled synthetic world, and there are some aspects of the way
it's organized that make its artificiality glaringly obvious. For
example, we don't have fashions, not in the sense of spontaneous design
creativity that spawns waves of imitation and recomplication.
(Creativity is a scarce resource at the best of times, and with barely
a hundred of us living here so far, there just isn't enough to go
round.) What we do have is a strangely frenetic ersatz fashion
industry, in the form of whatever's in the shops. Somewhere there's a
surviving catalogue of styles from the dark ages, probably compiled
from a museum, and the shops change their contents regularly,
compelling us to buy new stuff every few cycles or fall out of date.
(It's another conformity-promoting measure: forget to update your
wardrobe contents, leave yourself open to criticism.) This month hats
are in fashion, ridiculous confections with wide brims and net veils
that shadow the face. I can cope with hats, although I don't like the
brims or the veils—I keep catching them on things, and they get
in the way.
But let me get back to Cass, the subject of my hopes and worries . . .
I'm standing beside Sam as usual, holding the
hymnbook and moving my lips, letting my eyes rove around the other side
of the aisle. A new cohort arrived last week and the Church is
packed—they'll have to extend it soon. I'm trying to pick out the
newcomers because I don't want to get them mixed up with the older
cohorts. Maybe it's a bit of Jen's calculated cynicism rubbing off on
me, but I'm learning to guess someone's degree of alienation by how
long they've been around. I have a feeling I might be able to make some
allies among the new intake as long as I look for them early in the
conditioning cycle, before the score whores get their claws in.
For some reason Mick is sitting
with—standing among—the new folks this week, and I
automatically glance at the woman to his left. I do a double take.
She's wearing a long-sleeved blue dress with a high collar, and a hat
with a black veil that covers her face. She's got lots of makeup
smeared around her eyes. Her mouth is a red slash, and her cheeks are
colorless. But it's definitely Cass, and she's holding the hymnbook as
if she's never seen one before.
Is that you, Kay? I wonder,
tantalized by her presence. I've been holding on to that promise Kay
extracted from me—"You'll look for me inside, won't you?" And
Cass . . . she knows ice ghoul society. If Mick wasn't so crazy with jealousy that he doesn't want her out in public, if—
Sam nudges me discreetly in the ribs. People are
closing their hymnbooks and sitting down. I hastily follow suit. (Don't
want anyone to notice me, don't want to attract unwanted attention.)
"Dearly beloved," drones Fiore, "we are a loving
congregation, and today we welcome to our bosom the new cohort of
Eddie, Pat, Jon"—and he names seven other fresh
victims—"who I am sure you will take under your wings and strive
to befriend in due course. We also offer a belated welcome to
sleepyhead Cass, who has finally deigned to grace us with her fragrant
presence . . ." He twitters on in like vein for some
time, preaching a sermon of saccharine subordination illustrated
periodically with some anecdote of misdoing. Vern, it seems, got
falling-down drunk and vomited in Main Street two nights ago, while
Erica and Kate had a stand-up fight so violent that it put Erica in
hospital, along with Greg and Brook, who tried to pull Kate off her.
Kate is now in prison, paying the price for her outburst in days on
bread and nights on water, and by the time Fiore gets through
excoriating her, there's an angry undercurrent of disapproval in the
congregation. I glance sidelong at Cass, trying not to be too obtrusive
about it. I can't make out her face—the veil shadows her
expression effectively—but I'm pretty sure that if I could see
her, she'd look frightened. Her shoulders are set, defensive, and she's
hunched slightly away from Mick.
Once we go outside into the open air, I grab a
glass of wine and down it rapidly, keeping close to Sam. Sam watches
me, worried. "Something wrong?"
"Yes. No. I'm not sure." There are butterflies
in my stomach. Cass is the most isolated of the wives in Cohort Four,
the one who hasn't been allowed out anywhere—and could Sam stop
me doing anything if I felt like it? Mick is poison, not the subtle
social toxin of a Jen, but the forthright venom of a stinging insect,
brutal and direct. "There's something I want to check out. I'll be back
in a few minutes, okay?"
"Reeve—take care?"
I meet his eyes. He's concerned! I realize. Abashed, I nod, then slide away toward the front of the Church and the main entrance.
Mick is talking to a little knot of hard-looking
men, wiry muscles and close-cropped hair—guys I see digging or
operating incredibly noisy machinery, chewing up the roads then filling
them in again—he's gesticulating wildly. A couple of the Church
attendants stand nearby, and there're a couple of women waiting in the
doorway. I sidle toward the front door and go inside. The Church has
emptied out, and there's only one person still there, loitering near
the back pew.
"Kay? Cass?" I ask.
She looks at me. "R-Reeve?"
It's dark, and I can't be sure but there's
something about her heavy eye shadow that makes me think of bruising.
Her dress would effectively conceal signs of violence if Mick's been
beating her. "Are you all right?" I ask.
Her eyes turn toward the entrance. "No," she
whispers. "Listen, he's—don't get involved. All right? I don't
need your help. Stay away from me." Her voice quavers with a fine edge
of fear.
"I promised I'd look for you in here," I say.
"Don't." She shakes her head. "He'll kill me, do you realize that? If he thinks I've been talking to anyone—"
"But we can protect you! All you have to do is ask, and we'll get you out of there and keep him away from you."
I might as well not have bothered talking to
her: she shakes her head and backs toward the door, her shoes clacking
on the stone floor. Behind the veil, her face isn't simply frightened,
it's terrified. And the white powder on her cheek isn't quite enough to
conceal the ivory stain of old bruising.
Mick is waiting outside. If he sees me emerging
after Cass, he'll probably go nuts. And I'm beginning to wonder if I'm
right about her. When I called her Kay, she showed no sign of
recognition. But would she? Kay is an alias, after all, and with her
being just out of memory surgery, and me not being Robin but Reeve in
this hall of mirrors—if after these tendays someone called me
Robin, would I realize they were talking to me at first?
I glance around frustratedly, wondering if
there's a back exit. I'm alone in the Church nave. It's not my favorite
place, you understand, but right now it lacks the almost palpable sense
of hostility it exudes when we're all herded together in our Sunday
best, wondering who's going to be today's sacrificial victim. Waiting
for Mick to lose interest and leave, I walk around the front of the big
room, trying to get a new perspective on things.
I've never been forward of the pews before. What does Fiore keep in his lectern? I wonder, walking toward the altar. The lectern, seen from
behind, is quite disappointing—it's just a slab of carved wood
with a shelf set in it. There are a couple of paper books filed there,
but no robocatamite to account for Fiore's peculiar mannerisms. The
altar is also pretty boring. It's a slab of smoothly polished stone,
carved into neatly rectilinear lines. The symbols of the faith, the
sword and the chalice, sit atop a metal rack in the middle of the
purple-dyed cloth that covers the stone. I look closer, intrigued by
the sword. It's an odd-looking thing. The blade is dead straight, with
a totally squared-off tip, and it's about a centimeter thick. With no
edge on it and no taper it looks more like a mirror-polished billet of
steel than a blade. It's got a basket hilt and a gray, roughened grip,
suggesting a functional design rather than a decorative one. Something
nags at me, an insistent phantom memory stump itching where a real one
has been amputated. I'm certain I've seen a sword like this before.
There are faint rectangular grooves in the outer surface of the basket,
as if something has been removed. And the flat "edge" of the blade
isn't quite right—it shines with the luster of fine steel, but
there's also a faint rainbow sheen, a diffractive speckling at the edge
of my gaze.
I break out in a cold sweat. My blouse feels
like ice against the chill of my skin as I straighten up and hastily
head for the small door that's visible on this side of the organist's
bench. I don't want to be caught here, not now! Someone is having a
little joke with us, and I feel sick to my heart at the thought that it
might be Fiore, or his boss, Yourdon the Bishop. They're playing
with us, and this is the proof. Who can I tell? Most people here
wouldn't understand, and those that did—we've got no way out, not
unless the experimenters agree to release us early. But the exit leads
straight back into the clinics of the hospitaler-confessors, and I have
a horrible gut-deep feeling that they're involved in this. Certainly
they're implicated.
I've got to get out of here, I
realize, aghast. The thing is, I've seen swords like that before.
Vorpal blades, they call them, I'm not sure why. This one's obviously
decommissioned, but how did it get here? They don't rely on the edge or
point to cut, that's not what they're for. They belonged to, to—Who did they belong to? I rack my brains, trying to find the source of this terrible conviction that I stand in the presence of something
utterly evil, something that doesn't belong in any experimental polity,
a stink of livid corruption. But my treacherous memory lets me down
again, and as I batter myself against the closed door of my own
history, I walk back into the light outside, blinking and wondering if
I might be wrong after all. Wrong about Cass being Kay. Wrong about
Mick being violent. Wrong about the sword and the chalice. Wrong about
who and what I am . . .
TIME passes
glacially slowly. I don't say anything to Sam about the events in
Church, not about Cass's black eye nor the Vorpal blade on the Church
altar. Sam is comfortable to live with, happy to listen to my
depressive chatter about the women's world, but there's always the worm
of worry gnawing at the back of my mind: Can I trust him? I
want to, but I can't be sure he isn't one of my pursuers. It's a
horrible dilemma, the risk/trust trade-off. So I don't talk about what
I do in the garage, or on the basement exercise machine, and he doesn't
volunteer much information about what he does at work. A couple of the
ladies who lunch are talking about organizing dinner parties, but if we
invited ourselves into that kind of social circle they'd expect us to
reciprocate and the stress would be—well, I don't think either of
us is up to it. So we live our lonely lives in each other's back
pockets, and I worry about Cass, and Sam reads a lot and watches TV,
trying to understand the ancients.
When we get home after the abortive meeting in
Church, I use my netlink to check our group's public points. Jen is
leading on social connectedness, while Alice is second on that
score—her helping me with clothes seems to be good for her. To my
surprise I see that I'm at the bottom of the cohort. There's an
activity breakdown and it looks like everyone else is having sex with
their partner: Forming stable relationships is a good way to jack up
your score, easy points. I backtrack a week or two and see that Cass is
regularly active with Mick.
For some reason I find this unaccountably depressing. The others are watching, and I'm supposed
to be involved with Sam, and I don't want to do anything that might
give Jen any sense of satisfaction whatsoever. It's an immature
attitude, but I'm really conscious of the fact that they're keeping an
eye on my score, waiting for me to surrender. Waiting for me to give
Sam what they think he ought to want. Too bad they don't really know us.
ABOUT two weeks
later I finally reach the end of my tether. It's a hot, tiresome
Tuesday evening. I've spent the morning exercising outdoors—there
are still no neighbors, although a couple of families are due to move
in when the next cohort arrives in a couple of weeks' time—and
then worked in the garage all afternoon. I'm trying to relearn welding
the hard way, and I'm lucky not to have burned my arm off or
electrocuted myself so far.
I have vague recollections of having done this
stuff a long time ago, in gigaseconds past, but it's so long ago that
the memories are all second-hand and I've clearly forgotten almost
everything I knew. There's something wrong with my technique, and the
pieces of spring steel I'm trying to make into a single fabrication are
going brittle around the weld. I try bending the last one in the vise
and the join I've just spent an hour working on snaps and small
fragments go flying. If I was standing a bit farther over to the left,
I could have got one in the eye. As it is, I get a nasty shock and go
inside to try to sort our dinner out, because Sam is usually back from
work around now, and if left to his own devices, he'll flop down in
front of the television rather than sorting out food for both of us.
So I'm in the kitchen all on my own, rummaging
through the frozen packages in the freezer cupboard for something we
both eat, and I manage to drop a pizza box on the floor. It splits open
and the contents spill everywhere. It's one of those moments when the
whole universe comes spinning down on the top of your head, and you
realize how alone andisolated you are, and all your problems seem to laugh at you. Who do I think I'm kidding? I ask myself, and I burst into tears on the spot.
I'm trapped in a wholly inadequate body, with
only patchy memories of whoever I used to be left to prod me along in
search of a better life. I'm trapped in a fun-house mirror reflection
of a historical society where everyone was crazy by default, driven mad
by irrational laws and meaningless customs. Here I am, thinking I
remember being in rehab, reading a letter written to myself by an
earlier version—and how do I know I wrote the letter to
myself? I don't even remember doing it! For all I know it's a
confabulation, my own bored attempt to inject some excitement into a
life totally sapped of interest. Certainly the rant about people who
are out to kill me seems increasingly implausible and
distant—outright unbelievable, if not for the man with the wire.
I can't remember any reasons why anyone would
want me dead. And even a half-competent trainee assassin would find
killing me a trivial challenge at best, right now. I can't even put a
frozen pizza in a microwave oven without dropping it on the floor. I'm
spending my spare hours in the garage trying to weld together a
crossbow and busily planning to make myself a sword when the bad guys,
if they're real, are running a panopticon—a total surveillance
society—and have weapons like the one on the Church altar, edged
with the laser-speckling strangeness of supercondensates, waveguides
for wormhole generators. Knives that can cut space-time. They'll come
for me in the clear light of day, and they'll be backed by the whole
police state panoply of memory editors and existential programmers.
There's nowhere for me to run, no way out except through the T-gates
controlled by the experimenters, and no way in bar the same, and I
don't even know if I've lost Kay, or if Kay is Cass or someone else
entirely, and I'm not sure why I let Piccolo-47 talk me into coming
here. All I've got are my memories, and I can't even trust them.
I feel helpless and lost and very, very small,
and I stare at the pizza through a blurring veil of tears, and right
then I hear the front door lock click to itself and footsteps in the
front hall, and it's more than I can bear.
Sam finds me in the kitchen, sobbing as I fumble around for the dustpan.
"What's wrong?" He stands in the doorway looking at me, a bewildered expression on his face.
"I'm, I—" I manage to get the box into the trash, then drop the brush on top of it. "Nothing."
"It can't be nothing," he insists, logically enough.
"I don't want to talk about it." I sniff and
wipe my eyes on the back of my sleeve, embarrassed and hating myself
for this display of weakness. "It's not important—"
"Come on." His arm is around my shoulders, comforting. "Come on, out of here."
"Okay."
He leads me out of the kitchen and into the
living room and over to the big glass windows. I watch, not really
comprehending, as he opens one of them. Floor to ceiling, it forms a
door in its own right, a door into the back garden. "Come on," he says,
walking out onto the lawn.
I follow him outside. The grass is getting long. What do you want? I wonder.
"Sit down," he says. I blink and look at the bench.
"Oh, okay." I sniff again.
"Wait here," he says. He vanishes back into the
house, leaving me alone with my stupid and stupefying sense of
inadequacy. I stare at the grass. It's moist (we had a scheduled
precipitation at lunchtime, water drizzling gently from a million tiny
nozzles embedded in the sky), and a snail is inching its way
laboriously up a stem, close to my feet. Not far away there's another
one. It's a good time for mollusks, who haul their world around with
them, self-contained. I feel a momentary flash of envy. Here I am,
trapped inside the biggest snail shell anyone can imagine, a snail
shell made of glass that exposes everything we do to the monitors and
probes of the experimenters. And in my hubris I think I can actually
crawl out of my shell, escape into my own identity—
Sam is holding something out to me. "Here, have a drink."
I take the tumbler. It's blue glass, with a fizz
of bubbles trapped in the weighted base and a clear liquid half-filling
it. I sniff a bouquet of bitters and lemon.
"Go on, it won't poison you."
I raise my glass and take a mouthful. Gin and tonic, some submerged ghost of memory tells me. "Thanks." I sniff. He pours himself one, too. "I'm sorry."
"What for?" he asks, as he sits down next to me.
He's shed his jacket and necktie, and he moves as if he's weary, as if
he's got my troubles.
"I'm a dead loss." I shrug. "It just got too much for me."
"You're not a dead loss."
I look at him sharply, then have to sniff again.
I wish I could get my sinuses fixed. "Yes I am. I'm wholly dependent on
you—without your job, what would I do? I'm weak and small and
badly coordinated, and I can't even cook a pizza for supper without
dropping it all over the floor. And, and . . ."
Sam takes another mouthful. "Look," he says,
pointing at the garden. "You've got this. All day." He shakes his head.
"I get to sit in an office full of zombies and spend my time
proofreading gibberish. There's always more make-work for me, texts to
check for errors. It makes my head hurt. You've at least got this." He
looks at me, a guarded, odd look that makes me wonder what he sees.
"And whatever it is you're doing in the garage."
"I—"
"I don't mean to pry," he says, looking away shyly.
"It's not secret," I say. I swallow some more of my drink. "I'm making stuff." I nearly add, It's a hobby,
but that would be a lie. And the one person I haven't actively lied to
so far is Sam. I've got a feeling that if I start lying to him now,
I'll be crossing some sort of irrevocable line. With only myself for an
anchor, and knowing how fallible my memories are, I won't be able to
tell truth from fantasy anymore.
"Making stuff." He rolls his glass between his big hands. "Do you want a job to go to?" he asks.
"A job?" That's a surprise and a half. "Why?"
He shrugs. "To see people. Get out of the house.
To meet people other than the score whores, I mean. They're getting to
you, aren't they?"
I nod mutely.
"Not surprising." He stays tactfully silent while I drain my glass.
To my surprise, I feel a little better. Get a job! "How do I find a job?" I ask. "I mean, not being a man—"
"You phone the Chamber of Commerce and ask for
one." He puts his glass down. I look at it, see the two snails climbing
opposite sides of the same blade of grass, leaving their iridescent
trails of slime. "It's as simple as that. They'll send a car to pick
you up and take you somewhere with room for a body. They didn't run you
through the induction course when you arrived, but it's easy enough. I
don't know what they'll find for you or how much they'll pay
you—I'd guess a lot less than they pay men, that seems to be how
they did things in the dark ages—but if you find it too boring,
you can always phone the CC again and ask for something else."
"A job," I say, trying the words out for sense.
It's crazy, actually, but no more so than anything else in this world.
"I didn't know I could get one."
He shrugs. "It's not illegal or anything." A
sidelong look. "They just didn't set it up by default. It's another of
those things we're allowed to game if we're smart enough to think of
it."
"And I'll meet people."
"It depends where you work." Sam looks uncertain
for a moment. "Most jobs, there are zombies around—but they try
to keep at least two humans in every workplace. And there are visitors.
But it's pretty boring. I really didn't think you'd be interested."
"It can't possibly be as mind-destroying as this!" I clench my hands.
"Don't bet on it." He shakes his head. "Dark ages work was often meaningless, unpleasant, and sometimes dangerous."
"Not as dangerous to my sanity as not doing anything."
"That's my Reeve." Sam smiles, a brilliant
expression that I don't often see and that makes me really envy the
lucky woman he left behind outside the experiment. "I'll get you
another drink, then go fix dinner. How about we eat out here instead of
inside? Just for once."
"I'd like that a lot," I say fervently. "Just for once."
IN the early hours of the morning I'm awakened by one of my recurring nightmares.
I have several different bad dreams. What
distinguishes this one is the quality of the imagery in it. I'm a
neomorph, male again and roughly orthohuman in body plan, but
extensively augmented with mechabolic subsystems from the cellular
level up. Instead of intestines, I have a compact fusion gateway cell.
I have three hearts to keep my different circulatory fluids moving,
skin reinforced with diamond fiber mesh, and I can survive in vacuum
for hours. These are all trappings of my role as a soldier in the
service of the Linebarger Cats, because I am a tank.
But that's not what makes the dream a nightmare.
We're one-point-one megaseconds into the
campaign, and even though we—my unit—don't normally sleep,
we're all under the influence of fatigue poisons from nearly twelve
consecutive diurns of high-speed maneuvers. Hostilities with this
polity commenced as soon as High Command established the orbital
elements on one of their better-connected real-space nodes. The Six
Fingers Green Kingdom has been particularly tenacious in its attempts
to hold on to its corrupt A-gates, which are still infected with
Curious Yellow censorbots and contaminating everyone who passes through
them. They're one of the last hold-outs on the losing side; they've
survived long after the other censorship redoubts succumbed to our
maneuvers by virtue of their fanatically obscurantist network topology
and a cunning mesh of internal firewalls. But we've identified the
real-space location of one of their main switches, and that means we've
got a node with massive fan-out to exploit once we can get our people
into it. My unit is on the sharp end.
The assault vector is one end of a T-gate ten meters in diameter, boosted up to about thirty percent of c
and free-falling through the icy outer limits of the cloud of debris
orbiting the brown dwarf Epsilon Indi B. EI-B is not much bigger than a
gas giant planet, and has a surface temperature of under a thousand
degrees absolute—by the time you get out to its halo, whole light
minutes away, the star is almost invisible. Cometary bodies orbit it in
chilly isolation, as cold as the depths of interstellar space.
Our assault gate is unpowered and stealthy. It
drifts through the perimeter defense field of the Six Fingers Green
Kingdom orbital in a matter of seconds and skims past the huge cylinder
at a range of under fifty kilometers, preposterously close yet very
hard to spot. As it flashes by, my unit is one of several who make a
high-speed insertion through the distal end of the wormhole. As far as
the defenders are concerned, we appear out of empty space right on
their doorstep. And as far as we're concerned, it's a death trap.
It takes us fifty seconds to cover the fifty
kilometers to the habitat, decelerating all the way, mashed flat in our
acceleration cages as our suits jink and dodge and shed penaids and
decoys and graser bombs. We lose eighty percent of our numbers to point
defense fire in that fifty-second period. It's absolute carnage, but
even so we're lucky—the only reason any of us survive at all is
because we're working for the Linebarger Cats, and the Cats specialize
in applied insanity. Everyone knows that only a lunatic would attack
across open space, so the Green Fingers have concentrated ninety
percent of their firepower on the inside of their orbital, pointing at
the proximal ends of their longjump T-gates, rather than outside on the
hub, covering the barren real-space approaches.
I'm unconscious for most of the approach, my
memories of it spooled by sensors on my suit and buffered for instant
recall once my meatbody unvitrifies so I can take over. One moment I'm
lying down and the suit is closing around me, and the next I'm standing
in the wreckage of a compartment aboard the Green Finger orbital,
memories of the insane charge alive in my mind as I pull out my sword,
slave my blaster nodes to my eyeball trackers, exude more ablative
foam, and head for the inhabited spaces.
Fast forward:
Dealing with the civilians once we've taken the
polity is going to be difficult because they've all been censored by
Curious Yellow—the original version carrying the censorship
payload, not the later hacked tools of various inquisitions and
cognitive dictatorships. The censorship payload doesn't just delete
memories of forbidden things—it tends to leave spores in its
victims' brains and a boot loader in their netlinks, and if they upload
into a vulnerable A-gate it can wake up and infect the gate firmware.
So we have to round up everyone on board the hab we've just ripped
through with swords and blasters, and recycle them through our own
crude decontamination gates.
Now, here's where the dreamlike logic kicks in. Their assembler gates are the advanced, elegant products of a mature techgnosis. But our
A-gates are crude lash-ups, hand-built in a matter of tens of
megaseconds using what knowledge we could salvage. We threw them
together in a blind hurry when we realized how far the contamination
extended—throughout all the A-gates of the Republic of Is,
basically—and they're messy and inefficient and slow. What we've
built works, but it isn't fast. So we're running our assault gates in
half-duplex mode, disassembling and storing the citizens for subsequent
virus scanning and reincarnation. And because we haven't secured all
approaches, and because other nodes within the Six Fingers Green
Kingdom are fighting back with vicious desperation, we have to move fast.
After about five thousand seconds of collecting
struggling civilians and feeding them into the gates, Group Major
Nordak calls me with new orders. "The bodies are slowing us up," she
sends. "Just harvest the heads. We'll resurrect them all when we've got
the situation under control."
There's a huge crowd of civilians in a holding
square on Deck J, milling around in confusion and fear. Two of us are
pulling people out of the crowd through a door, telling them it's for
outbound processing. Some of them don't want to go, but arguing with
tankies in full armor is futile, and they end up coming to us whether
they want to or not, contusions and broken limbs the only difference it
makes to their eventual fate. We take them through the inner set of
doors that don't open until the outer ones are closed. Then all
of them get reluctant, when they see Loral and me waiting on the other
side of the inner door, with the assault gate and our swords and the
pile of discards.
We take it in turns, alternating, because it's
hard, stressful work. I grab a struggling victim, maybe a plump female
orthohuman or a scrawny guy who really needs a new body—some of
them have been living feral, refusing to go through the A-gates for
fear of CuriousYellow, until they actually grow old—and
I pinion the victims and lay them down on the slimy blood-slick floor
of the room. They usually scream, and in many cases they piss
themselves as Loral brings his Vorpal sword down on the back of their
neck between the C7 and T1 vertebrae. A twitch on the power button and
there's more blood squirting and splashing everywhere than you could
imagine, and they stop screaming. Loral pulls her sword out and I get
off the body and chase the head, which is usually soaking wet, the
eyelids twitching with postamputation shock. I throw the head into the
A-gate, low and fast as I can, and the gate swallows it and processes
the skull and hopefully gets them logged before permanent
depolarization and osmotically induced apoptosis can set in. Then Loral
grabs the discarded body and slings it onto the heap in the corner,
which one of our fellow special action troops carts away on a pallet
loader every so often, while I flail at the floor with a broom in a
losing battle to stop the blood puddling around our feet.
It's a disgusting and unpleasant job, and even
though we've gotten into the swing of it and are working as fast as we
can, we're only averaging one civilian every fifty seconds. We've been
working for a hundred kiloseconds now, one of eight teams on the
job—processing maybe sixteen thousand people a diurn between us.
And it's just my bitter bad luck that when the doors open and the guys
on the other side fling the next body at us, kicking and screaming at
the top of their lungs, it's my turn to use the sword and Loral's to
hold them down and I'm already raising the blade when I look at the
terrified face and depending on which variation of the nightmare this
is I see that it's my own, or worse—
—Kay's—
—and I'm sitting up swallowing a scream
and someone is cradling me in his arms and I'm covered in chilly sweat
and shuddering uncontrollably. I slowly realize I'm in bed, and I've
just kicked off the comforter. There's moonlight outside the window,
and I'm in YFH-Polity and no matter how bad things are by day, they
can't hold a candle to how bad things get in my dreams, and I whimper
softly in the back of my throat.
"It's all right now, you're awake, they can't
hurt you." Sam strokes my shoulders. I lean against him and manage to
turn the whimper into a sigh. My heart is pounding like one of the
jackhammers they use to repair the roads, and my skin is clammy. His
arm tightens around me. "Would you like to talk about it?" he murmurs.
"It's"—awful—"a recurring
dream. Memories"—inadequately redacted, I think—"from an
earlier life. What I wanted to be rid of, coming back to haunt me." I
speak haltingly because my mouth feels musty, and I'm not entirely
awake, just frightened out of sleep by the shadows of my own past. What's he doing in here?
"You were thrashing around, moaning and muttering in your sleep," he says. "I was worried you were having a seizure."
It's not unheard of, even in this age. I push
myself up on one arm but don't pull away from him—instead I pull
my right arm out from under the bedding and hold him tight.
"I lost a lot in surgery," I say slowly. "If this is part of it, I wish it would stay lost."
"It's gone now." He speaks soothingly, and I
wrap my other arm round him and hold on tight. He's big, he's stable,
he's serious, and he's solid. Serious Sam. I lean my face into
the depression at the base of his throat and inhale deeply, once,
twice. His arm around me feels good, secure. Security Sam. My ribs shake as I swallow a nervy chuckle. "What's that?" he asks.
"Nothing," I tell his throat. I'm awake enough
now to realize that I'm not the only one in this house who sleeps
naked. But I find that I don't care—I trust Sam not to try and
overpower me, not to do anything I don't want. Sam has somehow stepped
across the threshold from being a mistrusted stranger into a friend,
and I never noticed it happening. And now I don't want to be left alone
here, and it's the most natural thing in the universe to hold on to him
and to run my hand up and down his spine and stick my face into the
base of his throat and inhale his natural scent. "Do you mind staying?
I don't want to be alone."
He tenses slightly, but then I feel his hand running down my back, caressing my spine. I lean into his embrace. He feels so alive,
the antithesis of everything in my blood-drenched memory dream. I've
been sleeping alone and not really touching anyone, much less fucking,
for at least a month now, and therefore it doesn't surprise me in the
slightest to find that I'm becoming aroused, sensual, needing more skin
contact and more touch and more smell. I lick the base of his throat
and move one hand between his legs, and what I find there is no
surprise, because he's been living the same life of self-denial too.
"Don't—" he mutters, but I'm not
listening. Instead, I'm running my face down his chest, kissing him as
I fondle what's down below, giving the lie to his disinterest.
Sam's been holding back because of a lover
stranded in the real world without him, and I've been holding back
because of pride and the greedy eyes watching my social score. We'll
probably regret this in the morning, but right now I'm drunk on touch.
I rub my cheek against his thigh and lick him hungrily, feeling his
hands in my hair—
"No." He sounds hesitant. I take him in my mouth
as far as I can, and he sounds as if he's strangling. "No, Reeve,
please don't—" I carry on sucking and licking and he draws breath
to say something and instead gasps a little, and I finish him off with
a sense of anticlimax. That was too fast, wasn't it? Then he's standing on the other side of the bed, his back turned and his shoulders hunched. "I asked you to stop," he says sullenly.
It's a while before I can talk. "I
needed—" I stop. My mouth is acrid with the aftertaste. "I want
you to be happy." If I'm going to give in and humiliate myself in front
of the score whores, the least I can do is throw it back in their faces.
"Well, that's not the right way to do it." He's
tense and defensive, as if I've hurt him. "I thought we had an
understanding." He sidles around the bed and out the door before I can
think of anything to say, refusing to meet my eyes, and a minute or so
later I hear the shower come on.
I'm completely awake by now, so I pull on my
bathrobe to go downstairs and make a mug of coffee by way of a
substitute for mouthwash, because there's no way I'm going to go into
the bathroom while Sam's busy trying to rinse my saliva away. I've got
some pride left, and right now I don't think I could look at him
without yelling, What about your self-control, eh? He moons
incessantly over this amazing lover he met outside the polity, but he's
not too proud to let me fellate him—until afterward, when
suddenly I'm an un-person. I could really hate him for that. But
instead I sit in the kitchen with my cooling coffee, and I wait for the
noise of the shower to cease and the light upstairs to go out. Then I
tiptoe back to my bed and lie brooding until near dawn, wondering what
possessed me. In the end, I resolve not offer him any intimacies ever
again, until I've had a chance to spit in his imaginary lover's face in
front of him. Finally, I sleep.
THE next day I
don't stir from bed until Sam has left for work. Once I'm up, I phone
the Chamber of Commerce. The zombie who takes my call sounds only
marginally sapient but agrees to send a taxi for me the next morning. I
go outside and jog up and down the road until I'm exhausted—which
takes a lot longer now—then take a shower. I spend the rest of
the day in the garage trying to do some more work on the crossbow,
which is not going well. I wonder why I'm bothering: It's not as if I'm
going to shoot anyone, is it?
I leave Sam a half-defrosted pizza and a note
explaining how to cook it in the kitchen. By the time I come indoors
it's dark, Sam's holed up in the living room with the TV on, and I have
no trouble sneaking upstairs and going to bed without seeing him. It's
easy to do, now that we're both avoiding each other.
I am troubled in my sleep. It's a different bad
dream, nothing like as vivid as the slaughterhouse nightmare, but even
more disturbing in some ways. Imagine you're a detective, or some other
kind of investigator. And you're looking for people, bad people who
hide in shadows. They've committed terrible crimes but they've altered
everyone's memories so that nobody can remember what they did or who
they are. You don't know what they did or who they are, but
it's your job to find them and bring them to justice in such a way that
neither they, nor anyone else, can forget what they did and the
consequences of their actions. So you're a detective, and you're
walking through twilit polityscapes hunting for clues, but you don't
know who you are or why you're charged with this mission. For all you
know, you may even be one of the criminals. They've made everybody
forget who they are and what they did. Who's to say that they didn't do
it to themselves, too? You could be guilty of a crime so horrible that
it has no name and everyone's forgotten it, and you'll find the
irrevocable logic of detection drawing you to place yourself under
arrest and hand yourself over to the courts of a higher power. And
you'll be tried and sentenced for a crime you don't understand and
don't remember committing, and the punishment will be beyond human
comprehension and leave you walking the twilit polityscapes, a ghost
shorn of most of your memories except for a faint indelible stain of
original sin. And you'll be there because you've been sent looking for
a master criminal by way of atoning for your past actions. And you'll
be on their trail, and one day you will find them and, reaching out a
hand to grab them by the shoulder, you'll find yourself looking at the
back of your own head—
I wake up sweating and sick with my heart
pounding in the night, and there is no Sam. For a moment I feel defiant
and angry at his absence, but then I think: What have I done to my only friend here? And I roll over and wash the pillow in bitter tears before dawn.
THE taxi that
takes me to the Chamber of Commerce arrives about half an hour after
Sam leaves for work. I'm ready and waiting for it but nervous about the
whole idea. It seems necessary in some ways—to assert my
independence from Sam, get an extra source of income, meet other
inmates, break out of the lonely rut of being a stay-at-home
wife—but in other respects it's a questionable choice. I have no
idea what they're going to find for me to do, it's going to take up a
large chunk of my time, it'll probably be boring and pointless, and
although I'll meet new people, there's no way of knowing whether I'll
hate them on sight. What seemed like a good idea at the time is now
turning out to be stressful.
The taxi operator is no use, of course—he
can't tell me anything. "Chamber of Commerce," he announces. "Please
leave the vehicle." So I get out and head toward the imposing building
on my right, with the revolving door made of wood and brass, hoping my
uncertainty doesn't show. I march up to the clerk on the front desk.
"I'm Reeve. I've got an appointment at, uh, ten o'clock with Mr.
Harshaw?"
"Go right in, ma'am," says the zombie, pointing
at a door behind him with a frosted-glass window and gold-leaf
lettering stenciled along the top. My heels clack on the stone floor as
I walk over and open it.
"Mr. Harshaw?" I ask.
The room is dominated by a wide desk made out of
wood, its top inlaid with a rectangle of dyed, preserved skin cut from
a large herbivore. The walls are paneled in wood and there are crude
still pictures in frames hanging from hooks near the top, certificates
and group portraits of men in dark suits shaking hands with each other.
A borderline-senescent male in a dark suit, his head almost bereft of
hair and his waistline expanding, sits behind the desk. He half rises
as I enter, and extends a hand. Zombie? I wonder doubtfully.
"Hello, Reeve." He sounds relaxed and self-confident. "Won't you have a seat?"
"Sure." I take the chair on the other side of
the desk and cross my legs, studying his face. Sure enough there's a
slight flicker of attention—he's watching me, aware of my
body—which means he's real. Zombies simply aren't programmed for
that. "How come I haven't seen you in Church?" I ask.
"I'm on staff," he says easily. "Have a cigarette?" He gestures at one of the wooden boxes on his desk.
"Sorry, I don't smoke," I say, slightly stiffly. I hate the smell, but it's not as if it's harmful, is it?
"Good for you." He takes one, lights it, and
inhales thoughtfully. "You asked about job vacancies yesterday. As it
happens, we have one right now that would probably suit you—I
took the liberty of looking through your records—but it
specifically excludes smokers."
"Oh?" I raise an eyebrow. Mr. Harshaw the
staffer isn't what I expected, to say the least; I was winding myself
up to deal with a dumb zombie fronting a placement database.
"It's in the city library. You'd only be working
three days a week, but you'd be putting in eleven-hour shifts. On the
plus side, you'd be the trainee librarian there. On the minus side, the
starting salary isn't particularly high."
"What does the job involve?" I ask.
"Library work." He shrugs. "Filing books in
order. Keeping track of withdrawals and issuing overdue notices and
collecting fines. Helping people find books and information they're
looking for. Organizing the stacks and adding new titles as they come
in. You'd be working under Janis from cohort one, who has been our
librarian since the early days. She's going to be leaving, which is why
we need to train up a replacement."
"Leaving?" I look at him oddly. "Why?"
"To have a baby," he says, and blows a perfect smoke ring up at the ceiling.
I don't understand what he's saying at first, the concept is so alien to me. "Why would she have to leave her job to—"
It's his turn to look at me oddly. "Because she's pregnant," he says.
For a moment the world seems to be spinning
around my head. There's a roaring in my ears, and I feel weak at the
knees. It's a good thing I'm sitting down. Then I begin to integrate
everything and realize just what's going on. Janis is pregnant—she's
got a neonate growing inside her body like an encapsulated tumor, the
way humans used to incubate their young in the wild, back before
civilization. Presumably she and her husband had sex, and she was
fertile. "She must be—" I say, then cover my mouth. Fertile.
"Yes, she and Norm are very happy," Mr. Harshaw
says, nodding enthusiastically. He looks satisfied with something.
"We're all very happy for them, even if it means we do have to train up
a new librarian."
"Well, I'd be happy to see, I mean, to try," I begin, flustered, wondering, Did she ask the medics to make her fertile? Or, a sneaking and horrible suspicion, Are we already fertile?
I know menstruation was some kind of metabolic sign that went with
being a prehistoric female, but I didn't really put it all together
until now. Having a child is hard—you have to actively seek
medical assistance—and having one grow inside your body is even
harder. The idea that the orthohuman bodies they've put us in are so
ortho that we could automatically generate random human beings
if we have sex is absolutely terrifying. I don't think the dark ages
medics had incubators, and if I got pregnant I might actually have to
go through a live childbirth. In fact, if Sam and I had—"Excuse me, but where's the rest room?" I ask.
"It's the second door through there, on the
left." Mr. Harshaw smiles to himself as I make a dash for it. He's
still smiling five minutes later as I make my way back into his office,
forcing my face into a maskof composure, refusing to acknowledge the stomach cramps that took me to the stalls. "Are you all right?" he asks.
"I am, now," I say. "I'm sorry about that, must be something I ate."
"It's perfectly all right. If you'd like to come
with me, perhaps we can visit the library and I can introduce you to
Janis, see if you get along?"
I nod, and we head out front to catch a taxi. I
think I'm doing pretty well for someone who's just had her worldview
turned upside down and whacked on with a hammer. How long does a
neonate take to grow, about thirty megs? It puts a whole new face on
the experiment. I have a sinking sense that I must have implicitly
agreed to this. Somewhere buried in the small print of the release I
signed there'll be some clause that can be interpreted as saying that I
consent to be made fertile and if necessary to become pregnant and
bring to term an infant in the course of the study. It's the sort of
shitty trick that Fiore and his friends would delight in slipping past
us while we're vulnerable.
After a few minutes I realize that the oversight
we were promised by an independent ethics committee isn't worth a
bucket of warm—whatever. The extreme scenario would be for us
females to all get pregnant and deliver infants, in which case
the experimenters are going to be responsible for the care of about a
hundred babies, none of whom gave their consent to be raised in a
simulated dark ages environment without access to decent medical care,
education, or socialization. Any responsible ethics oversight committee
would shit a brick if you suggested running an experiment like that. So
I suspect the ethics oversight committee isn't very ethical, if indeed
it exists at all.
I'm thinking these thoughts as Mr. Harshaw tells
our zombie driver to take us to the municipal library. The library is
in a part of town I haven't visited before, on the same block as City
Hall and what Mr. Harshaw points out to me as the police station.
"Police station?" I ask, looking blank.
"Yes, where the police hang out." He looks at me as if I'm very slightly mad.
"I would have thought the crime rate here was too low to need a real police force," I say.
"So far it is," he replies, with a smile I can't interpret. "But things are changing."
The library is a low brick building, with a
glass facade opening onto a reception area, and turnstiles leading into
a couple of big rooms full of shelves. There are books—bound
sheaves of dumb paper—on all the shelves, and there are a lot
of shelves. In fact, I've never seen so many books in my life. It's
ironic, really. My netlink could bring a million times as much
information to me on a whim, if it was working. But in the
informationally impoverished society we're restricted to, these rows of
dead trees represent the total wealth of available human knowledge.
Static, crude scratchings are all we're to be permitted, it seems. "Who
can access these?" I ask.
"I'll leave it to Janis to explain the
procedures," he says, running his hand over his shiny crown, "but
anyone who wants can withdraw—borrow—books from the lending
department. The reference department is a bit different, and there's
also the private collection." He clears his throat. "That's
confidential, and you're not supposed to lend it to anyone who isn't
authorized to read it. That probably sounds dramatic, by the way, but
it's actually not very romantic. We just keep a lot of the
documentation for the project on paper, so we don't need to violate the
experimental protocol by bringing in advanced knowledge-management
tools, and we have to store the paper somewhere when it's not in use,
so we use the library." He holds the door open. "Let's go find Janis,
shall we? Then we'll have lunch. We can discuss whether you want to
work here, and if so, what your pay and conditions will be, and then if
you take the job, we can work out when you'll start training."
JANIS is skinny
and blond, with a haggard, worried-looking expression and long, bony
hands that flutter like trapped insects as she describes things. After
having to put up with Jen's machinations, she's like a breath of fresh
air. On my first day I arrive at my new job early, but Janis is already
there. She whisks me into a dingy little staff room round the back of
one of the bookcases that I'd never suspected existed on yesterday's
tour.
"I'm so glad you're here," she tells me,
clasping her hands. "Tea? Or coffee? We've got both"—there's an
electric kettle in the corner and she switches it on—"but
someone's going to have to run out and fetch some milk soon." She
sighs. "This is the staff room. When there's nobody about, you can take
your breaks here or go out for lunch—we close between noon and
one o'clock—and there's also a terminal into the library
computer." She points at a boxy device not unlike a baby television
set, connected by a coiled cable to a panel studded with buttons.
"The library has a computer?" I say, intrigued. "Can't I just use my netlink?"
Janis flushes, her cheeks turning pink. "I'm
afraid not," she apologizes. "They make us use them just like the
ancients would have, through a keyboard and screen."
"But I thought none of the ancient thinking
machines survived, except in emulation. How do we know what its
physical manifestation looked like?"
"I'm not sure." Janis looks thoughtful. "Do you
know, I hadn't thought of that? I've got no idea how they designed it!
It's probably buried in the experimental protocol somewhere—the
nonclassified bits are all online, if you want to go looking. But
listen, we don't have time for that now." The kettle boils, and she
busies herself for a minute pouring hot water into two mugs full of
instant coffee granules. I study her indirectly while her back's
turned. There's not much sign of her pregnancy yet, although I think
there might be a slight bulge around her waist—her dress is cut
so that it's hard to tell. "First, I want to get you started on how the
front desk works, on the lending side. We've got to keep track of who's
borrowed what books, and when they're due back, and it's the easiest
thing to start you on. So"—she hands me a coffee mug—"how
much do you know about library work?"
I learn over the course of the morning that
"library work" covers such an enormous area of information management
that back during the dark ages, before libraries became self-organizing
constructs, people used to devote their entire (admittedly short) lives
to studying the theory of how best to manage them. Neither
Janis—nor I—is remotely qualified to be a real dark age
librarian, with their esoteric mastery ofcatalogue systems and controlled information classification vocabularies, but we can
run a small municipal lending library and reference section with a bit
of scurrying around and a lot of patience. I seem to have some historic
skills in that direction, and unlike my experience with arc welding, I
haven't erased all of them. I can remember my alphabet and grasp the
decimal classification scheme immediately, and the way each book has a
ticket in an envelope inside the front cover that has to be retained
when it's loaned out makes sense, too . . .
It's only by midafternoon, when we've taken a
grand total of five returns and had one visitor who borrowed two books
(on Aztec culture and the care and feeding of carnivorous plants), that
I begin to wonder why YFH-Polity needs anything as exotic as a
full-time librarian.
"I don't know," Janis admits over a cup of tea
in the staff room, her feet stretched out under the rickety
white-painted wooden table. "It can get a bit busy—wait until six
o'clock, when most people are on their way home from work, that's when
we get most of our borrowers—but really, they don't need
me. A zombie could do the job perfectly well." She looks pensive. "I
suspect it's more to do with finding employment for people who ask for
it. It's one of the drawbacks of the entire experiment. We don't exist
in a closed-circuit economy, and if they don't constantly provide jobs
for people, it'll all fall apart. So what we're left with is a
situation where they pretend to pay us and we pretend to work. At least
until they merge the parishes."
"Merge the—there are more?"
"So I'm told." She shrugs. "They're introducing
us in small stages, so that we know who our neighbors are before we get
linked into a large community and everything goes to pieces."
"Isn't that a bit of a pessimistic attitude?" I ask.
"Maybe so." She flashes me a rare grin. "But it's a realistic one."
I think I'm going to like Janis, her ironic
sense of humor notwithstanding: I feel comfortable around her. We're
going to work well together. "And the other stuff? The restricted
archive? The computer?"
She waves it off. "All you need to know is, once
a week Fiore comes and we unlock the closed room and leave him alone in
it for an hour ortwo. If he wants to take any papers away, we log them and nag him until he brings them back."
"Anyone else?"
"Well." She looks thoughtful. "If the Bishop
shows up, you give him access to all areas." She pulls a face. "And
don't ask me about the computer, nobody told me much about how to use
it, and I don't really understand the thing, but if you want to tinker
with it during a slack period, be my guest. Just remember everything is
logged." She catches my eye. "Everything," she repeats, with quiet emphasis.
My pulse quickens. "On the computer? Or off it?"
"Book withdrawals," she says. "Possibly even
what pages people look at. You notice they're all hardcovers? You'd be
surprised how small even the dark age technés could make a
tracking device. You could build them into book spines, able to sense
which pages the reader was opening the book to. All without violating
protocol."
"But protocol—" I stop. The television
doesn't look very complex, technically, but is it? Really? What goes
into a machine like that? There must be either cameras or a really
complex rendering system . . .
"The dark ages weren't just dark, they were fast.
We're talking about the period when our ancestors went from needing an
abacus to add two numbers together to building the first emotional
machines. They went from witch doctors with poisonous
chemicals—who couldn't even reattach a cleanly severed
limb—to tissue regeneration, full control of the proteome and
genome, and growing body parts to order. From using rockets to get into
orbit to the first tethered lift systems. And they did all that in less
than three gigs, ninety old-time years."
She pauses for a sip of tea. "It is very
easy for us moderns to underestimate the dark age orthos. But it's a
habit you'll shed after you've been here for a while, and to give them
their due, the clergy—the experimenters—have been here
longer than the rest of us. Even Harshaw, and he works for them." She
pronounces his name with distaste, and I wonder what he's done to
offend her.
"You think they've got more of a handle on this than we do?" I ask, intrigued.
"Damn right." (Yes, she says "damn": she's
obviously getting into the spirit of things, speaking in the archaic
slang the real old-timers would have used.) "I think there's more going
on here than meets the eye. They've made a lot more progress toward
stabilizing this society than you'd expect for just five megs of
runtime." Her eyes flicker sharply toward a corner of the room right
above the door, and I follow the direction of her gaze. "In part it's
because they can see everything, hear everything, including this. In
part."
"But surely that's not all?"
She smiles at me enigmatically. "Break's over, kid. Time to go back to work."
I get home
late, bone-tired from filing returned books and standing behind a
counter for hours. I have a gnawing sense of apprehension as I walk in
the door. The lights are on in the living room and I can hear the
television. I head for the kitchen first to get something to eat, and
that's where I am when Sam finds me.
"Where've you been?" he demands.
"Work." I attack a tin of vegetable soup and a loaf of bread tiredly.
"Oh." Pause. "So what are you doing?"
He's put the butter in the refrigerator so it's
as hard as a rock. "Training to be the new city librarian. Three days a
week at present, but it's an eleven-hour day."
"Oh."
He bends over to put a dirty plate in the
washing machine. I manage to stop him just in time—it's full of
clean stuff. "No, you need to unload it first, okay?"
"Huh." He looks irritated. "So the city needs a new librarian?"
"Yes." I don't owe him any explanations, do I? Do I?
"Do you know Janis?"
"Janis—" He looks thoughtful. "No. I didn't even know we had a library."
"She's leaving in a couple of months, and they need someone to replace her."
He begins to remove plates from the bottom tray
in the washing machine and stack them on the work-top. "She doesn't
like the job? If it's so bad, why are you taking it?"
"It's not that." I finally get the soup out of
the can and into a saucepan on the red-glowing burner. "She's leaving
because she's pregnant." I turn round to watch him. He's focusing on
the dishwasher, pointedly ignoring me. Still sulking, I suspect.
"Pregnant? Huh." He sounds a little surprised. "Why would anyone want to have a baby in—"
"We're fertile, Sam."
I manage to catch the plates he was unloading
just in time. I straighten up, about half a meter from his nose, and
he's too flustered to avoid my gaze.
"We're fertile?"
"That's what Janis says, and judging by her
state, I think she's probably got the evidence to prove it." I scowl at
him for a moment, then turn back to the soup pan. "Got a bowl for me?"
"Ye-yes." The poor guy sounds genuinely shaken. I don't blame him—I've had a few hours to think about it, and I'm still getting used to the idea. "I'll just find one—"
"Think about it. We signed up to join the
study knowing it would run for a hundred megs, yes? Funny thing about
libraries: You can look things up in them. The gestation time for a
human neonate in a host body is twenty-seven to twenty-eight megs.
Meanwhile, we're all fertile, and we've been told we can earn points
toward our eventual termination bonuses by fucking. The historical
conception rate for healthy orthos having sex while fertile is roughly
thirty percent per menstrual cycle. What does that sound like to you?"
"But I, I—I mean, you could have—"
Sam holds a soup bowl in front of himself as if it's some kind of
shield, and he's trying to keep me at bay.
I glare at him. "Don't say it."
"I—" He swallows. "Here, take it."
I take the bowl.
"I think I know what you thought I was going to say and you're right
and I take it back even though I didn't say it. All right?" He says it
very fast, running the words together as if he's nervous.
"You didn't say it."
I put the bowl down very carefully, because
there really is no need to throw it at his head, and also because, once
I calm down a fraction, I realize that in point of fact he's right, and
he didn't say that if I'd fucked him the other night and become pregnant it would have been all my own fault. Smart Sam.
"It takes two to hold a grudge match." I lick my
lips. "Sam, I'm very sorry about the other night." What comes next is
hard to force out. "I shouldn't have taken advantage of you. I've been
going through a bad patch, but that's no excuse. I'm not—I've
never been—particularly good at self-restraint, but it won't
happen again." And if it does, you won't get an apology like this, that's for sure. "Much as I like you, you're not big on poly and this, this shit—" My shoulders are shaking.
"You don't have to apologize," he says, and
takes a step forward. Before I know what's happening he's hugging me,
and it really is good to feel his arms around me. "It's my fault, too.
I should have more self-control and I knew all along you were getting
interested in me, and I shouldn't have put myself in a position where
you might have thought—"
I sniff. "Shit!" I yell, and let go of him then spin round.
The soup is boiling over and there's a nasty
smell from the burner. I kill the power and grab the handle to shift it
somewhere safe, then hunt around for something to mop it up with. While
I'm doing that Sam, like a zombie with a priority instruction, keeps
methodically unloading the washing machine and transferring crockery to
the cupboards. Eventually I get what's left of my soup into a bowl and
pile my slices of bread on a plate, wondering why I didn't just use the
microwave oven in the first place.
"By the time I get to eat this, it'll all be cold."
"My fault." He looks apologetic. "If I'd let you get on with it—"
"Uh-huh." We're apologizing to each other for breathing loudly, what's wrong with us? "Listen, here's a question for you. You know the contract you, uh, signed—do you remember if there was a maximum duration on participation?"
"A maximum?" He looks startled. "It just said minimum one hundred megs. Why?"
"Figures." I pick up my plate and bowl and head
toward the living room. "Human neonates hatched in the wild in
primitive conditions took at least half a gigasec to reach maturity."
"Are you"—he's following me—"saying what I think you're saying?"
I put my bowl and plate down on the end table
beside the sofa and perch on the arm, because if I sit on the sofa,
it'll try to swallow me for good. "Why don't you tell me what you think
I'm saying?"
"I don't know." Which means he doesn't want to
say. He sits down at the other end of the sofa and stares at me. "We're
being watched, aren't we? All the time. Do you think it's wise to talk
about it?"
I blow on my soup to speed evaporative cooling.
"No, but there's no point being paranoid, is there? There are going to
be a hundred of us in here in time, at least. I suspect we outnumber
the experimenters twenty to one. Are you telling me they're going to
monitor the real-time take on everything we say to each other, as we
say it? A lot of the netlink score incidents are
preprogrammed—just events we happen to trigger. Someone has an
orgasm in proximity to their spouse, netlink triggers. A bunch of
zombies see someone damaging property or removing clothing in public,
their netlinks trigger. It doesn't mean someone is sitting on the
switch watching the monitors all the time. Does it?"
(Actually it's possible that this is the case, if we're in a panopticon prison run by spooks rather than half-assed academics, but I'm not going to tell them that I know this, assuming they exist. No way. Especially as I don't know why I know this.)
"But if we're being watched—"
"Listen." I put my spoon down. "We are here for a minimum of three years, maximum term unspecified, and we are fertile.
That sounds to me like what they've got in mind involves breeding a
population of genuine dark ages citizens. This is a separate polity, in
case you'd forgotten, which means it has a defensible
frontier—the assembler that generated these bodies we're wearing.
Assemblers don't just make things, they filter things: They're
firewalls. Polities are de facto independent networks of tightly
connected T-gates defined by the firewalls that shield their edges from
whatever tries to come in through their longjump T-gates. Their
borders, in other words. But you can have a polity without internal
T-gates; what defines it is the frontier, not the interior. We're
functioning under YFH's rules. Doesn't that mean that anyone born into
the place will be under the same rules, too?"
"But what about freedom of movement?" Sam looks antsy. "Surely they can't stop them if they want to emigrate?"
"Not if they don't know there's an outside
universe to emigrate to," I say grimly. I take a spoonful of soup and
wince, burning the roof of my mouth. "Ouch. We aren't supposed
to talk about our earlier lives. What if they tighten the score system
a bit more, so that mentioning the outside in front of children, or in
public, costs us points? Then how are the nubes going to figure it out?"
"That's crazy." He jerks his head from side to
side emphatically. "Why would anyone want to do that? I can understand
the original purpose of the experiment, to research the social
circumstances of the dark ages by experimental archaeology. But trying
to create a whole population of orthos, stuck in this crazy dark ages
sim and not even knowing it's a historical re-enactment rather than the
real universe . . . !"
"I'm not sure yet," I say tiredly. "I'm not at all sure what it's about. But that's the point. We're missing essential data."
"Right, right." He looks pained. "Do you suppose
it's anything to do with why they were picking people straight out of
memory surgery?"
"Yes, that's got to be part of it." I gaze at
him across a cold continental rift of sofa. "But that's only a part." I
was going to say we have to get out of here, but that's not
enough anymore. And despite what I've just said publicly, there's stuff
that I'm not going to talk about. Like, I don't think we'll ever
be allowed out. I don't know if this will ever end. If the child thing
is true, they may be prepared to hold us here indefinitely, or worse.
And that's leaving aside the most important questions: Why? And why us?
I go to work the next day, and the one after that, and by the end of my third day I am exhausted. I mean, shattered. Library work doesn't sound
as if it should be hard, but when you're working for eleven hours with
a one-hour break in the middle for lunch, it wears you down. The
daytime is almost empty, but there's a small rush of custom every
evening around six o'clock, and I have to scurry to and fro hunting for
tickets, filing returned books, collecting fines, and getting things
sorted out. Then in the morning I end up pushing a trolley loaded with
books around the shelves, returning the borrowed items and sorting out
anything that's been put back on a shelf out of sequence. If there's
any time left over, I end up dusting the shelves that are due for
cleaning.
"How do you know the books know when they're
being read?" I ask Janis, halfway through my second morning. "I mean,
take this one." I heft it where she can see it, a big green clothbound
sheaf of papers with a title like The Home Vegetable Garden.
"Look." Janis takes it from me and bends the cover back, so that the plastic protective sleeve on the spine bends.
I look. "Aha." I can just see something like a
squashed fly in there, two hair-fine antennae running up to the
stitching atop the spine. "Those are . . . ?"
"Fiber optics. That's my guess." Janis hums to
herself as she closes the book and slides it back into the trolley. "I
don't think they can hear you, but they can sense which page is open
and track your eyeballs. The experimenters have been careful to give us
all different faces, and we all have two working eyes. That's no
accident. Not all the ancients had that. If you want to read a book
secretly, you need mirrored sunglasses and a timer, so you turn each
page after the same amount of time."
"How do you know all this?" I ask admiringly. "You sound like a professional—" The word spy is on the tip of my tongue, but I swallow it with a little shiver.
"Before I checked into the clinic, I used to be
a detective." She gives me a long look. "It's a skill set I didn't ask
them to erase. Thought it might come in handy in my new life."
"Then what did you—" I stop myself just in time. "Forget I asked."
"By all means." She chuckles drily. "Listen, they tell me that it's normal
for me to check into hospital a week or two before the delivery, and to
stay there for a couple of weeks afterward. Can I"—she sounds
tentative—"ask a big favor of you?"
"What? Sure," I say blankly.
"I figure I'm going to be in bed a lot of the
time, bored out of my mind, and there's only so much television you can
watch in a day, and Norm is working, so he can't keep me company. Would
you mind visiting me and bringing me some library books? So I don't
lose track?"
"Why, I'd be delighted to!" I say it with perfect sincerity, because I mean it. If I
ever ended up in some kind of dark ages hospital for three or four
cycles I'd want visitors. "You'll let me know what you want, all right?"
"Thank you." Janis sounds grateful. "Now if you
could just get the footstool, these go on the top shelf and I can't
reach as high as you can."
On my third day I'm due to meet up with Jen and
Angel and Alice and do lunch. Jen's picked the Dominion Cafe as today's
venue, and I walk there from the library, whistling tunelessly. I'm
feeling unaccountably smug. I've found something new to do, I've got a
source of income all of my own, I know things that the ladies who lunch
haven't got a clue about, and if only I wasn't spending half my waking
hours in fear of the future and wishing I could get out of this
glass-walled prison and hook up with Kay again, I'd probably be quite
happy.
The Dominion Cafe is a lot plusher than the name
makes it sound, and I feel a bit underdressed as the maître d'
ushers me to the booth where Jen is holding court. Here I am in a plain
skirt and sweater, while Jen wears ever-more-exotic concoctions of spun
bug spit and must spend three or four hours a day on her makeovers and
hair. Angel isn't so much trying to ape her as getting tugged along in
the undertow, and Alice looks a bit uncomfortable in their presence.
But what do I care? They're people to talk to, and we're chained
together by the mutual scorefile so I can't ignore them. This must be
how the ancients used to feel about their families.
"Hello all," I say, pulling out a chair. "And how are you today?"
Jen waves at a metal bucket on a stand, with some kind of cloth draped over it. "Livin' large!" she announces. "Girls, a glass for Reeve. Won't you join us in a little Chateau Lafitte '59?"
"A little—" She whisks the cloth off the bucket, and I see it's full of ice packed around a green glass bottle.
"Champagne," Alice says, a little apologetically. "Fizzy wine."
"I wouldn't say no." Angel holds out a fluted glass while Jen picks up the bottle and pours.
"Why, is there something in particular to
celebrate?" Jen and Angel don't normally do their drinking before
sunset. So I figure it must be good.
"Well." Jen's eye sparkles wickedly. "You might
think it was something to do with your correcting your last social
shortcoming at long last." I feel my face heating. "But that's not it."
Bitch. "It's just that this is Alice's last drink for some time."
"Excuse me?" I say, unsure what's going on.
"About eight months to go," Alice says, dabbing
at her lips with a napkin. Her eyes flicker from me to Jen and back
again, as if looking for an offer of help.
"I—" I stop. Lick my lips. "You're pregnant?"
"Yes." Alice nods, a quick up and down. She doesn't look happy. Jen, however, looks ecstatic.
"Here's to Alice and her baby!" She raises a
glass of bubbly, and I echo the gesture because it would be rude not
to, but as I take a mouthful of the sweet, fizzy wine I catch Alice's
eye, and it's like there's a static discharge—I can see exactly
what she's thinking.
"To your very good health," I tell her over the
rim of my glass, and I'm pretty sure she gets the unspoken message
because her shoulders slump slightly, and she takes a small sip from
her own glass. I look at Jen. "And you?" I ask, before I can apply the
brakes to my motor mouth.
Jen doesn't crack a smile. "Shouldn't be too
long now," she remarks, calmly enough. "Then you can buy me a bottle of
champagne too, eh?"
I manage to summon up the ghost of a grin from somewhere. "You must want a baby badly."
"Of course! And I'm not just going to stop at one." Jen smiles at me sympathetically. "Of course, I heard all about your job. It must be very difficult."
"It's not so bad," I manage, before retreating into the glass. Bitch. "You know Janis is pregnant, too?" I'll bet you do. "I'm training to be her replacement." What is this, let's all overload the life-support system week? "It's going to mean more work for the rest of us."
"Oh, you'll be next," Jen says, with a casual,
airy certainty that makes my blood run cold. "You'll see things
differently when you've got one of your own. I say, waiter! Waiter!
Where's our menu?"
TIME passes
fast, mostly because I spend the afternoon with my nose buried in the
encyclopedia, trying to remedy my desperate ignorance of dark ages
reproductive politics. Which I sense is putting me at a dangerous
disadvantage.
The next day is the first of four days off. I
sleep until well after Sam's departed for the office. Then I go
downstairs and work out. Of the nine other houses on our stretch of
road, one is now occupied by Nicky and Wolf—but Wolf has a job
and Nicky, who is lazy beyond my wildest aspirations, sleeps in until
noon. So I get in a good hour-long run, by the end of which I'm sweated
up but not breathless or aching anymore. It's spring in our biome, and
the trees and flowers are beginning to blossom. The air is full of the
airborne seminiferous dust shed by the hermaphroditic vegetation. It
tickles my nose, making me sneeze, but some of the scents that
accompany it—attractants for insects—are nice.
After exercise I shower, dress in respectable
clothes, and head downtown to the hardware store to spend some of my
money. I feel better about spending it, knowing it's not Sam's money,
even though I realize this is stupid because it's just meaningless
scrip issued to keep the experiment working, not real currency. I come
away from the store with abrazing torch, flux, solder, lots and lots of copper wire, and some other odds and ends. Then I go shopping for domestic items.
I hit the drugstore first, armed with a shopping
list of things I'd never heard of until yesterday—things the
encyclopedia listed under sexual health. Unfortunately, just knowing
what to ask for doesn't translate into being able to buy it, and I
gradually figure out that the omissions make a pattern. I can
understand them not having progestogen-based medications on general
sale. But why are there no absorbent sponges? Or the plastic penile
sheaths I read about? After about half an hour of searching I conclude
that the drugstore is useless by design. I ran across a rather shocking
article on religious beliefs about sex and reproduction, and it looks
like our drugstore was stocked on the basis of instructions from
eclecticist hierophants. Something tells me that the lack of
contraceptives is not an accident. I'm just surprised I haven't already
heard people grumbling about it.
I have better luck in the department store,
where I buy a new microwave oven, some clip-on spotlights, and a few
other items. Then I go hunting for a craft shop. It takes me a while to
find what I'm looking for, but in the end I discover one tucked in a
corner of the shop, inside a pulp carton—a small wooden loom,
suitable for weaving cloth. I buy it along with a whole bunch of woolen
thread, just so nobody raises any eyebrows. Then I catch a taxi home
and install my loot in the garage, along with the unfinished crossbow
and the other projects.
It's time to get things moving. It's time I
stopped kidding myself that I can fight my way out of here, and time
that I stopped kidding myself that they're going to let me go in (I
checked the calendar) another ninety-four megaseconds. Forget the
crossbow and the other toys I've been playing with. I've got a stark
choice. I can conform like everyone else, go native in the pocket
polity they've established, settle down and get on with the job of
creating a generation of innocents who don't even know there's another
universe outside. Who knows? After a gigasecond, will I even remember I
had another life? It's not as if my presurgery self left me much to
hold on to . . .
Or I can try to find out what's really going on.
Fiore and his shadowy boss, Bishop Yourdon, are doing something with
this polity, that much is clear. This isn't just a straightforward
experimental archaeology commune. Too many aspects of the setup turn
out to be just plain wrong when you examine them closely. If I can
figure out what they're trying to do, maybe I can discover a way out.
Which is why I spend a personal infinity
laboriously stripping reel after reel of copper wire of its insulation
and threading it onto the loom. The first step in figuring out what's
going on is to get myself some privacy. I need a shoulder bag lined
with woven copper mesh to accompany the bug-zapper (my repurposed
microwave oven), and there's no way I could order a Faraday cage from
one of the stores without setting off alarms.
It takes me nearly two weeks to weave a square
meter of copper wire broadcloth, working in darkness by touch alone.
It's really fiddly stuff to work with. The strands keep breaking or
bending, it takes ages to strip the insulation, and besides, I've got a
day job to go to.
Janis is complaining about minor back pains and
spending a lot of time in the toilet each morning, coming out looking
pale. There are fewer wisecracks and jokes from her, which is a shame.
She's beginning to bulge around the waist, too. She's putting a brave
face on it, but I think underneath it all she's terrified. The prospect
of giving birth like an animal (with all the attendant risk and pain)
is enough to scare anybody, even if it didn't come with the added
horror of being chained down in this place for the indefinite
hereafter, the product of your blood and sweat held hostage against
your cooperation. What I want to know is, why isn't there a resistance
movement? I suppose in a panopticon anyone organizing such a thing
would have to be very quiet about it—or very naive—but I
can't help wondering why I haven't seen any signs of even covert
defiance.
I checked the YFH-Polity constitution in the
library (there's a copy on a lectern out front, for everybody to read)
and what's missing from it is as important as what's there. There's a
bill of rights that explicitly includes the phrase "right to life"
(which, if you read some dark ages histories, doesn't mean what a naive
modern would think it means), and it goes on to explicitly waive all
expectations of a right to privacy, which means they can enforce it
against my will. Ick. The constitution is a public protocol
specification defining the parameters within which YFH's legal system
operates. Before I came here, it seemed irrelevant, but now it
terrifies me—and I notice that it says nothing about a commitment
to freedom of movement. That's been an axiom for virtually all human
polities, ever since the end of the censorship wars mopped up the last
nests of Curious Yellow and the memetic dictatorships. Not that you'll
find any such knowledge in our shelves; history stops in 2050, as far
as your reading in this library goes, and anyway, everything after 2005
is accessible only via the computer terminals, using an arcane
conversational text interface that I'm still fumblingly trying to
explore.
I see relatively little of Sam during this time.
After our argument, indeed ever since the halfhearted reconciliation,
he's withdrawn from me. Maybe it's the shock of learning about his
reproductive competence, but he's very distant. Before that nightmare,
before I messed up everything between us, I'd hug him when he got home
from work. We'd have a laugh together, or chat, and we were (I'm sure
of this) growing close. But since that night and our argument, we
haven't even touched. I feel isolated and a bit afraid. If we did
touch I'd—I don't know. Let's be honest about this: I have an
active sex drive, but the thought of getting pregnant in here scares
the shit out of me. And while there are other things we could do if we
were inclined to intimacy, I find the whole situation is a very
effective turnoff. So I can't really blame Sam for avoiding me as much
as he can. The sooner he gets out of here the sooner he can rush off in
search of his romantic love—assuming the bitch didn't give up on
him and go in search of a poly nucleus to joyfully exchange bodily
fluids with about five seconds after he joined the experiment. Sam
broods, and, knowing his luck, he's fixated on someone I wouldn't give
the time of day to.
That's life for you.
FOUR weeks into my new job, twelve weeks before Janis is due to go on maternity leave, I have another wake-up-screaming nightmare.
This time things are different. For one thing, Sam isn't there to hold me
when I wake up. And for another, I know with cold certainty that this
one is true. It's not simply a hideous dream, it's something that
actually happened to me. Something that wasn't meant to be erased back
at the clinic.
I'm sitting at a desk in a cramped rectangular
room with no doors or windows. The walls are the color of old gold,
dulled but iridescent, rainbows of diffraction coming off them whenever
I look away from the desk. I'm in an orthohuman male body, not the
mecha battlecorpse of my previous nightmare, and I'm wearing a simple
tunic in a livery that I vaguely recognize as belonging to the clinic
of the surgeon-confessors.
On the desk in front of me sits a stack of rough
paper sheets, handwoven with ragged edges. I made the stuff myself a
long time ago, and any embedded snitches in it have long since died of
old age. In my left hand I hold a simple ink pen with a handle made of
bone that I carved from the femur of my last body—a little
personal conceit. There's a bottle of ink at the opposite side of the
desk, and I recall that procuring this ink cost a surprising amount of
time and money. The ink has no history. The carbon soot particles
suspended in it are isotopically randomized. You can't even tell what
region of the galaxy it came from. Anonymous ink for a poison pen. How
suitable . . .
I'm writing a letter to someone who doesn't
exist yet. That person is going to be alone, confused, probably very
frightened indeed. I feel a terrible sympathy for him in his loneliness
and fear, because I've been there myself, and I know what he's going
through. And I'll be right there with him, living through every second
of it. (Something's wrong. The letter I remember reading back in
rehab was only three pages, but this stack is much thicker. What's
happening?) I hunch over the desk, gripping the pen tightly enough
that it forms a painful furrow beside the first joint of my middle
finger as I scratch laborious tracks across the fibrous sheets.
As I remember the sensations in my fingers, the
somatic memory of writing, I get a horrible sense of certainty, a deep
conviction that I really did send myself a twenty-page letter
from the past, stuff I desperately needed to see—of which only
three pages were allowed to reach me.
Dear self:
Right now you're wondering who you are.
I assume you're over the wild mood swings by now and can figure out
what other people's emotional states signify. If not, I suggest you
stop reading immediately and leave this letter for later. There's stuff
in here that you will find disturbing. Access it too soon, and you'll
probably end up getting yourself killed.
Who are you? And who am I?
The answer to that question is that
you are me and I am you, but you lack certain key memories—most
importantly, everything that meant anything to me from about two and a
half gigaseconds ago. That's an awfully long time. Back before the
Acceleration most humans didn't live that long. So you're probably
asking yourself why I—your earlier self—might want to erase
all those experiences. Were they really that bad?
No, they weren't. In fact, if I hadn't
gone through deep memory surgery a couple of times before, I'd be
terrified. There's stuff in here, stuff in my head, that I don't want
to lose. Forgetting is a little like dying, and forgetting seventy
Urth-years of memories in one go is a lot like dying.
Luckily forgetfulness, like death, is
reversible these days. Go to the House of Rishael the Exceptional in
Block 54-Honey-September in the Polity of the Jade Sunrise and, after
presenting a tissue sample, ask to speak to Jordaan. Jordaan will
explain how to recover my latest imprint from escrow and how to merge
the imprint block back into your mind. It's a difficult process, but
it's stuff that belongs to you and brought you deep happiness when you
were me. In fact, it's the stuff that makes me myself—and the
lack of which defines who you are in relation to me.
Incidentally, one of the things you'll
find in the imprint is the memory of how to access a trust fund with a
quarter million écus in it.
(Yes, I'm a manipulative worm: I want
you to become me again, sooner or later. Don't worry, you're a
manipulative worm, too—you must be, if you're alive to read this
letter.)
Now, the basics.
You are recovering from deep memory erasure surgery. You are probably thinking that once you recover you'll go and spend the usual wanderjahr looking for a vocation, find somewhere to live, meet friends and lovers, and set up a life for yourself. Wrong.
The reason you are recovering from memory erasure surgery is that the
people you work for have noticed a disturbing pattern of events
centered on the Clinic of the Blessed Singularity run by the order of
surgeon-confessors at City Zone Darke in the Invisible Republic. People
coming out of surgery are being offered places in a
psychological/historical research project aimed at probing the social
conditions of the first dark age by live role-play. Some of these
people have very questionable histories: in some cases, questionable to
the point of being fugitive war criminals.
Your mission (and no, you don't have
any choice—I already committed us to it) is to go inside the
YFH-Polity, find out what's going on, then come back out to tell us.
Sounds simple, doesn't it?
There's a catch. The research
community has been established inside a former military prison, a
glasshouse that was used as a reprogramming and rehabilitation center
after the war. It was widely believed to be escape-proof at the time,
and it's certainly a very secure facility. Other agents have already
gone in. One very experienced colleague of yours vanished completely,
and is now over twenty megs past their criticality deadline. Another
reappeared eleven megaseconds late, reported to the prearranged
debriefing node, and detonated a concealed antimatter device, killing
the instance of their case officer who was in attendance.
I believe that both agents were
compromised because they were injected into the glasshouse with
extensive prebriefing and training. We have no idea what to expect on
the other side of the longjump gate into YFH-Polity, but their security
is tight. We expect extensive border firewalls and a focused
counterespionage operation supported by the surveillance facilities of
a maximum-security prison. There is likely to be stateful examination
of your upload vector, and careful background checks before you are
admitted. This is why I am about to undergo deep memory excision.
Simply put, what you don't know can't betray you.
Incidentally, if you're experiencing
lucid dreams about this stuff, it means you're overdue. This is the
secondary emergent fallback briefing.I'm about to have these memories partially
erased—unlinked, but not destroyed—before I go into the
clinic in City Zone Darke. It's a matter of erasing the associative
links to the data, not the data itself. They'll re-emerge given
sufficient time, hopefully even after the surgeon-confessors go after
the other memories that I'll be asking them to redact. They can't erase what I don't know I've already forgotten.
What is the background to your mission?
I can tell you very little. Our
records are worryingly incomplete, and to some extent this is a garbage
trawl triggered by the coincidence of the names Yourdon, Fiore, and
Hanta cropping up in the same place.
During the censorship wars, Curious
Yellow infected virtually every A-gate in the Republic of Is. We don't
know who released Curious Yellow, or why, because Curious Yellow
appears to have been created for the sole purpose of delivering a
psywar payload designed to erase all memories and data pertaining to
something or other. By squatting the assemblers, Curious Yellow ensured
that anyone who needed medical care, food, material provisions, or just
about any of the necessities of civilization, had to submit to
censorship. Needless to say, some of us took exception to this, and the
subsequent civil war—in which the Republic of Is shattered into
the current system of firewalled polities—resulted in a major
loss of data about certain key areas. In particular, the key services
provided by the Republic—a common time framework and the ability
to authenticate identities—were broken. The situation was
complicated, after the defeat of the Curious Yellow censorship worm, by
the emergence of quisling dictatorships whose leaders took advantage of
the Curious Yellow software to spread their own pernicious ideologies
and power structures. In the ensuing chaos, even more information was
lost.
Among the things we know very little
about are the history and origins of certain military personnel
conscripted into sleeper cells by Curious Yellow once the worm
determined it was under attack by dissidents armed with clean,
scratch-built A-gates. The same goes for the dangerous opportunists who
took advantage of Curious Yellow's payload capability in order to set
up their own pocket empires. Yourdon, Fiore, and Hanta came to our
attention in connection with the psychological warfare organizations of
no less than eighteen local cognitive dictatorships. They are
extraordinarily dangerous people, but they are currently beyond our
reach because they are, to put it bluntly, providing some kind of
service to the military of the Invisible Republic.
What we know about the sleeper cells
is this: In the last few megasecs of the war, before the alliance
succeeded in shattering and then sanitizing the last remaining networks
of Curious Yellow, some of the quisling dictatorships' higher echelons
went underground. It is now almost two gigaseconds since the end of the
war, and most people dismiss the concept of Curious Yellow revenants as
fantasy. However, I don't believe in ignoring threats just because they
sound far-fetched. If Curious Yellow really did create sleeper
cells, secondary pockets of infection designed to break out long after
the initial wave was suppressed, then our collective failure to pursue
them is disastrously shortsighted. And I am particularly worried
because some aspects of the YFH-Polity experimental protocol, as
published, sound alarmingly amenable to redirection along these lines.
My biggest reason for wanting you to
have undergone major memory erasure prior to injection into YFH-Polity
is this: I suspect that when the incoming experimental subjects are
issued with new bodies, they are filtered through an A-gate infected
with a live, patched copy of Curious Yellow. Therefore preemptive
memory redaction is the only sure way of preventing such a
verminiferous gate from identifying you as a threat for its owners to
eliminate.
I watch myself writing this letter to myself. I
can read it as clearly as if it's engraved in my own flesh. But I can't
see any marks in the paper, because my old self has forgotten to dip
his pen in the ink, and he's long since fallen to scratching invisible
indentations on the coarse sheets. I seem to stand behind his shoulder
although his head is nowhere in my field of vision, and I try to scream
at him, No! No! That isn't how you do it! But nothing comes out
because this is a dream, and when I try to grab the pen, my hand passes
right through his wrist, and he keeps writing on my naked brain with
his ink of blood and neurotransmitters.
I begin to panic, because being trapped in this cell with him has brought
memories flooding back in, memories that he cunningly suppressed in
order to avoid triggering Curious Yellow's redaction factories. It's a
movable feast of horrors and exultation and life in the large. It's too
much to bear, and it's too intense, because now I remember the rest of
my earlier dream of swords and armor and the reversible massacre aboard
a conditionally liberated polity cylinder. I remember the way our
A-gate glitched and crashed at the end of the rescue as we threw the
last severed head into its maw, and the way Loral turned to me, and
said, "Well shit," in a voice full of world-weary disgust, and
how I walked away and scheduled myself for deep erasure because I knew
if I didn't, the memory of it all would drag me awake screaming for
years to come—
—And I'm awake, and I make it to the toilet just in time before my stomach squeezes convulsively and tries to climb up my throat and escape.
I can't believe I did those things. I don't believe I would
have committed such crimes. But I remember the massacre as if it was
yesterday. And if those memories are false, then what about the rest of
me?
NOT entirely by
coincidence, the next day is my first run with the shoulder bag. It
started life as a rectangular green vinyl affair. It now sports a black
nylon lining that I've stitched together with much swearing and sucking
of pricked fingertips to conceal the gleaming copper weave glued to its
inside. It looks like a shopping bag until I fold over the inner flap.
Then it looks like a full shopping bag with a black flap covering the
contents. Right now it contains a carton of extremely strong ground
espresso, a filter cone, and several small items that are individually
innocuous but collectively damning if you know what you're looking at.
It's a good thing the bag looks anonymous, because unless I'm
hallucinating all my memories, what I'm going to take home from work in
that bag today will be a whole lot less innocuous than coffee beans.
I get in to work at the usual early hour and
find Janis in the staff room, looking pale and peaky. "Morning
sickness?" I ask. She nods. "Sympathies. Say, why don't you stay here,
and I'll get the returnssorted out? Put your feet up—I'll call you if anything comes up that I can't handle."
"Thanks. I'll do just that." She leans back against the wall. "I wouldn't be here but Fiore's coming—"
"You leave that to me," I say, trying not to
look surprised. I wasn't expecting him so soon, but I've got the bag,
so . . .
"Are you sure?" she asks.
"Yes." I smile reassuringly. "Don't worry about me, I'll just let him in and leave him to get on with things."
"Okay," she says gratefully, and I go back out and get to work.
First I pile yesterday's returns on the trolley
and push them around the shelves, filing them as fast as I can. It only
takes a few minutes—most of the inmates here don't realize that
reading is a recreational option, and only a handful are borrowing
regularly. But then I skip the dusting and cleaning I'm supposed to do
today. Instead, I grab my bag from behind the reception station, dump
it on the bottom shelf of the trolley, and head for the shelves in the
reference section next to the room where the Church documents are
stored.
Into the bag goes a dictionary of sexual taboos,
held in the reference shelves because some weird interpretation of dark
age mores holds that libraries wouldn't lend such stuff out. It's my
cover story in case I'm caught, something naughty but obviously
trivial. Then I leave the trolley right where it is with the bag tucked
away on the bottom shelf, where it's not immediately obvious. I head
back to the front desk. My palms are sweating. Fiore is due to visit
the archive, which means advancing my plans. Janis has always handled
him before—but she's ill, I'm running the shop, and there's no
point delaying the inevitable. I've got all my excuses prepared,
anyway. I've barely been able to sleep lately for rehearsing them in my
head.
Around midmorning a black car pulls up and parks
in front of the library steps. I put down the book I'm reading and
stand up to wait behind the counter. A uniformed zombie gets out of the
front and opens the rear door, standing to one side while a plump male
climbs out. His dark, oily hair shines in the daylight: The white slash
of his clerical collar lends his face a disembodied appearance, as if
it doesn't quite belong to the same world as the rest of his body. He
walks up the steps to the front door and pushes it open, then walks
over to the desk. "Special reference section," he says tersely. Then he
looks at my face. "Ah, Reeve. I didn't see you here before."
I manage a sickly smile. "I'm the trainee librarian. Janis is ill this morning, so I'm looking after everything in her absence."
"Ill?" He stares at me owlishly. I look right
back at him. Fiore has chosen a body that is physically imposing but
bordering on senescence, in the state the ancients called "middle age."
He's overweight to the point of obesity, squat and wide and barely
taller than I am. His chins wobble as he talks, and the pores on his
nose are very visible. Right now his nostrils are flared, sniffing the
air suspiciously, and his bushy eyebrows draw together as he inspects
me. He smells of something musty and organic, as if he's spent too long
in a compost heap.
"Yes, she has morning sickness," I say artlessly, hoping he won't ask where she is.
"Morning sick—oh, I see!" His frown
vanishes instantly. "Ah, the trials we have to suffer." His voice oozes
a slug-trail of sympathy. "I'm sure this must be hard for her, and for
you. Just take me to the reference room, and I'll stay out of your way,
child."
"Certainly." I head for the gate at the side of
the station. "If you'd like to follow me?" He knows exactly where we're
going, the old toad, but he's a stickler for appearances. I lead him to
the locked door in the reference section, and he produces a small bunch
of keys, muttering to himself, and opens it. "Would you like a cup of
tea or coffee?" I ask hesitantly.
He pauses and gives me the dead-fish stare again. "Isn't that against library regulations?" he asks.
"Normally yes, but you're not going to be in the
library proper," I babble, "you're in the archive and you're a
responsible person so I thought I'd offer—"
He stops being interested in me. "Coffee will be
fine. Milk, no sugar." He disappears into the room, leaving his keys
with the lock.
Now. Heart pounding, I head for the
staff room. Janis is snoozing when I open the door. She sits up with a
start, looking pale. "Reeve—"
"It's all right," I say, crossing over to the
kettle and filling it up. "Fiore's here, I let him in. Listen, why
don't you go home? If you're feeling ill, you shouldn't really be here,
should you?"
"I've been thinking about thinking." Janis
shakes her head. I rummage around for the coffee and filter papers and
set the stand up over the biggest mug I can find. I scoop the coffee
into the paper with wild abandon, stopping only when I realize that
making it too strong for Fiore will be as bad as not getting him to
drink it all. "You shouldn't think too much, Reeve. It's bad for you."
"Is it really?" I ask abstractedly, as I peel
the foil wrapping from a small tablet of chocolate I bought at the
drugstore and crumble half of it into the coffee grounds as the kettle
begins to hiss. I wad the foil into a tight ball and flick it into the
wastebasket.
"If you think about getting out of here," says Janis.
"Like I said, I'll call you a taxi—"
"No, I mean out of here." I turn round
and she looks at me with the expression of a trapped animal. It's one
of those moments of existential bleakness when the cocoon of lies that
we spin around ourselves to paper over the cracks in reality dissolve
into slime, and we're left looking at something really ugly. Janis has
got the bug, the same one I've got, only she's got it worse. "I can't
stand it anymore! They're going to put me in hospital and make me pass
a skull through my cunt, and then they're going to have a little
accident and I'll bleed out and they'll give me to Hanta to fix with
her tame censorship worm. I'll come out of the hospital smiling like
Yvonne and Patrice, and there won't be any me left, there'll be this thing that thinks it's me and—"
I grab her. "Shut up!" I hiss in her ear.
"It's not going to happen!" She sobs, a great racking howl welling up
inside her, and if she lets it out. I'm completely screwed because
Fiore will hear us. "I've got a plan."
"You've—what?"
The kettle is boiling. I gently push away her
groping hands and reach over to turn it off. "Listen. Go home. Right
now, right this instant. Leave Fiore to me. Stop panicking. The
more isolated we think we are, the more isolated we become. I won't let
them mess with your head." I smile at her reassuringly. "Trust me."
"You." Janis sniffles loudly, then lets go of me
and grabs a tissue off the box on the table. "You've got—no,
don't tell me." She blows her nose and takes a deep breath, then looks
at me again, a long, hard, appraising look. "Should have guessed. You
don't take shit, do you?"
"Not if I can help it." I pick up the kettle and
carefully pour boiling water into the funnel, where it will damp down
the coffee grounds, extract the xanthine alkaloids and dissolve the
half tab of Ex-Lax hidden in the powder, draining the sennoside
glycosides and the highly diuretic caffeine into the mug of steaming
coffee that, with any luck, will give Fiore a strong urge to take ten
minutes on the can about half an hour after he drinks it. "Just try to
relax. I should be able to tell you about it in a couple of days if
things work out."
"Right. You've got a plan." She blows her nose again. "You want me to go home." It's a question.
"Yes. Right now, without letting Fiore see you here—I told him you were at home, sick."
"Okay." She manages a wan smile.
I pour milk into the coffee mug, then pick it up. "I'm just going to give the Reverend his coffee," I tell her.
"To give—" Her eyes widen. "I see." She
takes her jacket from the hook on the back of the door. "I'd better get
out of your way, then." She grins at me briefly. "Good luck!"
And she's gone, leaving me room to pick up the
mug of coffee and the other item from the sink side and to carry them
out to Fiore.
THE simplest plans are often the best.
Anything I try to do on the library computer
system will be monitored, and the instant I try to find anything
interesting they'll know I know about it. It's probably there as a
honeypot, to snare the overly curious and insufficiently paranoid. Even
if it isn't, I probably won't get anywhere useful—those old
conversational interfaces are not only arcane, they're feeble-minded.
To put one over on these professional paranoids
is going to take skill, cunning, and lateral thinking. And my thinking
is this: If Fiore and the Bishop Yourdon and their fellow experimenters
have one weak spot, it's their dedication to the spirit of the study.
They won't use advanced but anachronistic surveillance techniques where
nonintrusive ones that were available during the dark ages will do. And
they won't use informational metastructures accessible via netlink
where a written manual and records on paper will do. (Either that, or
what they write on paper really is secret stuff, material that they won't entrust to a live data system in case it comes under attack.)
The ultrasecure repository in the library is
merely a room full of shelves of paper files, with no windows and a
simple mortise lock securing the door. What more do they need? They've
got us locked down in the glasshouse, a network of sectors of anonymous
orbital habs subjected to pervasive surveillance, floating in the
unmapped depths of interstellar space, coordinates and orbital elements
unknown, interconnected by T-gates that the owners can switch on or off
at will, and accessible from the outside only via a single secured
longjump gate. Not only that, but our experimenters appear to have a
rogue surgeon-confessor running the hospital. Burglar alarms would be
redundant.
After I knock on the door and pass Fiore his
coffee, I go back to the reference section and while away a few
minutes, leafing through an encyclopedia to pass the time. (The
ancients held deeply bizarre ideas about neuroanatomy, I discover, and
especially about developmental plasticity. I guess it explains some of
their ideas about gender segregation.)
As it happens, I don't have to wait long. Fiore
comes barging into the office and looks about. "You—is there a
staff toilet here?" he demands, glancing around apprehensively. His
forehead glistens beneath the lighting tubes.
"Certainly. It's through the staff common
room—this way." I head toward the staff room at a leisurely pace.
Fiore takes short steps, breathing heavily.
"Faster," he grumbles. I step aside
and gesture at the door. "Thank you," he adds as he darts inside. A
moment later I hear him fumbling with the bolt, then the rattle of a
toilet seat.
Excellent. With any luck, he'll be about his business before he looks for the toilet paper. Which is missing because I've hidden it.
I walk back to the door to the restricted document repository. Fiore has left his key in the lock and the door ajar. Oh dear.
I pull out the bar of soap, the sharp knife, and the wad of toilet
paper I've left in my bag on the bottom shelf of the trolley. What an unfortunate oversight!
I wedge my toe in the door to keep it from
shutting as I pull the key out and press it into the bar of soap, both
sides, taking care to get a clean impression. It only takes a few
seconds, then I use some of the paper to wipe the key clean and wrap up
the bar, which I stash back in the bag. The key is a plain metal
instrument. While there's an outside chance that there's some kind of
tracking device built into it in case it's lost, it isn't
lost—it moved barely ten centimeters while Fiore was taking his
ease. And I'm fairly certain there are no silly cryptographic
authentication tricks built into it—if so, why disguise it as an
old-fashioned mortise lock key? Mechanical mortise locks are
surprisingly secure when you're defending against intruders who're more
used to dealing with software locks. Finally, if there's one place that
won't be under visual surveillance, it's Fiore's high-security document
vault while the Priest is busy inside it. This is the chain of
assumptions on which I am gambling my life.
I make sure my bag is well hidden at the bottom
of the trolley before I slowly make my way back to the staff room. And
I wait a full minute before I allow myself to hear Fiore calling
querulously for toilet paper.
The rest of the day passes slowly without Janis
to joke with. Fiore leaves after another hour, muttering and grumbling
about his digestion. I transfer the soap bar to the wheezing little
refrigerator in the staff room where we keep the milk. I don't want to
risk its melting or deforming.
That evening, I lock up and go home with my
heart in my mouth, sweat gluing my blouse to the small of my back. It's
silly of me, I know. By doing this, I risk rapid exposure. But if I
don't do it, what will happen in the longer term is worse than anything
that can happen to me if they catch me with a library book from the
reference-only collection and a distorted bar of soap. It won't be just
me who goes down screaming. Janis knew about Curious Yellow and was
afraid of surveillance. I don't know why, or where from, but it's an
ominous sign. Who is she?
Back home, I head for the garage before I go
indoors. It's time to power up the bug zapper in anger for the first
time. The bug zapper is the cheap microwave oven I bought a few weeks
ago. I've had the lid off, and I've done some creative things with its
wiring. A microwave oven is basically a Faraday cage with a powerful
microwave emitter. It's tuned to emit electromagnetic energy at a
wavelength that is strongly absorbed by the water in whatever food you
put inside. Well, that's no good for me, but with some creative
jiggery-pokery, I've succeeded in buggering up the magnetron very
effectively. It now emits a noisy range of wavelengths, and while it
won't cook your dinner very well, it'll make a real mess of any
electronic circuits you put in it. I open the door and shake my
copper-lined bag's contents into it, then reach through the fabric to
retrieve the bar of soap. I really don't want to fry that—Fiore might get suspicious if he got the shits every time he went to the library while I was on duty.
I drop the oven door shut and zap the book for
fifteen seconds. Then I push a button on the breadboard I've taped to
the side of the oven. No lights come on. There's nothing talking in the
death cell, so it looks like I've effectively crisped any critters
riding the book's spine. Well, we'll see when I take it back to the
library, won't we? If Fiore singles me out in Church the day after
tomorrow, I'll know I was wrong, but sneaking a dirty book out of the
library for an evening isn't in the same league as stealing the keys
to—
The plaster of paris! Mentally, I
kick myself. I nearly forgot it. I tip the right amount into an empty
yoghurt pot with shaky hands, then measure in a beaker of water and
stir the mass with a teaspoon until it begins to get so hot that I have
to juggle it from hand to hand.
Ten minutes pass, and I line a baking tray with
moist whitish goop (gypsum, hydrated calcium sulphate). Hoping that it
has cooled enough, I press both sides of the soap bar into it a couple
of times. I have a tense moment worrying about the soap's softening and
melting, and I make the first impression too early, while the plaster's
so soft and damp that it sticks to the soap, but in the end I think
I've probably got enough to work with. So I cover the tray with a piece
of cheesecloth and go inside. It's nearly ten o'clock, I'm hungry and
exhausted, tomorrow is my day off, and I am going to have to go in to
work anyway to visit Janis and make sure she's all right. But next time
Fiore visits the repository, I'm going to be ready to sneak in right
after he's left. And then we'll see what he's hiding down
there . . .
SUNDAY dawns,
cool and mellow. I groan and try not to pull the bedclothes over my
head. By one of those quirks of scheduling, yesterday was a workday for
me, tomorrow is another, and I'm feeling hammered by the prospect of
two eleven-hour days. I'm not looking forward to spending half my day
off in forced proximity to score whores like Jen and Angel, but I
manage to force myself out of bed and rescue my Sunday outfit from the
pile growing on the chair at the end of the room. (I need to take a
trip to the dry-cleaners soon, and spend some time down in the basement
washing the stuff I can do at home. More drudgery on my day off. Does
it ever stop?)
Downstairs, I find Sam laboriously spooning
cornflakes into a bowl of milk. He looks preoccupied. My stomach is
tight with anxiety, but I force myself to put a pan of water on the
burner and carefully lower a couple of eggs into it. I need to make
myself eat: My appetite isn't good, and with the exercise regime I'm
keeping up, I could start burning muscle tissue very easily. I glance
inward at my mostly silent netlink to check my cohort's scores for the
week. As usual, I'm nearly the bottom-ranked female in the group. Only
Cass is doing worse, and I feel a familiar stab of anxiety. I'm nearly
sure she isn't Kay, but I can't help feeling for her. She has to put up
with that swine Mick, after all. Then my stomach does another flip-flop
as I remember something I have to do before we go.
"Sam."
He glances up from his bowl. "Yes?"
"Today. Don't be surprised if—if—" I can't say it.
He puts his spoon down and looks out the window. "It's a nice day." He frowns. "What's bugging you? Is it Church?"
I manage to nod.
His eyes go glassy for a moment. Checking his scores, I guess. Then he nods. "You didn't get any penalties, did you?"
"No. But I'm afraid I—" I shake my head, unable to continue.
"They're going to single you out," he says, evenly and slowly.
"That's it." I nod. "I've just got a feeling, is all."
"Let them." He looks angry, and for a moment I
feel frightened, then I realize that for a wonder it isn't
me—he's angry at the idea that Fiore might have a go at me in
Church, indignant at the possibility that the congregation might go
along with it. Resentful. "We'll walk out."
"No, Sam." The water is boiling—I check
the clock, then switch on the toaster. Boiled eggs and toast, that's
how far my culinary skills have come. "If you do that, it'll make you a
target, too. If we're both targets . . ."
"I don't care." He meets my gaze evenly, with no
sign of the reticence that's been dogging him for the past month. "I
made a decision. I'm not going to stand by and let them pick us off one
by one. We've both made mistakes, but you're the one who's most at risk
in here. I haven't been fair to you and I, I"—he stumbles for a
moment—"I wish things had turned out differently." He looks down
at his bowl and murmurs something I can't quite make out.
"Sam?" I sit down. "Sam. You can't take on the whole polity on your own." He looks sad. Sad? Why?
"I know." He looks at me. "But I feel so helpless!"
Sad and angry. I stand up and walk over to the burner, turn the heat right down. The eggs are bumping against the bottom of the pan. The toaster
is ticking. "We should have thought of that before we agreed to be
locked up in this prison," I say. I feel like screaming. With my
extra-heavy memory erasure—which I have a sneaking suspicion
exceeded anything my earlier self, the one who wrote me the letter and
then forgot about it, was expecting—I'm half-surprised I got here
in the first place. Certainly if I'd known Kay was going to dither,
then pull out, I'd probably have chosen to stay with her and the good
life, assassins or no.
"Prison." He chuckles bitterly. "That's a good description for it. I wish there was some way to escape."
"Go ask the Bishop; maybe he'll let you out
early for bad behavior." I pop the toast, butter it, then scoop both
eggs out of the water and onto my plate. "I wish."
"How about we walk to Church today?" Sam
suggests hesitantly, as I'm finishing breakfast. "It's about two
kilometers. That sounds a long way, but—"
"It also sounds like a good idea to me," I say, before he can talk himself out of it. "I'll wear my work shoes."
"Good. I'll meet you down here in ten minutes."
He brushes against me on his way out of the kitchen, and I startle, but
he doesn't seem to notice. Something's going on inside his head, and
not being able to open up and ask is frustrating.
Two kilometers is a nice morning walk, and Sam
lets me hold his hand as we stroll along the quiet avenues beneath
trees suddenly exploding with green and blue-black leaves. We have to
walk through three tunnels between zones to get to the neighborhood of
the Church—there are no lines of sight longer than half a
kilometer, perhaps because that would make it obvious that our
landscapes are cut from the inner surfaces of conic sections rather
than glued to the outside of a sphere by natural gravity—but we
see barely anyone. Most folks travel to Church by taxi, and they won't
be leaving their homes until we're nearly there.
The Church service starts out anticlimactic for
me, but probably not for anyone else. After leading the congregation
into a tub-thumping rendition of "First We Take Manhattan," Fiore
launches into a longperoration on the nature of obedience, crime, our place in society, and our duties to one another.
"Is it not true that we were placed here to
enjoy the benefits of civilization and to raise a great society for the
betterment of our children and the achievement of a morally pure
state?" he thunders from the pulpit, eyes focused glassily on an
infinity that lurks just behind the back wall. "And to this end, isn't
it the case that our social order, being the earthly antecedent of a
Platonic ideal society, must be defended so that it has room to mature
and bear the fruit of utopia?" A real tub-thumper, I realize
uneasily. I wonder where he's going? People are shuffling in the row
behind me; I'm not the only one with a guilty conscience.
"This being the case, can we admit to our
society one who violates its cardinal rules? Must we forebear from
criticizing the sins out of consideration for the sensibilities of the
sinner?" He demands. "Or for the sensibilities of those who, unknowing,
live side by side with the personification of vice incarnate?"
Here it comes. I feel a mortal sense
of dread, my stomach loosening in anticipation of the denunciation I
can feel coming. There's got to be more to this than a furtive library
book, and I have a horrible sinking feeling that he's figured out the
soap impression and the plaster of paris and the mold I'm preparing for
the duplicate keys—
"No!" Fiore booms from the pulpit. "This cannot be!" He thumps the rail with one fist. "But it grieves me to say that it is—that
Esther and Phil are not merely adulterating their souls by sneaking
their vile intimacies behind the backs of their ignorant and abused
spouses, but are adulterating the fabric of society itself!"
Huh? It's not me that he's going
after, but the thrill of relief doesn't last long: There's a loud
grumble of rage from the congregation, led by cohort three, whose
members are the ones Fiore is accusing. Everyone else looks round and I
turn round with them—not to go with the crowd could be dangerous
right now—and see a turbulent knot a couple of rows back, where
well-dressed churchgoers are turning on each other. A frightened female
and a defensive-looking male with dark hair are looking around
apprehensively, not making eye contact, but trying to—yes,they're looking for escape routes as Fiore continues. Something tells me they're too late.
"I would like to thank Jen in particular for
bringing this matter to my attention," Fiore says coolly. My netlink
dings, registering the arrival of more points than I'd normally rack up
in a month, an upward adjustment I can blame on the fact that I'm in
the same cohort as the little snitch. She's scored big-time with this
accusation of adultery. "And I ask you, what are we going to do about
the sickness in our midst?" Fiore scans the audience from his pulpit.
"What is to be done to cleanse our society?"
My sick sense of dread is back with a vengeance.
This is going to be a whole lot worse than anything I'd anticipated.
Normally, Fiore singles a handful out for ridicule, laughter, the
pointed finger of contempt—a minor humiliation for sneaking a
library book out of the reference section would be nothing out of the
ordinary. But this is big bad stuff, two people caught subverting the
social foundations of the experiment. Fiore is on a roll of righteous
indignation, and the atmosphere is getting very ugly indeed. A roar
goes up from the back benches, incoherent rage and anger, and I grab
Sam's hand. Then I check my netlink and freeze. He's fined cohort three all the points he's just given to Jen!
"Let's get out of here before it turns nasty," I mutter into Sam's ear,
and he nods and grips my hand back tightly. People are standing up and
shouting, so I sidle toward the side of the aisle as fast as I can,
using my elbows when I have to. I can see Mick on the other side,
yelling something, the tendons on the sides of his neck standing out
like cables. I don't see Cass. I keep moving. There's a storm brewing,
and this isn't the time or place to stop and ask.
Behind me Fiore shouts something about natural
justice, but he's barely audible over the crowd. The doors are open,
and people are spilling out into the car park. I gasp with pain as
someone stomps on my left foot, but I stay upright and sense rather
than see Sam following me. I make it through the crush in the doorway
and keep going, dodging small clumps of people and a struggling figure,
then Sam catches up with me. "Let's go," I tell him, grabbing his hand.
There are people in front of us, clustered around—it's Jen. "Reeve!" she calls.
I can't ignore her without being obvious. "What do you want?" I ask.
"Help us." She grins widely, her eyes sparkling
with excitement as she spreads her arms. She's wearing a little
black-silk number that displays her secondary sexual characteristics by
providing just a wisp of contrast: her chest is heaving as if she's
about to have an orgasm. "Come on!" She gestures at the dark knot near
the Church entrance. "We're going to have a party!"
"What do you mean?" I demand, looking past her.
Her husband, Chris, is conspicuously absent. Instead, she's acquired a
cohort of her own, followers or admirers or something, Grace from
twelve and Mina from nine and Tina from seven—all of them are
from newer cohorts than our own—and they're watching her, looking
to her as if she's a leader . . .
"Purify the polity!" she says, almost playfully.
"Come on! Together we can keep everyone in line and hold everything
together—and earn loads more points—if we make a strong
enough statement right now. Send the deviants and perverts a message."
She looks at me enthusiastically. "Right?"
"Uh, right," I mumble, backing away until I bump into Sam, who's come up behind me. "You're going to teach them a lesson, huh?"
I feel Sam's hand tightening on my shoulder,
warning me not to go too far, but Jen's in no mood to pick up minor
details like sarcasm: "That's right!" She's almost rapturous. "It's
going to be real fun. I got Chris and Mick ready—"
There's a high-pitched scream from somewhere
behind us. "Excuse us," I mumble, "I don't feel so good." Sam shoves me
forward, and I stumble past Jen, still stammering out excuses, but the
situation isn't critical. Jen doesn't have time to waste on broken
reeds and moral imbeciles, and she's already drifting toward the group
in the Church door, shouting something about community values.
We make it to the edge of the car park before I stumble again and grab
hold of Sam's arm. "We've got to stop them," I hear myself saying. I
wonder what that toad Fiore thought he was unleashing when he
transferred so many points from one cohort to another. Doing that to
the score whores is only going to have one result. At the very least,
cohort three is going to rip the shit out of Phil and Esther—but
now we've got Jen, trying to spin the whole thing as social cleansing
in order to position herself at the head of a mob. I can see a hideous
new reality taking shape here, and I want nothing to do with it.
"Not sensible." He shakes his head but slows down.
"I mean it!" I insist. I swallow, my throat dry. "They're going to beat Phil and Esther—"
"No, it's already gone past that point." There's an ugly quaver in his voice.
I dig my heels in and stop. Sam stops, too, of
necessity—it's that, or shove me over. He's breathing heavily.
"We've got to do something."
"Like. What?" He's breathing deeply. "There're at least twenty of them. Cohort three and
the idiots who've gotten some idea that they can parade their virtue by
joining in. We don't stand a chance." He glances over his shoulder,
seems to shudder, then suddenly pulls me closer and speeds up. "Don't
stop, don't look round," he hisses. So of course I stop dead and turn
around to see what they're doing behind us.
Oh shit, indeed. I feel wobbly, and
Sam catches me under one arm as I see what's happening. There are no
more screams, but that doesn't mean nothing's going on. The screaming
is continuing, inside the privacy of my own skull. "They planned this," I hear myself say, as if from the far end of a very dark tunnel. "They prepared for it. It's not spontaneous."
"Yes." Sam nods, his face whey-pale. There's no
other explanation, crazy as it seems. "Ritual human sacrifice seems to
have been a major cultural bonding feature in pretech cultures," he
mutters. "I wonder how long Fiore's been planning to introduce it?"
They've got two ropes over the branches of the
poplars beside the Church, and two groups are busy heaving their
twitching payloads up into the greenery. I blink. The ropes seem to
curve slightly. It might be centripetal acceleration, but more likely
it's because my eyes are watering.
"I don't care. If I had a gun, I'd shoot Jen
right now, I really would." I suddenly realize that I'm not feeling
faint from fear or dread, but from anger: "The bitch needs killing."
"Wouldn't work," he says, almost absently. "More
violence just normalizes the killing, it doesn't put an end to it:
They're having a party and all you could do is add to the fun . . ."
"Yeah, I—but I'd feel better." Jen had
better have bars on her windows and sleep with a baseball bat under her
pillow tonight, or she's in trouble. And she royally deserves it, the
mendacious bitch.
"Me too, I think."
"Can we do anything?"
"For them?" He shrugs. There's no more screaming, but a tone-deaf choir has struck up some kind of anthem. "No."
I shiver. "Let's go home. Right now."
"Okay," he says, and together we start walking again.
The singing follows us up the road. I'm
terrified that if I look back, I'll break down: There's absolutely
nothing I can do about it, but I feel a filthy sense of complicity with
them. As for Fiore . . . he's got it coming. Sooner or
later I'll get him. But I'm going to bite my tongue and not say a word
about that for now, because I've a feeling he staged this little show
to teach us a lesson about the construction of totalitarian power, and
right this moment all the spies and snitches are going to be
wide-awake, looking for signs of dissent.
A kilometer up
the road and ten minutes away from the ghastly feeding frenzy, I tug at
Sam's arm. "Let's slow down a little," I suggest. "Catch our breath.
There's no need to run anymore."
"Catch our—" Sam stares at me. "I thought you were mad at me."
"No, it's not you." I carry on walking, but more slowly.
His hand on my arm. "We didn't join in."
I nod, wordlessly.
"Three-quarters of the people there were as
horrified as we were. But we couldn't stop it once it got going." He
shakes his head.
I take a deep breath. "I'm pissed at myself for not making a stand while
there was time. You can game a mob if you know what you're doing. But
once people get moving in groups like that, it's really hard to contain
them. Fiore didn't need to set that off. But he did, like pouring
gasoline on a barbecue." Both of which are items I've only lately
become acquainted with. "And after that sermon and the score transfer,
he couldn't have stopped it even if he wanted to."
"You sound like you think it's a matter of
choice." I glance sidelong at him: Sam's not stupid, but he doesn't
normally talk in abstractions. He continues: "Do you really think you
could have stopped it? It's implicit in this society, Reeve. They set
us up to make it easy to make people kill for an abstraction. You saw
Jen. Did you really think you could have stopped her, once she got
going?"
"I should have stuck a knife in her ribs." I
trudge on in silence for a few seconds. "I'd probably have failed.
You're right, but that doesn't make me feel better."
We walk slowly along the road, baking beneath
the noonday heat of an artificial late-spring sun in our Sunday
outfits. The invertebrates creak in the long, yellowing grass, and the
deciduous trees rustle their leaves overhead in the breeze. I smell
sage and magnolia in the warm air. Ahead of us the road dives into a
cutting that leads to another of the tunnels with built-in T-gates that
conceal the true geometry of our inside-out world. Sam pulls out his
pocket flashlight, swinging it from his wrist by a strap.
"I've seen mobs before," I tell him. If only I could forget.
"They have a peculiar kind of momentum." I feel weak and shaky as I
think about it, about the look on Phil's face—I hardly knew
him—and the hunger stalking the shadow of the crowd. Jen's
malicious delight. "Once it gets past a certain point, all you can do
is run away fast and make sure you have nothing to do with what happens
next. If everybody did that, there wouldn't be any mobs."
"I guess." Sam sounds subdued as we walk into
the penumbra of the tunnel. He switches his flashlight on. The cone of
light bobs around crazily ahead of us as the road swings to the left.
"Even a sword-fighting fool of a hero can't
divert a mob like that on their own once it gets going," I tell him, as
much for my own benefit as anything else. "Not without battle armor and
some heavy weaponry, because they're going to keep coming and coming.
The ones behind can't see what's happening up front, and the fool who
stands in the way without backup is going to end up a dead fool really
fast, even if he kills a whole load of them. And anyway, your
sword-fighting fool, he's no smarter than any of them in the mob. The
time to stop the mob is before it gets started. To stand up in front of
it first, and tell it no."
We're walking into the dark curve of the tunnel, out of sight of either entrance. Sam sighs.
"I knew someone who'd do that," he says
wistfully. "The man I fell in love with. He wasn't a fool, but he'd
know how to handle a situation like that."
The man? Sam doesn't seem like the type
to me—until I remember that I'm seeing him through gender-trapped
eyes, the same way he's looking at me, and that I've got no way of
knowing who or what Sam was before he volunteered for the experiment.
"Nobody could do that," I tell him gently.
"Maybe so. But I think I'd trust Robin's judgment before I'd trust—"
I stop as suddenly as if I have just walked into
a wall. The hairs on the back of my neck are all standing on end, and
my stomach is knotting up again as if I'm going to be sick.
"What's wrong?" asks Sam.
"The person on the outside you've been pining after," I say carefully. "He's called Robin. Is that right?"
"Yes." He nods. "I shouldn't have said, we'll get penalized—"
I grab his hand like it's a floatation aid and I'm drowning. "Sam, Sam." You idiot! Yes, you! (I'm not sure which of us I mean.) "Did it ever occur to you to ask if maybe I knew Robin?"
"Why? What good would that have done?" His pupils are huge and dark in the twilight.
"You are the biggest—" I don't know what to say. Truly, I don't. Stunned is the mildest word that describes how I feel. "The name you gave Robin was Kay, right?"
"You—"
"Kay. Yes or no?"
He tenses and tries to pull his hand away. "Yes," he admits.
"O-kay." I don't seem to be able to get enough
air. "Well, Sam, we are going to continue on our way home, now, aren't
we? Because who we were before we came here doesn't make any difference
to where we are now, does it?"
His expression is impossible to read in the darkness. "You must be Vhora—"
I nearly slap him. Instead, I reach out with the
index finger of my free hand and touch his lips. "Home first. Then we
talk," I tell him, stomach still churning, aghast at my own stupidity
and willful blindness. Okay, so I walked right into this one. And I think I just sprained my brain. Now what?
He sighs. "All right." He still doesn't use my
name. But he turns to shine the flashlight ahead of us. And that's when
I see the outline of the door in the opposite wall.
IT'S funny how the more we travel the less we see.
Traveling via T-gates, we avoid the intervening
points between the nodes because the gate is actually a hole in the
structure of space, and in a very real sense there are no intervening
points. And it's not much different in a car. You get in, you tell the
zombie where to take you, and he steps on the gas. Not that there's a
machine under the bonnet that clatteringly detonates liquid distilled
from ancient fossilized biomass (just a compact gateway generator and a
sound effects unit), but it feels the same, in terms of your
interaction with your surroundings.
Meanwhile, outside the cars and the corridors
and the gates and the head games we deny playing with each other,
there's a real universe. And sometimes it smacks you in the face.
Like now. I have known all along, in an abstract
kind of way, that we're living in a series of roughly rectangular
terrain features laid out on the curved inner surface of several huge
colony cylinders, spinning to provide centripetal acceleration (a
substitute for gravity), in orbit around who-knows-what brown dwarf
stars. The sky is a display screen, the wind is air-conditioning, the
road tunnels are a necessary part of the illusion, and if you go for a
walk in the overgrown back lot you'll find a steep hill or cliff that
you can't climb because it goes vertical only a few meters up. I
haven't given much thought to how it's all stitched together, other
than to assume there are T-gates in each road tunnel. But what if there's another way out?
I clutch his hand. "Stop! Turn your flashlight back. Yes, there, right there."
"What is it?" he asks.
"Let's see." I tug him toward it. "Come on, I need the light."
The tunnel walls are made of smoothly curved
slabs of concrete set edge to edge, forming a hollow tube maybe eight
meters in diameter. The road is a flat sheet of asphalt, its edges
meeting the walls of the tube just under the halfway point up its
sides. (Now that I think about it, what could be running under the road
deck? It might be solid, but then again, there could be just about
anything down there.) What I've noticed is a rectangular groove in the
opposite wall. Close up I can see it's about a meter wide and two
meters high, a plain metal panel sunk into one side of the tunnel.
There's no sign of any handle or lock except for a hole a few
millimeters in diameter drilled halfway up it, just beside one edge.
"Give me the flashlight."
"Here." He passes it without argument. I get as
close to the wall as I can and shine the light into the crack. Nothing,
no sign of hinges or anything. I crouch down and shine it into the
hole. Nothing there, either. "Hmm."
"What is it?" he asks anxiously.
"It's a door. Can't say more than that." I
straighten up. "We can't do anything about it right now. Let's go home
and think about this."
"But if we go home, we won't be able to talk!"
In the dim light of the flashlight, his eyes look very white. "They'll
overhear everything."
"They don't see everything," I reassure him. "Come on, let's go home. This afternoon I want you to mow the lawn."
"But I—"
"The lawn mower is in the garage," I continue implacably. "Along with other things."
"But—"
"If they're not waiting for us when we get home,
they're not monitoring the tunnels, Sam. Noticed your netlink recently?
No? Well, we don't seem to have lost any points just now. There are
gaps in the surveillance coverage. I think I know somewhere else
they're not monitoring, and you ought to know we're not the only people
who want out."
I feel safe telling him that much, even though
if they brainscoop me and feed me to Curious Yellow right now, it'll
take down three of us: me and Sam and Janis. Kay may be in denial right
now but she—No, you've got to keep thinking of him as Sam,
I tell myself—isn't, I think, going to sell me to the bad guys. I
am pretty sure I can read Sam well enough now to know what's bugging
him. It's funny how I was in lust with Kay but couldn't tell if I
trusted her. Now I trust Sam, but I doubt I'll ever fuck him again.
Life is strange, isn't it? "You do want out, don't you?" I ask.
"Yes." He sounds tremulous.
"Then you're going to have to trust me for a
little bit longer because I don't have an escape plan yet." I squeeze
his hand. "But I'm working on it."
Together, we walk toward the light.
THAT afternoon
Sam changes into jeans and a T-shirt and mows the lawn. I'm in the
garage wearing overalls and safety goggles, because I've made a mold
from the plaster of paris dies and I'm pouring solder into it, casting
a lead copy of the key to Fiore's cabinet of curiosities. The lead key
won't turn in the lock, but it'll do okay as a template for the
engraving disk and the small bar of brass I've got waiting.
To confuse anyone who's watching, I've got some
props sitting around—a wooden wall plaque purchased from the
fishing store, a plate to engrave with some meaningless dedication.
When I showed Sam what I was up to he blinked rapidly, then nodded.
"It's for thewomen's freehand cross-stitch club," I said, pulling the explanation right out of my ass. There is no such club, but it sounds right, a backup explanation that will trigger a reflex in whatever watcher is scanning us for anomalous behavior.
We may be living in a glass jar with bright
lights and monitors trained on us the whole time, but it's not likely
that everything we do is being watched by a live human being in real
time. We massively outnumber the experimenters, and they're primarily
interested in our public socialization. (At least, that's the official
story.) To monitor an intelligent organism properly requires observers
with a theory of mind at least as strong as the subject. We subjects
outnumber the experimenters by a couple of orders of magnitude, and
I've seen no sign of strongly superhuman metaintelligences being
involved in this operation, so I think the odds are on my side. If we are
up against the weakly godlike, I might as well throw in the towel right
now. But if not . . . You can delegate all you want to
subconscious mechanisms, but you run the risk of them missing things. Sic transit gloria panopticon.
The Church services are almost certainly
monitored in every imaginable way. But after Church, Fiore and his
friends will be too busy re-running the lynching from every imaginable
angle and trying to figure out how the social dynamics of a genuine
dark ages mob operate. They won't be watching what I get up to in the
garage until much later, probably just a bored glance at a replay to
make sure I'm not fucking my neighbor's husband or weeping hysterically
in a corner. Because they're used to using A-gates to fab any physical
artifacts they need, they probably look at what I'm doing as some sort
of dark ages hobby and view me as a slightly dull but basically
well-adjusted wife. I even gained a couple of points last week for my
weaving. I laboriously hand-wove a Faraday cage lining for my shoulder
bag right under their noses, and they treated it as if I was diligently
practicing a traditional feminine craft! There are gaps in their
surveillance and bigger gaps in their understanding, and those gaps are
going to be their downfall.
Concentrating on making the key and thinking
about how much I am beginning to hate them is a good way for me to
avoid confronting what happened outside the Church this morning. It's
also a good distraction from the wall I walked into in my head, or the
door in the tunnel, or any of the other troubling shit that's happened
since I woke up this morning and thought it was going to be just
another boring Sunday.
After what feels like a few infinitely tense
minutes—but the lying clock insists it's been the best part of
four hours—I emerge from the garage. The hot morning sunlight has
softened into a roseate afternoon glow, and insects creak beneath a
turquoise sky. It looks like I've missed an idyllic summer afternoon. I
feel shaky, tired, and very hungry indeed. I'm also sweating like a
pig, and I probably stink. There's no sign of Sam, so I go indoors and
hit the bathroom, dump my clothes and dial the shower up to a cool
deluge until it washes everything away.
When I get out of the shower I rummage around in
my wardrobe until I find a sundress, then head downstairs with the
vague idea of sorting out something to eat. A microwave dinner perhaps,
to eat on the rear deck while the illusory sun sets. Instead, I run
into Sam coming in through the front door. He looks haggard.
"Where've you been?" I ask. "I was going to sort out some food."
"I've been with Martin and Greg and Alf, down at
the churchyard." I look at him, closer. His shirt is sweat-stained, and
there's dirt under his fingernails. "Doing the burying."
"Burying?" For a moment I don't get what he's
talking about, then it clicks into place and I feel dizzy, as if the
whole world's revolving around my head. "The—you should have told
me."
"You were busy." He shrugs dismissively.
I peer at him, concerned. "You look tired. Why don't you go have a shower? I'll fix you some food."
He shakes his head. "I'm not hungry."
"Yes you are." I take hold of his right arm and
lead him toward the kitchen. "You didn't eat any lunch unless you
sneaked a snack while I wasn't looking, and it's getting late." I take
a deep breath. "How bad was it?"
"It was—" He stops and takes a deep breath. "It was—" He stops again. Then he bursts into tears.
I am absolutely certain that Sam has seen death
before, up close and personal. He's at least three gigs old, he's been
through memory surgery, he's experienced the psychopathic dissociation
that comes with it, he's hung out with dueling fools like me in my
postsurgery phase, and he's lived among pretech aliens for whom violent
death and disease are all part of life's unpalatable banquet. But
there's an enormous difference between the effects of a semiformal duel
between consenting adults, with A-gate backups to make resurrection a
minor headache, and cleaning up after a random act of senseless
brutality in a Church parking lot.
Forget about no backups, no second chances,
nobody coming home again scratching their heads and wondering what was
in the two kiloseconds of their life that's just vanished. The
difference is that it could have been you. Because, when you
get down to it, the one thing you know for sure is that if the toad in
the pulpit had got the wrong name, it would have been you up
there in the branches, choking and twitching on the end of a rope. It
could have been you. It wasn't, but that's nothing but an accident of
fate. Sam's just back from the wars, and he's definitely got the
message.
Maybe that's why we end up on the wooden bench
on the back deck, me sitting up and him with his head in my lap, not
crying like a baby but sobbing occasionally between gasping breaths.
I'm stroking his hair and trying not to let it get to me either
way—the jagged razor edge of sympathy, or the urge to tell him to
pull himself together and get with the program. Judgment hurts, and
he'll talk it out in his own way if I just lend him an ear. If
not—
Well, I could have used a listener the other night, but I won't hold that against him.
"Greg rang while you were in the shed," he says
eventually. "Asked if I'd help clean up. What I was saying this
morning. Not letting them give me any shit. I figured part of that was,
if I couldn't do anything at the time I could maybe do some good
afterward." And he's off again, sobbing for about a minute.
When he stops, he manages to speak quietly and
evenly, in thoughtful tones. It sounds as if he's explaining it to
himself, trying to make sense of it. "I caught a taxi to Church. Greg
told me to bring a shovel, so I did. I got there and Martin and Alf
were there, along with Liz, Phil's—former wife. Mal is in
hospital. He tried to stop them. They hurt him. The mob, I mean. There
are other decent people here, but they're mostly too frightened to even
help bury the bodies or comfort the widow."
"Widow." It's a new word in our little prison,
like "pregnant" and "lynch mob." It's an equally unwelcome arrival.
(Along with "mortal" if we stay here long enough, I guess.)
"Greg got a ladder from inside the Church hall,
and Martin went up to cut down the bodies. Liz was very quiet when we
got Phil down, but couldn't take it when he was lowering Esther.
Luckily Xara showed up with a bottle of rye and sat with her. Then Greg
and Martin and Alf and me started digging. Actually, we started on the
spot, but Alf said it was Fiore's fault, and we should use the
graveyard. So we did that, while Alf got some boards. I think we did it
deep enough. None of us has ever done this before."
He goes silent for a long time. I stroke the hair back from the side of his face. "Twenty cycles," he says after a while.
"Seven months?"
"Without backups," he confirms.
It's a frightening amount of time to lose,
that's for sure. Even more frightening is the fact that their last
backups are locked up in the assembler firewall that isolates
YFH-Polity from the outside world—while I'm not certain it's
infected with Curious Yellow, I have my suspicions. (CY copies itself
between A-gates via the infected victims' netlinks, doesn't it? And the
suspiciously restricted functionality of our netlinks inside YFH
worries me.) There might not be any older copies of Phil or Esther on
file elsewhere. If that's the case, and if we can't phage-clean the
infected nodes, we might lose them for good.
Sam is silent for a long time. We stay there on
the bench as the light reddens and dims, and after a while I just rest
my hands on his shoulder and watch the trees at the far end of the
garden. Then, with absolutely no buildup, he murmurs, "I knew who you
were almost from the beginning."
I stroke his cheek again, but don't say anything.
"I figured it out inside a week. You were
spending all your time talking about this friend you were supposed to
be looking out on the inside for. Cass, you thought."
I keep stroking, to calm myself as much as anything else.
"I think I was in shock at first. You seemed so
dynamic and confident and self-possessed before—it was bad enough
waking up in that room and finding I was this enormous bloated
shambling thing, but then to see you like that, it really scared me. I
thought at first I was wrong, but no. So I kept quiet."
I stop moving my hands around, leaving one on his shoulder and one beside his head.
"I nearly killed myself on the second day, but you didn't notice."
Shit. I blink. "I was dealing with my own problems," I manage to say.
"Yes, I can see that now." His voice is gentle,
almost sleepy. "But I couldn't forgive you for a while. I've been here
before, you know. Not here-here, but somewhere like here."
"The ice ghouls?" I ask, before I can stop myself.
"Yes." He tenses, then pushes himself upright.
"A whole planet full of pre-Acceleration sapients who probably aren't
going to make it without outside help because they took so long
bootstrapping their techné that they ran out of easily
accessible fossil fuels." He swings his legs round and sits upright,
next to me but just too far away to touch. "Living and breeding and
dying of old age and sometimes fighting wars and sometimes starving in
famines and disasters and plagues."
"How long were you there, again?" I ask.
"Two gigs." He turns his head and looks straight
at me. "I was part of a, a—I guess you'd call it a reproductive
unit. A family. I was an ice ghoul, you know. I was there from
late adolescence through to senescence, but rather than let them nurse
me, I ran out onto the tundra and used my netlink to call for upload.
Nearly left it too late. I was terminally ill and close to being
nestridden." Sam looks distant. "All the pre-Acceleration tool-using
sapients we've seen use K-type reproductive strategies. I'd outlived my
partners, but I had three children, their assorted cis-mates and trans-mates, and more grandchildren than—"
He sighs.
"You seem to want me to know this," I say. "Are you sure about that?"
"I don't know." He looks at me. "I just wanted
you to know who I am and where I come from." He looks down at the
stones between his feet. "Not what I am now, which is a travesty. I
feel dirty."
I stand up. He's gone on for long enough, I
think. "Okay, so let me get this straight. You're a former
xeno-ornithologist who got way too close to your subjects for your own
emotional stability. You've got a bad case of body-image dysphoria that
YFH failed to spot in their excuse for an entry questionnaire, you're
good at denial—self and other—and you're a pathetic failure
at suicide." I stare at him. "What am I missing?" I grab his hands: "What am I missing?" I shout at him.
At this point I realize several things at once. I am really, really
angry with him, although that's not all I feel by a long way, because
it's not the kind of anger you feel at a stranger or an enemy. And
while I've been working out like crazy and I'm in much better physical
shape than I was when I came here, Sam is standing up, too, and he has
maybe thirty centimeters and thirty kilos on me because he's male, and
he's built like a tank. Maybe getting angry and yelling in the face of
someone who's that much bigger than I and who's shocky right now from
repeated bad experiences isn't a very wise thing to do, but I don't
care.
"* * *," he mumbles.
"What?" I state at him. "Would you care to repeat that?"
"* * *," he says, so quietly I can't hear it over the noise of the blood pounding in my ears. "That's why I didn't kill myself."
I shake my head. "I don't think I'm hearing you properly."
He glares at me. "Who do you think you are?" he demands.
"Depends. I was a historian, a long time ago.
Then there were the wars, and I was a soldier. Then I became the kind
of soldier who needs a historian's training, then I lost my memory."
I'm glaring right back at him. "Now I'm a ditzy, ineffectual housewife
and part-time librarian, okay? But I'll tell you this—one day I'm
going to be a soldier again."
"But those are all externals! They're not you. You won't tell me anything! Where do you come from? Did you ever have a family? What happened to them?"
He looks anxious, and suddenly I realize he's afraid of me. Afraid? Of me?
I take a step back. And then I register what my face probably looks
like right now, and it's like all my blood is replaced with ice water
of an instant, because his question has dredged up a memory that was, I
think, one of the ones my earlier self deliberately forgot before the
surgery, because he knew it would surface again and forgetting it hurt
but knowing it might be erased by crude surgical intervention was even
worse. And I sit down hard on the bench and look away from him because
I don't want to see his sympathy.
"They all died in the war," I hear myself saying woodenly. "And I don't want to talk about it."
WHEN I sleep,
another horror story dredges itself up from my suppressed memories and
comes to visit. This time I know it's genuine and true and really
happened to me, and there's nothing I can do to change it in any
detail—because that's what makes it so nightmarish.
The ending has already been written, and it is not a happy one.
In the dream, I am a gracile male orthohuman
with long, flowing green hair and what my partners describe as a
delightful laugh. I am a lot younger—barely three gigs—and
I'm also happy, at least at first. I'm in a stable family relationship
with three other core partners, plus various occasional liaisons with
five or six fuckbuddies. We're fully bisexual, either naturally or via
a limbic system mod copied from bonobos. My family has two children,
and we're thinking about starting another two in half a gig or so. I'm
also lucky enough to have a vocation, researching the history of the
theory of mind—an aspect of cultural ideology that only became
important after the Acceleration, and which goes in and out of fashion,
but which I hold to be critically important. The history of my field,
for example, tells us that for almost a gigasecond during the old-style
twenty-third century, most of humanity-in-exile were zimboes,
quasi-conscious drones operating under the aegis of an overmind. How
that happened and how the cognitive dictatorship was broken is
something I'm studying with considerable interest and not a few field
trips to old memory temples.
One of these visits is the reason I am not at
home with my family when Curious Yellow comes howling out of nowhere to
erase large chunks of history, taking with it an entire interstellar
civilization, and (to make things personal) my family.
I'm visiting a Mobile Archive Sucker in the full
physical flesh when Curious Yellow first appears. The MASucker is a
lumbering starship, effectively a mobile cylinder habitat, powered by
plasma piped from the interior of a distant A0 supergiant via T-gate.
It wallows along at low relativistic speeds between brown dwarf star
systems, which in this part of the galaxy are spaced less than a parsec
apart. During the multigigasecond intervals between close encounters,
the crew retreats into template-frozen backup, reincarnating from the
ship's assemblers whenever things get interesting. The ship is largely
self-sufficient and self-maintaining (apart from its stellar tap, and a
tightly firewalled T-gate to the premises of the research institute
that created it centuries ago). Its internal systems are entirely
offnet from the polity at large because it's designed for a mission
duration of up to a terasecond, and it was envisaged from the start
that civilization would probably collapse at least once within the
working life of the ship. That's why I've come out here in person to
interview Vecken, the ship's Kapitan, who lived shortly after the
cognitive dictatorship and may have recollections of some of the
survivors.
Now here's a curious thing: I can't remember
their faces. I remember that Lauro, Iambic-18, and Neual were not
simply important to me, not just lovers, but in a very real way defined
who I was. A large chunk of my sense of identity was configured around
this key idea that I wasn't solitary: that I was part of a group, that
we'd collectively adjusted our neuroendocrinology so that just being
around the others gave us a mild endorphin rush—what used to be a
haphazard process called "falling in love"—and we'd focused on
complementary interests and skills and vocations. It wasn't so much a
family as a superorganism, and it was a fulfilling, blissful state of
affairs. I think I may have had a lonely earlier life, but I don't
remember much of that because I guess it paled into insignificance in
comparison.
But I can't remember their faces, and even now—a lifetime after the grief has ebbed—that bugs me.
Neual was quick with hands and feet, taking
slyly sarcastic delight in winding me up. Lauro had perfect manners but
lost it when making love with us. Iambic-18 was a radical xenomorph,
sometimes manifesting in more than one body at the same time when the
fancy took it. Our children . . .
Are all dead, and it is unquestionably my fault.
The nature of Curious Yellow is that it propagates stealthily between
A-gates, creating a peer-to-peer network that exchanges stegged
instructions using people as data packets. If you have the misfortune
to be infected, it installs its kernel in your netlink, and when you
check into an A-gate for backup or transport—which proceeds
through your netlink—CY is the first thing to hit the gate's
memory buffer. A-gate control nodes are supposedly designed so that
they can't execute data, but whoever invented CY obviously found a
design flaw in the standard architecture. People who have been
disassembled and reassembled by the infected gates infect fresh A-gates
as they travel. CY uses people as a disease vector.
The original CY infection that hit the Republic
of Is installed a payload that was designed to redact historical
information surrounding some event—I'm not sure what, but I
suspect it's an aftershock left by the destruction of one of the old
cognitive dictatorships—by editing people as they passed through
infected gates. But it only activated once the infection had spread
across the entire network. So Curious Yellow appeared everywhere with
shocking abruptness, after spreading silently for hundreds of megasecs.
In my memory-dream, I am taking tea in the bridge of the Grateful for Duration,
which in that time takes the form of a temple to a lake kami from old
Nippon. I'm sitting cross-legged opposite Septima (the ship's curator)
and waiting for Kapitan Vecken to arrive. As I spool through some
questions I stored offline, my netlink hiccups. There's a
cache-coherency error, it seems—the ship's T-gate has just shut
down.
"Is something going on?" I ask Septima. "I've just been offlined."
"Might be." Septima looks irritated. "I'll ask
someone to investigate." She stares right through me, a reminder that
there are three or four other copies of this strange old archivist
wandering the concentric cylinder habs of the ship.
She blinks rapidly. "It appears to be a security
alert. Some sort of intruder just hit our transcription airgap. If you
wait here a moment, I'll go and find out what's going on."
She walks over toward the door of the teahouse
and, as far as I can reconstruct later, this is the precise moment,
when a swarm of eighteen thousand three hundred and twenty-nine
wasp-sized attack robots erupt from the assembler in my family's home.
We live in an ancient dwelling patterned on a lost house of old Urth
called Fallingwater, a conservative design from before the
Acceleration. There are doors and staircases and windows in this house,
but no internal T-gates that can be closed, and the robots rapidly
overpower Iambic-18, who is in the kitchen with the gate.
They deconstruct Iambic-18 so rapidly there is
no time for a scream of pain or pulse of netlinked agony. Then they fan
out through the house in a malignant buzzing fog, bringing rapid death.
A brief spray of blood here and a scream cut short there. The household
assembler has been compromised by Curious Yellow, our backups willfully
erased to make room for the wasps of tyranny, and, although I don't
know it yet, my life has been gracelessly cut loose from everything
that gave it meaning.
After the executions, they eat the physical
bodies and excrete more robot parts, ready to self-assemble into
further attack swarms that will continue the hunt for enemies of
Curious Yellow.
I know about this now because Curious Yellow
kept logs of all the somatic kills it made. Nobody knows why Curious
Yellow did this—one theory is that it is a report for CY's
creators—but I have watched the terahertz radar map of the
security wasps eating my family and my children so many times that it
is burned into my mind. I'm one of the rare survivors among the
millions targeted as somatic enemies, to be destroyed rather than
edited. And now it's as if I'm watching it again for the first time,
reliving the horror that made me plead with the Linebarger Cats to take
me in and turn me into a tank. (But that was half a gigasecond later,
when the Grateful for Duration made contact with one of the isolated redoubts of the resistance.)
I realize I'm
awake, and it's still nighttime. My cheeks itch from the salty tracks
of tears shed in my sleep, and I'm curled up in an uncomfortable
position, close to one edge of the bed. There's an arm around my waist,
and a breathing breeze on the back of my neck. For a moment I can't
work it out, but then it begins to make sense to me. "I'm awake now," I
murmur.
"Oh. Good." He sounds sleepy. How long has he
been here? I went to bed alone—I feel a momentary stab of panic
at the thought that he's here uninvited, but I don't want to be alone.
Not now.
"Were you asleep?" I ask.
He yawns. "Must have. Dozed off." His arm
tenses, and I tense, too, and push myself back toward the curve of his
chest and legs. "You were unhappy."
"What I didn't tell you earlier." And I'm still not sure it's a good idea to tell him. "My family. Curious Yellow killed them."
"What? But Curious Yellow didn't kill, it edited—"
"Not everyone." I lean against him. "Most people
it edited. Some of us it hunted down and murdered. The ones who might
have been able to work out who made it, I think."
"I didn't know that."
"Not many people do. You were either directly
affected, in which case you were probably dead, or it happened to
someone else, and you were busy rebuilding your life and trying to make
your struggling firewalled micropolity work without all the external
inputs provided by the rest of Is-ness. A gig after the end of the war
it was old news."
"But not for you."
I can feel Sam's tension through his arm around me.
"Look, I'm tired, and I don't want to revisit
it. Old pains, all right?" I try and relax against the side of his
body. "I've become a creature ofsolitary habits. Didn't do to get too close to anyone during the war, and since then, haven't had the opportunity."
His breathing is deep and even. Maybe he's
already asleep. I close my eyes and try to join him, but it takes me a
long time to drift off. I can't help wondering how badly he must have
been missing contact with another human being, to share my bed again.
MONDAY is a
working day, and it's also usually a lunch date, but I'm not about to
break bread with Jen after yesterday's events. I head for work with the
brass key hidden in my security bag. Once inside I rip into the filing
and cleaning immediately. It's midmorning before I realize that Janis
hasn't arrived yet.
I hope she's all right. I don't remember seeing
her yesterday, but if she's heard about what happened—well, I
don't know how close to the victims she was, but I can only imagine
what she must be going through if she knew them well. She was feeling
ill a couple of days ago—how is she now?
I head for the front desk. Business is dead
today, and I haven't had a single visitor, so I have no qualms about
flipping the sign on the door to CLOSED for a while. In the staff room
there's a file of administrative stuff, and after leafing through it
for a bit, I find Janis's home number. I dial it, and after a
worryingly long time someone answers the telephone.
"Janis?"
Her voice sounds tired, even through the distortion the telephone link seems to be designed to add. "Reeve, is that you?"
"Yes. I was getting worried about you. Are you all right?"
"I've been sick today. And to tell the truth, I didn't feel like coming in. Do you mind?"
I look around. "No, the place is dead as
a—" I stop myself just in time. "Listen, why don't you take a
couple of days off? You were going to be leaving in a couple of months
anyway, there's no point overdoing it. If you want, I'll drop round
with some books on my next day off, day after tomorrow. How about that?"
"That sounds great," she says gratefully, and after a bit more chat I hang up.
I'm just shifting the CLOSED sign back to OPEN when a long black limousine draws up at the curb outside. I manage a sharp intake of breath—What's Fiore doing here today?—before
the Priest gets out, and then, uncharacteristically, holds the door
open for someone else. Someone wearing a purple dress and a skullcap. I
realize exactly who it must be—the Bishop: Yourdon.
The Bishop turns out to be as cadaverously thin
and tall as Fiore is squat and bulbous. A stork and a toad. There's a
peculiarly sallow cast to his skin, and his cheekbones stand out like
blades. He wears spectacles with thick hornlike rectangular frames, and
his hair hugs his scalp in lank swatches the color of rotten ivory. He
strides forward, skeletal-looking hands writhing together, as Fiore
bumbles along huffing and puffing to keep up in his wake. "I say, I
say!" Fiore calls. "Please—"
The Bishop pushes the library door open, then
pauses. His eyes are a very pale blue, with slightly yellowish whites,
and his gaze is icily contemptuous. "You've fucked up before, Fiore,"
he hisses. "I do wish you'd keep your little masturbatory fantasies to
yourself in future." Then he turns round to face me.
"Hello?" I force a smile.
He looks at me as if I'm a machine. "I am Bishop Yourdon. Please take me to the document repository."
"Ah, yes, certainly." I hurry out from behind the desk and wave him toward the back.
Fiore harrumphs and breathes heavily as he
waddles after us, but Yourdon moves with bony grace, as if all his
joints have been replaced with well-lubricated bearings. Something
about him makes me shudder. The look he gave Fiore—I can't
remember having seen such an expression of pure contempt on a human
face in a very long time. I lead them to the room; the Grim Reaper
stalking along behind me in angry silence, followed by a bumbling
oleaginous toad.
I stand aside as we reach the reference section,
and Fiore fumbles with his keys, visibly wilting under Yourdon's fuming
gaze. He gets the door open and darts inside. Yourdon pauses, and fixes
me with an ice-water stare. "We are not to be disturbed," he informs
me, "for any reason whatsoever. Do you understand?"
I nod vigorously. "I, I'll be at the front desk if you need me." My teeth are nearly chattering. What is it with this guy? I've met misanthropes before, but Yourdon is something special.
Fiore and the Bishop hang out in the archive,
doing whatever it is they do in there for almost three hours. At a
couple of points I hear raised voices, Fiore's unctuous pleading
followed by the Bishop hissing back at him like an angry snake. I sit
behind the desk, forcing myself not to look over my shoulder every ten
seconds, and try to read a book about the history of witch-hunts in
preindustrial Europa and Merka. It contains disturbing echoes of what's
going on here, communities fractured into mutually mistrustful factions
that compete to denounce one another to greedy spiritual authorities
drunk on temporal power. However, I find it hard to concentrate while
the snake and the toad in the back room are making noises like they're
trying to sting each other to death.
It's well into my normal lunch hour when Fiore
and Yourdon surface. Fiore looks subdued and resentful. Yourdon appears
to be in a better mood, but if this is his good humor, I'd hate to see
him when he's angry. When he smiles he looks like a skull someone's
stretched a sheet of skin over, colorless lips peeling back from
yellowing teeth in a grin completely bereft of amusement. "You'd better
get back to work then," he calls to Fiore as he strides past my desk
without so much as a nod in my direction. "You've got a lot of lost
headway to make up." Then he barges out through the front door as the
long black limousine cruises round the edge of the block, ready to
convey its master back to his usual haunts.
A few minutes later Fiore bumbles past me with a
sullen glare. "I'll be round tomorrow," he mutters, then stomps out the
door. No limousinefor the Priest, who staggers off on foot in the noonday heat. My, how the mighty are fallen!
I watch him until he's out of sight, then walk
over and flip the sign on the door to CLOSED. Then I lock up and take a
deep breath. I wasn't expecting this to happen today, but it's too good
an opportunity to miss. I go fetch my bag from the staff room, then
head for the repository.
It's time for the moment of truth. Less than a
hundred seconds after Fiore left the building, I slide the laboriously
copied key into the lock. My heart is pounding as I turn it. For a
moment it refuses to budge, but I jiggle it—the teeth aren't
quite engaging with the pins—and something falls into position
and it squeals slightly and gives way. I push the door wide, then reach
for the light switch.
I'm in a small room with no windows, no chairs,
no tables, one bare electric bulb dangling on a wire from the ceiling,
bookshelves on three walls, and a trapdoor in the middle of the floor.
"What is this shit?" I ask aloud, looking round.
There are box files on all the shelves, masses
of box files. But there are no titles on the spines of the boxes, just
serial numbers. Everything's dusty except the trapdoor, which has been
opened recently. I inhale, then nearly go cross-eyed trying not to
sneeze. If this is Fiore's idea of housekeeping, it's no wonder Yourdon
was pissed at him.
I look at the nearest shelf and pull down one of
the files at random. There's a button catch and I open it to find it's
full of paper, yellowing sheets of the stuff, machine-smooth, columns
of hexadecimal numbers printed in rows of dumb ink. There's a sequence
number at the top of each sheet, and it takes me a few seconds to
figure out what I'm looking at. It's a serialized mind map, what the
ancients would have called a "hex dump." Pages and pages of it. The box
file probably holds about five hundred sheets. If all the others I see
contain more of this stuff, then I'm probably looking at about a
hundred thousand sheets, each containing maybe ten thousand characters.
Whatever is stored in this incredibly inefficient serial medium, it
isn't very big—about the same size as a small mammal's genome,
maybe, once you squeeze out all the redundant exons. It's three or four
orders of magnitude too small to be a map of a human being.
I shake my head and put the box file back. From
the level of dust on top of it, it hasn't been touched for quite a
time. I don't know what this stuff is, but it isn't what Fiore and
Yourdon came here to look at. Which leaves the trapdoor.
I bend down and grab the brass ring, then lift.
The wooden slab hinges up at the back, and I see a flight of steps
leading down. They're carpeted, and there are wooden handrails to
either side. Okay, so there's a secret basement under the library, I
tell myself, trying not to giggle with fear. What have I been working
on top of?
Of course I go downstairs. After what Fiore did
to Phil and Esther, I'm probably dead if they find me in the
repository. Taking the next step is a logical progression, nothing more.
The steps go down into twilight, but they don't
go down very far. The floor is three meters below the trapdoor, and
there's a light switch on the rail at the bottom. I flick it and glance
around.
Guess what? I'm not in the dark ages anymore.
If I was still in the dark ages, this would be a
musty basement with brick walls and wooden lath ceiling, or maybe
poured concrete and steel beams. They weren't big on structural diamond
back then, and their floors didn't grow zebrastripe fur, and they used
short-lived electrical bulbs instead of surfacing their ceilings with
fluorescent paint. There's a very retro-looking lounger in a mode that
I'm sure went out of fashion some time between the end of the Oort
colonial era and the first of the conservationista republics, and some
weird black-resin chairs that look like the skeletons of insects, if
insects grew four meters tall and supported themselves with
endoskeletons. Hmm. I glance over my shoulder. Yes, if Yourdon
and Fiore were having a knockdown shouting match in here with the hatch
open, I might just about have heard it at the front desk.
The other items in the basement are a lot more disconcerting.
For starters, there's something that I am almost
certain is a full military A-gate. It's a stubby cylinder about two
meters high and two meters in diameter, its shell slick with the white
opacity of carbonitrile armor. There's a ruggedized control workstation
next to it, perched on a rough wooden plinth—you use those things
in the field when you'reoperating under emission control, to make field expedient whatever it is you need in order to save your ass. Got plutonium? Got nuke.
Not that I've got the authentication ackles to switch the thing
on—if I mess with it I'll probably set off about a billion
alarms—but its presence here is as incongruous as a biplane in
the bronze age.
For seconds, the walls are lined with racks of
shelving bearing various pieces of equipment. There's what I'm fairly
certain is a generator pack for a Vorpal sword, like the one on the
Church altar. That brings back unpleasant memories, because I remember
those swords and what you can do with them—blood fountaining out
into a room where the headless corpses are already stacked like
cordwood beside the evacuation gate—and it makes me feel
nauseous. I take a quick breath, then I look at the shelves on the
other side of the room. There are lots of them, some of them stacked
with the quaint rectangular bricks of high-density storage, but most of
the space is given over to ring binders full of paper. This time,
instead of serial numbers on the spines, there are old-fashioned
human-readable titles, although they don't mean much to me. Like Revised Zimbardo Study Protocol 4.0, and Church Scale Moral Delta Coefficients, and Extended Host Selection Criteria—
Host selection criteria? I pull that
one off the shelf and begin reading. An indeterminate time later I
shake myself and put it back. I feel dirty, somehow contaminated. I
really wish I didn't understand what it said, but I'm afraid I do, and
now I'm going to have to figure out what to do with the knowledge.
I stare at the A-gate, speculating. There's a
very good chance that it's not infected with Curious Yellow, because
they wouldn't want to risk infecting themselves. But it still won't
help me escape, and it probably won't work for me anyway unless I can
hold a metaphorical gun to Fiore's head, threaten him with something
even more frightening than the prospect of Yourdon's revenge—and
if I've got the measure of Yourdon, any revenge he'd bother to carry
out would truly be a worse fate than death.
Shit. I need to think about this some more. But at least I've got until tomorrow, when Fiore returns.
BUSINESS is dead, literally dead. After I go back up top and lock the repository, I flip the door sign to OPEN
and sit at the front desk for a couple of hours, waiting tensely to see
if the zombies are going to come and drag me off to prison. But nothing
happens. I haven't tripped any alarms by my choice of lunchtime reading
matter. With hindsight it's not too surprising. If there's one place
Fiore and Yourdon and the mysterious Hanta won't want under
surveillance, it's wherever they're hiding their experimental tools.
Their kind doesn't thrive in the scrutiny of the panopticon. Which, as
it happens, gives me an idea.
Midway through the afternoon I lock up for half
an hour and hit the nearest electronics shop for a useful gadget. Then
I spend a nervous hour installing it in the cellar. Afterward, I feel
smug. If it works, it'll serve Fiore and Yourdon right for being
overconfident—and for making this crazy simulation too realistic.
Business is so dead that I go home half an hour
early. It's a warm summer evening, and I've got about two kilometers to
walk. I barely see anyone. There are some park attendants out mowing
the grass, but no ordinary folks. Did I miss a holiday or something? I
don't know. I put one foot in front of the other until I hit the road
out of the town center, follow it down into a short stretch of tunnel,
then back into daylight and a quiet residential street with trees and a
lazy, almost stagnant creek off to one side.
I hear voices and catch a faint smell of cooking
food from one of the houses as I walk past. People are home—I
haven't mysteriously been abandoned all on my own. What a shame.
I briefly fantasize that the academicians of the Scholastium have
figured out that all is not well in YFH-Polity and arrived to evacuate
all of us inmates while I waited behind the library counter. It's a
nice daydream.
Pretty soon I come to the next road tunnel
linking hab segments. This time I pull out a flashlight as I pass out
of sight of the entrance. Yes, just as I guessed—there's a
recessed doorlike panel in one wall of the tunnel. I pull out a notepad
and add it to my list. I'm slowly building up a map of the interrelated
segments. It looks like a cyclic directed graph, and that's exactly
what it is, a network of nodes connected by linesrepresenting roads with T-gates along their length. Now I'm adding in the maintenance hatches.
You can't actually see a T-gate—it's just
that one moment you're in one sector and the next moment you've walked
through an invisible brane and you're in another sector—but the
positioning of the hatches can probably tell me something if I'm just
smart enough to figure it out. Ditto the order of the network: if it's
left-handed or right-handed, or if there's a Hamiltonian path through
it. In the degenerate case, there may be no T-gates at all; this might
actually be a single hab cylinder, divided up by bulkheads that can be
sealed against loss of pressure. Or all the sectors may be in different
places, parsecs apart. I'm trying to avoid making assumptions. If you
don't search with open eyes, you risk missing things.
I get home at about my usual time, tense and
nervous but also curiously relieved. What's done is done. Tomorrow
Fiore will either notice my meddling, or he won't. (Or with any luck
he'll assume Yourdon did it, which I think is equally likely. There's
no love lost between those two, and if I play my cards right, I can
exploit their division.) Either way I should learn something. If I
don't . . . well, I know too much to stop now. If they
knew how much I've figured out about their little game, they'd kill me
immediately. No messing, no ritual humiliation in front of the score
whores in Church, just a rapid brainsuck and termination. Fiore's
playing with fire.
Sam is in the living room, watching TV. I tiptoe
past him and head upstairs, badly in need of a shower. When I get to my
room I shed my clothes, then go back to the bathroom and turn the water
on, meaning to wash today's stresses away.
Seconds after I get in I hear footsteps, then the bathroom door opening. "Reeve?"
"Yeah, it's me," I call.
"Need to talk. Urgently."
"After I finish," I say, nettled. "Can't it wait?"
"I suppose."
Small torments add up; I'm now in a thoroughly
bad mood. What's life coming to, when I can't even take a shower
without interruption? I soap myself down methodically then wash my
hair, taking care to rub the inefficient surfactant gel into my scalp.
After a couple of minutes of rinsing, I turn off the water and open the
door to reach for my towel, to be confronted by a surprised-looking Sam.
"Pass me the bath sheet," I tell him, trying to
make the best of things. He complies hastily. Months of living in this
goldfish bowl society have done strange things to my body-sense, and I
feel surprisingly awkward about being naked in front of him. I think he
feels it, too. "What's so important?" I step out of the shower as he
holds the towel for me.
"Phone call," he mumbles, trying to look away—his eyes keep drifting back toward me.
"Uh-huh. Who from?" He folds me in the towel as
if I'm a delicate treasure he's trying not to touch. I shiver and try
to ignore it.
"From Fer. He and El, they've heard something bad from Mick, and they're talking about sorting it out."
"Bad." I try to concentrate. The water on my skin is suddenly cold. "What kind of bad?"
"It's Cass, I think." I tense up inside. "Mick
gave them some crazy story about hearing from Fiore. Said the Priest
told him that one of the rules in here is, what was it, ‘be
fruitful and exponentiate.' That you can get a gigantic score bonus for
having children."
"That's not good," I say carefully, "but it might just be Mick acting in character."
"Well, yes, that's what Fer said, but then Mick
told El he was going to get that bonus whether or not Cass wanted it."
He sounds apprehensive. "El wasn't sure what that meant."
My mind races. "Cass wasn't at Church yesterday,
Sam. Last time I saw her she wouldn't talk—she seemed afraid." I
have a nasty feeling that I know what's going on. I really don't want
it to be true.
"Yes, well, Fer called me when El told him Mick
had made some kind of joke about stopping Cass trying to escape for
good. He wasn't sure just what it was but said it didn't sound right.
Reeve, what's going on? What are we going to do if it turns out he's
been tying Cass up while he's been at work, or using physical force, or
something?"
For someone living in a dark ages sim, Sam can
be heartbreakingly naive at times. "Sam, do you know what the word
‘rape' means?"
"I've heard it," he says guardedly. "I thought it had to involve strangers, and usually killing. Do you think—"
I turn round. "We've got to find out what's
going on, and we've got to get her out of there if it's true. I don't
think we can count on the police zombies, or Fiore for that matter, to
help. Fiore's messed up in the head anyway, even Yourdon thinks so." I
pause. "This is very bad."
The thought of what Cass might be going through
horrifies me, especially as I can guess how some of our cohort will
react if we try to rescue her. Before last Sunday I might have been
more hopeful, but now I know better than to expect anything but
gruesome savagery from our neighbors if they think their precious
points are at risk. "I think Janis would help, but she's ill. Alice,
maybe. Angel is scared but will probably follow if we approach her
right. Jen—I don't want Jen around. What about you guys?"
"Fer agrees," Sam says simply. "He doesn't like
the idea either. El, maybe not. I think if I ask, I can get Greg and
Martin and Alf involved. A team." He looks at me oddly.
"No killing," I say, warningly.
He shudders. "No! Never. But—"
"Someone's got to go find out if it's true, or if it was just Mick making a joke in bad taste. Right?"
He nods. "Right. Who?"
"I'll do it," I say flatly. "Tonight. I'm going
to get dressed. You get on the phone to people. Get them round here. I
want to sort out what we're doing before I go in, that way there won't
be any nasty surprises. All right?"
He nods then looks at me, an odd expression in his face. "Anything else?"
"Yes." I lean forward and kiss him quickly on the lips. "Get moving."
THREE hours
later, we're holed up in a vacant house on a quiet residential side
street across the road from what we now know is Cass and Mick's home,
thanks to an obliging zombie taxi driver. This street is still
three-quarters unoccupied. We pile out of our three taxis at
five-minute intervals and go to ground. Fer was among the first to
arrive. He got us into the empty house with a crowbar. There's not a
lot of furniture, and everything is dusty—not to mention dark,
because we don't want to turn on the lights and risk alerting
Mick—but it's better than trying to hide in the front garden for
a couple of hours.
There are only five of us—me, Sam, Fer,
Greg, and Greg's spouse, Tammy. Tammy is determined and very quietly
furious—I think it's because she didn't realize how bad things
really were until Sam phoned Greg. It's nearly midnight, and we're all
tired, but I run through the plan once again.
"Okay, one more time. I'm going to go across the
road and ring the doorbell. I'll ask to see Cass. Depending how Mick
reacts, Sam and Fer, you'll rush him or hang back. I've got the
whistle. One whistle means come in and get me, I need help. Two means
get Mick." I stop. "Greg, Tammy, you take the stockings, pull them over
your heads. We don't want him to recognize you if you have to take Cass
and look after her."
"I hope you're wrong about this," Tammy says grimly.
"So do I, believe me. So do I." I glance sidelong at Fer.
"Mick's not been right in the head since I've known him," Fer mutters.
"Anything else before we go?" I ask, standing up.
"Yes," says Fer. "If you don't whistle, and you don't come out within ten minutes, I'm going in anyway." He grips his crowbar.
"I should hope so." I nod, then get up and head across the road.
Mick's garden is overgrown with weeds, and the
grass is long. There are no lights in the windows, but that doesn't
mean anything. Like our house, there's a conservatory at the front. The
door stands open. I step inside and look at the front door. There's a
new lock drilled into it, big and chunky-looking. I ring the doorbell.
Nothing happens. I ring it again, and a light comes on in the hall. I
tense up, ready for it as I hear a key turn in the lock, then another
key, and the door opens.
"You." It's Mick. He belches at me, and I smell
sour wine on his breath. He's wearing a dirty T-shirt and boxers, and
he's clutching ametal canister with an open top. "What do you want?" He leers at me. "Din't I tellya not to bug me?"
"I want to see Cass," I say evenly. There's stuff piled in the hall. Looks like empty food cartons, rubbish. It smells sickly sweet. "She wasn't at Church on Sunday."
"Yeah?" He raises the can and takes a drink from it, then looks at me slyly. "Come in."
I step over the threshold as he backs into the
house. It looks like it started out as a mirror image of the one Sam
and I live in, but it's been trashed. The hall is stacked with ripped
boxes of ready meals and bits of decaying food. Something upstairs has
leaked, and there's a smelly stain spreading down one wall. "She's
upstairs, resting," he says, gesturing at the staircase. "Whyn't you go
up an' see her?"
I stare at him. "If you think she won't mind."
"She won't."
As I set foot on the staircase he sidles round
below and closes the door, then twists both keys in the locks. "Go on,"
he tells me, "nothin' to worry about." He giggles.
That does it. I've got the whistle on a cord
round my neck, hidden under the jumper I'm wearing. I pull it out and
blow two sharp blasts as I take the steps two at a time. Mick winces,
then turns to look up at me, his face a picture of confusion slowly
turning into anger. "Whatyuh do that for?" he shouts. Then there's a loud thump from behind him as someone hits the door.
I make the top step and glance round quickly.
The master bedroom is on the left, just like in my own house. There are
piles of filthy clothing mounded up along one wall, and I take in the
sick-but-sweet stench of blocked drains overlying something else,
something less identifiable. I dart into the bedroom, and my hand goes
to the light switch. Something squeals.
There's a splintering crash downstairs and a
bellow of inarticulate rage, but I'm too busy staring at the bed to pay
attention. Most of the furniture in the room has been trashed, like
someone threw it about or took an axe to it. The bed is the sole
exception, but it's been stripped down to the mattress. It stinks of
excrement and stale urine, there are flies buzzing about, and it's
occupied: Cass is lying on it naked. Her arms are tied to the
headboard, and her legs to either corner of the bottom of the bed.
She's filthy and there are bruises on her thighs and her face looks
like she's been repeatedly punched. That's where the squealing noise is
coming from. I think he's broken her jaw.
"Up here," I yell through the doorway. I turn
back to her. "We'll get you out of here, my friend." I bend over her
and pull out the switchblade I brought along for emergencies. "This is
going to hurt." I begin sawing on the cord around her arms and she
whimpers. As she moves there's a horrible stench from the encrusted
mattress and I realize she isn't just skinny, she's half-starved, and
there are sores on her arms, angry red rope burns.
I hear more crashes and bangs from downstairs,
then an angry yell. Cass whimpers, then moans loudly as the last cord
parts; her arms flop limply, and she moans some more. Her hands are
puffy and bruised-looking, and I've got a bad feeling about them, but
there's no time to waste. I move to the foot of the bed and start
sawing away at the rope around her right ankle, and that's when she
screams and I see what he's done to stop her from running away. There's
blood on the rope because he's slashed the big tendon on her ankle, and
her foot flops uncontrollably, and every time it moves, she tries to
scream, gurgling around her broken jaw. He said you get lots of points for having a baby.
I yell with fury, then there's someone in the doorway. I look up and
see it's Sam. There's a cut on his cheek that's bleeding, and one eye
is half-closed. That gets my attention, and I'm in control again. "Over
here," I say tensely. "I need you to hold her leg
still . . ."
When we go downstairs, Greg phones a number I
don't know about and calls an ambulance. Everyone is a bit the worse
for wear, except for Greg and Tammy. Sam is going to have a beautiful
black eye tomorrow, and Fer caught a kick in the ribs while he and Sam
and Greg were taking down Mick. They've laid him out on the floor of
the conservatory while we figure out what to do with him. I'm really
regretting my earlier stand against lynching, but the first priority is
to get Cass to safety. We'll have plenty of time to deal with Mick
later, assuming he doesn'tchoke on his own vomit while he's unconscious. That would make things easier all round.
"How is she?" asks Tammy. "I'd better—"
"No." I stop her by standing in the way. "Trust
me. We need to get her to the, the hospital. This isn't something you
can do at home."
"How bad?" Tammy demands.
"Hospital." I don't want her to see what Mick did to Cass's legs. I don't want to be responsible tonight.
The ambulance arrives within five minutes, a
boxy white vehicle with stylized red crescents on it. Two polite
zombies in blue uniforms come up to the front door. "This way," I say,
leading them upstairs. For once I'm glad there are zombies
everywhere—they won't ask the kind of awkward questions someone
with cognitive autonomy might raise. Sam is up there with Cass, and a
minute later the zombies pile back downstairs to fetch a folding
wheeled platform for her.
"Who is next of kin?" asks one of the zombies as they come down the stairs with Cass lying on the stretcher.
Fer begins to point toward Mick, and Tammy bats his hand away. "I am!" she says. "Take me with you."
"Request approved," says one of the zombies.
"Ride up front, please." They wheel Cass out toward the back of the
vehicle, and Tammy follows them.
Greg watches her for a moment, then turns to look back at Mick. "What are we going to do with him?" he asks.
There's a hard expression on Fer's face.
"Nothing," I say quickly, before Fer can open his mouth and stick his
foot in it. "Remember what we agreed? No lynching." I pause. "What we
do tomorrow is another matter."
"Will the police do anything?" Fer asks after a moment.
"I don't think so," says Sam, coming downstairs.
He's holding a damp towel to his eye. "I really don't think they're
programmed for this sort of thing. If we're unlucky, they'll come after
us for trampling on the flower bed and breaking down the door, but I
don't think you can really expect a zombie to cope with this sort
of . . . thing." He looks very sober as he stares at
Mick's prostrate form.
"Let's go home," I suggest. "How about we meet up tomorrow evening to talk about it?"
"That works for me," says Greg. Sam nods.
I eye Mick's prostrate form. "If he tries to come after any of us, I think we should kill him."
"You sound as if you're not certain." That's Fer.
"Certain?" I stare at him: "Shit, I've got half
a mind to cut his throat right here! Except, Sunday"—I
swallow—"has kind of put me off." I stare at him some more. "You
kicked the shit out of him. Think he'll come back for more?"
Greg shakes his head. "I hope he tries
something," he says, a curious half smile on his lips. I shiver. Just
for a moment he reminds me of Jen.
"Come on, let's go." I take Sam's free hand. "Fer, would you call two taxis?
It's close to one in the morning when Sam and I
get home, filthy and tired and bruised. "Go on in," I say, pausing in
the conservatory. "This shirt's going in the trash." Sam nods
wordlessly and goes indoors, leaving me to strip off under the cool
moonlight. I feel numb and tired, but also satisfied with the night's
work. I correct that—mostly satisfied. I unzip my trousers in
case any of the crap on the bed rubbed off on them, then I follow him
inside.
Sam's standing in the living room doorway,
holding a bottle of vodka and two tumblers. He hasn't turned the lights
on, but he's shed his shirt, and the moonlight shining through the tall
glass windows outlines his bare shoulders in silver. "I do not want to
dream tonight," he says, holding the bottle out to me.
"Me neither." I take one of the glasses, then
brush past him into the living room. I'm tired, I realize, but I'm also
wired with excitement and tension and apprehension about tomorrow, and
a burning hot anger for Cass—Why didn't I go round to see her before?—and
a fresh hatred for Fiore and Yourdon, and the faceless scum who created
this nightmare and expect us to live in it. "What are you waiting for?"
I drop onto the sofa and hold my glass out. Sam tips colorless spirit
into it. "C'mon."
He sits down next to me and fills his own glass,
then caps the bottle. "I should have listened to you earlier," he says,
taking a mouthful.
"So?" I raise my glass. "I hope the hospital can help. She was—"
There's a long moment of silence. It's probably only a couple of seconds, but it feels like hours.
"I didn't know."
"None of us did." But these sound like feeble
excuses to me right now, so I take another mouthful of vodka in order
to have something else to occupy my mouth with.
"R-Reeve. There's something else I want you to
know." I look at him sharply. He's looking right back at me, and I'm
suddenly conscious that I'm nearly naked. And he's not wearing that
much either, now I allow myself to notice it.
"Go ahead," I say, trying to keep my voice neutral.
"I'm. Oh." He looks away, looking pained.
Inexpressive. "Yesterday I said some things I didn't really mean.
Hurtful things, some of them. I want to apologize."
"No apology needed," I say, my heart beating painfully fast.
"Oh, but there is. You see, I didn't mean everything I said. But when I said * * * I was telling the—"
"Stop right there." I raise a hand. "Those words. You, uh, oh shit."
My head's spinning. It's late at night, I've been through a lot, I've
been drinking vodka, and Sam's saying words to me that my ears refuse
to listen to. "I didn't hear you just now, and I know for sure you said
the same thing before, and I didn't hear the words." He looks puzzled,
even offended. "I mean, I heard you speak, but I couldn't understand them." I'm beginning to worry. "You used the same phrase, didn't you? Exactly
the same words? Could there be something wrong with my—" He
stands up and strides over to the sideboard to retrieve his tablet,
which has been lying there gathering dust for some time. "What?"
He says something to it, then holds it up in front of me. Dim letters glow on the screen:
I LOVE YOU
"You what?" I say, "You're trying to say * * *—" And I know I'm saying the words, but I can't hear them. "Shit." I shake my head. "It's me. Sam,
I'm so sorry." I stand up and hug him. "* * *, too. It's just, there's
something really flaky up with my language module. Is that what you've
been trying to tell me?" I lean back far enough to see his face. "Is
it?"
"Yes," he admits. His face is a picture of worry. "I don't say that easily. And I can't hear it either, Reeve, I thought I was going nuts."
"I guess not." I'm close enough to feel his
crotch. "And I guess you only say that to people you're serious about."
He nods. "And maybe you're close enough that I can tell you that I'm
flattered, and very happy, and, and—" I pause. I feel as if I
ought to know what this weird inability to understand those three happy
words means, but I can't quite recall it. "We've got to get out of
here."
He nods. "I really don't like this," he says,
miserably, a wave of his hand encompassing everything from his body
outward. "I've—they should have spotted it. I don't feel right
when I'm big and slow and fixed. I mean, they can patch it
temporarily but I don't like that, either, it's easier just not to be.
Only they didn't even give me a, a—" He's breathing too fast.
I feel a stab of anger, not at Sam but at Fiore
and the other idiots. "You've got a big-body dysphoria, haven't you?"
He nods. "Figures." Kay spent a whole lifetime as an alien, didn't she?
And kept changing bodies, as if she couldn't quite settle on a form
that she felt comfortable in. Doubtless it's fixable with therapy, but
fixing people's problems isn't exactly what this polity is about.
"Sam." I kiss him on the cheek. "We've got to get out of here. Where's
your tablet?"
"Over there."
"I need to show you something." I let go of him
and fetch it, intending to point out to him the myriad ways in which
the polity constitution turns us into victims of a biologically
deterministic tyranny. "Here—" I page through it quickly. "Hey, I
didn't see this before!"
"What?" He looks over my shoulder.
"List of revealed behavioral scores.
Gender-based. Huh." I stare. Sex with your partner gets five points for
the very first occurrence, dropping off to one point each time after a
while. In other words, it's a decay function. "Adultery," that bad
word, gets minus one hundred. There are some other crazy items. Getting
pregnant brings fifty points, bringing the baby to term brings another
fifty. What's abortion? Whatever it is, it gets hammered as hard as
adultery, which is what got Esther and Phil into—let's not go
there. There are other things here, the most improbable activities,
that get huge penalties. But rape isn't mentioned. Murder loses you
just seventy points. What kind of sense does that make? It's ludicrous!
"Either they're trying to generate a psychotic polity, or the people in
the society they derived these scores from were off their heads."
"Or possibly both." Sam yawns. "Listen, it's
late. We need to get some sleep. Why don't we go to bed and chew this
over tomorrow? With the others?"
"Yes." I put the tablet down, not mentioning
that tomorrow I've got other plans because Fiore is visiting the
library again. "Tomorrow is going to be a very interesting day."
I spend a long
time lying in bed awake, fantasizing about what I'd like to do to Mick,
about what I think he deserves to have done to him—but which
isn't going to happen. I finally drift into sleep after a particularly
brutal fantasy, and I dream again, but this time it's no nightmare.
Rather, it's a flashback to how I started my life as a tank. I guess
these flashbacks would be nightmarish, if they were still
invested with any emotional impact—instead they're grisly and
freighted with significance, but drained of immediacy by time and
necessity.
I stay aboard the MASucker Grateful for Duration
for almost a gigasecond as it crawls slowly through interstellar space.
There's not really anything else I can do—we've been offlined by
Curious Yellow, which appears to have targeted the ship for special
treatment on the basis of its self-contained systems. Half-crazy with
worry for my family, tempered by apprehension about my situation, I
check myself into one of the ship's assemblers when it becomes clear
that this isn't a temporary outage, that something vast and extremely
ugly has overcome the Republic of Is and there's no way around it. We
won't find out what's happening until the Grateful for Duration reaches its next destination, an obscure religious retreat in orbit around a small and very cold gas giant that orbits a
brown dwarf about thirty trillion kilometers away. I extract a promise
from Kapitan Vecken that he'll unserialize me if anything interesting
happens, then archive myself to backup storage for the duration.
When I blink and awaken in the A-gate, the
universe has changed around me. I've been asleep for a gigasecond while
we crawled across almost three Urth-style "light years," then spent a
megasec decelerating under high-gee conditions to a rendezvous with
Delta Refuge. The contemplatorian monastery has been erased and filed
in deep storage, bits and atoms reconfigured into the sinister angled
constructs of a military-industrial complex. Kapitan Vecken is
reluctant to lend his ship to the resistance cabal, but he's happy to
run off a clone of his stand-alone A-gate to help speed their botched,
jerry-built attempts at constructing a sterile, uninfected
nano-ecosystem. And he's happy to put me ashore. So I meet the
resistance.
At that time—when I first join
them—the Linebarger Cats are an informal group of refugees,
dissidents, and generally uncooperative alienists who resent any
attempt to dictate their conscious phase space. They live in a few
cramped habs with little attempt to conceal the artificiality of the
environment. In my first few kiloseconds the close-lipped
paramilitaries who insist on searching me as I climb out of the
transfer pod explain what I've missed. The infection is a history worm.
It infiltrates A-gates. If you go into an infected A-gate, it crudely
deletes chunks of your memory (mostly at random, but if you remember
anything from before the Republic of Is, you're likely to lose it).
Then it copies its own kernel into your netlink. There are some
bootstrap instructions. If you find an uninfected gate, there's a
compulsion to put it into operator debugging mode, enter commands via
the conversational interface, then upload yourself. At which point the
A-gate executes the infected boot loader in your netlink, copies it
into its working set, and—bang!—another infected gate.
Assemblers are an old established technology,
and for many gigaseconds they've been a monoculture, best-of-breed, all
using the same subsystems—if you want a new A-gate, you just tell
the nearest assembler to clone itself. Where Curious Yellow got started
we do not know, but once it was in the wild, it spread like an ideal
gas, percolating through the network until it was everywhere.
It takes a while for a worm to overrun an A-gate
network while in stealth mode, using human brains as the infective
vector, but once the infection reaches critical mass, it's virtually
impossible to stop it spreading throughout an entire polity.
Once the activation signal is sent, everything
speeds up. Suddenly, there are privileged instruction channels.
Infected A-gates sprout defenses, extrude secure netlinks to the
nearest T-gates, and start talking to each other directly to exchange
orders and information. Here's the fun thing about Curious
Yellow—A-gates that are infected can send each other message
packets, peer to peer. If you've got the right authentication keys, you
can send a distant gate running Curious Yellow instructions to make
things. Or modify things. Or change people as they pass through it.
It's an anything box.
Fearful weapons appear, seemingly at random,
engaged on search and destroy missions for who knows what. Someone,
somewhere, is writing the macros, and the only way to stay clear is to
sever all T-gate connections, shutting the rogue assemblers off from
their orders. But the A-gates are still infected, still running Curious
Yellow. And if you use them to make more A-gates, those will be
infected, too, even if you write complete new design
templates—Curious Yellow's payload incorporates a pattern
recognizer for nanoreplicators and inserts itself into anything that
looks even remotely similar. The only solution is to drop back to
prereplicator tech, use the infected gates to make dumb tools, then try
to rebuild a sterile assembler from the wreckage of post-Acceleration
technosystems.
Or you can surrender to Curious Yellow and try
to live with the consequences, as the Linebarger Cats explain to me in
words of one syllable. Then they ask me what I intend to do, and I ask
if I can sign up.
Which explains how I ended up as a tank, but not really why.
I wake up as
the bright light of dawn crosses the edge of my pillow. I stretch and
yawn and look at Sam sleeping beside me, and for a heart-stoppingly
tender moment I long to be back on the outside, where I'm Robin and
she's Kay and we're both properly adjusted humans who canbe whoever we want to be and do whatever we want to do. For a moment I wish I'd never found out who he was . . .
So I force myself to get out of bed. It's a
library day, and I need to be there because I've got at least one
customer to deal with—Fiore. I'm tired and apprehensive,
wondering in the cold light of day if I've blown everything. The idea
of going through a normal working cycle after what happened last night
feels bizarre, the sort of thing a zombie would do—as if I'm
entirely a creature of unconscious habit, obedient to the commands of
an unknown puppeteer. But there's more to it than just doing the job, I
remind myself. I've got a different goal in mind, something else that
the day job is just a cover for. I'm still not entirely sure what's
going on here, why I was sent, and who Yourdon and Fiore are, but
enough stuff has surfaced that I can make an educated guess, and the
picture I'm piecing together isn't pretty.
I'm fairly sure that from the outside YFH-Polity
must appear to be a successful social psychology experiment. It's a
closed microcosm community with its own emergent rules and internal
dynamics that seem to be eerily close to some of the books I've been
reading in my spare hours in the library. It's got to be providing
great feedback on dark ages society for Yourdon and Fiore to wave under
the noses of the academic oversight committee appointed by the
Scholastium. But on the inside of the glasshouse, things are changing
very rapidly. When Yourdon and Fiore and the mysterious Hanta announce
a continuation, and say that all the inmates have agreed to extend
their consent, nobody's going to look too deeply. By then, the
experimental population will have nearly doubled. Half the inmates will
be newborn citizens, unknown to the oversight committee on the outside.
Maybe it's even worse than that—I ought to go to the hospital and
visit Cass, nose around, and see what their maternity facilities are
like. I'll bet they're pretty advanced for a dark ages facility. And
that they're expecting plenty of multiple births.
There's also the question of the box files in
the document repository. I figure they contain about a billion words of
data, committed to a storage medium that is stable for tens of
gigasecs, potentially even for hundreds. Spores. That's what they need the babies for, isn't it? I can't remember why we don't have repeated outbreaks of Curious Yellow anymore,
it's one of those memories that's buried too deeply for me to retrieve.
But there's got to be a connection, hasn't there? The original Curious
Yellow infection spread via human carriers, crudely editing them to
insert its kernel code and making them issue debugger commands to load
and execute on each assembler they found. It spread via the netlink.
Our netlinks don't work properly, do they? Hmm. The new A-gates
are different, but they're equally a monoculture, just one that's
designed to resist Curious Yellow's infection strategy. I can't help
thinking about that MilSpec assembler in the library basement. There's
something I'm missing here, something I don't quite have enough data for—
I'm dressed for work, standing in the kitchen
holding a mug of coffee, and I don't remember how I got here. For a
moment I shudder, in the grip of an anonymous sense of abstract horror.
Did I just get dressed, walk downstairs, and make coffee in an
introspective haze as I tried to get to grips with the real purpose of
this facility? Or is something worse happening? The way I can read the
words "I love you" but hear them as "* * *" suggests something's not
quite right in my speech center. If I'm suffering memory dropouts, I
could be quite ill. I mean, really ill. The small of my back
prickles with cold sweat as I realize that I might be about to unravel
like a knit jumper hooked by a nail. I know my memory's full of gaps
where associations between concepts and experiences have been broken,
but what if too much has gone? Can the rest of me just disappear
spontaneously, speech and memory and perceptions falling victim to an
excess of editing?
Not knowing who you are is even worse than not knowing who you were.
I get out of the house as fast as I can (leaving
Sam asleep upstairs in the bedroom) and walk to work. The weather is as
hot as usual—we seem to be moving into a scheduled "summer"
season—and I make good time even though I set off in the opposite
direction from normal, intending to loop around the back way and come
into the downtown district where the library is via a different road.
I open up the library. It's neat and
tidy—when neither Janis nor I are there I guess there's probably
a zombie janitor on staff duty. I head to the back room to fortify
myself with another coffee before Fiore arrives, and as I'm waiting for
the kettle to boil I get a surprise.
"Janis! What are you doing here? I thought you were ill."
"I'm feeling a lot better," she says, summoning
up a pale smile. "Last week I was getting sick a lot, and the lower
back pain was getting to me, but I'm less nauseous now, and as long as
I don't have to do a lot of bending or lifting, I should be all right
for a while. So I thought I'd come in and sit in on the front desk for
a bit."
Shit. "Well, it's been very quiet
for the past few days," I tell her. "You don't have to stay." A thought
strikes me. "You heard about Sunday."
"Yes." Her expression closes up. "I knew
something bad was going to happen—Esther and Phil were too
indiscreet—but I didn't expect anything like . . ."
"Would you like some coffee?" I extemporize,
trying to figure out how to get her out of here while I do things that
could get me into deep shit if they go wrong.
"Yes, please." She's got that brooding look, now. "I could strangle the greasy little turd."
"Fiore's visiting this morning," I say, managing to pitch my voice as casually as I can, hoping to get her attention.
"He is, is he?" She looks at me sharply.
I lick my lips. "Something else happened last night. I—it would really help if you could do me a favor."
"What kind of favor? If it's about Sunday—"
"No." I take a deep breath. "It's about one of
my cohort. Cass. Her husband, Mick, he's been, uh, well, some of us
went round yesterday night, and we took her to the hospital. We're
making sure he doesn't go anywhere near her, and meanwhile—"
"Mick. Short guy, big nose, eyes as mad as a very mad thing indeed. That him?"
"Yes."
Janis swears, quietly. "How bad was it?"
I debate how much to tell her. "It's about as
bad as it can get. If he finds her again, I'm afraid he'll kill her." I
stare at her. "Janis, Fiore knew. He had to! And he didn't do anything. I'm half-expecting him to nail us all for a ton of points next Sunday for intervening."
She nods thoughtfully. "So what do you want me to do?"
I switch the kettle off. "Take today off sick,
like you have for the past few days. Go to the hospital, visit Cass. If
they've wired her jaw, she might be able to talk. We can't be with her
all the time, but I think she'll need someone around. And someone
who'll be there to call the police if Mick shows up. I don't know if
the hospital zombies will do that."
"Forget the coffee, I'm out of here." As she
stands up she looks at me oddly. "Good luck with whatever you're
planning for Fiore," she says. "I hope it's painful." Then she heads
for the door.
AFTER Janis
leaves, I go and wait behind the front desk. Fiore shows up around
midmorning and pointedly ignores me. I offer him a coffee and get a
fish-eye stare instead of a "yes"—he seems suspicious. I wonder
if it's because of what happened last night? But he's here alone, with
no police and no tame congregation of score whores to back him up, so
he pretends he didn't see me at all, and I pretend I don't know
anything's wrong. He heads for the locked door in the reference
section, and I manage to hold back the explosive gulp of air my lungs
are straining for until he's gone.
My hands keep tensing and kneading the handles
of my bag as if they belong to someone else. There's a carving knife in
the bag, and I've sharpened the blade. It's not much of a dagger, but
I'm betting that Fiore isn't much of a knife fighter. With any luck he
won't notice anything, or he'll assume Yourdon is the author of my
little modification to the cellar and, therefore, leave it alone. The
knife is for the worst case, if I think Fiore has realized what I'm up
to. It's piss poor compared to the kit I used to work with, but it's
better than nothing. So I sit behind this desk like a prim and proper
librarian, entertaining mad fantasies about sawing off the Priest's
head with a carving knife while I wait for him to emerge from the
repository.
Sweat trickles down the small of my back as I look out across the forecourt
toward the highway, watching the pattern of light and shade cast by the
leaves of the cherry trees on either side of the path shift and
recombine on the concrete paving stones. My head hurts as I run through
my fragmentary information again. Are my intermittent disconnects
hiding things from me that I need to know?
Riddle me this: Why would three missing renegade
psyops specialists from the chaos that followed the fall of the
Republic of Is surface inside an experiment re-enacting an historical
period about which we know virtually nothing? And why would the filing
cupboard at the library contain what looks like a copy of the bytecode
to Curious Yellow, printed on paper? Why can't I hear the spoken words
"I love you," and why am I suffering from intermittent memory
blackouts? Why is there a stand-alone A-gate in the basement, and what
is Fiore doing with it? And why does Yourdon want us to have lots and
lots of babies?
I don't know. But there's one thing I'm
absolutely clear about: These scumsuckers used to work for Curious
Yellow or one of the cognitive dictatorships, and this is all something
to do with the aftermath of the censorship war. I'm here because
old-me, the Machiavellian guy with the pen whittled from his own
thighbone, harbored deep suspicions along these very lines. But in
order to get me in through the YFH firewalls he had to erase the chunks
of his memories that would give him away—and those are the very
pieces of me that I need in order to understand the situation!
It's frustrating. It's also immensely worrying
because there's more at risk here than simple personal
danger—whether from the experimenters or the other victims. I
have a faint inkling of the pain and suffering Curious Yellow caused
the first time it got out, and of the terrible struggle it took to chop
up the worm's Chord-type network and sterilize every single assembler.
It ruptured what was once an integrated interstellar civilization,
smashing it into a mess of diamond-shard polities. How did we stop it . . . ?
Footsteps. It's Fiore, looking curiously self-satisfied as he heads toward the library doors.
"Finished, Father?" I call.
"Yes, that is all for today." He inclines his
head toward me, a gesture that's evidently intended to be gracious but
that comes over as a pompous bob. Then his eyebrows furrow in a frown.
"Ah yes, Reeve. You were involved in the business last night, I believe?"
My left hand tightens on the knife handle inside my bag. "Yes." I stare him down. "Do you know what Mick was doing to Cass?"
"I know that"—something seems to occur to
him, and he changes direction in midsentence—"it is a most
serious thing indeed to interfere in the holy relation between husband
and wife. But in some circumstances it may be justifiable." He stares at me owlishly. "She was pregnant, you know."
"And?"
He must think my expression is one of
puzzlement, because he explains, "If you hadn't intervened, she might
have lost the child." He glances at his watch. "Now, you must excuse
me—I have an appointment. Good day." And he's off through the
door again like a shot, leaving me watching him from behind, mouth
agape with disbelief.
Why is Fiore concerned with the health of a
fetus, but not about its mother being assaulted, repeatedly raped, held
prisoner for weeks, maimed in such a way that she may never walk again?
Why? He's got all the human empathy of a zombie. What's wrong
with him? And why did he suddenly change his tune? I'd swear he was
about to denounce what we did last night, but then he moderated his
line. Fear of what the Bishop might say if he incited another near riot
over the way we rescued Cass, or something else?
They want us to have lots of children. But why is that important to them? Is it something to do with Curious Yellow?
I grind my teeth until Fiore is out of sight,
then I hop down from my stool, hang up the CLOSED sign, and head for
the lock-up. The secret basement downstairs is as I left it except for
the assembler, which is chugging to itself and gurgling as it loads
feedstock or coolant or something through pipes in the floor. I guess
Fiore's set it running some kind of long batch job. But checking up on
it isn't why I'm down here right now—I'm here to retrieve the
video cartridge from the camcorder I left running on the equipment
shelf.
The camcorder is a small metal box with a lens
on one side and a screen covering the other. I don't know what's going
on inside it. It certainly isn't an original dark ages
artifact—I've seen pictures of them in the library
books—but it does the same job. Along with all the other tech
artifacts in this polity, some set designer probably slaved over it for
hours trying to figure out how to give it the right functionality
without adding too much. They got it wrong, but not too wrong.
The original machines used things called "tapes" or "disks," but this
one just writes everything it sees onto a memory diamond the size of a
sand grain that's good for a gigasec of events.
I go sit down on the sofa to play with the
'corder. Putting my bag down next to me, I poke at the display until
I've zapped back an hour or three. Then I fast-forward through darkness
until the light comes on and Fiore comes in. At triple normal speed I
watch as he goes over to the bookshelves and leafs through a couple of
folders. I pause and zoom in to see what he was reading: POLICY ON SEXCRIME, followed by a glance at FAMILIAL STABILITY INDEX,
whatever that is. Next, he trots over to the A-gate and chatters to it,
gesturing at the terminal. I don't see any sign of biometric
authentication, no retinal scan or anything, but he may have used a
password. The gate cylinder rotates around its long axis, and he steps
inside. Fast-forward and about a kilosecond later he steps out again, blinking. So he's just backed himself up, has he?
Back at the control terminal Fiore issues some
more commands, and the gate begins chugging to itself. I glance over my
shoulder. Yes, it's still doing that—just some kind of long
synthesis job. He heads for the staircase and—
Shit! I whip round and reach for my bag. The A-gate cylinder is opening.
Knife in left hand, bag in right hand. Everything is crystal clear. Fiore suspected.
He backed himself up, then set an ambush, and I've blown it. The
cylinder turns and the interior cracks into view. White light, a smell
of violets and some kind of weird volatile organics, a bit of steam.
There's someone/something in there, moving.
I dart forward, bag raised, knife ready to
block. They're sitting up, head turning. I'll only get one chance to do
this. Heart pounding, I upend the empty shoulder bag over the head,
lank black hair—fat jowls wobbling indignantly hands coming
up—and I shove the knife blade up against his throat and yell, "Freeze!"
The duplicate Fiore freezes.
"This is a knife. If you move or make a sound or
try to dislodge the bag over your head, I will cut your throat. If you
understand, say yes."
His voice is muffled, but sounds almost amused. "What if I say no?"
"Then I cut your throat." I move the knife slightly.
"Yes," he says hurriedly.
"That's good." I adjust my grip. "Now let me
tell you something. You are thinking you have a working netlink and you
can call for help. You're wrong, because netlinks work via spread
spectrum, and you're wearing a Faraday cage over your head, and
although it's open at the bottom you're standing in a cellar. The
signal's attenuated. Do you understand?"
Pause. "There's nobody there!" He sounds slightly panicky. Clever fellow.
"I'm glad you said that because if you hadn't,
I'd have cut your throat," I tell him. "Like I said earlier, if you try
and lose the bag, I'll kill you immediately."
He's shaking. Oh, I shouldn't be enjoying this, but I am. For everything you've done to us I ought to kill you a hundred times over. What have I turned into?
I'm almost shaking with the intensity of—it's like hunger, the
yearning. "Listen to these instructions. I will shortly tell you to
stand up. When I do so, I want you to slowly rise, keeping your
arms by your sides. If at any point you can't feel the knife, you'd
better freeze, because if you keep moving, I'll kill you. When you're
on your feet, you will step fifty centimeters forward, then slowly move
your hands behind your back. You will then lace your fingers together.
Now, slowly, stand up."
Fiore, to give him his due, has a cool enough
head to do exactly as I tell him with no hesitation and no hysterics.
Or maybe he just knows exactly what he can expect if he doesn't obey.
He can't be under any illusions about how hated he is, can he?
"Forward one pace, then hands behind back," I
say. He steps forward. I have to stretch to keep the knife around his
neck, but I reach down with my free hand and follow his right arm
round. Now is the moment of danger—if he were to kick straight
back while blocking with his left shoulder he could hurt me badly and
probably get away. But I'm betting Fiore knows very little indeed about
serious one-on-one physical mayhem, and the bag over his head should
keep him disoriented long enough for me to do this. I step to one side,
reach into my pocket with my right hand until I find what I'm after,
then squeeze the contents of the tube over his hands and fingers.
Cyanoacrylate glue—the librarian's field-expedient handcuffs.
"Don't move your hands," I tell him.
"What is it—" He stops. Of course he can't
help moving his hands and the stuff flows into small cracks. It's less
viscous than water but it polymerizes in seconds. I move the knife
round to the side of his neck and examine my handiwork. He might be
able to get his hands apart if he's willing to leave skin behind, but
he won't be able to take me by surprise while he's doing it.
"Okay, we're now going to take three slow steps
forward. Yes, you can shuffle. I'll tell you when to stop—easy,
easy, stop!"
I stop him in the middle of an open patch of
floor. I need to think. He's breathing hoarsely inside the improvised
hood, and he stinks of fear-sweat. Any moment now, he'll realize that I
can't let him live, then he'll be uncontrollable. I've got maybe twenty
seconds—
"When my husband says * * * I can't hear him," I say conversationally. "What does that mean?"
"It means you're infected with Curious Yellow." He sounds oddly placid.
"You ran off a duplicate of yourself as a guard
to see who was coming in here," I tell him. "That was smart. Were you
afraid I was using the A-gate?"
"Yes," he says tersely.
"It's immune to the strain I'm infected with, isn't it?" I ask.
I can feel his muscles tensing. "Yes," he says reluctantly.
"And Yourdon didn't insist it was locked to your netlinks?" I ask, tensing as I gamble everything on the right answer.
He doesn't give it to me verbally, but he grunts and begins to pull his hands apart and I know I'm right, but I also know I've got about three seconds
left. So I step in close behind him and run my right hand down his
chest, caressing, and he freezes when I get to his crotch. A moment of
relief—he's anatomically orthohuman, and male. I grab his balls
and squeeze viciously. He jackknifes forward, speechless and gasping,
almost knocking me over with the violence of it, and the bag goes
flying. But that's okay, because a moment later I grab his hair and
while he's preoccupied with the terrible breath-sucking pain, I pull
his head up and run the knife blade smoothly through his carotid artery
and thyroid cartilage, just below the hyoid bone.
See, the difference between me and Fiore is that
I don't enjoy killing, but I know how to do it. Whereas Fiore gets off
on control fantasies and watching his score whores lynch lovers, but it
didn't occur to him to tell the assembler to restore him holding a
weapon, and it took him almost twenty seconds to realize that I was
going to have to kill him regardless of anything he did or said.
Basically, Fiore is your bureaucrat-type killer who runs push-button
experiments by remote control, while I'm—
I blank again.
THE civil war
lasts two gigasecs, nearly sixty-four years by the reckoning of
long-lost Urth. It's probably still raging in some far-flung corners of
human space. When the longjump network was shattered in an attempt to
firewall the damage, it split the interstellar net into disjoint
domains separated by lightspeed communications lag. Isolated pockets of
Curious Yellow are probably still running, out beyond the liberated
light cone, in the eternal darkness and cold—just as there may be
outposts of free posthumanity who dropped off the net when the Republic
of Is disintegrated. Redaction, the deletion of memory, is Curious
Yellow's deadliest weapon—some of those polities might have been
deliberately forgotten, their proximal T-gate endpoints dropped into
stars and the memories of their existence erased from everyone who used
an infected A-gate. The true horror of Curious Yellow is that we have
no way of knowing how much we have lost. Entire genocidal wars could
have been wiped from our memories as if they never happened. Perhaps
this explains the worm's peculiar vendetta against practicing
historians and archaeologists. It, or its creator, is afraid we will
remember something . . .
I spend my first gigasec among the Cats being a
tank. There's very little that is human left in me once I get a clear
picture of what's going on. It's not hard to generalize from the tales
of random atrocities committed against people who specialize in the
past; besides, the gigasecond of nonexistence I spent aboard Grateful for Duration
is a small death in its own right—time enough for children to
mature as adults, for spouses to despair, mourn, and move on. Even if
by some miracle my family hasn't been targeted for liquidation because
of my career, they're still lost to me. That sort of experience tends
to make one bitter. Bitter enough to give up on humanity as a bad job,
bitter enough to experiment with other, more sinister, identities.
About my body: I mass approximately two tons and
stand three meters high at the shoulder. My nervous system is
nonbiological—I'm running as a real-time sim with sensory
engagement through my panzer's pain nerves. (The long-term dangers of
complete migration into virtch are well understood, but avoidable to
some extent by maintaining a somatotype and staying anchored in the
real world. Besides which, there's an emergency to deal with.) If I
have to, I can accelerate my mind to ten times normal speed. My skin is
an exotic armor, pebbled with monocrystalline diamonds held in a
shock-absorbent quantum dot matrix that can be fast-tuned to match the
color of any background from radio frequencies through to soft X-rays.
For fingernails I have retractable diamond claws, and for
fists—clench and point—I have blasters. I don't eat, or
breathe, or shit, but take power from a coil wrapped around an endless
stream of plasma gated from the photosphere of a secret star.
As a callout sign I adopt the name liddellhart.
The other Cats don't know what this signifies. Maybe that explains why
over the bloody course of four hundred megs and sixteen engagements I
end up being promoted to template-senior sergeant and replicated a
hundredfold. Unlike Loral and some of the others, I don't freeze up
when there's a problem. I don't experience shock and dissociation when
I realize we've just decapitated twelve thousand civilians and shoved
their heads into a tactical assembler that is silently failing to back
them up. I do what's necessary. I don't hesitate when it's necessary to
sacrifice six of me in a suicide attack to buy time for the rest of the
intrusion team to withdraw. I don't feel anything much except for icy
hatred, and while I appreciate in the abstract that I'm sick, I'm not
willing to ask for medical attention that might impair my ability to
fight. Nor do our shadowy directors, who are watching over us all, see
fit to override me.
For the first gigasec, we pursue the war by
traditional methods. We find half-forgotten T-gates leading into
polities under the control of Curious Yellow. We go through, shoot up
the assemblers they're using as immigration firewalls, establish a
toehold, fight our way in, install sanitized A-gates of our own, and
forcibly run the civilian population through them to remove the Curious
Yellow taint from their heads. The ones who survive usually thank us
afterward.
At first it's relatively easy, but later we find
we are attacking polities where the defenses are heavier, and later
still Curious Yellow starts programming the civilians to fight bitterly
and without quarter. I've seen naked children, shaking in the grip of
an existential breakdown, walking toward panzers with Vorpal blades
clutched inexpertly in both hands. And I've seen worse things than
that. The idea of Curious Yellow, of surrender to a higher cause, seems
to appeal to a certain small subset of humanity. These people
manipulate the worm, customizing its payload to establish quisling
dictatorships in its shadow, and the horrors these gauleiters invent in
its service are far worse than the crude but direct tactics the
original worm used.
Quite late on in the campaign I realize this
and, in a fitful flashback to my earlier self, I begin to spend some of
my spare time thinking about the implications. My study of the
psychology of collaboration becomes one of the most heavily accessed
stacks in the Cats' internal knowledge base. So it probably shouldn't
come as a surprise when I receive a summons to headquarters, combined
with orders to converge my deltas and revert to orthohuman skin before
transit.
At first I'm apprehensive. I've grown used to
being an armored battalion, spending most of my seconds between action
in icy orbit around a convenient failed star or exoplanet. Breathing and eating and sleepingand emoting
are worrying, senseless handicaps. I recognize that they are of
interest in comprehending the enemy motivational framework, and
allowances must be made for them among the people we liberate, but why
should I subject myself to the frailties of flesh? But eventually I
realize that it's not about me. I need to be able to work with the
headquarters staff. So I reconverge my various selves, erasing my
identity from the kilotons of heavy metal that have until so recently
been my limbs, and I report to the nearest field command node for
up-processing.
WHEN I come to,
I find I'm leaning over the A-gate control panel. In my left hand I'm
clutching a dripping knife so tightly that my fingers are close to
cramping. There's blood halfway across the room, forming an obscene
lake.
If I got it right, he won't have had time to use
his netlink. He'll have been in acute physical agony as his head came
out of the bag, then he'll have blacked out because of blood loss.
Unconsciousness within ten seconds: It's more than he deserved.
But now I've got a huge problem, namely a
hundred and ten kilos of dead meat lying in about ten liters of gore in
the middle of a grass carpet that's already dying. Is this
incriminating or what? Oh, and my sweater and skirt and sensible shoes
are covered in blood. This does not look good.
I laugh, and it comes out as a hysterical giggle with more than a little madness in it. This is bad, I think. But there's got to be something—
For a moment I flash back to the time with the
malfunctioning A-gate, the pools of fluid and lumps of deanimated meat.
That helps stabilize me, in a way: It makes it clear what I have to do.
I pick up Fiore's arm and give it an experimental tug. His sallow flesh
ripples, and when I put my back into it, he jerks free of the carpet
and skids a few centimeters toward me. I grunt and tug again, but it's
not easy to move him so I pause for a bit and look around. There's some
kind of cabling on one of the tool shelves, so I go over and grab a
couple of meters of wire, twine it around his torso under the arms, and
use it to pull him toward the A-gate. Finally, I get him into position,
back inside the gate chamber. It's hard to keep him inside—one
leg keeps flopping out—but eventually I figure out that I can
hold him in if I use the rest of the cable to truss him up.
"Okay, take five," I tell myself breathlessly, bending over the field terminal. Talking to yourself, Reeve? I ask ironically. Are we going mad, yet?
My fingers leave sticky reddish smears on it as I prod at virtch
controls, but eventually I manage to bring up the conversational
interface. The gate seems to have a load of scheduled background
synthesis jobs queued up, but it's multitasking, and this is an
interrupt: "Gate accept raw waste feedstock for disassembly okay."
"Okay," says the gate, and the door whines slightly as it seals around the evidence.
"Gate select template cleaning systems index that there, I want one of them, make me one of them okay."
"Okay, fabricating," says the gate. "Time to
completion, three hundred and fifty seconds after end of current job."
Ah, the conveniences of modern life.
I go upstairs to the common room and make myself a cup of tea.
While it's brewing, I strip off my outer clothes
and drop them in the sink. We've got some basic cleaning equipment, and
the detergent is pretty good at getting out stains, probably better
than anything they had in the real dark ages. A couple of rinses, and
my skirt and sweater are simply soaking wet, so I wring them out and
drape them over the thermal vent and dial up the air temperature.
Back downstairs, I find the A-gate gaping open
and the stuff I asked for sitting inside it. Fiore has been transformed
into a carpet cleaning machine and a bunch of absorbent towels. It
takes another trip upstairs to fill its tank with water. The smell of
solvents makes me dizzy, but after half an hour I've gotten the visible
bloodstains out of the carpet and off the walls and shelves. I can't
easily do anything about the ceiling tiles, but unless you knew someone
had been killed in here you'd just mistake the spots for a leak
upstairs. So I put the carpet cleaner back in the gate and talk to
myself.
"It's a blind," I say, then yawn. It must be the
adrenaline rush finally subsiding. "Fiore, Yourdon, and the other one.
Psywar specialists working on emergent group behavior controls." The
blackouts seems to have jostled free some more fragmentary memories,
dossiers on—"War criminals. Ran the security apparat for the
Third People's Glorious Future Sphere. When the vermifuge was released,
they went on the run. They've spent the past gigasecs working on a
countervermifuge, then on a way to harden Curious Yellow."
I blink. Is this me, talking? Or a different me, using my speech centers to communicate with the rest of—whoever I am?
"Priority. Exfiltration. Priority.
Exfiltration." My hands are moving over the gate control systems even
without me willing them. "Shit!" I yelp. But there's no stopping them,
they know what they're doing. They seem to be setting up an output
program.
"System unavailable," says the gate, its tone of voice flat and unapologetic. "Longjump grid connectivity unavailable."
Whatever my hands are doing, it doesn't seem to
work. Something has shaken loose inside my memory, something vast and
ugly. "You must escape, Reeve," I hear my own voice telling me. "This
program will auto-erase in sixty seconds. Network connectivity to
external manifold is not available from this location. You must escape.
Auto-erase in fifty-five seconds."
Even though I'm only wearing clothes-liners, I break out in a cold sweat up and down my spine. "Who are you?" I whisper.
"This program will auto-erase in fifty seconds," something inside me replies.
"Okay, I hear you! I'm going, I'm going already!" I'm terrified that when it says this program it means me—obviously
it's some kind of parasite payload, like the Curious Yellow boot
kernel. But where can I escape to? I look up, at the ceiling, and it
clicks into place. I need to go up, through the walls of the
world. Maybe, just maybe, this polity is interleaved with
others—if so, if I can just break into an upper or lower deck,
there may be a way to get to a T-gate and rejoin the manifold of the
Invisible Republic. "Going up, right?"
"This program will auto-erase in thirty seconds. Escape vector approved. Conversational interface terminated."
It goes very quiet in my head; I stand over the assembler terminal shivering,
taking rapid shallow breaths. A shadow seems to have passed from my
mind, leaving only a cautious peace behind. The horror I feel is
hollow, now, an existential dread—So they hid zombie code inside me? Whoever they were?—but I'm back, I'm still me.
I'm not going to suddenly stop existing, to be replaced by a smiling
meat puppet wearing my body. It was just an escape package, configured
to report home after a preset period or some level of stress if I
couldn't figure out what to do. When it couldn't dial out, it issued a
callback to me, the conscious cover, and told me what it wanted. Which
is fine. If I do what it wants and escape, then I can get any other
little passengers dug out of my skull and everything will be great! And
I want to escape anyway, don't I? Don't I? Think happy thoughts.
"Fuck, I just killed Fiore," I whisper. "I've got to get out of here! What am I doing?"
Upstairs, the common room is as steamy as a
sauna. Coughing and choking I dial down the heat, grab my damp clothes,
and pull them on, then head for the door. Then—this is the
hardest part—I pat my hair into order, pick up my bag, and calmly
walk across the front lot toward the curb to hail a passing taxi.
"Take me home," I tell the driver, teeth nearly chattering with fear.
Home, the house I've shared with Sam
for long enough to make it feel like somewhere I know, is a scant five
minutes away by taxi. It feels like it's halfway to the next star
system. "Wait here," I tell the driver. I get out and head for the
garage. I don't want to see Sam, I really hope he's at work—if he
sees me, I might not be able to go through with this. Or even worse, he
might get dragged in. But he's not around, and I manage to get into the
garage and pick up my cordless hammer drill, a bunch of spare bits, and
some other handy gadgets I laid aside against a rainy day. I go back to
the taxi, and I'm still tightening the belt to hang everything off when
it moves away.
We cruise up a residential street, low houses
set back from the road behind white picket fences, separated by trees.
It's hot outside, loud with the background creaking of arthropods. We
drive into a tunnel entrance. I take a deep breath. "New orders. Stop
right here and wait sixty seconds. Then drive through the tunnel and
keep going. Keep your radio turned off. At each road intersection, pick
a direction at random and keep driving. Do not stop, other than to
avoid obstructions. Accept one thousand units of credit. Continue
driving until my credit expires. Confirm." I bite my lower lip.
"Wait sixty seconds. Drive, turning randomly at each intersection, until credit limit exceeded. Avoid obstacles. Confirm?"
"Do it!" I say, then I open the door and pile
out into the tunnel mouth with my kit. I wait tensely as the zombie
drives off, then I start walking back into the blackness.
The tunnel darkens as it curves, and I pull the
big metal flashlight out. Like everything else here, it's probably not
authentic, no electrochemical batteries—the same infrastellar
T-gate that powers cars or starships will suffice to provide a trickle
of current to a white diode plate. Right now, that's good news. I shine
it at the walls to either side as I walk, until I come to one of the
recessed doors. Unlike the last time I came this way, I'm prepared for
it. Out comes the hammer drill, and I only spend a few seconds sliding
a stone bit into it—all that time in the garage has paid off, I
guess. The racket it makes as it bites and chews at the concrete next
to the door is deafening, but chunks of synrock fall away, and the air
fills with acrid dust that bites at my lungs when I inhale. Should have brought a mask,
I realize, but it's a bit late now, and anyway, the sound and feel of
the drill is changing as the bit skitters across bright metal. "Hah!" I
mutter, resisting the frantic itch that keeps prodding me to look over
my shoulder.
It takes me a couple of minutes to get enough of
the surface of the doorframe exposed to be sure what I'm looking at,
but the more I see, the happier I am. The concrete tunnel is a hollow
tube, and the door is some kind of inspection hatch near a join. If I'm
right, the join isn't a T-gate, it's a physical bulkhead designed to
seal segments off in event of a pressure breach, which means this is
part of a larger physical structure. This door will lead into the
pressure door mechanism, and maybe via an airlock into other adjacent
segments—up and down as well as fore and aft, I hope. The only
problem is, the door's locked.
I dig around in my pockets for one of the toys I
took from the garage. Chopped-up magnesium from a block the hiking shop
sold me, mixed with deliberately rusted iron filings in a candle-wax
base—a crude thermite charge. I stick a gobbet of the stuff above
the lock mechanism (which is annoyingly anchored in the concrete),
flick my lighter under it, then jerk my hand back and turn away fast.
Even with my eyelids tightly shut the flare is blindingly intense,
leaving purple afterimages of the outline of my arm. There's a loud
hissing sputter, and I wait for a slow count of thirty before I turn
round and push hard on the door. It refuses to budge for a moment, then
silently gives way. The lock is a glowing hole in the partially exposed
doorframe—I hope we don't have a pressure excursion anytime soon.
I step through the door and glance around. I'm
in a small room with some kind of crude-looking machine occupying most
of it. Gas bottles, axles, physical valves. It looks as if it was built
during the stone age and designed to be maintained using tools from the
hardware store. Maybe it was? I scratch my head. If this hab
was originally configured for some kind of paleo cult, made to resemble
one of the polities of old Urth, it would be relatively easy for
Yourdon and Fiore to tailor to their purposes, wouldn't it? Maybe
that's what old-me meant about this place having unique features
suiting it to their needs. There's a ladder, of all things, bolted to
the wall, and a hatch in the floor. I go over to the hatch in the
floor, which is secured by a handwheel. Turning the wheel isn't too
hard, and after a moment there's a faint breeze as the hatch rises and
rotates out of the way.
Hmm. There's a pressure imbalance,
but it's nothing major. That means open doorways, maybe a whole deck
down below. But I said I'd go up, didn't I? I start to climb. The hatch
in the ceiling has another wheel, and it takes me longer to rotate it,
but there's some sort of spring mechanism inside it that raises it out
of the way. That's smart design for you. They assume that pressure
breaches come from outside, which in a rotating cylinder hab like this
means down, so you have to exert force to open a hatch leading
down. But hatches leading up have a passive power assist to make it
easy to get away from the blowout. I like that philosophy: It's going
to make life ever so much easier.
I climb into the tunnel, then pause to pull my
headlamp on. Getting it lit, I climb up above the hatch. Then I step
sideways off the ladder and close it behind me. I'm now at the bottom
of a dark tunnel occupied only by the ladder, punctuated by shadows far
above me, and the trail I've left leads down instead of up. I hope
there are doors up there. It would be really shitty luck to have gotten
this far only to find they're all jammed or depressurized or something.
BATTALION HQ
doesn't send me direct to Staff. Instead, they put me through an
A-gate, and I come out wearing my original ortho body. I feel small and
incredibly fragile and alive. It's an alarming experience that later
reminds me of my arrival in YFH-Polity. After my reanimation, they
disassemble me and split me into about 224 separate stripes
of data and zap it off over quantum-encrypted links via different
T-gates. I don't feel this process, of course. I just get into an
A-gate and wake up sitting in another one. But along the way I've been
fed through a cryptographic remixer circuit, combined and recombined
with other data streams with serial numbers filed off, so that even if
a couple of the nodes have fallen into enemy hands, they won't be able
to work out where I'm coming from, where I'm going, or who I am.
I blink and come alive again, then open the door
of the booth. A tense moment—I'm about to enter the semimythical
head office of the Linebarger Cats. A compactly built female xeno with
feline features is waiting for me, tapping her claw-tipped fingers.
"You're Robin, aren't you?" She says. "I love you."
"I'm sorry, are you sure you've got the right person?" I ask.
She bares needle-sharp fangs at me in something
approximating a smile: "In your dreams. It's just a diagnostic test
patched into your new netlink—if you can hear the words, it means
you're not carrying a copy of Curious Yellow. Welcome to the crazy
camp, Sergeant-Multiple. I'm Captain-Doctor Sanni. Let's go find an
office and I'll explain what's going on."
Sanni is an odd mixture of sly articulacy and
shy secretiveness, but she's read my paper and decided I'm wasted on
line ops, and she's got the clout to make it stick. When she tells me
why, I'm inclined to agree. This problem is a whole lot more
interesting than blowing holes in defensive perimeters, and much more
important in the long term.
"Curious Yellow can be broken," she explains.
"All we have to do is to fracture enough network links that the cost of
maintaining internal coherency among the worm farms exceeds their
available bandwidth. When that happens, it'll lose the ability to
coordinate its attacks, and we can then defeat it in detail. But the
problem is what happens afterward."
"After." I shake my head. "You're already thinking about the postwar situation?"
"Yes. See, Curious Yellow isn't going to go
away. We could replace all the A-gates in human space with another
monoculture, and they'll still be just as prone as the last set to
infestation by another coordinated worm attack. And running a
polyculture is going to be expensive enough that local monocultures
will have a competitive edge . . . In the long run,
it'll evolve back toward a state that is vulnerable to similar
infestations. What we need is an architectural solution—one that
locks Curious Yellow out by design. The best way to do that is not to
eliminate the worm, but to repurpose it."
"Repurpose it?"
"As an immune system."
It takes our team, which is one of about fifty
groups working under General-Dean Aton, nearly a gigasec to work out
the details of that single short sentence and turn it into a weapon. We
methodically iterate through hundreds of possibilities, researching the
effects on a firewalled experimental network of worm-infested gates
before the final working solution is clear, and
it takes hundreds of megs to implement and distribute it. But when the
main operations group is ready to launch the brutal physical assaults
on a thousand network junctions that will ultimately bring down Curious
Yellow, the vaccine is waiting for them.
Curious Yellow is a coordinated worm. It
accepts instructions from remote nodes. It compares instructions with
its neighbors, and if they look right, it executes them—this
keeps any single worm-infested gate from being easily subverted. By
simultaneously assaulting thousands, we convince them that our new
instructions are valid and to be obeyed, and they begin to spread out
through the network. The vermifuge is a hacked version of Curious
Yellow, equipped with a new payload. It does several tasks that, in
combination, should suffice to keep a new infestation down. When humans
go through a 'fuged A-gate, the gate installs Sanni's diagnostic patch
in their language centers, while purging any Curious Yellow infection
already present. The diagnostic patch is a simple dyslexic
loop—if you're also infested with Curious Yellow you won't be
able to hear the words "I love you." The final stage of the operation
is that once the vermifuge is in place in a wormed gate, it will refuse
to accept new instructions broadcast by Curious Yellow's creators.
We spend a gigasec working all this out and
applying it. Tens of thousands of unique soldier-instances die,
assaulting hardened positions in order to load copies of the vermifuge
into the first gates they capture. Civilian losses are scary, too,
millions dying as the embattled and increasingly disconnected Curious
Yellow nodes take random defensive measures, and their quislings lash
out at their invisible tormentors. But in the end resistance virtually
collapses in the space of a single tenday. There's chaos everywhere,
atrocities and score-settling and panic. There are even some cases of
starvation and life-support collapse, where all the assemblers stopped
working throughout an entire polity. But we've won, and the factional
groups in the alliance either disband or become petty governments,
starting the long process of rebuilding their little defensible corners
of the former megapolity.
The Linebarger Cats mostly go back to their
prewar activities, a troupe of historic re-enactment artists in the pay
of a retiring metahuman power who has spent the past gigasecs sleeping
through the chaos. But not all of us can let go and
forget . . .
ONCE upon a
time, when I was young and immortal, I jumped off a two-kilometer-high
cliff on a partially terraformed moon orbiting a hot Jupiter. There was
a fad for self-sustaining biospheres and deep gravity wells and it was
selling itself as a resort—that's my excuse. I did it without a
parachute. Gravity was low, about three meters per second squared, but
it was still a two-kilometer drop toward a waterfall that obscured the
jungle canopy far below with a haze of rainbow fog. I was trying on a
mythopoeic body, and as I dropped I spread my wings for the first time,
feeling the tension in the enormous thin webs between the fingers of my
middle-hands. As experiences go I would heartily recommend it to
anyone—right up until the point where an updraft caught my left
wing and flipped me tumbling toward a ridge, which I bounced off with a
broken finger that folded horribly backward, wrapping me in a caul of
my own wingskin as I fell spinning toward my death.
Back at the top of the cliff they insisted on
making me watch the last half minute of my life over and over again. I
shook my head and went into the A-gate to revert to my orthobody back
down at the coffeehouse on the rocky shore beside the lake at the
bottom of the waterfall. I stayed there for a long time. I couldn't
stop wondering what it must have been like to be there. The hot dull
pain in my mid-hand, the tumbling and whipping chill of the wind, the
certainty that I'm going to die—
I wondered if I'd ever find out.
It happened a long time ago. Since then,
hair-raising topological exploits with the Linebarger Cats—not to
mention age and cynicism—have shown me how the way we warp and
twist space-time has impaired our ability to comprehend the structures
we inhabit. Architecture has always influenced or controlled social
organization, but in a polity connected by T-gates, it has become more than influential—architects have become our dictators.
The vast majority of us live in the frigid
depths of space, in spinning cylinders of archaic design that orbit
brown dwarf stars or the outer gas giants of solar systems in which no
world remotely like long-dismantled Urth could ever form. For the most
part we pay no attention to the underpinnings of our human-habitable
spaces, save when they inconvenience us and we need to repair or
replace them. They're the empty stages upon which we parade the finery
of our many-roomed mansions, interlaced by holes in space that annul
the significance of the dark light years between . . .
. . . Until you try to climb one of the emergency maintenance shafts. Then you know about it.
The ladder rungs are anchored to the
antispinward wall of the shaft, rising toward the infinity of darkness
that swallows my flashlight beam whenever I look up. Below me there's a
long drop to a floor as unforgiving as the rocks at the foot of that
waterfall. I climb steadily, pacing myself. The radius of curvature of
the hab segments in YFH-Polity is small enough that if this is a single
cylinder, it must be several kilometers in diameter. The roof of our
hab is too high to touch from on top of a four-story building—the
tallest structures in downtown—but I'm already far above that,
with no sign of any openings.
At two hundred rungs I stop and rest. My arms
are already feeling sore, muscles complaining. If I hadn't been working
out for weeks, I'd be half-dead by now. I have no way of knowing how
much farther I'll have to climb, and a dull worry gnaws at my stomach. What if I'm wrong?
I'm assuming YFH-Polity is what it appears to be—a bunch of hab
sectors spliced together with T-gates, interleaved among other
self-contained polity segments across a multiplicity of real-space
habitats. But what if they've gone further than simply blocking access
to the rest of the network? It used to be the glasshouse, after all.
What if my embedded passenger got it critically wrong, and we're
actually stranded in a single location? There might be no way out.
But I can't go back. Yourdon must have figured
out I'm on the loose by now. He'll mobilize the zombies and hunt me
down like a rat cornered by army ants. Sam will be alone, wondering
what happened, getting lonelier and crazier and more depressed. Sooner
or later Mick will get his hands on Cass again. Jen will continue to
play her malignant head games with Alice and Angel. Fiore will slowly
turn the entire community into festering hate-filled puppets dancing to
the tune of a dark ages culture based on insecurity and fear. And I'm
fairly certain I know what their game is.
This isn't an archaeology experiment, it's a
psychological warfare laboratory. They're testing out their design for
an emergent behaviorally controlled society. YFH-Polity is a prototype
for the next generation of cognitive dictatorship. Because, when they
surface to release their new and improved version of Curious Yellow
upon an unsuspecting net, it won't be to install a crude censorship
regime. The payload they're planning will subtly impose behavioral
rules on its victims, and the resulting emergent society will be one
designed for their exploitation. A future of Church every Sunday, sword
and chalice on the altar, a pervert in every pulpit preaching betrayal
and distrust. Score whores in your neighborhood twitching panopticon
curtains to enforce an existential fascism—and that's just the
beginning. If the population of unvaccinated loyal carriers that
Yourdon and Fiore are breeding up are destined to be carriers of the
next release of Curious Yellow, the whole of human space will end up
looking like a bunch of postop cases from the surgeon-confessor's
clinic.
I can't afford to fail.
Minutes trickle away in silence before I start
moving again, putting one hand above the other, then one foot, then the
next hand, then the next foot. Repeat five times, then rest five beats.
Repeat five times, then rest five beats makes ten. Repeat that
another nine times, and I'm a hundred rungs farther up this tube of
torments. Morbid thoughts plague me. I could hit a patch of grease and
slip. Or just . . . not reach the top. The rungs are
about twenty centimeters apart. I'm nearing five hundred, now, a
hundred meters straight up. I'd hit the bottom so fast I'd splash.
(Banging off the ladder on the way down, of course, gently drifting in
the grip of Coriolis force. If I'd remembered to bring a plumb bob and
a long enough string, I could figure out roughly how large this hab
cylinder is, but I didn't think that far ahead.) My shoulders and
elbows ache like they're in a vise. I've spent ages pulling and pushing
on that stupid weight machine in the basement, but there's a difference
between a half-hour workout and hanging on for life. If I have another
memory fugue, I'm toast. How high can I go? How far apart are the
inhabitable decks? If I'm unlucky, it could be kilometers—
I can't fail; I owe it to what Lauro, Iambic-18,
and Neual used to mean to me not to let this happen. If I forget, then
it might as well never have happened. Memory is liberty.
Six hundred rungs and my arms are shrieking for
mercy. My thigh muscles aren't too happy, either. I'm gritting my teeth
and hoping for mercy when I see a shadow above me. I stop and pant for
a while, studying the outline. Rectangular, set into the wall. Could it be? I resume climbing, doggedly putting one hand in front of the other until I get there, close to nine hundred rungs up.
The shadow turns out to be the entrance to a
short human-height tunnel leading away from beside the ladder. It runs
two meters into the wall, then there's a thick, curved pressure door
with another handwheel set in it. I'm there! I'd dance for joy
except my arms feel as if they'd fall off. I step into the tunnel and
switch my big flashlight to candle mode, then sit down and lean back
against the wall and close my eyes for a count of a hundred. I think
I've earned it. Besides, I don't know what'll be waiting on the other
side of the door.
My arms feel like rubber, but I don't dare hang
around. After a couple of minutes I force myself to my feet and inspect
the handwheel. It looks workable, but when I try to turn it, it won't
budge. "Shit," I mutter aloud. These are desperate straits. Maybe if I had a lever,
I think, then I remember the flashlight. It's a big aluminum bar with a
light at one end. I stick it through the spokes of the wheel and lean
my weight on it, pushing against the wall, putting everything I've got
into trying to make the thing turn.
After a couple of minutes I admit to myself that
the wheel is not going to budge. It occurs to me that the builders of
this hab were hot on fail-safes—what if it isn't turning because
there's hard vacuum on the other side? Either it's got a deadlock
triggered by too high a pressure differential, or it's just been in
vacuum for so long that it's welded shut. "Shit," I mutter again. This
could be another of Yourdon and Fiore's half-assed security measures.
What good does it do me to get into an access tunnel if the other
floors are all open to space? Assuming they know about these access
tunnels in the first place, of course.
I wipe the sweat from my face and lean against
the wall. "Up or down?" I ask aloud, but nobody's answering. Down, at
least there's another level with air. Up, and . . .
well, there might be nothing. Or there might be a whole damn orbital
habitat that the bad guys don't know about. I could step out into a
city boulevard in Old Paradys, or the back of a brasserie in Zhang Li.
If I get lucky. If I'm not just imagining those places.
I stow the big flashlight in my belt loop and
head back toward the ladder. If I don't get somewhere in another
thousand rungs, I'm going to have to rethink my escape plan. Two
thousand rungs total will be nearly half a kilometer. If I'd realized I
was in for something like this, I would have bought climbing equipment,
a winch, even a rope I could sling around myself so I could rest on the
ladder. I fantasize briefly about rocket packs and elevator cars. Then
I grab the next rung and begin to climb again.
Another nine hundred rungs up the ladder I
become half-certain that I'm going to die. My arms are screaming at me,
and my left thigh has started threatening to cramp. I pause for breath,
my heart hammering. It's like being on the cliff again. This hab has
got to be kilometers in radius—the gravity here feels about the
same as it did when I started out. I'm in a tube with Urth-standard
gee, air: terminal velocity will be about eighty meters per second. If
I were to let go, the Coriolis force would rub me against the ladder
like a cheese grater at two hundred kilometers per hour, leaving a
greasy red smear. I can keep climbing, sure, but how easy is it going
to be to climb back down if I keep going up until I'm exhausted?
Thinking about it, I'm not sure going down is any better than going up.
Less lifting, but still flexing a left elbow that feels about twice the
size it should be, hot and throbbing as I raise it—
There's another platform ahead. Twenty rungs up.
Roughly four hundred meters from the bottom. "What?" I'm talking to
myself—that's not good news. I raise my right hand. Yes, it's a
platform.
The next thing I know, I'm sitting on the
platform, my legs dangling over the abyss, and I have no clear
recollection of how I got here. I must have had another fugue moment. I
shudder, my blood running cold at the realization.
I look round. This platform is just like the
last one, right down to the door with the handwheel set in it two
meters up the tunnel. Which means either I'm shit out of luck,
or—well, I can try the door, at least. If it doesn't work, I can
rest up. Then it's either up or down, heads or tails. I really don't
think I can make another climb until my abused muscles have had some
time to recover, and I didn't bring water or food. So I guess it's
down, and down and down and back into the depths of Yourdon's little
totalitarian fantasy.
Unless I let go of the ladder.
Or the door opens.
I take a
kilosecond to rest up before I approach the door. When I spin the wheel
one-handed, it smoothly winds up momentum, then there's a sigh of
long-seated gaskets as it pulls away from the frame and swings out to
one side. I look through the opening and see a universe that doesn't
make any kind of sense to my eyes.
The floor in front of the doorway is flat,
slightly rough, with a grayish stippled regularity typical of a
high-grip paving system. The segments are Penrose tiles, presumably
laid out by a walking assembler that crawled across the inner surface
of this gigantic cylindrical space, never recrossing its own path as it
vomited out the floor. Above my head there's a grayish ceiling that
curves in the far distance to meet the upturned bowl of the horizon.
Fine needles of diamond stab from the floor to the roof, holding heaven
and earth apart. The door I've just stepped out of is set in the base
of one of the needles—they're huge, and they're a long way apart.
This is probably an interdeck, an interstitial
support space between the inhabited floors. Or it's a deck that hasn't
been linked into the manifold of T-gates, terraformed and tamed and
occupied. At a guess I've climbed right through Yourdon's security
cordon, a level left open to vacuum. If I'd gone down I'd have
found . . . what? Maybe a level where the experimenters
live, where they're working on the upgraded Curious Yellow. Or just as
likely, another vacuum level.
My knees feel like rubber. I lean against the
outer wall of the radial tube I've just climbed, feeling completely
exhausted. I look up at the ceiling, almost half a kilometer up, and
realize just how little it curves and how wide the basin of reality is.
There are clouds in here, collecting near the tops of some of the
needles. The air is slightly misty and smells of dry yeast. Strange
monochromatic humps in the floor suggest hills and berms—mass
reserves waiting for the giant habitat assemblers to go to work on
them. I try to identify the end caps of the cylinder, but they're lost
in the haze, several tens of kilometers away. The light is coming from
thousands of tiny bright points in the ceiling.
I could starve to death in this place long before I could walk out of it.
I try to rest up for a while, but unease prods
me into premature motion. I know I need to try and accommodate this
fatigue, but there's an edge of panic whenever I think about Kay, or
the consequences of the thing lurking in my head that (I'm
half-convinced) is causing these blackouts. There's not a lot I can do,
except stay with the ladder and hope to find something more promising
on the next deck up—almost a kilometer above my head. But I don't
think I'd make it.
I stumble away from the ladder, heading toward
the nearest berm. Maybe there'll be some emotional machinery near there
that I'll be able to communicate with, something from outside
YFH-Polity's frontier that'll be able to put me in touch with reality.
I try my netlink, but it's dull and frozen, showing nothing but a
crashed listing of point scores allocated to my cohort. Curious Yellow, I think dully. That's why I can't hear Sam when he says * * *: the score-tracking system is based on Curious Yellow.
A couple hundred meters from the berm I see signs of life. Something about
the size of a taxi, consisting of loosely coupled rods and spheres, is
hunching up over the crest of the deposit. It extends tubular sensors
in my direction, then vaults over the crest of the hill, sensors
blurring into iridescent disks, ball-and-rod assemblies spinning on its
back. The balls are growing and thinning, unfolding like cauliflower
heads that glow with a diffractive sheen. I stop and wait for it to
arrive. I guess it's some kind of specialized biome construction
supervisor, an intelligent gardener. There is absolutely nothing I
could do to stop it from killing me if it's hostile—I might as
well attack a tank with a blunt carving knife—but that's
relatively unlikely. Knowing that doesn't make waiting easy, though.
It closes intimidatingly rapidly but rolls to a
stop about three meters away from me. "Hello," I say, "do you have a
language facility?"
The gardener draws itself up until it looms over
me. Florets open and close, buzzing faintly. "Who are you and what are
you doing here?"
I relax very slightly. "I'm Robin." The name feels odd, unfamiliar. "What polity is this?"
It buzzes and clicks to itself, flattening
slightly at the top like a puzzled cobra. "Hello, Robin. This zone is
no polity. It is ballast sector eighty nine, aboard the MASucker Harvest Lore. It is not an inhabitable biome. What are you doing here?"
No polity. I'm on a MASucker. Which means there'll probably only be one longjump gate on the whole ship, heavily firewalled . . .
I close my eyes and try not to sway on my feet. "I am trying to locate
legal authorities to whom I can report a serious crime. Mass identity
theft. If this isn't a polity, what is it?"
"I am not authorized to tell you. You are Robin.
I am required to ask you: How did you get here? You are showing signs
of physical distress. Do you require medical attention?"
I attempt to open my eyes, but they're not
responding. "Help," I try to say. Then my eyes open, and I'm back on
the ladder, hanging off it by one hand, feet dangling over the abyss of
an infinite cylinder, but there are no rungs and there's another tube
nested inside this one, stippled with a myriad of tiny points of light,
and something is comingout of the wall to lean over me. "Help," I repeat, as the thing bends toward me.
"I will alert the Kapitan's lodge."
Darkness.
WE declared
victory within the local manifold ten megasecs ago, and the magnitude
of the reconstruction headache is just beginning to sink in. We've
driven Curious Yellow back into its box and broken up the quisling
dictatorships that thrived under it. But the war isn't over until a
restart is out of the question. And that's an entirely different matter.
"The problem is, about half of the Provisional
Government have vanished," Sanni—now a very senior
colonel—tells me. (We're in a staff meeting room in MilSpace,
cramped and beige and securely anonymized.) "The high-profile arrests
are all very well, but where are the others?" She doesn't sound happy.
"They can't just vanish. Not without leaving
some kind of traces, surely?" That's Al, the long-suffering gofer who
keeps our research team in touch with the operational requirements
group and headquarters' Received Instructions Interpretation Unit,
whose job is to make sense of the oracular statements our Exultant
patron occasionally offers. "There are a lot of scores to settle."
"It's a lot easier to slip through the cracks
than it used to be," Sanni explains patiently. "Back when the Republic
was unitary it could track identities effectively. But since the end of
Is, we've been left with a myriad of self-contained polities, not all
of which will talk to each other. Their internal data models aren't
transitive. There could be any number of inconsistencies out there, and
we can't normalize for them."
What she means is, the Republic of Is provided
the most important common services a post-Acceleration civilization
needs: time and authentication. Without time, you can't be sure that
the same financial instrument isn't being executed in two different
places at once. And without authentication, you can't be certain that
the person in Body A is the owner of Identity A, rather than an
interloper who has stolen a copy of Body A. Time was easy before
spaceflight because it was a function of geography, not network
connectivity, and tracking people was easy because people couldn't
change species and sex and age and whatever on a whim. But since the
Acceleration, the prevention of identity theft has become one of the
core functions of government, any government. It's not just a
matter of preventing the most serious of crimes against the person;
without time and authentication little things like money and law
enforcement stop working.
Now the Republic of Is has fragmented, and its
successor polities aren't all running on the same time base. It's
possible to slip between the cracks and vanish. It's possible for a
hapless emigrant to leave Polity A for Polity B and arrive with a
different mind directing their body, with all the authentication tokens
that travel with them still pointing at the original identity. If your
A-gate firewalls don't trust each other implicitly, you've got a huge
problem. Which is why we're holed up here in a dingy cubicle in
MilSpace discussing it, rather than returning to business as usual on
the outside.
"We're going to have a huge problem with
revenants," Sanni adds. "Not the solo ones who just want to hide.
They'll mostly go to ground, set up a new identity, erase their
memories of the war, build a new life. A whole bunch of dog-fucking
criminals are going to think: Hey, I could be anyone tomorrow! And the
dilemma we face is, is there really any point persecuting a former
collaborator if they don't even remember what they did anymore? I
figure we're best leaving the deserters to lie. But the organized
groups are going to be a real headache. If they stay organized and hang
on to their memories, they could try to start it all up again. We might
be able to nail a bunch of them through traffic analysis, but what if
they set up an identity remixer somewhere? If they can get lots of
clean identities going into an isolated polity where they mingle with
the criminals, bodies go in, bodies come out, and how would we know
what's happening in the middle? If they're in charge of the firewall,
they can play any number of tricks. A shell game."
"So we look out for things like that," Al suggests.
I stare at him, and force myself to wait for a couple of seconds before I
open my mouth: Al isn't always fast on the uptake. "That's a fair
description of any modern polity," I point out. "And we haven't
consolidated control everywhere—we've only broken CY's
coordination capability within all the networks we're in direct
communication with. If we want to clean up, we've got to go further."
"So?" Al glyphs amusement in lieu of having a
face to smile with. "It's an ongoing process. Maybe you need to think
about what you're going to do with the bad guys when you've rounded
them up?"
I hear dryness,
and there's a taste of blue in my mouth, and I have an erection. I lick
my lips and find my mouth is dry and tastes like something died in it.
And I don't have an erection because I don't have a penis to have one
with. What I've got is a bad case of, of—memory fugue, I realize, and my eyes click open.
I'm lying between harshly starched white sheets,
facing a white wall with strange sockets in it. Pale green hangings
form a curtain on either side of my bed. Someone's put me in an odd
gown with a slit running right up the back. The gown is also green. This must be the hospital, I think, closing my eyes and trying not to panic. How did I get here? Trying not to panic is a nonstarter. I gasp and try to sit up.
A few seconds later the dizziness subsides and I
try again. My heart's pounding, I'm queasy, and the front of my head
aches; I feel as weak as a jellyfish. Meanwhile the panic is scraping
at my attention again. Who brought me here? If Yourdon finds me, he'll kill me!
There's some kind of box with buttons on it hanging from a hook on the
bed frame. I pick it up and stab a button at semirandom, and my feet
come up. Other way! Ten seconds later I'm sitting up uncomfortably, the bed raised behind my back. It puts an unpleasant pressure on my stomach, but
with verticality comes a minute degree of comfort—I've got some
control over my environment—before the greater unease sneaks up
on me again.
Okay, so the gardener—I trail off, my internal narrative stuck in a haze of incomprehension. It brought me here? Where is here, anyway?
This bed—it's one of a row, spaced alongside one wall in a huge,
high-ceilinged white room. There's an array of windows set high up in
the opposite wall, and I can glimpse blue and white sky through it.
Incomprehensible bits of equipment are dotted around. There are lockers
next to some of the beds—and I see that one of the beds at the
other end of the room looks to be occupied.
I close my eyes, feeling a deadweight of dread. I'm still in the glasshouse, I realize sickly.
But I'm too weak to do anything, and, besides,
I'm not alone. I hear the clack of approaching heels and the sound of
voices coming my way. "Hours end at four o'clock," says a female voice
with the flattening of affect I've come to expect of zombies. "The
consultant will visit in the evening. The patient is weak and is not to
be disturbed excessively." The curtain twitches back, and I see a
female zombie wearing a white dress and an odd hair adornment. The
zombie looks at me. "You have a visitor," she intones. "Do not
overexert yourself."
"Uh," I manage to say, and try to turn my head
so I can see who it is, but they're still half-concealed behind the
curtain. It's like a nightmare, when you know some kind of monster is
creeping up on you—
"Well, if it isn't our little librarian!"
And I think, Fuck, I know that voice! And simultaneously, almost petulantly, But you can't be here,
just as Fiore steps around the curtain and leans over the rail
alongside my bed, an expression of bemused condescension on his face.
"Would you like to tell me where you think you were going?"
"No." I manage to avoid gritting my teeth. "Not
particularly." The nightmare has caught up, and the well of despair is
threatening to swallow me down. They've caught me and brought me back
to play with me. I feel sick and hot.
"Come now, Reeve." Unctuous, that's the word. Fiore plants one plump hand on my forehead, and I realize he feels clammy and cold. "Oh dear. You are in a state." He removes the hand before I can shake it off, and I shiver. "I can see why they brought you straight here."
I clamp my teeth shut, waiting for the coup de
grâce, but Fiore seems to have something else in mind. "I have to
look after the pastoral well-being of all my flock, little lady, so I can't stay too long with you. You're obviously ill"—he
puts some kind of odd emphasis on the word—"and I'm sure that's
the explanation for your recent erratic behavior. But next time you
decide to go climbing in the walls, you should come and talk to me
first"—for a moment his expression hardens—"you wouldn't
want to do anything you might regret later."
Between shivers, I manage to roll my eyes. "I have no regrets." Why is he playing with me?
"Come now!" Fiore clucks disapprovingly for a
moment. "Of course you have regrets! To be human is to be regretful.
But we must learn to make the most of what we have to work with,
mustn't we? You've been slow to settle in and find your place in our
little parish, Reeve, and that's been causing some concern to those of
us who keep an eye on such things. I have—may I be
frank?—been worried that you might be an incorrigibly disruptive
influence. On the other hand, you obviously mean well, and care for
your neighbors—" An unreadable expression flits across his jowls.
"So I'm trying to give you the benefit of the doubt. Rest now, and
we'll continue our little chat later, when you're feeling better."
He straightens up in his portly manner and begins to turn away. I shiver again, a chill running up my spine. It's like he doesn't know I killed him!
I realize. I can see Fiore running multiple instances of himself, but
surely they'd be aware of each other, by way of their netlink? Why, doesn't he—
"You," I manage to say.
"Yes?"
"You." It's hard to form words. I'm really feeling feverish. "What's the, the . . ."
"I don't have all day!" His voice rises when
he's irritated, in an annoying whine. He straightens his robe. "Nurse?
I say, nurse!" In a quieter voice, to me: "I'll have them send for your
husband. I'm sure you'll have a lot to talk about." Then he turns on
his heel and bumbles away down the ward toward the other occupied beds.
I realize my teeth are chattering: I'm not sure whether from fever or black helpless rage. I killed you! And you didn't even notice!
Then the nurse comes stomping along in her sensible shoes, clutching
some kind of primitive diagnostic instrument, and I realize that I'm
feeling extremely unwell.
NURSE Zombie
gives me a test that involves sliding a cold glass rod into my ear and
staring into my eyes from close range, then she pulls out a jar and
gives me what I assume at first is a piece of candy, except that it
tastes vile. The hospital is set up to resemble a real dark ages
installation, but luckily they seem to draw the line at leeches or
heart transplants and similar barbarism. I guess this is some sort of
drug, synthesized at great expense and administered to have some random
weird systemic effect on my metabolism. "Try to sleep," Nurse explains
to me. "You are ill."
"C-cold," I whisper.
"Try to sleep, you are ill." But Nurse bends
down and pulls out a loose-weave blanket. "Drink lots of fluids." The
glass on the table next to me is empty, and in any case, I feel too
shivery to pull an arm out from under the blanket. "You are ill."
No shit. It's not just my arms and
legs—all my joints are screaming at me in chorus with a whole
load of muscles I wish I didn't have right now—but my head's
throbbing and I feel like I'm freezing to death and my stomach's not so
good either. And the blackouts and memory fugues are still with me.
"What's wrong with, me?" I ask, and it takes a big effort to get the
words out.
"You are ill," the zombie repeats. It's useless
arguing with her—nobody home, no theory of mind, just a bunch of
reflexes and canned dialogues.
"Who can I ask?"
She's turning away, but I seem to have tripped a new response. "The consultant
will visit at eight o'clock tonight, all questions must be addressed to
the consultant. The patient is weak and must not be disturbed
excessively. Drink lots of fluids." She picks up an empty jug that was
out of view a moment ago and whisks it away toward one end of the ward.
A moment later she's back with it. "Drink lots of fluids."
"Yeah . . ." I shudder and try to
work myself into a smaller volume under the blanket. I dimly realize I
ought to be asking lots of questions—actually I ought to be
forcing myself out of bed and running like my hair's on fire—but
right now, just pouring myself a glass of water seems like an heroic
task.
I lie back and stare at the ceiling, incoherent
with anger and embarrassment. Did I imagine myself killing Fiore in the
library? I don't think so; the memories are vivid. But so are all my
other memories, the massacres and the endless years of war. And not all
my memories are real, are they? The bootstrap memory, talking to
another voice in my own larynx—if it's not just a false memory of
a false memory, then it certainly wasn't me: It was a customized worm
running on my implant. I can't—this is getting
difficult—trust myself, especially while I keep going into fugue.
"Can I?" I ask, and I open my eyes again, and Sam startles.
He's leaning over me where Fiore was, and I
realize immediately that I've been in fugue for some time. I'm cold,
but I'm no longer feverish; the sheets are damp with sweat, and the
light visible through the windows is dimming toward evening. "Reeve?"
he asks anxiously.
"Sam." I lift my hand and reach for him. He wraps my fingers in his. "I'm ill."
"I came as soon as I heard. Fiore telephoned the office." He sounds slightly shocky, his eyes haunted. "What happened?"
I shiver again. The damp sheets are getting to me. "Later." Meaning: Not where the walls have ears. "Need water." My mouth's really dry. "I keep having fugues."
"The nurse said something about a consultant,"
says Sam. "Dr. Hanta. She said he'd be coming to look at you later. Are
you going to be all right? Why are you ill?"
I clutch Sam's hand as hard as I can. "I don't
know." He offers me the water glass, and I swallow.
"Suspect . . . not. Not sure. How long was
I . . . asleep . . . for?"
"You didn't recognize me when I came in," Sam
says. He's holding on to my hand as if he's afraid one of us is
drowning. "You didn't recognize me."
"Memory fugue's getting much worse," I say. I lick my lips. "Three"—no, four—"today.
I'm not sure why. I keep remembering stuff, but I'm not sure how much
of it is real. Thought I'd"—I stop before I say killed Fiore,
just in case I really did and there's some other reason the priest
doesn't know about it—"escaped. But I woke up here." I close my
eyes. "Fiore says I'm ill."
"What am I meant to do?" Sam asks plaintively. "How do I fix you? There's no A-gate here . . ."
"Dark ages tech." My hand aches from gripping
him. I force it to relax. "They didn't disassemble people and rebuild
them, they used medicine, drugs, and surgery. Tried to repair damaged
tissue in situ."
"That's insane!"
I chuckle weakly. "You're telling me? That's
what the consultant is, he's a doctor." One of those weird, obsolescent
words that doesn't mean what it used to—in the real world outside
this prison, a doctor is a scholar, someone who investigates stuff, not
a wetware mechanic. I suppose it may have meant the same back in the
real dark ages, when nobody really knew how self-replicating organisms
functioned and there was an element of research involved. "I think he's
meant to figure out what's wrong with me and repair it. Assuming they
don't just have a medical assembler down in the basement here—" I
clutch his hand, because a horrible thought's just struck me. If
they've got a medical A-gate, won't it be infected with Curious Yellow?
"Don't let them put me in it!"
"Put you in—what? What is it, Reeve? Reeve, are you having another fugue?"
Things are going gray around me. He leans close, and I whisper, "* * *," in his ear. Then—
DESPERATION is the engine of necessity.
It's two hundred megs since that committee
meeting with Al and Sanni and a lot of things have changed. Me, for
example: I'm not in military phenotype anymore. Neither is Sanni. We're
civilians now, corpuscles of military experience discharged into the
circulating confusion of reconstruction that has become the future of
Is.
I'm not used to being human again, ortho or
otherwise—bits of me are missing. When the war exploded, trapping
me on the MASucker for almost a generation, I was reduced to what I was
carrying on my person and in my head. Then when I militarized myself, I
had to let component aspects of my identity go. I'm not sure why, in
all cases. Some things make sense (when at war, one's scruples about
inflicting pain and injury on the enemy faction must be suppressed),
but there are gaps that follow no obvious rhyme or reason. According to
my written notes from the period on the Grateful for Duration,
I used to have an abiding and deep interest in baroque music of the
preindustrialized age, but now I can't recall even a scrap of melody.
Again, I used to be married, with children, but I am mystified by my
lack of memories from the period, or feelings. Maybe that was a
reaction to grief, and maybe not—but now I've been demobilized, I
find myself out of reaction mass and adrift along an escape vector
diverging from all attachments. Only my new job retains any hold over
me.
The Linebarger Cats emerged from the coalition
with significant assets. To my surprise I received a credit balance
that with careful management might mean I never need to work
again—at least for a few gigasecs. It seems that warfare pays, if
you're on the winning side and manage not to misplace your mind in the
process.
When I left MilSpace (a convoluted process
involving numerous anonymous remixer networks and one-way censorship
gates to strip me of my military modules before my reintegration into
civil society), I had myself reassembled as a louche young man in the
Cognitive Republic of Lichtenstein. There's a lot to be said for being
louche, especially after you've spent several hundred megaseconds with
no genitals.
Lichtenstein is a vivid and cynical colony of
artistic satirists, so sophisticated they've almost circled back into
primitivism. By convention we use visual field filters that limn
everything in dark strokes, filling our bodies with color. Life aspires
toward a state of machinima. It's a strange way to be, but familiar and
comfortable after the unsleeping hyperspectral awareness of a tankie.
So I hang around in the galleries and salons of Lichtenstein,
exchanging witty repartee and tall stories with the other
habitués, and in my copious free time I pay frequent trips to
the bathhouses and floataria. I make a point of never sleeping with the
same person twice in the same body, although I discover that even such
anonymous abandon doesn't protect me from my lovers' tears: It seems
half the population have lost someone and are wandering, searching the
world over.
My life is outwardly directionless for the first
four or five megs. In private I work on something that might eventually
turn out to be a memoir of the war—an old-fashioned serialized
text provocatively promoting a single viewpoint, without any pretense
at objectivity—while in public I live on my savings. DeMob gave
me a reasonably secure cover identity as a playboy remittance man from
a primogeniture polity, sent to while away his youth in less hidebound
(and politically loaded) biomes, and it's not hard to keep up
appearances. But deep down, the insignificance and lack of meaning of
such a life chafes; I want to be doing something, and while the project
I've been working on under Sanni's auspices for the past couple of
years fits the bill, it is, perforce, anonymous. If I make a mark, it
will be by my deeds, not my name. And so, as my debauch intensifies, I
slip into a kind of melancholic haze.
Then one morning I am awakened by a brassy flare of trumpets from the bedside orrery, which announces that I have a visitor.
I realize who
and where I am—and that I am desperately sick—at the exact
moment that Dr. Hanta presses a small, freezing cold brass disk against
the bare skin between my breasts. "Ow!"
"Breathe slowly," she orders, not unkindly, then
blinks like a sleepy owl from behind her thick-lensed glasses: "Ah,
back in the realm of the conscious, are we?"
By way of an answer I go into a hoarse coughing
fit, my muscles locking in spasms that leave my ribs aching. Hanta
recoils slightly, removing the stethoscope. "I see," she says. "I'll
just wait a moment—glass of water?"
I realize she's jacked the back of my bed up as
the coughing subsides. "Yes. Please." I'm shivery and weak but not
freezing anymore. She holds out a glass, and I manage to accept it
without spilling anything, although my hand shakes alarmingly. "What's
wrong with me?"
"That's what I'm here to find out." Hanta is a
petite female, shorter than I am, her skin a shade darker, although not
the aubergine-tinted brown of Fiore. Her short hair is dusted with the
silver spoor of impending senescence, and there are laugh-lines around
her face. She wears an odd white overcoat buttoned up the front and
carries the arcane totems of her profession, the caduceus and
stethoscope—the bell of the latter she rubs upon my chest. She
looks friendly and open and trustworthy, the antithesis of her two
clerical colleagues: but beauty is not truth, and some gut instinct
tells me never to let my guard down in her presence. "How long have you
been febrile?"
"Febrile?"
"Hot and cold. Chills, shivers, alternating with too hot. Night sweats, anything like that."
"Oh, about—" I feel my forehead wrinkling. "What day is it? How long have I been in here?"
"You've been here six hours," Dr. Hanta says patiently. "You were brought in around midafternoon."
I shiver convulsively. My skin is icy. "Since an hour or two before then."
"The Reverend Doctor Fiore tells me you were climbing." Her tone is neutral, professional, with no note of censure.
I swallow. "Since then."
"You're a lucky lady." Hanta smiles
enigmatically and moves her stethoscope to the ball of my left
shoulder, pulling open my hospital gown to get at it. "I'm sorry, I'll
be quick. Hmm." She stares into the stethoscope's eye crystal and
frowns. "It's a long time since I've seen that . . .
sorry." She straightens up. "It's not safe to climb around in the walls
here; some of the neighboring biomes aren't biomorphically integrated.
There are replicators in the mass fraction reserve cells that will eat
anything based on a nucleotide chassis that doesn't broadcast a contact
inhibition signal, and you're not equipped for that."
I swallow again—my mouth is unnaturally dry. "What?"
"Somehow or other you've managed to get yourself infected with a strain of pestis mechaniculorum.
You're feverish because your immune system is still just about
containing it. It's a good thing for you that we found you before
mechanotic cytolysis set in . . . Anyway, I'll fix you
up just as soon as I finish sequencing it."
"Um." I shudder again. "Oh, okay."
" ‘Okay' indeed. Do I have to tell
you not to go climbing around inside the walls again?" I shake my head,
almost embarrassed by my own fear of discovery. "Good." She pats me on
the shoulder. "At least if you're going to do it again, come to me
first, please? No more unfortunate accidents." She carefully
disconnects the stethoscope and wraps it around her caduceus. It makes
soft clicking noises as it fuses with the staff. "Now I'll just run you
off a little antirobotic, and you'll be up and about in no time."
Dr. Hanta hitches up her coat, then perches on a
stool next to my bed. "Isn't this a bit out of character?" I ask her,
throwing caution to the winds. I suspect if I asked Fiore or Yourdon
that question, they'd bite my head off, but Hanta seems more
approachable, if not more trustworthy.
"We all make mistakes." It's that smile again:
It's slightly fey and very sincere, as if she's laughing at a joke that
I'd laugh along with, if I only knew what it was. "You leave worrying
about the integrity of the experiment to me, dear." She waves a
dismissive hand. "Of course you worry about it when the priests' backs
are turned. Of course people try to game the system—it's only to
be expected. Probably some people don't even want to be here. Maybe
they changed their minds after signing the waiver. All I can say is,
we'll do our best to make sure they're not unhappy with the outcome."
She raises an eyebrow at me speculatively. "It's not easy to run an
experiment on this scale, and we make mistakes, what else can I say?
Some of us make more mistakes than others." And now she pulls an
expression of mild distaste, which seems to say it all. She's inviting
my agreement, and I find myself nodding along despite my better
judgment.
"But those mistakes . . ." I stop, unsure if I should continue.
"Yes?" She leans forward.
"How's Cass?" I force myself to ask.
Dr. Hanta's face, which up until now has been open and friendly, closes like a trapdoor. "Why do you ask?"
I lick my lips again. "I need something to
drink." She slides off her stool and paces round my bed, pours what's
left of the water jug into my cup, and hands it to me without a word. I
swallow. "One of Fiore's little mistakes, I suppose." I aim to say it
lightly, but it comes out dripping with sarcasm.
"Oh yes." Dr. Hanta looks round, toward the far
end of the ward—at something hidden from me by the curtain. I
shudder, and this time it's not from the fever chills. "I wouldn't say
one of his little mistakes." Her tone of voice is dry, but
there's something behind it that makes me glad I can't see her face.
But when she turns back to me, her expression is perfectly normal.
"Cass will be all right, dear."
"And Mick?" I prompt.
"That is under discussion."
"Under discussion. Was what happened to Esther and Phil discussed ahead of time?"
"Reeve"—she actually has the gall to look
upset—"no, it wasn't. Someone miscalculated badly. They've gone
back to the primary sources and discovered that what, what Esther and
Phil were doing wasn't so very unusual. And you're right, the weighting
attached to, uh, what they did—Major Fiore misjudged the mood of
the crowd. It won't happen again, we've learned from that experience,
and from—" She swallows, then nods minutely at the curtain. "If a
couple doesn't get on, there's going to be a procedure to go through to
obtain formal social approval of the separation. We're not evil. We're
in this for the long haul, and if you're unhappy, if everyone's unhappy
here, the polity won't gel, and the experiment can't work."
The experiment can't work. I look at her and find myself wondering, Does she mean it?
Fiore and Yourdon are so cynical I find myself startled to be in the
presence of a member of their team who seems to believe in what she's
doing. I'm suddenly appalled, as badly taken aback by her honesty as
the police zombies are by a stripper. "Uh. I think I see." I shake my
head, then wince. My neck aches. "But as long as Mick stays here, some
of us won't be happy at all."
"Oh, Mick will be dealt with one way or another,
dear." Her caduceus trills for attention, and she fidgets with it as
she talks. "I don't think the psychological damage is
irremediable—we probably won't have to restore from backup, which
is a good thing right now. But I'm going to have to redesign his
motivational parameters from the ground up." She frowns at the serpent
heads but doesn't explain herself further. "Cass will
be . . . well, I'm attending to the physical damage
right now, and when she's better, I'll ask her who she wants to be."
She falls silent for a few seconds. "Most medical fraternities,
confronted by a patient with this level of damage, would prescribe
gross memory surgery—or simply terminate the instance and restore
from backup. I don't believe in authorizing such a serious step without
taking her wishes into account."
She falls silent again. After a moment I realize she's staring at me. "What is it?"
"We need to talk about your blackouts."
"My what?" I bite my tongue, but it's a bit late to play dumb.
Dr. Hanta raises one eyebrow and crosses her
arms. "I'm not stupid, you know." She looks away, as if she's speaking
to someone else. "Everyone in here has been through redactive
reweighting and experiential reduction before we recruit them. One of
the reasons this polity needs a medical supervisor is to be ready for
identity crises. Most people have some inkling of who they used to be
and why they wanted memory surgery. Occasionally, we get someone who
doesn't remember—there's something they wanted to bury so deep
that they wouldn't even know what it was about. Something painful. But
I don't normally see . . . well! You've gone into fugue
twice since you were admitted to this ward, did you know that? I
checked with your husband during your last one, and he said you've been
having them more frequently."
She leans toward me, keeping her hands
sandwiched in her armpits as if she's hugging herself. "I don't like to
intrude where I'm not wanted, but by the sound of it, you need help
very badly indeed. You seem to have had a bad reaction to the
suppressants the clinic used on you, and while I can't be sure without
making a detailed examination, there is a risk that you could be
heading for some kind of crisis. I don't want to overstate things, but
in the worst-case scenario you could lose . . . well,
everything that makes you you. For example, if it's an
autoimmune reaction—according to your file you've got a heuristic
upgrade to your complement system, and sometimes the Bayesian
recognizers start firing off at the wrong targets—you could end
up with anterograde amnesia, a complete inability to lay down any new
mnemostructures. Or it might just be a sloppy earlier edit bleeding
through and triggering random integration fugues, in which case things
will ease off after a while, although you won't enjoy the ride. But I
can't tell you what to expect, much less treat you, if you won't even
admit you've got a problem."
"Oh." It takes me a while to absorb this, but
Hanta is remarkably patient with me and waits while I think about
things. If I didn't know better, I'd swear she actually liked me. "A
problem," I echo, uncertain how much I can let slip, before a cold
chill runs its icy fingers up my spine, and I shudder uncontrollably.
"Speaking of problems . . ."
Hanta raises her caduceus: "This will hurt, but only momentarily and a
lot less than being eaten alive by a mechaplague." She smiles faintly
as she points it at my shoulder, and I wince as the asps strike at me.
There's a toothy little prickling as they begin pumping adjuvant
patches into my circulation, upgrading my prosthetic immune system so
that it can deal with the pestis. I try not to wince.
"The infection will take some time to die off,
and there's a risk that it's adaptable enough to out-evolve the
robophages, so I'm going to keep you here overnight—just for
observation. Hopefully you'll be well enough to go home tomorrow, and
I'm going to write you up for a week off work while you recover. In the
meantime, have a think about whatI said concerning your memory problem, and we can talk about it in the morning when I check on your progress."
The snake-heads let go of me and wrap themselves back around the staff as Hanta stands up. "Sleep well!"
NATURALLY, I don't sleep well at all.
At first, I spend an indeterminate time
shuddering with cold chills and occasionally forgetting to inhale until
some primitive reflex kicks me into sucking in great rasping gasps of
air. Sleep is out of the question when you're afraid you'll stop
breathing, so I amuse myself to the point of abject terror by rolling
the events of the day over in my mind. Great arterial gouts of blood
project like ghosts upon the wall, shadows of my guilt over killing
Fiore . . . Fiore? But he doesn't know I killed him! Did
I hallucinate the whole thing? Obviously not the mad scramble up the
shaft, arms burning with overstressed muscles. The priest and the
doctor both knew about it. Assuming I didn't imagine their visits, I
remind myself. I'm fighting off a mecha infection and an obscure
neurological crisis at the same time. Wouldn't it be reasonable to
suspect I might just be out of my skull?
The lights on the ward have dimmed, and the
glimpse of sky I can see through the windows is deepening toward
purple, fly-specked with burning pinpricks of luminescence that glitter
oddly, as if refracted through a deep pool of water. Maybe they don't
know I know about Curious Yellow and the assembler in the library
basement, I tell myself. They just think I'm having a mental breakdown,
and I went for a little climb. Dissociative fugue, isn't that what the ancients called it?
I got myself infected with compost nano and Fiore called Hanta in to
patch me up, and he won't mention it in Church because it would
undermine the integrity of the experiment. Maybe they're right, and I
just imagined killing Fiore. I'm not simply remembering fragments of
badly suppressed memories, I'm confabulating out of fragments,
synthesizing false memories from the wreckage of a failed erasure job.
The memories of my time in the Cats, could they simply be recollections
from a game I used to play? Multiplayer immersive worlds with a plot
and an identity model—I don't remember being a gamer, but if I
wanted to get rid of an addiction, mightn't I have tried to flush it
out with a lightweight round of memory surgery?
I can't ask anyone, I realize. If I ask Sam, and
he hasn't heard of the Linebarger Cats, it doesn't mean they weren't
real—everyone here's been through memory excision! I'd giggle if
my throat wasn't so dry. I am Reeve! Watch me fake up a bunch of memories to haunt myself with!
Was the guy who stalked me through the hallways of the Invisible
Republic real? What about the mad bitch with the sword who called me
out? I've been running from enemies I never actually saw—only
glimpsed out of the sides of my eyes. It's like I'm suffering from
blindsight, the strange neurological trauma that leaves its victims
unable to see but able to sense events in their visual field by
guessing. Maybe I'm an intelligence agent trying to track down a
dangerous nest of enemies . . . and maybe I'm just a
sad, sick woman who used to substitute game play for living a real life
and who's now paying the price.
I lie awake in the twilight and eventually I
realize that the shivering has gone. I ache, and I'm feeble, but that's
to be expected after the long climb. And as I lie there I become aware
of the subtle noises on the ward, the soft white noise of the
air-conditioning, the tick of a clock, the quiet sobbing of—
Sobbing?
I sit bolt upright, the sheet and blanket
falling away from me. My thoughts churn in parallel with a sense of
dread and a numinous awareness of relief. Rescuing Cass and If Cass is here, then that memory was real with Still doesn't mean everything else was real and finally If it was real, Cass must be . . .
"Shit," I hear myself mutter. I pull the bedding
up and clutch it like a frightened child. "I can't deal with this." I
feel like sucking my thumb. "I am not ready for this." I'm
subvocalizing, so low I make no sound. I have to talk softly when I'm
telling myself the truth, because the truth is embarrassing and
hurtful. I flash back to what Hanta said: When she's better, I'll ask
her who she wants to be, and that's a comfort because I certainly don't
have anything better to offer her. Is Hanta up to doing memory surgery properly? I ponder. It would surprise me if they didn't
have a full surgeon-confessor along for the ride—it's the
ultimate prophylactic for those little ethical embarrassments that an
experimental polity might suffer. (Or for those little
infiltration-level embarrassments that a secret military installation
might encounter, a lying, cynical part of me that I'm no longer
entirely sure I believe in adds.)
I lie down again. The sobbing continues for a
while, then I hear the clacking heels of a nursing zombie converge on
the bed. Quiet voices and a sigh, followed by snores. The white ghost
of a nurse pauses at the foot of my bed, its face a dim oval. "Do you
need anything?" It asks me.
I shake my head. It's a lie, but what I need they can't provide.
THE next morning starts badly, shattered into fragments like a dropped vase:
"More fugues. Reeve, you're getting worse."
His large hand enfolding my small one. Weak and
pale. He strokes the back of my wrist with his thumb. I look into his
eyes and see sadness there and wonder why—
Two liquid-metal snake-heads bite at my wrist,
and I cry out, pulling away as they inject soothing numbness. The woman
who carries them is a goddess, golden-skinned with burning eyes.
I'm a tank again, a regiment of tanks, dropping
through the freezing night toward an enemy habitat—or did this
come later? I disconnect from the virtch interface and shake my head,
look around at the other players in the game arcade, and hear myself
whisper, "But it wasn't like that—"
Scratch of a carved goose feather on rough
paper, body of a pen made from a human bone. You will remember nothing
at first. If you did, they could parse your experience vector and
identify you as a threat.
"She's really bad this morning. The adjuvants
have worked—that infection is definitely on the mend—but
she's no use to us like this."
"What do you expect me to do? She's in danger of sliding into full-blown anterograde—"
A suffocating stench of bowels as I slide my
rapier back out of his guts. He lies among the rosebushes in a dueling
zone, beneath the shadow of a marble statue of an extinct species of
flying mammal. A sudden stab of horror, because this is a man I could
have loved.
"Fix her."
"I can't! Not without her consent."
Hand tightening around someone's wrist until
it's almost painful. "She's in no condition to give it—look at
that, what are you going to do if she starts to convulse?"
I'm a tank again, looping in a pool of horrors,
blood trickling beneath my gridded toes as I swing my sword through the
neck of another screaming woman while two of my other instances hold
her down.
I'm flying, tumbling arse over wing as my thumb
sings a keening pain of broken bone, and I smell the fresh water of the
roaring waterfall beneath me.
"Make it stop," I hear someone mumble, and
there's blood on my lips where I've almost bitten through them. It's me
who's being held down by the tanks, facing a woman with burning eyes,
and behind her is a man who loves me, if I could only remember what his
name was.
The snakes bite again and drink deep, and the sun goes dark.
RESTART:
I become aware that someone is holding my right hand.
Then, a timeless period later, I realize that
he's still holding my hand. Which implies he's very patient, because
I'm still lying in bed, and it's very bright. "What time is it?" I ask,
mildly panicky because I need to get to work.
"Ssh. It's around lunchtime, and everything's all right."
"If it's all right"—Sam squeezes my hand—"how long have you been sitting there?"
"Not long."
I open my eyes and look at him. He's on the stool beside my bed. I pull a face, or smile, or something. "Liar."
He doesn't smile or nod but the tension drains out of him like water and he sags as it runs away. "Reeve? Can you remember?"
I blink rapidly, trying to get some dust out of a corner of my left eye. Can I remember—"I
remember lots," I say. How much of what I remember is true is another
matter. Just trying to sort it out makes my head hurt! I'm a tank: I'm
a dissolute young bioaviator with a death wish: Maybe I'm a sad gamer
case instead, or a deep-cover agent. But all of these possibilities are
a whole lot sillier and less plausible than what everything around me
is saying, which is that I'm a small-town librarian who's had a nervous
breakdown. I decide I'll go with that version for the time being. I
hold Sam's hand tight, like I'm drowning: "How bad was it?"
"Oh Reeve, it was bad." He leans across me, and
hugs me and I hug him back as tight as I can. "It was bad as can be."
He's shaking, I realize with a sense of growing awe. He feels for me that deeply? "I was afraid I was going to lose you."
I nuzzle into the base of his neck. "That would
be bad." It's my turn to shudder with a frisson of existential dread at
the thought that I could have lost him. Somewhere in the
past week Sam has turned into my anchor, my refuge in the turbulent
waters of identity. "I've got . . . well. Things are a
bit jumbled today. What happened? When did you
hear . . . ?"
"I came as soon as I could," he mumbles in my
ear. "Last night they called but said I couldn't visit, it was too
late." He tenses.
"And?" I prompt. I feel as if there should be something more.
"You were fitting." He's still tense. "Dr. Hanta
said it's an acute crisis; you needed a fixative, but she couldn't do
it without your permission. I told her to give it anyway, but she
refused."
"A fixative? What for?"
"Your memories." He's even tenser. I let go of him, feeling cold.
"What does this fixative do?"
Dr. Hanta answers from behind me as I turn round
to look at her. "Memory is encoded in a number of ways, as differential
weightings in synaptic connections and also as connections between
different nerves. The last excision and redaction you underwent was
faulty. You began to experience breakthrough. In turn, that was
triggering alerts in your enhanced immune system, and then you got
yourself exposed to a mechanocytic infestation, which made things much
worse. Whenever new associative traces would start integrating, your
endogenous robophages would decide it was a mechanocyte signal and kill
the nerve cells. You were well on your way to losing the ability to
form new long-term associative traces—progressive brain damage.
The fixative is normally used as the last step in redactive editing. I
used it to renormalize, erase, the old memories that were breaking
through. I'm sorry, but you won't be able to access them now—you
keep those that you've already integrated, but the others are gone for
good."
Sam has loosened his grip on me, and I lean
against him as I stare at the doctor. "Did I give you permission to
mess with my mind?" I ask.
Hanta just looks at me.
"Did I?" I echo myself. I feel aghast. If she did it against my will, that's—
"Yes," says Sam.
"What?"
"She—you were pretty far gone." He hunches
over again. "She was describing the situation to you, and me, and I was
asking her to do it, and she said she couldn't—then you were
delirious. You began mumbling and she asked you, and you said yes."
"But I don't remember . . ." I stop. I think I do remember, sort of. But I can't be sure, can I? "Oh."
I stare at Hanta. I recognize the expression in
her eyes. I stare at her for a long time—then I manage to make
myself nod, just a quick jerk really, but it's enough to break contact,
and I think we all breathe out simultaneously. Meanwhile I'm thinking, Shit, I'll never be able to figure out where I've come from now, will I?
But it's not as bad as what was going to happen otherwise. I don't
remember the attacks, exactly, but I remember what happened between
them, the consequences—it's a consistent story. A new story of my
life, I suppose. "I feel much better," I say cautiously.
Sam laughs, and there's a raw edge in it that
borders on hysteria. "You feel better?" He hugs me again, and I hug him
right back. Hanta is smiling, with what I think is relief at a
difficult situation resolved. The suspicious paranoid corner of me
files it away for future reference, but even my secret-agent self is
willing to concede that Hanta might actually be what she seems, an
ethically orthodox practitioner with only the best interests of her
patients at heart. Which is a big improvement on Fiore or the Bishop,
but at least one out of three isn't bad.
"So when can I go home?" I ask expectantly.
IT turns out
that I'm stuck in hospital for the rest of the day and the next night,
too. Hospital life is tedious, punctuated by the white-clad ghosts
wheeling around trolleys of food and different things, instruments and
dark age potions.
I still ache from the fever, and I feel weak,
but I'm well enough to get up and go to the bathroom on my own. On my
way back I notice that the curtains around the other occupied bed on
the ward are drawn back. I glance around, but there are no nurses
present. Steeling myself, I approach.
It is Cass, and she's a mess. Her legs are
encased in bright blue polymer tubes from toe to thigh, and raised by
wires so that the bedding dangles across her in a kind of valley. The
bruises on her face have faded to an ugly green and yellow except
around her eye sockets, which look simultaneously puffy and hollow, her
eyelids sagging closed. She's still thin, and a translucent bag full of
fluid is slowly draining into her wrist through a pipe.
"Cass?" I say softly.
Her eyes open and roll toward me. "Guuh," she says.
"What?" She flinches slightly. I hear footsteps behind me. "Are you all right?"
The nursing zombie approaches. "Please step away from the patient. Please step away from the patient."
"How is she?" I demand. "What have you done to her?"
"Please step away from the patient," says the nurse, then a different reflex triggers: "All questions should be addressed to medical authorities. Thank you for your compliance. Go back to bed."
"Cass—" I try a last time. Gross memory
surgery falls through my mind like a snowflake, freezing everything it
touches. I feel awful. "Are you there, Cass?"
"Go back to bed," says the nurse, a touch threateningly.
"I'm going, I'm going," I say, and I shuffle
away from poor, damaged Cass. Cass who I thought was Kay, obsessing
over her, when all the time Kay was sleeping in the next room, and Cass
was living in a nightmare.
I have a problem with the ethics here, I think.
Hanta's not bad. But she collaborates with Fiore and Yourdon. What kind
of person would do that? I shake my head, wincing at the cognitive
dissonance. One who'd perform illegal memory surgery then implant the
recollection of giving informed consent in the victim's mind? I shake
my head again. I don't really think Hanta would do that, but I can't be sure. If the patient agrees with the practitioner afterward, is it really abuse?
IT'S a bright,
sunny Thursday morning when Hanta comes and sits by my bedside with a
clipboard. "Well!" Her smile is fresh and approving. "You've done
really well, Reeve. A splendid recovery. I think you're about well
enough to go home." She uses her pen to scribble an annotation on her
board. "You're still convalescent, so I advise you to take it very easy
for the next few days—certainly you shouldn't go back to work
until this time next week at the earliest, and ideally not until the
Monday afterward. Take this note and give it to Janis when you return
to work, it's a certificate of exemption from employment. If you feel
at all unwell, or have another dizzy spell, I want you to telephone the
hospital immediately, and we'll send an ambulance for you."
"Will the ambulance be much use if I'm incoherent or hallucinating?" I ask doubtfully.
Hanta shoves an unruly lock of hair back into
place: "We're still populating the polity," she says. "The paramedics
aren't due to arrive until next week. They have to have additional
skill set upgrades to their implants. But in two weeks' time if you
call an ambulance or see a nurse or need a police officer, you won't be
dealing with a zombie." She glances along the ward. "Can't happen soon
enough, if you ask me."
"I was meaning to ask . . ." I
trail off, unsure how to raise the subject, but Dr. Hanta knows what
I'm talking about.
"You did the right thing when you called the
ambulance," she says firmly. "Never doubt that." She touches my arm for
emphasis. "But zombies are no use for nonroutine circumstances." A
little sigh. "It'll be much easier when I have human assistants who can
learn on the job."
"How big is the polity going to grow?" I ask.
"The original briefing said something about ten cohorts of ten, but if
you're going to have police and ambulance crews, surely that's not
enough?"
She looks surprised. "No, a hundred participants
is just the size of the comparison set for score renormalization,
Reeve, a single parish. We introduce participants to each other in a
controlled manner, ten cohorts to a parish, but you're nearly all
settled in now. Next week is when we open the manifold and link all the
neighborhoods together. That's when YFH-Polity actually comes into
existence! It's going to be quite exciting—you're going to meet
strangers, and there'll be far fewer zombies."
"Wow," I say, my voice hollow and my head spinning. "How many, uh, neighborhoods, are you planning to link in?"
"Oh, thirty or so parishes. That's enough to
form one small city, which is about the minimum for a stable society,
according to our models."
"Keeping track of that must be a big job," I say slowly.
"You can say that again." Dr. Hanta stands up
and straightens her white coat. "It takes at least three of me to keep
track of everything!" Another errant curl gets tucked behind her
collar. "Now, if you don't mind, I'm going to leave you. You're ready
for discharge whenever you want to go home; just tell the nurse on the
front desk that you're leaving. Is there anything else?"
"Yes," I say hastily. Then I pause for a moment.
"When I was having my crisis, were you tempted to . . .
you know, change anything? Apart from administering the fixative
algorithm, that is?"
Hanta stares at me with her big brown eyes. She
looks thoughtful. "You know, if I tried to change the minds of everyone
who I thought needed changing, I'd never have time to do anything
else." She smiles at me, and her expression turns chilly. "And besides,
what you're asking about is highly questionable behavior, ethically
questionable, Mrs. Brown. To which I have two responses. Firstly,
whatever I might think of a patient, I would never act in a manner contrary to their best interests. And secondly, I expected better of you. Good day."
She turns and stalks away. I've really put my foot in it now, I think, feeling sick with embarrassment. Me and my big mouth . . .
I want to run after her and apologize, but that would be asking to
compound the misunderstanding, wouldn't it? Idiot, I tell
myself. She's right, they couldn't run the polity without having a
medical supervisor who has the subjects' best interests in mind; and
I've just pissed off the only member of the experimental team who might
be on my side. She could have helped me figure out how to fit in
better, and instead . . . Shit. Shit. Shit.
There's really nothing left to do here. I stand
up and rummage through the carrier bag Sam left for me last night.
There's underwear, a floral print dress, and a pair of strappy sandals,
but he forgot my handbag. Oh well, he gets high marks for trying. I
make myself decent then, after waiting long enough for Dr. Hanta to
leave the ward, I head down to reception. On the way I pass the other
ward, signposted MATERNITY. I guess
it'll be getting busy in a few months, but right now it's depressingly
empty. There's a spring in my step as I reach the front desk. "Checking
out," I say.
The zombie on the desk nods. "Mrs. Reeve Brown leaving the institution of her own volition," she drones. "Have a nice day."
The hospital faces onto Main Street, sandwiched
between a run of shops and a stretch zoned for offices. It's a sunny,
warm day, and my spirits rise as I go outside. I feel airy and empty,
light as a feather, not a care in the world! At least, not for now,
a stubborn part of me mutters darkly. Then I get the impression that
even the part of me that's always alert shrugs its shoulders and sighs.
Still, might as well take the day off to recover. Fiore has
actually let me off the hook, for which I can thank Dr. Hanta; so I've
got an actual choice. I'm free to keep on kicking and struggling
against the inevitable, or I can go home and relax for a few days, just
play the game and settle down. (It'll avoid attracting unwelcome
attention from Fiore or the score whores, and I can pretend I'm having
fun while I'm about it; I'll treat it like a game. Plus, it occurs to
me that if I want to get back at Jen, the best way to do it is to
defeat her on her own terms. I can always go back to figuring out how
to escape later.) Meanwhile, I really ought to try to sort things out
with Sam because I don't like the way paranoia and dread seems to have
been levering us apart.
It takes me three hours to catch a taxi home,
mostly because I pass the Lady's Lodge Beauty Parlor and stop to get my
hair tidied up, and then the department store. The staff in the salon
and the store are still all zombies, which is annoying, but at least
they don't get in the way. I need some more clothes, anyway—I
have no idea what happened to what I was wearing the other day, plus,
dressing à la mode is a good, easy way to boost your score, and
I can use that right now—and in between buying a couple of new
outfits I fetch up at the cosmetics counter. The store is deserted, and
I figure I'll give Sam a surprise, so I wait while the zombie assistant
applies a makeover with inhuman speed. Those dark ages folks may not
have had much by way of reconstructive nano, but they knew a lot about
using natural products to change they way they looked: I barely
recognize myself in the mirror by the time she's finished.
I'm still not very well, and find myself
flagging much sooner than I expected. So I finish off in the shop,
arrange to have my purchases delivered, and catch a taxi home. Home is
much as I expected—a mess. The cleaning service I commissioned
when I got the library job has been round, but they only come once a
week, and Sam has been letting the dirty dishes pile up in the kitchen
and leaving the glasses in the living room. I try to ignore it and put
my feet up, but after half an hour it's too much. If I'm going to
settle down a bit, I need to take care of that—it's part of the
role I'm playing—so I move everything to the kitchen and start
cycling them through the dishwasher. Then I go and lie down for a
while. But a pernicious demon of dissatisfaction has gotten into my
head, so I get up and start on the living room. It comes to me that I
really don't like the way the furniture is laid out, and there's
something about the sofa that annoys me unaccountably. The sofa will
have to go.In the meantime I can rearrange where everything is, and then I realize it's nearly six. Sam will be home soon.
I'm a very poor cook, but I manage to puzzle my
way through the instructions on the cartons, and I'm just laying out
the cutlery on the dining table in the dayroom when I hear the door
rattle.
"Sam?" I call. "I'm home!"
"Reeve?" He calls back.
I step into the hall, and he does a double take. "Reeve?" He gapes at me: It's a priceless moment.
"I had a little accident at the cosmetics counter," I say. "Like it?"
He goes cross-eyed for a moment, then manages to
nod. In addition to the makeover I'm wearing the sexiest, most
revealing dress I could find. I'll take my praise where I find it.
Sam's never been a great one for expressing his emotions, and this is
going pretty far for him. Come to think of it, he looks tired, sagging
inside his suit jacket.
"Hard day?" I ask.
He nods again. "I, uh"—he draws breath—"I thought you were ill."
"I am." I'm more tired than I want to admit in
front of him. "But I'm glad to be home, and Dr. Hanta's given me the
next week off work, so I figured I'd lay on a little surprise for you.
Are you hungry yet?"
"I missed lunch. Didn't feel much like eating back then." He looks thoughtful. "That wasn't such a good idea, was it?"
"Come with me." I lead him into the dayroom and
sit him down, then go back to the kitchen and switch on the microwave,
then pick up the two glasses of wine I'd poured and take them back to
the table. He doesn't say anything, but he's agog, eyes tracking me
like an incoming missile. "Here. A toast—to our future?"
"Our . . . future?" He looks
puzzled for a moment, then something seems to clear in his mind, and he
raises his glass and finally smiles at me, surrendering some inner
doubt. "Yes."
I hurry back to sort out our supper, and we eat.
I don't taste much of the food because, to tell the truth, I'm watching
Sam. I came so close to losing him that every moment feels delicate,
like glass. A huge and complex tenderness is crystallizing in me. "Tell
me about your day," I ask, to draw him out, and he mumbles through an
incoherent story about missing papers for a deed of attainder or
something, watching my face all the time. I have to prompt him to eat.
When he's done, I walk round the table to fetch his plate, and I can
feel the heat of his gaze on me. "We need to talk," I say.
"We need." His voice is congested with emotion. "Reeve."
"Come with me," I say.
He stands up. "Where? What is this about?"
"Come on." I reach out and take his necktie and
gently tug. He follows me into the hallway. "This way." I take the
steps slowly, going up, listening to his hoarse breathing deepen. He
doesn't try to pull away until I reach the bedroom door.
"We shouldn't be doing this," he says hoarsely. "I don't know why you're doing this, but we mustn't."
"Come on." I give him a little tug and he
follows me into the bedroom and I finally let go and turn to face him.
I feel a looseness in my innards as I look up at his face, a warmth at
my crotch. "Kay. Sam. Whoever you are. I love you."
I freeze, my eyes wide as I see his pupils
dilate and he looks puzzled: I realize he didn't hear me! "The magic
phrase, Sam." And I realize that I mean it. This isn't the
stinger-ampoule side effect of Jen's malice, it's something more
profound. "What you said to me the other day, I'm saying it right back
to you." His expression clears. "Come here."
He looks confused, now. "But if we—"
"No buts." I reach over to him and tug at the
knot on his necktie. It unclips from his collar, and I fumble at the
top button. He chews his upper lip, and I can feel him trembling under
my fingers, warm and immensely solid and reassuring. I take a step
closer until I'm leaning up against him, and I feel through his clothes
that he's as excited as I am. "I want you, Sam, Kay. I don't want to
have any barriers between us, it hurts too much. I've nearly lost you
twice now, I'm not going to lose you again."
His hands on my shoulders, huge and powerful. His breath on my cheek. "I'm afraid this isn't going to work, Reeve."
"Life's frightening." I get another button undone, then I look up to see
his face above me, and I stop. I was about to stretch up to kiss him,
but something about his expression isn't right. "What is it?"
"What's wrong with you?" he hisses. "This isn't like you, Reeve, what's happening?"
"I'm doing what I should have done last week." I
wrap my arms around him and lean my forehead against his shoulder. But
he's started a train of thought going, running on rails right through
my lust simple: "I've had a bad experience. It put a lot of things into
a new perspective, Sam. You ever had one of those? Done something
stupid and crazy and maybe a bit evil and only realized afterward that
you'd jeopardized everything you ever cared about? Been there, done
that—more than once—most recently the day before yesterday,
and I don't want to be defined by my mistakes. So I'm walking away from
them. I want us to work, I don't want to—"
"Reeve, stop it. Stop this. You're scaring me."
Huh? I pull back and stare at him, offended. It's like a bucket of ice water in the face.
"This isn't you speaking, is it?" he asks. He sounds certain.
"Yes it is!" I insist.
"Really?" He looks skeptical. "You wouldn't have thrown yourself at me like this last week."
"Yes I would! In a moment, if I wasn't so
conflicted." Then what he's trying to tell me without actually saying
it in so many words sinks in, and I jam one hand across my mouth to
keep from screaming in frustration.
"So you're not conflicted now," he says, gently
leading me over toward the bed and pushing me down on the edge of it,
sitting next to me so we're shoulder to shoulder. "But you were
conflicted when you went into the hospital, Reeve. You've been
conflicted as long as I've known you. So you'll pardon my momentary
suspicion when, the moment you get home, you throw yourself at me?
After swearing off sex entirely just a week ago."
It's there in front of me, a yawning abyss of my
own making, no longer avoidable since Dr. Hanta applied her fixative. I
am stuck with the me that I have become, unable to restore that which
is missing. "I'm not who I was a week ago," I say tightly. "She fixed
the memory leakage, for one thing. And I've acquired a restored sense
of my own mortality from somewhere I don't want to talk about, except
it's not anything that they did to me. I think." But a cynical corner
of my mind says, You said "I love you," didn't you? Last time you
did that, your CY-hack was triggered. Someone's tweaked your netlink,
haven't they?
The cold horror that steals over you when you
wake up unsure whether you died in the night has just stroked its bony
hand along my spine. Somewhere between the cooling puddle of blood in
the library basement and Dr. Hanta's sly consent, I seem to have lost
something. Sam's right, old-me wouldn't be doing this. Old-me would be
scared of different things, and rightly so—and I'm still scared
of Fiore and Yourdon, and I still want out of their perverse managed
society, but we're on board a MASucker, and I know what that means.
"I still want you," I tell him. Although a worm
of doubt adds, "I'm just not sure I want you for the same reasons I
wanted you last week."
"They've gotten to you."
I laugh shakily. "They got to me a long time
ago. I just didn't notice until now." I clutch at him, but as much from
terror as lust. "Why are you here, Kay? Why did you sign up for the
experiment?"
"I followed you."
"Bullshit!" I can see it now. "That's not
enough. And don't tell me it was to get away from your time with the
ice ghouls. Why did you go there? What were you running away from?"
Sam is silent and unresponsive for a while. "If I tell you, you'll probably hate me."
"So?" I see an opportunity. Shuffling up onto
the bed I pull my legs up under my dress and sit cross-legged with my
hands in my lap. "If I listen to your story and I don't hate you
afterward, will you let me fuck you?"
"I don't see what that's got to do with—"
"Let me be the judge of my motives, Sam." Even if they're contaminated.
"You keep trying to second-guess me. It's getting to be a bad habit.
Before, I didn't want to sleep with you for reasons that made sense at
the time. Then when the reasons no longer apply, you say I'macting out of character. You don't give me credit for being able to change of my own volition."
He shakes his head.
"Have you any idea how insulting that is?"
"That's not what I meant—"
"I am capable of change, that's why I'm here!" I
draw a deep breath. "I'm not who I was during the war, Sam, or before
it, or even after it. I'm who I am now, which is the end product of all
those other people becoming one another. They can put you into the dark
ages, but they can't put the dark ages into you, not short of
truncating your life expectancy to about three gigasecs or erasing so
many memories you might as well be . . ." I trail off.
I've got a strange feeling that I just realized something vitally
important, but I'm not sure what.
He looks at me oddly. "You'll hate me," he says. "I did terrible things."
"So?" I shrug. "I did bad things, too. People
out there wanted to kill me, Sam. I thought it was something to do with
a mission I was on and had accidentally erased, but now I'm not so
sure; maybe they were just after me because of, well, one of the people
I used to be. A person who fought in the war. A combatant."
He rocks back and forth thoughtfully. "Nobody here but us war criminals," he says.
It is very interesting to discover that the
phrase "my blood runs cold" actually reflects a physical sensation. It
is much less pleasant to do so while sitting next to someone you love
unconditionally and currently can't share a room with without needing a
change of underwear, and who's just triggered that sensation in your
head. And it's even worse when you realize that what he said applies to
you, too. "Nobody here but us monsters," I say, trying to be flippant.
"Or amnesiacs haunted by the ghosts of their past lives."
"Has it occurred to you that YFH-Polity might be very convenient for a certain type of person?" Sam asks slowly.
I'm getting impatient. "Are you going to lay me down on this bed and have sex with me after you finish lecturing me to death?"
He turns a funny color. "If we both still want to."
If we both still want to. Well, I guess you just have to work with what you've got. "I'm all ears," I say.
He shudders. "Don't say that."
"Well it's"—not literally—"true. Sort of."
"Where were you when the war broke out?" he asks.
Oops. I didn't expect him to ask that. Revealing
that kind of thing would be a big no-no under normal
circumstances—a breach of operational security that could allow
an opponent to work out exactly who you are and thereby figure out all
sorts of useful things about you, enough to endanger you operationally,
because virtually everything you ever did in public is stored in a
database somewhere. But—we're in the guts of a MASucker, and if
I'm not mistaken, there's only one data channel in or out, and Sam
isn't part of the cabal, and I reckon the current risk of our being
eavesdropped on is low. Nor are these normal circumstances.
"I was aboard a MASucker, interviewing the
crew," I admit. "We were cut off for more than a gig after the net went
down." Sam makes a thoughtful noise. "Your turn," I prompt, trying to
change the subject.
"I was an auditor." Sam is silent again. "That's why they drafted me."
"They?"
"The Solipsist Nation: Third Unforgivable
Thoughtcrime Battalion, to be precise. They were doing a search and
sweep for unsecured memory temples through the disconnected segment I
was stranded in, less than a hundred kilosecs after Curious Yellow cut
loose. I'd already been censored and compromised, and they just grabbed
me and added me to their distributed denial of consciousness array. I
spent the next couple of megs scrambling graveyards beyond retrieval,
then they got around to actually in-processing me and assigned me to
erasing archive trails."
Ugh. And I thought what I did in the Linebarger Cats was ugly?
I must shiver or give some other cue because Sam pulls away from me
slightly. "What clades did the Solipsist Nation align with?" I ask,
trying to distract him.
"What clades?" He shakes his head. "It was us against everyone, Reeve. You think anybody in their right minds would ally themselves with an aggressively solipsistic borganism?"
"But you"—I force myself to lean closer as I ask; he's tense and unhappy—"you were just a component, weren't you?"
He shakes his head. "I had some degree of
autonomy, by the time the war ended the Nation had taken to investing
us with a modicum of free will. I was . . . well. Before
the war, I looked pretty much the way you do right now. The Nation
upgraded me, turned me into a combat ogre—and put me on
occupation duty. You know what they called us? Rape machines. If you
want to break someone's will to resist, you can go via the brain, but
if the netlink's been fried by EMP, you have to get physical. They gave
us penises with backward-facing spines, you know that? We
did . . . terrible things. Eventually we were
overrun—my segment was overrun—by a consortium of enemies,
and they offlined us and when I woke up I was back to being me again,
but a me with memories and a large chunk of the Nation wedged
in my head. I spent half a meg in my cell disbelieving in the walls and
floor before I realized that they had to exist for the same reason I
had to exist. And while I was part of the Nation I did things." Deep
breath. "Things that left me ashamed to be human. Or male."
"Yeah, but." I stall. "You weren't yourself. Right?"
"I wish I could believe that." He sounds
forlorn. "I wouldn't do that kind of thing now, but then—I
remember believing in what I was doing. That was part of why I did the
ice ghoul thing, I didn't want to be part of a species that could dream
something like the Solipsist Nation into existence. I wanted—we
wanted—to think every thought in the human phase-space. Do you
know what it's like to be hungry and always eating and never full?
Solipsist Nation wrecked memory temples out of spite because they
contained thoughts we hadn't originated. And I contributed to that. I
enthusiastically optimized the processes. I did it because I wanted
to." He takes a deep breath. "I killed people, Reeve. I killed people
permanently."
"Then we're not so different."
"You?" He stares. "But you said you'd . . ."
"I started the war on a MASucker; I didn't stay
there." I take a deep breath, because I don't think I can dodge this
one. "I volunteered. Joined the Linebarger Cats, combat operations.
Spent nearly a gigasec being an armored regiment. Ended up in Psyops."
"Well." His voice is shaky. "I didn't expect that."
"What proportion of the people here do you think fought in the wars?"
"I haven't thought about it."
"People who were there don't want to remember
it. Almost as soon as we'd got a local cease-fire established, people
were slinking off to the surgeon-confessors."
"Yes." He pauses. "But Reeve, I'm a monster.
There are things in my head—even after excision—that I
don't like to visit. You don't want to get too close to me."
"Sam." I shift toward him. "I'm . . . There are things I tried to bury, too. I could say the same. Do you care?"
"What, about what you did?"
"Yes."
"No."
"Well, then." It's my turn to sound shaky. "What I said earlier stands. A bargain, and you agreed to it, hmm?"
He shrinks away. "I didn't know."
I swallow to try and clear my dry mouth. "I
don't mean right now," I say. To my surprise, I mean it. "But I still
want you, just as soon as you get used to the idea that I want you and
I'm still me. You don't have to project your hatred of what you were
forced to do onto me. And besides, I didn't see any barbs on your cock
the other night."
"But you've changed too much!" He bursts out,
like an iced-over air valve finally cutting loose. "Since Dr. Hanta saw
you. Before that, you were you: You were moody and thoughtful, you were cynical, you were funny—I don't have the words for it. Whatever she did, it's changed you,
Reeve. You'd refuse to do something just because it was expected of
you; now you're trying to make me fuck you! Do you really want to get
trapped in YFH for the foreseeable future? Trapped and pregnant, too?"
I think about it for a moment. "What's the
problem?" Hanta is a more than conscientious doctor, and I'm confident
I can survive a pregnancy—after all, every female mammal in my
family tree did it before me, didn't they? How bad can it be?
"Reeve." Now he's looking at me as if I've
morphed into battle-form, sprouting spikes and guns and armor before
his eyes. I giggle. It's like he's seen a ghost! "What have they done
to you?"
"Offered me a way out of having been a monster." I lean toward him hopefully. "Give me a kiss?"
DESPITE my best planning, we do not make love in the end.
In fact, when I finish the cleaning up and come to bed, Sam gets up and, with sleepy dignity, insists he's sleeping alone.
I am so angry and frustrated that I could cry.
My problem is easily defined—it's the solution that eludes me.
It's not that I've changed a lot, but—with or without Hanta's
prompting—I've decided to take some time out of struggling, and
the outward manifestation looks like a huge switch. Sam simply hasn't
caught up with me yet. It's very disturbing to be around someone who
seems to have inverted all their values and beliefs, and I know if it
was Sam who'd been in hospital and come home glassy-eyed and different,
I'd be incredibly upset. But I wish he wouldn't project his anxiety
onto me—I'm all right, in fact I'm better than I've been at any
time since I first woke up in the custody of the surgeon-confessors.
Yes, there's a problem here: Fiore and Yourdon
are doing something very dubious with a serialized copy of Curious
Yellow, they've figured out a way to defeat the security patch in
everyone's implants; and they seem to be researching how to use social
control rules installed via CY to create an emergent dictatorship.
But—and this is the important question—why should I care?
Haven't I been through enough already? I don't have to let myself be
tortured by my own memories; I've already nearly killed myself trying
to do what Sanni and the others in Security Cell Blue wanted. I've done
my duty, and failed. And now . . .
My dirty little secret is that while I was in hospital I realized that I could
give up. I've got Sam. I've got a job that has the potential to be as
interesting as I want it to be. I can settle down and be happy here for
a while, even though the amenities are primitive and some of the
neighbors are not to my taste. Even dictatorships need to provide the
vast majority of their citizens with a comfortable everyday life. I
don't have to keep fighting, and if I give up the struggle for a while,
they'll leave me alone. I can always go back to it later. Nobody will
scream if I stop, except maybe Sam, and he'll adapt to the new me
eventually.
All of which is great in theory, but it doesn't help when I'm crying myself to sleep, alone.
THE next day is
Friday. I wake up late, and by the time I get downstairs, Sam has
already gone to work. I feel drained, enervated by the aftereffects of
my infection and the stupid climbing attempt, so I don't do much. I end
up spending most of the day shuttling between the bedroom and the
kitchen, catching up on my reading and drinking cups of weak tea. When
Sam comes home—really late, and he's already eaten at the steak
diner in town and had a glass or three of wine—I demand to know
where he's been, and he clams up. Neither of us wants to back down, so
we end up not talking.
On Saturday I come downstairs in time to find
him putting the lawn mower away. "You'll need to tidy up in the
garage," he says by way of greeting.
"Why?" I ask.
"I need to stash some stuff."
"Uh-huh. What stuff?"
"I'm going out. See you later."
He means it—ten minutes after that he's
gone, off in a taxi to who knows where. And it's our most significant
communication in two days.
I kick myself for being stupid. Stupid is the watchword of the day. So
I go into the garage and look for stuff to throw out. It's a scrapyard
of unfinished projects, but I think the welding gear can go, and the
half-finished crossbow, and most of the other junk I've been tinkering
with under the mistaken idea that what I need to escape from is where I am, rather than who
I am. Some bits are missing anyway; I guess Sam's already made a start
on clearing it out to make room for his golf clubs or whatever. So I
heap my stuff in one corner and pull a tarpaulin over it. Out of sight, out of mind, out of garage, that's what I say.
Back inside, I try to watch some TV, but it's
inane and slow, not to mention barely comprehensible. Bright blurry
lights on a low-resolution screen with a curving front, slow-moving and
tedious, with plots that don't make sense because they rely on shared
knowledge that I just don't have. I'm steeling myself to turn it off
and face the boredom alone when the telephone rings.
"Reeve?"
"Hi? Who—Janis! How are you?" I clutch the handset like a drowning woman.
"Okay, Reeve, listen, do you have anything on today?"
"No, no I don't think so—why?"
"I'm meeting a couple of friends in town this
afternoon to try out a new cafe near the waterfront that's just
appeared. I was wondering if you'd like to come and join us? If you're
well enough, that is."
"I'm"—I pause—"supposed to take it
easy for a few days. That's what Dr. Hanta said." Let her chew on that.
"Is there a problem with work?"
"Not so you'd notice." Janis sounds dismissive.
"I'm catching up on my reading, to tell the truth. Anyway, I got the
note from the hospital. Don't worry on my part."
"Oh, okay then. As long as I'm not going to have to run anywhere. How do I get to this place?"
"Just ask a taxi to take you to the Village
Cafe. I'll be there around two. I was thinking we could try out the
cafe and maybe chat."
I am getting an itchy feeling that Janis isn't
telling me everything, but the shape of what she's not telling me is
coming through clearly enough. I shiver a bit. Do I really want to get involved? Probably not—but
they'll start talking if I don't, I think. Besides, if they're planning
something stupidly dangerous, I owe it to Dr. Hanta to talk them out of
it, I suppose. I glance at the TV set. "All right. Be seeing you."
It's already one o'clock, so I change into a
smarter outfit and call a taxi to the Village Cafe. I've no idea what
friends Janis might have in mind, but I don't think she'd be tasteless
enough to invite Jen along. Beyond that, I don't want to risk making a
bad impression. Appearances count if you're trying to up your score,
and other people pay attention to that kind of thing. And I don't
expect Janis would be organizing anything like this if it wasn't
important.
It's a wonderful day, the sky a deep blue and a
warm breeze blowing. Janis is right about one thing—I don't
remember ever seeing this neighborhood before. The taxi cruises between
rows of clapboard-fronted houses with white picket fences and
mercilessly laundered grass aprons in front of them, then hangs a left
around a taller brick building and drives along a tree-lined downhill
boulevard with oddly shaped buildings to either side. There are other
taxis about, and people! We drive past a couple out for a stroll along
the sidewalk. I thought Sam and I were the only folks who did that. Who
am I missing?
The taxi stops just before a cul-de-sac where a
semicircle of awnings shield white tables and outdoor furniture from
the sky. A stone fountain burbles wetly by the roadside. "Village
Cafe," recites the driver. "Village Cafe. Your credit score has been
debited." Blue numerals float out of the corner of my left eye as I
open the door and step out. There are people sitting at the
tables—one of them waves. It's Janis. She's looking a lot better
than the last time I saw her: She's smiling, for one thing. I walk over.
"Janis, hi." I recognize Tammy sitting next to her but don't know what to say. "Hello everybody?"
"Reeve, hi! This is Tammy, and here's Elaine—"
"El," El mumbles.
"And this is Bernice. Have a chair? We were just trying to work out what to order. Would you like anything?"
I sit down and see printed polymer sheet menus
sitting in front of each chair. I try to focus on them, just as a box
with a grille on it abovethe door to the cafe crackles and begins to shout: "Good afternoon! It's another beautiful day . . ."
"I think I'll have a gin and tonic," I say.
"Your attention please, here are two
announcements," continues the box. "Ice cream is now on sale for your
enjoyment. The flavor of the day is truffle and banana. Here is a
warning. There is a possibility of light showers later in the day.
Thank you for your attention."
Tammy pulls a face. "It's been doing that every ten minutes since we arrived. I wish it'd shut up."
"I asked at the counter," Janis says apologetically. "They say they can't shut it off—it's everywhere in this sector."
"Yes? What is this sector, anyway? I don't
remember it." I bury my nose in the menu immediately in case I've just
made a faux pas.
"I'm not sure. It appeared yesterday, so I thought we should go look at it."
"Consider it looked at," says Bernice. Who is
dark and slightly plump and wears a perpetual expression of mild
disgust: I think I've seen her at Church, but that's about it. "Mine's
a mango lassi."
A zombie, male, wearing a dark suit and a long,
white apron, shuffles out of the cafe. "Are you ready to order?" he
asks in a high, nasal voice.
"Yes, please." Janis rattles off a list of
drinks, and the waitron retreats indoors again. The drinks are mostly
alcohol-free: I seem to be one of the odd ones out. Oops, I
think. "Tammy and El and I have been meeting up every Saturday for the
past few weeks," she adds in my direction. "We tell our husbands we're
a sewing circle. It's a good excuse to gossip and drink, and none of
them would know a real sewing circle if one bit him on the toe,
so . . ."
"What is a sewing circle?" asks Bernice.
El reaches diffidently into a huge bag and pulls
out a thing that looks like an airlock cover made of cloth. There are
pins stuck in it, and colored thread. "Something like we all get
together to do embroidery. Like this." She pulls a needle out and
manages to stab herself in the ball of one thumb with it. "I'm not very
good yet," she adds mournfully.
"Count me out of the sewing," I say. "But the drinks and gossip are another matter."
"That's what she said you'd say." Tammy flashes
me an apologetic smile. "Besides, I was wondering if you knew what had
happened to Mick."
Oops again. "I'm not sure. I asked Dr. Hanta about him, and she said it was under discussion, whatever that means. I know Cass is still in the hospital."
"Ah, right." Tammy leans back. "Ten dollars says they both retire from the experiment within a week."
I shiver. There's only one way in or out of a
MASucker, for reason of security—to let the flight crew barricade
the door if the civilization on the other side of it collapses. "I'm
not sure how likely that is," I say. "But Dr. Hanta has a way of
straightening things out. I'm sure she'll be able to do something for
Cass, and I know Mick hasn't visited her since . . .
well."
"What about Fiore?" asks Janis.
I am getting the distinct feeling that they've
invited me here to pump me for information, but what do I care? They're
buying the drinks. "I ran into him after the business with Cass," I
say. Then the cafe door opens, and the waitron returns with our drinks.
I shut up until his back's turned. "He, um, I get the feeling he
doesn't approve of us doing anything unpredictable, but at the same
time Mick went too far. We solved a problem for him."
"Oh." Janis looks disappointed, and I mentally
kick myself. What she's really asking about is what happened in the
library the day she was off sick.
"I got talking to Dr. Hanta in hospital," I
offer. "She said, uh, well, she doesn't approve of the business with
Esther and Phil at all. I got the impression she was yelling at the
Bishop about it. They're going to add rules for divorce proceedings to
the score system to stop it happening again. And rape, to stop anyone
getting ideas from Mick."
"Hmm." Janis looks thoughtful. "If they stick to
a strict dark ages re-creation, they'll make rape a serious penalty
score, but only if the male gets caught."
"Eh?" Tammy looks indignant. "What good will that do?"
"What good does any of this do?" Janis asks drily. She reaches into her
handbag and pulls out a piece of knitting, which she passes to me. "I
think this is yours, you left this in the library," she tells me.
I gulp and hastily stuff the Faraday cage lining
of my botched experimental carrier into my handbag. "Thanks, I sure
did," I babble.
Janis smiles slowly. "It's a bit scratchy, but it catches the light just so."
Wheels within wheels. "It needs a bit more work," I extemporize. "Where did you find it?"
"In the back office. I was just tidying up."
My heart seems to be pounding, but nobody else has noticed. Janis looks at me, then looks at El. "What do you think?" she asks.
El looks up from her embroidery, harried. "I
think I feel a little sick," she says, and reaches for her pink
lemonade. "Church is going to be bad tomorrow."
"Lots of developments," Tammy agrees.
"What are you talking about?" I ask.
Janis nods at me: "Yes, that's right, you've been in hospital all week. Since Tuesday, anyway."
Tammy pulls out a tablet and puts it on the
table. "Lots of new stuff in here," she says, tapping the screen.
"You'll want to know about it."
"About what?" I ask.
"For starters, it seems our last cohort is in place here."
"But they said there were another fourteen after mine"—I do the math—"so we're six short. At least?"
Tammy taps her tablet. "They've been running
multiple sections of YFH-Polity in parallel. We're just one subsector,
a parish, they call it. From Monday they're all going to be linked up,
so we've got lots of new neighbors."
So far this is what Dr. Hanta told me. "And?"
Janis gives me a long, appraising look. "It's a
lot bigger than they told you outside when you were signed up. What
does that suggest to you?"
I look at her belly. It's not much of a bump
yet. Then, almost involuntarily, my eyes slide sideways. "El, are you,
I mean I hope I'm not prying here, but are you by any chance—"
"Pregnant?" El looks at me with her baby-blue eyes and puts one hand on her stomach. "Whatever gave you that idea?"
I try not to wince too obviously. "My period's overdue," says Bernice.
Permanence. "What else are they doing?" I probe.
"There are a lot of new facilities opening up,"
Tammy explains enthusiastically. "There's a kinematoscope, and a
swimming pool and gymnastic coliseum, and a theatre. More shops, too.
And City Hall will be open for business."
Bernice cracks before I do. "Whoa. That's a new one on me!"
"I think they're trying to make us comfortable," says Janis.
"Us?" I ask. "Or them?" My eyes take in bellies around the table, occupied bellies. In fact, mine is the only un-occupied one here. Thanks to Sam.
"Does it make any difference? I'm pretty sure most of us will be too busy changing nappies soon to worry about anything else."
Janis has a tone of voice that she uses when she
means to convey the exact opposite of the literal meaning of her words.
She's using it now, laying on the sarcasm with a trowel.
I smile brightly. "Then I suppose you think we should lie back and enjoy these wonderful new recreational resources!"
"Reeve," Tammy says warningly, "this is serious."
"Oh, you bet," I agree enthusiastically.
"Absolutely!" I finish my drink. "I'm sure you ladies have got lots of
important things to be talking about, but I just remembered I haven't
finished washing the dishes, and I've got to clear out the garage
before my husband gets home." I stand up. "Thanks for the weaving,
Janis. See you later?"
The rest of the soi-disant ladies' sewing circle look dubious, but Janis smiles back at me, then winks. "Be seeing you!"
I beat a hasty retreat. I like Janis, but this
sewing circle of hers frightens me. She's unhappy here, that much is
clear, and I don't think she'll want Dr. Hanta to help her over it. I'm
going to have to tell Fiore about Janis, I realize. She needs help. After Church tomorrow?
THE journey to
Church the next day is strained and tense. We dress in our Sunday best
and call a taxi as usual, but Sam doesn't say anything—he's taken
to communicating in grunts—and keeps casting me odd sidelong
looks when he thinks I won't notice. I pretend not to see. In truth I'm
tense, too, winding myself up for the inevitable and unpleasant
conversation with Fiore after the service. Church is packed these days,
and we're lucky to get a seat. At least there are other churches in the
other parishes (and presumably other instances of Fiore to preach in
them), so it's not likely to get any more crowded. "We'll have to leave
earlier in future," I tell Sam, and he stares at me.
Fiore walks in and goes to the front, and the
music strikes up, a catchy brassy little number by (my netlink tells
me) a composer named Brecht. Then Fiore starts the service proper.
"Dear congregants, we are gathered here today in unity to recognize our
place in the universe, our immutable roles in the great cycle of life,
which none shall take from us. Let us praise the designers who have
given us this day and all the days before us a role to fulfill! Praise
the designers!"
"Praise the designers!" echoes the congregation.
"Dear congregants, let us remember that true
meaning and happiness in life can be found through complying with the
great design! A round peg in a round hole!"
"A round peg in a round hole!" rolls the response.
"Let us also give thanks for the happiness that
has come to Mrs. Reeve Brown, who is now most certainly a round peg in
a round hole, and for the solace and comfort that members of our
congregation's away team have brought to Mrs. Cassandra Green, now
recovering in hospital! Happiness, comfort, and solace!"
"Happiness, comfort, and solace!"
I shake my head, happy but confused. I can't
figure it out, why is Fiore holding me of all people up as an example
to the rest of the congregation? I glance round and see Jen, a couple
of aisles away, staring snake eyes at me.
"It is our duty to care for our neighbors, to
help them conform to the ways of our society, to join with them in
their joy and their sorrow, their acceptance and their forgiveness. If
your neighbors need you, go unto them and give them the benefit of your
generosity. We are all neighbors, and those of us who are not in need
this week may be amongthe neediest next week. Guide and care for them, and chide them when it is appropriate . . ."
I begin to zone out. Fiore's voice is hypnotic,
his tone rising and falling in a measured cadence. It's warm and stuffy
in Church with the doors shut, and it seems Fiore isn't going to divert
from his sermon to condemn a sinner this week. For which I should be
grateful—Fiore could have decided to wreck my score for what I
did last week. Despite the warmth, I find myself shivering. He's shown
more forbearance than I expected. Should I follow his example, and
instead of telling him about Janis, try to set her straight myself?
". . . For remember, you are your
brother's keepers, and by the behavior of your brethren shall you be
judged. Voyage without end, amen!"
"Voyage without end!" echoes the chorus. "Amen!"
We stand, and there's another sing-along,
clap-along number—this time in a language I don't understand,
about marching and freedom and bread according to the psalm
book—and then the priest and his attendants leave the front, and
the service is over.
I'm a bit disappointed, but also relieved as we
file out of the Church into the bright daylight, where a buffet is
waiting for us. Sam is even quieter than usual, but right now I don't
care. I snag a glass of wine and a plate with a wheatmeal and fungus
confection on it and wander over to the vicinity of our cohort.
"Decided to settle down, have we?" asks a voice
at my left shoulder. I manage to suppress a frown of distaste. It's
Jen, of course.
"I care for my neighbors," I say, squeezing every gram of sincerity I can muster into it; then I make myself smile at her.
She beams back at me, of course. "Me too!" She
trills, then glances round. "I'm glad Fiore was merciful today, though.
I gather some of us might have been in for a rough ride!"
Sly little bitch. "I've no idea what
you're talking about," I begin, but it's impossible to go on because
the Church bells have begun to ring. Normally they clang in a vague
semblance of rhythm, but now they're jarring and clattering as if
something's caught up among them. People are turning and looking up at
the tower. "That's odd."
"Yes, it is." Jen sniffs dismissively and begins to turn toward a nearby knot of males.
"I haven't finished with you."
"In your dreams, darling." A broad grin, and she slips away.
Irritated, I look up at the tower. The door below it is ajar. Odd,
I think. It's not strictly my business, but what if something's come
loose? I ought to get help. I deposit my glass and plate with a passing
waitron and walk toward the door, taking care to stay off the grass in
my high heels.
The clashing and clattering of disturbed bells
is getting louder, and there's something dark on the front step, under
the door. As I make my way to it I look down and an unpleasantly
familiar stink infiltrates my nostrils, bringing tears to my eyes. I
turn round, and yell, "Over here! Help!" Then I push the door open.
The bell tower is a tall space illuminated by
small windows just below the base of the spire. The daylight spilling
down from them casts long shadows across the beams and the bells that
dangle from them, jostling and clashing above the whitewashed floor,
staining the spreading pool of dark liquid. Spreading black, the gray
of shadows, and a pale pendulum swinging across the floor. It takes a
second for my eyes to grow accustomed to the dimness, and another
second before I understand what they're showing me.
Mick, of all people, is the one playing the
endless atonal carillon that summoned me. It is immediately obvious
that his mastery of music is involuntary. He hangs from a bell-rope by
the ankles, his head tracing an endless pendulous circuit across the
floor in twin tracks of blood. Someone has taped his arms to his body,
gagged him, and rammed hypodermic needles into each ear. The cannulae
drip steadily, emptying what's left of his blood supply from his purple
and congested head. Loops and whorls and spirals of blood have trickled
in a delicate filigree, but some unevenness in the ground leads the
runnels to flow toward a pool on the inside of the door.
I'm simultaneously appalled, dumbstruck with
admiration for the artistic technique on display, terrified that
whoever did it might still be lurking at the scene, and utterly
nauseated at my satisfaction at Mick'send. So I do the only sensible and socially expedient thing I can think of, and scream my lungs out.
The first fellow to arrive on the scene—a
couple of seconds after I get started—isn't much use: He takes
one look at the impromptu chandelier, then doubles over and adds his
lunch to the puddle. But the second on the scene turns out to be
Martin, one of the volunteer gravediggers. "Reeve? Are you all right?"
I nod and manage to take a sobbing breath. I
feel unstable, and my vision is watery. "Look." I point. "Better get
the . . . the . . . Fiore. He'll know
what to do."
"I'll call the police." Martin walks around the
pool of blood and vomit carefully and picks up the telephone handset
that's fastened to the wall by the vestry entrance. "Hello? Operator?"
He jiggles the switch on top of the handset. "That's odd."
My brain is slowly beginning to work again. "What's odd?"
"The telephone. It's not making any noise. It doesn't work."
I snuffle, wipe my nose on the sleeve of my jacket, and stare at him. "That's very odd." Yes, a quiet corner of my mind reminds me, that's odd, and not in a good way. "Let's go outside."
Andrew—the guy who's throwing up—has
just about finished, and is down to making choking, sobbing noises.
Martin pulls him up by one arm, and we walk outside together. There's a
growing crowd on the porch, curious to know what's going on. "Someone
call the police," Martin shouts. "Get the Reverend if you can find
him!" People are pushing past him to look inside the doorway, yelling
in disbelief and coming back out again.
Somebody is sending us, the congregation, a message, aren't they?
I stumble but make it down onto the grass. Sam's there, looking
concerned. "You were with me during the service," I hiss. "You were
next to me the whole time. You know where I was."
"Yes?" He looks puzzled. So do I. I'm not sure why I'm doing this, but . . .
"I spoke to Jen briefly, then heard the bells
and went to see. Then I screamed. I was only inside for a second on my
own. Wasn't I?"
Sam gets it: His shoulders tense suddenly. "How bad is it?"
"Mick." I gasp quietly, then run out of words. I
can't continue just now because I had to look; I saw how his killer
fastened him to the bell-rope by his ankles, cutting him and running
the thick rope through the meaty gap between the bone and the thick
tendon. I'm half-afraid that when they cut him down, they'll discover
he was raped first, while paralyzed, before his killer strung him up to
drain like a slab of flesh. A moment later I'm leaning on Sam's
shoulder, sobbing. He doesn't pull away, but holds me in silence while
all around us the crowd throbs and chatters. I've seen many horrible
things in my life, but there was a judicial deliberation implicit in
what was done to Mick—a hideous moral statement, blindly
confident in its own righteousness. I know exactly who did it, even
though I spent the entire service next to Sam; because for hours on end
I lay awake and fantasized about doing that to Mick, the night we took
Cass away.
"WELL, Mrs. Brown, how fascinating to see you here! Always in the thick of things, I see."
His Excellency smiles like a skeleton, jaw agape
at some private joke. Sam shuffles next to me but holds his peace. You
do not talk back to the Bishop, especially when it's clear that his
humor is a mercurial thing, a butterfly floating above a blast furnace
of rage at the intrusion that has spoiled his Sunday.
Fiore clears his throat. "She is not a suspect," he says stiffly.
"What?" Yourdon's head whips round like a
snake's. The police zombies around us tense as if nervous, hands going
to the batons at their belts.
It's been half an hour since I opened the door,
and the cops have surrounded the churchyard. They're not letting people
go until Yourdon says so. He's clearly in a foul mood. Cold-blooded
murder isn't something our community has had to deal with so far, and
if we're to stay in the spirit of the experiment, we must remember that
to the ancients it was as grievous a crime as identity theft or
relational corruption. It's at this point that the deficiencies of our
little parish become apparent. Wehave no real chief of police, no trained investigators. And so the Bishop is forced to tend his flock in person.
"I saw her arrive with her husband, she was
present throughout the service, and numerous witnesses saw her approach
the door and go inside, then heard her scream. She was alone inside for
all of ten seconds, and if you think she could have committed the
offense in that space of time . . ."
"I'll ask for you to second-guess me when I
can't be bothered to make up my own mind." Yourdon's cheek twitches,
then he switches his attention to Martin so abruptly I feel my knees
weaken. An invisible pressure has come off my skull. "You. What did you
see?"
Martin clears his throat, and is stuttering into
an account of finding me screaming before a corpse when a cop walks up
to Fiore for a brief, mumbled conversation.
Yourdon glares at his subordinate. "Will you stop that?"
Fiore shuffles. "I have new information, Your Excellency."
"Yes? Well, out with it! I haven't got all day."
Fiore—the bumptious, supercilious buffoon
of a priest who likes nothing more than to lord it over his
congregation—wilts like a punctured aerostat. "A preliminary
forensic examination appears to have revealed DNA traces left by the
killer."
Yourdon snorts. "Why did we wait to commission a squad of detectives? Come on, don't waste my time."
Fiore takes a sheet of paper from the cop. "PCR
amplification in accordance with—no, skip that—determines
that the fingerprint on file is congruent with, uh, myself. And nobody
else in YFH-Polity."
Yourdon looks furious. "Are you telling me that you strung him up to bleed out?"
To his credit, Fiore holds his ground. "No, Your Excellency, I'm telling you that the murderer is playing with us."
I lean against Sam, feeling nauseous. But
that was my fantasy, wasn't it? About how to deal with Mick. And I
never told anyone about it. Which means, I must be the killer! Except I
didn't do it. What's going on?
"That's it." Yourdon claps his hands together.
"Action this day—you, Reverend Fiore, will coordinate with Dr.
Hanta to select, train, and augment a chief police constable. Who in
turn will be empowered and authorized to induct four citizens into the
police force at the rank of sergeant. You will also discuss with me at
a later date the selection of a judge, procedures for arraigning
criminals before a jury, and the appointment of an executioner." He
glares at the priest. "Then you will, I trust, return your chapel to
the pristine condition it was in before I entrusted it to you—and
see to the pastoral care of your flock, many of whom are in dire need
of direction!"
The Bishop turns on his heel and sweeps back
toward his long black limousine, trailed by a trio of police zombies
bearing primitive but effective automatic weapons. I sag against Sam's
arm, but he keeps me upright. Fiore waits until the Bishop slams his
door shut, then takes a deep breath and shakes his head lugubriously.
"No good will come of this," he grumbles in our direction—us, the
proximate witnesses, and the zombies who discreetly hem us in. "Police:
dismissed. Citizens, you should attend to the state of your
consciences. At least one of you knows exactly what happened here
today, before the service, and staying silent will not be to your
benefit."
The police zombies begin to disperse, followed
by a gaggle of curious parishioners. I approach Fiore cautiously. I'm
very disturbed, and I'm not sure this is the right time,
but . . .
"Yes, what is it, my child?" He narrows his eyes and composes his face in a smile of benediction.
"Father, I, I wonder if I can have a word with you?" I ask hesitantly.
"Of course." He glances at a police zombie. "Go
to the vestry, fetch a mop and bucket and cleaning materials, and begin
cleaning up the floor of the bell tower."
"It's about . . ." I trail off.
My conscience really is pricking me, but I'm not sure how to continue.
I feel eyes on me from across the yard, curious eyes wondering what I'm
saying.
"Do you know who did it?" Fiore demands.
"No, I wanted to talk to you about Janis, she's been very strange lately—"
"Do you think Janis killed him?" Bushy elevated
eyebrows frame dark eyes that stare down his patrician nose at me, a
nose that doesn't belong to the same face as those wattles of fatty
tissue around his throat. "Do you?"
"Uh, no—"
"Some other time, then," he says, and before I
realize I'm dismissed, he's calling out to another police zombie, "You!
You, I say! Go to the undertaker depot and bring a coffin to the bell
tower—" And a moment later he's walking away from me, cassock
flapping around his boots.
"Come on," says Sam. "Let's go home right now." He takes me by the arm.
I screw up my eyes to keep from crying. "Let's."
He leads me across the car park toward the waiting queue of taxis. "What did you try to tell Fiore?" he asks quietly.
"Nothing." If he wants to know so badly, he can talk to me the rest of the time, when I'm lonely.
"I don't believe you." He's silent for a minute as we get into a taxi.
"Then don't believe me." The taxi pulls away
from the curb without asking us where we want to go. The zombies know
us all by sight.
"Reeve." I look at him. He stares at me, his expression serious.
"What?"
"Please don't make me hate you."
"Too late," I say bitterly. And right then, for exactly that moment, it's true.
IT'S raining
when I wake up the day after the murder. And it rains—gently,
lightly, but persistently—every day for the rest of the week,
mirroring my mood to perfection.
I've got the run of the house and doctor's
orders to take things easy—no need to go in to work in the
library—so I should be happy. I made up my mind to be happy here,
didn't I? But I seem to have messed things up with Sam, and there are
dark, frightening undercurrents at work around me—people who've
made the opposite choice and who'll pounce on me in an instant if I
don't tread a careful line. Now that I have time to think things
through, I'm profoundly glad that Fiore wasn't paying attention when I
tried to tell him about Janis. Life is getting cheaper by the week, and
there are no free resurrections here—no home assemblers to back
up on daily.
Am I really that worried?
Yes.
I manage to make it through to Thursday morning
before I crack. I wake up with the dawn light (I'm not sleeping well at
present), and I hear Sam puttering around the bathroom. I look out the
window at the raindrops that steadily fall like a translucent curtain
before the vegetation, and I realize that I can't stand this any more.
I don't want another day on my own in the house. I know Dr. Hanta said
to take the whole week off to recover, but I feel fine, and at least if
I go in to work, there'll be something to do, won't there? Someone to
talk to. A friend, of sorts, even if she's behaving weirdly these days.
And even if I feel uncomfortable about what I'll say when I see her.
I dress for work, then head downstairs and call
a taxi, as usual. I'm half-tempted to walk, but it's raining, and I've
neglected to buy any waterproof gear. Rain aboard a starship, who'd have imagined it?
I wait just inside the front porch until the taxi pulls up, then rush
over to it and pile in on the backseat. "Take me to the library," I
gasp.
"Sure thing, ma'am." The driver pulls away, with a bit more acceleration than I'm used to. "Wonder when this weather will stop?"
Huh? I shake myself. "What did you say?"
"I heard from Jimmy at the public works
department that they're doing it because they discovered a problem with
the drainage system—need to flush out the storm sewers. I'm Ike,
by the way. Pleased to meet you."
I just about manage to recover gracefully: "I'm Reeve. Been driving cabs long?"
He chuckles. "Since I got here. You're a
librarian? That's a new one on me. I can get you downtown from here,
but you'll need to show me which block it's on."
"The merger," I manage to say.
"Yeah, that's the deal." He taps a syncopated
rhythm on the steering wheel, keeping time with the windscreen wipers,
then hauls the cab through a sharp turn. "What does a librarian do all
day?"
"What does a cab driver do?" I counter, still shaken. Those are manual controls! They put one of us in charge of a machine like that . . .
They must be serious about turning this into a functioning polity.
Which means they probably figure they've got the scoring levels loaded
into our implants just about right. "People come in and they ask for
books and we help them find them." I shrug. "There's more to it than
that, but that's it in a nutshell."
"Uh-huh. Me, I drive around all day. Get a call on the wireless, go find the fare, take them where they want to go."
"Sounds boring. Is it?"
He laughs. "Finding books sounds boring to me,
so I guess we're even! Downtown square, City Hall coming up. Where do
you want to go from here?"
It's not raining in the downtown district. "Drop
me off here and I'll walk the rest of the way," I offer, but he's
having none of it.
"Naah, I need to learn where everything is, don't I? So where is it?"
I surrender. "Next left. Go two blocks, then take the first right and park. You're opposite it."
I arrive at my workplace thoroughly shaken and
not quite sure why. I already heard Yourdon talking about police
sergeants and judges. Are we going to end up without any zombies at
all, doing everything for ourselves? That would be how you'd go about
running an accurate dark ages social simulation, I realize, but it
means things are happening on an altogether larger scale than I'd
imagined.
I'm a little late—the library is already
open—but there are no customers, so I walk straight up to the
counter and smile at Janis, who is nose-down in a book. "Hi!"
She jerks upright, then looks surprised. "Reeve. I wasn't expecting you today."
"Well, I got bored sitting around at home. Dr.
Hanta said I could come in to work today if I wanted to and, well, it
beats watching the rain, doesn't it?"
Janis nods, but she looks unamused. She closes
her book and puts it down carefully on the desk. "Yes, I suppose it
does." She stands up. "Want a cup of coffee?"
"Yes please!" I follow her back into the staff
room. It feels really good to be back—this is where I belong.
Janis is feeling low, but I can help sort that out. Then we've got a
library to run! And what could be better than that? Ike can keep his
smelly, dangerous cab.
"Well then." Janis switches the kettle on and
looks me up and down critically. "I may have to go out for a couple of
hours. You going to be all right running the place on your own?"
"No problem!" I straighten my skirt. Maybe it was some lint?
She winces, then rubs her forehead. "Please, not so much enthusiasm this early in the morning. What's gotten into you?"
"I've been bored!" I manage to keep myself from
squeaking. "It's been boring at home, and it's been raining all week
long." I pull out the other chair and sit down. "You can't go shopping
every day of the week, there's only so much cleaning and tidying you
can do in one house, the television is boring, and I should have
stopped here to borrow some books but I thought . . ." I
wind down. What have I been thinking?
"I think I see." A wan smile tugs at the corners of her eyes. "How's Sam?"
I tense. "What makes you ask?"
The smile fades. "He was here yesterday. Wanted
to talk about you, wanted to know my opinion . . . He
doesn't feel he can talk to you, so he has to let it out with someone
else. Reeve, that's not good. Are you all right? Is there anything I can do to help?"
"Yes, you can change the subject." I say it
lightly, but she just about freezes right up on the spot. "Sam's taken
offense to something I said, and we need to sort it out between us." My
stomach churns with anger and guilt, but I bite back on it. It's not
Janis's fault after all, but Sam should know better, the pig. "We'll
sort it out," I add, trying to reassure her.
"I . . . see." Janis looks as if
she's sucking on a slice of lemon. Right then the kettle comes to a
boil, so she stands up and pours the hot water into two mugs, then
scoops in the creamy powder and mixes it up. "I hope you won't take
this the wrong way, Reeve, but you seem to have changed since you came
out of hospital. You haven't really been yourself."
"Hmm? What do you mean?" I blow on my coffee to cool it.
"Oh, little things." She raises an eyebrow at
me. "You've gained a certain enthusiasm. You're more interested in
exteriors than interiors. And you seem to have lost your sense of
humor."
"What's humor got to do with it?" I glare at my mug, willing myself not to get angry. "I know who I am, I know who I was."
"Forget I said it." Janis sighs. "I'm sorry, I
don't know what's gotten into me. I'm getting really bitchy these
days." She falls silent for a while. "I hope you don't mind my leaving
you for a few hours."
I manage a forced laugh. Janis's issues aren't my business, strictly speaking, but—"What are friends for?"
She looks at me oddly. "Thanks." She takes a
mouthful of her coffee and makes a face. "This stuff is vile, the only
thing worse that I can think of is not having it at all." Her frown
lengthens. "I'm running late. See you back around lunchtime?"
"Sure," I say, and she stands up, grabs her jacket from the back of the door, and heads off.
I finish my coffee, then go back to the front
desk. There's some filing to do, but the cleaning zombies have been
thorough—they didn't even leave me any dusty top shelves to
polish. A couple of bored office workers drop in to return books or
browse the shelves for some lunchtime entertainment, but apart from
that the place is dead. So it happens that I'm sitting at the front
desk, puzzling over whether there's a better way to organize the
overdue returns shelf, when the front door opens, and Fiore steps in.
"I wasn't expecting you," he says, pudgy eyes narrowing suspiciously.
"Really?" I hop off my stool and smile at him, even though all my instincts are screaming at me to be careful.
"Indeed not." He sniffs. "Is the other librarian, Janis, in?"
"She's out this morning, but she'll be back
later." I get a horrible sense of déjà vu as I look at
him, like a flashback to a bad dream.
"Hmm. Well, if I can trouble you to turn your
back, I have business in the repository." His voice rises: "I don't
want to be disturbed."
"Ah, all right." I take an involuntary step
back. There's something about Fiore, something not quite right, a feral
tension in his eyes, and I'm suddenly acutely aware that we're alone,
and that he outweighs me two to one. "Will you be long?"
His eyes flicker past my shoulder. "No, this
won't take long, Reeve." Then he turns and lumbers toward the reference
section and the secure document repository, not bothering to look at
me. For a moment I don't believe my own instincts. It's a gesture of
contempt worthy of Fiore, after all, a man so wrapped up in himself
that if you spent too long with him, you'd end up thinking you were a
figment of his imagination. But then I hear him snort. There's the
squeak of the key in thelock, and a creak of floorboards. "You might as well come with me. We can talk inside."
I hurry after him. "In what capacity am I
talking to you?" I ask, desperately racking my brains for an excuse not
to join him. "Is it about Janis?"
He turns and fixes me with a beady stare. "It
might be, my daughter." And that's pure Fiore. So I follow him through
the door and down the steps into the cellar, a hopeless tension gnawing
at my guts, still unsure whether I'm right to be worried or not.
Fiore pauses when we get to the strange room at
the bottom of the stairs. "What exactly do you think of Dr. Hanta?" he
asks me. He sounds tired, weighed down with cares.
I'm taken aback. What is this, some kind of
internal politicking? "She's"—I pause, biting my tongue, acutely
aware who I'm talking to—"refreshingly direct. She means well,
and she's concerned. I trust her," I add impulsively, resisting the
urge to add, unlike you. I manage to maneuver so my back is to the storage shelves on one wall. If I have to grab something—
"That's not unexpected," Fiore says quietly. "What did she do to you?"
"She didn't tell you?"
"No, I want you to tell me in your own words."
His voice is low and urgent, and something in my heart breaks. I can't
pretend this isn't happening anymore, can I? So I play for time.
"I was having frequent memory fugues, and I
picked up a nasty little case of gray goo up top in the ship's mass
fraction tankage. That set my immune system off, and it began taking
out memory traces. Dr. Hanta had to put me on antirobotics and give me
a complete memory fixative in order to stop things progressing." I move
my hands behind my back and slowly shuffle backward, away from him and
toward the wall. "I'd say she's a surprisingly ethical practitioner,
given the way everyone else here carries on in secret. Or do you know
differently?"
"Hmm." Fiore—fake-Fiore—leans over
the assembler console and taps in some kind of code. "Yes, as a matter
of fact I do."
While he isn't watching I take another step back until I bump up against shelves. Good. I'm already mentally preparing what I need to do next.
Fiore continues, implacably. "One of your
predecessors here—yes, they're still around in deep
cover—got it worked out. Dr. Hanta isn't her real name. She, or
rather it, used to be a member of the Asclepian League." I give a
little gasp. "Yes, you do remember them, don't you? She was a
Vivisector, Reeve. One of the inner clade, dedicated to pursuing their
own vision of how humanity should be restructured."
"Thanks for reminding me what I came here to get
away from," I say shakily. "I'm going to be having nightmares about
that for the next week."
He turns and glares at me. "Are you stupid, or—" He stops himself. "I'm sorry. But if that's all it means to you, you really
are beyond—" He stabs at the console angrily. "Shit. I thought
you'd be at least vaguely concerned for the rest of us in here."
I take a deep breath, trying to get my nausea
under control. The Asclepians were another of the dictatorship cults, a
morphological collective. Much worse than the Solipsist Nation. They
restructured polities one screaming mangled body at a time. If Dr.
Hanta is an Asclepian, and she's working with Yourdon and Fiore, the
future they're trying to sculpt is a thing of horror. "She can't be.
She just can't."
"And I suppose you think Major-Doctor Fiore is
just a fat, egocentric psychiatrist?" He grins at me humorlessly. "Stop
that, Reeve, I know what you're up to. Hanta fucked with your head
really well, didn't she? Probably got you to give your consent first,
too. They're hot on formalities, Asclepians. Fiore and Yourdon are war
criminals, too. Shit, most of the people here did things so nasty they
want to forget everything. Do you remember why this is an experimental polity?"
"Remember?" That's a new one on me.
"Oh. A memory fixative, that makes sense." He
takes a final poke at the console. It dings and turns luminous green.
"Where would dictators be without our compliant amnesia? Make the
collective lose its memory, you can conceal anything. ‘Who now
remembers the Armenians?' " He takes a step back. "Listen, we'll have
to break whatever conditioning she loaded your implant with."
My stomach churns for real this time. I feel sick. He's a monster, and
he wants to drag me back down into the turmoil I was in before Hanta
sorted me out. And I've been up the ladder now, I know there's no way
out. We're stuck here. Resistance is futile. I really ought to run for
it, call the Bishop and get the police to take him away. But that'd be
like betraying myself, too, wouldn't it? "Did you kill Mick?" I
whisper. "How did you get in that body?"
"Will you feel better if I say yes?" His voice is surprisingly gentle. "Or will you feel worse?"
"I'll—" I take another gulp of air. "I want to know."
Fake-Fiore, Robin, blinks slowly, pudgy eyes
closing: I tense but he opens them again before I can gather my wits to
move. "It was after you killed Fiore," he says. "I got into the
assembler and backed myself up, programmed in a body merge and neural
splice, so I'd come out in Fiore's skin instead of
like . . ." He nods at me. "I put a two-hour hold on it
to give you time to get the mess sorted out, but you must have blanked
in between. So I wake up inside the gate and find the basement has been
partially cleaned, and you're missing, and I had to finish the job.
Fiore's backed up in the gate, and I've got his biometrics, so I manage
to get a dump of his implant, and when one of him showed up to check on
you, I told him you'd just gone missing. He believed me. He's not very
good at handling multiplicity.
"On Sunday morning I went to visit Cass in the
hospital," he says quietly. "It turns out I wasn't her first visitor
that morning. I haven't heard anything about it through the rumor net,
but it was pretty bad: I think Hanta covered it up afterward but if you
were wondering . . . I caught Mick. He'd been living in
the basement of an empty house, stealing stuff from folks' kitchens
while they were at work—we're a trusting bunch, have you noticed
that? We leave our back doors unlocked. He'd gagged her and you saw the
tissue scaffolds Hanta had her legs in. She couldn't do anything. I
mean, she was trying to get away, but not getting very far. He was
raping her again, Reeve, and you know what I think about third chances."
I nod, gulping for breath. The horror of it is
that I can see everything in my mind's eye: me-in-Fiore's-flesh
creeping up on Mick as he humps away, Cass thrashing around
helplessly—Mick's probably tied her arms out of the way—and
me-in-Fiore's-flesh saps Mick at the base of the skull. He doesn't do
it very carefully, because he's beyond fury at this point; beyond
caring about inflicting subarachnoid hemorrhages. He doesn't care at
all whether Mick wakes up again. In fact he thinks Mick's waking up
would be a very bad idea, at least for Cass, and maybe come to think of
it he can use Mick to send a message to any borderline sociopaths who
are thinking about following his example—
It's very me. Me as I used to be,
not me as I was before (quiet, peaceful historian, devoted family man)
or me as I am now (slightly squirrelly, evanescent with the joy of
discovering what it's like to surrender after fighting for what seems
like my entire life), but me as I was in the middle, the grim-faced
killing machine. But then I meet his eyes, and I see an awful sadness
in them, a sick sense of guilt that mirrors what I feel at the
knowledge that I'm absolutely going to have to shop him to the Bishop
because we can't afford to have a murderous doppelganger of one of our
most respected citizens running around—
I grab the first thing my fingers scrabble
across: a heavy file of paper hardcopy, part of the dump of Curious
Yellow from the closet upstairs. I take two brisk paces forward as I
raise it and bring it down on top of his head as hard as I can. He sags
and falls over, but I don't stick around to finish the job. Instead, I
turn and run for the stairs. If I can make it to the top and slam the
door, he'll be trapped down here for long enough to call—
"Going somewhere?" drawls Janis, pointing a
stungun at me from the top step. I can see her trigger finger whitening
behind the guard.
I start to raise my hands. "Don't—"
She does.
I groan and
reach up to touch my head, which hurts like hell where Reeve thumped
me. Someone grabs my wrist and tugs experimentally, and I open my eyes.
It's Janis. She looks concerned. "What happened?" I ask.
"I caught her running up the stairs, in a real hurry to get somewhere." Janis peers at me. "What about you?"
I touch my head finally and wince at the sharp pain. "She thumped me with something, a box file I think. I fell over." Stupid, stupid. I feel a bit sick. Looking round brings a stab of pain to my neck. "Hit my head on the A-gate plinth."
"Then it was lucky I was in time."
"Huh. There's no such thing as luck where you're involved."
"That was in another life," she says pensively. "Are you going to be all right on your own? I need to close up shop."
"Get it closed, already." I wince and push
myself upright, breathing heavily. This body has a lot of momentum, and
a lot of insulation, but it's not built for bouncing around. "If
anybody finds us—"
"I'll sort them out."
Janis vanishes upstairs. I sit up and manage not
to retch. Reeve almost ruined it for both of us, and I'm horrified at
how close I came to blowing it. If I hadn't figured out who Janis was,
I'd be on my own down here and Reeve would have killed me without
blinking. Doctor's orders.
I'm going to have to do something about Reeve,
and I'm not looking forward to this. Surely Hanta—let's make that
Colonel-Surgeon Vyshinski, to give her her real name—got to her,
but losing a week isn't something that I take lightly, and besides, she
knows stuff that might come in useful. Dilemmas, dilemmas. If there was some way to trivially reverse the brainwashing that Hanta's applied . . . shit.
Hanta's an artist, isn't she? It'll be some sort of motivational/value
abreactive hack, subtle as hell, leaves the personality intact but
tweaking the gain on a couple of traits, just enough to turn Reeve into
a good little score whore.
I sit with my legs apart, panting a trifle
heavily over my enormous wobbling gut-bucket, and try to come to terms
with the fact that I'm going to have to kill my better half. It's
upsetting, however often you've done it before.
There's some clattering upstairs. I stand up,
wheezing, and waddle over to see what's going on. I hate this body, but
it's been useful for getting me into places none of us could otherwise
go—they've been letting their internal security get sloppy,
forgetting the authenticator rhyme: something shared, something do, something secret, something you? I suppose settling for something you is sufficient if you've got control over all the assemblers in a polity, but still. I wait at the bottom of the stairs. "Who is it?" I call quietly.
"Me," says Janis. "I need a hand with her."
"Humph." I haul myself up the steps. Janis is
waiting at the top with Reeve, whose wrists and ankles she's trussed
together with a roll of library tape. Reeve is twitching a little and
showing signs of coming to. "What are you thinking we should do with
her?" I ask.
"Can you get her downstairs?" Janis asks breathlessly.
"Yes." I lean forward and grasp Reeve by the
ankles: For all that this body is grotesquely overweight, it's not
weak. I lift and drag, and Janis holds Reeve's arms up enough to stop
her head banging on the steps. At the bottom I pull her toward the
A-gate. By this time her eyes are rolling, and she's turning red in the
face. Hating myself, I lean forward. "What would you do?" I ask her.
"Mmph! Mmmph."
Defiant to the end—that's me. I look up at Janis. "Why didn't you kill her?"
"I didn't want to," says Janis.
"What, you're going to just—"
"Just put her in the gate!" She sounds stressed.
I get my hands under Reeve's armpits and lift.
She goes limp, trying to deadweight on me. "I don't like this any more
than you do," I tell her. "But this town's too small for both of us."
As I dump her into the A-gate, she kicks out
with both legs, but I'm expecting that, and I punch her over the left
kidney. That makes her double up. I swing the door shut. "Well?" I
glare at Janis. "What now?" I feel like shit. Killing myself always
makes me feel like shit. That's why I'm deferring to Janis, I think.
Pushing the tough choice off onto someone else's shoulders.
Janis is bending over the control station. "Figuring this out," she murmurs. "Look, I'm going to lift a template from her, okay?
"Fuck." I shake my head, a parody of
resignation. There's a thud from inside the A-gate, and I wince. I feel
for Reeve: I can see myself in her place, and it's horrifying. "Why?"
"Because." Janis looks up at me. "Fiore's going
to suspect if we keep you running around in drag. Don't you think it's
time for you to go back?"
"Back?"
"To being Reeve," she says patiently.
"Oh," I echo. "Oh, I see." Being thumped
on the head has left me sluggish and stupid. Janis is right, we don't
have to kill her. And suddenly I feel a whole lot better about punching
Reeve and dumping her into a macro-scale nanostructure disassembler,
for the same reason that punching yourself in the face never feels
quite as bad as having someone else do it for you.
"I'm going to template from her, and then you're
going to follow her, and I'm going to take a delta from your current
neural state vector and overlay it on Reeve. You'll wake up back in her
body, with both sets of memories, but you're going to be the dominant
set. Think that'll work?"
There's another muffled thump from inside the
A-gate, then muffled retching noises—Janis has triggered the
template program, paralyzing Reeve via her netlink, and the chamber is
filling with ablative digitizer foam. "It had better," I say.
"I'm worried Fiore may suspect what's going on. The thing with Mick could blow it completely if he puts two and two together."
I sigh heavily. "Okay, I'll go back to being Reeve. I suppose that makes sense."
"You agree?" She looks haggard in the dim light
from the ceiling bulbs. "Good, then it's not entirely stupid. What
then . . . ?"
"Then we sit down and figure out how to nail down the lid on this mess. Once I know what she knows."
"Right." Her lips quirk in a faint smile. "Your direct, no-nonsense approach is always like a breath of fresh air."
"Once a tank, always a tank," I remind her.
"Right," she echoes, and for a moment I can see a shadow of her former self. That sends a pang through my chest.
"The sooner I'm myself again, the better."
We sit in silence for long minutes while the gate chugs to itself, then finally
the console chimes, and there's a click as the door unlatches. I walk
over and swing it open: as usual, the chamber is bare and dry. I glance
over and see that she's watching me.
"Ready?" she asks.
"See you on the other side, Sanni," I say as I close the door.
That's all.
SECURITY Cell
Blue used to be part of the counterespionage division of the Linebarger
Cats. It was supposedly disbanded, all memory traces erased, at the end
of the censorship wars. I know this is not the case because I'm a
member. We didn't disband, we went underground—because our
mission wasn't over.
This is a risky business. Our job is to do
unpleasant things to ruthless people. Covering our tracks costs
money—lots of it, and it isn't always fungible across polity
frontiers these days. Local militias and governments have reinvented
exchange rates, currency hedges, and a whole host of other archaic
practices. Some polities are relatively open, while others have fallen
into warlordism. Some place great stock on authentication and
uniqueness tracking, while others don't care who you think you are as
long as you pay your oxygen tax. (The former make great homes; the
latter make great refuges.) As a consequence of the postwar
fragmentation, we end up moving around a lot, shuffling our appearances
and sometimes our memories, forking spares and merging deltas. At first
we live off the capital freed up by the Cats' liquidation; later we
supplement it by setting up a variety of business fronts. (If you've
ever heard of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, or Cordwainer Heavy
Industries, that's us.) Operationally, we work in loosely coupled
cells. I'm one of the heavy hitters, my background in combat ops
meshing neatly with my intelligence experience.
About fifty megs after the official end of
hostilities, I receive a summons to the Polity of the Jade Sunrise.
It's a strictly tech-limiting polity, and I'm in ortho drag, my cover
being a walkabout sword-fighting instructor. I've got access to enough
gray-market military wetware that I can walk the walk as well as slice
the floating hair, and my second-level cover is as a demilitarized
fugitive from summary justice somewhere that isn't
tech-limited—which sets me up for the Odessa Introduction if I
see a target of opportunity and need to run a Spanish Prisoner scam on
them. I've been doing a lot of that kind of job lately, but I'm not
sure what this particular one is about.
The designated rendezvous is the public
bathhouse on the Street of Orange Leaves. It's a narrow, cobbled,
mountainside road, running from near the main drag with the
silversmith's district down toward the harbor. It's a fine spring
afternoon, and the air is heavy with the smell of honeysuckle. A gang
of kids are playing throw-stick loudly outside the drunkenly leaning
apartment buildings, and the usual light foot traffic is laboriously
winding its way up and down the middle of the road, porters yelling
insults at rickshaw drivers and both groups venting their spleen on the
shepherd who's trying to drive a small flock of spidergoats uphill.
I've been here long enough to know what I'm
doing, more or less. I spot a boy who's hanging back on the sidelines
and snap my fingers. He comes over, not so much walking as slithering
so that his friends don't see him. Grubby, half-starved, his clothes
faded and patched: perfect. A coin appears between two of my fingers.
"Want another?" I ask.
He nods. "I don't do thex," he lisps. I look closer and realize he's got a cleft palate.
"Not asking you to." I make another coin appear,
this time out of reach. "The teahouse. I want you to look round the
back alley and see if there are any men waiting there. If there are,
come and tell me. If not, go in and find Mistress Sanni. Tell her that
the Tank says hello, then come and tell me."
"Two coin." He holds up a couple of fingers.
"Okay, two coin." I glare at him, and he does
the disappearing trick again. The kid's got talent, I realize, he does
that like a pro. Sharp doubts intrude: Maybe he is a pro? We rounded up the easy targets a long time ago—the ones who're still running ahead of us tend to be a lot harder to nail.
I don't have long to wait. A cent or so passes,
then lisp-boy is back. "Mithreth Thanni thay, the honeypot ith
overflowing. I take you to her."
The honeypot is overflowing: doesn't sound good. I pass him the two coins. "Okay, which way?"
He does a quick fade in front of me, but not too
fast for me to follow. We're round the back of a dubious alleyway, then
into a maze of anonymous backyards in a matter of seconds. Then he goes
over a rickety wooden fence and along another alley—this one full
of compost, the stink unbelievable—and up to an anonymous-looking
back door. "The'th here."
My hand goes to my sword hilt. "Really?" I stare
at the kid, then at the two dead thugs leaning against each other
beside the back step. The kid flashes a lightning grin at me.
"You did thay to check the back alley for muggerth, Robin."
"Sanni?"
He sketches a bow, urchin-cool. I raise an
eyebrow. The muggers look as if they're sleeping, if you ignore the
blood leaking from their noses. Very good work, for an intel type who
isn't a wet ops specialist. "We don't have long. Authenticate me."
We do the routine, something shared, something
do, something secret, something you—all the stuff the Republic of
Is used to do for us. "Okay, boss, why did you call me?" Sanni isn't my
boss these days, but old habits die hard.
"The honeypot is leaking." He drops the lisp and
stands tall, Sanni's natural presence shining through the bottleneck of
his three-hundred-meg body. "We—Vera Six, that is—got word
about twenty megs ago that a bunch of familiar spooks were haunting the
Invisible Republic. It all snowballed really fast. Looks like several
of the memory laundries have been infiltrated and the glasshouse has
been taken over."
I lean against the wall. "The glasshouse?"
Sanni nods. "Someone's going to have to go in
and polish the mirrors. Someone else. I forked an instance five megs
ago, and she hasn't reported back yet. It's going to be deep cover, I'm
afraid."
"Shit and pig-fucking shit." I glare at the dead muggers as if it's their fault.
The glasshouse is a rehab center for prisoners
of war. The setup is designed to encourage resocialization, to help
integrate them back into something vaguely resembling postwar society;
it's a former MASucker configured as a compact polity with with just
one T-gate in or out. Bad guys go in, civilians come out. At least,
that was the original theory.
"What's going on?" I ask.
"I think someone's broken our operational
security," says Sanni. I shudder and stare at the muggers. "Yes," he
says, seeing the direction of my gaze. "I said we don't have long. A
group drawn from several of our operational rivals have infiltrated the
Strategic Amnesia Commissariat of the Invisible Republic and taken over
the funding and operational control of the glasshouse. They discharged
all the current inmates, and we no longer know what's going on inside.
The glasshouse is under new management."
"I'm the wrong person, and in the wrong place.
Can't you send Magnus? Or the Synthesist? Do an uplevel callback to
descendant coordination and the veterans' association and see if
anybody—"
"I don't exist anymore," Sanni says calmly.
"After my delta went in and didn't report back, the bad guys came after
my primary and killed me repeatedly until I was almost entirely dead.
This"—he taps his skinny chest—"is just a partial. I'm a
ghost, Robin."
"But." I lick my lips, my heart pounding with shock. "Won't they simply kill me, too?"
"Not if you're identity-dead first." Sanni-ghost grins at me. "Here's what you're going to have to do . . ."
I am me. Joints
creak, heart pumps. It's warm and dark, and I'm sleepy. It slowly comes
to me that I'm squatting with my arms wrapped around my knees and my
chin—oh. So I'm not passing as Fiore? Right. That's satisfying to
know. One more fact to add to the pile. Roll the dice, see what comes
up on top.
I've been in two places at once for most of the
past two weeks. I've been in hospital, recovering at home. Talking to
Dr. Hanta, being horrified in the bell tower, trying to tell the
Reverend about Janis. And another me has been living in the library,
sleeping in the staff room, cautiously exploring off-limits sections of
the habitat, and latterly conspiring with Janis. Sanni. A
doubled moment of eternal jarring shock—meeting her head-on up
the stairs with a gun in her hand, just as startled as a week ago,
stumbling across her in the basement with a knife. She broke down and
cried, then, when she realized she wasn't the only one anymore. I
wouldn't have credited it if I hadn't been there myself.
Hard-as-diamonds Sanni, reduced to this? Isolation does strange things
to people . . .
"Come on, Reeve. Talk to me! Please. Are you all
right in there?" There's a note of desperation in her voice. "Say
something!" She leans over me anxiously. "How does it feel?"
"Let's see." I blink some more then unwrap my arms and push myself upright. I'm Reeve again. Damn, but I feel so light!
After being tied down by the centripetal chains fastened to Fiore's
flesh for more than a tenday, it's an amazing sensation. I could drift
away on a light breeze. I find myself grinning with delight, then I
look up at her and my face freezes. "I—she—nearly shopped
you to Fiore."
Janis blanches. "When?"
"After we disposed of Mick. Let me think." I
close my eyes. I need to get rid of the sudden storm surge of
adrenaline. "Low risk. I—she—was uncertain, and she
misjudged her timing. She didn't know who you are, she just thought you
were up to no good, so she tried to shop you for your own protection.
Fiore was preoccupied and told her to get lost. As long as nothing
reminds him, you're clear."
"Shit." Janis takes a step back, and I see that
she's still holding the stunner, but she's got it pointed at the floor.
She's swaying slightly, with relief or shock. "That was close."
I take a deep breath. "I've never been
brainwashed before." A little part of me still thinks Dr. Hanta is a
sympathetic and friendly practitioner who only means the best for me,
but it's outvoted by the much larger part of me that is eager to use
her intestines as a skipping rope. "I am"—breathing too fast, slow down—"not amused."
"Let's try a ping test." Janis hesitates for a moment. "Do you love me?"
"I love you." My heart speeds up again. "Hey, I heard that!"
"Yes." Janis nods. "I didn't, though. You know
what? I think the diffmerge must have scribbled over part of the CY
load in your netlink."
"No." I step out of the assembler and carefully
close the door. "It happened earlier. I heard it earlier"—I
frown—"talking to Sam, after I got out of hospital. I mean, she
heard it."
"Curious." She cocks her head to one side, a
very Sanni-like gesture that looks totally out of place on the Janis
I've gotten to know over the past few months. "Maybe if she—"
Janis snaps her fingers. "They've repurposed CY, haven't they? The bit
we're carrying around in here, it's used for loading behavior
scorefiles and such, but if Hanta's been modifying it to work as a
general-purpose boot loader . . ."
I shudder. The consequences are clear enough.
The original Curious Yellow used humans as an infective vector, but
only really ran inside A-gates that it had infected. A modified CY that
can actually run and do useful stuff inside a host's netlink, and which
doesn't trigger the detection patch, is a whole lot scarier. You can do
things with it like—"The zombies?"
"Yes." Janis looks as if she's seen a ghost. "Are we still in the glasshouse? Or have they relocated us?"
"We're still in the glasshouse," I reassure her.
It's the first bit of good news I've been able to piece together so
far. "MASucker Harvest Lore, if what she remembers seeing
upstairs is anything to go by. I mean, we might have been on a
different MASucker, but I thought you accounted for them all?"
"I think so." She nods, increasingly animated.
"So that locked area you found in City Hall"—when I was being
Fiore—"is probably the only T-gate on-site. Right?"
"There are the short-range gates to the
individual residences." I shiver again: Getting into City Hall and out
again without being identified was a matter of sheer brazen luck. Ten
minutes later I'd have run into the real Fiore. "They're definitely
switched off a hub at City Hall; I found the conference suite they
inducted us through. As I recall, on the Grateful for Duration
the longjump T-gate was connected to the flight control deck by a
direct short-range gate, but was itself stored in a heavily armored pod
outside the main pressure hull, in case someone tried to throw a nuke
through. So, if we assume they haven't rebuilt the Harvest Lore
in flight, there's going to be a way to get to the longjump node from
either City Hall or the cathedral, which is just over the road."
"Right." She nods. "So. If this is the Harvest Lore,
we're about two hundred years from next landfall. If we assume
exponentiation at, say, five infants per family, there's time for ten
generations . . . right, they're looking to breed up
about twenty thousand unauthenticated human vectors. Hanta's got time
to implant netlinks in them all. So when we arrive, she can flood the
network with this new population of carriers—"
"That's not going to happen." I smile, baring my teeth. "Never doubt that. They think they've got us trapped. But the right way to view it is, we can't retreat."
"You think we can take them on directly?" Sanni asks, and for a moment she's entirely Janis—isolated, damaged, frightened.
"Watch me," I tell her.
THE rest of the
day passes uneventfully. I say goodbye to Janis and go home as usual.
At least, that's what it must look like to anyone who's watching me.
I've spent the past few hours in an absentminded reverie, rolling
around irreconcilable memories and trying to work out where I stand.
It's most peculiar. On the one hand, I've got Reeve's horror at finding
Mick dead, her apprehensive fear that Janis might be "untrustworthy"
and a hazard to the friendly and open Dr. Hanta. And on the other hand,
I've got Robin's experiences. Sneaking around City Hall on tiptoe,
finding locked areas and avoiding Fiore by the skin of my teeth. Coming
across Mick in the hospital, with Cass. Dropping in on Janis in the
library, her initial guilty fear and the slowly growing
conviction—on my part—that she wasn't just a bystander but
an ally. Recognition protocols and the shock of mutual recognition.
Janis has been on her own in here for almost
half a year longer than I have. When she realized she wasn't alone, she
broke down and cried. She'd been certain it was only a matter of time
before Dr. Hanta got around to her. Terror, isolation, fear of the
midnight knock on the door: They wear you down after a while. She got
pregnant before anyone had figured out that part of the scheme. I'm
surprised she's still functioning at all.
The score system and the experimental protocols
are a real obstacle to us: For all we know, half the population of
YFH-polity could be cell members of one faction or another, blundering
around in the dark, unwilling to risk revealing themselves. But unless
we can somehow kick over the superstructure of artifice that the cabal
have established, we won't be able to link up with our potential allies
and identify our real enemies. Divide and conquer: You know it makes
sense.
I get home in due course, by way of the hardware
store. Sam is absent, so I go straight into the garage to see what I
can do. This isn't the time for recrimination, but I'm really pissed at
myself. I was going to get rid of this stuff! If nothing else, I found
making historic weapons fascinating. I may end up doing it as a hobby,
when all this is over, if there's scope for such luxuries.
Still, I guess I won't be needing the crossbow
now. Or the sword I was trying to temper. Sanni and I have got a
sterile assembler with full military scope. We left it cooking last
night, slowly and laboriously building a stockpile of polynitrohexose
bricks. Making weapons by A-gate is a slow process, and the higher the
energy density the longer it takes, so we compromised and opted for
chempowered weapons. The first batch of machine pistols will be ready
when we go in to work tomorrow. Which leads to the next logical
question—where's my Faraday cage bag gotten to in this pile?
I'm hopping around on top of a pile of scattered
steel bar stock and spilled screwdrivers, cursing up a blue streak and
clutching my left foot when some change in the light alerts me to the
fact that the garage door is open. "What the fuck—"
"Reeve?"
"Fuck!" I howl. "Shit. Dropped my hammer and—"
"Reeve? What's going on?"
I force myself to calm down. "I dropped my
hammer and it landed on this pile of bar stock and it bounced on my
toe." I hop some more. The pain is beginning to subside. "The hammer is
evil and must be punished."
"The hammer?" He pauses. "Have you been drinking?"
"Not yet." I lean against the wall and
experimentally put my foot on the floor. "Ouch. I just decided to turn
over a new—heh—leaf again. A girl needs a hobby and all
that." I raise an eyebrow.
He looks at me skeptically. "Bad day at the office?"
"It's always a bad day at the office, insofar as the office exists in the first place."
He frowns. "What's this about a hobby?"
"Extreme metalworking, or something like that. Have you seen my copy of The Swordsmith's Assistant? I was going to throw it out when I wasn't feeling myself, but I never got round to it."
You can almost see the light come on above his head. "Reeve? Is that you?"
"I had a crap day at the office, too. Reading
poetry out of boredom, you know? ‘Last night I met upon the
stair, a big fat man who wasn't there; he wasn't there again today:
inside my head he'll have to stay.' Ogden Nashville. Apparently, the
ancients seem to have liked him for some reason. C'mon, let's go and
round up some supper."
Sam retreats back into the house ahead of me, lips moving soundlessly as he turns it over in his head. I have
been reading poetry at work, I just hope my improvised doggerel gets
through. (Poetry really gums up conversational monitoring systems.
Parsing metaphor and emotional states is an AI-complete problem.)
We end up in the kitchen. "Were you thinking
about cooking again?" Sam asks cautiously. Thinking back to days past,
I suspect he wasn't too enthusiastic about being subjected to some of
my experiments.
"Let's just order a pizza instead, hmm? And a flask of wine."
"Why?" He stares at me.
"Do you have to turn every suggestion for what to do of an evening into an impromptu therapy session?"
He shrugs. "Just asking." He begins to turn away.
I grab his shoulder. "Don't do that."
He turns back sharply, looking surprised. "What?"
" ‘Last night I met upon the stair, a
big fat man who wasn't there; he wasn't there again today: inside my
head he'll have to stay' . . . I haven't been myself lately,
Sam, but I'm feeling a lot better today." I frown at him, willing the words to sink in.
"Oh, you mean . . ."
"Shh!" I hold up a warning finger. "The walls have ears."
Sam's eyes widen, and he begins to pull away
from me. I grab at his shoulder, hard, then step in close and wrap my
arms around him. He tries to push back, but I lean my face against his
shoulder. "We need to talk," I whisper.
"About what?" he whispers back. But at least he stops pushing.
"What's going on." I lick his earlobe, and he jolts as if I've stuck a live wire in it.
"Don't do that!" he hisses.
"Why not?" I ask, amused. "Afraid you might enjoy it?"
"But we, they—"
"I'm going to order food. While we're eating,
let's keep things light, okay? Afterward we'll go upstairs. I've got a
trick or two to show you. For avoiding eavesdroppers." I add in a whisper: "Smile, please."
"Won't it be obvious?" He's lowered his arms and
is holding me loosely around the waist. I shiver because I've been
wanting him to do that so badly for the past week—no, let's not
go there.
"No it won't be. They use low-level monitors to
track normal behavior. They call in high-end monitors only if we act
funny. So don't act funny."
"Oh." I look up as he looks down for a startled
instant, and I kiss him. He tastes of sweat and a faint, musty aroma of
dust and paperwork. A moment passes, then he responds enthusiastically.
"This is normal?" he asks.
"Whoa! Dinner first." I laugh, pulling back.
"Dinner first." He looks at me with a dark, serious expression.
I phone for a pizza and a couple of glass jars
of wine, and while Sam heads for the living room, I try to catch my
breath. Things are moving too fast for comfort, and I'm suddenly having
to deal with a mass of conflicted emotions at a time when all I was
wanting to do was recruit another dissatisfied inmate to the campaign.
The thing is, Sam and I have too much history for anything between us
to be simple—even though we haven't actually done very much
together. We haven't had time, and Sam's got big body-image
issues, and then she/me nearly fucked everything between us completely
while under the influence of the pernicious Dr. Hanta—oh,
hindsight is a wonderful tool, isn't it? Thinking about it, Sam's
dissatisfaction and passivity has been a running sore between us, and I
half suspect it took my apparent co-option to kick him into doing
something about it.
I feel guilty as I remember what I was thinking at the time. I can surrender . . . yes, and they'll make my life a living hell, won't they? Did I really
want to hand complete control over my life to the likes of Fiore,
Yourdon, and Hanta? I don't think I explicitly intended to do that, but
it amounted to the same thing. It feels like a moment of cowardice in
my own past, a voluntary moment of cowardice, and I feel oddly
dirty because of it. Because it's not far out of my normal character to
feel that way inclined—Hanta didn't rebuild her/me, she just
tweaked a few weightings in my mind map. "The only thing necessary for
the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing" in spades. And Sam got
to see that side of me. Ick.
The closet bings for attention and I take the
pizza tray and wine out of it. On my way through to the living room I
kick my shoes off, strewing them in the hallway. "Sam?" He turns round.
He's nesting in the sofa again, the television turned to some sports
channel. "Turn the volume up."
He raises an eyebrow at me but does as I ask,
and I sit down next to him. "Here. Garlic and tofu with deep-fried
lemon chicken steak." I open the box and pull out a slice, then hold it
in front of his mouth. "Eat?"
"What is this?"
"I want to feed you." I lean against him and
hold the pizza in front of his face, just out of reach. "Go on. You're
begging for it really, aren't you?"
"Gaah." He leans forward and takes a bite at
it—I try to pull my hand back, but I'm just too late and he gets
a mouthful. I laugh and lean closer and find his arm is around my
shoulders. Chewing: "You. Are. Intolerable."
"Manipulative," I suggest. "Annoying."
"All of the above?"
"Yes, all of it by turns." I feed him another
mouthful, then change my mind about letting him have the whole slice
and eat the rest of it myself.
"Every time I think I understand you, you change the rules," he complains. "Give me another . . ."
"Not my fault. I don't make the rules."
"Who does?"
I point a finger at the ceiling, waggle it
about. "Remember our chat in the library?" After I came out to Janis,
last Tuesday, she phoned Sam and asked him to come visit. He was very
surprised to see me-as-Fiore, almost as much as when we showed him the
basement and the A-gate. "Remember my face?" He nods, looking dubious.
"Janis and I sorted everything out. Settled the slight difference of
opinions. I'm feeling a lot better now, and less inclined to give up on
things."
His arm tightens. Warm, comforting, presence. "But why?"
I take a deep breath and offer him another slice
of pizza. Better keep it short. At this rate he's going to eat it all.
"You don't want to live like this."
"But I—" He stops.
"Do you?" I prod him.
He looks at me. "Watching you, this past week—" He shakes his head. "I'd love
to be able to settle in like that." He shakes his head again,
underscoring the ironic tone in his voice. "What alternative is there?"
"We're not supposed to talk about where we came
from." I pause to chew for a moment. "And we can't go back." I flick a
warning glance his way. "But we can make ourselves more comfortable
here if we rearrange our priorities." Will he get it?
Sam sighs. "If only we could do that." He glances down at his lap.
"I've got a new priority for you," I say, my heart beating faster.
"Really?"
"Yes." I put the pizza box down and plaster
myself against him. "We can start right here by you picking me up and
carrying me upstairs to the bathroom."
"The bathroom?"
"Yep." I kiss him again, and suddenly I'm not
sure this is a good idea at all. "Where we're going to get in the
shower together, and wash each other, and talk. Can't go to bed
smelling of office work, can we?"
"Shower—" His monosyllables aren't his
most appealing attribute: I kiss him into silence, shivering with alarm
at my own responses.
"Now."
THINGS do not go according to plan.
The plan seemed simple enough. Get Sam on board
again. Doing that, holding a proper conversation with him, was another
matter with the ever-present risk of being overheard. But if you
disguise your suspicious activities as something expected of you, while
only the dumb listener bots are online, you've got a good chance of
doing it undetected. The dumb listeners aren't good for much more than
keyword monitoring, and the cabal is sufficiently short on spare bodies
that they can't monitor everything we say all the time.
So call me naive, if you like. I figured that as
a married couple, one of us pretending to seduce the other and then
dragging them into a shower—lots of nice white noise to confuse
audio tracking, sheets of water to make it hard to lip-read, and an
excuse to stand really close together—would be a pretty good way
of evading surveillance.
What I didn't consider was that when I stand too
close to Sam my skin tingles, and I feel warm and needy in intimate
places. And what I especially didn't consider is that Sam is horribly
conflicted but has corresponding urges. He's human, too, and we both
have certain needs, which we've been trying to ignore for much too long.
Sam does as I ask him, and about halfway up the
stairs I realize that I'm going to lose control if we do this. I nearly
tell him to stop, but for some reason my mouth doesn't want to open. He
puts me down on the bathroom carpet and stands too close. "What now?"
he asks, a quiet tension in his voice.
"We, um, undress." Without realizing quite how,
I find my hands are already working on his trouser belt. When I feel
him begin to unbutton my blouse, I shudder, and not with fear. "Shower."
"This isn't such a good—"
"Shut up."
"You'll become, uh, pregnant."
"Won't." Worry about it later. I run my
hand around his back, feeling the thin man-fur that runs up the base of
his spine, and I lean closer. "Not worried anymore."
"But." I feel him unzip my skirt. Hands on my thighs. "Surely."
I kiss him to make him stop. We're down to underwear. "Shower. Now." My teeth are chattering with a rising tide of need that threatens to wreck what's left of my self-control.
We're in the shower cubicle, wearing our
underwear, and I dial the pressure up to maximum and the temperature to
fusion. His tongue—garlic and honey and a hint of something else,
of him. Arms around each other, we stand under the spray, and I feel
the tension in his back. He's got an erection, of course. Why am I
still wearing anything? Moments later I'm not. And a moment after that
I'm crunched against the wall, my knees drawn up, gasping at the size
of him inside me.
"You want to talk . . ."
The entire universe is in here. I wrap my arms around him and latch on to his lips, hungrily. I want to talk, but right now I've got higher priorities.
"Opening ceremony."
"Yes?"
"On a MASucker. Yes!"
"Yes . . ."
"Only one T-gate out. Six gigs to next star
system. If we break connection, bad guys can't pay up on scorefiles.
Breaks carrot side of dictatorship, no payoff for compliance.
Yes . . ."
"Overthrow the—the?"
He heaves like the wild sea. I'm lost on him,
abandoned. At first when I was Reeve, the idea of pregnancy horrified
me. Then Hanta tweaked something, and it was no big deal. Now I just
don't care anymore: It's survivable, and if it's the cost of
having Sam right now, I'll pay. I want to focus, to plan, but we've
gotten carried away. Sam is pounding away with no subtlety, and he
knows better, which means he's lost on the ocean, too. If we can find
each other and cling together through the night, who knows? "Sam, I, I
want you to—"
"Oh!" A moment later, a quieter "oh!" And a
sensation of spreading warmth that drives me to grind against him until
everything goes away, and I become the ocean for a few eternal seconds.
THINGS don't go
according to plan, but they go strangely well. After the first mad
flush of lust, we collapse in the shower, then soap each other off
thoroughly. Sam doesn't cringe away from my hands this time but seems
quiet, thoughtful. I kiss him, and he responds. After a while I begin
to feel as if my skin's about to fall off: I can barely see thebathroom for steam. "Let's dry off and go to bed," I suggest, feeling another little jolt of worry.
"Okay." Sam turns the shower head to OFF and
opens the cubicle door. It's cold out there. I shiver, and for a wonder
he wraps his arms around me.
"Are you feeling comfortable?" I ask hesitantly. "I mean, with this?"
He thinks for a moment. "I'm comfortable with you."
"But—"
He kisses the back of my head. "It's you. That makes it easier."
There's nothing left to divide us: We know
exactly how fucked up we are. We've had such disastrous
misunderstandings already that there's nothing left to come. Sam freaks
at the idea of being human and male and large? Yes. I have problems
with the idea of pregnancy, and there're no contraceptives in
YFH-Polity? Sure. We're past all that. It's all going to be very simple
from now on.
So we towel each other dry and I take his hand
and together we go to the bedroom, where presently we make love again,
tenderly and slowly.
THE next
morning, I stumble downstairs late, disheveled and happy, to find there
is a letter waiting for me on the front hall carpet. It's like a bucket
of cold water in the face. I pick it up and carry the piece of paper
into the kitchen and read it while the coffee machine gurgles and chugs
to itself.
To: Mrs. Reeve Brown
From: The Polity Administration Committee
Dear Mrs. Brown
It is now four months since your
arrival in YFH-Polity. In this time, numerous changes have taken place
in our little community, and we will shortly be commencing Phase Two of
the experiment in which you agreed to participate.
Accordingly, may I extend to you an
invitation to our first Town Meeting, to be held at City Hall on Sunday
morning in place of the regularly scheduled
Sunday Service. The meeting will explain the forthcoming Phase Two
changes, and will be followed by a service of thanksgiving, to be
conducted by the Very Reverend Dr. H. Yourdon in the cathedral.
Yours truly . . .
This puts a new perspective on things, doesn't
it? I shake my head, then take the two coffee mugs back upstairs. On my
way I snag the identical-looking letter with Sam's name on it.
"What do you think?" he asks, when he's had time to read it.
"I think it's exactly what it sounds like." I
shrug. "Things are getting bigger, new faces, new scenery—this
‘cathedral' they're opening! You can't run a town the way you run
a parish of a couple of hundred people, can you? No way can everybody
know each other. So they'll need a different intergroup score mechanism
to keep people behaving themselves. To account for the anonymity of
cities, the sight of familiar strangers."
His cheek twitches. "I'm not sure I like the sound of that."
"Oh, it can't be that bad," I assure him, rolling my eyes.
"Can't it?"
I nod. "No." A thought strikes me. "Listen, can you get away from the office for lunch?"
"What, you mean . . . ?"
"Yes. Drop by the library about one o'clock, and we'll go eat together." I smile at him. "How does that sound?"
"You want me to—" He works it out. "Yes, I can do that."
"Good." I lean close and kiss him on the cheek. "Be seeing you."
I arrive at work fifteen minutes early,
clutching my bag—not, in and of itself, an unusual
variation—but the place is unlocked because Janis is already in.
"Janis?" I poke my head round the office door.
She's not there. I sigh and head for the depository.
Down in the basement I find Janis loading
magazines into box files. "Give me a hand," she says tensely. "If Fiore
or Yourdon turns up while we're here . . ."
"Check." The magazines are vaguely banana-shaped
and don't fit very well, but I can get four or five in each file box
before I put them back on the shelf. Janis has six machine pistols
lined up before her on a chair, still in their synthesis gel capsules.
"Did you get the letter?" I ask.
"Yes. So did Norm." Her husband—I don't
know much about him. "They're pulling things forward. Once they
institutionalize the police and stop relying on isolation to do their
work for them, we're in trouble."
"Agreed." I pause. "Ladies' sewing club?" That
was my idea, when I was Robin, but Janis fronted it, and after my one
meeting with them while I was being Reeve, I guess she's going to have
to sort them out.
"I invited them here for lunch. Hurry up!" She's very twitchy this morning.
"Okay, I'm hurrying." I get the last of the
magazines stashed in box files on the shelves, for all the world
looking like innocent hard copy files of Curious Yellow. "I invited Sam
round. I think he's on message."
"Oh, good. I was hoping you two would sort
things out." A brief smile. "Now let's go upstairs. We've got a library
to open before we can overthrow the government."
SUBTLETY isn't
going to get us very far at this point, so Janis orders up a delivery
of sandwiches from a catering outfit working from the back of a cafe,
and when the ladies' sewing circle and revolutionary command committee
shows up, we lock the front door, hang out the CLOSED sign, and pile downstairs.
"We've got one day to organize this," says Janis. "Reeve, you want to summarize the situation?"
Heads turn. From their expressions, I don't
think they were expecting me to be here. I smile. "This
place—this polity—was originally designed as a glasshouse,
a military prison. It works too well; the YFH cabal figured that a
prison doesn't just keep people in, it keeps other people out.
So they set it up as a research lab, what we're now seeing." She
gestures at the shelves of box files on the back wall. "They're working
on developing a new type of cognitive dictatorship, one spread via
Curious Yellow, and they're breeding up a population of carriers for
it. When we get to the end of the ‘experiment' time-scale they're
planning on reintegrating everyone into general society—and using
your children to spread it." I see Janis's hand move unconsciously to
her stomach. "Do you want to help them?"
A mutter goes round the room, growing quickly: "No!"
"I'm glad to hear that," Janis says drily. "Now,
this raises the question—what is to be done? Reeve and I have
been working on an answer. Anyone want to guess?"
Sam sticks his hand up. "You're going to blow
the longjump gate anchor frame," he says calmly, "stranding us
teraklicks from the nearest other human polity. And then you're going
to hunt the cabal down and shoot them, find their backup networks and
offline them, then jump up and down on the smoking wreckage."
Janis smiles. "Not bad! Anyone else?"
El sticks her hand up. "Hold elections?"
Janis looks taken aback. "Something like that, I
guess." She shrugs. "But that's getting a little ahead of ourselves,
isn't it? What haven't I mentioned?"
I clear my throat. "We know where the longjump gate is. Which is good news and bad news."
"Why?" asks Helen. They're beginning to get
involved, which is good, but could turn bad if Janis and I don't
present them with a reasonable picture. They're not idiots, they must
know that we wouldn't have brought them in on the cellar if the
situation wasn't desperate.
"Reeve?" prompts Janis.
"Okay, here's the frame: We're on a MASucker
that somehow got de-crewed during the censorship wars. At a guess, CY
broke out during a scheduled crew shift change or something. Anyway,
the polity we're in is actually a quilted patchwork of sectors spliced
together by shortjump gates in all those road tunnels, but they're all
in a single physical manifold aboard one ship rather than scattered
across separate habs. That's why it was possible to turn it into a
prison. There's only one longjump gate in or out of the MASucker, and
it's stashed at one end of an armored pod on the outside of the hull
with a shortjump gate at the other end of the tunnel—this is
standard MASucker security, you understand. Someone outside could throw
a nuke through at the ship and it would be expended outside the hull.
Anyway, we first need to take and hold the shortjump gate leading to
the longjump pod, then we need to trash the longjump pod.
"We need to sever communications between us and their base of operations in the surgeon-confessors' hall, then make sure everybody knows.
Yourdon and Fiore have gotten away with running this existential
dictatorship unopposed because they've got a sufficient proportion of
us convinced that we're in line for a payback if we play along. Hanta
gives them an ace in their hole. They don't need to worry about the
payback; eventually she'll have time to just adjust everyone who drifts
out of line. Once we're cut off from the outside, the cabal lose their
backup and their social leverage, and we've got a straight fight. But
if we don't succeed, they can just block the gates between parish
sectors and mop us up in detail, one sector at a time."
I pause to lick my lips. "I spent some time on a
MASucker before the war. The door to the longjump pod was stashed near
the bridge, uh, the administrative block—which would correspond
to either the cathedral or City Hall in the new structure Yourdon is
assembling. I did some snooping around last week, and I found where
Yourdon lives. He's got a suite up on the top floor of City Hall, with
security up to the eyeballs—I didn't get in, but I poked around
the lower levels—and it turns out that City Hall bears a
remarkable resemblance to the Captain's Lodge on the MASucker I was
aboard. In which case, the T-gate to the longjump pod will be on the
top floor, in a secure suite adjacent to the captain's quarters."
I stop.
Janis stands up. "There you've got it, folks, so
let's keep this simple. We all have invitations to the ceremony at City
Hall the day after tomorrow. I propose that we go there. I've had the
fab here"—she waves at the assembler—"turning out kits with
shielded bags so you can carry them away without fear of surveillance.
Reeve?"
I clear my throat. "Plan is, we take our kit
along and cut loose as soon as Yourdon steps up to the front to address
everyone. Team Green's job is to secure the hall, drop any armed
support the bad guys have, and kill as many copies of Yourdon, Fiore,
and Hanta as we can find. They'll have backups or multiples running
live, but if we do everything fast, we can stop the instances
in City Hall getting word out. Meanwhile, Team Yellow will go up to the
captain's—the Bishop's—quarters and blow the longjump pod
right off the side of the ship. Any questions?"
Hands go up.
"Okay, here's what we'll do. El, Bernice, Helen,
Priss, Morgaine, Jill, you're all on Team Green with Janis, who's in
overall charge. Sam, Greg, Martin, and Liz are Team Yellow with me. I'm
in charge. Team Yellow, hang around, and I'll brief you. Team Green,
eat your lunch, then go back to work—come back to the library
individually this afternoon or tomorrow, and Janis will sort you out,
back you up, and brief you."
There's more muttering from the back. Janis
clears her throat. "One more thing. Operational security is paramount.
If anyone says anything, we are all . . . not dead.
Worse. Dr. Hanta has a full-capability brainfuck clinic running in the
hospital. If you give any sign outside of this basement that you're
involved in this plan, they'll shut down the shortjump gates, isolating
you, and flood us with zombies until we run out of bullets and knives.
Then they'll cart us away and turn us into happy, smiling slaves. Some
of you may figure that's better than dying—all right, that's your
personal choice. But if I think any of you is going to try to impose
that choice on me by going to the priests, you will find that my personal choice is to shoot you dead first.
"If you don't want to be in on this, say so right now—or
hang around upstairs and tell me when everyone else has gone. We've got
an A-gate; we can just back you up and keep you on ice for the
duration. There's no reason to be part of this if you're frightened.
But if you don't explicitly opt out, then you're accepting my command,
and I will expect total obedience on pain of death, until we've secured the ship."
Janis looks round at everyone, and her
expression is harsh. For a moment Sanni is back, shining through her
skin like a bright lamp through camouflage netting, frightening and
feral. "Do you all understand?"
There's a chorus of yesses from around the room.
Then one of the pregnant women at the back pipes up. "What are we
waiting for? Let's roll!"
TIME rushes by, counting down to a point of tension that lies ahead.
We've got logistic problems. Having the A-gate
in the library basement is wonderful—it's almost indispensable to
what we're attempting to do—but there are limits on what it can
churn out. No rare isotopes, so we can't simply nuke the longjump pod.
Nor do we have the design templates for a tankbody or combat drones or
much of anything beyond personal sidearms. You can't manufacture
T-gates in an A-gate, so we've got to work without wormhole
tech—that rules out Vorpal blades. Given time or immunity from
surveillance we could probably work around those restrictions, but
Janis says we've got a maximum feedstock mass flow of a hundred
kilograms per hour. I suspect Fiore, or whoever decided to plant this
thing in the library basement, throttled it deliberately to stop
someone like me from turning it into an invasion platform. Their
operational security is patchy after the manner of many overhasty and
understaffed projects, but it's far from nonexistent.
In the end Janis tells me, "I'm going to leave
it on overnight, building a brick of plasticized RDX along with
detonators and some extra gun cartridges. We can put together about ten
kilos over a six-hour run. That much high explosive is probably about
as much energy as we can risk sucking without triggering an alarm
somewhere. Do you think you can do the job on the longjump gate frame
with that much?"
"Ten kilos?" I shake my head. "That's disappointing. That's really not good."
She shrugs. "You want to risk going technical on Yourdon, be my guest."
She's got a point. There's a very good chance
that the bad guys will have planted trojans in some of the design
templates for more complex weapons—anything much more
sophisticated than handguns and raw chemical explosive will have
interlocks and sensor systems that might slip past our vetting. The
machine pistols she's run up are crude things, iron sights and
mechanical triggers and no heads-up capability. They don't even have
biometric interlocks to stop someone taking your own gun and shooting
you with it. They're a step up from my crossbow project, but not a very
high step. On the other hand, they've got no telltale electronics that Yourdon or Fiore might subvert.
"Did you test the gun cartridges? Just in case?"
Janis nods. "Thunder stick go bang. No fear on that account."
"Well, at least something's going to work, then." I'd be happier if we could lay in a brace of stunguns, but since I'm not wearing Fiore anymore, that would be kind of difficult to arrange.
Janis looks at me. "Make or break time."
I breathe deeply. "When has it been any other way?"
"Ah, but. We had backups, didn't we?" Her
shoulders are set defensively. "This time it's our last show. It isn't
how I expected things to turn out."
"Me neither." I finish packing my bag and straighten up. "Do you think anyone will crack?"
"I hope not." She stares at the wall, eyes
focused on some inner space. "I hope not." Her hand goes to her belly
again. "There's a reason I recruited gravid females. It does things to
your outlook. I've learned that much." Her eyes glisten. "It can go
either way—peeps who're still role-playing their way through YFH
in their head get angry and frightened, and those who've internalized
it, who're getting ready to be mothers, get even angrier about what
those brainfuckers are going to do to their children. Once you get
through the fear and disbelief, you get to the anger. I don't think any
of the pregnant females will crack, and you'll notice the males who
were along all have partners who are involved."
"True." Janis—no, Sanni—is sharp as
a knife. She knows what she's doing when it comes to organizing a
covert operation cell. But if she's a knife, she's one with a brittle
edge. "Sanni, can I ask you a question?"
"Sure." Her tone is relaxed but I see the little signs of tension, the wrinkles around her eyes. She knows why I used that name.
"What do you want to do after this?" I grasp for
the right words: "We're about to lock ourselves down in this little
bubble-polity like something out of the stone age, a generation ship . . .
we're not going to be getting out of here for gigasecs, tens of gigs,
at a minimum! I mean, not unless we go into suspension afterward. And I
thought you, you'd be wanting to escape, to get out and warn everybody
off. Break YFH from the outside. Instead, well, we've come up with a
case for pulling down the escape tunnel on top of ourselves. What do you want to do afterward once we've cut ourselves off?"
Sanni looks at me as if I've sprouted a second
head. "I want to retire." She glances round at the basement nervously.
"This place is giving me the creeps; we ought to go home soon. Look,
Reeve—Robin—this is where we belong. This is the
glasshouse. It's where they sent the damaged ones after the war. The
ones who need reprogramming, rehabilitation. Yourdon and Hanta and
Fiore belong here—but don't you think maybe we belong here, too?" She looks haunted.
I think for a minute. "No, I don't think so."
Then I force myself to add, "But I think I could grow to like it here
if only we weren't under pressure from . . . them."
"That's what it was designed for. A rest home, a
seductive retirement, balm for the tortured brow. Go on home to Sam."
She walks toward the stairs without looking at me. "Think about what
you've done, or what he did. I've got blood on my hands, and I know
it." She's halfway up the stairs, and I have to move to keep up with
her. "Don't you think that the world outside ought to be protected from
people like us?"
At the top of the staircase I think of a reply.
"Perhaps. And perhaps you're right, we did terrible things. But there
was a war on, and it was necessary."
She takes a deep breath. "I wish I had your self-confidence."
I blink at her. My self-confidence? Until I found her frightened and alone here, I'd always thought Sanni
was the confident one. But now the other conspirators have gone, she
looks confused and a bit lost. "I can't afford doubts," I admit.
"Because if I start doubting, I'll probably fall apart."
She produces a radiant smile, like first light
over a test range. "Don't do that, Robin. I'm counting on you. You're
all the army I need."
"Okay," I say. And then we go our separate ways.
I walk home, my
mesh-lined bag slung over one shoulder. Today is not a day for a taxi
ride, especially now that there's some risk of running into Ike.
Everything seems particularly vivid for some reason, the grass greener
and the sky bluer, and the scent of the flower beds outside the
municipal buildings overwhelmingly sweet and strange. My skin feels as
if I've picked up a massive electrostatic charge, hair follicles
standing erect. I am alive, I realize. By this time tomorrow I might be dead, dead and
gone forever because if we fail, the YFH cabal will still have the
T-gate, and their coconspirators won't hesitate to delete whatever
copies of us they have on file. I might be part of history, dry as
dust, an object of study if there ever is another generation of
historians.
And if do somehow manage to survive, I'll be a prisoner here for the next three unenhanced lifetimes.
I have mixed emotions. When I went into combat
before—what I remember of it—I didn't worry about dying.
But I wasn't human, then. I was a regiment of tanks. The only way I
could die would be if our side lost the entire war.
But I've got Sam, now. The thought of Sam's
being in danger makes me cringe. The thought of both of us being at the
mercy of the YFH cabal makes me a different kind of uneasy. Bend the neck, surrender, and it will be fine: That's the echo of her
personal choice coming back to haunt me. I rejected her, didn't I? But
she's part of me. Indivisible, inescapable. I can never escape from the
knowledge that I surrendered—
Sanni has surrendered, I realize. Not to Yourdon
and Fiore, but to the end of the war. She doesn't want to fight
anymore; she wants to settle down and raise a family and be a
small-town librarian. Janis is the real Sanni now, as real as she gets.
The glasshouse may have been subverted and perverted by the plotters,
but it's still working its psychological alchemy on us. Maybe that's
what Sanni was talking about. We're none of us who or what we used to
be, although our history remains indelible. I try to imagine what I
must have looked like to the civilians aboard the habs we conquered
through coup de main, and I find a blind spot. I know I must have
terrified them, but inside the armor and behind the guns I was just me,
wasn't I? But how were they to know? No matter. It's over, now.
I've got to live with it, just the way we had to do it. It seemed
necessary at the time: If you didn't want your memories to be censored
by feral software, or worse, by unscrupulous opportunists who'd
trojaned the worm, you had to fight. And once you take the decision to
fight, you have to live with the consequences. That's the difference
between us and Yourdon, Fiore, and Hanta. We're willing to harbor
doubts, to let go; but they're still fighting to bring the war back to
their enemies. To us.
These aren't good thoughts to be thinking.
They're downright morbid, and I can live without them—but they
won't leave me alone, so as I walk I try to fight back by swinging my
bag and whistling a jolly tune. And I try to look at myself from the
outside as I go. Here's a jolly librarian, outwardly a young woman in a
summer dress, shoulder bag in hand, whistling as she walks home from a
day at work. Invert the picture, though, and you see a dream-haunted
ex-soldier, clutching a kitbag containing a machine pistol, slinking
back to her billet for a final time before the—
Look, just stop, why don't you?
That's better.
When I get home, I stash the bag in the kitchen. The TV is going in the living room, so I shed my shoes and pad through.
"Sam."
He's on the sofa, curled up opposite the
flickering screen as usual. He's holding a metal canister of beer. He
glances at me as I come in.
"Sam." I join him on the sofa. After a moment I
realize that he's not really watching the TV. Instead, his eyes are on
the patio outside the glass doors at the end of the room. He breathes
slowly, evenly, his chest rising and falling steadily. "Sam."
His eyes flicker toward me, and a moment later the corners of his mouth edge upward. "Been working late?"
"I walked." I pull my feet up. The soft cushions
of the sofa swallow them. I lean sideways against him, letting my head
fall against his shoulder. "I wanted to feel . . ."
"Connected."
"Yes, that's it, exactly." I can feel his pulse,
and his breathing is profound, a stirring in the roots of my world. "I
missed you."
"I missed you, too." A hand touches my cheek, moves up to brush hair back from my forehead.
At moments like this I hate being an
unreconstructed human—an island of thinking jelly trapped in a
bony carapace, endless milliseconds away from its lovers, forced to
squeeze every meaning through a low-bandwidth speech channel. All men are islands, surrounded by the bottomless oceans of unthinking night. If I were half of who I used to be, and
had my resources to hand—and if Sam, if Kay, wanted to—we
could multiplex, and know each other a thousand times as deeply as this
awkward serial humanity permits. There's a poignancy to knowing what
we've lost, what we might have had together, which only makes me want
him more strongly. I move uneasily and clutch at his waist. "What took
you so long?"
"I'm running away." He finally turns his head to look at me sidelong. "From myself."
"Me too," Throwing caution to the wind: "Is that part of your problem? With being . . . this?"
"It's too close." He swallows. "To what they wanted me to be."
I don't ask who "they" were. "Do you want to escape? To leave the polity?"
He's silent for a long while. "I don't think
so," he says eventually. "Because I'd have to go back to being what I
want not to be, if that makes sense to you. Kay was a disguise, Reeve,
a mask. A hollow woman. Not a real person."
I snuggle closer to him. "I know you wanted to grow into her."
"Do you?" He raises an eyebrow.
"Look, why do you think I'm here?"
"Point." He looks momentarily rueful. "Do you want to leave?"
We're not really talking about staying or
leaving, this is understood, but what he really means by that—"I
thought I did," I admit, toying with the buttons on the front of his
shirt. "Then Dr. Hanta sorted me out, and I realized that what I really
wanted was somewhere to heal, somewhere to be me. Community. Peace." I
get my hand inside his shirt, and his breath acquires a little hoarse
edge that makes me squeeze my thighs together. "Love." I pause. "Not
necessarily her way, mind you." His hand is stroking my hair. His other
hand—"Do that some more."
"I'm afraid, Reeve."
"That makes two of us."
Later: "I want what you described."
I gasp. "Makes two. Of us. Oh."
"Love."
And we continue our conversation without words, using a language that
no abhuman watcher AI can interpret—a language of touch and
caress, as old as the human species. What we tell each other is simple.
Don't be afraid, I love you. We say it urgently and
emphatically, bodies shouting our mute encouragement. And in the dark
of the night, when we reach for each other, I dare myself to admit that
it might work out all right in the end.
We aren't bound to fail.
Are we?
BREAKFAST is an
affair of quiet desperation. Over the coffee and toast I clear my
throat and begin a carefully planned speech. "I need to go to the
library before Church, Sam, I forgot my gloves."
"Really?" He looks up, worry lines crisscrossing his forehead.
I nod vigorously. "I can't go to Church without them, it wouldn't be decent." Decent is one of those keywords the watchers monitor. Gloves aren't actually a dress code infraction, but they're a good excuse.
"Okay, I suppose I'll have to come with you," he
says, with all the enthusiasm of a condemned man facing the airlock.
"We need to leave soon, don't we?"
"Yes, I'd better get my bag," I say.
"I have a new waistcoat to wear."
I raise an eyebrow. His clothing sense is even
more artificial than my own. "It's upstairs," he explains. For a moment
I think he's going to say something more, something compromising, but
he manages to bottle it up in time. My stomach squirms queasily. "Take
care, darling."
"Nothing can possibly go wrong," he says with studied irony. He rises and heads for the staircase to our bedroom. (Our
bedroom. No more lonely nights.) My heart seems to catch an extra beat.
Then it's time to clear up the detritus, put the plates in the
dishwasher, and get my shoes on.
When Sam comes downstairs, he's dressed for
Church—with a many-pocketed vest under his suit jacket, and, in
his hand, the briefcase we packed yesterday. "Let's, uh, go," he says,
and casts me a wan grin.
"Yup," I say, then check the clock and pick up my extra-large handbag. "Let's roll."
We arrive at the library around ten o'clock, and
I let us in. The door to the cellar is already open. I reach into my
bag as I go down the steps, conscious that if someone's blown the
operation, then the bad guys could be waiting for me. But when I get to
the bottom I find Janis.
"Hi, Janis," I say slightly nervously.
"Hi yourself." She lowers her gun. "Just checking."
"Indeed. Sam? Come on down." I turn back to Janis. "Still waiting for Greg, Martin, and Liz."
"Right." Janis gestures at a pile of grayish
plastic bricks sitting on one of the chairs. "Sam? I think it'll work
better if you carry these."
"Sure." Sam ambles over and picks up a brick.
Squeezes it experimentally, then sniffs it. "Hmm, smells like success.
Detonators?"
"On the sofa." I spot the stack of spare
magazines and take a couple, then check they're loaded properly. "Where
are the cogsets?" I ask.
"Coming." Janis waves at the A-gate. "We need to synchronize our watches, too."
"Okay." This isn't going to work too well
without headsets and cognitive radio transceivers, but they're last on
our list of items to assemble because they're too obvious. They're
easier to sabotage than metal plumbing and chemical explosives, and a
lot likelier to tripwire the alarms in the A-gate than a collection of
antiques. If the radios don't work, our fallback is
crude—mechanical wristwatches and a prearranged time to start
shooting.
Sam stuffs bricks of Composition-C into his vest
pockets, squeezing them to fit. The vest bulges around his waist, as if
he's suddenly put on weight, and when he pulls his jacket on it hangs
open. What he's doing reminds me of something I once knew, something
alarming, but I can't quite remember what. So I shake my head and go
upstairs to wait behind the front desk.
A few minutes later Martin and Liz arrive
together. I send them down to the basement. I'm getting worried when
Greg appears. We're running short of time. It's 10:42 and the meeting
is due to start in just a kilosec or so. "What kept you?" I ask.
"I feel rough," he admits. I think he's been drinking. "Couldn't sleep properly. Let's get this over with, huh?"
"Yeah." I point him at the cellar. "Gang's down there."
T minus ten minutes. The door opens, and Janis
comes out. "Okay, I'm off to start the show in the auditorium," she
tells me. A fey smile. "Good luck."
"You too." She leans forward, and I hug her briefly, then she's off, walking down the library path toward City Hall.
"Where's Sam?" I ask.
"Oh, he had something extra to do down there,"
Liz says, a trifle sniffily. "Last-minute nerves." A moment later he
comes up the stairs. "Come on, Sam, want to miss the show?"
I open my mouth. "Time to move!"
Fragments of memory converge on a point in time:
Five of us, three males and two females, walking
along the front of Main Street toward City Hall. All in our Church
outfits, with subtle changes—Sam's vest, my shoes, Martin's bag.
Discreet earbuds adding their hum to our left ears, flesh-toned pickups
parallel to our jawlines. Businesslike.
"Merge with the crowd, then when they head for the auditorium doors, break left under the door labeled FIRE EXIT. Meet me on the other side."
Purpose. Tension. Beating heart, nervousness. A faint aroma of mineral oil on my fingertips. The usual heightened awareness.
Cohorts and parishes of regular
citizens—inmates—are gathering on the front steps and in
the open reception hall of the biggest building on Main Street. Some I
recognize; most are anonymous.
Jen looms out of the crowd, smiling, converging on me. My guts freeze. "Reeve! Isn't it wonderful?"
"Yes, it is," I say, slightly too coldly because she stares at me, and her eyes narrow.
"Well, excuse me," she says, and turns on her heel as if to walk away, then pauses. "I'd have thought you'd be celebrating."
"I am." I raise an eyebrow at her. "Are you?"
"Hah!" And with a contemptuous smirk, she wheels away and latches on to Chris's arm.
A cold sweat prickles up and down my spine—sheer relief, mostly—and I head toward the FIRE EXIT
sign, which is conveniently close to the rest rooms. I pause for a
second to glance around and check my watch (T minus three minutes) then
lean on the emergency bar. The door scrapes open, and I step through
into a concrete-lined stairwell.
Click. I glance round. Liz lowers her gun. I'm too slow today,
I think hopelessly. I mute my mike. "Two minutes," I say, backing into
the corner opposite her niche. She nods. I reach into my bag, pull out
my gun, stuff the spare magazines into my pockets, and drop the bag.
Click. That's me.
One minute. Sam and Greg and Martin, the latter looking slightly harried. I key my mike. "Follow me."
A couple of weeks ago, wearing Fiore's stolen
flesh, I explored this complex—extremely cautiously, taking pains
to be certain that Yourdon was occupied elsewhere at the time. The
first floor contains the lobby and a big auditorium, plus a couple of
things described on the building map as "courtrooms." The second floor,
which we pass without stopping, is wall-to-wall office space. The third
floor . . . well, I didn't spend much time there.
We reach the door and pause. "Zero," I say, tracking the sweep of my watch hand.
A second later there's a chime in my headset. "Go!" says Janis.
"Now."
Greg opens the door fast, and Martin and Liz
duck through, then pronounce the bare-floored corridor clear. I lead us
along it, then there's another door, and Greg forces the exit bar from
our side. Carpet. A short, narrow passage. Yourdon must have left by now, surely?
I rush forward and find myself in a boringly mundane living room,
furnished in dark age fashion except for the smooth white bulge of an
A-gate in one corner. "Here," I say. "Spread out."
We're not experts at house searches. Doubtless
if there was armed resistance waiting for us, we'd be easy prey. But
the house is empty. Three bedrooms, a living room, an
office—there's a desk and an ancient computer terminal, and
books—and a kitchen and bathroom and another room full of boxes.
It's empty. Empty of personality as well as anachronisms like a longjump gate.
"What now?" asks Sam.
"We check out front." I walk up to the front
door of the apartment, then Greg squeezes past me and unlocks it. He
pulls it open and steps out, then I follow to see where we are, and the
ground leaps up and whacks me across the knees with a concussive jolt
too deep to call a noise.
"Panic one," Janis says in my ear, a prearranged code for Team Green. That was a bomb, I think dizzily.
There's a click behind me, then a scream of
pain. I whip round and that saves my life because the short burst of
gunfire hammers past me and catches Liz instead, bullets slapping into
her body as she spins round. I keep turning and drop to one knee, then
fire a continuous burst that empties the magazine and nearly sprains my
wrists.
"* * *," says Janis, in my ringing ears.
"Repeat." I'm staring at Greg. What used to be
Greg. Someone behind me is making horrible sounds. I think it's Liz.
"We have a code red, two down."
"I said, Panic two," says Janis. "They've got a Vorpal—"
Pink noise fills my ears, and her voice breaks
up: cognitive radios meet heuristic jamming. "Come on!" I yell at Sam,
who's bending over Liz. "Follow me!"
We're on a landing at the top of the stairs.
Yourdon's apartment covers one side of the building, but on the other
side—there's a door. I dash toward it, reloading on the go. Greg tried to kill me, I realize. Which means he warned them. So . . .
I pause at one side of the door and wave Sam to
the other. Then I brace myself and unload the entire clip through it at
waist height.
While my ears are ringing, and I'm fumbling the
next magazine into place, Sam kicks the door in and quickly shoots the
police zombie slumped against the side of the corridor in the head.
(That one was still moving, hand creeping toward the shotgun lying in
the floor; the two bodies behind it aren't even twitching.) Seeing how
efficiently Sam steps in gives me a momentary chill of recognition. No hesitation. Behind us, Liz is still moaning, and Martin won't be good for anything. "What is this place?" I ask aloud.
"More offices." Sam kicks a door open and duck-walks through it. "Modern
offices." I follow him. The next door is more substantial, opening onto
a glass-fronted balcony above a room with open floor space, an
office-sized assembler at one side, and a row of glassy
doors . . . "Is that what I think it is?"
Bingo. "Gates," I say. "A switch hub. How do we get down—"
"Hello, Reeve," says my earpiece, in a voice that sets my teeth on edge. "This isn't going to work, you know."
Where did Fiore get a headset from? Greg? Or have they captured one of Team Green?
Sam looks as if someone's poleaxed him. His jaw is literally gaping. Too late I realize he's on the same chatline.
"You've lost, Reeve," Fiore adds
conversationally. I can hear noises in the background. "We know about
your plot. There are guards outside the switch chamber, and if you get
past them and make it to the longjump pod, you'll die—there's an
active laser fence in there. I'm most disappointed in you, but we can
still work something out if you put down your popguns and surrender."
I touch my index finger to my lips and wait
until Sam nods at me, to show he's got the message. Then I walk toward
the door onto the staircase leading down into the switch chamber and
its bank of shortjump gates.
I don't want Sam to see how sick I feel.
"You don't know shit, Fiore," I say lightly.
"Yes I do." He sounds smug. "Greg's unfortunate
death makes further concealment irrelevant. Bluntly, you've failed. You
can't—"
I rip my earbud out and throw it away,
frantically miming at Sam to do likewise. He pulls it out of his ear
and stares at it. As he's about to toss it there's a dual bang. He
doubles over as a thin reddish mist sprays from his left finger and
thumb, retching with pain.
"Sam!" I yell at him. He cradles his damaged
hand, panting. "Sam! We've only got a few seconds! Fiore can't stop us,
or he'd already be up here! Sanni's got him pinned down! We've got to
blow the longjump pod before he gets away! Give me your jacket!"
"No choice—" He takes a shuddering breath and shakes his head. "Reeve."
I place my gun at my feet and take him by the shoulders. "What is it, love?"
A moment of awful tenderness, as I see the pain in his eyes. "I'm sorry," he says brokenly. "I couldn't be what you wanted."
"What—"
And his good fist, still wrapped around the butt
of his gun, whacks me across the back of my head, propelling me
straight into a pit of darkness from which I only emerge when it's far
too late.
IT feels very
different when you watch a replay of a body tumbling off a cliff, in
free fall toward the harsh ground so far below, and it's not your body,
and there are no second chances.
In the years since Sanni and I—and the
rest of our ragtag resistance network—kicked the door shut and
overturned Yourdon's pocket dictatorship, I've watched the video take
of Sam's death many times. How he sapped me, then gently laid me out on
the floor, grunting with effort as he rolled me into the recovery
position so I wouldn't choke on my own vomit. How he straightened up
painfully afterward and put his gun down. How he walked along the row
of shortjump doors, looking for the one opening on the short metal
corridor with the handrail and the ring of support nodes halfway along
it. How he paused, and went back to move me so that I wasn't lined up
with it. And then how he stepped through.
What does it take to step into a corridor,
knowing that your enemy said there's a laser fence halfway along it?
And as if that isn't enough, to do so wearing a waistcoat with ten
kilos of plastic explosives weighing down its pockets?
Sam gets halfway along the corridor. There's a
momentary flash, then the door bulges and turns black as the T-gate
does a scram shutdown and ejects its wormhole endpoint through the side
of the pod. It's not very dramatic.
And that's how we reach the foot of the cliff.
While I was unconscious, Janis and her team did
what was expected of them. I think that she was expecting betrayal all
along, because she had a few surprises of her own. Yourdon, at the
front of the hall, chopped her in half with his Vorpal blade: I can
only imagine his shock when another Janis stepped out from behind the
fire escape and blew a hole through his chest. I should have
realized she was playing a tricky game—her excuse about taking
all night to run off ten kilos of high explosives was far too
convenient—but in hindsight, she didn't trust anyone by that
point. Even me.
While I was unconscious, Fiore—desperate,
trapped in the police station down the road by a squad of murderous
Sannis—patched through his netlink and got onto our command
circuit which was, as expected, compromised by design. But Sanni was
one jump ahead of him all the way. Greg had told him what was going on
that morning. Fiore thought that a laser fence and extra security
guards would suffice. These psywar types, they don't think like a tank,
or a fighting cat. Two of me—despite being seriously pissed at
Sanni for making them live in the library attic and stay away from
Sam—took him out with a rocket-propelled grenade, while three
other squads fanned out and combed the parish churches for cowering
revenants. As Janis later explained, "When the only soldier you can
rely on is Reeve, you make the most of her." But I won't bear a grudge,
even though two of me died.
Because when the dust stopped raining down on
the cowering cohorts in the auditorium, while our other instances raced
through the administration block and the hospital, frantically hunting
down assemblers and deleting their pattern buffers before another
Yourdon or Fiore could ooze out of them, it was Janis who stepped up to
the lectern and fired a shot into the ceiling and called for silence.
"Friends," she said, a faint tremor in her voice. "Friends. The experiment is over. The prison is closed.
"Welcome back to the real world."
THAT all
happened years ago. The river of history waits for nobody. We live our
lives in the wake of vast events, accommodating ourselves to their
shapes. Even those of us who contributed to the events in question.
Maybe the oddest thing is how little has changed since we over-threw
the scorefile dictatorship. We still have regular town meetings. We
still live in small family groups, as orthohumans. Many of us even
stayed with the spousal units we were assigned by Fiore or Yourdon. We
dress like it's still the dark ages, and we hold jobs just like before,
and we even have babies the primitive way. Sometimes.
But . . .
We vote in the town meetings. There are
no scorefile metrics with hidden point tables that some smug researcher
can tweak in order to make the parishioners jump. We don't dance like
puppets for anyone, even our elected mayor. We may live in families as
orthohumans, but we've got an assembler in every home. Mostly we don't want to be neomorphs. Many of us spent too much time as living weapons during the war. We do
have—and enthusiastically use—modern medical technology,
with A-gates everywhere. The costumery and lifestyle upholstery is
harder to explain, but I put it down to social inertia. I saw a blue
hermaphrodite centaur in a chain-mail hauberk and no pants in the
shopping mall the other day, and guess what? Nobody raised an eyebrow.
We're a tolerant town these days. We have to be: There's nowhere else
to go until we arrive wherever the Harvest Lore is carrying us.
As for me, I don't have to fight anymore. I've
got the best of my surrendered self's wishes, without any of the
drawbacks. And I've been so lucky that thinking about it makes me want
to cry.
I have a daughter. Her name's Andy—short
for Andromeda. She swears she wants to be a boy when she grows up; she
isn't going to hit puberty for another six years, and she may change
her mind when her body starts changing. The important thing is we live
in a society where she can be whatever she wants. She looks like a
random phenotypic cross between Reeve and Sam, and sometimes when I see
her in the right light, just catching her profile, my breath catches in
my throat as I see him diving off that cliff. Did he know I was already
pregnant when he carefully made sure I was out of harm's way, then
jumped? It shouldn't be possible, but sometimes I wonder if he
suspected.
Andromeda was delivered—surprise—in
the hospital, by the nice Dr. Hanta. Who no longer needs a gun pointing
at her head all day long, since Sanni gave her a choice between
reprogramming herself to let her patients define their own best
interests or joining Yourdon and Fiore. After going through with the
birth, I went back to being Robin, or as close to the original Robin as
our medical 'ware could come up with. Natural childbirth is an
experience all fathers should go through at least once in their lives
(as adults, I mean), but I needed to be Robin again: the only version
of me that doesn't come with innocent blood on his hands.
It's late, now, and Andy is sleeping upstairs.
I've been writing this account down longhand on paper, to help fix
these events in my memory, like the letter someone wrote to me so long
ago that I can barely remember what it was like to be him. Even without
memory surgery, we are fragile beings, lights in the darkness that
leave a trail fading out behind us as we forget who we have been. I
don't actually want to remember much about what I was, before the war.
I'm comfortable here, and I expect to live here for a long time to
come, longer than my entire troubled life to this point. If all I
remember of the first half of my life is a thick pile of paper and
Sam's conflicted love for me, that will be enough. But there's a
difference between not remembering and deliberately forgetting. Hence
the stack of paper.
One last thought: My wife is dozing on the sofa
across the room. I have a question for her, which I'll wake her up for.
"What do you think Sam was thinking when he walked down that tunnel?"
Oh. That's useful. She yawns, and says, "I wouldn't know. I wasn't there."
"But if you had to guess?"
"I'd say he was hoping for a second chance."
"Is that all?"
She stands up. "Sometimes the truth is boring, Robin. Go on, put that in your memoir."
"Okay. Any other comments before I finish up here? I'm going to bed in a minute."
"Let me think . . ." Kay shrugs,
an incredibly fluid gesture that involves four shoulder joints. "No.
Don't be long." She smiles lazily and heads for the staircase, swinging
her hips in a way that suggests she's got something other than sleep in
mind. She's been a lot happier since she stopped being Sam, which she
did very shortly after the panicky last-minute backup in the library
basement. And so, you may be assured, am I.
Thanks
due to: James Nicoll, Robert "Nojay" Sneddon, Cory Doctorow, Andrew J.
Wilson, Caitlin Blasdell, David Clements, Sean Eric Fagan, Farah
Mendlesohn, Ken MacLeod, Juliet McKenna, and all the usual suspects.
"This
apparatus," said the Officer, grasping a connecting rod and leaning
against it, "is our previous Commandant's invention. . . . Have you
heard of our previous Commandant? No? Well, I'm not claiming too much
when I say that the organization of the entire penal colony is his
work. We, his friends, already knew at the time of his death that the
administration of the colony was so self-contained that even if his
successor had a thousand new plans in mind he would not be able to
alter anything of the old plan, at least not for several years . . .
It's a shame that you didn't know the old Commandant!"
The
polities descended from the Republic of Is do not use days, weeks, or
other terrestrial dating systems other than for historical or
archaeological purposes; however, the classical second has been
retained as the basis of timekeeping.
Here's a quick ready-reckoner:
one second
One second, the time taken for light to travel 299,792,458 meters in vacuum
one kilosecond
Archaic: 16 minutes
one hundred kiloseconds (1 diurn)
Archaic: 27 hours, 1 day and three hours
one megasecond (1 cycle)
Ten diurns. Archaic: eleven days and six hours
thirty megaseconds (1 m-year)
300 diurns. Archaic: 337 Earth days (11 months)
one gigasecond
Archaic: approximately 31 Earth years
one terasecond
Archaic: approximately 31,000 Earth years (half age of human species)
one petasecond
Archaic: approximately 31,000,000 Earth years (half elapsed time since end of Cretaceous era)
A dark-skinned
human with four arms walks toward me across the floor of the club, clad
only in a belt strung with human skulls. Her hair forms a smoky wreath
around her open and curious face. She's interested in me.
"You're new around here, aren't you?" she asks, pausing in front of my table.
I stare at her. Apart from the neatly
articulated extra shoulder joints, the body she's wearing is roughly
ortho, following the traditional human body plan. The skulls are
subsized, strung together on a necklace threaded with barbed wire and
roses. "Yes, I'm a nube," I say. My parole ring makes my left index
finger tingle, a little reminder. "I'm required to warn you that I'm
undergoing identity reindexing and rehabilitation. I—people in my
state—may be prone to violent outbursts. Don't worry, that's just
a statutory warning: I won't hurt you. What makes you ask?"
She shrugs. It's an elaborate rippling gesture
that ends with a wiggle of her hips. "Because I haven't seen you here
before, and I've been coming here most nights for the past twenty or
thirty diurns. You can earn extra rehab credit by helping out. Don't
worry about the parole ring, most of us here have them. I had to warn
people myself a while ago."
I manage to force a smile. A fellow inmate?
Further along the program? "Would you like a drink?" I ask, gesturing
at the chair next to me. "And what are you called, if you don't mind me
asking?"
"I'm Kay." She pulls out the chair and sits,
flipping her great mass of dark hair over her shoulder and tucking her
skulls under the table with two hands as she glances at the menu. "Hmm,
I think I will have an iced double mocha pickup, easy on the coca." She
looks at me again, staring at my eyes. "The clinic arranges things so
that there's always a volunteer around to greet nubes. It's my turn
this swing shift. Do you want to tell me your name? Or where you're
from?"
"If you like." My ring tingles, and I remember
to smile. "My name's Robin, and you're right, I'm fresh out of the
rehab tank. Only been out for a meg, to tell the truth." (A bit over
ten planetary days, a million seconds.) "I'm from"—I go into
quicktime for a few subseconds, trying to work out what story to give
her, ending up with an approximation of the truth—"around these
parts, actually. But just out of memory excision. I was getting stale
and needed to do something about whatever it was I was getting stale
over."
Kay smiles. She's got sharp cheekbones, bright
teeth framed between perfect lips; she's got bilateral symmetry, three
billion years of evolutionary heuristics and homeobox genes generating
a face that's a mirror of itself—and where did that thought come from?
I ask myself, annoyed. It's tough, not being able to tell the
difference between your own thoughts and a postsurgical identity
prosthesis.
"I haven't been human for long," she admits. "I just moved here from Zemlya." Pause. "For my surgery," she adds quietly.
I fiddle with the tassels dangling from my sword
pommel. There's something not quite right about them, and it's bugging
me intensely. "You lived with the ice ghouls?" I ask.
"Not quite—I was an ice ghoul."
That gets my attention: I don't think I've ever
met a real live alien before, even an ex-alien. "Were you"—what's
the word?—"born that way, or did you emigrate for a while?"
"Two questions." She holds up a finger. "Trade?"
"Trade." I remember to nod without prompting,
and my ring sends me a flicker of warmth. It's crude conditioning:
reward behavior indicative of recovery, punish behavior that reinforces
the postsurgical fugue. I don't like it, but they tell me it's an
essential part of the process.
"I emigrated to Zemlya right after my previous
memory dump." Something about her expression strikes me as evasive.
What could she be omitting? A failed business venture, personal
enemies? "I wanted to study ghoul society from the inside." Her
cocktail emerges from the table, and she takes an experimental sip.
"They're so strange." She looks wistful for a moment. "But after a
generation I got . . . sad." Another sip. "I was living
among them to study them, you see. And when you live among people for
gigaseconds on end you can't stop yourself getting involved, not unless
you go totally post and upgrade your—well. I made friends and
watched them grow old and die until I couldn't take any more. I had to
come back and excise the . . . the impact. The pain."
Gigaseconds? Thirty planetary years
each. That's a long time to spend among aliens. She's studying me
intently. "That must have been very precise surgery," I say slowly. "I
don't remember much of my previous life."
"You were human, though," she prods.
"Yes." Emphatically yes. Shards of memory
remain: a flash of swords in a twilit alleyway in the remilitarized
zone. Blood in the fountains. "I was an academic. A member of the
professoriat." An array of firewalled assembler gates, lined up behind
the fearsome armor of a customs checkpoint between polities. Pushing
screaming, imploring civilians toward a shadowy entrance—"I
taught history." That much is—was—true. "It all seems
boring and distant now." The brief flash of an energy weapon, then
silence. "I was getting stuck in a rut, and I needed to refresh myself.
I think."
Which is almost but not quite a complete lie. I
didn't volunteer, someone made me an offer I couldn't refuse. I knew
too much. Either consent to undergo memory surgery, or my next death
would be my last. At least, that's what it said I'd done in the
dead-paper letter that was waiting by my bedside when I awakened in the
rehab center, fresh from having the water of Lethe delivered straight
to my brain by the molecular-sized robots of the hospitaler
surgeon-confessors. I grin, sealing the partial truths with an outright
lie. "So I had a radical rebuild, and now I can't remember why."
"And you feel like a new human," she says, smiling faintly.
"Yes." I glance at her lower pair of hands. I
can't help noticing that she's fidgeting. "Even though I stuck with
this conservative body plan." I'm very conservatively turned
out—a medium-height male, dark eyes, wiry, the stubble of dark
hair beginning to appear across my scalp—like an unreconstructed
Eurasian from the pre-space era, right down to the leather kilt and
hemp sandals. "I have a strong self-image, and I didn't really want to
shed it—too many associations tied up in there. Those are nice
skulls, by the way."
Kay smiles. "Thank you. And thank you again for not asking, by the way."
"Asking?"
"The usual question: Why do you look like, well . . ."
I pick up my glass for the first time and take a
sip of the bitingly cold blue liquid. "You've just spent an entire
prehistoric human lifetime as an ice ghoul and people are needling you
for having too many arms?" I shake my head. "I just assumed you have a
good reason."
She crosses both pairs of arms defensively. "I'd
feel like a liar looking like . . ." She glances past
me. There are a handful of other people in the bar, a few bushujo and a
couple of cyborgs, but most of them are wearing orthohuman bodies.
She's glancing at a woman with long blond hair on one side of her head
and stubble on the other, wearing a filmy white drape and a sword belt.
The woman is braying loudly with laughter at something one of her
companions just said—berserkers on the prowl for players. "Her,
for example."
"But you were orthohuman once?"
"I still am, inside."
The penny drops: She wears xenohuman drag when
she's in public because she's shy. I glance over at the group and
accidentally make eye contact with the blond woman. She looks at me,
stiffens, then pointedlyturns away. "How long has this bar been here?" I ask, my ears burning. How dare she do that to me?
"About three megs." Kay nods at the group of
orthos across the room. "I really would avoid paying obvious attention
to them, they're duelists."
"So am I." I nod at her. "I find it therapeutic."
She grimaces. "I don't play, myself. It's messy. And I don't like pain."
"Well, neither do I," I say slowly. "That's not
the point." The point is that we get angry when we can't remember who
we are, and we lash out at first; and a structured, formal framework
means that nobody else needs to get hurt.
"Where do you live?" she asks.
"I'm in the"—she's transparently changing
the subject, I realize—"clinic, still. I mean, everything I had,
I"—liquidated and ran—"I travel light. I still haven't
decided what to be in this new lifetime, so there doesn't seem much
point in having lots of baggage."
"Another drink?" Kay asks. "I'm buying."
"Yes, please." A warning bell rings in my head
as I sense Blondie heading toward our table. I pretend not to notice,
but I can feel a familiar warmth in my stomach, a tension in my back.
Ancient reflexes and not a few modern cheat-codes take over and I
surreptitiously loosen my sword in its scabbard. I think I know what
Blondie wants, and I'm perfectly happy to give it to her. She's not the
only one around here prone to frequent flashes of murderous rage that
take a while to cool. The counselor told me to embrace it and give in,
among consenting fellows. It should burn itself out in time. Which is
why I'm carrying.
But the postexcision rages aren't my only
irritant. In addition to memory edits, I opted to have my age reset.
Being postadolescent again brings its own dynamic of hormonal torment.
It makes me pace my apartment restlessly, drives me to stand in the
white cube of the hygiene suite and draw blades down the insides of my
arms, curious to see the bright rosy blood welling up. Sex has acquired
an obsessive importance I'd almost forgotten. The urges to sex and
violence are curiously hard to fight off when you awaken drained and
empty and unable to rememberwho you used to be, but they're a lot less fun, the second or third time through the cycle of rejuvenation.
"Listen, don't look round, but you probably ought to know that someone is about to—"
Before I can finish the sentence, Blondie leans
over Kay's shoulder and spits in my face. "I demand satisfaction." She
has a voice like a diamond drill.
"Why?" I ask stonily, heart thumping with
tension as I wipe my cheek. I can feel the rage building, but I force
myself to keep it under control.
"You exist."
There's a certain type of look some postrehab
cases get while they're in the psychopathic dissociative stage, still
reknitting the raveled threads of their personality and memories into a
new identity. The insensate anger at the world, the existential
hate—often directed at their previously whole self for putting
them into this world, naked and stripped of memories—generates
its own dynamic. Wild black-eyed hatred and the perfect musculature of
the optimized phenotype combine to lend Blondie an intimidating, almost
primal presence. Nevertheless, she's got enough self-control to issue a
challenge before she attacks.
Kay, shy and much further advanced in recovery than either of us, cowers in her seat as Blondie glares at me. That annoys me—Blondie's got no call to intimidate bystanders. And maybe I'm not as out of control as I feel.
"In that case"—I slowly stand up, not
breaking eye contact for a moment—"how about we take this to the
remilitarized zone? First death rules?"
"Yes," she hisses.
I glance at Kay. "Nice talking to you. Order me
another drink? I'll be right back." I can feel her eyes on my back as I
follow Blondie to the gate to the RMZ. Which is right beside the bar.
Blondie pauses on the threshold. "After you," she says.
"Au contraire. Challenger goes first."
She glares at me one more time, clearly furious,
then strides into the T-gate and blinks out. I wipe my right palm on my
leather kilt, grip the hilt of my sword, draw, and leap through the
point-to-point wormhole.
Dueling etiquette calls for the challenger to
clear the gate by a good ten paces, but Blondie isn't in a good mood,
and it's a very good thing that I'm on the defensive and ready to parry
as I go through because she's waiting, ready to shove her sword through
my abdomen on the spot.
She's fast and vicious and utterly uninterested
in playing by the rules, which is fine by me because my own existential
rage now has an outlet and a face. The anger that has been eating me up
since my surgery, the hatred of the war criminals who forced me into
this, of the person I used to be who surrendered to the large-scale
erasure of their memories—I can't even remember what sex I was,
or how tall—has a focus, and on the other end of her circling
blade, Blondie's face is a glow of concentration and fury to mirror my
own.
This part of the remilitarized zone is modeled
on a ruined city of old Urth, shattered postnuclear concrete wastelands
and strange creeping vegetation shrouding the statues of conquerors and
the burned-out wreckage of wheeled cars. We could be alone here,
marooned on a planet uninhabited by other sapients. Alone to work out
our grief and rage as the postsurgical fugue slowly dissipates.
Blondie tries to rush me, and I fall back
carefully, trying to spot some weakness in her attack. She prefers the
edge to the point and the right to the left, but she's not leaving me
any openings. "Hurry up and die!" she snaps.
"After you." I feint and try to draw her
off-balance, circling round her. Next to the gate we came in through
there's a ruined stump of a tall building, rubble heaped up above head
height. (The gate's beacon flashes red, signifying no egress until one
of us is dead.) The rubble gives me an idea, and I feint again, then
back off and leave an opening for her.
Blondie takes the opening, and I just barely
block her, because she's fast. But she's not sly, and she certainly
wasn't expecting the knife in my left hand—taped to my left thigh
before—and as she tries to guard against it, I see my chance and
run my sword through her belly.
She drops her weapon and falls to her knees. I sit down heavily opposite her, almost collapsing. Oh dear. How did she manage to get my leg? Maybe I shouldn't trust my instincts quite so totally.
"Done?" I ask, suddenly feeling faint.
"I—" There's a curious expression on her
face as she holds on to the basket of my sword. "Uh." She tries to
swallow. "Who?"
"I'm Robin," I say lightly, watching her with
interest. I'm not sure I've ever watched somebody dying with a sword
through their guts before. There's lots of blood and a really vile
smell of ruptured intestines. I'd have thought she'd be writhing and
screaming, but maybe she's got an autonomic override. Anyway, I'm busy
holding my leg together. Blood keeps welling up between my fingers. Comradeship in pain. "You are . . . ?"
"Gwyn." She swallows. The light of hatred is extinguished, leaving something—puzzlement?—behind.
"When did you last back up, Gwyn?"
She squints. "Unh. Hour. Ago."
"Well then. Would you like me to end this?"
It takes a moment for her to meet my eyes. She nods. "When? You?"
I lean over, grimacing, and pick up her blade. "When did I last back myself up? Since recovering from memory surgery, you mean?"
She nods, or maybe shudders. I raise the blade
and frown, lining it up on her neck: it takes all my energy. "Good
question—"
I slice through her throat. Blood sprays everywhere.
"Never."
I stumble to
the exit—an A-gate—and tell it to rebuild my leg before
returning me to the bar. It switches me off, and a subjective instant
later, I wake up in the kiosk in the washroom at the back of the bar,
my body remade as new. I stare into the mirror for about a minute,
feeling empty but, curiously, at peace with myself. Maybe I'll be ready for a backup soon?
I flex my right leg. The assembler's done a good job of canonicalizing
it, and the edited muscle works just fine. I resolve to avoid Gwyn, at
least until she's in a less insensately violent mood, which may take a
long time if she keeps picking fights with her betters. Then I return
to my table.
Kay is still there, which is odd. I'd expected her to be gone by now. (A-gates
are fast, but it still takes a minimum of about a thousand seconds to
tear down and rebuild a human body: that's a lot of bits and atoms to
juggle.)
I drop into my seat. She has bought me another drink. "I'm sorry about that," I say automatically.
"You get used to it around here." She sounds philosophical. "Feeling better?"
"You know, I—" I stop. Just for a moment
I'm back in that dusty concrete-strewn wasteland, a searing pain in my
leg, the sheer hatred I feel fueling my throw at Gwyn's head. "It's
gone," I say. I stare at the glass, then pick it up and knock back half
of it in one go.
"What's gone?" I catch her watching me. "If you don't mind talking about it," she adds hastily.
She's frightened but concerned, I suddenly
realize. My parole ring pulses warmth repeatedly. "I don't mind," I
say, and smile, probably a trifle tiredly. I put the glass down. "I'm
still in the dissociative phase, I guess. Before I came out this
evening I was sitting in my room all on my own, and I was drawing
pretty lines all over my arms with a scalpel. Thinking about opening my
wrists and ending it all. I was angry. Angry at myself. But now I'm
not."
"That's very common." Her tone is guarded. "What changed it for you?"
I frown. Knowing it's a common side effect of
reintegration doesn't help. "I've been an idiot. I need to take a
backup as soon as I go home."
"A backup?" Her eyes widen. "You've been walking
around here wearing a sword and a dueling sash all evening, and you
don't have a backup?" Her voice rises to a squeak. "What are you trying to do?"
"Knowing you've got a backup blunts your edge.
Anyway, I was angry with myself." I stop frowning as I look at her.
"But you can't stay angry forever."
More to the point, I'm suddenly feeling an
awful, hollow sense of dread about the idea of rediscovering who I am,
or who I used to be. What does it mean, to suddenly begin sensing other
people's emotions again only after you run someone through with a
sword? Back in the dark ages it would have been a tragedy. Even here,
dying isn't something most people take lightly. For a horrible moment I
feel the urge to rush out and find Gwyn and apologize to her—but
that's absurd, she won't remember, she'll be in the same headspace she
was in before. She'd probably challenge me to another duel and, being
in the same insensate rage, turn me into hamburger on the spot.
"I think I'm reconnecting," I say slowly. "Do
you know somewhere I could go that's safer? I mean, less likely to
attract the attentions of berserkers?"
"Hmm." She looks at me critically. "If you lose
the sword and the sash, you won't look out of place round the block in
one of the phase two recovery piazzas. I know a place that does a
really good joesteak—how hungry are you feeling?"
IN the wake of
the duel I have become hungry for food just as my appetite for violence
has declined. Kay takes me to a charmingly rustic low-gee piazza of
spun-diamond foam and bonsai redwoods, where quaint steam-powered
robots roast succulent baby hams over charcoal grills. Kay and I chat
and it becomes clear that she's mightily intrigued to see me recovering
visibly from the emotional aftereffects of memory surgery. I pump her
for details of life among the ice ghouls, and she quizzes me about the
dueling academies of the Invisible Republic. She has a quirky sense of
humor and, toward the end of the meal, suggests that she knows a party
where there's fun to be had.
The party turns out to be a fairly laid-back
floating orgy in one of the outpatient apartments. There are only about
six people there when we arrive, mostly lying on the large circular
bed, passing around a water pipe and masturbating each other tenderly.
Kay leans me up against the wall just beside the entrance, kisses me,
and does something electrifying to my perineum and testicles with three
of her hands. Then she vanishes into the hygiene suite to use the
assembler, leaving me panting. When she returns I almost don't
recognize her—her hair has turned blue, she's lost two arms, and
her skin has turned the color of milky coffee. But she walks right up
to me and kisses me again and I recognize her by the taste of her
mouth. I carry her to the bed and, after our first urgent fuck, we join
the circle with the pipe—which is loaded with opium and an easily
vaporized phosphodiesterase inhibitor—then explore each other's
bodies and those of our neighbors until we're close to falling asleep.
I'm lying next to her, almost face-to-face, when she murmurs, "That was fun."
"Fun," I echo. "I needed—" My vision blurs. "Too long."
"I come here regularly," she offers. "You?"
"I haven't—" I pause.
"What?"
"I can't remember when I last had sex."
She places one hand between my thighs. "Really?" She looks puzzled.
"I can't." I frown. "I must have forgotten it."
"Forgotten? Truly?" She looks surprised. "Could
you have had a bad relationship or something? Could that be why you had
surgery?"
"No, I—" I stop before anything more slips
out. The letter from my older self would have said if that was the
case, I'm certain of that much. "It's just gone. I don't think that
usually happens, does it?"
"No." She cuddles up against me and strokes my
neck. I feel a momentary sense of wonder as I stiffen against her, then
I begin to trace the edges of her nipples, and her breath catches. It
must be the drugs, I think; I couldn't possibly stay aroused this long
without some external input, could I? "You'd be a good subject for
Yourdon's experiment."
"Yourdon's what?"
She pushes at my chest and I roll onto my back
obligingly to let her mount me. There are toys scattered round the bed,
mewing and begging to be used, but she seems to need to do this the
traditional way, bareback skin on skin: she probably sees it as a way
of reconnecting with what it means to be human or something. My breath
hisses as I grab her buttocks and pull her down onto me.
"The experiment. He's looking for serious amnesia cases, offering a referral fee to finders. I'll tell you later."
And then we stop talking, because speech is
simply getting in the way of communication, and in the here and now,
she's all I need.
AFTERWARD, I
walk home through avenues carpeted with soft, living grass, roofed in
green marble slabs carved from the lithosphere of a planet hundreds of
teraklicks away. I am alone with my thoughts, netlink silenced save for
a route map that promises me a five-kilometer walk avoiding all other
persons. Though I carry my sword, I don't feel any desire to be
challenged. I need time to think, because when I get home my therapist
will be waiting for me, and I need to be clear in my own head about who
I think I am becoming before I talk to it.
Here I am, awake and alive—whoever I am. I'm Robin, aren't I?
I have a slew of fuzzy memories, traces left behind by memory washes
that blur my earlier lives into an impressionist haze. I had to look up
my own age shortly after I woke. Turns out I'm nearly seven billion
seconds old, though I have the emotional stability of a postadolescent
a tenth that age. Once upon a time people who lived even two
gigaseconds were senescent. How can I be so old yet feel so young and
inexperienced?
There are huge, mysterious holes in my life.
Obviously I must have had sex before, but I don't remember it. Clearly
I have dueled—my reflexes and unconscious skills made short work
of Gwyn—but I don't remember training, or killing, except in
mysterious flashes that could equally well be leftover memories of
entertainments. The letter from my earlier self said I was an academic,
a military historian specializing in religious manias, sleeper cults,
and emergent dark ages. If so, I don't remember any of it at all. Maybe
it's buried deep, to re-emerge when I need it—and maybe it's gone
for good. Whatever grade of memory excision my earlier self requested
must have been perilously close to a total wipe.
So what's left?
There are fractured shards of memory all over
the lobby of my Cartesian theatre, waiting for me to slip and cut
myself on them. I'm in male orthohuman form right now, orthodox product
of natural selection. This shape feels right to me, but I think there
was a time when Iwas something much stranger—for some reason, I have the idea that I might have been a tank.
(Either that, or I mainlined one too many wartime adventure virtches,
and they stuck with me through memory surgery even when more important
parts went missing.) The sense of implacable extensibility, coldly
controlled violence . . . yes, maybe I was a
tank. If so, at one time I guarded a critical network gate. Traffic
between polities, like traffic within a polity, passes over T-gates,
point-to-point wormholes linking distant locations. T-gates have two
endpoints, and are unfiltered—anything can pass through one, from
one end to the other. While this isn't a problem within a polity, it's
a huge problem when you're defending a network frontier against
attack from other polities. Hence the firewall. My job, as part of the
frontier guard, was to make sure that inbound travelers went straight
into an A-gate—an assembler array that disassembled, uploaded,
and analyzed them for threats, before routing them as serial data to
another A-gate on the inside of the DMZ for reassembly. Normally people
would only be routed through an A-gate for customs scanning or
serialization via a high-traffic wormhole aperture dedicated to data
traffic; but at that time there were no exceptions to the security
check because we were at war.
War? Yes: it was the tail end of
the censorship wars. I must have been infected at some point because I
can't remember what it was about, but I was definitely guarding
cross-border—longjump—T-gates for one of the successor
states that splintered from the Republic of Is when its A-gates were
infected by the redactionist worms.
And then I seem to faintly recall . . . yes! Once upon a time I was one of the Linebarger Cats. Or I worked for them. But I wasn't a tank, then. I was something else.
I step out of a T-gate at one end of a
musty-smelling corridor running through the stony heart of a ruined
cathedral. Huge pillars rise toward a black sky on either side of me,
ivy crawling across the latticework screens that block off the gaps
between them. (The pillars are a necessary illusion, markers for the
tunnel field that holds in the atmosphere; the planet beneath this
gothic park is icy cold and airless, tidally locked to a brown dwarf
primary somewhere in transsolar space within a few hundred trillion
kilometers of legendary dead Urth.) I walk across decaying tapestries
of crimson-and-turquoise wool, armored and gowned orthohumans fighting
and loving across a gulf of seconds so vast that my own history dims
into insignificance.
Here I am, stranded at the far end of time in a
rehabilitation center run by the hospitaler surgeon-confessors of the
Invisible Republic, pacing the abandoned halls of a picturesque folly
on the surface of a brown dwarf planet as I try to piece together my
unraveled identity. I can't even remember how I got here. So how am I
meant to talk to my therapists?
I follow the blinking cursor of my netlink map
into a central atrium, then hang a left into a nave that leads past
stone altars topped with the carved skeletons of giants. The nave leads
shortly to a rectangular hole in space delineated by another T-gate.
Stepping through the wormhole, I feel light-footed: gravity here
declines to hold me, and there is a pronounced Coriolis force tugging
toward my left. The light is brighter, and the floor is a blue liquid
lake with surface tension so high that I can skate along it, my feet
dimpling the surface. There are no doors at water level but niches and
irregular hollows cut into the walls, and the air carries a tang of
iodine. If I had to hazard a guess, I'd say this route was leading
through a chamber in one of the enigmatic routers that orbit so many
brown dwarfs in this part of the galaxy.
At the end of the corridor I pass several moving
human-sized clouds—privacy haze fuzzing out the other travelers
so that we do not have to notice each other—and then into another
chamber, with a ring of T-gate wormholes and A-gate routers circling
the wall. I take the indicated door and find myself in a
familiar-looking corridor paneled to either side in living wood, an
ornamental fountain occupying the courtyard at the far end. It's
peaceful and friendly, lit with the warm glow of a yellow star. This is
where I, and a handful of other rehabilitation subjects, have been
assigned apartments. This is where we can come to socialize safely with
people in the same state of recovery, when it is safe for us to do so.
And this is where I come to meet my therapist.
TODAY'S therapist isn't remotely humanoid, not even bushujo or elven; Piccolo-47 is a mesomorphic drone, roughly pear-shaped, with a variety
of bizarre-looking extensible robot limbs—some of them not
physically connected to Piccolo's body—and nothing that resembles
a face. Personally, I think that's rude (humans are hardwired at a low
level to use facial expressions to communicate emotional states: Not
wearing a face in public is a deliberate snub), but I keep the thought
to myself. It's probably doing it on purpose to see how stable I
am—if I can't cope with someone who doesn't have a face, how am I
going to manage in public? Anyway, picking fights with my counselor is
not going to help my emotional wobbles. I'm tired, and I'd like to have
a long bath and go to sleep, so I resolve to get this over without any
unpleasant incidents.
"You fought a duel today," says Piccolo-47. "Please describe the events leading up to the incident in your own words."
I sit down on the stone steps beneath the
fountain, lean back until I can feel the cool splashing of water on the
back of my neck, and try to tell myself that I'm talking to a household
appliance. That helps. "Sure," I say, and summarize the diurn's
events—at least, the public ones.
"Do you feel that Gwyn provoked you unduly?" asks the counselor.
"Hmm." I think about it for a moment. "I think I
may have provoked her," I say slowly. "Not intentionally, but she
caught me watching her, and I could probably have disengaged. If I'd
wanted to." The admission makes me feel slightly dirty—but only
slightly. Gwyn is walking around right now with no memory of having
been stabbed in the guts. She's lost less than an hour of her lifeline.
Whereas my leg is still giving me twinges of memory, and I risked—
"You said you have not taken a backup. Isn't that a little foolhardy?"
"Yes, yes it is." I make up my mind. "And I'm going to take one as soon as we finish this conversation."
"Good." I startle slightly and stare at
Piccolo-47, disturbed. Therapists don't normally express opinions,
positive or negative, during a session; it's just broken the illusion
that it's not there, and I feel my skin crawl slightly as I look at its
smooth carapace. "Examination of your public state suggests that you
are progressing well. I encourage you to continue exploring the
rehabilitative sector and to make use of the patient support groups."
"Um." I stare. "I thought you weren't meant to intervene . . . ?"
"Intervention is contraindicated in early stages
of recovery of patients with severe dissociative psychopathology
consequential to memory excision. However, in later stages, it may be
used where appropriate to provide guidance for a patient who is showing
significant progress." Then Piccolo-47 pauses. "I would like to make a
request. You are free to disregard it."
"Oh?" I stare at its dorsal manipulator root.
It's something like an iridescent cauliflower, flexing and shimmering
and breathing, and something like a naked lung, turned inside out and
electroplated with titanium. It's fascinatingly abhuman, a macroscopic
nanomachine so complex it seems almost alive in its own right.
"You said that Patient Kay mentioned the Yourdon
experiment to you. Historian Professor Yourdon is one of my coworkers,
and Kay is perfectly correct. Your relatively deep therapy means that
you would be an ideal participant for the project. I also believe that
your long-term recovery may benefit from participation."
"Hmm." I can tell when I'm being stroked for a hard sell. "You'll have to tell me more about it."
"Certainly. One moment?" I can tell Piccolo-47
is going into quicktime and messaging someone else: its focus of
attention wanders—I can see the sensor peripherals
unfocusing—and the manipulator root stops shimmering. "I have
taken the liberty of transmitting your public case profile to the
coordination office, Robin. The experiment I allude to is a
cross-disciplinary one being conducted by the departments of
archaeology, history, psychology, and social engineering within the
Scholastium. Professor Yourdon is its coordinator-general. If you
volunteer to participate, a copy of your next backup—or your
original, should you choose total immersion—will be instantiated
as a separate entity within an experimental community, where it will
live alongside roughly a hundred other volunteers for thirty to a
hundred megaseconds." Roughly one to three old-style years. "The
community is designed as an experiment to probe certain psychological
constraints associated with life prior to the censorship wars. An
attempt to reconstruct a culture that we have lost track of, in other
words."
"An experimental society?"
"Yes. We have limited data about many periods in
our history. Dark ages have become all too frequent since the dawn of
the age of emotional machines. Sometimes they are
unintentional—the worst dark age, at the dawn of the emotional
age, was caused by the failure to understand informational economics
and the consequent adoption of incompatible data representation
formats. Sometimes they're deliberate—the censorship wars, for
example. But the cumulative result is that there are large periods of
history from which very little information survives that has not been
skewed by observational bias. Propaganda, entertainment, and self-image
conspire to rob us of accurate depictions, and old age and the need for
periodic memory excision rob us of our subjective experiences. So
Professor Yourdon's experiment is intended to probe emergent social
relationships in an early emotional-age culture that is largely lost to
us today."
"I think I see." I shuffle against the stonework
and lean back against the fountain. Piccolo-47's voice oozes with
reassurance. I'm pretty sure it's emitting a haze of feel-good
pheromones, but if my suspicions are correct it won't have thought of
the simple somatic discomforts I can inflict on myself to help me stay
alert. The pitter-patter of icy droplets on my neck is a steady
irritant. "So I'd, what, go live in this community for ten megs? And
then what? What would I do?"
"I can't tell you in any great detail,"
Piccolo-47 admits, its tones conciliatory and calm. "That would
undermine the integrity of the experiment. Its goals and functions have
to remain uncertain to the subjects if it is to retain any empirical
validity, because it is meant to be a living society—a real one.
What I can tell you is that you will be free to leave as soon as the
experiment reaches an end state that satisfies the acceptance criteria
of the gatekeeper, or if the ethics committee supervising it
approves an early release. Within it, there will be certain
restrictions on your freedom of movement, freedom of access to
information and medical procedures, and restrictions on the artifacts
and services available to you that postdate the period being probed.
From time to time the gatekeeper will broadcast certain information to
the participants, to guide your understanding of the society. There is
a release tobe notarized before you can join. But we assure you that all your rights and dignities will be preserved intact."
"What's in it for me?" I ask bluntly.
"You will be paid handsomely for your
participation." Piccolo-47 sounds almost bashful. "And there is an
extra bonus scheme for subjects who contribute actively to the success
of the project."
"Uh-huh." I grin at my therapist. "That's not
what I meant." If he thinks I need credit, he's sadly mistaken. I don't
know who I was working for before—whether it really was the
Linebarger Cats or some other, more obscure (and even more terrifying)
Power—but one thing is certain, they didn't leave me destitute
when they ordered me to undergo memory excision.
"There is also the therapeutic aspect," says
Piccolo-47. "You appear to harbor goal-dysphoria issues. These relate
to the almost complete erasure of your delta block reward/motivation
centers, along with the associated memories of your former vocation;
bluntly, you feel directionless and idle. Within the simulation
community, you will be provided with an occupation and expected to
work, and introduced to a community of peers who are all in the same
situation as you. Comradeship and a renewed sense of purpose are likely
side effects of this experiment. Meanwhile you will have time to
cultivate your personal interests and select a direction that fits your
new identity, without pressure from former associates or acquaintances.
And I repeat, you will be paid handsomely for your participation."
Piccolo-47 pauses for a moment. "You have already met one of your
fellow participants," he adds.
A hit.
"I'll think about it," I say noncommittally.
"Send me the details and I'll think about it. But I'm not going to say
yes or no on the spot." I grin wider, baring my teeth. "I don't like
being pressured."
"I understand." Piccolo-47 rises slightly and
moves backward a meter or so. "Please excuse me. I am very enthusiastic
for the experiment to proceed successfully."
"Sure." I wave it off. "Now if you'll excuse me, I really do need some privacy. I still sleep, you know."
"I will see you in approximately one diurn,"
says Piccolo-47, rising farther and rotating toward a hole that is
irising open in the ceiling. "Goodbye." Then it's gone, leaving only a
faint smell of lavender behind, and me to the strikingly vivid memory
of the taste and feel of Kay's tongue exploring my lips.
The Invisible Republic is one of the legacy
polities that emerged from the splinters of the Republic of Is, in the
wake of the series of censorship wars that raged five to ten
gigaseconds ago. During the wars, the internetwork of longjump T-gates
that wove the subnets of the hyperpower together was shattered, leaving
behind sparsely connected nets, their borders filtered through
firewalled assembler gates guarded by ferocious mercenaries. Incomers
were subjected to forced disassembly and scanned for subversive
attributes before being rebuilt and allowed across the frontiers.
Battles raged across the airless cryogenic wastes that housed the
longjump nodes carrying traffic between warring polities, while the
redactive worms released by the Censor factions lurked in the firmware
of every A-gate they could contaminate, their viral payload mercilessly
deleting all knowledge of the underlying cause of the conflict from
fleeing refugees as they passed through the gates.
Like almost all human polities since the
Acceleration, the Republic of Is relied heavily on A-gates for
manufacturing, routing, switching, filtering, and the other essentials
of any network civilization. The ability of nanoassembler arrays to
deconstruct and replicate artifacts and organisms from raw atomic
feedstock made them virtually indispensable—not merely for
manufacturing and medical purposes, but for virtual transport (it's
easier to simultaneously cram a hundred upload templates through a
T-gate than a hundred physical bodies) and molecular firewalling. Even
when war exposed them to subversion by the worms of censorship, nobody
wanted to do without the A-gates—to grow old and decrepit, or
succumb to injury, seemed worse than the risk of memory corruption. The
paranoid few who refused to pass through the verminous gates dropped
away, dying of old age or cumulative accidental damage; meanwhile,
those of us who still used them can no longer be certain of whatever it
was that the worm payloads were designed to hide in the first place. Or
even who the Censors were.
But the stress of the censorship caused people
to distrust all gates that they didn't control themselves. You can't
censor data or mass flowing through a T-gate, which is simply a
wormhole of twisted space-time connecting two distant points. So even
short-range traffic switched to T-gates, while new mass assemblies
became scarce because of generalized distrust of the Censored A-gates.
There was an economic crash, then a splintering of communications, and
entire T-gate networks—networks with high degrees of internal
connectivity, not necessarily spatial proximity—began to
disconnect from the wider net. Is became Was, and what was once a
myriad of public malls with open topologies sprouted fearsome armed
checkpoints, frontier posts between firewalled virtual republics.
That was then, and this is now. The Invisible
Republic was one of the first successor states to form. They built an
intranetwork of T-gates and fiercely defended them from the outside
until the first generation of fresh A-gates, bootstrapped painfully all
the way from hand-lithographed quantum dot arrays, became available.
The Invisibles started out as a group of academic institutions that set
up a distributed trust system early in the censorship; they still
retain their military-academic roots. The Scholastium views knowledge
as power and seeks to restore the data lost during successive dark
ages—although whether it is really a good idea to uncover the
cause of the censorship is a matter of hot debate.
Just about everyone lost parts of their lives during the war, and tens
of billions more died completely: Re-creating the preconditions for the
worst holocaust since the twenty-third century is not uncontroversial.
Ironically, the Invisible Republic is now the
place where many people come in order to forget their pasts. We who
remain human (while relying on A-gate redaction to save our bodies from
senescence) sooner or later need to learn to forget. Time is a
corrosive fluid, dissolving motivation, destroying novelty, and
leaching the joy from life. But forgetting is a fraught process, one
that is prone to transcription errors and personality flaws. Delete the
wrong pattern, and you can end up becoming someone else. Memories
exhibit dependencies, and their management is one of the highest
medical art forms. Hence the high status and vast resources of the
surgeon-confessors, into whose hands my earlier self delivered me. The
surgeon-confessors learned their skills by forensic analysis of the
damage done to the victims of the censorship wars. And thus,
yesterday's high crime leads to today's medical treatment.
A few
diurns—almost half a tenday—after my little chat with
Piccolo- 47, I am back in the recovery club, nursing a drink and
enjoying the mild hallucinations it brings on in conjunction with the
mood music the venue plays for me. It's been voted a hot day, and most
of the party animals are out in the courtyard, where they've grown a
swimming pool. I've been studying, trying to absorb what I can of the
constitution and jurisprudential traditions of the Invisible Republic,
but it's hard work, so I decided to come here to unwind. I've left my
sword and dueler's sash back home. Instead, I'm wearing black leggings
and a loose top festooned with a Menger sponge of empty pockets
stitched out of smaller pockets and smaller still, almost down to the
limits of visibility—woven in free fall by hordes of tiny otaku
spiders, I'm told, their genes programmed by an obsessive-compulsive
sartorial topologist. I feel pretty good about myself because my most
recent therapist-assignee, Lute-629,says I'm making good progress. Which is probably why I'm not sufficiently on guard.
I'm sitting alone at a table minding my own
business when, without any kind of warning, two hands clap themselves
over my eyes. I startle and try to stand up, tensing in the first
instinctive move to throw up a blocking forearm, but another pair of
hands is already pressing down on my shoulders. I realize who it is
only just in time to avoid punching her in the face. "Hello, stranger,"
she breathes in my ear, apparently unaware of how close I came to
striking her.
"Hey." In one dizzy moment I smell her skin
against the side of my cheek as my heart tries to lurch out of my
chest, and I break out in a cold sweat. I reach up carefully to stroke
the side of her face. I'm about to suggest she shouldn't sneak up on
me, but I can visualize her smiling, and something makes me take a more
friendly tone. "I was wondering if I'd see you here."
"Happens." The hands vanish from my eyes as she
lets go of me. I twist round to see her impish grin. "I'm not
disturbing anything important, am I?"
"Oh, hardly. I've just had my fill of studying, and it's time to relax." I grin ruefully. And I would be relaxing if you weren't giving me fight-or-flight attacks!
"Good." She slides into the booth beside me,
leans up against my side, and snaps her fingers at the menu. Moments
later a long, tall something or other that varies from gold at the top
to blue at the bottom arrives in a glass of flash-frozen ice that
steams slightly in the humid air. I can see horse-head ripples in the
mist, blue steam-trails of self-similarity. "I'm never sure whether
it's polite to ask people if they want to socialize—the
conventions are too different from what I'm used to."
"Oh, I'm easy." I finish my own drink and let
the table reabsorb my glass. "Actually, I was thinking about a meal.
Are you by any chance hungry?"
"I could be." She chews her lower lip and looks at me pensively. "You said you were hoping to see me."
"Yes. I was wondering about the, uh, greeter thing. Who runs it, and whether they need any volunteers."
She blinks and looks me up and down. "You think
you're sufficiently in control? You want to volunteer
to—remarkable!" One of my external triggers twitches, telling me
that she's accessing my public metadata, the numinous cloud of medical
notes that follow us all around like a swarm of phantom bees, ready to
sting us into submission at the first sign of undirected aggression.
"You've made really good progress!"
"I don't want to be a patient forever." I
probably sound a bit defensive. Maybe she doesn't realize she's rubbed
me up the wrong way, but I really don't like being patronized.
"Do you know what you're going to do when your control metrics are within citizenship bounds?" she asks.
"No idea." I glance at the menu. "Hey, I'll have one of whatever she's drinking," I tell the table.
"Why not?" She sounds innocently curious. Maybe that's why I decide to tell her the unembellished truth.
"I don't know much about who I am. I mean,
whoever I was before, he put me in for a maximum wash, didn't he? I
don't remember what my career was, what I used to do, even what I was
interested in. Tabula rasa, that's me."
"Oh my." My drink emerges from the table. She
looks as if she doesn't know whether to believe me or not. "Do you have
a family? Any friends?"
"I'm not sure," I admit. Which is a white lie. I
have some very vague memories of growing up, some of them vivid in a
stereotyped way that suggests crude enhancement during a previous
memory wash—memories I'd wanted to preserve at all costs, two
proud mothers watching my early steps across a black sandy
beach . . . and I have a strong but baseless conviction
that I've had long-term partners, at least a gigasecond of domesticity.
And there are faint memories of coworkers, phantoms of former Cats. But
try as I might, I can't put a face to any of them, and that's a
cruel realization to confront. "I have some fragments, but I've got a
feeling that before my memory surgery I was pretty solitary. Anorganization person, a node in a big machine. Can't remember what kind of machine, though." Fresh-spilled blood bubbling and fizzing in vacuum. Liar.
"That's so sad," she says.
"What about you?" I ask. "Before you were an ice ghoul . . . ?"
"Oh yes! I grew up in a troupe, I had lots of
brothers and sisters and parents. We were primate fundamentalists, you
know? It's kind of embarrassing. But I still hear from some of the
cousins now and then—we exchange insights once in a while." She
smiles wistfully. "When I was a ghoul, it was one of the few things
that reminded me I had an alien side."
"But did you, when you were a ghoul, did you have . . . ?"
Her face freezes over: "No, I didn't." I look away, embarrassed for her. Why did I imagine I was the only liar at the table?
"About that food idea," I say, hastily changing
the subject, "I'm still trying out some of the eateries around here. I
mean, getting to know what's good and figuring out who hangs out where.
I was thinking about going for a meal and maybe seeing if a few
acquaintances are around afterward, Linn and Vhora. Do you know them?
They're in rehab, too, only they've been out a bit longer than us.
Linn's doing craft therapy, ad hoc environmental patching, while
Vhora's learning to play the musette."
"Did you have anywhere in particular in mind to go and eat?" She unfreezes fast once we're off the sensitive subject.
"I was thinking a pavement cafe in the Green
Maze that hangs off the back of the Reich Wing looked like a
possibility. It's run by a couple of human cooks who design
historically inauthentic Indonesian tapas in public. It's strictly
recreational, a performance thing: They don't actually expect you to
eat their prototypes—not unless you want to." I raise a finger.
"If that doesn't interest you, there's a fusion shed, also in the Green
Maze, that I cached yesterday. They do a decent pan-fried calzone, only
they call it something like a dizer or dozer. And there's always sushi."
Kay nods thoughtfully. "Plausible," she agrees.
Then she smiles. "I like the sound of your tapas. Shall we go and see
how much we can eat? Then let's meet these friends of yours."
They're not friends so much as nodding
acquaintances, but I don't tell her that. Instead, I pay up with a wave
at the billpoint, and we head for the back door, out onto the beautiful
silvery beach that the rehab club backs on to, then over to a
rustic-looking door that conceals the gate to the green maze. Along the
way, Kay pulls a pair of batik harem pants and a formally cut
black-lace jacket out of her waist pouch, which is an artfully
concealed gate opening on a personal storage space. Both of us are
barefoot, for although there is a breeze and bright sunlight on our
skin, we are fundamentally as deep indoors as it is possible for humans
to get, cocooned in a network of carefully insulated habitats floating
at intervals of light kiloseconds throughout a broad reach of the big
black.
The Green Maze is one of those rectilinear
manifolds that was all the fashion about four gigasecs ago, right after
the postwar fragmentation bottomed out. The framework consists of green
corridors, all straight, all intersecting at ninety-degree angles and
held together by a bewildering number of T-gates. Actually, it's a
sparse network, so you can go through a doorway on one side of the maze
and find yourself on the far side, or several levels up, or even two
twists, a hop, and a jump behind the back of your own head. Lots of
apartment suites hang off it, including the back entrance to my own,
along with an even more startling range of cubist-themed public spaces,
entertainment nooks, eateries, resteries, entertainment venues, and a
few real formal hedge mazes built in a style several tens of
teraseconds older.
Needless to say, nobody knows their way around
the Green Maze by memory or dead reckoning—some of the gates move
from diurn to diurn—but my netlink knows where I'm going and
throws up a firefly for me. It takes us about a third of a kilosec to
walk there in companionable silence. I'm still trying to work out
whether I can trust Kay, but I'm already sure I like her.
The tapas place is open plan, ancient cast-iron
chairs and tables on a grassy deck beneath a dome under a pink sky
streaked with clouds of carbon monoxide that scud across a cracked
basalt wilderness. The sun is very bright and very small, and if the
dome vanished, we'd probably freeze to death before the atmosphere
poisoned us. Kay glances at the ornamental archway surrounding the
T-gate, overgrowth with ivy, and picks a table close to it. "Anything
wrong?" I ask.
"It reminds me of home." She looks as if she's bitten a durian fruit while expecting a mango. "Sorry. I'll try to ignore it."
"I didn't mean to—"
"I know you didn't." A small, wry, smile. "Maybe I didn't erase enough."
"I'm worried that I erased too much," I say
before I can stop myself. Then Frita, one of the two
proprietor/cook/designers wanders over, and we're lost for a while in
praise of his latest creations, and of course we have to sample the
fruits of the first production run and make an elaborate business of
reviewing them while Erci stands by strumming his mandolin and looking
proud.
"Erased too much," Kay prods me.
"Yes." I push my plate away. "I don't know for
sure. My old self left me a long, somewhat vague letter. Written and
serialized, not an experiential; it was encoded in a way he knew I'd
remember how to decrypt, he was very careful about that. Anyway, he
hinted about all sorts of dark things. He knew too much, rambled on
about how he'd worked for a Power and done bad things until his
coworkers forced him into excision and rehab. And it was a thorough job
of assisted forgetting they did on me. I mean, for all I know I might
be a war criminal or something. I've completely lost over a gigasecond,
and the stuff before then is full of holes—I don't remember
anything about what my vocation was, or what I did during the
censorship, or any friends or family, or anything like that."
"That's awful." Kay rests a slim hand atop each
of mine and peers at me across the wreckage of a remarkably good
aubergine-and-garlic casserole.
"But that's not all." I glance at her wineglass, sitting empty beside the carafe. "Another refill?"
"My pleasure." She refills my glass and raises
it to my lips while taking a sip from her own without releasing my
hands. I smile as I swallow, and she smiles back. Maybe there's
something to be said for her hexapedal body plan, although I'd be
nervous about doing it to myself—she must have had some pretty
extensive spinal modifications to coordinate all those limbs with such
unconscious grace. "Go on?"
"There are hints." I swallow. "Pretty blatant
ones. He warned me to be on my guard against old enemies—the kind
who wouldn't be content with a simple duel to the death."
"What are we talking about?" She looks concerned.
"Identity theft, backup corruption." I shrug. "Or . . . I don't know. I mean, I don't remember.
Either my old self was totally paranoid, or he was involved in
something extremely dirty and opted to take the radical retirement
package. If it's the latter, I could be in really deep trouble. I lost
so much that I don't know how the sort of people he was involved with
behave, or why. I've been doing some reading, history and so on, but
that's not the same as being there." I swallow again, my mouth
dry, because at this point she might very well stand up and walk out on
me and suddenly I realize that I've invested quite a lot of self-esteem
in her continued good opinion of me. "I mean, I think he may have been
a mercenary, working for one of the Powers."
"That would be bad." She lets go of my hands. "Robin?"
"Yes?"
"Is that why you haven't had a backup since
rehab? And why you're always hanging out in public places with your
back to the most solid walls?"
"Yes." I've admitted it, and now I don't know why I didn't say it before. "I'm afraid of my past. I want it to stay dead."
She stands up, leans across the table to take my
hands and hold my face, then kisses me. After a moment I respond
hungrily. Somehow we're standing beside the table and hugging each
other—that's a lot of contact with Kay—and I'm
laughing with relief as she rubs my back and holds me tight. "It's all
right," she soothes, "it's all right." Well, no it isn't—but she's
all right, and suddenly my horizons feel as if they've doubled in size.
I'm not in solitary anymore, there's someone I can talk to without
feeling as if I might be facing a hostile interrogation. The sense of
release is enormous, and far more significant than simple sex.
"Come on," I say, "let's go see Linn and Vhora."
"Sure," she says, partly letting go. "But Robin, isn't it obvious what you need to do?"
"Huh?"
"About your problem." She taps her toe impatiently. "Or haven't the therapists been giving you the hard sell, too?"
"You mean the experiment?" I lead her back into
the Green Maze, cueing my netlink for another firefly. "I was going to
say no. It sounds crazy. Why would I want to live in a panopticon
society for ten or fifty megs?"
"Think about it," she says. "It's a closed
community running in a disconnected T-gate manifold. Nobody gets to go
in or comes out after it starts running, not until the whole thing
terminates. What's more, it's an experimental protocol. It'll be
anonymized and randomized, and the volunteers' records will be
protected by the Scholastium's Experimental Ethics Service. So—"
Enlightenment dawns. "If anyone is after me, they won't be able to get at me unless they're inside it from the start! And while I'm in it I'll be invisible."
"I knew you'd get it." She squeezes my hand.
"Come on, let's find these friends of yours. Do you know if they've
been approached, too?"
WE find Linn
and Vhora in a forest glade, enjoying an endless summer afternoon. It
turns out that they've both been asked if they're willing to
participate in the Yourdon study. Linn is wearing an orthohuman female
body and is most of the way out of rehab; lately she's been getting
interested in the history of fashion—clothing, cosmetics,
tattoos, scarification, that sort of thing—and the idea of the
study appeals to her. Vhora, in contrast, is wearing something like a
kawaii pink-and-baby-blue centaurform mechabody: she's got huge black
eyes, eyelashes to match, perfect breasts, and piebald skin covered in
Kevlar patches.
"I had a session with Dr. Mavrides," Linn
volunteers diffidently. She has long, auburn hair, pale, freckled skin,
green eyes, upturned nose, and elven ears: her historical-looking gown
covers her from throat to floor. It's a green that matches her eyes.
Vhora, in contrast, is naked. Linn leans against Vhora's flank, one arm
spread lazily across her back to toy idly with the base of the fluted
horn that rises from the center of Vhora's forehead. "It sounds
interesting to me."
"Not my cut." Vhora sounds amused, though it's
hard to judge. "It's historical. Premorphic, too. Sorry but I don't do
ortho anymore, two lifetimes were enough for me."
"Oh, Vhora." Linn sighs, sounding exasperated.
She does something with one fingertip near the base of the horn that
makes the mecha tense for a moment. "Won't you . . . ?"
"I'm not clear on the historical period in
question," I say carefully. To be perfectly truthful, I'd deliberately
ignored the detailed pitch Piccolo-47 mailed me until Kay pointed out
the advantages of disappearing into a closed polity for a few years,
because I was totally uninterested in going to live in a cave and hunt
mammoths with a spear, or whatever Yourdon and his coinvestigators have
in mind. I don't like being taken for a soft touch, and Piccolo-47's
attitude is patronizing at best. Mind you, Piccolo-47 is the sort of
self-congratulatory, introspectively obsessed psych professional who'd
take any suggestion that their behavior displayed contempt for the
clients as projection, rather than treating it as an attempt to work
around real social deficiencies. In my experience, the best way to deal
with such people is to politely agree with everything they say, then
ignore them. Hence my lack of information about the exact nature of the
project.
"Well, they're not telling us everything," Linn
apologizes. "But I did some digging. Historian Professor Yourdon has a
particular interest in a field I know something about, the first
postindustrial dark age—that would be from the mid-twentieth to
mid-twenty-first centuries, if you're familiar with Urth chronology.
He's working with Colonel-Doctor Boateng, who is really a military
psychologist specializing in the study of polymorphic
societies—caste systems, gender systems, stratification along
lines dictated by heredity, astrology, or other characteristics outside
the individual's control. He's published a number of reports lately
asserting that people in most societies prior to the Interval
Monarchies couldn't act as autonomous agents because of social
constraints imposed on them without consent, and I suspect the reason
the Scholastium funds his research is because it has diplomatic
implications."
I feel Kay shiver slightly through my left arm,
which is wrapped around her uppermost shoulders. She leans against me
more closely, and I lean against the tree trunk behind me in turn.
"Like ice ghoul societies," she murmurs.
"Ice ghouls?" asks Vhora.
"They aren't tech—no, what I mean is that
they are still developing technologies. They haven't reached the
Acceleration yet. No emotional machines, no virtual or self-replicating
toolsets. No Exultants, no gates, no ability to restructure their
bodies without ingesting poisonous plant extracts or cutting themselves
with metal knives." She shudders slightly. "They're prisoners of their
own bodies, they grow old and fall apart, and if one of them loses a
limb, they can't replace it." She's very unhappy about something, and
for a moment I wonder what the ice ghouls she lived with meant to her,
that she has to come here to forget.
"Sounds icky," says Linn. "Anyway, that's what
Colonel-Doctor Boateng is interested in. Polities where people have no
control over who they are."
"How's the experiment meant to work, then?" I ask, puzzling over it.
"Well, I don't know all the details," Linn
temporizes. "But what happens . . . well, if you
volunteer, they put you through a battery of tests. You're not supposed
to go in if you've got close family attachments and friends, by the
way; it's strictly for singletons." Kay's grasp tightens around me for
a moment. "Anyway, they back you up and your copy wakes up inside.
"What they've prepared for the experiment is a
complete polity—the briefing says there are over a hundred
million cubic meters of accommodation space and a complete shortjump
network inside. It's not totally uncivilized, like a raw planetary
biome or anything. There are a couple of catches, though. There are no
free assemblers, you can't simply request any structure you want. If
you need food or clothing or tools or whatever, you're supposed to use
these special restricted fabricators that'll only give you what you're
entitled to within the experiment. They run a money system and provide
work, so you have to work and pay for what you consume; it's intended
to emulate a pre-Acceleration scarcity economy. Not too scarce, of
course—they don't want people starving. The other catch is, well,
they assign you a new orthohuman body and a history to play-act with.
During the experiment, you're stuck in your assigned role. No netlink,
no backups, no editing—if you hurt yourself, you have to wait for
your body to repair itself. I mean, they didn't have A-gates back
before the Acceleration, did they? Billions of people lived there, it
can't be that bad, you just have to be prudent and take care not to mutilate yourself."
"But what's the experiment about?" I repeat. There's something missing; I can't quite put my finger on it . . .
"Well, it's supposed to represent a dark ages
society," Linn explains. "We just live in it and follow the rules, and
they watch us. Then it ends, and we leave. What more do you need?"
"What are the rules?" asks Kay.
"How should I know?" Linn smiles dreamily as she
leans against Vhora, fondling the meso's horn, which is glowing softly
pink and pulsing in time to her hand motions. "They're just trying to
reinvent a microcosm of the polymorphic society that's ancestral to our
own. A lot of our history comes out of the dark ages—it was when
the Acceleration took hold—but we know so little about it. Maybe
they think trying to understand how dark ages society worked will
explain how we got where we are? Or something else. Something to do
with the origins of the cognitive dictatorships and the early colonies."
"But the rules—"
"They're discretionary," says Vhora. "To prod
the subjects toward behaving in character, they get points for behaving
in ways in keeping with what we know about dark ages society, and they
lose points for behaving wildly out of character. Points are
convertible into extra bonus money when the experiment ends. That's
all."
I stare at the meso. "How do you know that?" I ask.
"I read the protocol." Vhora manages an impish
smirk. "They want to make people cooperate and behave consistently
without being prescriptive. After all, in every society people
transgress whatever rules there are, don't they? It's a matter of
balancing costs with benefits."
"But it's just a points system," I say.
"Yes. So you can tell if you're doing well or badly, I suppose."
"That's a relief," Kay murmurs. She holds me
tight. The afternoon sunlight in the forest glade is soft and yellow,
and while there's a buzzing and rasping of insects in the background,
the biome leaves us alone. Linn smiles at us again, a remarkably fey
expression, and strokes that spot on top of Vhora's head. There's
something unselfconsciously erotic about her gesture, but it's not an
eroticism I share. "Shall we be going?" Kay asks me.
"Yes, I think so." I help her to her feet, and she in turn helps me up.
"Nice of you to visit," purrs Vhora, shivering
visibly as Linn tickles the base of the horn again. "Are you sure you
don't want to stay?"
"Thank you for the offer, but no," Kay says carefully, "I have a therapy appointment in a kilosec. Maybe some other time."
"Goodbye then," says Linn. Vhora is working one-handed at the laces on the back of her gown as Kay and I leave.
"Too bad about the therapy session," I say, once
we're through the first gate and round the first corner. I hold my hand
out, and she takes it. "I was hoping we could spend some time together."
Kay squeezes my hand. "What kind of therapy did you have in mind?"
"You mean you—"
"Hush, silly. Of course I lied! Did you think I was going to share you with ponygirl back there?"
I turn and back her against the wall, and
suddenly she's all around me, greedy hands grasping and stroking and
squeezing. Her mouth tastes of Kay and lunchtime spices, indescribable
and exotic.
SOMETIME later
we surface in a privacy bower in a restery neither of us knows,
somewhere in the Green Maze, sweaty and naked and tired and elated.
I've had sex with Kay in her private naked orthobody before, but this
is different. She can do things with those four cunning hands that make
me scream with delightful anticipation, holding me on the razor-fine
edge of orgasm for a timeless eternity. I wish I could do something
back to her, something similar. Maybe one day I will, if I get it
together to go xenomorphic myself. I don't usually regret being tied to
my self-image so strongly, but Kay's giving my inhibitions a good
stretch.
Afterward, she rolls away from me, and I cradle her in my arms.
"They don't take couples," she says quietly.
"You said I need to go."
"That's true." She sounds tranquil about it. I don't know, I haven't asked—but is this simply an extended fling?
"I don't have to go."
"If you're in danger, I'd rather you were safe."
I cup her breast, one-handed. She shivers.
"I'd rather I was safe, too. But with you."
"We'd be in different bodies," she murmurs. "We probably wouldn't even recognize each other."
"Would you be all right like that?" I ask anxiously. "If you're shy—"
"I can pretend it's an extended disguise. I've done it before, remember."
Oh. "We'd have to lie." It slips out without my willing it.
"Why?" she asks. "We aren't actually a couple"—my heart skips a beat—"not yet."
"Are you mono? Or poly?" I ask.
"Both." Her nipple tightens under my fingertips.
"It's easier to handle the emotional balance with just one partner,
though." I feel her back tense slightly. "Do you get jealous?"
I have to think hard about it. "I don't think
so, but I'm not certain. I don't remember enough to be sure.
But . . . back there, when Linn invited us. I don't
think I felt jealous then. As long as we're friends."
"Good." She begins to roll over toward me, then
pushes herself up on all her arms and climbs across me until she's on
top, hanging there like the spider goddess of earthly delights. "Then
we won't be lying, exactly, if we tell them we aren't in a long-term
relationship. Promise you'll look me up when we get inside? Or
afterward, if you can't find me? Or if you end up not going inside
after all?"
I stare into her eyes from a distance of
millimeters, seeing hunger and desire and insecurity mirrored there.
"Yes," I say, "I promise."
The spider goddess approves; she descends to
reward her mate, holding him spread-eagled with four arms as she goes
to work on him with her mouthparts and remaining limbs. While for his
part, the male wonders if this is going to be their last time together.
AS I make my solitary way home from our assignation, someone tries to murder me.
I still haven't taken a backup, despite what I
told Piccolo-47. It seems a somewhat irrevocable step, signifying my
acceptance of my new state. Backing up your identity adds baggage, just
as much as memory excision sheds it. In my case, however, it seems that
I really should take a backup as soon as I get back to my room.
It would probably hurt Kay if I were to die now and revert to the state
I was in before we became involved, and not causing her pain has become
important to me.
Maybe that's why I survive.
After we leave the restery we split up, with a
shy wave and a glistening look for each other. Kay has a genuine
therapy session to go to, and I am trying to hold myself to a routine
of reading and research that demands I put in at least ten more
kilosecs this diurn. We take our leave reluctantly, raw with new
sensibilities. I'm still not sure how I feel, and the thought of going
into the experimental polity worries me (will she recognize me? Will I
recognize her? Will we care for each other in our assigned new forms
and point-scoring roles?), but still, we're both mature adults. We have
independent lives to lead. We can say goodbye if we want to.
I don't want company right now (apart from
Kay's), so I tell my netlink to anonymize me as I head home via the
graph of T-gates that connect the Green Maze. People reveal themselves
to my filtered optic nerves as pillars of fog moving in stately
silence, while my own identity is filtered out of their sensory input
by their netlinks.
But not recognizing people is not the same as
not knowing somebody is there, and you have to be able to dodge
passersby even if you can't tell who they are. About halfway home I
realize that one of the fogpillars is following me, usually a gate or
two behind. How interesting, I tell myself as reflexes I didn't
know I had kick in. They're clearly aware that I've got anonymity
switched on, and it seems to be giving them a false sense of security.
I tell my netlink to tag the fogpillar with a bright red stain and keep
my positional sense updated with it. You can do this without breaking
anonymity—it's one of the oldest tricks in the track and trail
book. I carry on, taking pains to give no hint that I've recognized my
shadow.
Rather than retracing the route we took through
the Green Maze, I head directly toward my apartment's corridor. The
fogpillar follows me, and I casually ease my left hand into the big hip
pocket on my jacket, feeling my way through the spongy manifold of
T-gates inside it until I find the right opening.
I'm walking along the nave of altars in the
temple of the skeletal giants when my tail makes its move. There's
nobody else about right now, which is probably why they pick this
particular moment. They lunge toward me, thinking I can't see them, but
the tag my netlink has added to their fogpillar gives them
away—I've got a running range countdown in my left eye and as
soon as they move, I cut the anonymity filter, spin, and draw.
He's a small, unremarkable-looking
male—nut brown skin, black hair, narrow eyes, wiry
build—and he's wearing a totally unremarkable-looking kilt and
vest; in fact the only remarkable thing about him is his sword. It
isn't a dueling sword, it's a power-assisted microfilament wire,
capable of slicing through diamond armor as if it isn't there. It's
completely invisible except for the red tracking bead that glows at its
tip, almost two meters from his right hand.
Too bad. I brace, squeeze the
trigger for a fraction of a second, then let go and try to blink away
the hideous purple afterimages. There's a tremendously loud
thunderclap, a vile stench of ozone and burned meat, and my arms hurt.
The sword handle goes skittering across the worn flagstones, and I
hastily jump out of the way—I don't want to lose a foot by
accident—then I glance about, relying on my peripheral vision to
tell me if anyone else is around.
"Scum!" I hiss in the direction of Mr. Crispy. I
feel curiously unmoved by what I've just done, although I wish the
afterimages would go away faster—you're supposed to use a blaster
with flash-suppression goggles, but I didn't have time to grab them.
The blaster is a simple weapon, just a small T-gate linked (via another
pair of T-gates acting as a valve) to an endpoint orbiting in the
photosphere of a supergiant star. It's messy, it's short-range, it'll
take out anything short of full battle armor, and because it's
basically just a couple of wormholes tied together with superstring,
it's impossible to jam. On the minus side my ears are ringing, I can
already feel the skin on my face itching with fresh radiation burns,
and I think I melted a couple of the crypts. It's considered bad form
for duelists to use blasters—or indeed anything that isn't
strictly hand-powered—which is probably why he wasn't expecting
it.
"Never bring a knife to a gun fight," I tell Mr.
Crispy as I turn away from him. His right arm thinks about it for a
moment, then falls off.
The rest of my journey home is uneventful, but
I'm shaking, and my teeth are chattering with the aftershock by the
time I get there. I shut the door and tell it to fuse with the walls,
then drop into the single chair that sits in the middle of my room when
the bed isn't extended. Did he know I hadn't recorded a backup? Did he
realize my older self wouldn't have erased all my defensive reflexes,
or that I'd know where to get hold of a blaster in the Invisible
Republic? I've no idea. What I do know is someone just tried to
kill me by stealth and without witnesses or the usual after-duel
resurrection, which suggests that they want me offline while they find
and tinker with my backups. Which makes it attempted identity theft, a
crime against the individual that most polities rate as several degrees
worse than murder.
There's no avoiding it now. I'm going to have to
take a backup—and then I'm going to have to seek sanctuary inside
the Yourdon experiment. As an isolated polity, disconnected from the
manifold while the research project runs, it should be about as safe as
anywhere can be. Just as long as none of my stalkers are signed up for
it . . .
TAKING a backup is very easy—it's dealing with the aftereffects that's hard.
You need to find an A-gate with backup
capability (which just means that it has a booth big enough to hold a
human body and isn't specifically configured for special applications,
like a military gate). There's one in every rehab apartment, used for
making copies of furnishings and preparing dinner as well as
deconstructing folks right down to the atomic level, mapping them, and
reassembling them again. To make a backup snapshot you just sit down in
the thing and tell your netlink to back you up. It's not instantaneous
(it works by brute-force nanoscale disassembly, not wormhole magic),
but you won't notice the possibly disturbing sensation of being buried
in blue factory goop, eaten, digitized, and put back together again
because your netlink will switch you off as soon as it starts to upload
your neural state vector into the gate's buffer.
I'm nervous about the time gap. I don't like the
idea of being offline for any length of time while an unknown party is
trying to hijack my identity. On the other hand, not to make a backup,
complete with my current suspicions, would be foolhardy—if they
succeed in nailing me, I want my next copy to know exactly what the
score is. (And to know about Kay.) There really isn't any way around
it, so I take precautions. Before I get into the booth, I use the
A-gate to run up some innocuous items that can be combined to make a
very nasty booby trap. After installing it, I take a deep breath and
stand still for nearly a minute, facing the open door of the booth.
Just to steady my nerves, you understand.
I get inside. "Back me up," I say. The booth extrudes a seat, and I sit down, then the door seals and flashes up a WORKING
sign. I just have time to see blue milky liquid swirling in through the
vents at floor level before everything goes gray and I feel extremely
tired.
Now, about those aftereffects. What should
happen is that after a blank period you wake up feeling fuzzy-headed
and a bit moist. The door opens, and you go and shower off the gel
residue left by the gate. You've lost maybe a thousand seconds, during
which time a membrane studded with about a thousand trillion robotic
disassembly heads the size of large protein molecules has chewed
through you one nanometer at a time, stripping you down to molecular
feedstock, recording your internal state vector, and putting a fresh
copy back together behind it as it scans down the tank. But you don't
notice it because you're brain-dead for the duration, and when the door
to the A-gate reopens, you can just pick up your life where you left it
before the backup. You naturally feel a bit vague when you come up
again, but it's still you. Your body is—
Wrong.
I try to stand up too fast, and my knees both
give way under me. I slump against the wall of the booth, feeling
dizzy, and as I hit the wall I realize I'm too short. I'm still
at the stage of feeling rather than thinking. The next thing I know I'm
sitting down again and the booth is uncomfortably narrow because my hips are too wide
and I'm too short in the trunk as well. There's something else, too. My
arms feel—odd, not wrong, just different. I lift a hand and put
it in my lap, and my thighs feel too big, and then there's something
else. Oh, I realize, sliding my hand between my legs, I'm not male. No, I'm female. I raise my other hand, explore my chest. Female and orthohuman.
This in itself is no big deal. I've been a
female orthohuman before; I'm not sure when or for how long, and it's
not my favorite body plan, but I can live with it for the time being.
What makes me freak and stand upagain, so suddenly I get black spots in my visual field and nearly fall over, is the corollary. Someone tampered with my backup! And then the double take: I am the backup. Somewhere a different version of me has died.
"Shit," I say aloud, leaning against the frosted
door of the cubicle. My voice sounds oddly unfamiliar, an octave higher
and warmer. "And more shit."
I can't stay in here forever, but whatever I'm
going to find out when I open the door can't be good. Steeling myself
against a growing sense of dread, I hit the door latch. It's about then
that I realize I'm not wearing anything. That's no surprise—my
manifold jacket was made from T-gates, and T-gates are one of the
things that an A-gate can't fabricate—but my leggings have gone,
too, and they were ordinary fabric. I've been well and truly hacked,
I realize with a growing sense of dread. The door slides open,
admitting a gust of air that feels chilly against my damp skin. I blink
and glance around. It looks like my apartment, but there's a blank
white tablet on the low desk beside the chair, the booby trap has gone,
and the door is back in the wall. When I examine it I see that it's the
wrong color, and the chair isn't the one I ran up on the apartment gate.
I look at the tablet. The top surface says, in flashing red letters, READ ME NOW.
"Later." I glance at the door, shudder, then go
into the bathroom. Whoever's got me is clearly not in any hurry, so I
might as well take my time and get my head together before I confront
them.
The bathrooms in the rehab suites are
interchangeable, white ceramic eggs with water and air jets and
directionless lighting that can track you wherever you go and drainage
ducts and foldaway appliances that live in the walls. I dial the shower
up to hot and high and stand under it, shivering with fear, until my
skin feels raw and clean.
I've been hacked, and there's nothing I can do
about it except jump through whatever hoops they've laid out for me and
hope they kill me cleanly at the end or let me go. Resistance, as they
say, is futile. If they've hacked my backup so deeply that they can
force a new body plan on me, then they can do anything they want. Mess
with my head, run multiple copies of me, access my private keys, even
make a zombie body and use it to do whatever they want it to do while
masquerading as me. If they can wake me up in the A-gate of another
rehab apartment, then they've trapped my state vector. I could run away
a thousand times, be tortured to death a hundredfold—and I'd
still wake up back in that booth, a prisoner once more.
Identity theft is an ugly crime.
Before I leave the bathroom, I take a good look
at my new body in the mirror. After all, I haven't seen it before, and
I've got a nasty feeling it'll tell me something about the expectations
of my captors.
It turns out that I'm orthohuman and female all
right, but not obtrusively so. I think I'm probably fifteen centimeters
shorter than I was, axisymmetrical, with good skin and hair. It's a
pretty good-looking body, but they haven't forced exaggerated sexual
characteristics on me—I'm not a doll. I've got wide hips, a
narrow waist, breasts that are bigger than I'd have gone for, high
cheekbones and full lips, skin that's paler than I like. My new
forehead is clear and high, above Western-style blue eyes with no
fold—they look oddly round and staring, almost kawaii—and
brown hair that's currently plastered across my shoulders. My
shoulders? It's that long. Why do I have long hair? My
fingernails and toenails are short. I frown. It's oddly inconsistent. I
stretch my arms up over my head and get a nasty shock. I'm weak—I've
got no upper-body musculature to speak of. I probably couldn't hold a
saber at arm's length for half a kilosec without dropping it.
So, in summary, I'm short and weak and unarmed,
but cute if your sense of aesthetics centers on old-fashioned body
plans. "How reassuring," I snarl at my reflection. Then I go back into
the bedroom, sit down, and look at the tablet. READ ME NOW, it says. "Read to me," I tell it, and the words morph into new shapes:
Dear Participant
Thank you for consenting to take part
in the Yourdon-Fiore-Hanta experimental polity project. (If you do not
recall giving this consent, tap HERE to
see the release form you signed after your last backup.) We hope you
will enjoy your stay in the polity. We have prepared an orientation
lecture for you. The next presentation will be conducted by Dr. Fiore
in 1294 seconds. To assist with maintaining the correct setting,
please attend wearing the historically authentic costume supplied (see
carton under chair). There will be a cheese and wine reception
afterward at which you will be given a chance to meet your fellows in
the current intake of participants.
I blink. Then I reread the tablet, frantically searching for alternate meanings. I didn't sign that! Did I?
Looks like I did—either that or I've been hacked, but my having
signed the release is more likely. I tap the link, and it's there in
black and white and red, and the sixteen-digit number works when I feed
the fingerprint to my netlink. I signed a contract, and it says here
I'm committed to living in YFH-Polity under an assumed identity, name
of Reeve, for the next . . . hundred megaseconds? Three years?
During which time my civil rights will be limited by prior mutual
agreement—not extending to my core sentient rights, they're not
allowed to torture or brainwash me—and I can't be discharged from
my obligation without the consent of the experimenters.
I find myself hyperventilating, as I oscillate
between weak-kneed relief that I'm not a victim of identity theft and
apprehension at the magnitude of what I've signed up for. They have the
right to unilaterally expel me (Well, that's all right, then, I just have to piss them off if I decide I want out),
and they have the right to dictate what body I can live in! It's a
ghastly picture, and in among the draconian provisions I see that I
also agreed to let them monitor my every action. Ubiquitous
surveillance. I've just checked into a dark ages panopticon theme
hotel! What can possibly have possessed me to—oh. Buried in the small print is a rider titled "Compensatory Benefits."
Aha.
Firstly, the Scholastium itself guarantees the
experimenters against all indemnities and will back any claims. So if
they violate the limited rights they've granted me, I can sue them, and
they've got nearly infinitely deep pockets. Secondly, the remuneration
is very satisfactory. I do a brief calculation and work out that what
they've promised to pay me for three Urth years in the rat run is
probably enough to see me in comfort for at least thrice that long once
I get out.
I begin to calm down. I haven't been hacked; I did this to myself of my
own free will, and there are some good sides to the picture. My other
self hasn't completely taken leave of his senses. It occurs to me that
it's going to be very hard for the bad guys, whoever they are,
to get at me inside an experimental polity that's only accessible via a
single T-gate guarded by a firewall and the Scholastium's shock troops.
I'm supposed to act in character for the
historical period we're pretending to live in, wearing a body that
doesn't resemble me, using an alias and a fake background identity, and
not discussing the outside world with anyone else in the study. That
means any assassin who comes after me is going to start with huge
handicaps, like not knowing what I look like, not being allowed to ask,
and not being able to take any weapons along. If I'm lucky, the me who
isn't in here will be able to take care of business within the next
hundred megs, and when I come out and we merge our deltas I'll be home
free and rich. And if he doesn't succeed, well, I can see if they'll let me keep this assumed identity when I leave . . .
I pull the carton of clothes out from under the
bed and wrinkle my nose. They don't smell bad or anything, but they're
a bit odd—historically accurate, the tablet said. There's a
strange black tunic, very plain, that leaves my arms and lower legs
bare, and a black jacket to wear over it. For footwear there's a pair
of shiny black pumps, implying a strongish grav zone, but with weird,
pointed toes and heels that converge to a spike three or four
centimeters long. The underwear is simple enough, but I take a while to
figure out that the filmy gray hose go on my legs. Which, I notice, are
hairless—in fact, I've got no hair except on my head. So my
body's ortho, but not undomesticated. I shake my head.
The weirdest thing of all is that the fabric is
dumb—too stupid to repel dirt or eat skin bacteria, much less
respond to style updates or carry on a conversation. And the costume
comes with no pockets, not even an inconspicuous T-gate concealed in
the jacket lining. When did they invent them? I wonder. I'll have to find an outfit with more brains later.
I put everything on and check myself out in the bathroom mirror. My
hair is going to be a problem—I search the place, but all I can
find is an elastic loop to pull it through. It'll have to do until I
can cut it back to a sensible length.
Which leaves me with nothing to do now but go
see this orientation lecture and "cheese and wine reception." So I pick
up my tablet, open the door, and go.
THERE'S a wide
but narrow room on the far side of the door. I've just come out of one
of twelve doors that open off three of the walls, which are painted
flat white. The floor is tiled in black and white squares of marble.
The fourth wall, opposite my door, is paneled in what I recognize after
a moment as sheets of wood—your actual dead trees, killed and
sliced into planks—with two doors at either side that are propped
open. I guess that's where the lecture is due to be held, although why
they can't do it in netspace is beyond me. I walk over to the nearest
open door, annoyed to discover that my shoes make a nasty clacking
sound with every step.
There are seven or eight other people already
inside a big room, with several rows of uncomfortable-looking chairs
drawn up before a podium that stands before a white-painted wall.
We—I've got to get used to the idea that I'm a voluntary
participant, even if I don't feel like one right now—are a
roughly even mix of orthohuman males and females, all in historical
costume. The costume seems to follow an intricate set of rules about
who's allowed to wear what garments, and everybody is wearing a
surprising amount of fabric, given that we're in a controlled hab.
Those of us who are female have been given one-piece dresses or skirts
that fall to the knee, in combination with tops that cover our upper
halves. The men are wearing matching jacket and trouser combinations
over shirts with some sort of uncomfortable-looking collar and scarf
arrangement at the neck. Most of the clothing is black and white or
gray and white, and remarkably drab.
Apart from the archaic costume there are other
anomalies—none of the males have long hair, and none of the
females have short hair, at least where I can see it. A couple of heads
turn as I walk in, but I don't feel out of place, even with my long
hair yanked back in a ponytail. I'm just another anonymous figure in
historic drag. "Is this the venue for the lecture?" I ask the nearest
person, a tall male—probably no taller than I used to be, but I
find myself looking up at him from my new low vantage—with black
hair and a neatly trimmed facial mane.
"I think so," he says slowly, and shrugs, then
looks uncomfortable. Not surprising, as his outfit looks as if it's
strangling him slowly. "Did you just come through? I found a READ ME in my room after my last backup—"
"Yeah, me, too," I say. I clutch the tablet
under my arm and smile up at him. I can recognize nervous chatter when
I hear it and Big Guy looks every bit as uneasy as I feel. "Do you
remember signing, or did you do that after your backup, too?"
"I'm not the only one?" He looks relieved. "I
was in rehab," he says hastily. "Coming out of the crazy patch you go
through. Then I woke up here—"
"Yeah, whatever." I nod, losing interest. "Me too. When is it starting?"
A door I hadn't noticed before opens in the
white wall at the back and a plump male ortho walks in. This one is
wearing a long white coat held shut with archaic button fasteners up
the front, and he waddles as he walks, like a fat, self-satisfied
amphibian. His hair is black and falls in lank, greasy-looking locks on
either side of his face, longer than that of any of the other males
here. He walks to the podium and makes a disgusting throat-clearing
noise to get our attention.
"Welcome! I'm glad you agreed to come to our
little introductory talk today. I'd like to apologize for requiring you
to come in person, but because we're conducting this research project
under rigorous conditions of consistency, we felt we should stay within
the functional parameters of the society we are simulating. They'd do
it this way, with a face-to-face meeting, so . . . if
you would all like to take seats?"
We take a while to sort ourselves out. I end up
in the front row, sitting between Big Guy and a female with freckled
pale skin and coppery red hair, not unlike Linn, but wearing a cream
blouse and a dark gray jacket and skirt. It's not a style I can make
any sense of—it's vertically unbalanced and, frankly, a bit
weird. But it's not that different from what they've given me to wear,
so I suppose it must be historically accurate. Have our aesthetics changed that much? I wonder.
The person on the podium gets started. "I am
Major-Doctor Fiore, and I worked with Colonel-Professor Yourdon on the
design of the experimental protocol. I'm here to start by explaining to
you what we're trying to achieve, albeit—I hope you'll
understand—leaving out anything that might prejudice your
behavior within the trial polity." He smiles as if he's just cracked a
private joke.
"The first dark ages." He throws out his chest
and takes a deep breath when he's about to say something he thinks is
significant. "The first dark ages lasted about three gigaseconds,
compared to the seven gigaseconds of the censorship wars. But to put
things in perspective, the first dark ages neatly spanned the first
half of the Acceleration, the so-called late-twentieth and
early-twenty-first centuries in the chronology of the time. If we
follow the historical record forward from the pretechnological era into
the first dark age, we find we're watching humans who lived like
technologically assisted monkeys—very smart primates with complex
mechanical tools, but basically unchanged since the species first
emerged. Then when we look at the people who emerged from the first
dark age, we find ourselves watching people not unlike ourselves, as we
live in the modern era, the ‘age of emotional machines' as one
dark age shaman named it. There's a gap in the historical record, which
jumps straight from carbon ink on macerated wood pulp to memory diamond
accessible via early but recognizable versions of the intentionality
protocols. Somewhere in that gap is buried the origin of the posthuman
state."
Big Guy mutters something under his breath. It takes me a moment to decode it: What a pompous oaf.
I stifle a titter of amusement because it's no laughing matter. This
pompous oaf holds my future in his hands for the next tenth of a
gigasec. I want to catch his next words.
"We know why the dark age happened," Fiore
continues. "Our ancestors allowed their storage and processing
architectures to proliferate uncontrollably, and they tended to throw
away old technologies instead of virtualizing them. For reasons of
commercial advantage, some of their largest entities deliberately
created incompatible information formats and locked up huge quantities
of useful material in them, so that when new architectures replaced
old, the data became inaccessible.
"This particularly affected our records of
personal and household activities during the latter half of the dark
age. Early on, for example, we have a lot of film data captured
by amateurs and home enthusiasts. They used a thing called a cine
camera, which captured images on a photochemical medium. You could
actually decode it with your eyeball. But a third of the way into the
dark age, they switched to using magnetic storage tape, which degrades
rapidly, then to digital storage, which was even worse because for no
obvious reason they encrypted everything. The same sort of thing
happened to their audio recordings, and to text. Ironically, we know a
lot more about their culture around the beginning of the dark age,
around old-style year 1950, than about the end of the dark age, around
2040."
Fiore stops. Behind me a couple of quiet
conversations have broken out. He seems mildly annoyed, probably
because people aren't hanging on his every word. Me, I'm
fascinated—but I used to be an historian, too, albeit studying a
very different area.
"Will you let me continue?" Fiore asks pointedly, glaring at a female in the row behind me.
"Only if you tell us what this has got to do with us," she says cheekily.
"I'll—" Fiore stops. Again, he takes a
deep breath and throws his shoulders back. "You're going to be living
in the dark ages, in a simulated Euromerican cultura like those that
existed in the period 1950–2040," he snaps. "I'm trying
to tell you that this is our best reconstruction of the environment
from available sources. This is a sociological and psychological
immersion experiment, which means we'll be watching how you interact
with each other. You get points for staying in character, which means
obeying the society's ground rules, and you lose points for breaking
role." I sit up. "Your individual score affects the group, which means
everyone. Your cohort—all ten of you, one of the twenty groups
we're introducing to this section of the polity over the next five
megs—will meet once a week, on Sundays, in a parish center called
the Church of the Nazarene, where you can discuss whatever you've
learned. To make the simulation work better, there are a lot of
nonplayer characters, zombies run by the Gamesmaster, and for much of
the time you'll be interacting with these rather than with other
experimental subjects. Everything's laid out in a collection of hab
segments linked by gates so they feel like a single geographical
continuum, just like a traditional planetary surface."
He calms down a little. "Questions?"
"What are the society's ground rules?" asks a male with dark skin in a light suit from the back row. He sounds puzzled.
"You'll find out. They're largely imposed
through environmental constraints. If you need to be told, we'll tell
you via your netlink or one of the zombies." Fiore sounds even more
smug.
"What are we meant to do here?" asks the redhead
in the seat beside me. She sounds alert if a little vague. "I mean,
apart from ‘obey the rules.' A hundred megs is a long time, isn't
it?"
"Obey the rules." Fiore smiles tightly. "The
society you're going to be living in was formal and highly ritualized,
with much attention paid to individual relationships and status often
determined by random genetic chance. The core element in this society
is something called the nuclear family. It's a heteromorphic structure
based on a male and a female living in close quarters, usually with one
of them engaging in semi-ritualized labor to raise currency and the
other preoccupied with social and domestic chores and child rearing.
You're expected to fit in, although child rearing is obviously
optional. We're interested in studying the stability of such
relationships. You'll find your tablets contain copies of several books
that survived the dark ages."
"Okay, so we form these, uh, nuclear families," calls a female from the back row. "What else do we need to know?"
Fiore shrugs. "Nothing now. Except"—a
thought strikes him—"you'll be living with dark ages medical
constraints. Remember that! An accident can kill you. Worse, it can
leave you damaged: You won't have access to assemblers during the
experiment. You really don't want to try modifying your bodies, either;
the medical technology that exists is quite authentically primitive.
Nor will you have access to your netlinks from now on." I try to probe
mine, but there's nothing there. For a panicky moment I wonder if I've
gone deaf, then I realize, He's telling the truth! There's no network here. "Your netlinks will communicate social scoring metrics to you, and nothing else. There is a primitive conversational internetwork between wired terminals here, but you aren't expected to use it.
"We've laid on a buffet outside this room. I
suggest you get to know each other, then each pick a partner and go
through that door"—he points to a door at the other side of the
white wall—"which will gate you to your primary residence for
in-processing. Remember to take your slates so you can read the
quickstart guide to dark ages society." He looks around the room
briefly. "If there are no more questions, I'll be going."
A hand or two goes up at the back, but before
anyone can call out, he turns and dives through the door he came in. I
look at Redhead.
"Huh, I guess that's us told," she says. "What now?"
I glance at Big Guy. "What do you think?"
He stands up. "I think we ought to do like he said and eat," he says slowly. "And talk. I'm Sam. What are you called?"
"I'm R-Reeve," I say, stumbling over the name
the tablet said I should use. "And you," I add glancing at redhead,
"are . . . ?"
"You can call me Alice." She stands up. "Come on. Let's see who else is here and get to know them."
OUTSIDE the
lecture theatre there are two long tables heaped with plates of cold
finger food, fruit and "cheese"—strong-smelling curds fermented
from something I can't identify—and glasses of wine. Five of us
are male and five of us are female, and we partition into two loose
clumps at either table, at opposite sides of the room. Besides Alice
the redhead there's Angel (dark skin and frizzy hair), Jen (roundish
face, pale blond hair, even curvier than I am), and Cass (straight
black hair, coffee-colored skin, serious eyes). We're all looking a
little uncomfortable, moving in jerks and tics, twitchy in our new
bodies and ugly clothes. The males are Sam (whom I met), Chris (the
dark-skinned male from the back row), El, Fer, and Mick. I try to tell
them apart by the color of their suits and neckcloths, but it's hard
work, and the short hair gives them all a mechanical, almost insectile,
similarity. It must have been a very conformist age, I think.
"So." Alice looks round at our little group and
smiles, then picks a cube of yellowish ‘cheese' from her woodpulp
plate and chews it thoughtfully. "What are we going to do?"
Angel produces her tablet from a little bag that
she hangs over her arm. If I had one, I didn't notice it, and I kick
myself mentally for not thinking of improvising something like that.
"There's a reading list here," she says, carefully tapping through it.
I watch over her shoulder as scrolls dissolve into facsimile pages from
ancient manuscripts. "There's that odd word again. What's a
‘wife'?"
"I think I know that one," says Cass. "The, uh,
family thing. Where there were only two participants, and they were
morphologically locked, the female participant was called a
‘wife' and the male was called a ‘husband.' It implies
sexual relations, if it's anything like ice ghoul society."
"We aren't supposed to talk about the outside," Jen says uncomfortably.
"But if we don't, we don't have any points of
reference for what we're trying to understand and live in, do we?" I
say, fighting the urge to stare at Cass. Is that you in there, Kay?
It might just be a coincidence, her knowing something about ice
ghouls—there was a huge fad for them about two gigasecs ago, when
they were first discovered. Then again, the bad guys might have noticed
Kay and sent a headhunter after me, armed with whatever they can
extract from her skull for bait . . .
"I want to know where they got these books," I
say. "Look, all they've got is publication dates and rough sales
figures, so we'll know they were popular. But whether they're accurate
indicators of the social system in force is another matter."
"Who cares?" Jen says abruptly. She picks up a
glass and splashes straw-colored wine into it from a glass jug. "I'm
going to pick me a ‘husband' and leave the other details for
later." She grins and empties her glass down her throat.
"What diurn?" Cass's brow furrows as she
grapples with the tablet's primitive interface. It's the nearest thing
we've got to a manual, I realize. "Aha," she says. "We're on day five of the week,
called ‘Thursday.' Weeks have seven days, and we are supposed to
meet on day one, about two-fifty kilo—no, three days—from
now."
"So?" Jen refills her glass.
Cass looks thoughtful. "So if we're supposed to
mimic a family, we probably ought to start by pairing off and going to
whatever dwelling they've assigned us. After a diurn or so of ploughing
through these notes and getting to know each other, we'll be better
able to work out what we're supposed to be doing. Also, I guess, we can
see if the partnering arrangement is workable."
Jen wanders off toward the knot of males at the
other side of the room, glass in hand. Angel fidgets with her tablet,
turning it over and over in her hands and looking uncertain. Alice eats
another lump of cheese. I feel quite ill watching her—the stuff
tastes vile. "I'm not used to the idea of living together with
someone," I say slowly.
"It's not so bad." Cass nods to herself. "But this is a very abrupt and arbitrary way of starting it."
Alice rests a hand on her arm, reassuring. "The
sexual relationship is only implicit," she says. "If you pick a husband
and don't get on, I'm sure you can choose another at the Church
meeting."
"Perhaps." Cass pulls away and glances nervously
at the group of males and one female, who is laughing loudly as two of
the males attempt to refill her glass for her. "And perhaps not."
Alice looks dissatisfied. "I'm going to see what
the party's about." She turns and stalks over toward the other group.
That leaves me with Cass and Angel. Angel is busily scrolling through
text on her tablet, looking distracted, and Cass just looks worried.
"Cheer up, it can't be that bad," I say automatically.
She shivers and hugs herself. "Can't it?" she asks.
"I don't think so." I pick my words carefully.
"This is a controlled experiment. If you read the waivers, you'll see
that we haven't relinquished our basic rights. They have to intervene
if things go badly wrong."
"Well, that's a relief," she says. I look at her sharply.
"Look, we need to pick a ‘husband' each,"
Angel points out. "Whoever's last won't get much of a choice, and as it
is we'll be stuck with whomever the others have rejected. For whatever
reason." She looks between us, her expression guarded. "See you."
I stare at Cass. "What you said earlier, about the ice ghouls—"
"Forget it." She cuts me off with a chopping gesture. "Maybe Jen was right." She sounds downbeat.
"Did you know anyone else who was going into the experiment?" I ask suddenly, then wish I could swallow my own tongue.
Cass frowns at me. "Obviously not, or they
wouldn't have admitted me to the study." Then she looks away, slowly
and pointedly. I follow the direction of her gaze. There's an
unobtrusive black hemisphere hanging from the ceiling in one corner.
She sets her shoulders. "We'd better socialize."
"If you're worried about the implications of
pair-bonding, I don't see why we couldn't share an apartment for a
couple of diurns," I offer, heart pounding and palms sticky. Are you really Kay, Cass?
I'm almost certain she is, but she won't talk where we might be being
monitored. And if I ask and she isn't, I risk giving away my own
identity to whoever's hunting me, if any of them have followed me in
here.
"I don't think that would be allowed," she says
guardedly. She makes a minute nod in my direction, then jerks her chin
toward the others, who by now are making quite a buzz of conversation.
"Shall we go and see who they've fixed us up with?"
On the other side of the room it turns out that
Jen has broken the ice by insisting that all the males compete to
demonstrate their merit, by pouring her a drink and presenting it to
her elegantly. Needless to say she's stinking drunk but giggly. She
seems to have settled on Chris-from-the-back-row as her target—he
seems to be a little embarrassed by her antics, I think, but he can't
get away because Alice and Angel have zeroed in on three of the others
and are leaving him to Jen's clutches. Big Guy, Sam, is standing
stiffly with his back to the wall, looking almost as uneasy as Cass. I
glance at Cass, who's hanging back, then mentally shrug and approach
Sam, bypassing Jen's raucous gaggle.
"Life of the party," I say, tipping my head at Jen.
"Er, yes." He's holding an empty glass and
swaying a little. Maybe his feet are sore. It's hard to read his
expression—the black mane of fur around his mouth obscures the
muscles there—but he doesn't look happy. In fact, if the floor
opens up beneath his feet and swallows him, he'll probably smile with
relief.
"Listen." I touch his arm. As expected, he tenses. "Just come over here with me for a moment, please?"
He permits me to lead him away from the swarm of orthos trying to vector through the social asteroid belt.
"What do you make of this setup?" I ask quietly.
"It makes me nervous." His eyes glance between my face and the doors. Figures.
"Well, it makes me nervous, too. And Cass." I nod at the bunch across the room. "And, I think, even Jen."
"I've read part of the backgrounder." He shakes his head. "It's not what I expected. Neither was this—"
"Well." My lips have gone dry. I take a sip from
my glass and look at Sam, calculating. He's bigger than I am. I'm
physically weak (and wait until I get my hands on the joker who set that
parameter up), but unless I'm misreading him badly he's well
socialized. "We might as well make the best of things. We're expected
to go set up a joint apartment with someone who is a different gender.
Then we get settled in, read the briefings, do whatever they tell us to
do, and go to the Church on Sunday to see how everyone else is doing.
Do you think you can do that if you treat it as a vocational task?"
Sam puts his empty glass down on the table with fastidious precision and pulls out his tablet. "I could,
but it says here that the ‘nuclear family' wasn't just an
economic arrangement, there's sex involved, too." He pauses for a
moment. "I'm not good at intimacy. Especially with strangers."
Is that why you're so tense? "That's not necessarily a problem." I take another sip of wine. "Listen"—I end up glancing at the camera dome (thank you, Cass)—"I'm
sure none of these arrangements are going to end up permanent. We'll
get a chance to sort out any mistakes at the meeting on First—uh,
Sunday? Meanwhile"—I look up at him—"I don't mind your
preference. We don't have to have sex unless we both want to. Is that
okay by you?"
He looks down at me for a while. "That might work," he says quietly.
I realize I've just picked a husband. I just hope he isn't one of the hunters . . .
What happens next is anticlimactic. Someone's
probably been watching the group dynamics through that surveillance
lens, because after another few centisecs our tablets tinkle for
attention. We're instructed to go through the doorway at the back of
the lecture theatre in pairs, at least two seconds apart. We're already
in YFH-Polity, in the administration subnet, beyond the longjump T-gate
leading back to the Invisible Republic. There's some kind of framework
with a bundle of shortjump gates behind the next door, ready to take us
to our homes. So I take Sam's hand—it's enormous, but he holds
mine limply, and his skin is a bit clammy—and I lead him over to
the door. "Ready?" I ask.
He nods, looking unhappy. "Let's get this over with."
Step. "Over with? It's going to take"—step—"at
least three years before it's over with!" And we're standing in a
really small room facing another door, surrounded by the most
unimaginable clutter, and he lets go of my hand and turns around, and I
say, "Is this it?" Ending on a squeak.
REEVE and Sam Brown—not their, our,
real names—are a middle-class couple circa 1990–2010, from
the middle of the dark ages. They are said to be "married," which means
they live together and notionally observe a mono relationship with
formal approval from their polity's government and the
ideological/religious authorities. It is a publicly respectable role.
For purposes of the research project, the Browns
are currently both unemployed but have sufficient savings to live
comfortably for a "month" or thereabouts while they put their feet down
and seek work. They have just moved into a suburban split-level house
with its own garden—apparently a vestigial agricultural
installation maintained for aesthetic or traditional reasons—on a
road with full-grown trees to either side separating them from other
similar-looking houses. A "road" is an open-walled access passage
designed to facilitate ground transport by automobile and truck. (I
think I have seen automobiles somewhere, once, but what's a "truck"?)
At this point the simulation breaks down, because although this
environment is meant to mimic the appearance of a planetary surface,
the "sky" is actually a display surface about ten meters above our
heads, and the "road" vanishes into tunnels which conceal T-gate
entrances, two hundred meters in either direction. There are cultivated
barriers of vegetation to stop us walking into the walls. It's a pretty
good simulation, considering that according to the tablet it's actually
contained in a bunch of habitat cylinders (which orbit in the debris
belts of three or four brown dwarf stars separated by a hundred
trillion kilometers of vacuum), but it's not the real thing.
Our house . . .
I step out of the closet Sam and I materialized
in and look around. The closet is in some kind of shed, with a rough
ceramic-tiled floor and thin transparent wall panels (called "windows,"
according to Sam) held in a grid of white plastic strips that curve
overhead. There's stuff everywhere. Baskets with small colorful
plants hanging from the wall, a door—made of strips of wood,
cunningly interlocking around a transparent panel—and so on.
There's some kind of rough carpetlike mat in front of the door, the
purpose of which is unclear. I push the door open, and what I see is
even more confusing.
"I thought this was meant to be an apartment?" I say.
"They weren't good at privacy." Sam is looking
around as if trying to identify artifacts that mean something to him.
"They had no anonymity in public. No T-gates either. So they used to
keep all their private space at home, in one structure. It's called a
‘house' or a ‘building,' and it has lots of rooms. This is
just the vestibule."
"If you say so." I feel like an idiot. Inside
the house itself I find myself in a passageway. There are doors on
three sides. I wander from room to room, gawping in disbelief.
The ancients had carpet. It's thick enough to deaden the annoying clack-clack
of my shoes. The walls are covered in some sort of fabric print,
totally static but not unpleasant to look at. Windows in the front room
look out across a hump of land planted with colorful flowers, and at
the back across an expanse of close-cropped grass. The rooms are all
full of furniture, chunky, heavy stuff, made of carved-up lumps of wood
and metal, and a bit of what I assume must be structural diamond. They
were big on rectilinear geometry, relegating curves to small objects
and the odd obscure piece of dead-looking machinery. There's one room
at the back with a lot of metal surfaces and what looks like an
open-topped water tank in it, and there are odd machines dotted over
the cabinet tops. There's another small room under the staircase with a
recognizable but primitive-looking high-gee toilet in it.
I prowl around the upstairs corridor, opening
doors and trying to puzzle out the purpose of the rooms to either side.
They separate rooms by function, but most of them seem to have multiple
uses. One of them might be a bathroom, but it's too large and appears
to be jammed—all the hygiene modules are extended and frozen
simultaneously, as if it's crashed. A couple of the rooms have sleeping
platforms in them, and other stuff, big wooden cabinets. I look in one,
but there's nothing but a pole extending from one side to the other
with some kind of hooked carrier slung over it.
It's all very puzzling. I sit down on the bed and pull out my tablet just as it dings for attention. What now? I ask myself.
The tablet's sprouted a button and an arrow and it says, POINT AT OBJECT TO IDENTIFY.
Okay, so this must be the help system, I think. Relieved, I point it at the boxy cabinet and press the button.
WARDROBE. Storage cabinet for clothes awaiting use. Note: used clothing can be cleaned in the UTILITY ROOM in the basement by means of the WASHING MACHINE. As new arrivals, you have only one set of clothes. Suggested task for tomorrow—go downtown and buy new clothes.
My feet itch. I kick my shoes off impulsively,
glad to be rid of those annoying heels. Then I shrug out of the black
pocketless jacket and stash it in the wardrobe, using the hook-and-arm
affair dangling from the bar. It looks lonely there, and I suddenly
feel very odd. Everything here is overwhelmingly strange. How's Sam taking it?
I wonder, feeling concerned; he wasn't doing so well in the reception
session, and if this is as weird for him as it is for
me . . .
I wait for my head to stop spinning before I go
back downstairs. (A thought strikes me on the way. Am I supposed to
wear the same outfit inside my ‘house' as I do in public? These
people have a marked public/private split personality—they
probably have different costumes for formal and informal events.) In
the end, I leave the jacket but, a trifle regretfully, put the shoes
back on.
I find Sam slumped in one corner of a huge sofa
in the living room, facing a chunky black box with a curved lens that
shows colorful but flat images. It's making a lot of indistinct noise.
"What is that?" I ask him, and he almost jumps out of his skin.
"It's called a television," he says. "I am watching football."
"Uh-huh." I walk round the sofa and sit down
halfway along it, close enough to reach out and take his hand, but far
enough away to maintain separation if both of us want to. I peer at the
pictures. Some kind of mecha—no, they're ortho males, right? In
armor—are forming groups facing each other. They're color coded.
"Why are you watching this?" I ask. One of them throws something
alarmingly like an assault mine at the other group of orthos, who try
to jump on it. Then they begin running and squabbling for ownership of
the mine. After a moment someone blows a whistle and there's a roaring
noise that I realize is coming from the crowd watching
the—ritual? Competitive-self-execution? Game?—from rows of
seats behind them.
"It's supposed to be a popular entertainment." Sam shakes his head. "I thought if I watched it I might understand more—"
"What's the most important thing we can understand?" I ask, leaning toward him. "The experiment, or how to live in it?"
He sighs and picks up a black knobby rectangle,
points it at the box, and waits for the picture to fade to black. "The
tablet said I ought to try it," he admits.
"My tablet said we have to go and buy
clothing tomorrow. We've only got what we're wearing, and apparently it
gets dirty and smelly really fast. We can't just throw it away and make
more, we have to buy it downtown." A thought strikes me. "What do we do
when we get hungry?"
"There's a kitchen." He nods at the doorway to
the room with the appliances that puzzled me. "But if you don't know
how to use it, we can order a meal using the telephone. It's a
voice-only network terminal."
"What do you mean, if you don't know how?" I ask him, raising an eyebrow.
"I'm just repeating what the tablet says." Sam sounds a little defensive.
"Here, give that to me." He passes it and I
rapidly read what he's looking at. Domestic duties: the people of the
dark ages, when living together, apparently divided up work depending
on gender. Males held paid vocations; females were expected to clean
and maintain the household, buy and prepare food, buy clothing, clean
the clothing, and operate domestic machinery while their male worked.
"This is crap!" I say.
"You think so?" He looks at me oddly.
"Well, yeah. It's straight out of the most primitive nontech anthro cultures. No
advanced society expects half its workforce to stay home and divides
labor on arbitrary lines. I don't know what their source for this
rubbish is, but it's not plausible. If I had to guess, I'd say they've
mistaken radical prescriptive documentation for descriptive." I tap my
finger on his slate. "I'd like to see some serious social conditions
surveys before I took this as fact. And in any event, we don't have to
live that way, even if it's how they direct the majority of the zombies
in the polity. This is just a general guideline; every culture has lots
of outliers."
Sam looks thoughtful. "So you think they've got it wrong?"
"Well, I'm not going to say that for certain
until I've reviewed their primary sources and tried to isolate any
bias, but there's no way I'm doing all the housework." I grin, to take
some of the sting out of it. "What were you saying about being able to
request food using the ‘telephone'?"
DINNER is a
circular, baked, bread-type thing called a pizza. There's cheese on it,
but also tomato paste and other stuff that makes it more palatable.
It's hot and greasy and it comes to us via the shortjump gate in the
closet in the conservatory, rather than on a ‘truck.' I'm a bit
disappointed by this, but I guess the truck can wait until tomorrow.
Sam unwinds after dinner. I take off my shoes and hose and convince him
he'll feel better without his jacket and the thing called a
necktie—not that he needs much convincing. "I don't know why they
wore these," he complains.
"I'll do some research later." We're still on
the sofa, with open pizza boxes balanced on our laps, eating the greasy
hot slices of food with our fingers. "Sam, why did you volunteer for
the experiment?"
"Why?" He looks panicky.
"You're shy, you're not good in social situations. They told
us up front we'd have to live in a dark ages society for a tenth of a
gigasec with no way out. Didn't it strike you as not being a sensible
thing to do?"
"That's a very personal question." He crosses his arms.
"Yes, it is." I stop talking and stare at him.
For a moment he looks so sad that I wish I could take the words back. "I had to get away," he mumbles.
"From what?" I put my box down and pad across
the carpet to a large wooden chest with drawers and compartments full
of bottles of liquor. I take two glasses, open a bottle, sniff the
contents—you can never be sure until you try it—and pour.
Then I carry them back over to the sofa and pass him one.
"When I came out of rehab." He stares at the
television, which is peculiar because the machine is switched off.
Under his shoes he's wearing some sort of short, thick hose. His toes
twitch uneasily. "Too many people recognized me. I was afraid. It's my
fault, I think, but they might have hurt me if I'd stayed."
"Hurt you?" Sam is big and has thick hair and
isn't very fast moving, and he seems to be very gentle. I've been
thinking that maybe I lucked out with him—there's potential for
abuse in this atomic relationship thing, but he's so shy and retiring
that I can't see him being a problem.
"I was a bit crazy," he says. "You know the
dissociative psychopathic phase some people go through after deep
memory redaction? I was really bad. I kept forgetting to back
up and I kept picking fights and people kept having to kill me in
self-defense. I made a real fool of myself. When I came out of
it . . ." He shakes his head. "Sometimes you just want
to go and hide. Perhaps I hid too well."
I look at him sharply. I don't believe you, I decide. "We all make fools
of ourselves from time to time," I say, trying to hang a reassuring
message on the observation. "Here, try this." I raise my glass. "It
says it's vodka."
"To forgetfulness." He raises his glass to me. "And tomorrow."
I wake up alone
in a strange room, lying on a sleeping platform under a sack of
fiber-stuffed fabric. For a few panicky moments I can't remember where
I am. My head's sore, and there's a gritty feeling in my eyes: If this
is life in the dark ages, you can keep it. At least nobody's trying to kill me right now, I tell myself, trying to come up with something to feel good about. I roll out of bed, stretch, and head for the bathroom.
It's my fault for being so distracted. On my way
back to my bedroom to get dressed I walk headfirst into Sam. He's naked
and bleary-eyed and looks half-asleep, and I sort of plaster myself
across his chest. "Oof," I say, right as he says, "Are you all right?"
"I think so." I push back from him a few centimeters and look up at his face. "I'm sorry. You?"
He looks worried. "We were going to buy clothes and, uh, stuff. Weren't we?"
I realize, momentarily unnerved, that we're both
naked, he's taller than I am, and he's hairy all over. "Yes, we were,"
I say, watching him warily. All that hair: He's a lot less gracile than I'd normally go for, and then I realize he's looking at me as if he's never seen me before.
It's a touchy moment, but then he shakes his head, breaking the tension: "Yes." He yawns. "Can I go to the bathroom first?"
"Sure." I step aside and he shambles past me. I
turn to watch him. I don't know how I feel about this, about sharing a
"house" with a stranger who is stronger and bigger than I am and who
has a self-confessed history of impulsive violent episodes.
But . . . who am I to criticize? By the time I'd known
Kay this long, we'd gone to a wild orgy together and fucked each other
raw, and if that isn't impulsive behavior, I don't know . . . maybe Sam's right. Sex is an unpleasant complication here, especially before we know what the rules are. If there are rules. Vague memories are trying to surface: I've got a feeling I was involved with both
males and females back before my excision. Possibly poly, possibly
bi—I can't quite remember. I shake my head, frustrated, and go
back to my room to get into costume.
While I'm getting ready, I pick up my tablet. It
tells me to look in the closet in the conservatory. I go downstairs and
find the conservatory is chilly—don't these people have proper
life support?—and inside the cupboard that held a T-gate
yesterday there's now a blank wall and a couple of shelves. One of the
shelves holds a couple of small bags made of dumb fabric. They've got
lots of pockets, and when I open one I find it's full of rectangles of
plastic with names and numbers on them. My tablet tells me that these
are "credit cards," and we can use them to obtain "cash" or to pay for
goods and services. It seems crude and clumsy, but I pick up the
wallets all the same. I'm turning away from the door when my netlink
chimes.
"Huh?" I look round. As I glance at the wallets in my hand a bright blue cursor lights up over them, and my netlink says, TWO POINTS. "What the—" I stop dead. My tablet chimes.
Tutorial: social credits are awarded
and rescinded for behavior that complies with or violates public norms.
This is an example. Your social credits may also rise or fall depending
on your cohort's collective score. After termination of the simulation
all individuals will receive a payment bonus proportional to their
score; the highest-scoring cohort will receive a further bonus of 100%
on their final payment.
"Okay." I hurry back inside to give Sam his wallet.
Sam is coming downstairs as I go inside. "Here,"
I say, holding both the wallets out to him, "this one is yours. Can you
put these in a pocket for me until I buy one of those shoulder bags?
I've got nowhere to put mine."
"Sure." He takes my stuff. "Did you read the tutorial?"
"I started to—I needed something to help me get to sleep. Let's . . . how do we get downtown?"
"I called a taxi. It'll be here to pick us up in a short while."
"Okay." I look him up and down. He's back in costume again. It still
looks awkward. I can't help tapping my toes with impatience. "Clothing,
first. For both of us. Where do we go? Do you know how the stuff is
sold?"
"There's something called a department store, the tutorial said to start there. We might run into some of the others."
"Hmm." A thought strikes me. "I'm hungry. Think there'll be somewhere to eat?"
"Maybe."
Something large and yellow appears outside the door. "Is that it?" I ask.
"Who knows?" He looks twitchy. "Let's go see."
The yellow thing is a taxi, a kind of automobile
you hire by the centisecond. There's a human operator up front, and
something like a padded bench seat in the rear. We get in, and Sam
leans forward. "Can you take us to the nearest department store?" he
asks.
The operator nods. "Macy's. Downtown zone. That
will be five dollars." He holds out a hand and I notice that his skin
is perfectly smooth and he has no fingernails. Is he one of the zombies?
I wonder. Sam hands over his "credit card" and the operator swipes it
between his fingers, then hands it back. Sam sits back, then there's a
lurch, and we're moving. The taxi makes various loud noises, so that
I'm afraid it's about to suffer a systems malfunction—there's a
loud rumbling from underneath and a persistent whine up front—but
we turn into the road and accelerate toward the tunnel. A moment of
darkness, then we're somewhere else, driving along a road between two
short rows of gray-fronted buildings. The taxi stops and the door next
to Sam clicks open. "We have arrived at downtown," says the operator.
"Please disembark promptly."
Sam is frowning over his tablet, then
straightens up. "This way," he says. Before I can ask why, he heads off
toward one of the nearest buildings, which has a row of doors in it. I
follow him.
Inside the store, I get lost fast. There's stuff
everywhere, piled in heaps and stacked in storage bins, and there are
lots of people wandering about. The ones in the odd-looking uniforms
are shop operators who're supposed to help you find things and take
your money. There are no assemblers and no catalogues, so I suppose
they can only sell the stuff they've got on display, which is why it's
all over the place. I ask one of the operators where I can find
clothes, and she says, "on the third floor, ma'am." There are moving
staircases in a central high-ceilinged room, so I head for the third
level and look around.
Clothes. Lots of clothes. More clothes than I've
ever imagined in one place—and all of them made of dumb fabric
with no obvious way of finding what you want and getting it adjusted to
the right size! How did they ever figure out what they needed? It's a
crazy system, just putting everything in the middle of a big house and
letting visitors take their chances. There are some other people
walking around and fingering the merchandise, but when I approach them
they turn out to be zombies, playing the part of real people. None of
the others are here yet. I guess we must be early.
I wander through a forest of racks hung with jackets until I catch a shop operator. "You," I say. "What can I wear?"
She looks like an orthohuman female, wearing a
blue skirt and jacket and those shoes with uncomfortable heels, and she
smiles at me robotically. "What items do you require?" she asks.
"I need—" I stop. "I need underwear," I
say. The stuff doesn't clean itself. "Enough for a week. I need some
more pairs of hose"—since I tore the one on my left
leg—"and another outfit identical to this one. And another set of
shoes." A thought strikes me. "Can I have a pair of pants?"
"Please wait." The shop operator freezes.
"Please come this way." She leads me to a lectern near a display of
statues wearing flimsy long gowns, and another operator comes out of a
door in the wall carrying a bundle of packages. "Here is your order.
Pants, item not available in this department. Please identify a
template, and we will supply correctly sized garments."
"Oh." I look around. "Can I choose anything here?"
"Yes."
I spend a couple of kiloseconds wandering the
shop floor, looking for stuff to wear. They sell very few pants here,
and they look damaged—made of a heavy blue fabric, ripped open at
the knees. Eventually I end up in another corner of the store where
there's a rack of trousers that look all right, plain black ones with
no holes in them. "I want one of these in my size," I say to the
nearest operator, a male one.
"Item not available in female fitting," he says.
"Oh. Great." I scratch my head. "Can you alter it?"
"Item not available in female fitting," he repeats. My netlink bings. A red icon appears over the rack of pants: SUMPTUARY VIOLATION.
"Hmm." So there are restrictions on what they'll
sell to me? This is getting annoying. "Can you provide one in my size
fitting? It's for a male exactly the same size as myself."
"Please wait." I wait, fidgeting impatiently.
Eventually another male operator appears from an inconspicuous door in
the shop wall, carrying a bundle. "Your gift item is here."
"Uh-huh." I take the pants, suppress a grin, and
think about these irritating shoes and how . . . "Take
me to the shoe department. I want a pair of shoes in my size fitting,
for a male—"
When I pay using the "credit card," I score a couple more social points: I've made five so far.
I catch up with Sam down in the furniture
department about five kiloseconds later. We're both massively
overloaded with bags, but he's bought a portable container called a
‘suitcase' and we shove most of our purchases into it. I've
bought a shoulder bag and a pair of ankle boots that have soft soles
and don't clatter when I walk—I shoved my old shoes into the bag,
just in case I need them for some reason—and I'm a lot more
comfortable walking around now. "Let's go find somewhere to eat," he
suggests.
"Okay." There's an eatery on the other side of
the road from Macy's, and it's not unlike a real one, except that the
food is delivered by human (no, zombie) attendants, and is supposed to
be prepared by other humans in the kitchen. Luckily, this is a
simulation, or I'd feel quite ill. For deep combat sweeps they teach
you how to synthesize food from biological waste or your dead comrades,
but that's different. This is supposed to be civilization, of a kind.
We order from a menu printed on a sheet of white film, then sit back to
wait for our food. "How did your shopping go?" I ask Sam.
"Not too badly," he says guardedly. "I bought underwear. And some
trousers and tops. My tablet says there are a lot of social conventions
surrounding clothing. Stuff we can wear, stuff we can't wear, stuff we must wear—it's a real mess."
"Tell me about it." I tell him about my difficulty ordering trousers that didn't have holes in them.
"It says—" He pulls his tablet out. "Ah,
yes. Sumptuary conventions. It's not legally codified, but trousers
weren't allowed for females early in the dark ages, and skirts weren't
allowed for males at all." He frowns. "It also says the customs appear
to have changed sometime around the middle of the period."
"You're going to stick by the book?" I ask him,
as a zombie walks up and deposits a glass of pale yellow liquid called
beer next to each of our settings.
"Well, they can always fine us," he says,
shrugging. "But I suppose you're right. We don't have to do anything
we're not comfortable with."
"Right." I hike my right leg up and put my foot on the table. "Look at this."
"It's a heavy boot."
"A boot from the males-only department. But they sized it for me when I told them it was a gift for a male the same size as me."
"Oh?"
I realize I'm showing the leg with the torn hose
and put it back under the table. "We've got some autonomy, however
limited. Now we're in here, we can live however we want, can't we?"
Plates of food arrive—synthetic steaks,
fake vegetables designed to look as if they'd grown in a muddy corner
of a wild biosphere, and cups of brightly colored condiments. For a
while I busy myself with my plate. I'm really hungry, and the food is
flavorsome, if a bit basic. At least we're not going to starve in here.
I fill up quickly.
"I don't know if we can," Sam mumbles around a full mouth. "I mean, the points system—"
"Doesn't stop us doing anything," I interrupt,
sliding my plate away. "All we have to do is to agree to ignore it, and
we can do whatever we want."
"I suppose so." He forks another piece of steak into his mouth.
"Anyway, we've got no idea what they take to be
a violation of the system. I mean, what do I have to do to lose a
point? Or to gain points? They haven't actually told us
anything, they've just said ‘obey the rules and collect points.'
" I stab my fork in his direction. "We've got these reference texts in
our tablets, all this stuff about how it's a genetically determinist
society and there are all these silly customs, but I don't see how that
can affect us unless we let it. All societies have some degree of
flexibility, but these guys have just picked the first narrowly
normative interpretation that came to hand. If you ask me, they're just
plain lazy."
"What will the others think?" he asks.
"What will they think?" I stare at him. "We're
here for a hundred megs. Do you really think they'll put a bonus
payment at the end of the experiment ahead of, say, having to wear
stupid pointy shoes that make your feet hurt for three years?"
"It depends." Sam puts his knife down. "It all
depends on how they balance the relative convenience of making other
people uncomfortable against their own future wealth." His expression
is pensive. "The protocol is . . . interesting."
"Okay." I stand up. "Let's test it." I shrug out
of my jacket and lay it over the back of my chair. A couple of the
dining zombies look round. "Hey, look at me!" I yell. I unzip my dress
and drop it around my ankles. Sam is startled. I watch his face as I
reach behind my back and unlatch my breast halter, drop it, then step
up onto my chair and push down my hose and G-string. "Look at me!" Sam
looks up, and my face feels hot as I see his expression—
Then there's a red flash that blots out my
visual field, and a loud chime from my netlink, like the decompression
alert we all learn to fear before we can walk. MINUS TEN POINTS FOR PUBLIC NUDITY, says the link.
When my vision clears, I can see waitrons and
the maître d' rushing toward me holding up towels and aprons,
ready to do something, anything, to cover the horrible sight. Sam is
still looking up at me, and I'm not the only one who's blushing. I
climb down off the chair and three or four male zombies, all bigger
than me, converge and between them pin my arms and carry me bodily into
the back. I bite back a scream offright: I can't move! But
they take me straight to the females-only lavatory and simply shove me
through the door, on my own. A moment later, while I'm still trying to
catch my breath, the door whips open and someone throws my discarded
clothes at me.
Minus ten points, causing a public nuisance,
intones my netlink. Police have been summoned. Help function advises
you to correct your dress code infraction and leave.
Oh shit, shit . . . I
scrabble around for a moment, pulling the dress over my head and then
shrugging into the jacket. Underwear can wait—I don't know what
these "police" are, but they don't sound good. I pull the door open and
glance round the corner but there's nobody about, nothing but a short
corridor with doors back to the restaurant and one that says FIRE ESCAPE
in green letters. I shove it open and find myself standing in a narrow
road with lots of wheeled containers. It stinks of decaying food.
Shaking slightly, I walk to the end, then turn left, and left again.
Back on the road I walk right into Sam. "Now will you take the protocol seriously?" he hisses in my ear. "They nearly arrested me!"
"Arrested? What's that?"
"The police." He's breathing heavily. "They can
take you away, lock you up. Detention, it's called." He's still flushed
in the face and clearly concerned. "You could have been hurt."
I shiver. "Let's go home."
"I'll call a taxi," he says grumpily. "You've done enough damage for one day."
SAM has bought
a thing called a cell phone—a pocket-sized replacement for the
blocky network terminal wired into the wall. He keeps it in a pocket.
He speaks to it for a while, and a few cents later a taxi pulls up. We
go home, and he stomps into the living room, leaving the suitcase in
the front hall, and turns on the television. I tiptoe around for a
while before looking in on him to find that he's engrossed in the
football, a faintly puzzled expression on his face.
I spend some time in my bedroom, reading from my own tablet. It's got
lots of advice about how people lived in the dark ages, none of which
makes much sense—most of what they did sounds arbitrary and silly
when you strip it of the surrounding social context and the history
that explains how their customs developed. The way my experiment in the
restaurant backfired still burns me (how can not wearing clothes be so
harmful in any rational social context?), but after a while I realize
that I didn't get zapped this morning when I went around the house
naked. So I take off my new boots, then my dress, which is beginning to
get a bit whiffy. I go downstairs and open the suitcase, take out my
purchases, and carry them up to my room. I stash them in the wardrobe,
but there's enough space for ten times as much stuff, which leaves me
puzzled. But I don't feel like trying the new costumes on right now. In
fact, I feel like shit. Sam is ignoring me pointedly (a defensive
reaction, I think), we're living in a crazy experiment that doesn't
make sense, and I won't even get a chance to find out if everyone else
thinks it's mad until the day after tomorrow.
I'm reading the tablet's explanation of how
vocations—excuse me, "work"—worked in dark ages society,
boggling slightly, when a bell rings from the low table next to my bed.
I look toward it and my tablet flashes: ANSWER THE PHONE.
Oh. I didn't realize I had one. I fumble around for a while then find the chunky gadget on a cord that you're supposed to hold to your face. "Yes?" I say.
"R-Reeve! Is that you?"
"Cass? Kay?" I ask, blanking on names for a moment.
"Reeve! You've got to help me get out of here!
He's crazy. If I stay here, I'm sure he's going to end up hitting me
again. I need somewhere to go." I've heard panic before, and this is
it. Cass (Kay? a little corner of me insists) is desperate. But why?
"Where are you?" I ask. "What's happening? Calm down and tell me everything."
"I need to get away from here," she insists
again, her voice breaking. "He's crazy! He's read the manuals and he's
insisting he's going to get the completion bonus, and if he has to,
he's going to force me to do everything by the book. He went out this
morning, locking me in and taking my wallet—he's still got
it—and when he got back, he threatened to beat me up if I didn't
prepare a meal for him. He says that for maximum points the female must
obey the male, and if I don't do what the guidelines say, he'll beat me
up—shit, he's coming."
Click.
I'm left holding the receiver, staring at the
wall behind the bed in horror. I drop it and rush downstairs to the
living room. "Sam! We've got to do something!"
Sam looks up from his tablet. "Do what?"
"It's K—Cass! She just phoned. She needs
help. Her husband is crazy—he's taken away her wallet, locked her
indoors, and is threatening to beat her up if she doesn't obey him.
We've got to do something! There's no way she can defend herself—"
Sam puts his tablet down. "Are you sure of this?" he asks quietly.
"Yes! That's what she told me!" I'm just about
jumping up and down, beside myself with fury. (If I ever catch the
joker who leeched all my upper body strength, I swear I am going to
graft their head to a tree sloth and make them run an endurance race.)
"We've got to do something!"
"Like what?" he asks.
I deflate. "I'm not sure. She wants to get out. But—"
"Did you check our cumulative score?"
"My—no, I didn't. What's that got to do with it?"
"Just do it," he says.
"Okay." What is our cohort's cumulative score? I ask my netlink. The result sets me back. "Hey, we're doing well! Even after . . ." I falter.
"Well yes, if you look in the subtotals, you'll
see that we get points, lots of them, for forming ‘stable
normative relationships.' " His cheek twitches. "Like Cass and, who is
it, Mick."
"But if he's hurting her—"
"Is he really? All right, we take her word for
it. But what can we do? If we break them up, we cost everyone in our
cohort a hundred points, just like that. Reeve, have you noticed the
journal log? Infractions are public. Everyone noticed your
little—experiment—at lunchtime. It's all over their
journal, in red digits. Caused quite a stir. If you do something that
costs the cohort a stable relationship, some of them—not me, but
the ones who will be obsessing with that termination bonus—will
start to hate you. And as you pointed out earlier, we're stuck here for
the next hundred megs."
"Shit. Shit!" I stare at him. "What about you?"
He looks up at me from his corner of the sofa, his face impassive. "What about me?"
"Would you hate me?" I ask, quietly.
He thinks for a moment. "No. No, I don't think
so." Pause. "I wish you'd be a little more discreet, though. Lie low,
think things through before you act, try to at least look as if you're
planning on fitting in."
"Okay. So what should I be thinking? About Cass, I mean. If that scumbag is taking advantage of his greater physical strength . . ."
"Reeve." He pauses again. "I agree in principle.
But first we must know what we need to do. Can she leave him of her own
accord, without our help? If so, then she ought to—it's her
choice. If not, what can we do to help? We have to live with the
consequences of our early mistakes for a very long time. Unless Cass is
in immediate danger, it would be best to try and get the entire cohort
to take action, not go it alone."
"But right now, we've got to stop him doing anything. Haven't we?"
I don't know what's come over me. I feel
helpless, and I hate it. I should be able to go round to the
scumsucker's house and kick the door down and give him a taste of cold
steel in his guts. Or failing that, I ought to plan a cunning
two-pronged assault that whisks the victim to safety while
booby-trapping his bathroom and putting itching powder in his bed. But
I'm just spinning my wheels, venting and emoting and unloading on Sam.
My normal network of resources and capabilities is missing, and I'm
letting the environment dictate my responses. The environment is set up
to inculcate this weird gender-deterministic role play, so
I'm . . . I shake my head.
"We don't want anyone to get the idea that
hurting or imprisoning members of our cohort is a good way to earn
points," Sam says thoughtfully. "Do you have any ideas about how to do
that?"
I think for a moment. "Phone him," I say, before
the idea is completely formed in my head. "Phone him
and . . . yeah." I look out at the garden. "Tell him
we'll see him, and Cass, at Church, the day after tomorrow. There's no
need to be nasty," I realize. "It says we're supposed to dress up and
look good in Church. It's a custom thing. Tell him we could lose points
if she doesn't look good. Collectively." I turn to Sam. "Think he'll
get the message?"
"Unless he's very, very stupid." Sam nods, then stands up. "I'll call him right away." He pauses. "Reeve?"
"Yes?"
"You're not . . . you're making me nervous, smiling like that."
"Sorry." I think for a moment. "Sam?"
"Yes?"
I'm silent for a few second while I try to work
out how much I can safely tell him. After a while I shrug mentally and
just say it. I don't think Sam is likely to be a cold-blooded assassin
in the pay of whatever enemies my earlier self made. "I knew Cass.
Outside the experiment before we, uh, before we volunteered. If that
turd-faced scum hurts her I—well, right now I can't punch his
teeth so far down his throat that he has to eat with his ass, but I'll
think of something else to do. Something equivalent. And, Sam?"
"Yes?"
"I can be very creative when it's time to get violent."
SAM picks up
the phone and asks the Gatekeeper to connect him to Mick's household. I
linger at the top of the stairs and listen to him, down in the front
hall. It sounds like he's trying not to lose his temper. After a couple
of cents, he puts the phone down hard and stomps back to the living
room. I spend most of the rest of the evening avoiding him, instead
worrying myself into a black depression at the possibility that I might
have made things worse for Cass by getting Sam involved.
Points. Collective accountability. Stable
couples. Peer pressure. My head's spinning. It's not that I'm unused to
the idea of daily life having rules—at least, in
peacetime—but it somehow seems indecent for them to make it so
explicit. Societies cohere through tacit understanding, a nod and a
wink and—very occasionally—a lookup in a legal database.
I'm used to learning how things work as I go along and this experience,
a headfirst collision with a fully formed set of rules to live one's
life by, has given me a big shock.
I speculate that I'd be able to handle things
better if I weren't trapped in a frankly inadequate body. I'm not
normally conscious of my own size or strength, and I'm not interested
in mesomorphic tinkering—but then again, I would never
consciously choose to make myself small and frail. I'm borderline
malnourished, too. When I go to the bathroom and use the mirror, I can
almost see my ribs under a layer of subcutaneous fat. I'm not used to
being a waif, and when I get my hands on whoever did this to
me . . . Hah, but I won't be able to do anything to them, will I? "Assholes," I mutter darkly, then head for the kitchen to see if there are any high-protein options on offer.
Later on, I explore the basement. There are a
bunch of machines down here that my tablet says are for household
maintenance. I puzzle over the clothes washing machine. There's
something very crude and mechanical about it, as if its shape is
rigidly fixed. It's not like a real machine, warm and protean and
accommodating to your needs. It's just a lump of ceramic and metal. It
doesn't even answer when I tell it I need to clean my dress—it's
really stupid.
Farther back in the basement there's something
else, a bench with levers attached, for developing upper body muscle
mass the hard way. I'm a bit skeptical, but the tablet says these
people had to develop musculature by repeatedly lifting weights and
other exercises. I find the manual for the exercise machine and after
about a kilosecond I manage to reduce myself to a quivering,
sweat-smeared jelly. It's like some kind of psychological torture, a
lesson that rams home just how weak I am.
I stumble upstairs, shower, and collapse into an
uneasy sleep, troubled by dreams of drowning and visions of Kay
reaching toward me with all her arms outstretched, begging for
something I don't understand. Not to mention faint echoes of something
terrible, immigrants pushing and shoving under the gun, begging and
screaming to be allowed through the gates of Hel. I startle awake and
lie shivering in the darkness for half an hour. What's happening to me?
I'm trapped in another universe. It's true what
they say: The past is another polity, but I don't think most people
mean it quite like this.
THE next
morning, I'm in the kitchen trying to puzzle out the instructions for
using the coffeemaker when the phone rings. There's a terminal in the
hall, so I go there to pick it up, wondering if something's wrong.
"Call for Sam," buzzes a flat voice. "Call for Sam."
I stare at the handset for a moment, then look up the stairs. "It's for you!" I yell.
"I'm coming." Sam takes the staircase two steps
at a time. I pass him the handset. "Yes?" He listens for a moment.
"What is—I don't understand. Can you repeat that? Oh. Yes, yes, I
will." Listening to a conversation on one of these old telephones has
an eerie feel. They exist in a strange space, a half-duplex information
realm devoid of privacy.
Sam continues to listen, looking puzzled then
annoyed as the instructions continue. Finally, he puts the phone down.
"Well!" He says emphatically.
"I'm trying to cook the coffee," I tell him. "Come and tell me about it."
"They're sending a taxi. I've got half an ‘hour'—that's nearly two kilosecs, isn't it?—to get ready."
"Who are ‘they'?" I ask. My stomach clenches with anxiety.
"I've been assigned a temporary job," says Sam.
"They're picking me up for induction training. It's to show me how the
labor system here works. I may be given a different job later."
"Huh." I turn back to the coffee machine so he
won't see me frown. If that's the hydroxide tank, then this must be the
venturi nozzle . . . the disassembled metal bits don't
make any more sense to me than they did before I took it to pieces.
"What am I supposed to do? Are they going to assign me a labor duty,
too?"
"I don't think so." He pauses. "You can ask for
a job, but they don't expect you to. This one, the manual says it's a
starting point." He doesn't look too happy. "We get paid collectively,"
he adds after a few seconds.
"What? You mean they make you work, and I get half of it?"
"Yes."
I shake my head, then screw the machine back
together. After a bit I get to the point where it's making gurgling
whining noises and dribbling brown liquid. I stare at it, then wonder, Isn't it supposed to make a cup first?
Silly me, no assemblers! I hastily rummage through the cupboards until
I find a couple of cups and jam one under the nozzle. "Stupid, stupid,"
I mutter, unsure whether I'm describing myself or the long-dead
designers of the machine.
A taxi shows up in due course, and Sam goes off
to his work induction training. I wander around the house for a bit,
trying to figure out where everything is and what it does. The washing
machine apparently has physical switches you have to set to make it
work. It runs on water, and you have to add something called detergent
to the clothes, a substitute for properly designed fabrics. After I
read about fabrics in the manual Designed for Living, I feel a
bit queasy and resolve to only wear artificial ones. There's something
deeply disturbing about wearing clothes made from dead animals. There's
stuff called "silk" that's basically bug vomit, and the idea of it
makes my skin crawl.
After a couple of hours I get bored. The house
is deeply uncommunicative (if this was a real polity, I'd say it was
autistic), and the entertainment resources are primitive, to say the
least. I try the telephone, thinking I'll call Cass and see how she's
doing—at a guess, Mick will be undergoing work induction, too,
just like Sam—but the phone just makes that idiotic bleeping for
a minute or so (I'm trying to adjust to the strange time units the
ancients used). Maybe she's asleep, or shopping. Or could she be dead?
For a moment I daydream randomly: After Sam's call, Mick hit her over
the head with the handlebars from an exercise machine and chopped her
up in the basement. Or he strangled her while she was
asleep . . .
Why am I harboring these gruesome fantasies?
Something is very wrong with me. I feel trapped, that's a large part of
it. I'm isolated here, stuck alone in a suburban house while my husband
goes to his assigned job. Which is all wrong because what's really going on is that there's an assassin or assassins looking for me because of—because of what? Something that happened before my memory surgery—and I'm isolated, stuck here floundering around in my ignorance.
I need to get out of here.
Ten minutes later I'm standing outside the
conservatory, wearing my dress-code-violating boots and trousers and
with a bag over my shoulder containing my wallet and an extremely sharp
knife I found in the kitchen. It's absolutely pathetic, especially
given the shape of my arm muscles (which feel as if I've been whacking
on them with a hammer), but it's the best I can do right now. With any
luck, the assassinswill be in the same situation, and I'll have time to prepare myself before they're ready to make their move.
Item number one on the checklist for the well-prepared fugitive: Know your escape routes.
I don't call a taxi. Instead, I walk to the side
of the road and look up and down it. The neighborhood is peaceful, if a
bit peculiar. Huge deciduous plants grow to either side, and the
vegetation gets wild and out of control near the boundaries of the
garden associated with our house. Hidden invertebrates make creaking,
grating noises like malfunctioning machinery. I try to remember the
direction the taxi took us in. That way. I turn left and walk along the side of the road, ready to jump out of the way if a taxi appears suddenly.
There are other houses along the road. They're
about the same size as mine, clumps of rectangular boxes with
glass-fronted openings in frames, sporting oddly tilted upper surfaces.
They're painted a variety of colors but look drab and faded, like dead
husks shed by enormous land-going arthropods. There's no sign of life
in any of them, and I guess they're probably just part of the scenery.
I've got no idea where Cass lives, and I wish I did. I could go and
visit her: For all I know she's in the next house along from me. But I
don't know, and directory services are only one of the netlink-mediated
facilities that are missing here, and Sam is right about one
thing—the ancients were incredibly territorial. If they can call
the public security forces and detain people simply for wearing the
wrong clothes in public, what might they do if I went into someone
else's house?
A couple of hundred meters along the road, I
come to a rise in the ground. The road continues on the level,
descending into a deep trench, finally diving into a dark tunnel in the
hillside. Looking up the sides I notice that something isn't quite
right about the trees. Gotcha, I think. This must be the edge
of a hab module. I can just barely imagine what's right beneath my
feet—complex machinery locked within a skin of structural
diamond, a cylinder kilometers long spinning in the void, orbiting in
the icy darkness. Emptiness for a few tens of millions of kilometers,
then a brown dwarf star little bigger than a gas giant planet, then
tens of trillions of kilometers more to the nearest other star system.
Scale is the first enemy.
I walk into the tunnel and see a bend ahead,
beyond which it gets very dark. This is disturbing—I didn't
notice it when I was in the back of the taxi, even though my attention
was being grabbed by every weird thing I saw. But if there's a T-gate
in here . . . Well, there's only one way to find out. I
keep my right hand in contact with the tunnel wall as it curves round
into darkness. I keep walking slowly ahead, and after maybe fifty
meters it begins to bend the other way. I pass another curve, then
there's light from the end of the tunnel, and I'm walking along a road
where the buildings to either side are distinctly different in shape
and size. There's a sign ahead that reads: WELCOME TO THE VILLAGE. (A village is a small community; a downtown is the commercial area of a village. At least, I think that's how it works.)
I've been doing my reading like a good citizen,
and there are several places I need to go shopping, starting with a
hardware store. The thing is, it seems to me that because these people
couldn't simply order any design patterns they needed out of an
assembler, they had to make things themselves from more primitive
components. This means "tools," and it's surprisingly easy to convert a
good basic toolkit into an arsenal of field-expedient weapons. I'm
probably safe in here as long as I don't disclose my identity, but
"probably" doesn't get you very far when the alternative is lethal, and
I'm already lying awake at night worrying about it.
I spend about half an hour in the hardware
store, during which time I discover that the operator zombies aren't
programmed to stop females buying axes, crowbars, spools of steel wire,
arc-welding rigs, subtractive volume renderers, or just about any other
tool I can see. The kit I go for costs quite a bit and is bulky and
very heavy, but they say they'll deliver and install them in our
"garage," an externally accessible sub-building that I haven't explored
yet. I thank them and add some billets of metal feedstock and some
lengths of spring steel to the order.
Walking out of the store with a basic workshop
on its way over to my house and an axe hidden in a workman's holster
under my coat, I feel a lot better about the outlook for the near-term
future. It's a bright, warm morning: small feathery dinosaurs are
issuing territorial calls from the deciduous plants between the
buildings, and for the first time since I arrived I am beginning to
feel as if I'm in control of my own destiny.
Which is when I run into Jen and Angel, walking
arm in arm along the sidewalk toward a rustic-looking building with a
sign above the door saying, YE OLDE COFFEE SHOPPE.
"Why, hello there!" Jen gushes, spreading her
arms to drag me into an embrace, while Angel stands back, smiling
faintly. I yield to Jen's hug stiffly, hoping she won't feel the
axe—but no such luck. "What's that you're wearing? And what have you got under your coat?" she demands.
"I've just been to the hardware store," I
explain, forcing myself to smile politely. "I was buying some tools for
Sam for the, the garden, and I didn't have room for them in my bag so
I'm carrying them in the shoulder pouch he asked me to get." The lies
flow easily the more I practice them. "How are you doing?
"Oh, we're doing really well!" Jen says expansively, letting go of me.
"We were just about to stop for a coffee," says Angel. "Would you like to join us?"
"Sure," I say. There doesn't seem to be any
polite way to say no. Plus, I haven't had any human contact except Sam
for the past hundred kilosecs, and I wouldn't mind a chance to pick
their brains. So I follow them into Ye Olde Coffee Shoppe, and we sit
down at a booth with shiny red vinyl seats and a bright white
polymer-topped table while the waitrons attend to our needs.
"So how are you settling in?" asks Angel. "We heard you had some trouble yesterday."
"Yes, darling." Jen smiles brilliantly as she
nods. She's wearing a bright yellow dress and some kind of hat that
vaguely resembles a ballistic shuttlecraft. She's applied some kind of
paint-powder to her face to exaggerate the color of her lips (red) and
eyelashes (black), and something she's used on her skin has left her
smelling like an explosion in a topiary. "I hope you're not going to
make a habit of it?"
"I'm sure she won't," Angel chides her. "It's
just a natural settling-in mistake. We can all expect to make a few,
can't we?" She glances sideways at the waitron: "A double chocolate
iced latte made with fair-trade beans and whipped cream, no sugar," she
snaps.
"I'll have the same," I manage to say just as Jen starts rambling about the
contents of the price board above the counter, changing her mind three
times before she reaches the end of every sentence. I study Angel while
I'm about it. Angel is wearing a jacket-and-skirt combination—a
"suit," they call it, though it doesn't look like the version permitted
to males—and while it's darker and drabber than Jen's outfit,
she's got some shiny lumps of metal stuck to her earlobes. I can see
it's meant to be jewelry, but it looks painful. "What's that on your
ears?" I ask.
"They're called earrings," Angel tells me.
"There's a salon up the road that'll pierce your ears, then you can
hang different pieces of jewelry from them. Once the hole heals," she
adds, with a slight wince. "They're still a little sore."
"Hang on, that's not glued onto your skin or properly installed? They shoved it through your ear rather than rebuilding your ear around it? And it's metal?"
"Yes," she says, giving me an odd look. I don't
know what to say to that, but luckily I don't have to because Jen
finishes ordering her cafe americano and turns back to focus on us.
"I'm so pleased we ran into you today, darling!"
She leans toward me confidingly. "I've been doing some research, and
we're not the only cohort here—in fact, all six will be meeting
at Church tomorrow, and we wouldn't want anyone to let the side down."
"I'm sorry?" I ask, taken aback.
"She means, we need to keep up appearances," Angel says, with another of those expressive looks that I can't decode.
"I don't understand."
A faint frown wrinkles the skin between Jen's eyebrows. "It's not just about yesterday,"
she emphasizes. "Everyone's entitled to their little mistakes. But it
turns out that in addition to our points being averaged within the
cohort, each cohort in the parish gets to talk about what they've
achieved in the preceding week, and the other cohorts rate them on
their behavior before voting to add or subtract bonus points."
"It's an iterated prisoner's dilemma scenario,
with collective liability," Angel cuts in, just as one of the operator
zombies twiddles a knob on a polished metal tank behind the bar that
makes a noise like a pressure leak. "Very elegant experimental design,
if you ask me."
"It's an—" Oh shit. I nod, guardedly, unsure how much I can reveal: "I think I see."
"Yes." Angel nods. "We're going to have to
defend your behavior yesterday, and the other groups can add points or
subtract them depending on whether they think we deserve it and on
whether they think we'll hold a grudge when it's their turn in the
ring."
"That's really devious!"
"Yes." Angel again.
Jen smiles. "Which is why, darling, you're not
going to show up the side by violating the dress code, and you'll be
suitably remorseful about whatever the silly incident yesterday was
about—no, I don't want to know all the sordid details—and
we'll do our bit by backing you up and trying to bury the whole matter
as deeply as we can under a pile of every other cohort's sins. Won't
we?" She glances at Angel. "We're the new group, we can expect to be
picked on. It's going to be bad enough with Cass, as it is."
"What's wrong with Cass?" I ask.
"She's not settling in," says Jen.
Angel looks as if she's about to open her mouth,
but Jen waves her hand dismissively. "If you've been getting any silly
phone calls from her, just ignore them. She's only doing it to get
attention, and she'll stop soon enough."
I stare at Jen. "She told me Mick's threatening to hurt her," I say. The zombie delivers the first of our coffee cups.
"So?" Jen stares right back at me, and there's a
cold core of steel behind her expression: "What business of ours is it?
What's between a wife and her husband is private, as long as it doesn't
threaten to drag our points down or get our whole cohort in trouble.
Apart from the other thing, of course."
"What other—"
Angel cuts in. "You get social points for
fucking," she says, her voice self-consciously neutral. Again, she
gives me that odd look. "I thought you'd have figured it out by now."
"For sex?" I must sound faintly scandalized, or shocked or something, because Jen's face relaxes into a mask of amusement.
"Only with your husband, darling." She sips her
coffee and looks at me calculatingly. "That's something else we've
noticed. I don't want to hurry you or anything,
but . . ."
"Who I fuck is none of your business," I say
flatly. My coffee arrives, but right now I'm not feeling thirsty. My
mouth tastes as dry and acrid as if I've just chewed half a kilogram of
raw caffeine. "I'll dress up for the Church meeting and say I'll be
good and do whatever else you want me to do in public. And I'll try not
to cost you any points. But." I tap the table in front of Jen's coffee
cup, insultingly close. "You will not, ever, tell me whom I may
associate with or what I will do with my chosen associates. Or with
whom I have sex." The silence grows icicles. I take an unwisely large
gulp of hot coffee and burn the roof of my mouth. "Do I make myself
clear?"
"Quite clear, darling." Jen's eyes glitter like splinters of frozen malice.
I make myself smile. "Now, shall we find something civilized to talk about while we drink our coffee and eat our pastries?"
"I think that would be a good idea," says Angel.
She looks slightly shaken. "After lunch, how about we buy you something
suitable to wear to Church?" She asks me. "Just in case. Meanwhile, I
was wondering if you've used your washing machine yet? It has some
interesting features . . ." And she's off into an
exploration of techniques for gaining points in the women's world,
generated by game theory and policed by mutual scorefile surveillance.
BY the end of
our lunch, I think I've got a handle on them. Angel means well but is
too calculatedly fearful for her own good. She's afraid of stepping out
of line, unwilling to jeopardize her score, and worried about what
people will think of her. This combination makes her an easy target for
Jen, who is flamboyant and aggressively extroverted on the outside, but
uses it to conceal an insecure need for approval, which leads her to
bully people until they give it to her. She's as ruthless as anyone I
can recall meeting since my memory surgery, and I've met some hardcases
around the clinic. The surgeon-confessors tend to attract such. (What's
even more disturbing is that I have faint ghost-recollections of
knowing similar people before, but with no details attached. Who they
were or what they meant to me has sunk into the abyss where memories go
when their owners no longer need them.)
The two of them, working by unspoken assent,
appoint themselves as my personal shopping assistants for the
afternoon. They're not crude about it, but they're very persistent and
make no real attempt to conceal their desire to modify my behavior
along lines compatible with their enhanced scorefiles.
After coffee and cakes (for which Angel pays),
they escort me to a series of establishments. In the first of these I
am subjected to the attentions of a hairstylist. Angel sits with me and
chats interminably about kitchen appliances while Jen goes off
somewhere to do something of her own, and the zombie immobilizes me and
applies a fearsome array of knives, combs, chemical reagents, and
compact machine tools to my head. Once I get out of the chair, I have
to admit that my hair's different—it's still long, but it's
several shades lighter, and whenever I turn my head it moves like a
solid lump of foamed plastic.
"Perhaps we should get you some clothing for
tomorrow," Jen says, smiling broadly. It's phrased as a suggestion, but
the way she says it makes it an order. They lead me through a series of
boutiques, where I am induced to present my credit card. She insists
that I try on the costume, and while I'm showing her how it looks,
Angel gets the store zombies to parcel up my stuff. I end up looking
like one of them, the ladies who lunch. "We're getting there," Jen
says, something almost like approval on her face. "You need a makeover,
though."
"A what?"
They just laugh at me. Probably just as well; if
they told me in advance, I'd try to escape. And, as I keep reminding
myself (with an increasing sense of dread), I'll have nearly a hundred
tendays—three years—in which to regret any mistakes I make
today.
THE lights are
turning red and sinking toward the tunnel at the edge of the world when
the taxi we're crammed into stops outside my house, and the door opens.
"Go on," says Angel, pushing my bag at me, "goand surprise him. He'll have had a long day and will need cheering up." I realize she's using the generic he—they don't care who he is, all they care about is the fact that he's my husband, and we can earn them points.
"Okay, I'm going, I'm going," I say, harassed. I
take the bag, and as I turn, something bites me on the leg. "Hey!" I
look round but the taxi is already pulling away. "Shit," I mumble. My
leg throbs. I reach down and feel something lumpy stuck in it. I pull
it out. It's some sort of lozenge with a needle coming out of one end. "Shit."
I stumble up the path in the new shoes they insisted I buy—the
heels are steeper and less comfortable than the first pair—and in
through the door. I dump the bags and head for the living room, where
the TV is on. Sam is lying in front of it, his eyes closed and his tie
loosened, and I feel a stab of compassion for him. The injection point
on my leg aches, a cold reminder.
"Sam. Wake up!" I shake his shoulder. "I need your help!"
"Whu—" He opens his eyes and looks at me.
"Reeve?" His pupils dilate visibly. I probably smell weird—Jen
and Angel tried half the contents of a scent bar on me, for no reason I
can fathom.
"Help." I sit down next to him and hike up my
skirt to show him the mark on my thigh. "Look." I hold up the ampoule
where he can see it. "They got me. What in seven shades of shit is
that stuff?" My crotch is unnaturally sensitive and I feel slightly
dizzy, worryingly relaxed and unstressed in view of what's just
happened.
"It's—" He blinks. "I don't know. Who did this to you?"
"Jen and Angel. They dropped me off from a taxi
and I think Angel got me with this thing as I left." I lick my lips.
I'm feeling distinctly odd. "What do you think? Poison?"
"Maybe not," he says, staring at me. Then he
picks up his tablet and pokes at it. "There," he says, holding it for
me. "Must be their idea of fun."
I thrust my hands between my thighs and clamp
them together, my eyes blurring as I read. My crotch is tingling. "It's
a—huh!" Fury washes over me. "The bitches!"
Sam shakes his head. "I've had a really tiring
day, but it sounds like you've had an exciting one. Coming home dressed
like a—and your friends, spiking you for sexual arousal." He
raises an eyebrow. "Why did they do that, do you suppose?" Sam can
remain analytical and composed in the most trying situations. I wish I
had half his grace under pressure.
"I—" I force myself to move my hands. "Bitches."
"What's going on, Reeve? Is the peer pressure really that compelling?" He sounds concerned, sympathetic.
"Yes." I grit my teeth. He's sitting too close
to me, but I don't want to risk moving. The drug is hitting me hard in
warm, tingly waves, and I'm afraid of leaving a damp patch on the sofa.
"It's the social points. We knew the points were shared with our
cohort, but there are extra compulsion mechanisms we didn't know about.
Jen and Angel told me about them, but I didn't . . .
shit. And then you can score points for . . . other
activities."
"What other activities?" he asks gently.
"Use your imagination!" I gasp, and bolt for the bathroom.
SAM knocks on
the bathroom door once, tentatively, as I'm lying in the bottom of the
shower cubicle in a daze of lust, letting waves of hot water sluice
over me like a tropical storm—Since when do I know what a tropical storm on Urth felt like?—and
trying to feel clean. Part of me wants to invite him in, but I manage
to bite my lip and stay silent. I guess I can cross Jen and Angel off
my list of possible assassins, but I find myself fantasizing in the
shower, fantasizing about getting them alone and the myriad revenges
I'll take. I know these are just fantasies—you can't kill
somebody more than once in this place, and once you've killed them,
they're out of reach—but something in me wants to make them hurt,
and not just because they've destroyed any chance of my ever having
honest sex with this curiously introverted, thoughtful, bear of a
husband I've acquired. So I work my arms to exhaustion on the weight
machine down in the basement, then go to bed alone and uneasy.
Sunday dawns bright and hot. I reluctantly put
on the dress Jen and Angel made me buy and go to meet Sam downstairs. I
have no pockets, don't know if I'm allowed to carry a bag, and I feel
very unsafe without even a utility knife. Sam's wearing a black suit,
white shirt, black tie.Very monochrome. He looks solid, but going by his face he feels as unsure of himself as I am. "Ready?" I ask.
He nods. "I'll call the taxi."
The Parish Church is a big stone building some
distance away from where we live. There's a tower at one end, as sharp
and axisymmetrical as a relativistic impactor (if warships were made of
stone and had holes drilled in their dorsal end with huge parabolic
chimes hanging inside). The bells are ringing loudly, and the car park
is filling with taxis and males and females dressed in period costume
as we arrive. I see a few faces I know, Jen's among them. But I find I
don't recognize most of the people in the crowd as we wait outside, and
I hang on to Sam's arm for fear of losing him.
Internally, the Church contains of a single
room, with a platform at one end and rows of benches carved from dead
trees facing it. There's an altar on the platform, with a long naked
blade lying atop it beside a large gold chalice. We file in and sit
down. As soft music plays, a procession walks up the aisle from the
rear of the building. There are three males, physically aged but not
yet senescent, wearing distinctive robes covered in metallic thread.
They climb the platform and take up set positions. Then the one at the
front and right begins to speak, and I realize with a start that he's
Major-Doctor Fiore.
"Dear congregants, we are gathered here today to
remember those who have gone before us. Frozen faces carved in stone,
the frozen faces of multitudes." He pauses, and everyone around us
repeats his words back to him, a low rumbling echo that seems to go on
and on forever.
Fiore continues to recite gibberish in
portentous tones at an increasing pace. Every sentence or two he stops,
and the congregation repeats his words back to him. I hope it's
gibberish—some of it is not only baffling but vaguely menacing,
references to being judged after our deaths, punishment for sins,
rewards for obedience. I glance sideways but quickly realize everybody
else is watching him. I mouth the words but feel deeply uneasy about
it. Some folks seem to be getting worked up, shouting the responses.
Next, a zombie in an alcove strikes up a turgid
melody on some sort of primitive music machine, and Fiore tells us to
turn the paper books in front of us to a set page. People begin singing
the words there, and clapping in time, and they don't make any sense
either. The name "Christian" features in it repeatedly, but not in any
context I understand. And the message of the sing-along is distinctly
sinister, all about submission and conformity and reward feedback
loops. It's as if I've got some sort of deep-rooted reflex that refuses
to let me absorb propaganda uncritically: I end up reading the book
with a frown on my face.
After half an hour or so, Fiore signals the
zombie to stop playing. "Dearly beloved," he says, his tone unctuous
and confiding. He leans forward on the lectern, searching our faces. "Dearly beloved." I add my own sarcastic mental commentary to the proceedings—Too dear for you to afford,
I footnote him. "Today I would like you all to extend a warm welcome to
our newest members, cohort six. We are a loving Church, and it behooves
us"—He actually used the word "behooves," he actually said that!—"to
gather them to our breast and welcome them fully into our family." He
smiles ecstatically and clutches the lectern as if a zombie catamite
hidden behind it is sucking his cock. "Please welcome our newest
members, Chris, El, Sam, Fer, and Mick, and their wives Jen, Angel,
Reeve, Alice, and Cass."
Everyone around me—except Sam, who looks
as confused as I feel—suddenly starts smacking their hands
together in front of them. It's some kind of welcoming ritual, I guess,
and the noise is surprisingly loud. Sam catches my eye and begins to
clap, tentatively, but then Fiore holds up a hand and everybody stops.
"My children," he says, gazing down at us
fondly, "our new brethren have only been here for three days. In that
time, they have had much to learn and see and do, and some of them have
made mistakes. To err is human, and to forgive is also human. It is
ours to forgive and to pardon. To pardon, for example, Mrs. Alice
Sheldon of number six, for her difficulty with plumbing. Or to Mrs.
Reeve Brown of number six, for her unfortunate public display of nudity
the other day. Or to—"
He's drowned out by laughter. I look round and
see that suddenly people are laughing at me and pointing. I feel a rush
of embarrassment and anger. How dare he do this? But it's intimidating, too. There must be fifty people here, and some of them are staring as if they're trying to figure
out what I look like without any clothes on. If I was me, if I was in
my own self-selected body, I'd call him out on the spot—but I'm
not. In the sick pit of my stomach I realize that they're never going
to forget that I've been singled out, and that this makes me a target.
After all, that's how peer pressure works, isn't it? That's what this
is about. The experimenters can't expect to generate a workable dark
ages society in just three years by dumping a bunch of convalescents in
orthohuman bodies into the polity and letting them wander around. They
need a social mechanism to make us require conformity of one other, and
the best way to do that is to provide a mechanism to make us punish our
own deviants—
"—Or to forgive Cass, for her tendency to oversleep. Such as today, when she seems to have forgotten to come to Church."
They're not looking at me anymore, but they're
muttering, and there's a dark undercurrent of disapproval at work. I
catch Sam's eye, and he looks frightened. He reaches out sideways, and
I grab his hand and cling to it as if I'm drowning.
"I urge you all to give your sympathies to Mick,
her husband, who has to support such a slothful wife, and to help her
out when next you see her." And now I can follow everybody's gaze to
Mick. He's short and wiry and has a big, sharp nose and dark, brooding
eyes. He looks angry and defensive, for good reason. The bruising
weight of a five-point infraction has left me feeling weak in the knees
and frightened, and now he's getting it as a proxy for his wife's
failure to get up in the morning—
Failure to get up in the morning? I feel like yelling at Fiore: It's an excuse, idiot, an excuse for not being seen in public!
Fiore moves on to discuss other people, other
cohorts, stuff that's meaningless to me right now. My netlink comes up,
insisting I vote on whether to add or subtract points to each of the
other cohorts, with a list of sins and achievements tallied against
each name. I don't vote for any of them. In the end our own cohort gets
dumped on unanimously by the voters of the five older ones. We all lose
a couple of points, signaled by the tolling of a sullen iron bell
hanging in an archway near the back of the Church. Fiore signals the
zombie to strike up the organ and leads us in another meaningless song,
then it's the end of the service. But I can't run away and hide just
yet because the auto-da-fé is followed by a social reception in
honor of the new cohort, so we can smile brittle smiles and eat
canapés under the magnolia trees while they politely sneer at us.
There are tables laid out in the ornamental
garden called a graveyard that backs onto the Church. They're covered
with white cloths and stacked with glasses of wine. We're led outside
and left to fend for ourselves. Taxis don't run on Sunday during Church
services. I find myself standing stiffly with my back as close to the
churchyard wall as I can get, clutching a wineglass with one hand and
Sam with the other. My shoes are pinching, and my face feels set in a
permanent grimace.
"Reeve! And Sam!" It's Jen, dragging along Angel
and their husbands, Chris and El, in her undertow. She looks a little
less ebullient than she was yesterday, and I can guess why.
"We didn't do so well," El grunts. He spares me
a lingering glance that hits me like a punch in the guts. It's really
creepy. I know exactly what he's thinking, just not why he's thinking
it. Is it because he thinks I cost him his points or because he's
trying to imagine me with no clothes on?
"We could have done worse," says Jen, her words clipped and harsh-sounding. She's strangling her handbag in a death grip.
"On the outside." I take a deep breath. "I'd challenge Fiore if he made a crack like that at me in public."
"But you're not on the outside, darling," Jen
points out. She smiles at Sam. "Is she like this at home, or only when
she's got an audience?"
I am close, very close, to throwing the
contents of my wineglass in her face and demanding satisfaction just to
see if she'll crack, but my butterfly mind sees a distraction sneaking
furtively past behind her—it's Mick. So instead of doing
something stupid I do something downright foolhardy and march right
over to him.
"Hello, Mick," I say brightly.
He jumps and glares at me. He's tense, wound up like a spring, positively fizzing. "Yes? What do you want?" he demands.
"Oh, nothing." I smile and inspect his face. "I just wanted to sympathize
with you, having a wife who doesn't get up in the morning for Church.
That's downright inconvenient. Will I see her here next week?"
"Yes," he grates. He's holding his hands stiffly by his sides, and they're clenched into fists.
"Oh, good! How marvelous. Listen, you don't mind
me visiting to see her this afternoon, do you? We've got a lot to talk
about, and I thought she'd—"
"No." He glares at me. "You're not seeing the bitch. Not today, or—whenever. Go away. Whore."
I'm not sure what the word means, but I get the
general picture. "Okay, I'm going," I say tensely. If I'd had a few
more days with the bench press and the weights, things might be
difficult: But not right now. Not yet.
I turn and walk back over to Sam. He doesn't say
anything when I lean against him, which is just as well because I don't
trust myself to be tactful, especially not while we're in public, and I
can't escape. My heart's pounding, and I feel sick with suppressed
anger and shame. Cass is being treated as a virtual prisoner by her
husband. I'm being publicly ridiculed and making enemies just for
trying to maintain my sense of identity. This whole polity is rigged to
try to make us betray our friends . . . but somewhere
out there, people are looking for me with murder in mind. And if I
don't keep a low profile, sooner or later they'll find me.
AFTER Church we
go home. Sam doesn't have to work on Sunday, so he watches television.
I go and explore the garage. It's a flimsy structure off to one side of
the house, with a big pair of doors in front. There's a workbench, and
the hardware shop zombies have already installed all the stuff I bought
yesterday. I spend a while tinkering with the drill press and reading
the manual for the arc-welding apparatus. Then I go and work out on the
exercise device in the basement, grimly pretending that it's a torture
machine for transferring physical stress to the bones of a human victim
and that Jen's on the receiving end of it. After I've squished her into
a bloody lump the size of a shopping bag, I feel drained but happier
and ready to tackle difficult tasks. So I go looking for Sam.
He's in the living room, staring blankly at the
TV screen with the volume turned off. I sit down next to him, and he
barely notices. "What's wrong?" I ask.
"I'm—" He shakes his head, mute and miserable.
I reach for his hand but he pulls it away. "Is it me?" I ask.
"No."
I reach for his hand again, grab it, and hang on. He doesn't pull away this time, but he seems to be tense.
"What is it, then?"
For a while I think he isn't going to say anything, but then, just as I'm about to try again, he sighs. "It's me."
"It's—what?"
"Me. I shouldn't be here."
"What?" I look around. "In the living room?"
"No, in this polity," he says. Now I get it,
it's not anger—it's depression. When he's down, Sam clams up and
wallows in it instead of taking it out on his surroundings.
"Explain. Try and convince me." I shuffle closer
to him, keeping hold of his hand. "Pretend I'm one of the
experimenters, and you're looking to justify an early termination,
okay?"
"I'm—" He looks at me oddly. "We're not
supposed to talk about who we were before the experiment. It doesn't
aid enculturation, and it's probably going to get in the way."
"But I—" I stop. "Okay, how about you tell
me," I say slowly. "I won't tell anyone." I look him in the eye. "We're
supposed to be a monadic couple. There aren't any negative-sum game
plays between couples in this society, are there?"
"I don't know." He sniffs. "You might talk."
"Who to?"
"Your friend Cass."
"Bullshit!" I punch him lightly on the arm. "Look, if I promise I won't tell?"
He looks at me thoughtfully. "Promise."
"Okay, I promise." I pause. "So what's wrong?"
His shoulders are hunched. "I've just come out
of memory surgery," he says slowly. "I think that's where Fiore and
Yourdon and their crowd found most of us, by the way. A redaction
clinic must be a great place to find experimental subjects who're
healthy but who've forgotten everything they knew. People who've come
adrift from the patterns of life, and who have minimal social
connections. People with active close ties don't go in for memory
surgery, do they?"
"Not often, I don't think," I say, vaguely
disturbed by a recollection of military officers briefing me: trouble
in another life, urgent plotting against an evil contingency.
"Not unless they're trying to hide something from themselves."
I manage to fake up an amused laugh for him. "I don't think that's very likely. Do you?"
"I'd . . . well. I'm pretty
narrowly channeled emotionally. Narrow, but deep. I had a family. And
it all went wrong, for reasons I can't deal with now, reasons I could
have done something about, maybe. Or maybe not. Whatever, that's the
bare outline of what I remember. The rest is all third-person
sketching, reconstructed memory implants to replace whatever it meant
to me. Because, I'm not exaggerating, it burned me out. If I hadn't
undergone memory redaction, I'd probably have become suicidal. I have a
tendency toward reactive depression, and I'd just lost everything that
meant anything to me."
I hold his hand, not daring to move, suddenly
wondering what kind of emotional time bomb I casually selected over the
cheese and wine table half a week ago.
After about a minute, he sighs again. "It's
over. They're in the past, and I don't remember it too clearly. I
didn't have the full surgery, just enough to add a layer of fuzz so
that I could build a new life for myself." He looks at me. "Do you
know?"
Know what? I think, feeling panicky. Then I understand what he's asking.
"I had memory surgery, too," I say slowly, "but
it wasn't for the first time. And it was thorough. I've—" I
swallow. "I had to read an autobiography I wrote for myself." And did I
lie when I was writing it? Did that other me tell the truth, or was he
spinning a pretty tapestry of lies for the stranger he was due to
become in the future? "It said I was mated once, long-term. Three
partners, six children, it lasted over a gigasec." I feel shaky as I
consider the next part. "I don't remember their faces. Any of them."
In truth I don't remember any of it. It
might as well have happened to someone else. According to my
autobiography it did. The whole thing ended more than four gigasecs
ago—over a hundred and twenty years—and I went through my
first memory reset early in the aftermath, and a much more thorough one
recently. For more than thirty years those three mates and six children
meant more to me than, well, anything. But all they are today is
background color to the narrative of my life, like dry briefing
documents setting up a prefabricated history for a sleeper agent about
to be injected into a foreign polity.
Sam holds my hand. "I had surgery to deal with
the pain," he says. "And I came out of surgery, and I found I probably
didn't need it in the first place. Pain is a stimulus, a signal that
the organism needs to take some kind of evasive action, isn't it? I
don't mean the chronic pain caused by nerve damage, but ordinary pain.
And emotional pain. You need to do something about it, not avoid it.
Afterward, it was distant, but I felt empty. Only half-human. And I
wasn't sure who I was, either."
I stroke his hand. "Was it the dissociative psychopathology?" I ask. "Or something deeper?"
"Deeper." He sounds absent. "I had such a void
that I—well, I made the mistake of falling in love again. Too
soon, with somebody who was brilliant and fast and witty and probably
completely crazy. And they asked me about the experiment while I was
miserable, trying to figure out whether I really was in love or
was just fooling myself. We discussed the experiment, but I don't think
they were too keen on the idea. And in the end it all got too much for
me: I signed up, backed myself up, and woke up in here." He looks at me
unhappily. "I made a mistake."
"What?" I stare at him, not sure what to make of this.
"It's not that I don't like sex," he says
apologetically, "but I'm in love with someone else. And I'm not going
to see them until—" He shakes his head. "Well, there it is. You
must think I'm a real idiot."
"No." What I think is, I really have to rescue
Cass, Kay, from that scumsucker who's got her locked up. "I don't think
you're an idiot, Sam," I hear myself telling him. I lean sideways and
kiss him on the cheek in friendly intimacy. He starts, but he doesn't
try to push me away. "I just wish we weren't this messed up."
"Me too," he says sadly. "Me too." I lean
against him for a while, words seeming redundant at this point. Then,
because I'm becoming uncomfortably aware of his body, I get up and head
back out to the garage. There's still daylight, and I've got an idea or
two in my head that I'd like to work on. If it turns out I have to
rescue Kay from Mick and he's violent, I want to be properly equipped.
ON Monday Sam
goes to work. And the next day, and the one after that—every day
of every week, except Sunday. He's being trained as a legal secretary,
which sounds a lot more interesting than it is, although he's getting a
handle on the laws and customs of the ancients—some big legal
databases survived the dark ages almost untouched, and City Hall has to
process a lot of paperwork. One result is that he wears the same dark
suits every day, except at home, where it turns out to be okay for him
to wear jeans and open-necked shirts.
I begin to get used to him leaving most days,
and settle into a routine. I get up in the morning and make coffee for
us both. After Sam heads for work I go down to the cellar and work out
until I'm covered in sweat and my arms are creaking. Then I have
another coffee, go outside, and run the length of the road between the
two tunnels several times—at first I make it six lengths, as it's
half a kilometer, but I begin to increase it after Tuesday. When I'm
staggering with near exhaustion, I go back home and have a shower,
another cup of coffee, and either put on something respectable if I'm
heading downtown or something disrespectable if I'm going to work in
the garage.
There are other unpleasantnesses, of course.
About two weeks into our residence, I wake up in the middle of the
night with an unpleasant belly cramp. The next morning I'm disgusted to
discover that I'm bleeding. I'd heard of menstruation, of
course, but I hadn't expected the YFH-Polity designers to be crazy
enough to reintroduce it. Most other female mammals simply reabsorb
their endometria, why should dark ages humans have to be different? I
clean up after myself as well as I can, then find I'm still leaking.
It's a miserable time, but when I break down and phone Angel to ask if
there's any way of stopping it, she just suggests I go to the drugstore
and look for feminine hygiene supplies.
Supplies come from the stores in the downtown
zone. I get to shop a couple of times a week. Food comes in prepacked
meal containers or as raw ingredients, but I'm a lousy cook and a slow
learner so I tend to avoid the latter. This week I pull my routine
forward—like, urgently—because feminine hygiene means the
drugstore, where they sell pads to wear inside your underwear. The
whole business is revolting. What's going to happen next? Are they
going to inflict leprosy on us? I grit my teeth and resolve to buy more
underwear. And pain medication, which comes in small bitter-tasting
disks that you have to swallow and which don't work very well.
Clothing I've more or less sorted out. I've
taken to asking Angel or sometimes Alice to choose stuff for my public
appearances. This insures me against making a wrong choice and getting
on anyone's shit-list. Jen points out that I've got lousy fashion
taste, an accusation that might actually carry some weight if there
were enough of us in this snow globe of a universe to actually have
fashions, rather than simply being on the receiving end of a
fragmentary historical clothing database that's advancing through the
old-style 1950s at a rate of one planetary year per two tendays.
Other supplies . . . I haunt the
hardware shop. Sam probably thinks I'm spending all the money he's
earning on makeovers and hairdos or something, but the truth is, I'm
looking to my survival. If and when the assassins find me, I'm
determined they're going to have a fight on their hands. I don't think
he's even looked in the garage once since we moved in. If he had, he'd
probably have noticed the drill press, welding kit, and the bits of
metal and wood and nails and glue and the workbench. And the textbooks:
The Crossbow, Medieval and Modern, Military and Sporting, Its Construction History and Management. It's funny what's survived.
Currently I'm reading a big fat volume called The Swordsmith's Assistant.
There's method in my madness. While there's no obvious way I can get my
hands on a blaster or other modern weaponry, and I'm not suicidal
enough to play with explosives inside a pressurized hab without knowing
its physical topology, it occurs to me that you can still raise an
awful lot of mayhem with the toys you can build in a dark age machine
shop. My main headache with the crossbow, in fact, is going to be
knowing the axis of rotation in each sector, so that I can correct myaim for Coriolis force. Which is where the plumb bob and the laser distance meter come in.
In public, I'm working hard at being a different person. I don't want anyone to figure out that I'm building an arsenal.
The ladies of our cohort—which means Jen,
Angel, me, and Alice, because Cass still isn't allowed out in public by
her husband—meet up for lunch three times a week. I don't ask
after Cass because I don't want Jen to get the idea that I'm interested
in her. She'd peg it as a weakness and try to figure out how to exploit
it. I don't want her to get any kind of handle of me, so I dress up and
meet them at a restaurant or cafe, and smile and listen politely as
they discuss what their husbands are doing or the latest gossip about
their neighbors. The nine other houses on my road are standing vacant,
waiting for the next cohorts of test subjects to arrive, but that's
unusual—I gather the others live near to people from other
cohorts, and there's a rich sea of gossip lapping around the tide pools
of suburban anomie.
"I think we can make some mileage against cohort
three," Jen says one day, over a Spanish omelet dusted with paprika.
She sounds cunning.
"You do?" Angel asks anxiously.
"Yes." Jen looks smug.
"Do tell." Alice puts her fork down in the
wreckage of her Caesar salad. She's trying to look interested, but she
can't fool me. Jen casts her a sharp look, then stabs her omelet.
"Esther and Mal live at the other end of
Lakeside View from me and Chris." A piece of omelet quivers on the end
of her fork, impaled for our attention. Jen chews reflectively. "I've
noticed Esther watching me from their garden, some mornings. So I
called a taxi to go shopping, then had it circle round and drop me off
just beyond the tunnel at the other end of the road. Funny who you see
in the area." She smiles, exposing perfect raptor-sharp teeth.
"Who?" asks Alice, obliging her with an audience.
"She goes in, and about ten minutes later Phil
turns up by taxi. He sends it away and rings the doorbell. Leaves an
hour or two later."
Angel tut-tuts disapprovingly. Alice just looks faintly disgusted.
"Don't you see?" asks Jen. "It's not public.
That gives us leverage." She spears a broccoli stem, dismembers it a
branch at a time, tearing with her teeth. "There's a word for it.
Adultery. It's not negatively scored as such, as long as it's secret.
But if it comes out—"
"We know," Angel interrupts. "So why—"
"Because we're not part of cohort three. Esther
and Mal and Phil are all in cohort three. The, ah, peer pressure has to
be applied by your peers. So this gives us leverage over Esther and
Phil. If we tell Mal, they lose points big-time."
"I don't feel so good," I say, putting my knife down and pushing my chair back from the table. "Need some fresh air."
"Was it something I said?" asks Jen, casually concerned.
I'm getting better at lying with a straight
face. I don't think I used to be good at it, but spending too much time
around Jen is giving me a crash course in mendacity. "Nothing to do
with you—must be something I ate," I say as I stand up.
I'm trying not to stand out, trying not to
offend Jen or the others, and trying not to look eccentric in public,
but there are limits to what I will put up with. Being tacitly enlisted
in a conspiracy to blackmail is too much. I'll have to smile at them
tomorrow or the day after, but right now I want to be alone. So I go
outside, where a gentle breeze is blowing, and I walk to the end of the
block and cross the road. There's very little traffic (none of us real
humans drive vehicles—it's far too dangerous), and the zombies
are configured to give right of way to pedestrians, so I manage to get
into the park reasonably fast.
The park is a semidomesticated biome. The grass
is neatly trimmed, the large deciduous plants are carefully pruned, and
the small stream of water that meanders through it is tamed and can be
crossed by numerous footbridges. It has the big advantage that at this
time of day it's nearly empty, except for the zombie groundsman and
perhaps a couple of wives with nothing better to do with their time. I
walk along the stone path that leads from the edge of the downtown
block toward the small coppice on the edge of the boating lake.
I gradually calm down as I near the side of the
lake. It's simulating a sunny day with a little high cloud and a lazy
breeze, just occasionally getting up enough speed to cool my skin
through my costume. Apart from the incessant machinelike twitter of the
fist-sized dinosaurs in the trees, it's quite peaceful. Sometimes I can
almost bring myself to forget the perpetual simmering sense of anger
and humiliation that Jen seems to thrive on inducing in the rest of us.
However much I try to, I can't put myself in
their shoes. It's as if they don't realize that you can game the system
by ignoring it, by refusing to participate, as well as by going along
with the overt rewards and punishments. They've all unconsciously
decided to obey the arbitrary pressure toward gender partitioning, and
they won't be content unless everyone else conforms and competes for
the same rewards. Was it like this for real dark ages females, created
as random victims of genetic determinism rather than volunteers in an
experiment enforced by explicit rewards and penalties? If so, I'm
lucky: I've only got another three years of it.
Being a wife is a lonely business. Sam and I
lead largely independent lives. He goes to work in the morning, and I
only see him in the evenings, when he's tired, or on Sundays. On
Sundays we go to Church, bound together by our mutual fear of being
singled out for opprobrium, and afterward we go home together and try
to remind each other that the score whores—who slavishly chase
after every hint of right behavior that Fiore drops—are not the
most intelligent or reasonable people. We have an uphill struggle at
times.
It's a shame Sam's a male, and a shame that the
internal dynamics of this compressed community have set up this
artificial barrier between us. I have a feeling that if we weren't
under so much external pressure, I could get to like him.
And then there's Cass, who was at Church last Sunday.
We live in a really small, tightly constrained
and controlled synthetic world, and there are some aspects of the way
it's organized that make its artificiality glaringly obvious. For
example, we don't have fashions, not in the sense of spontaneous design
creativity that spawns waves of imitation and recomplication.
(Creativity is a scarce resource at the best of times, and with barely
a hundred of us living here so far, there just isn't enough to go
round.) What we do have is a strangely frenetic ersatz fashion
industry, in the form of whatever's in the shops. Somewhere there's a
surviving catalogue of styles from the dark ages, probably compiled
from a museum, and the shops change their contents regularly,
compelling us to buy new stuff every few cycles or fall out of date.
(It's another conformity-promoting measure: forget to update your
wardrobe contents, leave yourself open to criticism.) This month hats
are in fashion, ridiculous confections with wide brims and net veils
that shadow the face. I can cope with hats, although I don't like the
brims or the veils—I keep catching them on things, and they get
in the way.
But let me get back to Cass, the subject of my hopes and worries . . .
I'm standing beside Sam as usual, holding the
hymnbook and moving my lips, letting my eyes rove around the other side
of the aisle. A new cohort arrived last week and the Church is
packed—they'll have to extend it soon. I'm trying to pick out the
newcomers because I don't want to get them mixed up with the older
cohorts. Maybe it's a bit of Jen's calculated cynicism rubbing off on
me, but I'm learning to guess someone's degree of alienation by how
long they've been around. I have a feeling I might be able to make some
allies among the new intake as long as I look for them early in the
conditioning cycle, before the score whores get their claws in.
For some reason Mick is sitting
with—standing among—the new folks this week, and I
automatically glance at the woman to his left. I do a double take.
She's wearing a long-sleeved blue dress with a high collar, and a hat
with a black veil that covers her face. She's got lots of makeup
smeared around her eyes. Her mouth is a red slash, and her cheeks are
colorless. But it's definitely Cass, and she's holding the hymnbook as
if she's never seen one before.
Is that you, Kay? I wonder,
tantalized by her presence. I've been holding on to that promise Kay
extracted from me—"You'll look for me inside, won't you?" And
Cass . . . she knows ice ghoul society. If Mick wasn't so crazy with jealousy that he doesn't want her out in public, if—
Sam nudges me discreetly in the ribs. People are
closing their hymnbooks and sitting down. I hastily follow suit. (Don't
want anyone to notice me, don't want to attract unwanted attention.)
"Dearly beloved," drones Fiore, "we are a loving
congregation, and today we welcome to our bosom the new cohort of
Eddie, Pat, Jon"—and he names seven other fresh
victims—"who I am sure you will take under your wings and strive
to befriend in due course. We also offer a belated welcome to
sleepyhead Cass, who has finally deigned to grace us with her fragrant
presence . . ." He twitters on in like vein for some
time, preaching a sermon of saccharine subordination illustrated
periodically with some anecdote of misdoing. Vern, it seems, got
falling-down drunk and vomited in Main Street two nights ago, while
Erica and Kate had a stand-up fight so violent that it put Erica in
hospital, along with Greg and Brook, who tried to pull Kate off her.
Kate is now in prison, paying the price for her outburst in days on
bread and nights on water, and by the time Fiore gets through
excoriating her, there's an angry undercurrent of disapproval in the
congregation. I glance sidelong at Cass, trying not to be too obtrusive
about it. I can't make out her face—the veil shadows her
expression effectively—but I'm pretty sure that if I could see
her, she'd look frightened. Her shoulders are set, defensive, and she's
hunched slightly away from Mick.
Once we go outside into the open air, I grab a
glass of wine and down it rapidly, keeping close to Sam. Sam watches
me, worried. "Something wrong?"
"Yes. No. I'm not sure." There are butterflies
in my stomach. Cass is the most isolated of the wives in Cohort Four,
the one who hasn't been allowed out anywhere—and could Sam stop
me doing anything if I felt like it? Mick is poison, not the subtle
social toxin of a Jen, but the forthright venom of a stinging insect,
brutal and direct. "There's something I want to check out. I'll be back
in a few minutes, okay?"
"Reeve—take care?"
I meet his eyes. He's concerned! I realize. Abashed, I nod, then slide away toward the front of the Church and the main entrance.
Mick is talking to a little knot of hard-looking
men, wiry muscles and close-cropped hair—guys I see digging or
operating incredibly noisy machinery, chewing up the roads then filling
them in again—he's gesticulating wildly. A couple of the Church
attendants stand nearby, and there're a couple of women waiting in the
doorway. I sidle toward the front door and go inside. The Church has
emptied out, and there's only one person still there, loitering near
the back pew.
"Kay? Cass?" I ask.
She looks at me. "R-Reeve?"
It's dark, and I can't be sure but there's
something about her heavy eye shadow that makes me think of bruising.
Her dress would effectively conceal signs of violence if Mick's been
beating her. "Are you all right?" I ask.
Her eyes turn toward the entrance. "No," she
whispers. "Listen, he's—don't get involved. All right? I don't
need your help. Stay away from me." Her voice quavers with a fine edge
of fear.
"I promised I'd look for you in here," I say.
"Don't." She shakes her head. "He'll kill me, do you realize that? If he thinks I've been talking to anyone—"
"But we can protect you! All you have to do is ask, and we'll get you out of there and keep him away from you."
I might as well not have bothered talking to
her: she shakes her head and backs toward the door, her shoes clacking
on the stone floor. Behind the veil, her face isn't simply frightened,
it's terrified. And the white powder on her cheek isn't quite enough to
conceal the ivory stain of old bruising.
Mick is waiting outside. If he sees me emerging
after Cass, he'll probably go nuts. And I'm beginning to wonder if I'm
right about her. When I called her Kay, she showed no sign of
recognition. But would she? Kay is an alias, after all, and with her
being just out of memory surgery, and me not being Robin but Reeve in
this hall of mirrors—if after these tendays someone called me
Robin, would I realize they were talking to me at first?
I glance around frustratedly, wondering if
there's a back exit. I'm alone in the Church nave. It's not my favorite
place, you understand, but right now it lacks the almost palpable sense
of hostility it exudes when we're all herded together in our Sunday
best, wondering who's going to be today's sacrificial victim. Waiting
for Mick to lose interest and leave, I walk around the front of the big
room, trying to get a new perspective on things.
I've never been forward of the pews before. What does Fiore keep in his lectern? I wonder, walking toward the altar. The lectern, seen from
behind, is quite disappointing—it's just a slab of carved wood
with a shelf set in it. There are a couple of paper books filed there,
but no robocatamite to account for Fiore's peculiar mannerisms. The
altar is also pretty boring. It's a slab of smoothly polished stone,
carved into neatly rectilinear lines. The symbols of the faith, the
sword and the chalice, sit atop a metal rack in the middle of the
purple-dyed cloth that covers the stone. I look closer, intrigued by
the sword. It's an odd-looking thing. The blade is dead straight, with
a totally squared-off tip, and it's about a centimeter thick. With no
edge on it and no taper it looks more like a mirror-polished billet of
steel than a blade. It's got a basket hilt and a gray, roughened grip,
suggesting a functional design rather than a decorative one. Something
nags at me, an insistent phantom memory stump itching where a real one
has been amputated. I'm certain I've seen a sword like this before.
There are faint rectangular grooves in the outer surface of the basket,
as if something has been removed. And the flat "edge" of the blade
isn't quite right—it shines with the luster of fine steel, but
there's also a faint rainbow sheen, a diffractive speckling at the edge
of my gaze.
I break out in a cold sweat. My blouse feels
like ice against the chill of my skin as I straighten up and hastily
head for the small door that's visible on this side of the organist's
bench. I don't want to be caught here, not now! Someone is having a
little joke with us, and I feel sick to my heart at the thought that it
might be Fiore, or his boss, Yourdon the Bishop. They're playing
with us, and this is the proof. Who can I tell? Most people here
wouldn't understand, and those that did—we've got no way out, not
unless the experimenters agree to release us early. But the exit leads
straight back into the clinics of the hospitaler-confessors, and I have
a horrible gut-deep feeling that they're involved in this. Certainly
they're implicated.
I've got to get out of here, I
realize, aghast. The thing is, I've seen swords like that before.
Vorpal blades, they call them, I'm not sure why. This one's obviously
decommissioned, but how did it get here? They don't rely on the edge or
point to cut, that's not what they're for. They belonged to, to—Who did they belong to? I rack my brains, trying to find the source of this terrible conviction that I stand in the presence of something
utterly evil, something that doesn't belong in any experimental polity,
a stink of livid corruption. But my treacherous memory lets me down
again, and as I batter myself against the closed door of my own
history, I walk back into the light outside, blinking and wondering if
I might be wrong after all. Wrong about Cass being Kay. Wrong about
Mick being violent. Wrong about the sword and the chalice. Wrong about
who and what I am . . .
TIME passes
glacially slowly. I don't say anything to Sam about the events in
Church, not about Cass's black eye nor the Vorpal blade on the Church
altar. Sam is comfortable to live with, happy to listen to my
depressive chatter about the women's world, but there's always the worm
of worry gnawing at the back of my mind: Can I trust him? I
want to, but I can't be sure he isn't one of my pursuers. It's a
horrible dilemma, the risk/trust trade-off. So I don't talk about what
I do in the garage, or on the basement exercise machine, and he doesn't
volunteer much information about what he does at work. A couple of the
ladies who lunch are talking about organizing dinner parties, but if we
invited ourselves into that kind of social circle they'd expect us to
reciprocate and the stress would be—well, I don't think either of
us is up to it. So we live our lonely lives in each other's back
pockets, and I worry about Cass, and Sam reads a lot and watches TV,
trying to understand the ancients.
When we get home after the abortive meeting in
Church, I use my netlink to check our group's public points. Jen is
leading on social connectedness, while Alice is second on that
score—her helping me with clothes seems to be good for her. To my
surprise I see that I'm at the bottom of the cohort. There's an
activity breakdown and it looks like everyone else is having sex with
their partner: Forming stable relationships is a good way to jack up
your score, easy points. I backtrack a week or two and see that Cass is
regularly active with Mick.
For some reason I find this unaccountably depressing. The others are watching, and I'm supposed
to be involved with Sam, and I don't want to do anything that might
give Jen any sense of satisfaction whatsoever. It's an immature
attitude, but I'm really conscious of the fact that they're keeping an
eye on my score, waiting for me to surrender. Waiting for me to give
Sam what they think he ought to want. Too bad they don't really know us.
ABOUT two weeks
later I finally reach the end of my tether. It's a hot, tiresome
Tuesday evening. I've spent the morning exercising outdoors—there
are still no neighbors, although a couple of families are due to move
in when the next cohort arrives in a couple of weeks' time—and
then worked in the garage all afternoon. I'm trying to relearn welding
the hard way, and I'm lucky not to have burned my arm off or
electrocuted myself so far.
I have vague recollections of having done this
stuff a long time ago, in gigaseconds past, but it's so long ago that
the memories are all second-hand and I've clearly forgotten almost
everything I knew. There's something wrong with my technique, and the
pieces of spring steel I'm trying to make into a single fabrication are
going brittle around the weld. I try bending the last one in the vise
and the join I've just spent an hour working on snaps and small
fragments go flying. If I was standing a bit farther over to the left,
I could have got one in the eye. As it is, I get a nasty shock and go
inside to try to sort our dinner out, because Sam is usually back from
work around now, and if left to his own devices, he'll flop down in
front of the television rather than sorting out food for both of us.
So I'm in the kitchen all on my own, rummaging
through the frozen packages in the freezer cupboard for something we
both eat, and I manage to drop a pizza box on the floor. It splits open
and the contents spill everywhere. It's one of those moments when the
whole universe comes spinning down on the top of your head, and you
realize how alone andisolated you are, and all your problems seem to laugh at you. Who do I think I'm kidding? I ask myself, and I burst into tears on the spot.
I'm trapped in a wholly inadequate body, with
only patchy memories of whoever I used to be left to prod me along in
search of a better life. I'm trapped in a fun-house mirror reflection
of a historical society where everyone was crazy by default, driven mad
by irrational laws and meaningless customs. Here I am, thinking I
remember being in rehab, reading a letter written to myself by an
earlier version—and how do I know I wrote the letter to
myself? I don't even remember doing it! For all I know it's a
confabulation, my own bored attempt to inject some excitement into a
life totally sapped of interest. Certainly the rant about people who
are out to kill me seems increasingly implausible and
distant—outright unbelievable, if not for the man with the wire.
I can't remember any reasons why anyone would
want me dead. And even a half-competent trainee assassin would find
killing me a trivial challenge at best, right now. I can't even put a
frozen pizza in a microwave oven without dropping it on the floor. I'm
spending my spare hours in the garage trying to weld together a
crossbow and busily planning to make myself a sword when the bad guys,
if they're real, are running a panopticon—a total surveillance
society—and have weapons like the one on the Church altar, edged
with the laser-speckling strangeness of supercondensates, waveguides
for wormhole generators. Knives that can cut space-time. They'll come
for me in the clear light of day, and they'll be backed by the whole
police state panoply of memory editors and existential programmers.
There's nowhere for me to run, no way out except through the T-gates
controlled by the experimenters, and no way in bar the same, and I
don't even know if I've lost Kay, or if Kay is Cass or someone else
entirely, and I'm not sure why I let Piccolo-47 talk me into coming
here. All I've got are my memories, and I can't even trust them.
I feel helpless and lost and very, very small,
and I stare at the pizza through a blurring veil of tears, and right
then I hear the front door lock click to itself and footsteps in the
front hall, and it's more than I can bear.
Sam finds me in the kitchen, sobbing as I fumble around for the dustpan.
"What's wrong?" He stands in the doorway looking at me, a bewildered expression on his face.
"I'm, I—" I manage to get the box into the trash, then drop the brush on top of it. "Nothing."
"It can't be nothing," he insists, logically enough.
"I don't want to talk about it." I sniff and
wipe my eyes on the back of my sleeve, embarrassed and hating myself
for this display of weakness. "It's not important—"
"Come on." His arm is around my shoulders, comforting. "Come on, out of here."
"Okay."
He leads me out of the kitchen and into the
living room and over to the big glass windows. I watch, not really
comprehending, as he opens one of them. Floor to ceiling, it forms a
door in its own right, a door into the back garden. "Come on," he says,
walking out onto the lawn.
I follow him outside. The grass is getting long. What do you want? I wonder.
"Sit down," he says. I blink and look at the bench.
"Oh, okay." I sniff again.
"Wait here," he says. He vanishes back into the
house, leaving me alone with my stupid and stupefying sense of
inadequacy. I stare at the grass. It's moist (we had a scheduled
precipitation at lunchtime, water drizzling gently from a million tiny
nozzles embedded in the sky), and a snail is inching its way
laboriously up a stem, close to my feet. Not far away there's another
one. It's a good time for mollusks, who haul their world around with
them, self-contained. I feel a momentary flash of envy. Here I am,
trapped inside the biggest snail shell anyone can imagine, a snail
shell made of glass that exposes everything we do to the monitors and
probes of the experimenters. And in my hubris I think I can actually
crawl out of my shell, escape into my own identity—
Sam is holding something out to me. "Here, have a drink."
I take the tumbler. It's blue glass, with a fizz
of bubbles trapped in the weighted base and a clear liquid half-filling
it. I sniff a bouquet of bitters and lemon.
"Go on, it won't poison you."
I raise my glass and take a mouthful. Gin and tonic, some submerged ghost of memory tells me. "Thanks." I sniff. He pours himself one, too. "I'm sorry."
"What for?" he asks, as he sits down next to me.
He's shed his jacket and necktie, and he moves as if he's weary, as if
he's got my troubles.
"I'm a dead loss." I shrug. "It just got too much for me."
"You're not a dead loss."
I look at him sharply, then have to sniff again.
I wish I could get my sinuses fixed. "Yes I am. I'm wholly dependent on
you—without your job, what would I do? I'm weak and small and
badly coordinated, and I can't even cook a pizza for supper without
dropping it all over the floor. And, and . . ."
Sam takes another mouthful. "Look," he says,
pointing at the garden. "You've got this. All day." He shakes his head.
"I get to sit in an office full of zombies and spend my time
proofreading gibberish. There's always more make-work for me, texts to
check for errors. It makes my head hurt. You've at least got this." He
looks at me, a guarded, odd look that makes me wonder what he sees.
"And whatever it is you're doing in the garage."
"I—"
"I don't mean to pry," he says, looking away shyly.
"It's not secret," I say. I swallow some more of my drink. "I'm making stuff." I nearly add, It's a hobby,
but that would be a lie. And the one person I haven't actively lied to
so far is Sam. I've got a feeling that if I start lying to him now,
I'll be crossing some sort of irrevocable line. With only myself for an
anchor, and knowing how fallible my memories are, I won't be able to
tell truth from fantasy anymore.
"Making stuff." He rolls his glass between his big hands. "Do you want a job to go to?" he asks.
"A job?" That's a surprise and a half. "Why?"
He shrugs. "To see people. Get out of the house.
To meet people other than the score whores, I mean. They're getting to
you, aren't they?"
I nod mutely.
"Not surprising." He stays tactfully silent while I drain my glass.
To my surprise, I feel a little better. Get a job! "How do I find a job?" I ask. "I mean, not being a man—"
"You phone the Chamber of Commerce and ask for
one." He puts his glass down. I look at it, see the two snails climbing
opposite sides of the same blade of grass, leaving their iridescent
trails of slime. "It's as simple as that. They'll send a car to pick
you up and take you somewhere with room for a body. They didn't run you
through the induction course when you arrived, but it's easy enough. I
don't know what they'll find for you or how much they'll pay
you—I'd guess a lot less than they pay men, that seems to be how
they did things in the dark ages—but if you find it too boring,
you can always phone the CC again and ask for something else."
"A job," I say, trying the words out for sense.
It's crazy, actually, but no more so than anything else in this world.
"I didn't know I could get one."
He shrugs. "It's not illegal or anything." A
sidelong look. "They just didn't set it up by default. It's another of
those things we're allowed to game if we're smart enough to think of
it."
"And I'll meet people."
"It depends where you work." Sam looks uncertain
for a moment. "Most jobs, there are zombies around—but they try
to keep at least two humans in every workplace. And there are visitors.
But it's pretty boring. I really didn't think you'd be interested."
"It can't possibly be as mind-destroying as this!" I clench my hands.
"Don't bet on it." He shakes his head. "Dark ages work was often meaningless, unpleasant, and sometimes dangerous."
"Not as dangerous to my sanity as not doing anything."
"That's my Reeve." Sam smiles, a brilliant
expression that I don't often see and that makes me really envy the
lucky woman he left behind outside the experiment. "I'll get you
another drink, then go fix dinner. How about we eat out here instead of
inside? Just for once."
"I'd like that a lot," I say fervently. "Just for once."
IN the early hours of the morning I'm awakened by one of my recurring nightmares.
I have several different bad dreams. What
distinguishes this one is the quality of the imagery in it. I'm a
neomorph, male again and roughly orthohuman in body plan, but
extensively augmented with mechabolic subsystems from the cellular
level up. Instead of intestines, I have a compact fusion gateway cell.
I have three hearts to keep my different circulatory fluids moving,
skin reinforced with diamond fiber mesh, and I can survive in vacuum
for hours. These are all trappings of my role as a soldier in the
service of the Linebarger Cats, because I am a tank.
But that's not what makes the dream a nightmare.
We're one-point-one megaseconds into the
campaign, and even though we—my unit—don't normally sleep,
we're all under the influence of fatigue poisons from nearly twelve
consecutive diurns of high-speed maneuvers. Hostilities with this
polity commenced as soon as High Command established the orbital
elements on one of their better-connected real-space nodes. The Six
Fingers Green Kingdom has been particularly tenacious in its attempts
to hold on to its corrupt A-gates, which are still infected with
Curious Yellow censorbots and contaminating everyone who passes through
them. They're one of the last hold-outs on the losing side; they've
survived long after the other censorship redoubts succumbed to our
maneuvers by virtue of their fanatically obscurantist network topology
and a cunning mesh of internal firewalls. But we've identified the
real-space location of one of their main switches, and that means we've
got a node with massive fan-out to exploit once we can get our people
into it. My unit is on the sharp end.
The assault vector is one end of a T-gate ten meters in diameter, boosted up to about thirty percent of c
and free-falling through the icy outer limits of the cloud of debris
orbiting the brown dwarf Epsilon Indi B. EI-B is not much bigger than a
gas giant planet, and has a surface temperature of under a thousand
degrees absolute—by the time you get out to its halo, whole light
minutes away, the star is almost invisible. Cometary bodies orbit it in
chilly isolation, as cold as the depths of interstellar space.
Our assault gate is unpowered and stealthy. It
drifts through the perimeter defense field of the Six Fingers Green
Kingdom orbital in a matter of seconds and skims past the huge cylinder
at a range of under fifty kilometers, preposterously close yet very
hard to spot. As it flashes by, my unit is one of several who make a
high-speed insertion through the distal end of the wormhole. As far as
the defenders are concerned, we appear out of empty space right on
their doorstep. And as far as we're concerned, it's a death trap.
It takes us fifty seconds to cover the fifty
kilometers to the habitat, decelerating all the way, mashed flat in our
acceleration cages as our suits jink and dodge and shed penaids and
decoys and graser bombs. We lose eighty percent of our numbers to point
defense fire in that fifty-second period. It's absolute carnage, but
even so we're lucky—the only reason any of us survive at all is
because we're working for the Linebarger Cats, and the Cats specialize
in applied insanity. Everyone knows that only a lunatic would attack
across open space, so the Green Fingers have concentrated ninety
percent of their firepower on the inside of their orbital, pointing at
the proximal ends of their longjump T-gates, rather than outside on the
hub, covering the barren real-space approaches.
I'm unconscious for most of the approach, my
memories of it spooled by sensors on my suit and buffered for instant
recall once my meatbody unvitrifies so I can take over. One moment I'm
lying down and the suit is closing around me, and the next I'm standing
in the wreckage of a compartment aboard the Green Finger orbital,
memories of the insane charge alive in my mind as I pull out my sword,
slave my blaster nodes to my eyeball trackers, exude more ablative
foam, and head for the inhabited spaces.
Fast forward:
Dealing with the civilians once we've taken the
polity is going to be difficult because they've all been censored by
Curious Yellow—the original version carrying the censorship
payload, not the later hacked tools of various inquisitions and
cognitive dictatorships. The censorship payload doesn't just delete
memories of forbidden things—it tends to leave spores in its
victims' brains and a boot loader in their netlinks, and if they upload
into a vulnerable A-gate it can wake up and infect the gate firmware.
So we have to round up everyone on board the hab we've just ripped
through with swords and blasters, and recycle them through our own
crude decontamination gates.
Now, here's where the dreamlike logic kicks in. Their assembler gates are the advanced, elegant products of a mature techgnosis. But our
A-gates are crude lash-ups, hand-built in a matter of tens of
megaseconds using what knowledge we could salvage. We threw them
together in a blind hurry when we realized how far the contamination
extended—throughout all the A-gates of the Republic of Is,
basically—and they're messy and inefficient and slow. What we've
built works, but it isn't fast. So we're running our assault gates in
half-duplex mode, disassembling and storing the citizens for subsequent
virus scanning and reincarnation. And because we haven't secured all
approaches, and because other nodes within the Six Fingers Green
Kingdom are fighting back with vicious desperation, we have to move fast.
After about five thousand seconds of collecting
struggling civilians and feeding them into the gates, Group Major
Nordak calls me with new orders. "The bodies are slowing us up," she
sends. "Just harvest the heads. We'll resurrect them all when we've got
the situation under control."
There's a huge crowd of civilians in a holding
square on Deck J, milling around in confusion and fear. Two of us are
pulling people out of the crowd through a door, telling them it's for
outbound processing. Some of them don't want to go, but arguing with
tankies in full armor is futile, and they end up coming to us whether
they want to or not, contusions and broken limbs the only difference it
makes to their eventual fate. We take them through the inner set of
doors that don't open until the outer ones are closed. Then all
of them get reluctant, when they see Loral and me waiting on the other
side of the inner door, with the assault gate and our swords and the
pile of discards.
We take it in turns, alternating, because it's
hard, stressful work. I grab a struggling victim, maybe a plump female
orthohuman or a scrawny guy who really needs a new body—some of
them have been living feral, refusing to go through the A-gates for
fear of CuriousYellow, until they actually grow old—and
I pinion the victims and lay them down on the slimy blood-slick floor
of the room. They usually scream, and in many cases they piss
themselves as Loral brings his Vorpal sword down on the back of their
neck between the C7 and T1 vertebrae. A twitch on the power button and
there's more blood squirting and splashing everywhere than you could
imagine, and they stop screaming. Loral pulls her sword out and I get
off the body and chase the head, which is usually soaking wet, the
eyelids twitching with postamputation shock. I throw the head into the
A-gate, low and fast as I can, and the gate swallows it and processes
the skull and hopefully gets them logged before permanent
depolarization and osmotically induced apoptosis can set in. Then Loral
grabs the discarded body and slings it onto the heap in the corner,
which one of our fellow special action troops carts away on a pallet
loader every so often, while I flail at the floor with a broom in a
losing battle to stop the blood puddling around our feet.
It's a disgusting and unpleasant job, and even
though we've gotten into the swing of it and are working as fast as we
can, we're only averaging one civilian every fifty seconds. We've been
working for a hundred kiloseconds now, one of eight teams on the
job—processing maybe sixteen thousand people a diurn between us.
And it's just my bitter bad luck that when the doors open and the guys
on the other side fling the next body at us, kicking and screaming at
the top of their lungs, it's my turn to use the sword and Loral's to
hold them down and I'm already raising the blade when I look at the
terrified face and depending on which variation of the nightmare this
is I see that it's my own, or worse—
—Kay's—
—and I'm sitting up swallowing a scream
and someone is cradling me in his arms and I'm covered in chilly sweat
and shuddering uncontrollably. I slowly realize I'm in bed, and I've
just kicked off the comforter. There's moonlight outside the window,
and I'm in YFH-Polity and no matter how bad things are by day, they
can't hold a candle to how bad things get in my dreams, and I whimper
softly in the back of my throat.
"It's all right now, you're awake, they can't
hurt you." Sam strokes my shoulders. I lean against him and manage to
turn the whimper into a sigh. My heart is pounding like one of the
jackhammers they use to repair the roads, and my skin is clammy. His
arm tightens around me. "Would you like to talk about it?" he murmurs.
"It's"—awful—"a recurring
dream. Memories"—inadequately redacted, I think—"from an
earlier life. What I wanted to be rid of, coming back to haunt me." I
speak haltingly because my mouth feels musty, and I'm not entirely
awake, just frightened out of sleep by the shadows of my own past. What's he doing in here?
"You were thrashing around, moaning and muttering in your sleep," he says. "I was worried you were having a seizure."
It's not unheard of, even in this age. I push
myself up on one arm but don't pull away from him—instead I pull
my right arm out from under the bedding and hold him tight.
"I lost a lot in surgery," I say slowly. "If this is part of it, I wish it would stay lost."
"It's gone now." He speaks soothingly, and I
wrap my other arm round him and hold on tight. He's big, he's stable,
he's serious, and he's solid. Serious Sam. I lean my face into
the depression at the base of his throat and inhale deeply, once,
twice. His arm around me feels good, secure. Security Sam. My ribs shake as I swallow a nervy chuckle. "What's that?" he asks.
"Nothing," I tell his throat. I'm awake enough
now to realize that I'm not the only one in this house who sleeps
naked. But I find that I don't care—I trust Sam not to try and
overpower me, not to do anything I don't want. Sam has somehow stepped
across the threshold from being a mistrusted stranger into a friend,
and I never noticed it happening. And now I don't want to be left alone
here, and it's the most natural thing in the universe to hold on to him
and to run my hand up and down his spine and stick my face into the
base of his throat and inhale his natural scent. "Do you mind staying?
I don't want to be alone."
He tenses slightly, but then I feel his hand running down my back, caressing my spine. I lean into his embrace. He feels so alive,
the antithesis of everything in my blood-drenched memory dream. I've
been sleeping alone and not really touching anyone, much less fucking,
for at least a month now, and therefore it doesn't surprise me in the
slightest to find that I'm becoming aroused, sensual, needing more skin
contact and more touch and more smell. I lick the base of his throat
and move one hand between his legs, and what I find there is no
surprise, because he's been living the same life of self-denial too.
"Don't—" he mutters, but I'm not
listening. Instead, I'm running my face down his chest, kissing him as
I fondle what's down below, giving the lie to his disinterest.
Sam's been holding back because of a lover
stranded in the real world without him, and I've been holding back
because of pride and the greedy eyes watching my social score. We'll
probably regret this in the morning, but right now I'm drunk on touch.
I rub my cheek against his thigh and lick him hungrily, feeling his
hands in my hair—
"No." He sounds hesitant. I take him in my mouth
as far as I can, and he sounds as if he's strangling. "No, Reeve,
please don't—" I carry on sucking and licking and he draws breath
to say something and instead gasps a little, and I finish him off with
a sense of anticlimax. That was too fast, wasn't it? Then he's standing on the other side of the bed, his back turned and his shoulders hunched. "I asked you to stop," he says sullenly.
It's a while before I can talk. "I
needed—" I stop. My mouth is acrid with the aftertaste. "I want
you to be happy." If I'm going to give in and humiliate myself in front
of the score whores, the least I can do is throw it back in their faces.
"Well, that's not the right way to do it." He's
tense and defensive, as if I've hurt him. "I thought we had an
understanding." He sidles around the bed and out the door before I can
think of anything to say, refusing to meet my eyes, and a minute or so
later I hear the shower come on.
I'm completely awake by now, so I pull on my
bathrobe to go downstairs and make a mug of coffee by way of a
substitute for mouthwash, because there's no way I'm going to go into
the bathroom while Sam's busy trying to rinse my saliva away. I've got
some pride left, and right now I don't think I could look at him
without yelling, What about your self-control, eh? He moons
incessantly over this amazing lover he met outside the polity, but he's
not too proud to let me fellate him—until afterward, when
suddenly I'm an un-person. I could really hate him for that. But
instead I sit in the kitchen with my cooling coffee, and I wait for the
noise of the shower to cease and the light upstairs to go out. Then I
tiptoe back to my bed and lie brooding until near dawn, wondering what
possessed me. In the end, I resolve not offer him any intimacies ever
again, until I've had a chance to spit in his imaginary lover's face in
front of him. Finally, I sleep.
THE next day I
don't stir from bed until Sam has left for work. Once I'm up, I phone
the Chamber of Commerce. The zombie who takes my call sounds only
marginally sapient but agrees to send a taxi for me the next morning. I
go outside and jog up and down the road until I'm exhausted—which
takes a lot longer now—then take a shower. I spend the rest of
the day in the garage trying to do some more work on the crossbow,
which is not going well. I wonder why I'm bothering: It's not as if I'm
going to shoot anyone, is it?
I leave Sam a half-defrosted pizza and a note
explaining how to cook it in the kitchen. By the time I come indoors
it's dark, Sam's holed up in the living room with the TV on, and I have
no trouble sneaking upstairs and going to bed without seeing him. It's
easy to do, now that we're both avoiding each other.
I am troubled in my sleep. It's a different bad
dream, nothing like as vivid as the slaughterhouse nightmare, but even
more disturbing in some ways. Imagine you're a detective, or some other
kind of investigator. And you're looking for people, bad people who
hide in shadows. They've committed terrible crimes but they've altered
everyone's memories so that nobody can remember what they did or who
they are. You don't know what they did or who they are, but
it's your job to find them and bring them to justice in such a way that
neither they, nor anyone else, can forget what they did and the
consequences of their actions. So you're a detective, and you're
walking through twilit polityscapes hunting for clues, but you don't
know who you are or why you're charged with this mission. For all you
know, you may even be one of the criminals. They've made everybody
forget who they are and what they did. Who's to say that they didn't do
it to themselves, too? You could be guilty of a crime so horrible that
it has no name and everyone's forgotten it, and you'll find the
irrevocable logic of detection drawing you to place yourself under
arrest and hand yourself over to the courts of a higher power. And
you'll be tried and sentenced for a crime you don't understand and
don't remember committing, and the punishment will be beyond human
comprehension and leave you walking the twilit polityscapes, a ghost
shorn of most of your memories except for a faint indelible stain of
original sin. And you'll be there because you've been sent looking for
a master criminal by way of atoning for your past actions. And you'll
be on their trail, and one day you will find them and, reaching out a
hand to grab them by the shoulder, you'll find yourself looking at the
back of your own head—
I wake up sweating and sick with my heart
pounding in the night, and there is no Sam. For a moment I feel defiant
and angry at his absence, but then I think: What have I done to my only friend here? And I roll over and wash the pillow in bitter tears before dawn.
THE taxi that
takes me to the Chamber of Commerce arrives about half an hour after
Sam leaves for work. I'm ready and waiting for it but nervous about the
whole idea. It seems necessary in some ways—to assert my
independence from Sam, get an extra source of income, meet other
inmates, break out of the lonely rut of being a stay-at-home
wife—but in other respects it's a questionable choice. I have no
idea what they're going to find for me to do, it's going to take up a
large chunk of my time, it'll probably be boring and pointless, and
although I'll meet new people, there's no way of knowing whether I'll
hate them on sight. What seemed like a good idea at the time is now
turning out to be stressful.
The taxi operator is no use, of course—he
can't tell me anything. "Chamber of Commerce," he announces. "Please
leave the vehicle." So I get out and head toward the imposing building
on my right, with the revolving door made of wood and brass, hoping my
uncertainty doesn't show. I march up to the clerk on the front desk.
"I'm Reeve. I've got an appointment at, uh, ten o'clock with Mr.
Harshaw?"
"Go right in, ma'am," says the zombie, pointing
at a door behind him with a frosted-glass window and gold-leaf
lettering stenciled along the top. My heels clack on the stone floor as
I walk over and open it.
"Mr. Harshaw?" I ask.
The room is dominated by a wide desk made out of
wood, its top inlaid with a rectangle of dyed, preserved skin cut from
a large herbivore. The walls are paneled in wood and there are crude
still pictures in frames hanging from hooks near the top, certificates
and group portraits of men in dark suits shaking hands with each other.
A borderline-senescent male in a dark suit, his head almost bereft of
hair and his waistline expanding, sits behind the desk. He half rises
as I enter, and extends a hand. Zombie? I wonder doubtfully.
"Hello, Reeve." He sounds relaxed and self-confident. "Won't you have a seat?"
"Sure." I take the chair on the other side of
the desk and cross my legs, studying his face. Sure enough there's a
slight flicker of attention—he's watching me, aware of my
body—which means he's real. Zombies simply aren't programmed for
that. "How come I haven't seen you in Church?" I ask.
"I'm on staff," he says easily. "Have a cigarette?" He gestures at one of the wooden boxes on his desk.
"Sorry, I don't smoke," I say, slightly stiffly. I hate the smell, but it's not as if it's harmful, is it?
"Good for you." He takes one, lights it, and
inhales thoughtfully. "You asked about job vacancies yesterday. As it
happens, we have one right now that would probably suit you—I
took the liberty of looking through your records—but it
specifically excludes smokers."
"Oh?" I raise an eyebrow. Mr. Harshaw the
staffer isn't what I expected, to say the least; I was winding myself
up to deal with a dumb zombie fronting a placement database.
"It's in the city library. You'd only be working
three days a week, but you'd be putting in eleven-hour shifts. On the
plus side, you'd be the trainee librarian there. On the minus side, the
starting salary isn't particularly high."
"What does the job involve?" I ask.
"Library work." He shrugs. "Filing books in
order. Keeping track of withdrawals and issuing overdue notices and
collecting fines. Helping people find books and information they're
looking for. Organizing the stacks and adding new titles as they come
in. You'd be working under Janis from cohort one, who has been our
librarian since the early days. She's going to be leaving, which is why
we need to train up a replacement."
"Leaving?" I look at him oddly. "Why?"
"To have a baby," he says, and blows a perfect smoke ring up at the ceiling.
I don't understand what he's saying at first, the concept is so alien to me. "Why would she have to leave her job to—"
It's his turn to look at me oddly. "Because she's pregnant," he says.
For a moment the world seems to be spinning
around my head. There's a roaring in my ears, and I feel weak at the
knees. It's a good thing I'm sitting down. Then I begin to integrate
everything and realize just what's going on. Janis is pregnant—she's
got a neonate growing inside her body like an encapsulated tumor, the
way humans used to incubate their young in the wild, back before
civilization. Presumably she and her husband had sex, and she was
fertile. "She must be—" I say, then cover my mouth. Fertile.
"Yes, she and Norm are very happy," Mr. Harshaw
says, nodding enthusiastically. He looks satisfied with something.
"We're all very happy for them, even if it means we do have to train up
a new librarian."
"Well, I'd be happy to see, I mean, to try," I begin, flustered, wondering, Did she ask the medics to make her fertile? Or, a sneaking and horrible suspicion, Are we already fertile?
I know menstruation was some kind of metabolic sign that went with
being a prehistoric female, but I didn't really put it all together
until now. Having a child is hard—you have to actively seek
medical assistance—and having one grow inside your body is even
harder. The idea that the orthohuman bodies they've put us in are so
ortho that we could automatically generate random human beings
if we have sex is absolutely terrifying. I don't think the dark ages
medics had incubators, and if I got pregnant I might actually have to
go through a live childbirth. In fact, if Sam and I had—"Excuse me, but where's the rest room?" I ask.
"It's the second door through there, on the
left." Mr. Harshaw smiles to himself as I make a dash for it. He's
still smiling five minutes later as I make my way back into his office,
forcing my face into a maskof composure, refusing to acknowledge the stomach cramps that took me to the stalls. "Are you all right?" he asks.
"I am, now," I say. "I'm sorry about that, must be something I ate."
"It's perfectly all right. If you'd like to come
with me, perhaps we can visit the library and I can introduce you to
Janis, see if you get along?"
I nod, and we head out front to catch a taxi. I
think I'm doing pretty well for someone who's just had her worldview
turned upside down and whacked on with a hammer. How long does a
neonate take to grow, about thirty megs? It puts a whole new face on
the experiment. I have a sinking sense that I must have implicitly
agreed to this. Somewhere buried in the small print of the release I
signed there'll be some clause that can be interpreted as saying that I
consent to be made fertile and if necessary to become pregnant and
bring to term an infant in the course of the study. It's the sort of
shitty trick that Fiore and his friends would delight in slipping past
us while we're vulnerable.
After a few minutes I realize that the oversight
we were promised by an independent ethics committee isn't worth a
bucket of warm—whatever. The extreme scenario would be for us
females to all get pregnant and deliver infants, in which case
the experimenters are going to be responsible for the care of about a
hundred babies, none of whom gave their consent to be raised in a
simulated dark ages environment without access to decent medical care,
education, or socialization. Any responsible ethics oversight committee
would shit a brick if you suggested running an experiment like that. So
I suspect the ethics oversight committee isn't very ethical, if indeed
it exists at all.
I'm thinking these thoughts as Mr. Harshaw tells
our zombie driver to take us to the municipal library. The library is
in a part of town I haven't visited before, on the same block as City
Hall and what Mr. Harshaw points out to me as the police station.
"Police station?" I ask, looking blank.
"Yes, where the police hang out." He looks at me as if I'm very slightly mad.
"I would have thought the crime rate here was too low to need a real police force," I say.
"So far it is," he replies, with a smile I can't interpret. "But things are changing."
The library is a low brick building, with a
glass facade opening onto a reception area, and turnstiles leading into
a couple of big rooms full of shelves. There are books—bound
sheaves of dumb paper—on all the shelves, and there are a lot
of shelves. In fact, I've never seen so many books in my life. It's
ironic, really. My netlink could bring a million times as much
information to me on a whim, if it was working. But in the
informationally impoverished society we're restricted to, these rows of
dead trees represent the total wealth of available human knowledge.
Static, crude scratchings are all we're to be permitted, it seems. "Who
can access these?" I ask.
"I'll leave it to Janis to explain the
procedures," he says, running his hand over his shiny crown, "but
anyone who wants can withdraw—borrow—books from the lending
department. The reference department is a bit different, and there's
also the private collection." He clears his throat. "That's
confidential, and you're not supposed to lend it to anyone who isn't
authorized to read it. That probably sounds dramatic, by the way, but
it's actually not very romantic. We just keep a lot of the
documentation for the project on paper, so we don't need to violate the
experimental protocol by bringing in advanced knowledge-management
tools, and we have to store the paper somewhere when it's not in use,
so we use the library." He holds the door open. "Let's go find Janis,
shall we? Then we'll have lunch. We can discuss whether you want to
work here, and if so, what your pay and conditions will be, and then if
you take the job, we can work out when you'll start training."
JANIS is skinny
and blond, with a haggard, worried-looking expression and long, bony
hands that flutter like trapped insects as she describes things. After
having to put up with Jen's machinations, she's like a breath of fresh
air. On my first day I arrive at my new job early, but Janis is already
there. She whisks me into a dingy little staff room round the back of
one of the bookcases that I'd never suspected existed on yesterday's
tour.
"I'm so glad you're here," she tells me,
clasping her hands. "Tea? Or coffee? We've got both"—there's an
electric kettle in the corner and she switches it on—"but
someone's going to have to run out and fetch some milk soon." She
sighs. "This is the staff room. When there's nobody about, you can take
your breaks here or go out for lunch—we close between noon and
one o'clock—and there's also a terminal into the library
computer." She points at a boxy device not unlike a baby television
set, connected by a coiled cable to a panel studded with buttons.
"The library has a computer?" I say, intrigued. "Can't I just use my netlink?"
Janis flushes, her cheeks turning pink. "I'm
afraid not," she apologizes. "They make us use them just like the
ancients would have, through a keyboard and screen."
"But I thought none of the ancient thinking
machines survived, except in emulation. How do we know what its
physical manifestation looked like?"
"I'm not sure." Janis looks thoughtful. "Do you
know, I hadn't thought of that? I've got no idea how they designed it!
It's probably buried in the experimental protocol somewhere—the
nonclassified bits are all online, if you want to go looking. But
listen, we don't have time for that now." The kettle boils, and she
busies herself for a minute pouring hot water into two mugs full of
instant coffee granules. I study her indirectly while her back's
turned. There's not much sign of her pregnancy yet, although I think
there might be a slight bulge around her waist—her dress is cut
so that it's hard to tell. "First, I want to get you started on how the
front desk works, on the lending side. We've got to keep track of who's
borrowed what books, and when they're due back, and it's the easiest
thing to start you on. So"—she hands me a coffee mug—"how
much do you know about library work?"
I learn over the course of the morning that
"library work" covers such an enormous area of information management
that back during the dark ages, before libraries became self-organizing
constructs, people used to devote their entire (admittedly short) lives
to studying the theory of how best to manage them. Neither
Janis—nor I—is remotely qualified to be a real dark age
librarian, with their esoteric mastery ofcatalogue systems and controlled information classification vocabularies, but we can
run a small municipal lending library and reference section with a bit
of scurrying around and a lot of patience. I seem to have some historic
skills in that direction, and unlike my experience with arc welding, I
haven't erased all of them. I can remember my alphabet and grasp the
decimal classification scheme immediately, and the way each book has a
ticket in an envelope inside the front cover that has to be retained
when it's loaned out makes sense, too . . .
It's only by midafternoon, when we've taken a
grand total of five returns and had one visitor who borrowed two books
(on Aztec culture and the care and feeding of carnivorous plants), that
I begin to wonder why YFH-Polity needs anything as exotic as a
full-time librarian.
"I don't know," Janis admits over a cup of tea
in the staff room, her feet stretched out under the rickety
white-painted wooden table. "It can get a bit busy—wait until six
o'clock, when most people are on their way home from work, that's when
we get most of our borrowers—but really, they don't need
me. A zombie could do the job perfectly well." She looks pensive. "I
suspect it's more to do with finding employment for people who ask for
it. It's one of the drawbacks of the entire experiment. We don't exist
in a closed-circuit economy, and if they don't constantly provide jobs
for people, it'll all fall apart. So what we're left with is a
situation where they pretend to pay us and we pretend to work. At least
until they merge the parishes."
"Merge the—there are more?"
"So I'm told." She shrugs. "They're introducing
us in small stages, so that we know who our neighbors are before we get
linked into a large community and everything goes to pieces."
"Isn't that a bit of a pessimistic attitude?" I ask.
"Maybe so." She flashes me a rare grin. "But it's a realistic one."
I think I'm going to like Janis, her ironic
sense of humor notwithstanding: I feel comfortable around her. We're
going to work well together. "And the other stuff? The restricted
archive? The computer?"
She waves it off. "All you need to know is, once
a week Fiore comes and we unlock the closed room and leave him alone in
it for an hour ortwo. If he wants to take any papers away, we log them and nag him until he brings them back."
"Anyone else?"
"Well." She looks thoughtful. "If the Bishop
shows up, you give him access to all areas." She pulls a face. "And
don't ask me about the computer, nobody told me much about how to use
it, and I don't really understand the thing, but if you want to tinker
with it during a slack period, be my guest. Just remember everything is
logged." She catches my eye. "Everything," she repeats, with quiet emphasis.
My pulse quickens. "On the computer? Or off it?"
"Book withdrawals," she says. "Possibly even
what pages people look at. You notice they're all hardcovers? You'd be
surprised how small even the dark age technés could make a
tracking device. You could build them into book spines, able to sense
which pages the reader was opening the book to. All without violating
protocol."
"But protocol—" I stop. The television
doesn't look very complex, technically, but is it? Really? What goes
into a machine like that? There must be either cameras or a really
complex rendering system . . .
"The dark ages weren't just dark, they were fast.
We're talking about the period when our ancestors went from needing an
abacus to add two numbers together to building the first emotional
machines. They went from witch doctors with poisonous
chemicals—who couldn't even reattach a cleanly severed
limb—to tissue regeneration, full control of the proteome and
genome, and growing body parts to order. From using rockets to get into
orbit to the first tethered lift systems. And they did all that in less
than three gigs, ninety old-time years."
She pauses for a sip of tea. "It is very
easy for us moderns to underestimate the dark age orthos. But it's a
habit you'll shed after you've been here for a while, and to give them
their due, the clergy—the experimenters—have been here
longer than the rest of us. Even Harshaw, and he works for them." She
pronounces his name with distaste, and I wonder what he's done to
offend her.
"You think they've got more of a handle on this than we do?" I ask, intrigued.
"Damn right." (Yes, she says "damn": she's
obviously getting into the spirit of things, speaking in the archaic
slang the real old-timers would have used.) "I think there's more going
on here than meets the eye. They've made a lot more progress toward
stabilizing this society than you'd expect for just five megs of
runtime." Her eyes flicker sharply toward a corner of the room right
above the door, and I follow the direction of her gaze. "In part it's
because they can see everything, hear everything, including this. In
part."
"But surely that's not all?"
She smiles at me enigmatically. "Break's over, kid. Time to go back to work."
I get home
late, bone-tired from filing returned books and standing behind a
counter for hours. I have a gnawing sense of apprehension as I walk in
the door. The lights are on in the living room and I can hear the
television. I head for the kitchen first to get something to eat, and
that's where I am when Sam finds me.
"Where've you been?" he demands.
"Work." I attack a tin of vegetable soup and a loaf of bread tiredly.
"Oh." Pause. "So what are you doing?"
He's put the butter in the refrigerator so it's
as hard as a rock. "Training to be the new city librarian. Three days a
week at present, but it's an eleven-hour day."
"Oh."
He bends over to put a dirty plate in the
washing machine. I manage to stop him just in time—it's full of
clean stuff. "No, you need to unload it first, okay?"
"Huh." He looks irritated. "So the city needs a new librarian?"
"Yes." I don't owe him any explanations, do I? Do I?
"Do you know Janis?"
"Janis—" He looks thoughtful. "No. I didn't even know we had a library."
"She's leaving in a couple of months, and they need someone to replace her."
He begins to remove plates from the bottom tray
in the washing machine and stack them on the work-top. "She doesn't
like the job? If it's so bad, why are you taking it?"
"It's not that." I finally get the soup out of
the can and into a saucepan on the red-glowing burner. "She's leaving
because she's pregnant." I turn round to watch him. He's focusing on
the dishwasher, pointedly ignoring me. Still sulking, I suspect.
"Pregnant? Huh." He sounds a little surprised. "Why would anyone want to have a baby in—"
"We're fertile, Sam."
I manage to catch the plates he was unloading
just in time. I straighten up, about half a meter from his nose, and
he's too flustered to avoid my gaze.
"We're fertile?"
"That's what Janis says, and judging by her
state, I think she's probably got the evidence to prove it." I scowl at
him for a moment, then turn back to the soup pan. "Got a bowl for me?"
"Ye-yes." The poor guy sounds genuinely shaken. I don't blame him—I've had a few hours to think about it, and I'm still getting used to the idea. "I'll just find one—"
"Think about it. We signed up to join the
study knowing it would run for a hundred megs, yes? Funny thing about
libraries: You can look things up in them. The gestation time for a
human neonate in a host body is twenty-seven to twenty-eight megs.
Meanwhile, we're all fertile, and we've been told we can earn points
toward our eventual termination bonuses by fucking. The historical
conception rate for healthy orthos having sex while fertile is roughly
thirty percent per menstrual cycle. What does that sound like to you?"
"But I, I—I mean, you could have—"
Sam holds a soup bowl in front of himself as if it's some kind of
shield, and he's trying to keep me at bay.
I glare at him. "Don't say it."
"I—" He swallows. "Here, take it."
I take the bowl.
"I think I know what you thought I was going to say and you're right
and I take it back even though I didn't say it. All right?" He says it
very fast, running the words together as if he's nervous.
"You didn't say it."
I put the bowl down very carefully, because
there really is no need to throw it at his head, and also because, once
I calm down a fraction, I realize that in point of fact he's right, and
he didn't say that if I'd fucked him the other night and become pregnant it would have been all my own fault. Smart Sam.
"It takes two to hold a grudge match." I lick my
lips. "Sam, I'm very sorry about the other night." What comes next is
hard to force out. "I shouldn't have taken advantage of you. I've been
going through a bad patch, but that's no excuse. I'm not—I've
never been—particularly good at self-restraint, but it won't
happen again." And if it does, you won't get an apology like this, that's for sure. "Much as I like you, you're not big on poly and this, this shit—" My shoulders are shaking.
"You don't have to apologize," he says, and
takes a step forward. Before I know what's happening he's hugging me,
and it really is good to feel his arms around me. "It's my fault, too.
I should have more self-control and I knew all along you were getting
interested in me, and I shouldn't have put myself in a position where
you might have thought—"
I sniff. "Shit!" I yell, and let go of him then spin round.
The soup is boiling over and there's a nasty
smell from the burner. I kill the power and grab the handle to shift it
somewhere safe, then hunt around for something to mop it up with. While
I'm doing that Sam, like a zombie with a priority instruction, keeps
methodically unloading the washing machine and transferring crockery to
the cupboards. Eventually I get what's left of my soup into a bowl and
pile my slices of bread on a plate, wondering why I didn't just use the
microwave oven in the first place.
"By the time I get to eat this, it'll all be cold."
"My fault." He looks apologetic. "If I'd let you get on with it—"
"Uh-huh." We're apologizing to each other for breathing loudly, what's wrong with us? "Listen, here's a question for you. You know the contract you, uh, signed—do you remember if there was a maximum duration on participation?"
"A maximum?" He looks startled. "It just said minimum one hundred megs. Why?"
"Figures." I pick up my plate and bowl and head
toward the living room. "Human neonates hatched in the wild in
primitive conditions took at least half a gigasec to reach maturity."
"Are you"—he's following me—"saying what I think you're saying?"
I put my bowl and plate down on the end table
beside the sofa and perch on the arm, because if I sit on the sofa,
it'll try to swallow me for good. "Why don't you tell me what you think
I'm saying?"
"I don't know." Which means he doesn't want to
say. He sits down at the other end of the sofa and stares at me. "We're
being watched, aren't we? All the time. Do you think it's wise to talk
about it?"
I blow on my soup to speed evaporative cooling.
"No, but there's no point being paranoid, is there? There are going to
be a hundred of us in here in time, at least. I suspect we outnumber
the experimenters twenty to one. Are you telling me they're going to
monitor the real-time take on everything we say to each other, as we
say it? A lot of the netlink score incidents are
preprogrammed—just events we happen to trigger. Someone has an
orgasm in proximity to their spouse, netlink triggers. A bunch of
zombies see someone damaging property or removing clothing in public,
their netlinks trigger. It doesn't mean someone is sitting on the
switch watching the monitors all the time. Does it?"
(Actually it's possible that this is the case, if we're in a panopticon prison run by spooks rather than half-assed academics, but I'm not going to tell them that I know this, assuming they exist. No way. Especially as I don't know why I know this.)
"But if we're being watched—"
"Listen." I put my spoon down. "We are here for a minimum of three years, maximum term unspecified, and we are fertile.
That sounds to me like what they've got in mind involves breeding a
population of genuine dark ages citizens. This is a separate polity, in
case you'd forgotten, which means it has a defensible
frontier—the assembler that generated these bodies we're wearing.
Assemblers don't just make things, they filter things: They're
firewalls. Polities are de facto independent networks of tightly
connected T-gates defined by the firewalls that shield their edges from
whatever tries to come in through their longjump T-gates. Their
borders, in other words. But you can have a polity without internal
T-gates; what defines it is the frontier, not the interior. We're
functioning under YFH's rules. Doesn't that mean that anyone born into
the place will be under the same rules, too?"
"But what about freedom of movement?" Sam looks antsy. "Surely they can't stop them if they want to emigrate?"
"Not if they don't know there's an outside
universe to emigrate to," I say grimly. I take a spoonful of soup and
wince, burning the roof of my mouth. "Ouch. We aren't supposed
to talk about our earlier lives. What if they tighten the score system
a bit more, so that mentioning the outside in front of children, or in
public, costs us points? Then how are the nubes going to figure it out?"
"That's crazy." He jerks his head from side to
side emphatically. "Why would anyone want to do that? I can understand
the original purpose of the experiment, to research the social
circumstances of the dark ages by experimental archaeology. But trying
to create a whole population of orthos, stuck in this crazy dark ages
sim and not even knowing it's a historical re-enactment rather than the
real universe . . . !"
"I'm not sure yet," I say tiredly. "I'm not at all sure what it's about. But that's the point. We're missing essential data."
"Right, right." He looks pained. "Do you suppose
it's anything to do with why they were picking people straight out of
memory surgery?"
"Yes, that's got to be part of it." I gaze at
him across a cold continental rift of sofa. "But that's only a part." I
was going to say we have to get out of here, but that's not
enough anymore. And despite what I've just said publicly, there's stuff
that I'm not going to talk about. Like, I don't think we'll ever
be allowed out. I don't know if this will ever end. If the child thing
is true, they may be prepared to hold us here indefinitely, or worse.
And that's leaving aside the most important questions: Why? And why us?
I go to work the next day, and the one after that, and by the end of my third day I am exhausted. I mean, shattered. Library work doesn't sound
as if it should be hard, but when you're working for eleven hours with
a one-hour break in the middle for lunch, it wears you down. The
daytime is almost empty, but there's a small rush of custom every
evening around six o'clock, and I have to scurry to and fro hunting for
tickets, filing returned books, collecting fines, and getting things
sorted out. Then in the morning I end up pushing a trolley loaded with
books around the shelves, returning the borrowed items and sorting out
anything that's been put back on a shelf out of sequence. If there's
any time left over, I end up dusting the shelves that are due for
cleaning.
"How do you know the books know when they're
being read?" I ask Janis, halfway through my second morning. "I mean,
take this one." I heft it where she can see it, a big green clothbound
sheaf of papers with a title like The Home Vegetable Garden.
"Look." Janis takes it from me and bends the cover back, so that the plastic protective sleeve on the spine bends.
I look. "Aha." I can just see something like a
squashed fly in there, two hair-fine antennae running up to the
stitching atop the spine. "Those are . . . ?"
"Fiber optics. That's my guess." Janis hums to
herself as she closes the book and slides it back into the trolley. "I
don't think they can hear you, but they can sense which page is open
and track your eyeballs. The experimenters have been careful to give us
all different faces, and we all have two working eyes. That's no
accident. Not all the ancients had that. If you want to read a book
secretly, you need mirrored sunglasses and a timer, so you turn each
page after the same amount of time."
"How do you know all this?" I ask admiringly. "You sound like a professional—" The word spy is on the tip of my tongue, but I swallow it with a little shiver.
"Before I checked into the clinic, I used to be
a detective." She gives me a long look. "It's a skill set I didn't ask
them to erase. Thought it might come in handy in my new life."
"Then what did you—" I stop myself just in time. "Forget I asked."
"By all means." She chuckles drily. "Listen, they tell me that it's normal
for me to check into hospital a week or two before the delivery, and to
stay there for a couple of weeks afterward. Can I"—she sounds
tentative—"ask a big favor of you?"
"What? Sure," I say blankly.
"I figure I'm going to be in bed a lot of the
time, bored out of my mind, and there's only so much television you can
watch in a day, and Norm is working, so he can't keep me company. Would
you mind visiting me and bringing me some library books? So I don't
lose track?"
"Why, I'd be delighted to!" I say it with perfect sincerity, because I mean it. If I
ever ended up in some kind of dark ages hospital for three or four
cycles I'd want visitors. "You'll let me know what you want, all right?"
"Thank you." Janis sounds grateful. "Now if you
could just get the footstool, these go on the top shelf and I can't
reach as high as you can."
On my third day I'm due to meet up with Jen and
Angel and Alice and do lunch. Jen's picked the Dominion Cafe as today's
venue, and I walk there from the library, whistling tunelessly. I'm
feeling unaccountably smug. I've found something new to do, I've got a
source of income all of my own, I know things that the ladies who lunch
haven't got a clue about, and if only I wasn't spending half my waking
hours in fear of the future and wishing I could get out of this
glass-walled prison and hook up with Kay again, I'd probably be quite
happy.
The Dominion Cafe is a lot plusher than the name
makes it sound, and I feel a bit underdressed as the maître d'
ushers me to the booth where Jen is holding court. Here I am in a plain
skirt and sweater, while Jen wears ever-more-exotic concoctions of spun
bug spit and must spend three or four hours a day on her makeovers and
hair. Angel isn't so much trying to ape her as getting tugged along in
the undertow, and Alice looks a bit uncomfortable in their presence.
But what do I care? They're people to talk to, and we're chained
together by the mutual scorefile so I can't ignore them. This must be
how the ancients used to feel about their families.
"Hello all," I say, pulling out a chair. "And how are you today?"
Jen waves at a metal bucket on a stand, with some kind of cloth draped over it. "Livin' large!" she announces. "Girls, a glass for Reeve. Won't you join us in a little Chateau Lafitte '59?"
"A little—" She whisks the cloth off the bucket, and I see it's full of ice packed around a green glass bottle.
"Champagne," Alice says, a little apologetically. "Fizzy wine."
"I wouldn't say no." Angel holds out a fluted glass while Jen picks up the bottle and pours.
"Why, is there something in particular to
celebrate?" Jen and Angel don't normally do their drinking before
sunset. So I figure it must be good.
"Well." Jen's eye sparkles wickedly. "You might
think it was something to do with your correcting your last social
shortcoming at long last." I feel my face heating. "But that's not it."
Bitch. "It's just that this is Alice's last drink for some time."
"Excuse me?" I say, unsure what's going on.
"About eight months to go," Alice says, dabbing
at her lips with a napkin. Her eyes flicker from me to Jen and back
again, as if looking for an offer of help.
"I—" I stop. Lick my lips. "You're pregnant?"
"Yes." Alice nods, a quick up and down. She doesn't look happy. Jen, however, looks ecstatic.
"Here's to Alice and her baby!" She raises a
glass of bubbly, and I echo the gesture because it would be rude not
to, but as I take a mouthful of the sweet, fizzy wine I catch Alice's
eye, and it's like there's a static discharge—I can see exactly
what she's thinking.
"To your very good health," I tell her over the
rim of my glass, and I'm pretty sure she gets the unspoken message
because her shoulders slump slightly, and she takes a small sip from
her own glass. I look at Jen. "And you?" I ask, before I can apply the
brakes to my motor mouth.
Jen doesn't crack a smile. "Shouldn't be too
long now," she remarks, calmly enough. "Then you can buy me a bottle of
champagne too, eh?"
I manage to summon up the ghost of a grin from somewhere. "You must want a baby badly."
"Of course! And I'm not just going to stop at one." Jen smiles at me sympathetically. "Of course, I heard all about your job. It must be very difficult."
"It's not so bad," I manage, before retreating into the glass. Bitch. "You know Janis is pregnant, too?" I'll bet you do. "I'm training to be her replacement." What is this, let's all overload the life-support system week? "It's going to mean more work for the rest of us."
"Oh, you'll be next," Jen says, with a casual,
airy certainty that makes my blood run cold. "You'll see things
differently when you've got one of your own. I say, waiter! Waiter!
Where's our menu?"
TIME passes
fast, mostly because I spend the afternoon with my nose buried in the
encyclopedia, trying to remedy my desperate ignorance of dark ages
reproductive politics. Which I sense is putting me at a dangerous
disadvantage.
The next day is the first of four days off. I
sleep until well after Sam's departed for the office. Then I go
downstairs and work out. Of the nine other houses on our stretch of
road, one is now occupied by Nicky and Wolf—but Wolf has a job
and Nicky, who is lazy beyond my wildest aspirations, sleeps in until
noon. So I get in a good hour-long run, by the end of which I'm sweated
up but not breathless or aching anymore. It's spring in our biome, and
the trees and flowers are beginning to blossom. The air is full of the
airborne seminiferous dust shed by the hermaphroditic vegetation. It
tickles my nose, making me sneeze, but some of the scents that
accompany it—attractants for insects—are nice.
After exercise I shower, dress in respectable
clothes, and head downtown to the hardware store to spend some of my
money. I feel better about spending it, knowing it's not Sam's money,
even though I realize this is stupid because it's just meaningless
scrip issued to keep the experiment working, not real currency. I come
away from the store with abrazing torch, flux, solder, lots and lots of copper wire, and some other odds and ends. Then I go shopping for domestic items.
I hit the drugstore first, armed with a shopping
list of things I'd never heard of until yesterday—things the
encyclopedia listed under sexual health. Unfortunately, just knowing
what to ask for doesn't translate into being able to buy it, and I
gradually figure out that the omissions make a pattern. I can
understand them not having progestogen-based medications on general
sale. But why are there no absorbent sponges? Or the plastic penile
sheaths I read about? After about half an hour of searching I conclude
that the drugstore is useless by design. I ran across a rather shocking
article on religious beliefs about sex and reproduction, and it looks
like our drugstore was stocked on the basis of instructions from
eclecticist hierophants. Something tells me that the lack of
contraceptives is not an accident. I'm just surprised I haven't already
heard people grumbling about it.
I have better luck in the department store,
where I buy a new microwave oven, some clip-on spotlights, and a few
other items. Then I go hunting for a craft shop. It takes me a while to
find what I'm looking for, but in the end I discover one tucked in a
corner of the shop, inside a pulp carton—a small wooden loom,
suitable for weaving cloth. I buy it along with a whole bunch of woolen
thread, just so nobody raises any eyebrows. Then I catch a taxi home
and install my loot in the garage, along with the unfinished crossbow
and the other projects.
It's time to get things moving. It's time I
stopped kidding myself that I can fight my way out of here, and time
that I stopped kidding myself that they're going to let me go in (I
checked the calendar) another ninety-four megaseconds. Forget the
crossbow and the other toys I've been playing with. I've got a stark
choice. I can conform like everyone else, go native in the pocket
polity they've established, settle down and get on with the job of
creating a generation of innocents who don't even know there's another
universe outside. Who knows? After a gigasecond, will I even remember I
had another life? It's not as if my presurgery self left me much to
hold on to . . .
Or I can try to find out what's really going on.
Fiore and his shadowy boss, Bishop Yourdon, are doing something with
this polity, that much is clear. This isn't just a straightforward
experimental archaeology commune. Too many aspects of the setup turn
out to be just plain wrong when you examine them closely. If I can
figure out what they're trying to do, maybe I can discover a way out.
Which is why I spend a personal infinity
laboriously stripping reel after reel of copper wire of its insulation
and threading it onto the loom. The first step in figuring out what's
going on is to get myself some privacy. I need a shoulder bag lined
with woven copper mesh to accompany the bug-zapper (my repurposed
microwave oven), and there's no way I could order a Faraday cage from
one of the stores without setting off alarms.
It takes me nearly two weeks to weave a square
meter of copper wire broadcloth, working in darkness by touch alone.
It's really fiddly stuff to work with. The strands keep breaking or
bending, it takes ages to strip the insulation, and besides, I've got a
day job to go to.
Janis is complaining about minor back pains and
spending a lot of time in the toilet each morning, coming out looking
pale. There are fewer wisecracks and jokes from her, which is a shame.
She's beginning to bulge around the waist, too. She's putting a brave
face on it, but I think underneath it all she's terrified. The prospect
of giving birth like an animal (with all the attendant risk and pain)
is enough to scare anybody, even if it didn't come with the added
horror of being chained down in this place for the indefinite
hereafter, the product of your blood and sweat held hostage against
your cooperation. What I want to know is, why isn't there a resistance
movement? I suppose in a panopticon anyone organizing such a thing
would have to be very quiet about it—or very naive—but I
can't help wondering why I haven't seen any signs of even covert
defiance.
I checked the YFH-Polity constitution in the
library (there's a copy on a lectern out front, for everybody to read)
and what's missing from it is as important as what's there. There's a
bill of rights that explicitly includes the phrase "right to life"
(which, if you read some dark ages histories, doesn't mean what a naive
modern would think it means), and it goes on to explicitly waive all
expectations of a right to privacy, which means they can enforce it
against my will. Ick. The constitution is a public protocol
specification defining the parameters within which YFH's legal system
operates. Before I came here, it seemed irrelevant, but now it
terrifies me—and I notice that it says nothing about a commitment
to freedom of movement. That's been an axiom for virtually all human
polities, ever since the end of the censorship wars mopped up the last
nests of Curious Yellow and the memetic dictatorships. Not that you'll
find any such knowledge in our shelves; history stops in 2050, as far
as your reading in this library goes, and anyway, everything after 2005
is accessible only via the computer terminals, using an arcane
conversational text interface that I'm still fumblingly trying to
explore.
I see relatively little of Sam during this time.
After our argument, indeed ever since the halfhearted reconciliation,
he's withdrawn from me. Maybe it's the shock of learning about his
reproductive competence, but he's very distant. Before that nightmare,
before I messed up everything between us, I'd hug him when he got home
from work. We'd have a laugh together, or chat, and we were (I'm sure
of this) growing close. But since that night and our argument, we
haven't even touched. I feel isolated and a bit afraid. If we did
touch I'd—I don't know. Let's be honest about this: I have an
active sex drive, but the thought of getting pregnant in here scares
the shit out of me. And while there are other things we could do if we
were inclined to intimacy, I find the whole situation is a very
effective turnoff. So I can't really blame Sam for avoiding me as much
as he can. The sooner he gets out of here the sooner he can rush off in
search of his romantic love—assuming the bitch didn't give up on
him and go in search of a poly nucleus to joyfully exchange bodily
fluids with about five seconds after he joined the experiment. Sam
broods, and, knowing his luck, he's fixated on someone I wouldn't give
the time of day to.
That's life for you.
FOUR weeks into my new job, twelve weeks before Janis is due to go on maternity leave, I have another wake-up-screaming nightmare.
This time things are different. For one thing, Sam isn't there to hold me
when I wake up. And for another, I know with cold certainty that this
one is true. It's not simply a hideous dream, it's something that
actually happened to me. Something that wasn't meant to be erased back
at the clinic.
I'm sitting at a desk in a cramped rectangular
room with no doors or windows. The walls are the color of old gold,
dulled but iridescent, rainbows of diffraction coming off them whenever
I look away from the desk. I'm in an orthohuman male body, not the
mecha battlecorpse of my previous nightmare, and I'm wearing a simple
tunic in a livery that I vaguely recognize as belonging to the clinic
of the surgeon-confessors.
On the desk in front of me sits a stack of rough
paper sheets, handwoven with ragged edges. I made the stuff myself a
long time ago, and any embedded snitches in it have long since died of
old age. In my left hand I hold a simple ink pen with a handle made of
bone that I carved from the femur of my last body—a little
personal conceit. There's a bottle of ink at the opposite side of the
desk, and I recall that procuring this ink cost a surprising amount of
time and money. The ink has no history. The carbon soot particles
suspended in it are isotopically randomized. You can't even tell what
region of the galaxy it came from. Anonymous ink for a poison pen. How
suitable . . .
I'm writing a letter to someone who doesn't
exist yet. That person is going to be alone, confused, probably very
frightened indeed. I feel a terrible sympathy for him in his loneliness
and fear, because I've been there myself, and I know what he's going
through. And I'll be right there with him, living through every second
of it. (Something's wrong. The letter I remember reading back in
rehab was only three pages, but this stack is much thicker. What's
happening?) I hunch over the desk, gripping the pen tightly enough
that it forms a painful furrow beside the first joint of my middle
finger as I scratch laborious tracks across the fibrous sheets.
As I remember the sensations in my fingers, the
somatic memory of writing, I get a horrible sense of certainty, a deep
conviction that I really did send myself a twenty-page letter
from the past, stuff I desperately needed to see—of which only
three pages were allowed to reach me.
Dear self:
Right now you're wondering who you are.
I assume you're over the wild mood swings by now and can figure out
what other people's emotional states signify. If not, I suggest you
stop reading immediately and leave this letter for later. There's stuff
in here that you will find disturbing. Access it too soon, and you'll
probably end up getting yourself killed.
Who are you? And who am I?
The answer to that question is that
you are me and I am you, but you lack certain key memories—most
importantly, everything that meant anything to me from about two and a
half gigaseconds ago. That's an awfully long time. Back before the
Acceleration most humans didn't live that long. So you're probably
asking yourself why I—your earlier self—might want to erase
all those experiences. Were they really that bad?
No, they weren't. In fact, if I hadn't
gone through deep memory surgery a couple of times before, I'd be
terrified. There's stuff in here, stuff in my head, that I don't want
to lose. Forgetting is a little like dying, and forgetting seventy
Urth-years of memories in one go is a lot like dying.
Luckily forgetfulness, like death, is
reversible these days. Go to the House of Rishael the Exceptional in
Block 54-Honey-September in the Polity of the Jade Sunrise and, after
presenting a tissue sample, ask to speak to Jordaan. Jordaan will
explain how to recover my latest imprint from escrow and how to merge
the imprint block back into your mind. It's a difficult process, but
it's stuff that belongs to you and brought you deep happiness when you
were me. In fact, it's the stuff that makes me myself—and the
lack of which defines who you are in relation to me.
Incidentally, one of the things you'll
find in the imprint is the memory of how to access a trust fund with a
quarter million écus in it.
(Yes, I'm a manipulative worm: I want
you to become me again, sooner or later. Don't worry, you're a
manipulative worm, too—you must be, if you're alive to read this
letter.)
Now, the basics.
You are recovering from deep memory erasure surgery. You are probably thinking that once you recover you'll go and spend the usual wanderjahr looking for a vocation, find somewhere to live, meet friends and lovers, and set up a life for yourself. Wrong.
The reason you are recovering from memory erasure surgery is that the
people you work for have noticed a disturbing pattern of events
centered on the Clinic of the Blessed Singularity run by the order of
surgeon-confessors at City Zone Darke in the Invisible Republic. People
coming out of surgery are being offered places in a
psychological/historical research project aimed at probing the social
conditions of the first dark age by live role-play. Some of these
people have very questionable histories: in some cases, questionable to
the point of being fugitive war criminals.
Your mission (and no, you don't have
any choice—I already committed us to it) is to go inside the
YFH-Polity, find out what's going on, then come back out to tell us.
Sounds simple, doesn't it?
There's a catch. The research
community has been established inside a former military prison, a
glasshouse that was used as a reprogramming and rehabilitation center
after the war. It was widely believed to be escape-proof at the time,
and it's certainly a very secure facility. Other agents have already
gone in. One very experienced colleague of yours vanished completely,
and is now over twenty megs past their criticality deadline. Another
reappeared eleven megaseconds late, reported to the prearranged
debriefing node, and detonated a concealed antimatter device, killing
the instance of their case officer who was in attendance.
I believe that both agents were
compromised because they were injected into the glasshouse with
extensive prebriefing and training. We have no idea what to expect on
the other side of the longjump gate into YFH-Polity, but their security
is tight. We expect extensive border firewalls and a focused
counterespionage operation supported by the surveillance facilities of
a maximum-security prison. There is likely to be stateful examination
of your upload vector, and careful background checks before you are
admitted. This is why I am about to undergo deep memory excision.
Simply put, what you don't know can't betray you.
Incidentally, if you're experiencing
lucid dreams about this stuff, it means you're overdue. This is the
secondary emergent fallback briefing.I'm about to have these memories partially
erased—unlinked, but not destroyed—before I go into the
clinic in City Zone Darke. It's a matter of erasing the associative
links to the data, not the data itself. They'll re-emerge given
sufficient time, hopefully even after the surgeon-confessors go after
the other memories that I'll be asking them to redact. They can't erase what I don't know I've already forgotten.
What is the background to your mission?
I can tell you very little. Our
records are worryingly incomplete, and to some extent this is a garbage
trawl triggered by the coincidence of the names Yourdon, Fiore, and
Hanta cropping up in the same place.
During the censorship wars, Curious
Yellow infected virtually every A-gate in the Republic of Is. We don't
know who released Curious Yellow, or why, because Curious Yellow
appears to have been created for the sole purpose of delivering a
psywar payload designed to erase all memories and data pertaining to
something or other. By squatting the assemblers, Curious Yellow ensured
that anyone who needed medical care, food, material provisions, or just
about any of the necessities of civilization, had to submit to
censorship. Needless to say, some of us took exception to this, and the
subsequent civil war—in which the Republic of Is shattered into
the current system of firewalled polities—resulted in a major
loss of data about certain key areas. In particular, the key services
provided by the Republic—a common time framework and the ability
to authenticate identities—were broken. The situation was
complicated, after the defeat of the Curious Yellow censorship worm, by
the emergence of quisling dictatorships whose leaders took advantage of
the Curious Yellow software to spread their own pernicious ideologies
and power structures. In the ensuing chaos, even more information was
lost.
Among the things we know very little
about are the history and origins of certain military personnel
conscripted into sleeper cells by Curious Yellow once the worm
determined it was under attack by dissidents armed with clean,
scratch-built A-gates. The same goes for the dangerous opportunists who
took advantage of Curious Yellow's payload capability in order to set
up their own pocket empires. Yourdon, Fiore, and Hanta came to our
attention in connection with the psychological warfare organizations of
no less than eighteen local cognitive dictatorships. They are
extraordinarily dangerous people, but they are currently beyond our
reach because they are, to put it bluntly, providing some kind of
service to the military of the Invisible Republic.
What we know about the sleeper cells
is this: In the last few megasecs of the war, before the alliance
succeeded in shattering and then sanitizing the last remaining networks
of Curious Yellow, some of the quisling dictatorships' higher echelons
went underground. It is now almost two gigaseconds since the end of the
war, and most people dismiss the concept of Curious Yellow revenants as
fantasy. However, I don't believe in ignoring threats just because they
sound far-fetched. If Curious Yellow really did create sleeper
cells, secondary pockets of infection designed to break out long after
the initial wave was suppressed, then our collective failure to pursue
them is disastrously shortsighted. And I am particularly worried
because some aspects of the YFH-Polity experimental protocol, as
published, sound alarmingly amenable to redirection along these lines.
My biggest reason for wanting you to
have undergone major memory erasure prior to injection into YFH-Polity
is this: I suspect that when the incoming experimental subjects are
issued with new bodies, they are filtered through an A-gate infected
with a live, patched copy of Curious Yellow. Therefore preemptive
memory redaction is the only sure way of preventing such a
verminiferous gate from identifying you as a threat for its owners to
eliminate.
I watch myself writing this letter to myself. I
can read it as clearly as if it's engraved in my own flesh. But I can't
see any marks in the paper, because my old self has forgotten to dip
his pen in the ink, and he's long since fallen to scratching invisible
indentations on the coarse sheets. I seem to stand behind his shoulder
although his head is nowhere in my field of vision, and I try to scream
at him, No! No! That isn't how you do it! But nothing comes out
because this is a dream, and when I try to grab the pen, my hand passes
right through his wrist, and he keeps writing on my naked brain with
his ink of blood and neurotransmitters.
I begin to panic, because being trapped in this cell with him has brought
memories flooding back in, memories that he cunningly suppressed in
order to avoid triggering Curious Yellow's redaction factories. It's a
movable feast of horrors and exultation and life in the large. It's too
much to bear, and it's too intense, because now I remember the rest of
my earlier dream of swords and armor and the reversible massacre aboard
a conditionally liberated polity cylinder. I remember the way our
A-gate glitched and crashed at the end of the rescue as we threw the
last severed head into its maw, and the way Loral turned to me, and
said, "Well shit," in a voice full of world-weary disgust, and
how I walked away and scheduled myself for deep erasure because I knew
if I didn't, the memory of it all would drag me awake screaming for
years to come—
—And I'm awake, and I make it to the toilet just in time before my stomach squeezes convulsively and tries to climb up my throat and escape.
I can't believe I did those things. I don't believe I would
have committed such crimes. But I remember the massacre as if it was
yesterday. And if those memories are false, then what about the rest of
me?
NOT entirely by
coincidence, the next day is my first run with the shoulder bag. It
started life as a rectangular green vinyl affair. It now sports a black
nylon lining that I've stitched together with much swearing and sucking
of pricked fingertips to conceal the gleaming copper weave glued to its
inside. It looks like a shopping bag until I fold over the inner flap.
Then it looks like a full shopping bag with a black flap covering the
contents. Right now it contains a carton of extremely strong ground
espresso, a filter cone, and several small items that are individually
innocuous but collectively damning if you know what you're looking at.
It's a good thing the bag looks anonymous, because unless I'm
hallucinating all my memories, what I'm going to take home from work in
that bag today will be a whole lot less innocuous than coffee beans.
I get in to work at the usual early hour and
find Janis in the staff room, looking pale and peaky. "Morning
sickness?" I ask. She nods. "Sympathies. Say, why don't you stay here,
and I'll get the returnssorted out? Put your feet up—I'll call you if anything comes up that I can't handle."
"Thanks. I'll do just that." She leans back against the wall. "I wouldn't be here but Fiore's coming—"
"You leave that to me," I say, trying not to
look surprised. I wasn't expecting him so soon, but I've got the bag,
so . . .
"Are you sure?" she asks.
"Yes." I smile reassuringly. "Don't worry about me, I'll just let him in and leave him to get on with things."
"Okay," she says gratefully, and I go back out and get to work.
First I pile yesterday's returns on the trolley
and push them around the shelves, filing them as fast as I can. It only
takes a few minutes—most of the inmates here don't realize that
reading is a recreational option, and only a handful are borrowing
regularly. But then I skip the dusting and cleaning I'm supposed to do
today. Instead, I grab my bag from behind the reception station, dump
it on the bottom shelf of the trolley, and head for the shelves in the
reference section next to the room where the Church documents are
stored.
Into the bag goes a dictionary of sexual taboos,
held in the reference shelves because some weird interpretation of dark
age mores holds that libraries wouldn't lend such stuff out. It's my
cover story in case I'm caught, something naughty but obviously
trivial. Then I leave the trolley right where it is with the bag tucked
away on the bottom shelf, where it's not immediately obvious. I head
back to the front desk. My palms are sweating. Fiore is due to visit
the archive, which means advancing my plans. Janis has always handled
him before—but she's ill, I'm running the shop, and there's no
point delaying the inevitable. I've got all my excuses prepared,
anyway. I've barely been able to sleep lately for rehearsing them in my
head.
Around midmorning a black car pulls up and parks
in front of the library steps. I put down the book I'm reading and
stand up to wait behind the counter. A uniformed zombie gets out of the
front and opens the rear door, standing to one side while a plump male
climbs out. His dark, oily hair shines in the daylight: The white slash
of his clerical collar lends his face a disembodied appearance, as if
it doesn't quite belong to the same world as the rest of his body. He
walks up the steps to the front door and pushes it open, then walks
over to the desk. "Special reference section," he says tersely. Then he
looks at my face. "Ah, Reeve. I didn't see you here before."
I manage a sickly smile. "I'm the trainee librarian. Janis is ill this morning, so I'm looking after everything in her absence."
"Ill?" He stares at me owlishly. I look right
back at him. Fiore has chosen a body that is physically imposing but
bordering on senescence, in the state the ancients called "middle age."
He's overweight to the point of obesity, squat and wide and barely
taller than I am. His chins wobble as he talks, and the pores on his
nose are very visible. Right now his nostrils are flared, sniffing the
air suspiciously, and his bushy eyebrows draw together as he inspects
me. He smells of something musty and organic, as if he's spent too long
in a compost heap.
"Yes, she has morning sickness," I say artlessly, hoping he won't ask where she is.
"Morning sick—oh, I see!" His frown
vanishes instantly. "Ah, the trials we have to suffer." His voice oozes
a slug-trail of sympathy. "I'm sure this must be hard for her, and for
you. Just take me to the reference room, and I'll stay out of your way,
child."
"Certainly." I head for the gate at the side of
the station. "If you'd like to follow me?" He knows exactly where we're
going, the old toad, but he's a stickler for appearances. I lead him to
the locked door in the reference section, and he produces a small bunch
of keys, muttering to himself, and opens it. "Would you like a cup of
tea or coffee?" I ask hesitantly.
He pauses and gives me the dead-fish stare again. "Isn't that against library regulations?" he asks.
"Normally yes, but you're not going to be in the
library proper," I babble, "you're in the archive and you're a
responsible person so I thought I'd offer—"
He stops being interested in me. "Coffee will be
fine. Milk, no sugar." He disappears into the room, leaving his keys
with the lock.
Now. Heart pounding, I head for the
staff room. Janis is snoozing when I open the door. She sits up with a
start, looking pale. "Reeve—"
"It's all right," I say, crossing over to the
kettle and filling it up. "Fiore's here, I let him in. Listen, why
don't you go home? If you're feeling ill, you shouldn't really be here,
should you?"
"I've been thinking about thinking." Janis
shakes her head. I rummage around for the coffee and filter papers and
set the stand up over the biggest mug I can find. I scoop the coffee
into the paper with wild abandon, stopping only when I realize that
making it too strong for Fiore will be as bad as not getting him to
drink it all. "You shouldn't think too much, Reeve. It's bad for you."
"Is it really?" I ask abstractedly, as I peel
the foil wrapping from a small tablet of chocolate I bought at the
drugstore and crumble half of it into the coffee grounds as the kettle
begins to hiss. I wad the foil into a tight ball and flick it into the
wastebasket.
"If you think about getting out of here," says Janis.
"Like I said, I'll call you a taxi—"
"No, I mean out of here." I turn round
and she looks at me with the expression of a trapped animal. It's one
of those moments of existential bleakness when the cocoon of lies that
we spin around ourselves to paper over the cracks in reality dissolve
into slime, and we're left looking at something really ugly. Janis has
got the bug, the same one I've got, only she's got it worse. "I can't
stand it anymore! They're going to put me in hospital and make me pass
a skull through my cunt, and then they're going to have a little
accident and I'll bleed out and they'll give me to Hanta to fix with
her tame censorship worm. I'll come out of the hospital smiling like
Yvonne and Patrice, and there won't be any me left, there'll be this thing that thinks it's me and—"
I grab her. "Shut up!" I hiss in her ear.
"It's not going to happen!" She sobs, a great racking howl welling up
inside her, and if she lets it out. I'm completely screwed because
Fiore will hear us. "I've got a plan."
"You've—what?"
The kettle is boiling. I gently push away her
groping hands and reach over to turn it off. "Listen. Go home. Right
now, right this instant. Leave Fiore to me. Stop panicking. The
more isolated we think we are, the more isolated we become. I won't let
them mess with your head." I smile at her reassuringly. "Trust me."
"You." Janis sniffles loudly, then lets go of me
and grabs a tissue off the box on the table. "You've got—no,
don't tell me." She blows her nose and takes a deep breath, then looks
at me again, a long, hard, appraising look. "Should have guessed. You
don't take shit, do you?"
"Not if I can help it." I pick up the kettle and
carefully pour boiling water into the funnel, where it will damp down
the coffee grounds, extract the xanthine alkaloids and dissolve the
half tab of Ex-Lax hidden in the powder, draining the sennoside
glycosides and the highly diuretic caffeine into the mug of steaming
coffee that, with any luck, will give Fiore a strong urge to take ten
minutes on the can about half an hour after he drinks it. "Just try to
relax. I should be able to tell you about it in a couple of days if
things work out."
"Right. You've got a plan." She blows her nose again. "You want me to go home." It's a question.
"Yes. Right now, without letting Fiore see you here—I told him you were at home, sick."
"Okay." She manages a wan smile.
I pour milk into the coffee mug, then pick it up. "I'm just going to give the Reverend his coffee," I tell her.
"To give—" Her eyes widen. "I see." She
takes her jacket from the hook on the back of the door. "I'd better get
out of your way, then." She grins at me briefly. "Good luck!"
And she's gone, leaving me room to pick up the
mug of coffee and the other item from the sink side and to carry them
out to Fiore.
THE simplest plans are often the best.
Anything I try to do on the library computer
system will be monitored, and the instant I try to find anything
interesting they'll know I know about it. It's probably there as a
honeypot, to snare the overly curious and insufficiently paranoid. Even
if it isn't, I probably won't get anywhere useful—those old
conversational interfaces are not only arcane, they're feeble-minded.
To put one over on these professional paranoids
is going to take skill, cunning, and lateral thinking. And my thinking
is this: If Fiore and the Bishop Yourdon and their fellow experimenters
have one weak spot, it's their dedication to the spirit of the study.
They won't use advanced but anachronistic surveillance techniques where
nonintrusive ones that were available during the dark ages will do. And
they won't use informational metastructures accessible via netlink
where a written manual and records on paper will do. (Either that, or
what they write on paper really is secret stuff, material that they won't entrust to a live data system in case it comes under attack.)
The ultrasecure repository in the library is
merely a room full of shelves of paper files, with no windows and a
simple mortise lock securing the door. What more do they need? They've
got us locked down in the glasshouse, a network of sectors of anonymous
orbital habs subjected to pervasive surveillance, floating in the
unmapped depths of interstellar space, coordinates and orbital elements
unknown, interconnected by T-gates that the owners can switch on or off
at will, and accessible from the outside only via a single secured
longjump gate. Not only that, but our experimenters appear to have a
rogue surgeon-confessor running the hospital. Burglar alarms would be
redundant.
After I knock on the door and pass Fiore his
coffee, I go back to the reference section and while away a few
minutes, leafing through an encyclopedia to pass the time. (The
ancients held deeply bizarre ideas about neuroanatomy, I discover, and
especially about developmental plasticity. I guess it explains some of
their ideas about gender segregation.)
As it happens, I don't have to wait long. Fiore
comes barging into the office and looks about. "You—is there a
staff toilet here?" he demands, glancing around apprehensively. His
forehead glistens beneath the lighting tubes.
"Certainly. It's through the staff common
room—this way." I head toward the staff room at a leisurely pace.
Fiore takes short steps, breathing heavily.
"Faster," he grumbles. I step aside
and gesture at the door. "Thank you," he adds as he darts inside. A
moment later I hear him fumbling with the bolt, then the rattle of a
toilet seat.
Excellent. With any luck, he'll be about his business before he looks for the toilet paper. Which is missing because I've hidden it.
I walk back to the door to the restricted document repository. Fiore has left his key in the lock and the door ajar. Oh dear.
I pull out the bar of soap, the sharp knife, and the wad of toilet
paper I've left in my bag on the bottom shelf of the trolley. What an unfortunate oversight!
I wedge my toe in the door to keep it from
shutting as I pull the key out and press it into the bar of soap, both
sides, taking care to get a clean impression. It only takes a few
seconds, then I use some of the paper to wipe the key clean and wrap up
the bar, which I stash back in the bag. The key is a plain metal
instrument. While there's an outside chance that there's some kind of
tracking device built into it in case it's lost, it isn't
lost—it moved barely ten centimeters while Fiore was taking his
ease. And I'm fairly certain there are no silly cryptographic
authentication tricks built into it—if so, why disguise it as an
old-fashioned mortise lock key? Mechanical mortise locks are
surprisingly secure when you're defending against intruders who're more
used to dealing with software locks. Finally, if there's one place that
won't be under visual surveillance, it's Fiore's high-security document
vault while the Priest is busy inside it. This is the chain of
assumptions on which I am gambling my life.
I make sure my bag is well hidden at the bottom
of the trolley before I slowly make my way back to the staff room. And
I wait a full minute before I allow myself to hear Fiore calling
querulously for toilet paper.
The rest of the day passes slowly without Janis
to joke with. Fiore leaves after another hour, muttering and grumbling
about his digestion. I transfer the soap bar to the wheezing little
refrigerator in the staff room where we keep the milk. I don't want to
risk its melting or deforming.
That evening, I lock up and go home with my
heart in my mouth, sweat gluing my blouse to the small of my back. It's
silly of me, I know. By doing this, I risk rapid exposure. But if I
don't do it, what will happen in the longer term is worse than anything
that can happen to me if they catch me with a library book from the
reference-only collection and a distorted bar of soap. It won't be just
me who goes down screaming. Janis knew about Curious Yellow and was
afraid of surveillance. I don't know why, or where from, but it's an
ominous sign. Who is she?
Back home, I head for the garage before I go
indoors. It's time to power up the bug zapper in anger for the first
time. The bug zapper is the cheap microwave oven I bought a few weeks
ago. I've had the lid off, and I've done some creative things with its
wiring. A microwave oven is basically a Faraday cage with a powerful
microwave emitter. It's tuned to emit electromagnetic energy at a
wavelength that is strongly absorbed by the water in whatever food you
put inside. Well, that's no good for me, but with some creative
jiggery-pokery, I've succeeded in buggering up the magnetron very
effectively. It now emits a noisy range of wavelengths, and while it
won't cook your dinner very well, it'll make a real mess of any
electronic circuits you put in it. I open the door and shake my
copper-lined bag's contents into it, then reach through the fabric to
retrieve the bar of soap. I really don't want to fry that—Fiore might get suspicious if he got the shits every time he went to the library while I was on duty.
I drop the oven door shut and zap the book for
fifteen seconds. Then I push a button on the breadboard I've taped to
the side of the oven. No lights come on. There's nothing talking in the
death cell, so it looks like I've effectively crisped any critters
riding the book's spine. Well, we'll see when I take it back to the
library, won't we? If Fiore singles me out in Church the day after
tomorrow, I'll know I was wrong, but sneaking a dirty book out of the
library for an evening isn't in the same league as stealing the keys
to—
The plaster of paris! Mentally, I
kick myself. I nearly forgot it. I tip the right amount into an empty
yoghurt pot with shaky hands, then measure in a beaker of water and
stir the mass with a teaspoon until it begins to get so hot that I have
to juggle it from hand to hand.
Ten minutes pass, and I line a baking tray with
moist whitish goop (gypsum, hydrated calcium sulphate). Hoping that it
has cooled enough, I press both sides of the soap bar into it a couple
of times. I have a tense moment worrying about the soap's softening and
melting, and I make the first impression too early, while the plaster's
so soft and damp that it sticks to the soap, but in the end I think
I've probably got enough to work with. So I cover the tray with a piece
of cheesecloth and go inside. It's nearly ten o'clock, I'm hungry and
exhausted, tomorrow is my day off, and I am going to have to go in to
work anyway to visit Janis and make sure she's all right. But next time
Fiore visits the repository, I'm going to be ready to sneak in right
after he's left. And then we'll see what he's hiding down
there . . .
SUNDAY dawns,
cool and mellow. I groan and try not to pull the bedclothes over my
head. By one of those quirks of scheduling, yesterday was a workday for
me, tomorrow is another, and I'm feeling hammered by the prospect of
two eleven-hour days. I'm not looking forward to spending half my day
off in forced proximity to score whores like Jen and Angel, but I
manage to force myself out of bed and rescue my Sunday outfit from the
pile growing on the chair at the end of the room. (I need to take a
trip to the dry-cleaners soon, and spend some time down in the basement
washing the stuff I can do at home. More drudgery on my day off. Does
it ever stop?)
Downstairs, I find Sam laboriously spooning
cornflakes into a bowl of milk. He looks preoccupied. My stomach is
tight with anxiety, but I force myself to put a pan of water on the
burner and carefully lower a couple of eggs into it. I need to make
myself eat: My appetite isn't good, and with the exercise regime I'm
keeping up, I could start burning muscle tissue very easily. I glance
inward at my mostly silent netlink to check my cohort's scores for the
week. As usual, I'm nearly the bottom-ranked female in the group. Only
Cass is doing worse, and I feel a familiar stab of anxiety. I'm nearly
sure she isn't Kay, but I can't help feeling for her. She has to put up
with that swine Mick, after all. Then my stomach does another flip-flop
as I remember something I have to do before we go.
"Sam."
He glances up from his bowl. "Yes?"
"Today. Don't be surprised if—if—" I can't say it.
He puts his spoon down and looks out the window. "It's a nice day." He frowns. "What's bugging you? Is it Church?"
I manage to nod.
His eyes go glassy for a moment. Checking his scores, I guess. Then he nods. "You didn't get any penalties, did you?"
"No. But I'm afraid I—" I shake my head, unable to continue.
"They're going to single you out," he says, evenly and slowly.
"That's it." I nod. "I've just got a feeling, is all."
"Let them." He looks angry, and for a moment I
feel frightened, then I realize that for a wonder it isn't
me—he's angry at the idea that Fiore might have a go at me in
Church, indignant at the possibility that the congregation might go
along with it. Resentful. "We'll walk out."
"No, Sam." The water is boiling—I check
the clock, then switch on the toaster. Boiled eggs and toast, that's
how far my culinary skills have come. "If you do that, it'll make you a
target, too. If we're both targets . . ."
"I don't care." He meets my gaze evenly, with no
sign of the reticence that's been dogging him for the past month. "I
made a decision. I'm not going to stand by and let them pick us off one
by one. We've both made mistakes, but you're the one who's most at risk
in here. I haven't been fair to you and I, I"—he stumbles for a
moment—"I wish things had turned out differently." He looks down
at his bowl and murmurs something I can't quite make out.
"Sam?" I sit down. "Sam. You can't take on the whole polity on your own." He looks sad. Sad? Why?
"I know." He looks at me. "But I feel so helpless!"
Sad and angry. I stand up and walk over to the burner, turn the heat right down. The eggs are bumping against the bottom of the pan. The toaster
is ticking. "We should have thought of that before we agreed to be
locked up in this prison," I say. I feel like screaming. With my
extra-heavy memory erasure—which I have a sneaking suspicion
exceeded anything my earlier self, the one who wrote me the letter and
then forgot about it, was expecting—I'm half-surprised I got here
in the first place. Certainly if I'd known Kay was going to dither,
then pull out, I'd probably have chosen to stay with her and the good
life, assassins or no.
"Prison." He chuckles bitterly. "That's a good description for it. I wish there was some way to escape."
"Go ask the Bishop; maybe he'll let you out
early for bad behavior." I pop the toast, butter it, then scoop both
eggs out of the water and onto my plate. "I wish."
"How about we walk to Church today?" Sam
suggests hesitantly, as I'm finishing breakfast. "It's about two
kilometers. That sounds a long way, but—"
"It also sounds like a good idea to me," I say, before he can talk himself out of it. "I'll wear my work shoes."
"Good. I'll meet you down here in ten minutes."
He brushes against me on his way out of the kitchen, and I startle, but
he doesn't seem to notice. Something's going on inside his head, and
not being able to open up and ask is frustrating.
Two kilometers is a nice morning walk, and Sam
lets me hold his hand as we stroll along the quiet avenues beneath
trees suddenly exploding with green and blue-black leaves. We have to
walk through three tunnels between zones to get to the neighborhood of
the Church—there are no lines of sight longer than half a
kilometer, perhaps because that would make it obvious that our
landscapes are cut from the inner surfaces of conic sections rather
than glued to the outside of a sphere by natural gravity—but we
see barely anyone. Most folks travel to Church by taxi, and they won't
be leaving their homes until we're nearly there.
The Church service starts out anticlimactic for
me, but probably not for anyone else. After leading the congregation
into a tub-thumping rendition of "First We Take Manhattan," Fiore
launches into a longperoration on the nature of obedience, crime, our place in society, and our duties to one another.
"Is it not true that we were placed here to
enjoy the benefits of civilization and to raise a great society for the
betterment of our children and the achievement of a morally pure
state?" he thunders from the pulpit, eyes focused glassily on an
infinity that lurks just behind the back wall. "And to this end, isn't
it the case that our social order, being the earthly antecedent of a
Platonic ideal society, must be defended so that it has room to mature
and bear the fruit of utopia?" A real tub-thumper, I realize
uneasily. I wonder where he's going? People are shuffling in the row
behind me; I'm not the only one with a guilty conscience.
"This being the case, can we admit to our
society one who violates its cardinal rules? Must we forebear from
criticizing the sins out of consideration for the sensibilities of the
sinner?" He demands. "Or for the sensibilities of those who, unknowing,
live side by side with the personification of vice incarnate?"
Here it comes. I feel a mortal sense
of dread, my stomach loosening in anticipation of the denunciation I
can feel coming. There's got to be more to this than a furtive library
book, and I have a horrible sinking feeling that he's figured out the
soap impression and the plaster of paris and the mold I'm preparing for
the duplicate keys—
"No!" Fiore booms from the pulpit. "This cannot be!" He thumps the rail with one fist. "But it grieves me to say that it is—that
Esther and Phil are not merely adulterating their souls by sneaking
their vile intimacies behind the backs of their ignorant and abused
spouses, but are adulterating the fabric of society itself!"
Huh? It's not me that he's going
after, but the thrill of relief doesn't last long: There's a loud
grumble of rage from the congregation, led by cohort three, whose
members are the ones Fiore is accusing. Everyone else looks round and I
turn round with them—not to go with the crowd could be dangerous
right now—and see a turbulent knot a couple of rows back, where
well-dressed churchgoers are turning on each other. A frightened female
and a defensive-looking male with dark hair are looking around
apprehensively, not making eye contact, but trying to—yes,they're looking for escape routes as Fiore continues. Something tells me they're too late.
"I would like to thank Jen in particular for
bringing this matter to my attention," Fiore says coolly. My netlink
dings, registering the arrival of more points than I'd normally rack up
in a month, an upward adjustment I can blame on the fact that I'm in
the same cohort as the little snitch. She's scored big-time with this
accusation of adultery. "And I ask you, what are we going to do about
the sickness in our midst?" Fiore scans the audience from his pulpit.
"What is to be done to cleanse our society?"
My sick sense of dread is back with a vengeance.
This is going to be a whole lot worse than anything I'd anticipated.
Normally, Fiore singles a handful out for ridicule, laughter, the
pointed finger of contempt—a minor humiliation for sneaking a
library book out of the reference section would be nothing out of the
ordinary. But this is big bad stuff, two people caught subverting the
social foundations of the experiment. Fiore is on a roll of righteous
indignation, and the atmosphere is getting very ugly indeed. A roar
goes up from the back benches, incoherent rage and anger, and I grab
Sam's hand. Then I check my netlink and freeze. He's fined cohort three all the points he's just given to Jen!
"Let's get out of here before it turns nasty," I mutter into Sam's ear,
and he nods and grips my hand back tightly. People are standing up and
shouting, so I sidle toward the side of the aisle as fast as I can,
using my elbows when I have to. I can see Mick on the other side,
yelling something, the tendons on the sides of his neck standing out
like cables. I don't see Cass. I keep moving. There's a storm brewing,
and this isn't the time or place to stop and ask.
Behind me Fiore shouts something about natural
justice, but he's barely audible over the crowd. The doors are open,
and people are spilling out into the car park. I gasp with pain as
someone stomps on my left foot, but I stay upright and sense rather
than see Sam following me. I make it through the crush in the doorway
and keep going, dodging small clumps of people and a struggling figure,
then Sam catches up with me. "Let's go," I tell him, grabbing his hand.
There are people in front of us, clustered around—it's Jen. "Reeve!" she calls.
I can't ignore her without being obvious. "What do you want?" I ask.
"Help us." She grins widely, her eyes sparkling
with excitement as she spreads her arms. She's wearing a little
black-silk number that displays her secondary sexual characteristics by
providing just a wisp of contrast: her chest is heaving as if she's
about to have an orgasm. "Come on!" She gestures at the dark knot near
the Church entrance. "We're going to have a party!"
"What do you mean?" I demand, looking past her.
Her husband, Chris, is conspicuously absent. Instead, she's acquired a
cohort of her own, followers or admirers or something, Grace from
twelve and Mina from nine and Tina from seven—all of them are
from newer cohorts than our own—and they're watching her, looking
to her as if she's a leader . . .
"Purify the polity!" she says, almost playfully.
"Come on! Together we can keep everyone in line and hold everything
together—and earn loads more points—if we make a strong
enough statement right now. Send the deviants and perverts a message."
She looks at me enthusiastically. "Right?"
"Uh, right," I mumble, backing away until I bump into Sam, who's come up behind me. "You're going to teach them a lesson, huh?"
I feel Sam's hand tightening on my shoulder,
warning me not to go too far, but Jen's in no mood to pick up minor
details like sarcasm: "That's right!" She's almost rapturous. "It's
going to be real fun. I got Chris and Mick ready—"
There's a high-pitched scream from somewhere
behind us. "Excuse us," I mumble, "I don't feel so good." Sam shoves me
forward, and I stumble past Jen, still stammering out excuses, but the
situation isn't critical. Jen doesn't have time to waste on broken
reeds and moral imbeciles, and she's already drifting toward the group
in the Church door, shouting something about community values.
We make it to the edge of the car park before I stumble again and grab
hold of Sam's arm. "We've got to stop them," I hear myself saying. I
wonder what that toad Fiore thought he was unleashing when he
transferred so many points from one cohort to another. Doing that to
the score whores is only going to have one result. At the very least,
cohort three is going to rip the shit out of Phil and Esther—but
now we've got Jen, trying to spin the whole thing as social cleansing
in order to position herself at the head of a mob. I can see a hideous
new reality taking shape here, and I want nothing to do with it.
"Not sensible." He shakes his head but slows down.
"I mean it!" I insist. I swallow, my throat dry. "They're going to beat Phil and Esther—"
"No, it's already gone past that point." There's an ugly quaver in his voice.
I dig my heels in and stop. Sam stops, too, of
necessity—it's that, or shove me over. He's breathing heavily.
"We've got to do something."
"Like. What?" He's breathing deeply. "There're at least twenty of them. Cohort three and
the idiots who've gotten some idea that they can parade their virtue by
joining in. We don't stand a chance." He glances over his shoulder,
seems to shudder, then suddenly pulls me closer and speeds up. "Don't
stop, don't look round," he hisses. So of course I stop dead and turn
around to see what they're doing behind us.
Oh shit, indeed. I feel wobbly, and
Sam catches me under one arm as I see what's happening. There are no
more screams, but that doesn't mean nothing's going on. The screaming
is continuing, inside the privacy of my own skull. "They planned this," I hear myself say, as if from the far end of a very dark tunnel. "They prepared for it. It's not spontaneous."
"Yes." Sam nods, his face whey-pale. There's no
other explanation, crazy as it seems. "Ritual human sacrifice seems to
have been a major cultural bonding feature in pretech cultures," he
mutters. "I wonder how long Fiore's been planning to introduce it?"
They've got two ropes over the branches of the
poplars beside the Church, and two groups are busy heaving their
twitching payloads up into the greenery. I blink. The ropes seem to
curve slightly. It might be centripetal acceleration, but more likely
it's because my eyes are watering.
"I don't care. If I had a gun, I'd shoot Jen
right now, I really would." I suddenly realize that I'm not feeling
faint from fear or dread, but from anger: "The bitch needs killing."
"Wouldn't work," he says, almost absently. "More
violence just normalizes the killing, it doesn't put an end to it:
They're having a party and all you could do is add to the fun . . ."
"Yeah, I—but I'd feel better." Jen had
better have bars on her windows and sleep with a baseball bat under her
pillow tonight, or she's in trouble. And she royally deserves it, the
mendacious bitch.
"Me too, I think."
"Can we do anything?"
"For them?" He shrugs. There's no more screaming, but a tone-deaf choir has struck up some kind of anthem. "No."
I shiver. "Let's go home. Right now."
"Okay," he says, and together we start walking again.
The singing follows us up the road. I'm
terrified that if I look back, I'll break down: There's absolutely
nothing I can do about it, but I feel a filthy sense of complicity with
them. As for Fiore . . . he's got it coming. Sooner or
later I'll get him. But I'm going to bite my tongue and not say a word
about that for now, because I've a feeling he staged this little show
to teach us a lesson about the construction of totalitarian power, and
right this moment all the spies and snitches are going to be
wide-awake, looking for signs of dissent.
A kilometer up
the road and ten minutes away from the ghastly feeding frenzy, I tug at
Sam's arm. "Let's slow down a little," I suggest. "Catch our breath.
There's no need to run anymore."
"Catch our—" Sam stares at me. "I thought you were mad at me."
"No, it's not you." I carry on walking, but more slowly.
His hand on my arm. "We didn't join in."
I nod, wordlessly.
"Three-quarters of the people there were as
horrified as we were. But we couldn't stop it once it got going." He
shakes his head.
I take a deep breath. "I'm pissed at myself for not making a stand while
there was time. You can game a mob if you know what you're doing. But
once people get moving in groups like that, it's really hard to contain
them. Fiore didn't need to set that off. But he did, like pouring
gasoline on a barbecue." Both of which are items I've only lately
become acquainted with. "And after that sermon and the score transfer,
he couldn't have stopped it even if he wanted to."
"You sound like you think it's a matter of
choice." I glance sidelong at him: Sam's not stupid, but he doesn't
normally talk in abstractions. He continues: "Do you really think you
could have stopped it? It's implicit in this society, Reeve. They set
us up to make it easy to make people kill for an abstraction. You saw
Jen. Did you really think you could have stopped her, once she got
going?"
"I should have stuck a knife in her ribs." I
trudge on in silence for a few seconds. "I'd probably have failed.
You're right, but that doesn't make me feel better."
We walk slowly along the road, baking beneath
the noonday heat of an artificial late-spring sun in our Sunday
outfits. The invertebrates creak in the long, yellowing grass, and the
deciduous trees rustle their leaves overhead in the breeze. I smell
sage and magnolia in the warm air. Ahead of us the road dives into a
cutting that leads to another of the tunnels with built-in T-gates that
conceal the true geometry of our inside-out world. Sam pulls out his
pocket flashlight, swinging it from his wrist by a strap.
"I've seen mobs before," I tell him. If only I could forget.
"They have a peculiar kind of momentum." I feel weak and shaky as I
think about it, about the look on Phil's face—I hardly knew
him—and the hunger stalking the shadow of the crowd. Jen's
malicious delight. "Once it gets past a certain point, all you can do
is run away fast and make sure you have nothing to do with what happens
next. If everybody did that, there wouldn't be any mobs."
"I guess." Sam sounds subdued as we walk into
the penumbra of the tunnel. He switches his flashlight on. The cone of
light bobs around crazily ahead of us as the road swings to the left.
"Even a sword-fighting fool of a hero can't
divert a mob like that on their own once it gets going," I tell him, as
much for my own benefit as anything else. "Not without battle armor and
some heavy weaponry, because they're going to keep coming and coming.
The ones behind can't see what's happening up front, and the fool who
stands in the way without backup is going to end up a dead fool really
fast, even if he kills a whole load of them. And anyway, your
sword-fighting fool, he's no smarter than any of them in the mob. The
time to stop the mob is before it gets started. To stand up in front of
it first, and tell it no."
We're walking into the dark curve of the tunnel, out of sight of either entrance. Sam sighs.
"I knew someone who'd do that," he says
wistfully. "The man I fell in love with. He wasn't a fool, but he'd
know how to handle a situation like that."
The man? Sam doesn't seem like the type
to me—until I remember that I'm seeing him through gender-trapped
eyes, the same way he's looking at me, and that I've got no way of
knowing who or what Sam was before he volunteered for the experiment.
"Nobody could do that," I tell him gently.
"Maybe so. But I think I'd trust Robin's judgment before I'd trust—"
I stop as suddenly as if I have just walked into
a wall. The hairs on the back of my neck are all standing on end, and
my stomach is knotting up again as if I'm going to be sick.
"What's wrong?" asks Sam.
"The person on the outside you've been pining after," I say carefully. "He's called Robin. Is that right?"
"Yes." He nods. "I shouldn't have said, we'll get penalized—"
I grab his hand like it's a floatation aid and I'm drowning. "Sam, Sam." You idiot! Yes, you! (I'm not sure which of us I mean.) "Did it ever occur to you to ask if maybe I knew Robin?"
"Why? What good would that have done?" His pupils are huge and dark in the twilight.
"You are the biggest—" I don't know what to say. Truly, I don't. Stunned is the mildest word that describes how I feel. "The name you gave Robin was Kay, right?"
"You—"
"Kay. Yes or no?"
He tenses and tries to pull his hand away. "Yes," he admits.
"O-kay." I don't seem to be able to get enough
air. "Well, Sam, we are going to continue on our way home, now, aren't
we? Because who we were before we came here doesn't make any difference
to where we are now, does it?"
His expression is impossible to read in the darkness. "You must be Vhora—"
I nearly slap him. Instead, I reach out with the
index finger of my free hand and touch his lips. "Home first. Then we
talk," I tell him, stomach still churning, aghast at my own stupidity
and willful blindness. Okay, so I walked right into this one. And I think I just sprained my brain. Now what?
He sighs. "All right." He still doesn't use my
name. But he turns to shine the flashlight ahead of us. And that's when
I see the outline of the door in the opposite wall.
IT'S funny how the more we travel the less we see.
Traveling via T-gates, we avoid the intervening
points between the nodes because the gate is actually a hole in the
structure of space, and in a very real sense there are no intervening
points. And it's not much different in a car. You get in, you tell the
zombie where to take you, and he steps on the gas. Not that there's a
machine under the bonnet that clatteringly detonates liquid distilled
from ancient fossilized biomass (just a compact gateway generator and a
sound effects unit), but it feels the same, in terms of your
interaction with your surroundings.
Meanwhile, outside the cars and the corridors
and the gates and the head games we deny playing with each other,
there's a real universe. And sometimes it smacks you in the face.
Like now. I have known all along, in an abstract
kind of way, that we're living in a series of roughly rectangular
terrain features laid out on the curved inner surface of several huge
colony cylinders, spinning to provide centripetal acceleration (a
substitute for gravity), in orbit around who-knows-what brown dwarf
stars. The sky is a display screen, the wind is air-conditioning, the
road tunnels are a necessary part of the illusion, and if you go for a
walk in the overgrown back lot you'll find a steep hill or cliff that
you can't climb because it goes vertical only a few meters up. I
haven't given much thought to how it's all stitched together, other
than to assume there are T-gates in each road tunnel. But what if there's another way out?
I clutch his hand. "Stop! Turn your flashlight back. Yes, there, right there."
"What is it?" he asks.
"Let's see." I tug him toward it. "Come on, I need the light."
The tunnel walls are made of smoothly curved
slabs of concrete set edge to edge, forming a hollow tube maybe eight
meters in diameter. The road is a flat sheet of asphalt, its edges
meeting the walls of the tube just under the halfway point up its
sides. (Now that I think about it, what could be running under the road
deck? It might be solid, but then again, there could be just about
anything down there.) What I've noticed is a rectangular groove in the
opposite wall. Close up I can see it's about a meter wide and two
meters high, a plain metal panel sunk into one side of the tunnel.
There's no sign of any handle or lock except for a hole a few
millimeters in diameter drilled halfway up it, just beside one edge.
"Give me the flashlight."
"Here." He passes it without argument. I get as
close to the wall as I can and shine the light into the crack. Nothing,
no sign of hinges or anything. I crouch down and shine it into the
hole. Nothing there, either. "Hmm."
"What is it?" he asks anxiously.
"It's a door. Can't say more than that." I
straighten up. "We can't do anything about it right now. Let's go home
and think about this."
"But if we go home, we won't be able to talk!"
In the dim light of the flashlight, his eyes look very white. "They'll
overhear everything."
"They don't see everything," I reassure him. "Come on, let's go home. This afternoon I want you to mow the lawn."
"But I—"
"The lawn mower is in the garage," I continue implacably. "Along with other things."
"But—"
"If they're not waiting for us when we get home,
they're not monitoring the tunnels, Sam. Noticed your netlink recently?
No? Well, we don't seem to have lost any points just now. There are
gaps in the surveillance coverage. I think I know somewhere else
they're not monitoring, and you ought to know we're not the only people
who want out."
I feel safe telling him that much, even though
if they brainscoop me and feed me to Curious Yellow right now, it'll
take down three of us: me and Sam and Janis. Kay may be in denial right
now but she—No, you've got to keep thinking of him as Sam,
I tell myself—isn't, I think, going to sell me to the bad guys. I
am pretty sure I can read Sam well enough now to know what's bugging
him. It's funny how I was in lust with Kay but couldn't tell if I
trusted her. Now I trust Sam, but I doubt I'll ever fuck him again.
Life is strange, isn't it? "You do want out, don't you?" I ask.
"Yes." He sounds tremulous.
"Then you're going to have to trust me for a
little bit longer because I don't have an escape plan yet." I squeeze
his hand. "But I'm working on it."
Together, we walk toward the light.
THAT afternoon
Sam changes into jeans and a T-shirt and mows the lawn. I'm in the
garage wearing overalls and safety goggles, because I've made a mold
from the plaster of paris dies and I'm pouring solder into it, casting
a lead copy of the key to Fiore's cabinet of curiosities. The lead key
won't turn in the lock, but it'll do okay as a template for the
engraving disk and the small bar of brass I've got waiting.
To confuse anyone who's watching, I've got some
props sitting around—a wooden wall plaque purchased from the
fishing store, a plate to engrave with some meaningless dedication.
When I showed Sam what I was up to he blinked rapidly, then nodded.
"It's for thewomen's freehand cross-stitch club," I said, pulling the explanation right out of my ass. There is no such club, but it sounds right, a backup explanation that will trigger a reflex in whatever watcher is scanning us for anomalous behavior.
We may be living in a glass jar with bright
lights and monitors trained on us the whole time, but it's not likely
that everything we do is being watched by a live human being in real
time. We massively outnumber the experimenters, and they're primarily
interested in our public socialization. (At least, that's the official
story.) To monitor an intelligent organism properly requires observers
with a theory of mind at least as strong as the subject. We subjects
outnumber the experimenters by a couple of orders of magnitude, and
I've seen no sign of strongly superhuman metaintelligences being
involved in this operation, so I think the odds are on my side. If we are
up against the weakly godlike, I might as well throw in the towel right
now. But if not . . . You can delegate all you want to
subconscious mechanisms, but you run the risk of them missing things. Sic transit gloria panopticon.
The Church services are almost certainly
monitored in every imaginable way. But after Church, Fiore and his
friends will be too busy re-running the lynching from every imaginable
angle and trying to figure out how the social dynamics of a genuine
dark ages mob operate. They won't be watching what I get up to in the
garage until much later, probably just a bored glance at a replay to
make sure I'm not fucking my neighbor's husband or weeping hysterically
in a corner. Because they're used to using A-gates to fab any physical
artifacts they need, they probably look at what I'm doing as some sort
of dark ages hobby and view me as a slightly dull but basically
well-adjusted wife. I even gained a couple of points last week for my
weaving. I laboriously hand-wove a Faraday cage lining for my shoulder
bag right under their noses, and they treated it as if I was diligently
practicing a traditional feminine craft! There are gaps in their
surveillance and bigger gaps in their understanding, and those gaps are
going to be their downfall.
Concentrating on making the key and thinking
about how much I am beginning to hate them is a good way for me to
avoid confronting what happened outside the Church this morning. It's
also a good distraction from the wall I walked into in my head, or the
door in the tunnel, or any of the other troubling shit that's happened
since I woke up this morning and thought it was going to be just
another boring Sunday.
After what feels like a few infinitely tense
minutes—but the lying clock insists it's been the best part of
four hours—I emerge from the garage. The hot morning sunlight has
softened into a roseate afternoon glow, and insects creak beneath a
turquoise sky. It looks like I've missed an idyllic summer afternoon. I
feel shaky, tired, and very hungry indeed. I'm also sweating like a
pig, and I probably stink. There's no sign of Sam, so I go indoors and
hit the bathroom, dump my clothes and dial the shower up to a cool
deluge until it washes everything away.
When I get out of the shower I rummage around in
my wardrobe until I find a sundress, then head downstairs with the
vague idea of sorting out something to eat. A microwave dinner perhaps,
to eat on the rear deck while the illusory sun sets. Instead, I run
into Sam coming in through the front door. He looks haggard.
"Where've you been?" I ask. "I was going to sort out some food."
"I've been with Martin and Greg and Alf, down at
the churchyard." I look at him, closer. His shirt is sweat-stained, and
there's dirt under his fingernails. "Doing the burying."
"Burying?" For a moment I don't get what he's
talking about, then it clicks into place and I feel dizzy, as if the
whole world's revolving around my head. "The—you should have told
me."
"You were busy." He shrugs dismissively.
I peer at him, concerned. "You look tired. Why don't you go have a shower? I'll fix you some food."
He shakes his head. "I'm not hungry."
"Yes you are." I take hold of his right arm and
lead him toward the kitchen. "You didn't eat any lunch unless you
sneaked a snack while I wasn't looking, and it's getting late." I take
a deep breath. "How bad was it?"
"It was—" He stops and takes a deep breath. "It was—" He stops again. Then he bursts into tears.
I am absolutely certain that Sam has seen death
before, up close and personal. He's at least three gigs old, he's been
through memory surgery, he's experienced the psychopathic dissociation
that comes with it, he's hung out with dueling fools like me in my
postsurgery phase, and he's lived among pretech aliens for whom violent
death and disease are all part of life's unpalatable banquet. But
there's an enormous difference between the effects of a semiformal duel
between consenting adults, with A-gate backups to make resurrection a
minor headache, and cleaning up after a random act of senseless
brutality in a Church parking lot.
Forget about no backups, no second chances,
nobody coming home again scratching their heads and wondering what was
in the two kiloseconds of their life that's just vanished. The
difference is that it could have been you. Because, when you
get down to it, the one thing you know for sure is that if the toad in
the pulpit had got the wrong name, it would have been you up
there in the branches, choking and twitching on the end of a rope. It
could have been you. It wasn't, but that's nothing but an accident of
fate. Sam's just back from the wars, and he's definitely got the
message.
Maybe that's why we end up on the wooden bench
on the back deck, me sitting up and him with his head in my lap, not
crying like a baby but sobbing occasionally between gasping breaths.
I'm stroking his hair and trying not to let it get to me either
way—the jagged razor edge of sympathy, or the urge to tell him to
pull himself together and get with the program. Judgment hurts, and
he'll talk it out in his own way if I just lend him an ear. If
not—
Well, I could have used a listener the other night, but I won't hold that against him.
"Greg rang while you were in the shed," he says
eventually. "Asked if I'd help clean up. What I was saying this
morning. Not letting them give me any shit. I figured part of that was,
if I couldn't do anything at the time I could maybe do some good
afterward." And he's off again, sobbing for about a minute.
When he stops, he manages to speak quietly and
evenly, in thoughtful tones. It sounds as if he's explaining it to
himself, trying to make sense of it. "I caught a taxi to Church. Greg
told me to bring a shovel, so I did. I got there and Martin and Alf
were there, along with Liz, Phil's—former wife. Mal is in
hospital. He tried to stop them. They hurt him. The mob, I mean. There
are other decent people here, but they're mostly too frightened to even
help bury the bodies or comfort the widow."
"Widow." It's a new word in our little prison,
like "pregnant" and "lynch mob." It's an equally unwelcome arrival.
(Along with "mortal" if we stay here long enough, I guess.)
"Greg got a ladder from inside the Church hall,
and Martin went up to cut down the bodies. Liz was very quiet when we
got Phil down, but couldn't take it when he was lowering Esther.
Luckily Xara showed up with a bottle of rye and sat with her. Then Greg
and Martin and Alf and me started digging. Actually, we started on the
spot, but Alf said it was Fiore's fault, and we should use the
graveyard. So we did that, while Alf got some boards. I think we did it
deep enough. None of us has ever done this before."
He goes silent for a long time. I stroke the hair back from the side of his face. "Twenty cycles," he says after a while.
"Seven months?"
"Without backups," he confirms.
It's a frightening amount of time to lose,
that's for sure. Even more frightening is the fact that their last
backups are locked up in the assembler firewall that isolates
YFH-Polity from the outside world—while I'm not certain it's
infected with Curious Yellow, I have my suspicions. (CY copies itself
between A-gates via the infected victims' netlinks, doesn't it? And the
suspiciously restricted functionality of our netlinks inside YFH
worries me.) There might not be any older copies of Phil or Esther on
file elsewhere. If that's the case, and if we can't phage-clean the
infected nodes, we might lose them for good.
Sam is silent for a long time. We stay there on
the bench as the light reddens and dims, and after a while I just rest
my hands on his shoulder and watch the trees at the far end of the
garden. Then, with absolutely no buildup, he murmurs, "I knew who you
were almost from the beginning."
I stroke his cheek again, but don't say anything.
"I figured it out inside a week. You were
spending all your time talking about this friend you were supposed to
be looking out on the inside for. Cass, you thought."
I keep stroking, to calm myself as much as anything else.
"I think I was in shock at first. You seemed so
dynamic and confident and self-possessed before—it was bad enough
waking up in that room and finding I was this enormous bloated
shambling thing, but then to see you like that, it really scared me. I
thought at first I was wrong, but no. So I kept quiet."
I stop moving my hands around, leaving one on his shoulder and one beside his head.
"I nearly killed myself on the second day, but you didn't notice."
Shit. I blink. "I was dealing with my own problems," I manage to say.
"Yes, I can see that now." His voice is gentle,
almost sleepy. "But I couldn't forgive you for a while. I've been here
before, you know. Not here-here, but somewhere like here."
"The ice ghouls?" I ask, before I can stop myself.
"Yes." He tenses, then pushes himself upright.
"A whole planet full of pre-Acceleration sapients who probably aren't
going to make it without outside help because they took so long
bootstrapping their techné that they ran out of easily
accessible fossil fuels." He swings his legs round and sits upright,
next to me but just too far away to touch. "Living and breeding and
dying of old age and sometimes fighting wars and sometimes starving in
famines and disasters and plagues."
"How long were you there, again?" I ask.
"Two gigs." He turns his head and looks straight
at me. "I was part of a, a—I guess you'd call it a reproductive
unit. A family. I was an ice ghoul, you know. I was there from
late adolescence through to senescence, but rather than let them nurse
me, I ran out onto the tundra and used my netlink to call for upload.
Nearly left it too late. I was terminally ill and close to being
nestridden." Sam looks distant. "All the pre-Acceleration tool-using
sapients we've seen use K-type reproductive strategies. I'd outlived my
partners, but I had three children, their assorted cis-mates and trans-mates, and more grandchildren than—"
He sighs.
"You seem to want me to know this," I say. "Are you sure about that?"
"I don't know." He looks at me. "I just wanted
you to know who I am and where I come from." He looks down at the
stones between his feet. "Not what I am now, which is a travesty. I
feel dirty."
I stand up. He's gone on for long enough, I
think. "Okay, so let me get this straight. You're a former
xeno-ornithologist who got way too close to your subjects for your own
emotional stability. You've got a bad case of body-image dysphoria that
YFH failed to spot in their excuse for an entry questionnaire, you're
good at denial—self and other—and you're a pathetic failure
at suicide." I stare at him. "What am I missing?" I grab his hands: "What am I missing?" I shout at him.
At this point I realize several things at once. I am really, really
angry with him, although that's not all I feel by a long way, because
it's not the kind of anger you feel at a stranger or an enemy. And
while I've been working out like crazy and I'm in much better physical
shape than I was when I came here, Sam is standing up, too, and he has
maybe thirty centimeters and thirty kilos on me because he's male, and
he's built like a tank. Maybe getting angry and yelling in the face of
someone who's that much bigger than I and who's shocky right now from
repeated bad experiences isn't a very wise thing to do, but I don't
care.
"* * *," he mumbles.
"What?" I state at him. "Would you care to repeat that?"
"* * *," he says, so quietly I can't hear it over the noise of the blood pounding in my ears. "That's why I didn't kill myself."
I shake my head. "I don't think I'm hearing you properly."
He glares at me. "Who do you think you are?" he demands.
"Depends. I was a historian, a long time ago.
Then there were the wars, and I was a soldier. Then I became the kind
of soldier who needs a historian's training, then I lost my memory."
I'm glaring right back at him. "Now I'm a ditzy, ineffectual housewife
and part-time librarian, okay? But I'll tell you this—one day I'm
going to be a soldier again."
"But those are all externals! They're not you. You won't tell me anything! Where do you come from? Did you ever have a family? What happened to them?"
He looks anxious, and suddenly I realize he's afraid of me. Afraid? Of me?
I take a step back. And then I register what my face probably looks
like right now, and it's like all my blood is replaced with ice water
of an instant, because his question has dredged up a memory that was, I
think, one of the ones my earlier self deliberately forgot before the
surgery, because he knew it would surface again and forgetting it hurt
but knowing it might be erased by crude surgical intervention was even
worse. And I sit down hard on the bench and look away from him because
I don't want to see his sympathy.
"They all died in the war," I hear myself saying woodenly. "And I don't want to talk about it."
WHEN I sleep,
another horror story dredges itself up from my suppressed memories and
comes to visit. This time I know it's genuine and true and really
happened to me, and there's nothing I can do to change it in any
detail—because that's what makes it so nightmarish.
The ending has already been written, and it is not a happy one.
In the dream, I am a gracile male orthohuman
with long, flowing green hair and what my partners describe as a
delightful laugh. I am a lot younger—barely three gigs—and
I'm also happy, at least at first. I'm in a stable family relationship
with three other core partners, plus various occasional liaisons with
five or six fuckbuddies. We're fully bisexual, either naturally or via
a limbic system mod copied from bonobos. My family has two children,
and we're thinking about starting another two in half a gig or so. I'm
also lucky enough to have a vocation, researching the history of the
theory of mind—an aspect of cultural ideology that only became
important after the Acceleration, and which goes in and out of fashion,
but which I hold to be critically important. The history of my field,
for example, tells us that for almost a gigasecond during the old-style
twenty-third century, most of humanity-in-exile were zimboes,
quasi-conscious drones operating under the aegis of an overmind. How
that happened and how the cognitive dictatorship was broken is
something I'm studying with considerable interest and not a few field
trips to old memory temples.
One of these visits is the reason I am not at
home with my family when Curious Yellow comes howling out of nowhere to
erase large chunks of history, taking with it an entire interstellar
civilization, and (to make things personal) my family.
I'm visiting a Mobile Archive Sucker in the full
physical flesh when Curious Yellow first appears. The MASucker is a
lumbering starship, effectively a mobile cylinder habitat, powered by
plasma piped from the interior of a distant A0 supergiant via T-gate.
It wallows along at low relativistic speeds between brown dwarf star
systems, which in this part of the galaxy are spaced less than a parsec
apart. During the multigigasecond intervals between close encounters,
the crew retreats into template-frozen backup, reincarnating from the
ship's assemblers whenever things get interesting. The ship is largely
self-sufficient and self-maintaining (apart from its stellar tap, and a
tightly firewalled T-gate to the premises of the research institute
that created it centuries ago). Its internal systems are entirely
offnet from the polity at large because it's designed for a mission
duration of up to a terasecond, and it was envisaged from the start
that civilization would probably collapse at least once within the
working life of the ship. That's why I've come out here in person to
interview Vecken, the ship's Kapitan, who lived shortly after the
cognitive dictatorship and may have recollections of some of the
survivors.
Now here's a curious thing: I can't remember
their faces. I remember that Lauro, Iambic-18, and Neual were not
simply important to me, not just lovers, but in a very real way defined
who I was. A large chunk of my sense of identity was configured around
this key idea that I wasn't solitary: that I was part of a group, that
we'd collectively adjusted our neuroendocrinology so that just being
around the others gave us a mild endorphin rush—what used to be a
haphazard process called "falling in love"—and we'd focused on
complementary interests and skills and vocations. It wasn't so much a
family as a superorganism, and it was a fulfilling, blissful state of
affairs. I think I may have had a lonely earlier life, but I don't
remember much of that because I guess it paled into insignificance in
comparison.
But I can't remember their faces, and even now—a lifetime after the grief has ebbed—that bugs me.
Neual was quick with hands and feet, taking
slyly sarcastic delight in winding me up. Lauro had perfect manners but
lost it when making love with us. Iambic-18 was a radical xenomorph,
sometimes manifesting in more than one body at the same time when the
fancy took it. Our children . . .
Are all dead, and it is unquestionably my fault.
The nature of Curious Yellow is that it propagates stealthily between
A-gates, creating a peer-to-peer network that exchanges stegged
instructions using people as data packets. If you have the misfortune
to be infected, it installs its kernel in your netlink, and when you
check into an A-gate for backup or transport—which proceeds
through your netlink—CY is the first thing to hit the gate's
memory buffer. A-gate control nodes are supposedly designed so that
they can't execute data, but whoever invented CY obviously found a
design flaw in the standard architecture. People who have been
disassembled and reassembled by the infected gates infect fresh A-gates
as they travel. CY uses people as a disease vector.
The original CY infection that hit the Republic
of Is installed a payload that was designed to redact historical
information surrounding some event—I'm not sure what, but I
suspect it's an aftershock left by the destruction of one of the old
cognitive dictatorships—by editing people as they passed through
infected gates. But it only activated once the infection had spread
across the entire network. So Curious Yellow appeared everywhere with
shocking abruptness, after spreading silently for hundreds of megasecs.
In my memory-dream, I am taking tea in the bridge of the Grateful for Duration,
which in that time takes the form of a temple to a lake kami from old
Nippon. I'm sitting cross-legged opposite Septima (the ship's curator)
and waiting for Kapitan Vecken to arrive. As I spool through some
questions I stored offline, my netlink hiccups. There's a
cache-coherency error, it seems—the ship's T-gate has just shut
down.
"Is something going on?" I ask Septima. "I've just been offlined."
"Might be." Septima looks irritated. "I'll ask
someone to investigate." She stares right through me, a reminder that
there are three or four other copies of this strange old archivist
wandering the concentric cylinder habs of the ship.
She blinks rapidly. "It appears to be a security
alert. Some sort of intruder just hit our transcription airgap. If you
wait here a moment, I'll go and find out what's going on."
She walks over toward the door of the teahouse
and, as far as I can reconstruct later, this is the precise moment,
when a swarm of eighteen thousand three hundred and twenty-nine
wasp-sized attack robots erupt from the assembler in my family's home.
We live in an ancient dwelling patterned on a lost house of old Urth
called Fallingwater, a conservative design from before the
Acceleration. There are doors and staircases and windows in this house,
but no internal T-gates that can be closed, and the robots rapidly
overpower Iambic-18, who is in the kitchen with the gate.
They deconstruct Iambic-18 so rapidly there is
no time for a scream of pain or pulse of netlinked agony. Then they fan
out through the house in a malignant buzzing fog, bringing rapid death.
A brief spray of blood here and a scream cut short there. The household
assembler has been compromised by Curious Yellow, our backups willfully
erased to make room for the wasps of tyranny, and, although I don't
know it yet, my life has been gracelessly cut loose from everything
that gave it meaning.
After the executions, they eat the physical
bodies and excrete more robot parts, ready to self-assemble into
further attack swarms that will continue the hunt for enemies of
Curious Yellow.
I know about this now because Curious Yellow
kept logs of all the somatic kills it made. Nobody knows why Curious
Yellow did this—one theory is that it is a report for CY's
creators—but I have watched the terahertz radar map of the
security wasps eating my family and my children so many times that it
is burned into my mind. I'm one of the rare survivors among the
millions targeted as somatic enemies, to be destroyed rather than
edited. And now it's as if I'm watching it again for the first time,
reliving the horror that made me plead with the Linebarger Cats to take
me in and turn me into a tank. (But that was half a gigasecond later,
when the Grateful for Duration made contact with one of the isolated redoubts of the resistance.)
I realize I'm
awake, and it's still nighttime. My cheeks itch from the salty tracks
of tears shed in my sleep, and I'm curled up in an uncomfortable
position, close to one edge of the bed. There's an arm around my waist,
and a breathing breeze on the back of my neck. For a moment I can't
work it out, but then it begins to make sense to me. "I'm awake now," I
murmur.
"Oh. Good." He sounds sleepy. How long has he
been here? I went to bed alone—I feel a momentary stab of panic
at the thought that he's here uninvited, but I don't want to be alone.
Not now.
"Were you asleep?" I ask.
He yawns. "Must have. Dozed off." His arm
tenses, and I tense, too, and push myself back toward the curve of his
chest and legs. "You were unhappy."
"What I didn't tell you earlier." And I'm still not sure it's a good idea to tell him. "My family. Curious Yellow killed them."
"What? But Curious Yellow didn't kill, it edited—"
"Not everyone." I lean against him. "Most people
it edited. Some of us it hunted down and murdered. The ones who might
have been able to work out who made it, I think."
"I didn't know that."
"Not many people do. You were either directly
affected, in which case you were probably dead, or it happened to
someone else, and you were busy rebuilding your life and trying to make
your struggling firewalled micropolity work without all the external
inputs provided by the rest of Is-ness. A gig after the end of the war
it was old news."
"But not for you."
I can feel Sam's tension through his arm around me.
"Look, I'm tired, and I don't want to revisit
it. Old pains, all right?" I try and relax against the side of his
body. "I've become a creature ofsolitary habits. Didn't do to get too close to anyone during the war, and since then, haven't had the opportunity."
His breathing is deep and even. Maybe he's
already asleep. I close my eyes and try to join him, but it takes me a
long time to drift off. I can't help wondering how badly he must have
been missing contact with another human being, to share my bed again.
MONDAY is a
working day, and it's also usually a lunch date, but I'm not about to
break bread with Jen after yesterday's events. I head for work with the
brass key hidden in my security bag. Once inside I rip into the filing
and cleaning immediately. It's midmorning before I realize that Janis
hasn't arrived yet.
I hope she's all right. I don't remember seeing
her yesterday, but if she's heard about what happened—well, I
don't know how close to the victims she was, but I can only imagine
what she must be going through if she knew them well. She was feeling
ill a couple of days ago—how is she now?
I head for the front desk. Business is dead
today, and I haven't had a single visitor, so I have no qualms about
flipping the sign on the door to CLOSED for a while. In the staff room
there's a file of administrative stuff, and after leafing through it
for a bit, I find Janis's home number. I dial it, and after a
worryingly long time someone answers the telephone.
"Janis?"
Her voice sounds tired, even through the distortion the telephone link seems to be designed to add. "Reeve, is that you?"
"Yes. I was getting worried about you. Are you all right?"
"I've been sick today. And to tell the truth, I didn't feel like coming in. Do you mind?"
I look around. "No, the place is dead as
a—" I stop myself just in time. "Listen, why don't you take a
couple of days off? You were going to be leaving in a couple of months
anyway, there's no point overdoing it. If you want, I'll drop round
with some books on my next day off, day after tomorrow. How about that?"
"That sounds great," she says gratefully, and after a bit more chat I hang up.
I'm just shifting the CLOSED sign back to OPEN when a long black limousine draws up at the curb outside. I manage a sharp intake of breath—What's Fiore doing here today?—before
the Priest gets out, and then, uncharacteristically, holds the door
open for someone else. Someone wearing a purple dress and a skullcap. I
realize exactly who it must be—the Bishop: Yourdon.
The Bishop turns out to be as cadaverously thin
and tall as Fiore is squat and bulbous. A stork and a toad. There's a
peculiarly sallow cast to his skin, and his cheekbones stand out like
blades. He wears spectacles with thick hornlike rectangular frames, and
his hair hugs his scalp in lank swatches the color of rotten ivory. He
strides forward, skeletal-looking hands writhing together, as Fiore
bumbles along huffing and puffing to keep up in his wake. "I say, I
say!" Fiore calls. "Please—"
The Bishop pushes the library door open, then
pauses. His eyes are a very pale blue, with slightly yellowish whites,
and his gaze is icily contemptuous. "You've fucked up before, Fiore,"
he hisses. "I do wish you'd keep your little masturbatory fantasies to
yourself in future." Then he turns round to face me.
"Hello?" I force a smile.
He looks at me as if I'm a machine. "I am Bishop Yourdon. Please take me to the document repository."
"Ah, yes, certainly." I hurry out from behind the desk and wave him toward the back.
Fiore harrumphs and breathes heavily as he
waddles after us, but Yourdon moves with bony grace, as if all his
joints have been replaced with well-lubricated bearings. Something
about him makes me shudder. The look he gave Fiore—I can't
remember having seen such an expression of pure contempt on a human
face in a very long time. I lead them to the room; the Grim Reaper
stalking along behind me in angry silence, followed by a bumbling
oleaginous toad.
I stand aside as we reach the reference section,
and Fiore fumbles with his keys, visibly wilting under Yourdon's fuming
gaze. He gets the door open and darts inside. Yourdon pauses, and fixes
me with an ice-water stare. "We are not to be disturbed," he informs
me, "for any reason whatsoever. Do you understand?"
I nod vigorously. "I, I'll be at the front desk if you need me." My teeth are nearly chattering. What is it with this guy? I've met misanthropes before, but Yourdon is something special.
Fiore and the Bishop hang out in the archive,
doing whatever it is they do in there for almost three hours. At a
couple of points I hear raised voices, Fiore's unctuous pleading
followed by the Bishop hissing back at him like an angry snake. I sit
behind the desk, forcing myself not to look over my shoulder every ten
seconds, and try to read a book about the history of witch-hunts in
preindustrial Europa and Merka. It contains disturbing echoes of what's
going on here, communities fractured into mutually mistrustful factions
that compete to denounce one another to greedy spiritual authorities
drunk on temporal power. However, I find it hard to concentrate while
the snake and the toad in the back room are making noises like they're
trying to sting each other to death.
It's well into my normal lunch hour when Fiore
and Yourdon surface. Fiore looks subdued and resentful. Yourdon appears
to be in a better mood, but if this is his good humor, I'd hate to see
him when he's angry. When he smiles he looks like a skull someone's
stretched a sheet of skin over, colorless lips peeling back from
yellowing teeth in a grin completely bereft of amusement. "You'd better
get back to work then," he calls to Fiore as he strides past my desk
without so much as a nod in my direction. "You've got a lot of lost
headway to make up." Then he barges out through the front door as the
long black limousine cruises round the edge of the block, ready to
convey its master back to his usual haunts.
A few minutes later Fiore bumbles past me with a
sullen glare. "I'll be round tomorrow," he mutters, then stomps out the
door. No limousinefor the Priest, who staggers off on foot in the noonday heat. My, how the mighty are fallen!
I watch him until he's out of sight, then walk
over and flip the sign on the door to CLOSED. Then I lock up and take a
deep breath. I wasn't expecting this to happen today, but it's too good
an opportunity to miss. I go fetch my bag from the staff room, then
head for the repository.
It's time for the moment of truth. Less than a
hundred seconds after Fiore left the building, I slide the laboriously
copied key into the lock. My heart is pounding as I turn it. For a
moment it refuses to budge, but I jiggle it—the teeth aren't
quite engaging with the pins—and something falls into position
and it squeals slightly and gives way. I push the door wide, then reach
for the light switch.
I'm in a small room with no windows, no chairs,
no tables, one bare electric bulb dangling on a wire from the ceiling,
bookshelves on three walls, and a trapdoor in the middle of the floor.
"What is this shit?" I ask aloud, looking round.
There are box files on all the shelves, masses
of box files. But there are no titles on the spines of the boxes, just
serial numbers. Everything's dusty except the trapdoor, which has been
opened recently. I inhale, then nearly go cross-eyed trying not to
sneeze. If this is Fiore's idea of housekeeping, it's no wonder Yourdon
was pissed at him.
I look at the nearest shelf and pull down one of
the files at random. There's a button catch and I open it to find it's
full of paper, yellowing sheets of the stuff, machine-smooth, columns
of hexadecimal numbers printed in rows of dumb ink. There's a sequence
number at the top of each sheet, and it takes me a few seconds to
figure out what I'm looking at. It's a serialized mind map, what the
ancients would have called a "hex dump." Pages and pages of it. The box
file probably holds about five hundred sheets. If all the others I see
contain more of this stuff, then I'm probably looking at about a
hundred thousand sheets, each containing maybe ten thousand characters.
Whatever is stored in this incredibly inefficient serial medium, it
isn't very big—about the same size as a small mammal's genome,
maybe, once you squeeze out all the redundant exons. It's three or four
orders of magnitude too small to be a map of a human being.
I shake my head and put the box file back. From
the level of dust on top of it, it hasn't been touched for quite a
time. I don't know what this stuff is, but it isn't what Fiore and
Yourdon came here to look at. Which leaves the trapdoor.
I bend down and grab the brass ring, then lift.
The wooden slab hinges up at the back, and I see a flight of steps
leading down. They're carpeted, and there are wooden handrails to
either side. Okay, so there's a secret basement under the library, I
tell myself, trying not to giggle with fear. What have I been working
on top of?
Of course I go downstairs. After what Fiore did
to Phil and Esther, I'm probably dead if they find me in the
repository. Taking the next step is a logical progression, nothing more.
The steps go down into twilight, but they don't
go down very far. The floor is three meters below the trapdoor, and
there's a light switch on the rail at the bottom. I flick it and glance
around.
Guess what? I'm not in the dark ages anymore.
If I was still in the dark ages, this would be a
musty basement with brick walls and wooden lath ceiling, or maybe
poured concrete and steel beams. They weren't big on structural diamond
back then, and their floors didn't grow zebrastripe fur, and they used
short-lived electrical bulbs instead of surfacing their ceilings with
fluorescent paint. There's a very retro-looking lounger in a mode that
I'm sure went out of fashion some time between the end of the Oort
colonial era and the first of the conservationista republics, and some
weird black-resin chairs that look like the skeletons of insects, if
insects grew four meters tall and supported themselves with
endoskeletons. Hmm. I glance over my shoulder. Yes, if Yourdon
and Fiore were having a knockdown shouting match in here with the hatch
open, I might just about have heard it at the front desk.
The other items in the basement are a lot more disconcerting.
For starters, there's something that I am almost
certain is a full military A-gate. It's a stubby cylinder about two
meters high and two meters in diameter, its shell slick with the white
opacity of carbonitrile armor. There's a ruggedized control workstation
next to it, perched on a rough wooden plinth—you use those things
in the field when you'reoperating under emission control, to make field expedient whatever it is you need in order to save your ass. Got plutonium? Got nuke.
Not that I've got the authentication ackles to switch the thing
on—if I mess with it I'll probably set off about a billion
alarms—but its presence here is as incongruous as a biplane in
the bronze age.
For seconds, the walls are lined with racks of
shelving bearing various pieces of equipment. There's what I'm fairly
certain is a generator pack for a Vorpal sword, like the one on the
Church altar. That brings back unpleasant memories, because I remember
those swords and what you can do with them—blood fountaining out
into a room where the headless corpses are already stacked like
cordwood beside the evacuation gate—and it makes me feel
nauseous. I take a quick breath, then I look at the shelves on the
other side of the room. There are lots of them, some of them stacked
with the quaint rectangular bricks of high-density storage, but most of
the space is given over to ring binders full of paper. This time,
instead of serial numbers on the spines, there are old-fashioned
human-readable titles, although they don't mean much to me. Like Revised Zimbardo Study Protocol 4.0, and Church Scale Moral Delta Coefficients, and Extended Host Selection Criteria—
Host selection criteria? I pull that
one off the shelf and begin reading. An indeterminate time later I
shake myself and put it back. I feel dirty, somehow contaminated. I
really wish I didn't understand what it said, but I'm afraid I do, and
now I'm going to have to figure out what to do with the knowledge.
I stare at the A-gate, speculating. There's a
very good chance that it's not infected with Curious Yellow, because
they wouldn't want to risk infecting themselves. But it still won't
help me escape, and it probably won't work for me anyway unless I can
hold a metaphorical gun to Fiore's head, threaten him with something
even more frightening than the prospect of Yourdon's revenge—and
if I've got the measure of Yourdon, any revenge he'd bother to carry
out would truly be a worse fate than death.
Shit. I need to think about this some more. But at least I've got until tomorrow, when Fiore returns.
BUSINESS is dead, literally dead. After I go back up top and lock the repository, I flip the door sign to OPEN
and sit at the front desk for a couple of hours, waiting tensely to see
if the zombies are going to come and drag me off to prison. But nothing
happens. I haven't tripped any alarms by my choice of lunchtime reading
matter. With hindsight it's not too surprising. If there's one place
Fiore and Yourdon and the mysterious Hanta won't want under
surveillance, it's wherever they're hiding their experimental tools.
Their kind doesn't thrive in the scrutiny of the panopticon. Which, as
it happens, gives me an idea.
Midway through the afternoon I lock up for half
an hour and hit the nearest electronics shop for a useful gadget. Then
I spend a nervous hour installing it in the cellar. Afterward, I feel
smug. If it works, it'll serve Fiore and Yourdon right for being
overconfident—and for making this crazy simulation too realistic.
Business is so dead that I go home half an hour
early. It's a warm summer evening, and I've got about two kilometers to
walk. I barely see anyone. There are some park attendants out mowing
the grass, but no ordinary folks. Did I miss a holiday or something? I
don't know. I put one foot in front of the other until I hit the road
out of the town center, follow it down into a short stretch of tunnel,
then back into daylight and a quiet residential street with trees and a
lazy, almost stagnant creek off to one side.
I hear voices and catch a faint smell of cooking
food from one of the houses as I walk past. People are home—I
haven't mysteriously been abandoned all on my own. What a shame.
I briefly fantasize that the academicians of the Scholastium have
figured out that all is not well in YFH-Polity and arrived to evacuate
all of us inmates while I waited behind the library counter. It's a
nice daydream.
Pretty soon I come to the next road tunnel
linking hab segments. This time I pull out a flashlight as I pass out
of sight of the entrance. Yes, just as I guessed—there's a
recessed doorlike panel in one wall of the tunnel. I pull out a notepad
and add it to my list. I'm slowly building up a map of the interrelated
segments. It looks like a cyclic directed graph, and that's exactly
what it is, a network of nodes connected by linesrepresenting roads with T-gates along their length. Now I'm adding in the maintenance hatches.
You can't actually see a T-gate—it's just
that one moment you're in one sector and the next moment you've walked
through an invisible brane and you're in another sector—but the
positioning of the hatches can probably tell me something if I'm just
smart enough to figure it out. Ditto the order of the network: if it's
left-handed or right-handed, or if there's a Hamiltonian path through
it. In the degenerate case, there may be no T-gates at all; this might
actually be a single hab cylinder, divided up by bulkheads that can be
sealed against loss of pressure. Or all the sectors may be in different
places, parsecs apart. I'm trying to avoid making assumptions. If you
don't search with open eyes, you risk missing things.
I get home at about my usual time, tense and
nervous but also curiously relieved. What's done is done. Tomorrow
Fiore will either notice my meddling, or he won't. (Or with any luck
he'll assume Yourdon did it, which I think is equally likely. There's
no love lost between those two, and if I play my cards right, I can
exploit their division.) Either way I should learn something. If I
don't . . . well, I know too much to stop now. If they
knew how much I've figured out about their little game, they'd kill me
immediately. No messing, no ritual humiliation in front of the score
whores in Church, just a rapid brainsuck and termination. Fiore's
playing with fire.
Sam is in the living room, watching TV. I tiptoe
past him and head upstairs, badly in need of a shower. When I get to my
room I shed my clothes, then go back to the bathroom and turn the water
on, meaning to wash today's stresses away.
Seconds after I get in I hear footsteps, then the bathroom door opening. "Reeve?"
"Yeah, it's me," I call.
"Need to talk. Urgently."
"After I finish," I say, nettled. "Can't it wait?"
"I suppose."
Small torments add up; I'm now in a thoroughly
bad mood. What's life coming to, when I can't even take a shower
without interruption? I soap myself down methodically then wash my
hair, taking care to rub the inefficient surfactant gel into my scalp.
After a couple of minutes of rinsing, I turn off the water and open the
door to reach for my towel, to be confronted by a surprised-looking Sam.
"Pass me the bath sheet," I tell him, trying to
make the best of things. He complies hastily. Months of living in this
goldfish bowl society have done strange things to my body-sense, and I
feel surprisingly awkward about being naked in front of him. I think he
feels it, too. "What's so important?" I step out of the shower as he
holds the towel for me.
"Phone call," he mumbles, trying to look away—his eyes keep drifting back toward me.
"Uh-huh. Who from?" He folds me in the towel as
if I'm a delicate treasure he's trying not to touch. I shiver and try
to ignore it.
"From Fer. He and El, they've heard something bad from Mick, and they're talking about sorting it out."
"Bad." I try to concentrate. The water on my skin is suddenly cold. "What kind of bad?"
"It's Cass, I think." I tense up inside. "Mick
gave them some crazy story about hearing from Fiore. Said the Priest
told him that one of the rules in here is, what was it, ‘be
fruitful and exponentiate.' That you can get a gigantic score bonus for
having children."
"That's not good," I say carefully, "but it might just be Mick acting in character."
"Well, yes, that's what Fer said, but then Mick
told El he was going to get that bonus whether or not Cass wanted it."
He sounds apprehensive. "El wasn't sure what that meant."
My mind races. "Cass wasn't at Church yesterday,
Sam. Last time I saw her she wouldn't talk—she seemed afraid." I
have a nasty feeling that I know what's going on. I really don't want
it to be true.
"Yes, well, Fer called me when El told him Mick
had made some kind of joke about stopping Cass trying to escape for
good. He wasn't sure just what it was but said it didn't sound right.
Reeve, what's going on? What are we going to do if it turns out he's
been tying Cass up while he's been at work, or using physical force, or
something?"
For someone living in a dark ages sim, Sam can
be heartbreakingly naive at times. "Sam, do you know what the word
‘rape' means?"
"I've heard it," he says guardedly. "I thought it had to involve strangers, and usually killing. Do you think—"
I turn round. "We've got to find out what's
going on, and we've got to get her out of there if it's true. I don't
think we can count on the police zombies, or Fiore for that matter, to
help. Fiore's messed up in the head anyway, even Yourdon thinks so." I
pause. "This is very bad."
The thought of what Cass might be going through
horrifies me, especially as I can guess how some of our cohort will
react if we try to rescue her. Before last Sunday I might have been
more hopeful, but now I know better than to expect anything but
gruesome savagery from our neighbors if they think their precious
points are at risk. "I think Janis would help, but she's ill. Alice,
maybe. Angel is scared but will probably follow if we approach her
right. Jen—I don't want Jen around. What about you guys?"
"Fer agrees," Sam says simply. "He doesn't like
the idea either. El, maybe not. I think if I ask, I can get Greg and
Martin and Alf involved. A team." He looks at me oddly.
"No killing," I say, warningly.
He shudders. "No! Never. But—"
"Someone's got to go find out if it's true, or if it was just Mick making a joke in bad taste. Right?"
He nods. "Right. Who?"
"I'll do it," I say flatly. "Tonight. I'm going
to get dressed. You get on the phone to people. Get them round here. I
want to sort out what we're doing before I go in, that way there won't
be any nasty surprises. All right?"
He nods then looks at me, an odd expression in his face. "Anything else?"
"Yes." I lean forward and kiss him quickly on the lips. "Get moving."
THREE hours
later, we're holed up in a vacant house on a quiet residential side
street across the road from what we now know is Cass and Mick's home,
thanks to an obliging zombie taxi driver. This street is still
three-quarters unoccupied. We pile out of our three taxis at
five-minute intervals and go to ground. Fer was among the first to
arrive. He got us into the empty house with a crowbar. There's not a
lot of furniture, and everything is dusty—not to mention dark,
because we don't want to turn on the lights and risk alerting
Mick—but it's better than trying to hide in the front garden for
a couple of hours.
There are only five of us—me, Sam, Fer,
Greg, and Greg's spouse, Tammy. Tammy is determined and very quietly
furious—I think it's because she didn't realize how bad things
really were until Sam phoned Greg. It's nearly midnight, and we're all
tired, but I run through the plan once again.
"Okay, one more time. I'm going to go across the
road and ring the doorbell. I'll ask to see Cass. Depending how Mick
reacts, Sam and Fer, you'll rush him or hang back. I've got the
whistle. One whistle means come in and get me, I need help. Two means
get Mick." I stop. "Greg, Tammy, you take the stockings, pull them over
your heads. We don't want him to recognize you if you have to take Cass
and look after her."
"I hope you're wrong about this," Tammy says grimly.
"So do I, believe me. So do I." I glance sidelong at Fer.
"Mick's not been right in the head since I've known him," Fer mutters.
"Anything else before we go?" I ask, standing up.
"Yes," says Fer. "If you don't whistle, and you don't come out within ten minutes, I'm going in anyway." He grips his crowbar.
"I should hope so." I nod, then get up and head across the road.
Mick's garden is overgrown with weeds, and the
grass is long. There are no lights in the windows, but that doesn't
mean anything. Like our house, there's a conservatory at the front. The
door stands open. I step inside and look at the front door. There's a
new lock drilled into it, big and chunky-looking. I ring the doorbell.
Nothing happens. I ring it again, and a light comes on in the hall. I
tense up, ready for it as I hear a key turn in the lock, then another
key, and the door opens.
"You." It's Mick. He belches at me, and I smell
sour wine on his breath. He's wearing a dirty T-shirt and boxers, and
he's clutching ametal canister with an open top. "What do you want?" He leers at me. "Din't I tellya not to bug me?"
"I want to see Cass," I say evenly. There's stuff piled in the hall. Looks like empty food cartons, rubbish. It smells sickly sweet. "She wasn't at Church on Sunday."
"Yeah?" He raises the can and takes a drink from it, then looks at me slyly. "Come in."
I step over the threshold as he backs into the
house. It looks like it started out as a mirror image of the one Sam
and I live in, but it's been trashed. The hall is stacked with ripped
boxes of ready meals and bits of decaying food. Something upstairs has
leaked, and there's a smelly stain spreading down one wall. "She's
upstairs, resting," he says, gesturing at the staircase. "Whyn't you go
up an' see her?"
I stare at him. "If you think she won't mind."
"She won't."
As I set foot on the staircase he sidles round
below and closes the door, then twists both keys in the locks. "Go on,"
he tells me, "nothin' to worry about." He giggles.
That does it. I've got the whistle on a cord
round my neck, hidden under the jumper I'm wearing. I pull it out and
blow two sharp blasts as I take the steps two at a time. Mick winces,
then turns to look up at me, his face a picture of confusion slowly
turning into anger. "Whatyuh do that for?" he shouts. Then there's a loud thump from behind him as someone hits the door.
I make the top step and glance round quickly.
The master bedroom is on the left, just like in my own house. There are
piles of filthy clothing mounded up along one wall, and I take in the
sick-but-sweet stench of blocked drains overlying something else,
something less identifiable. I dart into the bedroom, and my hand goes
to the light switch. Something squeals.
There's a splintering crash downstairs and a
bellow of inarticulate rage, but I'm too busy staring at the bed to pay
attention. Most of the furniture in the room has been trashed, like
someone threw it about or took an axe to it. The bed is the sole
exception, but it's been stripped down to the mattress. It stinks of
excrement and stale urine, there are flies buzzing about, and it's
occupied: Cass is lying on it naked. Her arms are tied to the
headboard, and her legs to either corner of the bottom of the bed.
She's filthy and there are bruises on her thighs and her face looks
like she's been repeatedly punched. That's where the squealing noise is
coming from. I think he's broken her jaw.
"Up here," I yell through the doorway. I turn
back to her. "We'll get you out of here, my friend." I bend over her
and pull out the switchblade I brought along for emergencies. "This is
going to hurt." I begin sawing on the cord around her arms and she
whimpers. As she moves there's a horrible stench from the encrusted
mattress and I realize she isn't just skinny, she's half-starved, and
there are sores on her arms, angry red rope burns.
I hear more crashes and bangs from downstairs,
then an angry yell. Cass whimpers, then moans loudly as the last cord
parts; her arms flop limply, and she moans some more. Her hands are
puffy and bruised-looking, and I've got a bad feeling about them, but
there's no time to waste. I move to the foot of the bed and start
sawing away at the rope around her right ankle, and that's when she
screams and I see what he's done to stop her from running away. There's
blood on the rope because he's slashed the big tendon on her ankle, and
her foot flops uncontrollably, and every time it moves, she tries to
scream, gurgling around her broken jaw. He said you get lots of points for having a baby.
I yell with fury, then there's someone in the doorway. I look up and
see it's Sam. There's a cut on his cheek that's bleeding, and one eye
is half-closed. That gets my attention, and I'm in control again. "Over
here," I say tensely. "I need you to hold her leg
still . . ."
When we go downstairs, Greg phones a number I
don't know about and calls an ambulance. Everyone is a bit the worse
for wear, except for Greg and Tammy. Sam is going to have a beautiful
black eye tomorrow, and Fer caught a kick in the ribs while he and Sam
and Greg were taking down Mick. They've laid him out on the floor of
the conservatory while we figure out what to do with him. I'm really
regretting my earlier stand against lynching, but the first priority is
to get Cass to safety. We'll have plenty of time to deal with Mick
later, assuming he doesn'tchoke on his own vomit while he's unconscious. That would make things easier all round.
"How is she?" asks Tammy. "I'd better—"
"No." I stop her by standing in the way. "Trust
me. We need to get her to the, the hospital. This isn't something you
can do at home."
"How bad?" Tammy demands.
"Hospital." I don't want her to see what Mick did to Cass's legs. I don't want to be responsible tonight.
The ambulance arrives within five minutes, a
boxy white vehicle with stylized red crescents on it. Two polite
zombies in blue uniforms come up to the front door. "This way," I say,
leading them upstairs. For once I'm glad there are zombies
everywhere—they won't ask the kind of awkward questions someone
with cognitive autonomy might raise. Sam is up there with Cass, and a
minute later the zombies pile back downstairs to fetch a folding
wheeled platform for her.
"Who is next of kin?" asks one of the zombies as they come down the stairs with Cass lying on the stretcher.
Fer begins to point toward Mick, and Tammy bats his hand away. "I am!" she says. "Take me with you."
"Request approved," says one of the zombies.
"Ride up front, please." They wheel Cass out toward the back of the
vehicle, and Tammy follows them.
Greg watches her for a moment, then turns to look back at Mick. "What are we going to do with him?" he asks.
There's a hard expression on Fer's face.
"Nothing," I say quickly, before Fer can open his mouth and stick his
foot in it. "Remember what we agreed? No lynching." I pause. "What we
do tomorrow is another matter."
"Will the police do anything?" Fer asks after a moment.
"I don't think so," says Sam, coming downstairs.
He's holding a damp towel to his eye. "I really don't think they're
programmed for this sort of thing. If we're unlucky, they'll come after
us for trampling on the flower bed and breaking down the door, but I
don't think you can really expect a zombie to cope with this sort
of . . . thing." He looks very sober as he stares at
Mick's prostrate form.
"Let's go home," I suggest. "How about we meet up tomorrow evening to talk about it?"
"That works for me," says Greg. Sam nods.
I eye Mick's prostrate form. "If he tries to come after any of us, I think we should kill him."
"You sound as if you're not certain." That's Fer.
"Certain?" I stare at him: "Shit, I've got half
a mind to cut his throat right here! Except, Sunday"—I
swallow—"has kind of put me off." I stare at him some more. "You
kicked the shit out of him. Think he'll come back for more?"
Greg shakes his head. "I hope he tries
something," he says, a curious half smile on his lips. I shiver. Just
for a moment he reminds me of Jen.
"Come on, let's go." I take Sam's free hand. "Fer, would you call two taxis?
It's close to one in the morning when Sam and I
get home, filthy and tired and bruised. "Go on in," I say, pausing in
the conservatory. "This shirt's going in the trash." Sam nods
wordlessly and goes indoors, leaving me to strip off under the cool
moonlight. I feel numb and tired, but also satisfied with the night's
work. I correct that—mostly satisfied. I unzip my trousers in
case any of the crap on the bed rubbed off on them, then I follow him
inside.
Sam's standing in the living room doorway,
holding a bottle of vodka and two tumblers. He hasn't turned the lights
on, but he's shed his shirt, and the moonlight shining through the tall
glass windows outlines his bare shoulders in silver. "I do not want to
dream tonight," he says, holding the bottle out to me.
"Me neither." I take one of the glasses, then
brush past him into the living room. I'm tired, I realize, but I'm also
wired with excitement and tension and apprehension about tomorrow, and
a burning hot anger for Cass—Why didn't I go round to see her before?—and
a fresh hatred for Fiore and Yourdon, and the faceless scum who created
this nightmare and expect us to live in it. "What are you waiting for?"
I drop onto the sofa and hold my glass out. Sam tips colorless spirit
into it. "C'mon."
He sits down next to me and fills his own glass,
then caps the bottle. "I should have listened to you earlier," he says,
taking a mouthful.
"So?" I raise my glass. "I hope the hospital can help. She was—"
There's a long moment of silence. It's probably only a couple of seconds, but it feels like hours.
"I didn't know."
"None of us did." But these sound like feeble
excuses to me right now, so I take another mouthful of vodka in order
to have something else to occupy my mouth with.
"R-Reeve. There's something else I want you to
know." I look at him sharply. He's looking right back at me, and I'm
suddenly conscious that I'm nearly naked. And he's not wearing that
much either, now I allow myself to notice it.
"Go ahead," I say, trying to keep my voice neutral.
"I'm. Oh." He looks away, looking pained.
Inexpressive. "Yesterday I said some things I didn't really mean.
Hurtful things, some of them. I want to apologize."
"No apology needed," I say, my heart beating painfully fast.
"Oh, but there is. You see, I didn't mean everything I said. But when I said * * * I was telling the—"
"Stop right there." I raise a hand. "Those words. You, uh, oh shit."
My head's spinning. It's late at night, I've been through a lot, I've
been drinking vodka, and Sam's saying words to me that my ears refuse
to listen to. "I didn't hear you just now, and I know for sure you said
the same thing before, and I didn't hear the words." He looks puzzled,
even offended. "I mean, I heard you speak, but I couldn't understand them." I'm beginning to worry. "You used the same phrase, didn't you? Exactly
the same words? Could there be something wrong with my—" He
stands up and strides over to the sideboard to retrieve his tablet,
which has been lying there gathering dust for some time. "What?"
He says something to it, then holds it up in front of me. Dim letters glow on the screen:
I LOVE YOU
"You what?" I say, "You're trying to say * * *—" And I know I'm saying the words, but I can't hear them. "Shit." I shake my head. "It's me. Sam,
I'm so sorry." I stand up and hug him. "* * *, too. It's just, there's
something really flaky up with my language module. Is that what you've
been trying to tell me?" I lean back far enough to see his face. "Is
it?"
"Yes," he admits. His face is a picture of worry. "I don't say that easily. And I can't hear it either, Reeve, I thought I was going nuts."
"I guess not." I'm close enough to feel his
crotch. "And I guess you only say that to people you're serious about."
He nods. "And maybe you're close enough that I can tell you that I'm
flattered, and very happy, and, and—" I pause. I feel as if I
ought to know what this weird inability to understand those three happy
words means, but I can't quite recall it. "We've got to get out of
here."
He nods. "I really don't like this," he says,
miserably, a wave of his hand encompassing everything from his body
outward. "I've—they should have spotted it. I don't feel right
when I'm big and slow and fixed. I mean, they can patch it
temporarily but I don't like that, either, it's easier just not to be.
Only they didn't even give me a, a—" He's breathing too fast.
I feel a stab of anger, not at Sam but at Fiore
and the other idiots. "You've got a big-body dysphoria, haven't you?"
He nods. "Figures." Kay spent a whole lifetime as an alien, didn't she?
And kept changing bodies, as if she couldn't quite settle on a form
that she felt comfortable in. Doubtless it's fixable with therapy, but
fixing people's problems isn't exactly what this polity is about.
"Sam." I kiss him on the cheek. "We've got to get out of here. Where's
your tablet?"
"Over there."
"I need to show you something." I let go of him
and fetch it, intending to point out to him the myriad ways in which
the polity constitution turns us into victims of a biologically
deterministic tyranny. "Here—" I page through it quickly. "Hey, I
didn't see this before!"
"What?" He looks over my shoulder.
"List of revealed behavioral scores.
Gender-based. Huh." I stare. Sex with your partner gets five points for
the very first occurrence, dropping off to one point each time after a
while. In other words, it's a decay function. "Adultery," that bad
word, gets minus one hundred. There are some other crazy items. Getting
pregnant brings fifty points, bringing the baby to term brings another
fifty. What's abortion? Whatever it is, it gets hammered as hard as
adultery, which is what got Esther and Phil into—let's not go
there. There are other things here, the most improbable activities,
that get huge penalties. But rape isn't mentioned. Murder loses you
just seventy points. What kind of sense does that make? It's ludicrous!
"Either they're trying to generate a psychotic polity, or the people in
the society they derived these scores from were off their heads."
"Or possibly both." Sam yawns. "Listen, it's
late. We need to get some sleep. Why don't we go to bed and chew this
over tomorrow? With the others?"
"Yes." I put the tablet down, not mentioning
that tomorrow I've got other plans because Fiore is visiting the
library again. "Tomorrow is going to be a very interesting day."
I spend a long
time lying in bed awake, fantasizing about what I'd like to do to Mick,
about what I think he deserves to have done to him—but which
isn't going to happen. I finally drift into sleep after a particularly
brutal fantasy, and I dream again, but this time it's no nightmare.
Rather, it's a flashback to how I started my life as a tank. I guess
these flashbacks would be nightmarish, if they were still
invested with any emotional impact—instead they're grisly and
freighted with significance, but drained of immediacy by time and
necessity.
I stay aboard the MASucker Grateful for Duration
for almost a gigasecond as it crawls slowly through interstellar space.
There's not really anything else I can do—we've been offlined by
Curious Yellow, which appears to have targeted the ship for special
treatment on the basis of its self-contained systems. Half-crazy with
worry for my family, tempered by apprehension about my situation, I
check myself into one of the ship's assemblers when it becomes clear
that this isn't a temporary outage, that something vast and extremely
ugly has overcome the Republic of Is and there's no way around it. We
won't find out what's happening until the Grateful for Duration reaches its next destination, an obscure religious retreat in orbit around a small and very cold gas giant that orbits a
brown dwarf about thirty trillion kilometers away. I extract a promise
from Kapitan Vecken that he'll unserialize me if anything interesting
happens, then archive myself to backup storage for the duration.
When I blink and awaken in the A-gate, the
universe has changed around me. I've been asleep for a gigasecond while
we crawled across almost three Urth-style "light years," then spent a
megasec decelerating under high-gee conditions to a rendezvous with
Delta Refuge. The contemplatorian monastery has been erased and filed
in deep storage, bits and atoms reconfigured into the sinister angled
constructs of a military-industrial complex. Kapitan Vecken is
reluctant to lend his ship to the resistance cabal, but he's happy to
run off a clone of his stand-alone A-gate to help speed their botched,
jerry-built attempts at constructing a sterile, uninfected
nano-ecosystem. And he's happy to put me ashore. So I meet the
resistance.
At that time—when I first join
them—the Linebarger Cats are an informal group of refugees,
dissidents, and generally uncooperative alienists who resent any
attempt to dictate their conscious phase space. They live in a few
cramped habs with little attempt to conceal the artificiality of the
environment. In my first few kiloseconds the close-lipped
paramilitaries who insist on searching me as I climb out of the
transfer pod explain what I've missed. The infection is a history worm.
It infiltrates A-gates. If you go into an infected A-gate, it crudely
deletes chunks of your memory (mostly at random, but if you remember
anything from before the Republic of Is, you're likely to lose it).
Then it copies its own kernel into your netlink. There are some
bootstrap instructions. If you find an uninfected gate, there's a
compulsion to put it into operator debugging mode, enter commands via
the conversational interface, then upload yourself. At which point the
A-gate executes the infected boot loader in your netlink, copies it
into its working set, and—bang!—another infected gate.
Assemblers are an old established technology,
and for many gigaseconds they've been a monoculture, best-of-breed, all
using the same subsystems—if you want a new A-gate, you just tell
the nearest assembler to clone itself. Where Curious Yellow got started
we do not know, but once it was in the wild, it spread like an ideal
gas, percolating through the network until it was everywhere.
It takes a while for a worm to overrun an A-gate
network while in stealth mode, using human brains as the infective
vector, but once the infection reaches critical mass, it's virtually
impossible to stop it spreading throughout an entire polity.
Once the activation signal is sent, everything
speeds up. Suddenly, there are privileged instruction channels.
Infected A-gates sprout defenses, extrude secure netlinks to the
nearest T-gates, and start talking to each other directly to exchange
orders and information. Here's the fun thing about Curious
Yellow—A-gates that are infected can send each other message
packets, peer to peer. If you've got the right authentication keys, you
can send a distant gate running Curious Yellow instructions to make
things. Or modify things. Or change people as they pass through it.
It's an anything box.
Fearful weapons appear, seemingly at random,
engaged on search and destroy missions for who knows what. Someone,
somewhere, is writing the macros, and the only way to stay clear is to
sever all T-gate connections, shutting the rogue assemblers off from
their orders. But the A-gates are still infected, still running Curious
Yellow. And if you use them to make more A-gates, those will be
infected, too, even if you write complete new design
templates—Curious Yellow's payload incorporates a pattern
recognizer for nanoreplicators and inserts itself into anything that
looks even remotely similar. The only solution is to drop back to
prereplicator tech, use the infected gates to make dumb tools, then try
to rebuild a sterile assembler from the wreckage of post-Acceleration
technosystems.
Or you can surrender to Curious Yellow and try
to live with the consequences, as the Linebarger Cats explain to me in
words of one syllable. Then they ask me what I intend to do, and I ask
if I can sign up.
Which explains how I ended up as a tank, but not really why.
I wake up as
the bright light of dawn crosses the edge of my pillow. I stretch and
yawn and look at Sam sleeping beside me, and for a heart-stoppingly
tender moment I long to be back on the outside, where I'm Robin and
she's Kay and we're both properly adjusted humans who canbe whoever we want to be and do whatever we want to do. For a moment I wish I'd never found out who he was . . .
So I force myself to get out of bed. It's a
library day, and I need to be there because I've got at least one
customer to deal with—Fiore. I'm tired and apprehensive,
wondering in the cold light of day if I've blown everything. The idea
of going through a normal working cycle after what happened last night
feels bizarre, the sort of thing a zombie would do—as if I'm
entirely a creature of unconscious habit, obedient to the commands of
an unknown puppeteer. But there's more to it than just doing the job, I
remind myself. I've got a different goal in mind, something else that
the day job is just a cover for. I'm still not entirely sure what's
going on here, why I was sent, and who Yourdon and Fiore are, but
enough stuff has surfaced that I can make an educated guess, and the
picture I'm piecing together isn't pretty.
I'm fairly sure that from the outside YFH-Polity
must appear to be a successful social psychology experiment. It's a
closed microcosm community with its own emergent rules and internal
dynamics that seem to be eerily close to some of the books I've been
reading in my spare hours in the library. It's got to be providing
great feedback on dark ages society for Yourdon and Fiore to wave under
the noses of the academic oversight committee appointed by the
Scholastium. But on the inside of the glasshouse, things are changing
very rapidly. When Yourdon and Fiore and the mysterious Hanta announce
a continuation, and say that all the inmates have agreed to extend
their consent, nobody's going to look too deeply. By then, the
experimental population will have nearly doubled. Half the inmates will
be newborn citizens, unknown to the oversight committee on the outside.
Maybe it's even worse than that—I ought to go to the hospital and
visit Cass, nose around, and see what their maternity facilities are
like. I'll bet they're pretty advanced for a dark ages facility. And
that they're expecting plenty of multiple births.
There's also the question of the box files in
the document repository. I figure they contain about a billion words of
data, committed to a storage medium that is stable for tens of
gigasecs, potentially even for hundreds. Spores. That's what they need the babies for, isn't it? I can't remember why we don't have repeated outbreaks of Curious Yellow anymore,
it's one of those memories that's buried too deeply for me to retrieve.
But there's got to be a connection, hasn't there? The original Curious
Yellow infection spread via human carriers, crudely editing them to
insert its kernel code and making them issue debugger commands to load
and execute on each assembler they found. It spread via the netlink.
Our netlinks don't work properly, do they? Hmm. The new A-gates
are different, but they're equally a monoculture, just one that's
designed to resist Curious Yellow's infection strategy. I can't help
thinking about that MilSpec assembler in the library basement. There's
something I'm missing here, something I don't quite have enough data for—
I'm dressed for work, standing in the kitchen
holding a mug of coffee, and I don't remember how I got here. For a
moment I shudder, in the grip of an anonymous sense of abstract horror.
Did I just get dressed, walk downstairs, and make coffee in an
introspective haze as I tried to get to grips with the real purpose of
this facility? Or is something worse happening? The way I can read the
words "I love you" but hear them as "* * *" suggests something's not
quite right in my speech center. If I'm suffering memory dropouts, I
could be quite ill. I mean, really ill. The small of my back
prickles with cold sweat as I realize that I might be about to unravel
like a knit jumper hooked by a nail. I know my memory's full of gaps
where associations between concepts and experiences have been broken,
but what if too much has gone? Can the rest of me just disappear
spontaneously, speech and memory and perceptions falling victim to an
excess of editing?
Not knowing who you are is even worse than not knowing who you were.
I get out of the house as fast as I can (leaving
Sam asleep upstairs in the bedroom) and walk to work. The weather is as
hot as usual—we seem to be moving into a scheduled "summer"
season—and I make good time even though I set off in the opposite
direction from normal, intending to loop around the back way and come
into the downtown district where the library is via a different road.
I open up the library. It's neat and
tidy—when neither Janis nor I are there I guess there's probably
a zombie janitor on staff duty. I head to the back room to fortify
myself with another coffee before Fiore arrives, and as I'm waiting for
the kettle to boil I get a surprise.
"Janis! What are you doing here? I thought you were ill."
"I'm feeling a lot better," she says, summoning
up a pale smile. "Last week I was getting sick a lot, and the lower
back pain was getting to me, but I'm less nauseous now, and as long as
I don't have to do a lot of bending or lifting, I should be all right
for a while. So I thought I'd come in and sit in on the front desk for
a bit."
Shit. "Well, it's been very quiet
for the past few days," I tell her. "You don't have to stay." A thought
strikes me. "You heard about Sunday."
"Yes." Her expression closes up. "I knew
something bad was going to happen—Esther and Phil were too
indiscreet—but I didn't expect anything like . . ."
"Would you like some coffee?" I extemporize,
trying to figure out how to get her out of here while I do things that
could get me into deep shit if they go wrong.
"Yes, please." She's got that brooding look, now. "I could strangle the greasy little turd."
"Fiore's visiting this morning," I say, managing to pitch my voice as casually as I can, hoping to get her attention.
"He is, is he?" She looks at me sharply.
I lick my lips. "Something else happened last night. I—it would really help if you could do me a favor."
"What kind of favor? If it's about Sunday—"
"No." I take a deep breath. "It's about one of
my cohort. Cass. Her husband, Mick, he's been, uh, well, some of us
went round yesterday night, and we took her to the hospital. We're
making sure he doesn't go anywhere near her, and meanwhile—"
"Mick. Short guy, big nose, eyes as mad as a very mad thing indeed. That him?"
"Yes."
Janis swears, quietly. "How bad was it?"
I debate how much to tell her. "It's about as
bad as it can get. If he finds her again, I'm afraid he'll kill her." I
stare at her. "Janis, Fiore knew. He had to! And he didn't do anything. I'm half-expecting him to nail us all for a ton of points next Sunday for intervening."
She nods thoughtfully. "So what do you want me to do?"
I switch the kettle off. "Take today off sick,
like you have for the past few days. Go to the hospital, visit Cass. If
they've wired her jaw, she might be able to talk. We can't be with her
all the time, but I think she'll need someone around. And someone
who'll be there to call the police if Mick shows up. I don't know if
the hospital zombies will do that."
"Forget the coffee, I'm out of here." As she
stands up she looks at me oddly. "Good luck with whatever you're
planning for Fiore," she says. "I hope it's painful." Then she heads
for the door.
AFTER Janis
leaves, I go and wait behind the front desk. Fiore shows up around
midmorning and pointedly ignores me. I offer him a coffee and get a
fish-eye stare instead of a "yes"—he seems suspicious. I wonder
if it's because of what happened last night? But he's here alone, with
no police and no tame congregation of score whores to back him up, so
he pretends he didn't see me at all, and I pretend I don't know
anything's wrong. He heads for the locked door in the reference
section, and I manage to hold back the explosive gulp of air my lungs
are straining for until he's gone.
My hands keep tensing and kneading the handles
of my bag as if they belong to someone else. There's a carving knife in
the bag, and I've sharpened the blade. It's not much of a dagger, but
I'm betting that Fiore isn't much of a knife fighter. With any luck he
won't notice anything, or he'll assume Yourdon is the author of my
little modification to the cellar and, therefore, leave it alone. The
knife is for the worst case, if I think Fiore has realized what I'm up
to. It's piss poor compared to the kit I used to work with, but it's
better than nothing. So I sit behind this desk like a prim and proper
librarian, entertaining mad fantasies about sawing off the Priest's
head with a carving knife while I wait for him to emerge from the
repository.
Sweat trickles down the small of my back as I look out across the forecourt
toward the highway, watching the pattern of light and shade cast by the
leaves of the cherry trees on either side of the path shift and
recombine on the concrete paving stones. My head hurts as I run through
my fragmentary information again. Are my intermittent disconnects
hiding things from me that I need to know?
Riddle me this: Why would three missing renegade
psyops specialists from the chaos that followed the fall of the
Republic of Is surface inside an experiment re-enacting an historical
period about which we know virtually nothing? And why would the filing
cupboard at the library contain what looks like a copy of the bytecode
to Curious Yellow, printed on paper? Why can't I hear the spoken words
"I love you," and why am I suffering from intermittent memory
blackouts? Why is there a stand-alone A-gate in the basement, and what
is Fiore doing with it? And why does Yourdon want us to have lots and
lots of babies?
I don't know. But there's one thing I'm
absolutely clear about: These scumsuckers used to work for Curious
Yellow or one of the cognitive dictatorships, and this is all something
to do with the aftermath of the censorship war. I'm here because
old-me, the Machiavellian guy with the pen whittled from his own
thighbone, harbored deep suspicions along these very lines. But in
order to get me in through the YFH firewalls he had to erase the chunks
of his memories that would give him away—and those are the very
pieces of me that I need in order to understand the situation!
It's frustrating. It's also immensely worrying
because there's more at risk here than simple personal
danger—whether from the experimenters or the other victims. I
have a faint inkling of the pain and suffering Curious Yellow caused
the first time it got out, and of the terrible struggle it took to chop
up the worm's Chord-type network and sterilize every single assembler.
It ruptured what was once an integrated interstellar civilization,
smashing it into a mess of diamond-shard polities. How did we stop it . . . ?
Footsteps. It's Fiore, looking curiously self-satisfied as he heads toward the library doors.
"Finished, Father?" I call.
"Yes, that is all for today." He inclines his
head toward me, a gesture that's evidently intended to be gracious but
that comes over as a pompous bob. Then his eyebrows furrow in a frown.
"Ah yes, Reeve. You were involved in the business last night, I believe?"
My left hand tightens on the knife handle inside my bag. "Yes." I stare him down. "Do you know what Mick was doing to Cass?"
"I know that"—something seems to occur to
him, and he changes direction in midsentence—"it is a most
serious thing indeed to interfere in the holy relation between husband
and wife. But in some circumstances it may be justifiable." He stares at me owlishly. "She was pregnant, you know."
"And?"
He must think my expression is one of
puzzlement, because he explains, "If you hadn't intervened, she might
have lost the child." He glances at his watch. "Now, you must excuse
me—I have an appointment. Good day." And he's off through the
door again like a shot, leaving me watching him from behind, mouth
agape with disbelief.
Why is Fiore concerned with the health of a
fetus, but not about its mother being assaulted, repeatedly raped, held
prisoner for weeks, maimed in such a way that she may never walk again?
Why? He's got all the human empathy of a zombie. What's wrong
with him? And why did he suddenly change his tune? I'd swear he was
about to denounce what we did last night, but then he moderated his
line. Fear of what the Bishop might say if he incited another near riot
over the way we rescued Cass, or something else?
They want us to have lots of children. But why is that important to them? Is it something to do with Curious Yellow?
I grind my teeth until Fiore is out of sight,
then I hop down from my stool, hang up the CLOSED sign, and head for
the lock-up. The secret basement downstairs is as I left it except for
the assembler, which is chugging to itself and gurgling as it loads
feedstock or coolant or something through pipes in the floor. I guess
Fiore's set it running some kind of long batch job. But checking up on
it isn't why I'm down here right now—I'm here to retrieve the
video cartridge from the camcorder I left running on the equipment
shelf.
The camcorder is a small metal box with a lens
on one side and a screen covering the other. I don't know what's going
on inside it. It certainly isn't an original dark ages
artifact—I've seen pictures of them in the library
books—but it does the same job. Along with all the other tech
artifacts in this polity, some set designer probably slaved over it for
hours trying to figure out how to give it the right functionality
without adding too much. They got it wrong, but not too wrong.
The original machines used things called "tapes" or "disks," but this
one just writes everything it sees onto a memory diamond the size of a
sand grain that's good for a gigasec of events.
I go sit down on the sofa to play with the
'corder. Putting my bag down next to me, I poke at the display until
I've zapped back an hour or three. Then I fast-forward through darkness
until the light comes on and Fiore comes in. At triple normal speed I
watch as he goes over to the bookshelves and leafs through a couple of
folders. I pause and zoom in to see what he was reading: POLICY ON SEXCRIME, followed by a glance at FAMILIAL STABILITY INDEX,
whatever that is. Next, he trots over to the A-gate and chatters to it,
gesturing at the terminal. I don't see any sign of biometric
authentication, no retinal scan or anything, but he may have used a
password. The gate cylinder rotates around its long axis, and he steps
inside. Fast-forward and about a kilosecond later he steps out again, blinking. So he's just backed himself up, has he?
Back at the control terminal Fiore issues some
more commands, and the gate begins chugging to itself. I glance over my
shoulder. Yes, it's still doing that—just some kind of long
synthesis job. He heads for the staircase and—
Shit! I whip round and reach for my bag. The A-gate cylinder is opening.
Knife in left hand, bag in right hand. Everything is crystal clear. Fiore suspected.
He backed himself up, then set an ambush, and I've blown it. The
cylinder turns and the interior cracks into view. White light, a smell
of violets and some kind of weird volatile organics, a bit of steam.
There's someone/something in there, moving.
I dart forward, bag raised, knife ready to
block. They're sitting up, head turning. I'll only get one chance to do
this. Heart pounding, I upend the empty shoulder bag over the head,
lank black hair—fat jowls wobbling indignantly hands coming
up—and I shove the knife blade up against his throat and yell, "Freeze!"
The duplicate Fiore freezes.
"This is a knife. If you move or make a sound or
try to dislodge the bag over your head, I will cut your throat. If you
understand, say yes."
His voice is muffled, but sounds almost amused. "What if I say no?"
"Then I cut your throat." I move the knife slightly.
"Yes," he says hurriedly.
"That's good." I adjust my grip. "Now let me
tell you something. You are thinking you have a working netlink and you
can call for help. You're wrong, because netlinks work via spread
spectrum, and you're wearing a Faraday cage over your head, and
although it's open at the bottom you're standing in a cellar. The
signal's attenuated. Do you understand?"
Pause. "There's nobody there!" He sounds slightly panicky. Clever fellow.
"I'm glad you said that because if you hadn't,
I'd have cut your throat," I tell him. "Like I said earlier, if you try
and lose the bag, I'll kill you immediately."
He's shaking. Oh, I shouldn't be enjoying this, but I am. For everything you've done to us I ought to kill you a hundred times over. What have I turned into?
I'm almost shaking with the intensity of—it's like hunger, the
yearning. "Listen to these instructions. I will shortly tell you to
stand up. When I do so, I want you to slowly rise, keeping your
arms by your sides. If at any point you can't feel the knife, you'd
better freeze, because if you keep moving, I'll kill you. When you're
on your feet, you will step fifty centimeters forward, then slowly move
your hands behind your back. You will then lace your fingers together.
Now, slowly, stand up."
Fiore, to give him his due, has a cool enough
head to do exactly as I tell him with no hesitation and no hysterics.
Or maybe he just knows exactly what he can expect if he doesn't obey.
He can't be under any illusions about how hated he is, can he?
"Forward one pace, then hands behind back," I
say. He steps forward. I have to stretch to keep the knife around his
neck, but I reach down with my free hand and follow his right arm
round. Now is the moment of danger—if he were to kick straight
back while blocking with his left shoulder he could hurt me badly and
probably get away. But I'm betting Fiore knows very little indeed about
serious one-on-one physical mayhem, and the bag over his head should
keep him disoriented long enough for me to do this. I step to one side,
reach into my pocket with my right hand until I find what I'm after,
then squeeze the contents of the tube over his hands and fingers.
Cyanoacrylate glue—the librarian's field-expedient handcuffs.
"Don't move your hands," I tell him.
"What is it—" He stops. Of course he can't
help moving his hands and the stuff flows into small cracks. It's less
viscous than water but it polymerizes in seconds. I move the knife
round to the side of his neck and examine my handiwork. He might be
able to get his hands apart if he's willing to leave skin behind, but
he won't be able to take me by surprise while he's doing it.
"Okay, we're now going to take three slow steps
forward. Yes, you can shuffle. I'll tell you when to stop—easy,
easy, stop!"
I stop him in the middle of an open patch of
floor. I need to think. He's breathing hoarsely inside the improvised
hood, and he stinks of fear-sweat. Any moment now, he'll realize that I
can't let him live, then he'll be uncontrollable. I've got maybe twenty
seconds—
"When my husband says * * * I can't hear him," I say conversationally. "What does that mean?"
"It means you're infected with Curious Yellow." He sounds oddly placid.
"You ran off a duplicate of yourself as a guard
to see who was coming in here," I tell him. "That was smart. Were you
afraid I was using the A-gate?"
"Yes," he says tersely.
"It's immune to the strain I'm infected with, isn't it?" I ask.
I can feel his muscles tensing. "Yes," he says reluctantly.
"And Yourdon didn't insist it was locked to your netlinks?" I ask, tensing as I gamble everything on the right answer.
He doesn't give it to me verbally, but he grunts and begins to pull his hands apart and I know I'm right, but I also know I've got about three seconds
left. So I step in close behind him and run my right hand down his
chest, caressing, and he freezes when I get to his crotch. A moment of
relief—he's anatomically orthohuman, and male. I grab his balls
and squeeze viciously. He jackknifes forward, speechless and gasping,
almost knocking me over with the violence of it, and the bag goes
flying. But that's okay, because a moment later I grab his hair and
while he's preoccupied with the terrible breath-sucking pain, I pull
his head up and run the knife blade smoothly through his carotid artery
and thyroid cartilage, just below the hyoid bone.
See, the difference between me and Fiore is that
I don't enjoy killing, but I know how to do it. Whereas Fiore gets off
on control fantasies and watching his score whores lynch lovers, but it
didn't occur to him to tell the assembler to restore him holding a
weapon, and it took him almost twenty seconds to realize that I was
going to have to kill him regardless of anything he did or said.
Basically, Fiore is your bureaucrat-type killer who runs push-button
experiments by remote control, while I'm—
I blank again.
THE civil war
lasts two gigasecs, nearly sixty-four years by the reckoning of
long-lost Urth. It's probably still raging in some far-flung corners of
human space. When the longjump network was shattered in an attempt to
firewall the damage, it split the interstellar net into disjoint
domains separated by lightspeed communications lag. Isolated pockets of
Curious Yellow are probably still running, out beyond the liberated
light cone, in the eternal darkness and cold—just as there may be
outposts of free posthumanity who dropped off the net when the Republic
of Is disintegrated. Redaction, the deletion of memory, is Curious
Yellow's deadliest weapon—some of those polities might have been
deliberately forgotten, their proximal T-gate endpoints dropped into
stars and the memories of their existence erased from everyone who used
an infected A-gate. The true horror of Curious Yellow is that we have
no way of knowing how much we have lost. Entire genocidal wars could
have been wiped from our memories as if they never happened. Perhaps
this explains the worm's peculiar vendetta against practicing
historians and archaeologists. It, or its creator, is afraid we will
remember something . . .
I spend my first gigasec among the Cats being a
tank. There's very little that is human left in me once I get a clear
picture of what's going on. It's not hard to generalize from the tales
of random atrocities committed against people who specialize in the
past; besides, the gigasecond of nonexistence I spent aboard Grateful for Duration
is a small death in its own right—time enough for children to
mature as adults, for spouses to despair, mourn, and move on. Even if
by some miracle my family hasn't been targeted for liquidation because
of my career, they're still lost to me. That sort of experience tends
to make one bitter. Bitter enough to give up on humanity as a bad job,
bitter enough to experiment with other, more sinister, identities.
About my body: I mass approximately two tons and
stand three meters high at the shoulder. My nervous system is
nonbiological—I'm running as a real-time sim with sensory
engagement through my panzer's pain nerves. (The long-term dangers of
complete migration into virtch are well understood, but avoidable to
some extent by maintaining a somatotype and staying anchored in the
real world. Besides which, there's an emergency to deal with.) If I
have to, I can accelerate my mind to ten times normal speed. My skin is
an exotic armor, pebbled with monocrystalline diamonds held in a
shock-absorbent quantum dot matrix that can be fast-tuned to match the
color of any background from radio frequencies through to soft X-rays.
For fingernails I have retractable diamond claws, and for
fists—clench and point—I have blasters. I don't eat, or
breathe, or shit, but take power from a coil wrapped around an endless
stream of plasma gated from the photosphere of a secret star.
As a callout sign I adopt the name liddellhart.
The other Cats don't know what this signifies. Maybe that explains why
over the bloody course of four hundred megs and sixteen engagements I
end up being promoted to template-senior sergeant and replicated a
hundredfold. Unlike Loral and some of the others, I don't freeze up
when there's a problem. I don't experience shock and dissociation when
I realize we've just decapitated twelve thousand civilians and shoved
their heads into a tactical assembler that is silently failing to back
them up. I do what's necessary. I don't hesitate when it's necessary to
sacrifice six of me in a suicide attack to buy time for the rest of the
intrusion team to withdraw. I don't feel anything much except for icy
hatred, and while I appreciate in the abstract that I'm sick, I'm not
willing to ask for medical attention that might impair my ability to
fight. Nor do our shadowy directors, who are watching over us all, see
fit to override me.
For the first gigasec, we pursue the war by
traditional methods. We find half-forgotten T-gates leading into
polities under the control of Curious Yellow. We go through, shoot up
the assemblers they're using as immigration firewalls, establish a
toehold, fight our way in, install sanitized A-gates of our own, and
forcibly run the civilian population through them to remove the Curious
Yellow taint from their heads. The ones who survive usually thank us
afterward.
At first it's relatively easy, but later we find
we are attacking polities where the defenses are heavier, and later
still Curious Yellow starts programming the civilians to fight bitterly
and without quarter. I've seen naked children, shaking in the grip of
an existential breakdown, walking toward panzers with Vorpal blades
clutched inexpertly in both hands. And I've seen worse things than
that. The idea of Curious Yellow, of surrender to a higher cause, seems
to appeal to a certain small subset of humanity. These people
manipulate the worm, customizing its payload to establish quisling
dictatorships in its shadow, and the horrors these gauleiters invent in
its service are far worse than the crude but direct tactics the
original worm used.
Quite late on in the campaign I realize this
and, in a fitful flashback to my earlier self, I begin to spend some of
my spare time thinking about the implications. My study of the
psychology of collaboration becomes one of the most heavily accessed
stacks in the Cats' internal knowledge base. So it probably shouldn't
come as a surprise when I receive a summons to headquarters, combined
with orders to converge my deltas and revert to orthohuman skin before
transit.
At first I'm apprehensive. I've grown used to
being an armored battalion, spending most of my seconds between action
in icy orbit around a convenient failed star or exoplanet. Breathing and eating and sleepingand emoting
are worrying, senseless handicaps. I recognize that they are of
interest in comprehending the enemy motivational framework, and
allowances must be made for them among the people we liberate, but why
should I subject myself to the frailties of flesh? But eventually I
realize that it's not about me. I need to be able to work with the
headquarters staff. So I reconverge my various selves, erasing my
identity from the kilotons of heavy metal that have until so recently
been my limbs, and I report to the nearest field command node for
up-processing.
WHEN I come to,
I find I'm leaning over the A-gate control panel. In my left hand I'm
clutching a dripping knife so tightly that my fingers are close to
cramping. There's blood halfway across the room, forming an obscene
lake.
If I got it right, he won't have had time to use
his netlink. He'll have been in acute physical agony as his head came
out of the bag, then he'll have blacked out because of blood loss.
Unconsciousness within ten seconds: It's more than he deserved.
But now I've got a huge problem, namely a
hundred and ten kilos of dead meat lying in about ten liters of gore in
the middle of a grass carpet that's already dying. Is this
incriminating or what? Oh, and my sweater and skirt and sensible shoes
are covered in blood. This does not look good.
I laugh, and it comes out as a hysterical giggle with more than a little madness in it. This is bad, I think. But there's got to be something—
For a moment I flash back to the time with the
malfunctioning A-gate, the pools of fluid and lumps of deanimated meat.
That helps stabilize me, in a way: It makes it clear what I have to do.
I pick up Fiore's arm and give it an experimental tug. His sallow flesh
ripples, and when I put my back into it, he jerks free of the carpet
and skids a few centimeters toward me. I grunt and tug again, but it's
not easy to move him so I pause for a bit and look around. There's some
kind of cabling on one of the tool shelves, so I go over and grab a
couple of meters of wire, twine it around his torso under the arms, and
use it to pull him toward the A-gate. Finally, I get him into position,
back inside the gate chamber. It's hard to keep him inside—one
leg keeps flopping out—but eventually I figure out that I can
hold him in if I use the rest of the cable to truss him up.
"Okay, take five," I tell myself breathlessly, bending over the field terminal. Talking to yourself, Reeve? I ask ironically. Are we going mad, yet?
My fingers leave sticky reddish smears on it as I prod at virtch
controls, but eventually I manage to bring up the conversational
interface. The gate seems to have a load of scheduled background
synthesis jobs queued up, but it's multitasking, and this is an
interrupt: "Gate accept raw waste feedstock for disassembly okay."
"Okay," says the gate, and the door whines slightly as it seals around the evidence.
"Gate select template cleaning systems index that there, I want one of them, make me one of them okay."
"Okay, fabricating," says the gate. "Time to
completion, three hundred and fifty seconds after end of current job."
Ah, the conveniences of modern life.
I go upstairs to the common room and make myself a cup of tea.
While it's brewing, I strip off my outer clothes
and drop them in the sink. We've got some basic cleaning equipment, and
the detergent is pretty good at getting out stains, probably better
than anything they had in the real dark ages. A couple of rinses, and
my skirt and sweater are simply soaking wet, so I wring them out and
drape them over the thermal vent and dial up the air temperature.
Back downstairs, I find the A-gate gaping open
and the stuff I asked for sitting inside it. Fiore has been transformed
into a carpet cleaning machine and a bunch of absorbent towels. It
takes another trip upstairs to fill its tank with water. The smell of
solvents makes me dizzy, but after half an hour I've gotten the visible
bloodstains out of the carpet and off the walls and shelves. I can't
easily do anything about the ceiling tiles, but unless you knew someone
had been killed in here you'd just mistake the spots for a leak
upstairs. So I put the carpet cleaner back in the gate and talk to
myself.
"It's a blind," I say, then yawn. It must be the
adrenaline rush finally subsiding. "Fiore, Yourdon, and the other one.
Psywar specialists working on emergent group behavior controls." The
blackouts seems to have jostled free some more fragmentary memories,
dossiers on—"War criminals. Ran the security apparat for the
Third People's Glorious Future Sphere. When the vermifuge was released,
they went on the run. They've spent the past gigasecs working on a
countervermifuge, then on a way to harden Curious Yellow."
I blink. Is this me, talking? Or a different me, using my speech centers to communicate with the rest of—whoever I am?
"Priority. Exfiltration. Priority.
Exfiltration." My hands are moving over the gate control systems even
without me willing them. "Shit!" I yelp. But there's no stopping them,
they know what they're doing. They seem to be setting up an output
program.
"System unavailable," says the gate, its tone of voice flat and unapologetic. "Longjump grid connectivity unavailable."
Whatever my hands are doing, it doesn't seem to
work. Something has shaken loose inside my memory, something vast and
ugly. "You must escape, Reeve," I hear my own voice telling me. "This
program will auto-erase in sixty seconds. Network connectivity to
external manifold is not available from this location. You must escape.
Auto-erase in fifty-five seconds."
Even though I'm only wearing clothes-liners, I break out in a cold sweat up and down my spine. "Who are you?" I whisper.
"This program will auto-erase in fifty seconds," something inside me replies.
"Okay, I hear you! I'm going, I'm going already!" I'm terrified that when it says this program it means me—obviously
it's some kind of parasite payload, like the Curious Yellow boot
kernel. But where can I escape to? I look up, at the ceiling, and it
clicks into place. I need to go up, through the walls of the
world. Maybe, just maybe, this polity is interleaved with
others—if so, if I can just break into an upper or lower deck,
there may be a way to get to a T-gate and rejoin the manifold of the
Invisible Republic. "Going up, right?"
"This program will auto-erase in thirty seconds. Escape vector approved. Conversational interface terminated."
It goes very quiet in my head; I stand over the assembler terminal shivering,
taking rapid shallow breaths. A shadow seems to have passed from my
mind, leaving only a cautious peace behind. The horror I feel is
hollow, now, an existential dread—So they hid zombie code inside me? Whoever they were?—but I'm back, I'm still me.
I'm not going to suddenly stop existing, to be replaced by a smiling
meat puppet wearing my body. It was just an escape package, configured
to report home after a preset period or some level of stress if I
couldn't figure out what to do. When it couldn't dial out, it issued a
callback to me, the conscious cover, and told me what it wanted. Which
is fine. If I do what it wants and escape, then I can get any other
little passengers dug out of my skull and everything will be great! And
I want to escape anyway, don't I? Don't I? Think happy thoughts.
"Fuck, I just killed Fiore," I whisper. "I've got to get out of here! What am I doing?"
Upstairs, the common room is as steamy as a
sauna. Coughing and choking I dial down the heat, grab my damp clothes,
and pull them on, then head for the door. Then—this is the
hardest part—I pat my hair into order, pick up my bag, and calmly
walk across the front lot toward the curb to hail a passing taxi.
"Take me home," I tell the driver, teeth nearly chattering with fear.
Home, the house I've shared with Sam
for long enough to make it feel like somewhere I know, is a scant five
minutes away by taxi. It feels like it's halfway to the next star
system. "Wait here," I tell the driver. I get out and head for the
garage. I don't want to see Sam, I really hope he's at work—if he
sees me, I might not be able to go through with this. Or even worse, he
might get dragged in. But he's not around, and I manage to get into the
garage and pick up my cordless hammer drill, a bunch of spare bits, and
some other handy gadgets I laid aside against a rainy day. I go back to
the taxi, and I'm still tightening the belt to hang everything off when
it moves away.
We cruise up a residential street, low houses
set back from the road behind white picket fences, separated by trees.
It's hot outside, loud with the background creaking of arthropods. We
drive into a tunnel entrance. I take a deep breath. "New orders. Stop
right here and wait sixty seconds. Then drive through the tunnel and
keep going. Keep your radio turned off. At each road intersection, pick
a direction at random and keep driving. Do not stop, other than to
avoid obstructions. Accept one thousand units of credit. Continue
driving until my credit expires. Confirm." I bite my lower lip.
"Wait sixty seconds. Drive, turning randomly at each intersection, until credit limit exceeded. Avoid obstacles. Confirm?"
"Do it!" I say, then I open the door and pile
out into the tunnel mouth with my kit. I wait tensely as the zombie
drives off, then I start walking back into the blackness.
The tunnel darkens as it curves, and I pull the
big metal flashlight out. Like everything else here, it's probably not
authentic, no electrochemical batteries—the same infrastellar
T-gate that powers cars or starships will suffice to provide a trickle
of current to a white diode plate. Right now, that's good news. I shine
it at the walls to either side as I walk, until I come to one of the
recessed doors. Unlike the last time I came this way, I'm prepared for
it. Out comes the hammer drill, and I only spend a few seconds sliding
a stone bit into it—all that time in the garage has paid off, I
guess. The racket it makes as it bites and chews at the concrete next
to the door is deafening, but chunks of synrock fall away, and the air
fills with acrid dust that bites at my lungs when I inhale. Should have brought a mask,
I realize, but it's a bit late now, and anyway, the sound and feel of
the drill is changing as the bit skitters across bright metal. "Hah!" I
mutter, resisting the frantic itch that keeps prodding me to look over
my shoulder.
It takes me a couple of minutes to get enough of
the surface of the doorframe exposed to be sure what I'm looking at,
but the more I see, the happier I am. The concrete tunnel is a hollow
tube, and the door is some kind of inspection hatch near a join. If I'm
right, the join isn't a T-gate, it's a physical bulkhead designed to
seal segments off in event of a pressure breach, which means this is
part of a larger physical structure. This door will lead into the
pressure door mechanism, and maybe via an airlock into other adjacent
segments—up and down as well as fore and aft, I hope. The only
problem is, the door's locked.
I dig around in my pockets for one of the toys I
took from the garage. Chopped-up magnesium from a block the hiking shop
sold me, mixed with deliberately rusted iron filings in a candle-wax
base—a crude thermite charge. I stick a gobbet of the stuff above
the lock mechanism (which is annoyingly anchored in the concrete),
flick my lighter under it, then jerk my hand back and turn away fast.
Even with my eyelids tightly shut the flare is blindingly intense,
leaving purple afterimages of the outline of my arm. There's a loud
hissing sputter, and I wait for a slow count of thirty before I turn
round and push hard on the door. It refuses to budge for a moment, then
silently gives way. The lock is a glowing hole in the partially exposed
doorframe—I hope we don't have a pressure excursion anytime soon.
I step through the door and glance around. I'm
in a small room with some kind of crude-looking machine occupying most
of it. Gas bottles, axles, physical valves. It looks as if it was built
during the stone age and designed to be maintained using tools from the
hardware store. Maybe it was? I scratch my head. If this hab
was originally configured for some kind of paleo cult, made to resemble
one of the polities of old Urth, it would be relatively easy for
Yourdon and Fiore to tailor to their purposes, wouldn't it? Maybe
that's what old-me meant about this place having unique features
suiting it to their needs. There's a ladder, of all things, bolted to
the wall, and a hatch in the floor. I go over to the hatch in the
floor, which is secured by a handwheel. Turning the wheel isn't too
hard, and after a moment there's a faint breeze as the hatch rises and
rotates out of the way.
Hmm. There's a pressure imbalance,
but it's nothing major. That means open doorways, maybe a whole deck
down below. But I said I'd go up, didn't I? I start to climb. The hatch
in the ceiling has another wheel, and it takes me longer to rotate it,
but there's some sort of spring mechanism inside it that raises it out
of the way. That's smart design for you. They assume that pressure
breaches come from outside, which in a rotating cylinder hab like this
means down, so you have to exert force to open a hatch leading
down. But hatches leading up have a passive power assist to make it
easy to get away from the blowout. I like that philosophy: It's going
to make life ever so much easier.
I climb into the tunnel, then pause to pull my
headlamp on. Getting it lit, I climb up above the hatch. Then I step
sideways off the ladder and close it behind me. I'm now at the bottom
of a dark tunnel occupied only by the ladder, punctuated by shadows far
above me, and the trail I've left leads down instead of up. I hope
there are doors up there. It would be really shitty luck to have gotten
this far only to find they're all jammed or depressurized or something.
BATTALION HQ
doesn't send me direct to Staff. Instead, they put me through an
A-gate, and I come out wearing my original ortho body. I feel small and
incredibly fragile and alive. It's an alarming experience that later
reminds me of my arrival in YFH-Polity. After my reanimation, they
disassemble me and split me into about 224 separate stripes
of data and zap it off over quantum-encrypted links via different
T-gates. I don't feel this process, of course. I just get into an
A-gate and wake up sitting in another one. But along the way I've been
fed through a cryptographic remixer circuit, combined and recombined
with other data streams with serial numbers filed off, so that even if
a couple of the nodes have fallen into enemy hands, they won't be able
to work out where I'm coming from, where I'm going, or who I am.
I blink and come alive again, then open the door
of the booth. A tense moment—I'm about to enter the semimythical
head office of the Linebarger Cats. A compactly built female xeno with
feline features is waiting for me, tapping her claw-tipped fingers.
"You're Robin, aren't you?" She says. "I love you."
"I'm sorry, are you sure you've got the right person?" I ask.
She bares needle-sharp fangs at me in something
approximating a smile: "In your dreams. It's just a diagnostic test
patched into your new netlink—if you can hear the words, it means
you're not carrying a copy of Curious Yellow. Welcome to the crazy
camp, Sergeant-Multiple. I'm Captain-Doctor Sanni. Let's go find an
office and I'll explain what's going on."
Sanni is an odd mixture of sly articulacy and
shy secretiveness, but she's read my paper and decided I'm wasted on
line ops, and she's got the clout to make it stick. When she tells me
why, I'm inclined to agree. This problem is a whole lot more
interesting than blowing holes in defensive perimeters, and much more
important in the long term.
"Curious Yellow can be broken," she explains.
"All we have to do is to fracture enough network links that the cost of
maintaining internal coherency among the worm farms exceeds their
available bandwidth. When that happens, it'll lose the ability to
coordinate its attacks, and we can then defeat it in detail. But the
problem is what happens afterward."
"After." I shake my head. "You're already thinking about the postwar situation?"
"Yes. See, Curious Yellow isn't going to go
away. We could replace all the A-gates in human space with another
monoculture, and they'll still be just as prone as the last set to
infestation by another coordinated worm attack. And running a
polyculture is going to be expensive enough that local monocultures
will have a competitive edge . . . In the long run,
it'll evolve back toward a state that is vulnerable to similar
infestations. What we need is an architectural solution—one that
locks Curious Yellow out by design. The best way to do that is not to
eliminate the worm, but to repurpose it."
"Repurpose it?"
"As an immune system."
It takes our team, which is one of about fifty
groups working under General-Dean Aton, nearly a gigasec to work out
the details of that single short sentence and turn it into a weapon. We
methodically iterate through hundreds of possibilities, researching the
effects on a firewalled experimental network of worm-infested gates
before the final working solution is clear, and
it takes hundreds of megs to implement and distribute it. But when the
main operations group is ready to launch the brutal physical assaults
on a thousand network junctions that will ultimately bring down Curious
Yellow, the vaccine is waiting for them.
Curious Yellow is a coordinated worm. It
accepts instructions from remote nodes. It compares instructions with
its neighbors, and if they look right, it executes them—this
keeps any single worm-infested gate from being easily subverted. By
simultaneously assaulting thousands, we convince them that our new
instructions are valid and to be obeyed, and they begin to spread out
through the network. The vermifuge is a hacked version of Curious
Yellow, equipped with a new payload. It does several tasks that, in
combination, should suffice to keep a new infestation down. When humans
go through a 'fuged A-gate, the gate installs Sanni's diagnostic patch
in their language centers, while purging any Curious Yellow infection
already present. The diagnostic patch is a simple dyslexic
loop—if you're also infested with Curious Yellow you won't be
able to hear the words "I love you." The final stage of the operation
is that once the vermifuge is in place in a wormed gate, it will refuse
to accept new instructions broadcast by Curious Yellow's creators.
We spend a gigasec working all this out and
applying it. Tens of thousands of unique soldier-instances die,
assaulting hardened positions in order to load copies of the vermifuge
into the first gates they capture. Civilian losses are scary, too,
millions dying as the embattled and increasingly disconnected Curious
Yellow nodes take random defensive measures, and their quislings lash
out at their invisible tormentors. But in the end resistance virtually
collapses in the space of a single tenday. There's chaos everywhere,
atrocities and score-settling and panic. There are even some cases of
starvation and life-support collapse, where all the assemblers stopped
working throughout an entire polity. But we've won, and the factional
groups in the alliance either disband or become petty governments,
starting the long process of rebuilding their little defensible corners
of the former megapolity.
The Linebarger Cats mostly go back to their
prewar activities, a troupe of historic re-enactment artists in the pay
of a retiring metahuman power who has spent the past gigasecs sleeping
through the chaos. But not all of us can let go and
forget . . .
ONCE upon a
time, when I was young and immortal, I jumped off a two-kilometer-high
cliff on a partially terraformed moon orbiting a hot Jupiter. There was
a fad for self-sustaining biospheres and deep gravity wells and it was
selling itself as a resort—that's my excuse. I did it without a
parachute. Gravity was low, about three meters per second squared, but
it was still a two-kilometer drop toward a waterfall that obscured the
jungle canopy far below with a haze of rainbow fog. I was trying on a
mythopoeic body, and as I dropped I spread my wings for the first time,
feeling the tension in the enormous thin webs between the fingers of my
middle-hands. As experiences go I would heartily recommend it to
anyone—right up until the point where an updraft caught my left
wing and flipped me tumbling toward a ridge, which I bounced off with a
broken finger that folded horribly backward, wrapping me in a caul of
my own wingskin as I fell spinning toward my death.
Back at the top of the cliff they insisted on
making me watch the last half minute of my life over and over again. I
shook my head and went into the A-gate to revert to my orthobody back
down at the coffeehouse on the rocky shore beside the lake at the
bottom of the waterfall. I stayed there for a long time. I couldn't
stop wondering what it must have been like to be there. The hot dull
pain in my mid-hand, the tumbling and whipping chill of the wind, the
certainty that I'm going to die—
I wondered if I'd ever find out.
It happened a long time ago. Since then,
hair-raising topological exploits with the Linebarger Cats—not to
mention age and cynicism—have shown me how the way we warp and
twist space-time has impaired our ability to comprehend the structures
we inhabit. Architecture has always influenced or controlled social
organization, but in a polity connected by T-gates, it has become more than influential—architects have become our dictators.
The vast majority of us live in the frigid
depths of space, in spinning cylinders of archaic design that orbit
brown dwarf stars or the outer gas giants of solar systems in which no
world remotely like long-dismantled Urth could ever form. For the most
part we pay no attention to the underpinnings of our human-habitable
spaces, save when they inconvenience us and we need to repair or
replace them. They're the empty stages upon which we parade the finery
of our many-roomed mansions, interlaced by holes in space that annul
the significance of the dark light years between . . .
. . . Until you try to climb one of the emergency maintenance shafts. Then you know about it.
The ladder rungs are anchored to the
antispinward wall of the shaft, rising toward the infinity of darkness
that swallows my flashlight beam whenever I look up. Below me there's a
long drop to a floor as unforgiving as the rocks at the foot of that
waterfall. I climb steadily, pacing myself. The radius of curvature of
the hab segments in YFH-Polity is small enough that if this is a single
cylinder, it must be several kilometers in diameter. The roof of our
hab is too high to touch from on top of a four-story building—the
tallest structures in downtown—but I'm already far above that,
with no sign of any openings.
At two hundred rungs I stop and rest. My arms
are already feeling sore, muscles complaining. If I hadn't been working
out for weeks, I'd be half-dead by now. I have no way of knowing how
much farther I'll have to climb, and a dull worry gnaws at my stomach. What if I'm wrong?
I'm assuming YFH-Polity is what it appears to be—a bunch of hab
sectors spliced together with T-gates, interleaved among other
self-contained polity segments across a multiplicity of real-space
habitats. But what if they've gone further than simply blocking access
to the rest of the network? It used to be the glasshouse, after all.
What if my embedded passenger got it critically wrong, and we're
actually stranded in a single location? There might be no way out.
But I can't go back. Yourdon must have figured
out I'm on the loose by now. He'll mobilize the zombies and hunt me
down like a rat cornered by army ants. Sam will be alone, wondering
what happened, getting lonelier and crazier and more depressed. Sooner
or later Mick will get his hands on Cass again. Jen will continue to
play her malignant head games with Alice and Angel. Fiore will slowly
turn the entire community into festering hate-filled puppets dancing to
the tune of a dark ages culture based on insecurity and fear. And I'm
fairly certain I know what their game is.
This isn't an archaeology experiment, it's a
psychological warfare laboratory. They're testing out their design for
an emergent behaviorally controlled society. YFH-Polity is a prototype
for the next generation of cognitive dictatorship. Because, when they
surface to release their new and improved version of Curious Yellow
upon an unsuspecting net, it won't be to install a crude censorship
regime. The payload they're planning will subtly impose behavioral
rules on its victims, and the resulting emergent society will be one
designed for their exploitation. A future of Church every Sunday, sword
and chalice on the altar, a pervert in every pulpit preaching betrayal
and distrust. Score whores in your neighborhood twitching panopticon
curtains to enforce an existential fascism—and that's just the
beginning. If the population of unvaccinated loyal carriers that
Yourdon and Fiore are breeding up are destined to be carriers of the
next release of Curious Yellow, the whole of human space will end up
looking like a bunch of postop cases from the surgeon-confessor's
clinic.
I can't afford to fail.
Minutes trickle away in silence before I start
moving again, putting one hand above the other, then one foot, then the
next hand, then the next foot. Repeat five times, then rest five beats.
Repeat five times, then rest five beats makes ten. Repeat that
another nine times, and I'm a hundred rungs farther up this tube of
torments. Morbid thoughts plague me. I could hit a patch of grease and
slip. Or just . . . not reach the top. The rungs are
about twenty centimeters apart. I'm nearing five hundred, now, a
hundred meters straight up. I'd hit the bottom so fast I'd splash.
(Banging off the ladder on the way down, of course, gently drifting in
the grip of Coriolis force. If I'd remembered to bring a plumb bob and
a long enough string, I could figure out roughly how large this hab
cylinder is, but I didn't think that far ahead.) My shoulders and
elbows ache like they're in a vise. I've spent ages pulling and pushing
on that stupid weight machine in the basement, but there's a difference
between a half-hour workout and hanging on for life. If I have another
memory fugue, I'm toast. How high can I go? How far apart are the
inhabitable decks? If I'm unlucky, it could be kilometers—
I can't fail; I owe it to what Lauro, Iambic-18,
and Neual used to mean to me not to let this happen. If I forget, then
it might as well never have happened. Memory is liberty.
Six hundred rungs and my arms are shrieking for
mercy. My thigh muscles aren't too happy, either. I'm gritting my teeth
and hoping for mercy when I see a shadow above me. I stop and pant for
a while, studying the outline. Rectangular, set into the wall. Could it be? I resume climbing, doggedly putting one hand in front of the other until I get there, close to nine hundred rungs up.
The shadow turns out to be the entrance to a
short human-height tunnel leading away from beside the ladder. It runs
two meters into the wall, then there's a thick, curved pressure door
with another handwheel set in it. I'm there! I'd dance for joy
except my arms feel as if they'd fall off. I step into the tunnel and
switch my big flashlight to candle mode, then sit down and lean back
against the wall and close my eyes for a count of a hundred. I think
I've earned it. Besides, I don't know what'll be waiting on the other
side of the door.
My arms feel like rubber, but I don't dare hang
around. After a couple of minutes I force myself to my feet and inspect
the handwheel. It looks workable, but when I try to turn it, it won't
budge. "Shit," I mutter aloud. These are desperate straits. Maybe if I had a lever,
I think, then I remember the flashlight. It's a big aluminum bar with a
light at one end. I stick it through the spokes of the wheel and lean
my weight on it, pushing against the wall, putting everything I've got
into trying to make the thing turn.
After a couple of minutes I admit to myself that
the wheel is not going to budge. It occurs to me that the builders of
this hab were hot on fail-safes—what if it isn't turning because
there's hard vacuum on the other side? Either it's got a deadlock
triggered by too high a pressure differential, or it's just been in
vacuum for so long that it's welded shut. "Shit," I mutter again. This
could be another of Yourdon and Fiore's half-assed security measures.
What good does it do me to get into an access tunnel if the other
floors are all open to space? Assuming they know about these access
tunnels in the first place, of course.
I wipe the sweat from my face and lean against
the wall. "Up or down?" I ask aloud, but nobody's answering. Down, at
least there's another level with air. Up, and . . .
well, there might be nothing. Or there might be a whole damn orbital
habitat that the bad guys don't know about. I could step out into a
city boulevard in Old Paradys, or the back of a brasserie in Zhang Li.
If I get lucky. If I'm not just imagining those places.
I stow the big flashlight in my belt loop and
head back toward the ladder. If I don't get somewhere in another
thousand rungs, I'm going to have to rethink my escape plan. Two
thousand rungs total will be nearly half a kilometer. If I'd realized I
was in for something like this, I would have bought climbing equipment,
a winch, even a rope I could sling around myself so I could rest on the
ladder. I fantasize briefly about rocket packs and elevator cars. Then
I grab the next rung and begin to climb again.
Another nine hundred rungs up the ladder I
become half-certain that I'm going to die. My arms are screaming at me,
and my left thigh has started threatening to cramp. I pause for breath,
my heart hammering. It's like being on the cliff again. This hab has
got to be kilometers in radius—the gravity here feels about the
same as it did when I started out. I'm in a tube with Urth-standard
gee, air: terminal velocity will be about eighty meters per second. If
I were to let go, the Coriolis force would rub me against the ladder
like a cheese grater at two hundred kilometers per hour, leaving a
greasy red smear. I can keep climbing, sure, but how easy is it going
to be to climb back down if I keep going up until I'm exhausted?
Thinking about it, I'm not sure going down is any better than going up.
Less lifting, but still flexing a left elbow that feels about twice the
size it should be, hot and throbbing as I raise it—
There's another platform ahead. Twenty rungs up.
Roughly four hundred meters from the bottom. "What?" I'm talking to
myself—that's not good news. I raise my right hand. Yes, it's a
platform.
The next thing I know, I'm sitting on the
platform, my legs dangling over the abyss, and I have no clear
recollection of how I got here. I must have had another fugue moment. I
shudder, my blood running cold at the realization.
I look round. This platform is just like the
last one, right down to the door with the handwheel set in it two
meters up the tunnel. Which means either I'm shit out of luck,
or—well, I can try the door, at least. If it doesn't work, I can
rest up. Then it's either up or down, heads or tails. I really don't
think I can make another climb until my abused muscles have had some
time to recover, and I didn't bring water or food. So I guess it's
down, and down and down and back into the depths of Yourdon's little
totalitarian fantasy.
Unless I let go of the ladder.
Or the door opens.
I take a
kilosecond to rest up before I approach the door. When I spin the wheel
one-handed, it smoothly winds up momentum, then there's a sigh of
long-seated gaskets as it pulls away from the frame and swings out to
one side. I look through the opening and see a universe that doesn't
make any kind of sense to my eyes.
The floor in front of the doorway is flat,
slightly rough, with a grayish stippled regularity typical of a
high-grip paving system. The segments are Penrose tiles, presumably
laid out by a walking assembler that crawled across the inner surface
of this gigantic cylindrical space, never recrossing its own path as it
vomited out the floor. Above my head there's a grayish ceiling that
curves in the far distance to meet the upturned bowl of the horizon.
Fine needles of diamond stab from the floor to the roof, holding heaven
and earth apart. The door I've just stepped out of is set in the base
of one of the needles—they're huge, and they're a long way apart.
This is probably an interdeck, an interstitial
support space between the inhabited floors. Or it's a deck that hasn't
been linked into the manifold of T-gates, terraformed and tamed and
occupied. At a guess I've climbed right through Yourdon's security
cordon, a level left open to vacuum. If I'd gone down I'd have
found . . . what? Maybe a level where the experimenters
live, where they're working on the upgraded Curious Yellow. Or just as
likely, another vacuum level.
My knees feel like rubber. I lean against the
outer wall of the radial tube I've just climbed, feeling completely
exhausted. I look up at the ceiling, almost half a kilometer up, and
realize just how little it curves and how wide the basin of reality is.
There are clouds in here, collecting near the tops of some of the
needles. The air is slightly misty and smells of dry yeast. Strange
monochromatic humps in the floor suggest hills and berms—mass
reserves waiting for the giant habitat assemblers to go to work on
them. I try to identify the end caps of the cylinder, but they're lost
in the haze, several tens of kilometers away. The light is coming from
thousands of tiny bright points in the ceiling.
I could starve to death in this place long before I could walk out of it.
I try to rest up for a while, but unease prods
me into premature motion. I know I need to try and accommodate this
fatigue, but there's an edge of panic whenever I think about Kay, or
the consequences of the thing lurking in my head that (I'm
half-convinced) is causing these blackouts. There's not a lot I can do,
except stay with the ladder and hope to find something more promising
on the next deck up—almost a kilometer above my head. But I don't
think I'd make it.
I stumble away from the ladder, heading toward
the nearest berm. Maybe there'll be some emotional machinery near there
that I'll be able to communicate with, something from outside
YFH-Polity's frontier that'll be able to put me in touch with reality.
I try my netlink, but it's dull and frozen, showing nothing but a
crashed listing of point scores allocated to my cohort. Curious Yellow, I think dully. That's why I can't hear Sam when he says * * *: the score-tracking system is based on Curious Yellow.
A couple hundred meters from the berm I see signs of life. Something about
the size of a taxi, consisting of loosely coupled rods and spheres, is
hunching up over the crest of the deposit. It extends tubular sensors
in my direction, then vaults over the crest of the hill, sensors
blurring into iridescent disks, ball-and-rod assemblies spinning on its
back. The balls are growing and thinning, unfolding like cauliflower
heads that glow with a diffractive sheen. I stop and wait for it to
arrive. I guess it's some kind of specialized biome construction
supervisor, an intelligent gardener. There is absolutely nothing I
could do to stop it from killing me if it's hostile—I might as
well attack a tank with a blunt carving knife—but that's
relatively unlikely. Knowing that doesn't make waiting easy, though.
It closes intimidatingly rapidly but rolls to a
stop about three meters away from me. "Hello," I say, "do you have a
language facility?"
The gardener draws itself up until it looms over
me. Florets open and close, buzzing faintly. "Who are you and what are
you doing here?"
I relax very slightly. "I'm Robin." The name feels odd, unfamiliar. "What polity is this?"
It buzzes and clicks to itself, flattening
slightly at the top like a puzzled cobra. "Hello, Robin. This zone is
no polity. It is ballast sector eighty nine, aboard the MASucker Harvest Lore. It is not an inhabitable biome. What are you doing here?"
No polity. I'm on a MASucker. Which means there'll probably only be one longjump gate on the whole ship, heavily firewalled . . .
I close my eyes and try not to sway on my feet. "I am trying to locate
legal authorities to whom I can report a serious crime. Mass identity
theft. If this isn't a polity, what is it?"
"I am not authorized to tell you. You are Robin.
I am required to ask you: How did you get here? You are showing signs
of physical distress. Do you require medical attention?"
I attempt to open my eyes, but they're not
responding. "Help," I try to say. Then my eyes open, and I'm back on
the ladder, hanging off it by one hand, feet dangling over the abyss of
an infinite cylinder, but there are no rungs and there's another tube
nested inside this one, stippled with a myriad of tiny points of light,
and something is comingout of the wall to lean over me. "Help," I repeat, as the thing bends toward me.
"I will alert the Kapitan's lodge."
Darkness.
WE declared
victory within the local manifold ten megasecs ago, and the magnitude
of the reconstruction headache is just beginning to sink in. We've
driven Curious Yellow back into its box and broken up the quisling
dictatorships that thrived under it. But the war isn't over until a
restart is out of the question. And that's an entirely different matter.
"The problem is, about half of the Provisional
Government have vanished," Sanni—now a very senior
colonel—tells me. (We're in a staff meeting room in MilSpace,
cramped and beige and securely anonymized.) "The high-profile arrests
are all very well, but where are the others?" She doesn't sound happy.
"They can't just vanish. Not without leaving
some kind of traces, surely?" That's Al, the long-suffering gofer who
keeps our research team in touch with the operational requirements
group and headquarters' Received Instructions Interpretation Unit,
whose job is to make sense of the oracular statements our Exultant
patron occasionally offers. "There are a lot of scores to settle."
"It's a lot easier to slip through the cracks
than it used to be," Sanni explains patiently. "Back when the Republic
was unitary it could track identities effectively. But since the end of
Is, we've been left with a myriad of self-contained polities, not all
of which will talk to each other. Their internal data models aren't
transitive. There could be any number of inconsistencies out there, and
we can't normalize for them."
What she means is, the Republic of Is provided
the most important common services a post-Acceleration civilization
needs: time and authentication. Without time, you can't be sure that
the same financial instrument isn't being executed in two different
places at once. And without authentication, you can't be certain that
the person in Body A is the owner of Identity A, rather than an
interloper who has stolen a copy of Body A. Time was easy before
spaceflight because it was a function of geography, not network
connectivity, and tracking people was easy because people couldn't
change species and sex and age and whatever on a whim. But since the
Acceleration, the prevention of identity theft has become one of the
core functions of government, any government. It's not just a
matter of preventing the most serious of crimes against the person;
without time and authentication little things like money and law
enforcement stop working.
Now the Republic of Is has fragmented, and its
successor polities aren't all running on the same time base. It's
possible to slip between the cracks and vanish. It's possible for a
hapless emigrant to leave Polity A for Polity B and arrive with a
different mind directing their body, with all the authentication tokens
that travel with them still pointing at the original identity. If your
A-gate firewalls don't trust each other implicitly, you've got a huge
problem. Which is why we're holed up here in a dingy cubicle in
MilSpace discussing it, rather than returning to business as usual on
the outside.
"We're going to have a huge problem with
revenants," Sanni adds. "Not the solo ones who just want to hide.
They'll mostly go to ground, set up a new identity, erase their
memories of the war, build a new life. A whole bunch of dog-fucking
criminals are going to think: Hey, I could be anyone tomorrow! And the
dilemma we face is, is there really any point persecuting a former
collaborator if they don't even remember what they did anymore? I
figure we're best leaving the deserters to lie. But the organized
groups are going to be a real headache. If they stay organized and hang
on to their memories, they could try to start it all up again. We might
be able to nail a bunch of them through traffic analysis, but what if
they set up an identity remixer somewhere? If they can get lots of
clean identities going into an isolated polity where they mingle with
the criminals, bodies go in, bodies come out, and how would we know
what's happening in the middle? If they're in charge of the firewall,
they can play any number of tricks. A shell game."
"So we look out for things like that," Al suggests.
I stare at him, and force myself to wait for a couple of seconds before I
open my mouth: Al isn't always fast on the uptake. "That's a fair
description of any modern polity," I point out. "And we haven't
consolidated control everywhere—we've only broken CY's
coordination capability within all the networks we're in direct
communication with. If we want to clean up, we've got to go further."
"So?" Al glyphs amusement in lieu of having a
face to smile with. "It's an ongoing process. Maybe you need to think
about what you're going to do with the bad guys when you've rounded
them up?"
I hear dryness,
and there's a taste of blue in my mouth, and I have an erection. I lick
my lips and find my mouth is dry and tastes like something died in it.
And I don't have an erection because I don't have a penis to have one
with. What I've got is a bad case of, of—memory fugue, I realize, and my eyes click open.
I'm lying between harshly starched white sheets,
facing a white wall with strange sockets in it. Pale green hangings
form a curtain on either side of my bed. Someone's put me in an odd
gown with a slit running right up the back. The gown is also green. This must be the hospital, I think, closing my eyes and trying not to panic. How did I get here? Trying not to panic is a nonstarter. I gasp and try to sit up.
A few seconds later the dizziness subsides and I
try again. My heart's pounding, I'm queasy, and the front of my head
aches; I feel as weak as a jellyfish. Meanwhile the panic is scraping
at my attention again. Who brought me here? If Yourdon finds me, he'll kill me!
There's some kind of box with buttons on it hanging from a hook on the
bed frame. I pick it up and stab a button at semirandom, and my feet
come up. Other way! Ten seconds later I'm sitting up uncomfortably, the bed raised behind my back. It puts an unpleasant pressure on my stomach, but
with verticality comes a minute degree of comfort—I've got some
control over my environment—before the greater unease sneaks up
on me again.
Okay, so the gardener—I trail off, my internal narrative stuck in a haze of incomprehension. It brought me here? Where is here, anyway?
This bed—it's one of a row, spaced alongside one wall in a huge,
high-ceilinged white room. There's an array of windows set high up in
the opposite wall, and I can glimpse blue and white sky through it.
Incomprehensible bits of equipment are dotted around. There are lockers
next to some of the beds—and I see that one of the beds at the
other end of the room looks to be occupied.
I close my eyes, feeling a deadweight of dread. I'm still in the glasshouse, I realize sickly.
But I'm too weak to do anything, and, besides,
I'm not alone. I hear the clack of approaching heels and the sound of
voices coming my way. "Hours end at four o'clock," says a female voice
with the flattening of affect I've come to expect of zombies. "The
consultant will visit in the evening. The patient is weak and is not to
be disturbed excessively." The curtain twitches back, and I see a
female zombie wearing a white dress and an odd hair adornment. The
zombie looks at me. "You have a visitor," she intones. "Do not
overexert yourself."
"Uh," I manage to say, and try to turn my head
so I can see who it is, but they're still half-concealed behind the
curtain. It's like a nightmare, when you know some kind of monster is
creeping up on you—
"Well, if it isn't our little librarian!"
And I think, Fuck, I know that voice! And simultaneously, almost petulantly, But you can't be here,
just as Fiore steps around the curtain and leans over the rail
alongside my bed, an expression of bemused condescension on his face.
"Would you like to tell me where you think you were going?"
"No." I manage to avoid gritting my teeth. "Not
particularly." The nightmare has caught up, and the well of despair is
threatening to swallow me down. They've caught me and brought me back
to play with me. I feel sick and hot.
"Come now, Reeve." Unctuous, that's the word. Fiore plants one plump hand on my forehead, and I realize he feels clammy and cold. "Oh dear. You are in a state." He removes the hand before I can shake it off, and I shiver. "I can see why they brought you straight here."
I clamp my teeth shut, waiting for the coup de
grâce, but Fiore seems to have something else in mind. "I have to
look after the pastoral well-being of all my flock, little lady, so I can't stay too long with you. You're obviously ill"—he
puts some kind of odd emphasis on the word—"and I'm sure that's
the explanation for your recent erratic behavior. But next time you
decide to go climbing in the walls, you should come and talk to me
first"—for a moment his expression hardens—"you wouldn't
want to do anything you might regret later."
Between shivers, I manage to roll my eyes. "I have no regrets." Why is he playing with me?
"Come now!" Fiore clucks disapprovingly for a
moment. "Of course you have regrets! To be human is to be regretful.
But we must learn to make the most of what we have to work with,
mustn't we? You've been slow to settle in and find your place in our
little parish, Reeve, and that's been causing some concern to those of
us who keep an eye on such things. I have—may I be
frank?—been worried that you might be an incorrigibly disruptive
influence. On the other hand, you obviously mean well, and care for
your neighbors—" An unreadable expression flits across his jowls.
"So I'm trying to give you the benefit of the doubt. Rest now, and
we'll continue our little chat later, when you're feeling better."
He straightens up in his portly manner and begins to turn away. I shiver again, a chill running up my spine. It's like he doesn't know I killed him!
I realize. I can see Fiore running multiple instances of himself, but
surely they'd be aware of each other, by way of their netlink? Why, doesn't he—
"You," I manage to say.
"Yes?"
"You." It's hard to form words. I'm really feeling feverish. "What's the, the . . ."
"I don't have all day!" His voice rises when
he's irritated, in an annoying whine. He straightens his robe. "Nurse?
I say, nurse!" In a quieter voice, to me: "I'll have them send for your
husband. I'm sure you'll have a lot to talk about." Then he turns on
his heel and bumbles away down the ward toward the other occupied beds.
I realize my teeth are chattering: I'm not sure whether from fever or black helpless rage. I killed you! And you didn't even notice!
Then the nurse comes stomping along in her sensible shoes, clutching
some kind of primitive diagnostic instrument, and I realize that I'm
feeling extremely unwell.
NURSE Zombie
gives me a test that involves sliding a cold glass rod into my ear and
staring into my eyes from close range, then she pulls out a jar and
gives me what I assume at first is a piece of candy, except that it
tastes vile. The hospital is set up to resemble a real dark ages
installation, but luckily they seem to draw the line at leeches or
heart transplants and similar barbarism. I guess this is some sort of
drug, synthesized at great expense and administered to have some random
weird systemic effect on my metabolism. "Try to sleep," Nurse explains
to me. "You are ill."
"C-cold," I whisper.
"Try to sleep, you are ill." But Nurse bends
down and pulls out a loose-weave blanket. "Drink lots of fluids." The
glass on the table next to me is empty, and in any case, I feel too
shivery to pull an arm out from under the blanket. "You are ill."
No shit. It's not just my arms and
legs—all my joints are screaming at me in chorus with a whole
load of muscles I wish I didn't have right now—but my head's
throbbing and I feel like I'm freezing to death and my stomach's not so
good either. And the blackouts and memory fugues are still with me.
"What's wrong with, me?" I ask, and it takes a big effort to get the
words out.
"You are ill," the zombie repeats. It's useless
arguing with her—nobody home, no theory of mind, just a bunch of
reflexes and canned dialogues.
"Who can I ask?"
She's turning away, but I seem to have tripped a new response. "The consultant
will visit at eight o'clock tonight, all questions must be addressed to
the consultant. The patient is weak and must not be disturbed
excessively. Drink lots of fluids." She picks up an empty jug that was
out of view a moment ago and whisks it away toward one end of the ward.
A moment later she's back with it. "Drink lots of fluids."
"Yeah . . ." I shudder and try to
work myself into a smaller volume under the blanket. I dimly realize I
ought to be asking lots of questions—actually I ought to be
forcing myself out of bed and running like my hair's on fire—but
right now, just pouring myself a glass of water seems like an heroic
task.
I lie back and stare at the ceiling, incoherent
with anger and embarrassment. Did I imagine myself killing Fiore in the
library? I don't think so; the memories are vivid. But so are all my
other memories, the massacres and the endless years of war. And not all
my memories are real, are they? The bootstrap memory, talking to
another voice in my own larynx—if it's not just a false memory of
a false memory, then it certainly wasn't me: It was a customized worm
running on my implant. I can't—this is getting
difficult—trust myself, especially while I keep going into fugue.
"Can I?" I ask, and I open my eyes again, and Sam startles.
He's leaning over me where Fiore was, and I
realize immediately that I've been in fugue for some time. I'm cold,
but I'm no longer feverish; the sheets are damp with sweat, and the
light visible through the windows is dimming toward evening. "Reeve?"
he asks anxiously.
"Sam." I lift my hand and reach for him. He wraps my fingers in his. "I'm ill."
"I came as soon as I heard. Fiore telephoned the office." He sounds slightly shocky, his eyes haunted. "What happened?"
I shiver again. The damp sheets are getting to me. "Later." Meaning: Not where the walls have ears. "Need water." My mouth's really dry. "I keep having fugues."
"The nurse said something about a consultant,"
says Sam. "Dr. Hanta. She said he'd be coming to look at you later. Are
you going to be all right? Why are you ill?"
I clutch Sam's hand as hard as I can. "I don't
know." He offers me the water glass, and I swallow.
"Suspect . . . not. Not sure. How long was
I . . . asleep . . . for?"
"You didn't recognize me when I came in," Sam
says. He's holding on to my hand as if he's afraid one of us is
drowning. "You didn't recognize me."
"Memory fugue's getting much worse," I say. I lick my lips. "Three"—no, four—"today.
I'm not sure why. I keep remembering stuff, but I'm not sure how much
of it is real. Thought I'd"—I stop before I say killed Fiore,
just in case I really did and there's some other reason the priest
doesn't know about it—"escaped. But I woke up here." I close my
eyes. "Fiore says I'm ill."
"What am I meant to do?" Sam asks plaintively. "How do I fix you? There's no A-gate here . . ."
"Dark ages tech." My hand aches from gripping
him. I force it to relax. "They didn't disassemble people and rebuild
them, they used medicine, drugs, and surgery. Tried to repair damaged
tissue in situ."
"That's insane!"
I chuckle weakly. "You're telling me? That's
what the consultant is, he's a doctor." One of those weird, obsolescent
words that doesn't mean what it used to—in the real world outside
this prison, a doctor is a scholar, someone who investigates stuff, not
a wetware mechanic. I suppose it may have meant the same back in the
real dark ages, when nobody really knew how self-replicating organisms
functioned and there was an element of research involved. "I think he's
meant to figure out what's wrong with me and repair it. Assuming they
don't just have a medical assembler down in the basement here—" I
clutch his hand, because a horrible thought's just struck me. If
they've got a medical A-gate, won't it be infected with Curious Yellow?
"Don't let them put me in it!"
"Put you in—what? What is it, Reeve? Reeve, are you having another fugue?"
Things are going gray around me. He leans close, and I whisper, "* * *," in his ear. Then—
DESPERATION is the engine of necessity.
It's two hundred megs since that committee
meeting with Al and Sanni and a lot of things have changed. Me, for
example: I'm not in military phenotype anymore. Neither is Sanni. We're
civilians now, corpuscles of military experience discharged into the
circulating confusion of reconstruction that has become the future of
Is.
I'm not used to being human again, ortho or
otherwise—bits of me are missing. When the war exploded, trapping
me on the MASucker for almost a generation, I was reduced to what I was
carrying on my person and in my head. Then when I militarized myself, I
had to let component aspects of my identity go. I'm not sure why, in
all cases. Some things make sense (when at war, one's scruples about
inflicting pain and injury on the enemy faction must be suppressed),
but there are gaps that follow no obvious rhyme or reason. According to
my written notes from the period on the Grateful for Duration,
I used to have an abiding and deep interest in baroque music of the
preindustrialized age, but now I can't recall even a scrap of melody.
Again, I used to be married, with children, but I am mystified by my
lack of memories from the period, or feelings. Maybe that was a
reaction to grief, and maybe not—but now I've been demobilized, I
find myself out of reaction mass and adrift along an escape vector
diverging from all attachments. Only my new job retains any hold over
me.
The Linebarger Cats emerged from the coalition
with significant assets. To my surprise I received a credit balance
that with careful management might mean I never need to work
again—at least for a few gigasecs. It seems that warfare pays, if
you're on the winning side and manage not to misplace your mind in the
process.
When I left MilSpace (a convoluted process
involving numerous anonymous remixer networks and one-way censorship
gates to strip me of my military modules before my reintegration into
civil society), I had myself reassembled as a louche young man in the
Cognitive Republic of Lichtenstein. There's a lot to be said for being
louche, especially after you've spent several hundred megaseconds with
no genitals.
Lichtenstein is a vivid and cynical colony of
artistic satirists, so sophisticated they've almost circled back into
primitivism. By convention we use visual field filters that limn
everything in dark strokes, filling our bodies with color. Life aspires
toward a state of machinima. It's a strange way to be, but familiar and
comfortable after the unsleeping hyperspectral awareness of a tankie.
So I hang around in the galleries and salons of Lichtenstein,
exchanging witty repartee and tall stories with the other
habitués, and in my copious free time I pay frequent trips to
the bathhouses and floataria. I make a point of never sleeping with the
same person twice in the same body, although I discover that even such
anonymous abandon doesn't protect me from my lovers' tears: It seems
half the population have lost someone and are wandering, searching the
world over.
My life is outwardly directionless for the first
four or five megs. In private I work on something that might eventually
turn out to be a memoir of the war—an old-fashioned serialized
text provocatively promoting a single viewpoint, without any pretense
at objectivity—while in public I live on my savings. DeMob gave
me a reasonably secure cover identity as a playboy remittance man from
a primogeniture polity, sent to while away his youth in less hidebound
(and politically loaded) biomes, and it's not hard to keep up
appearances. But deep down, the insignificance and lack of meaning of
such a life chafes; I want to be doing something, and while the project
I've been working on under Sanni's auspices for the past couple of
years fits the bill, it is, perforce, anonymous. If I make a mark, it
will be by my deeds, not my name. And so, as my debauch intensifies, I
slip into a kind of melancholic haze.
Then one morning I am awakened by a brassy flare of trumpets from the bedside orrery, which announces that I have a visitor.
I realize who
and where I am—and that I am desperately sick—at the exact
moment that Dr. Hanta presses a small, freezing cold brass disk against
the bare skin between my breasts. "Ow!"
"Breathe slowly," she orders, not unkindly, then
blinks like a sleepy owl from behind her thick-lensed glasses: "Ah,
back in the realm of the conscious, are we?"
By way of an answer I go into a hoarse coughing
fit, my muscles locking in spasms that leave my ribs aching. Hanta
recoils slightly, removing the stethoscope. "I see," she says. "I'll
just wait a moment—glass of water?"
I realize she's jacked the back of my bed up as
the coughing subsides. "Yes. Please." I'm shivery and weak but not
freezing anymore. She holds out a glass, and I manage to accept it
without spilling anything, although my hand shakes alarmingly. "What's
wrong with me?"
"That's what I'm here to find out." Hanta is a
petite female, shorter than I am, her skin a shade darker, although not
the aubergine-tinted brown of Fiore. Her short hair is dusted with the
silver spoor of impending senescence, and there are laugh-lines around
her face. She wears an odd white overcoat buttoned up the front and
carries the arcane totems of her profession, the caduceus and
stethoscope—the bell of the latter she rubs upon my chest. She
looks friendly and open and trustworthy, the antithesis of her two
clerical colleagues: but beauty is not truth, and some gut instinct
tells me never to let my guard down in her presence. "How long have you
been febrile?"
"Febrile?"
"Hot and cold. Chills, shivers, alternating with too hot. Night sweats, anything like that."
"Oh, about—" I feel my forehead wrinkling. "What day is it? How long have I been in here?"
"You've been here six hours," Dr. Hanta says patiently. "You were brought in around midafternoon."
I shiver convulsively. My skin is icy. "Since an hour or two before then."
"The Reverend Doctor Fiore tells me you were climbing." Her tone is neutral, professional, with no note of censure.
I swallow. "Since then."
"You're a lucky lady." Hanta smiles
enigmatically and moves her stethoscope to the ball of my left
shoulder, pulling open my hospital gown to get at it. "I'm sorry, I'll
be quick. Hmm." She stares into the stethoscope's eye crystal and
frowns. "It's a long time since I've seen that . . .
sorry." She straightens up. "It's not safe to climb around in the walls
here; some of the neighboring biomes aren't biomorphically integrated.
There are replicators in the mass fraction reserve cells that will eat
anything based on a nucleotide chassis that doesn't broadcast a contact
inhibition signal, and you're not equipped for that."
I swallow again—my mouth is unnaturally dry. "What?"
"Somehow or other you've managed to get yourself infected with a strain of pestis mechaniculorum.
You're feverish because your immune system is still just about
containing it. It's a good thing for you that we found you before
mechanotic cytolysis set in . . . Anyway, I'll fix you
up just as soon as I finish sequencing it."
"Um." I shudder again. "Oh, okay."
" ‘Okay' indeed. Do I have to tell
you not to go climbing around inside the walls again?" I shake my head,
almost embarrassed by my own fear of discovery. "Good." She pats me on
the shoulder. "At least if you're going to do it again, come to me
first, please? No more unfortunate accidents." She carefully
disconnects the stethoscope and wraps it around her caduceus. It makes
soft clicking noises as it fuses with the staff. "Now I'll just run you
off a little antirobotic, and you'll be up and about in no time."
Dr. Hanta hitches up her coat, then perches on a
stool next to my bed. "Isn't this a bit out of character?" I ask her,
throwing caution to the winds. I suspect if I asked Fiore or Yourdon
that question, they'd bite my head off, but Hanta seems more
approachable, if not more trustworthy.
"We all make mistakes." It's that smile again:
It's slightly fey and very sincere, as if she's laughing at a joke that
I'd laugh along with, if I only knew what it was. "You leave worrying
about the integrity of the experiment to me, dear." She waves a
dismissive hand. "Of course you worry about it when the priests' backs
are turned. Of course people try to game the system—it's only to
be expected. Probably some people don't even want to be here. Maybe
they changed their minds after signing the waiver. All I can say is,
we'll do our best to make sure they're not unhappy with the outcome."
She raises an eyebrow at me speculatively. "It's not easy to run an
experiment on this scale, and we make mistakes, what else can I say?
Some of us make more mistakes than others." And now she pulls an
expression of mild distaste, which seems to say it all. She's inviting
my agreement, and I find myself nodding along despite my better
judgment.
"But those mistakes . . ." I stop, unsure if I should continue.
"Yes?" She leans forward.
"How's Cass?" I force myself to ask.
Dr. Hanta's face, which up until now has been open and friendly, closes like a trapdoor. "Why do you ask?"
I lick my lips again. "I need something to
drink." She slides off her stool and paces round my bed, pours what's
left of the water jug into my cup, and hands it to me without a word. I
swallow. "One of Fiore's little mistakes, I suppose." I aim to say it
lightly, but it comes out dripping with sarcasm.
"Oh yes." Dr. Hanta looks round, toward the far
end of the ward—at something hidden from me by the curtain. I
shudder, and this time it's not from the fever chills. "I wouldn't say
one of his little mistakes." Her tone of voice is dry, but
there's something behind it that makes me glad I can't see her face.
But when she turns back to me, her expression is perfectly normal.
"Cass will be all right, dear."
"And Mick?" I prompt.
"That is under discussion."
"Under discussion. Was what happened to Esther and Phil discussed ahead of time?"
"Reeve"—she actually has the gall to look
upset—"no, it wasn't. Someone miscalculated badly. They've gone
back to the primary sources and discovered that what, what Esther and
Phil were doing wasn't so very unusual. And you're right, the weighting
attached to, uh, what they did—Major Fiore misjudged the mood of
the crowd. It won't happen again, we've learned from that experience,
and from—" She swallows, then nods minutely at the curtain. "If a
couple doesn't get on, there's going to be a procedure to go through to
obtain formal social approval of the separation. We're not evil. We're
in this for the long haul, and if you're unhappy, if everyone's unhappy
here, the polity won't gel, and the experiment can't work."
The experiment can't work. I look at her and find myself wondering, Does she mean it?
Fiore and Yourdon are so cynical I find myself startled to be in the
presence of a member of their team who seems to believe in what she's
doing. I'm suddenly appalled, as badly taken aback by her honesty as
the police zombies are by a stripper. "Uh. I think I see." I shake my
head, then wince. My neck aches. "But as long as Mick stays here, some
of us won't be happy at all."
"Oh, Mick will be dealt with one way or another,
dear." Her caduceus trills for attention, and she fidgets with it as
she talks. "I don't think the psychological damage is
irremediable—we probably won't have to restore from backup, which
is a good thing right now. But I'm going to have to redesign his
motivational parameters from the ground up." She frowns at the serpent
heads but doesn't explain herself further. "Cass will
be . . . well, I'm attending to the physical damage
right now, and when she's better, I'll ask her who she wants to be."
She falls silent for a few seconds. "Most medical fraternities,
confronted by a patient with this level of damage, would prescribe
gross memory surgery—or simply terminate the instance and restore
from backup. I don't believe in authorizing such a serious step without
taking her wishes into account."
She falls silent again. After a moment I realize she's staring at me. "What is it?"
"We need to talk about your blackouts."
"My what?" I bite my tongue, but it's a bit late to play dumb.
Dr. Hanta raises one eyebrow and crosses her
arms. "I'm not stupid, you know." She looks away, as if she's speaking
to someone else. "Everyone in here has been through redactive
reweighting and experiential reduction before we recruit them. One of
the reasons this polity needs a medical supervisor is to be ready for
identity crises. Most people have some inkling of who they used to be
and why they wanted memory surgery. Occasionally, we get someone who
doesn't remember—there's something they wanted to bury so deep
that they wouldn't even know what it was about. Something painful. But
I don't normally see . . . well! You've gone into fugue
twice since you were admitted to this ward, did you know that? I
checked with your husband during your last one, and he said you've been
having them more frequently."
She leans toward me, keeping her hands
sandwiched in her armpits as if she's hugging herself. "I don't like to
intrude where I'm not wanted, but by the sound of it, you need help
very badly indeed. You seem to have had a bad reaction to the
suppressants the clinic used on you, and while I can't be sure without
making a detailed examination, there is a risk that you could be
heading for some kind of crisis. I don't want to overstate things, but
in the worst-case scenario you could lose . . . well,
everything that makes you you. For example, if it's an
autoimmune reaction—according to your file you've got a heuristic
upgrade to your complement system, and sometimes the Bayesian
recognizers start firing off at the wrong targets—you could end
up with anterograde amnesia, a complete inability to lay down any new
mnemostructures. Or it might just be a sloppy earlier edit bleeding
through and triggering random integration fugues, in which case things
will ease off after a while, although you won't enjoy the ride. But I
can't tell you what to expect, much less treat you, if you won't even
admit you've got a problem."
"Oh." It takes me a while to absorb this, but
Hanta is remarkably patient with me and waits while I think about
things. If I didn't know better, I'd swear she actually liked me. "A
problem," I echo, uncertain how much I can let slip, before a cold
chill runs its icy fingers up my spine, and I shudder uncontrollably.
"Speaking of problems . . ."
Hanta raises her caduceus: "This will hurt, but only momentarily and a
lot less than being eaten alive by a mechaplague." She smiles faintly
as she points it at my shoulder, and I wince as the asps strike at me.
There's a toothy little prickling as they begin pumping adjuvant
patches into my circulation, upgrading my prosthetic immune system so
that it can deal with the pestis. I try not to wince.
"The infection will take some time to die off,
and there's a risk that it's adaptable enough to out-evolve the
robophages, so I'm going to keep you here overnight—just for
observation. Hopefully you'll be well enough to go home tomorrow, and
I'm going to write you up for a week off work while you recover. In the
meantime, have a think about whatI said concerning your memory problem, and we can talk about it in the morning when I check on your progress."
The snake-heads let go of me and wrap themselves back around the staff as Hanta stands up. "Sleep well!"
NATURALLY, I don't sleep well at all.
At first, I spend an indeterminate time
shuddering with cold chills and occasionally forgetting to inhale until
some primitive reflex kicks me into sucking in great rasping gasps of
air. Sleep is out of the question when you're afraid you'll stop
breathing, so I amuse myself to the point of abject terror by rolling
the events of the day over in my mind. Great arterial gouts of blood
project like ghosts upon the wall, shadows of my guilt over killing
Fiore . . . Fiore? But he doesn't know I killed him! Did
I hallucinate the whole thing? Obviously not the mad scramble up the
shaft, arms burning with overstressed muscles. The priest and the
doctor both knew about it. Assuming I didn't imagine their visits, I
remind myself. I'm fighting off a mecha infection and an obscure
neurological crisis at the same time. Wouldn't it be reasonable to
suspect I might just be out of my skull?
The lights on the ward have dimmed, and the
glimpse of sky I can see through the windows is deepening toward
purple, fly-specked with burning pinpricks of luminescence that glitter
oddly, as if refracted through a deep pool of water. Maybe they don't
know I know about Curious Yellow and the assembler in the library
basement, I tell myself. They just think I'm having a mental breakdown,
and I went for a little climb. Dissociative fugue, isn't that what the ancients called it?
I got myself infected with compost nano and Fiore called Hanta in to
patch me up, and he won't mention it in Church because it would
undermine the integrity of the experiment. Maybe they're right, and I
just imagined killing Fiore. I'm not simply remembering fragments of
badly suppressed memories, I'm confabulating out of fragments,
synthesizing false memories from the wreckage of a failed erasure job.
The memories of my time in the Cats, could they simply be recollections
from a game I used to play? Multiplayer immersive worlds with a plot
and an identity model—I don't remember being a gamer, but if I
wanted to get rid of an addiction, mightn't I have tried to flush it
out with a lightweight round of memory surgery?
I can't ask anyone, I realize. If I ask Sam, and
he hasn't heard of the Linebarger Cats, it doesn't mean they weren't
real—everyone here's been through memory excision! I'd giggle if
my throat wasn't so dry. I am Reeve! Watch me fake up a bunch of memories to haunt myself with!
Was the guy who stalked me through the hallways of the Invisible
Republic real? What about the mad bitch with the sword who called me
out? I've been running from enemies I never actually saw—only
glimpsed out of the sides of my eyes. It's like I'm suffering from
blindsight, the strange neurological trauma that leaves its victims
unable to see but able to sense events in their visual field by
guessing. Maybe I'm an intelligence agent trying to track down a
dangerous nest of enemies . . . and maybe I'm just a
sad, sick woman who used to substitute game play for living a real life
and who's now paying the price.
I lie awake in the twilight and eventually I
realize that the shivering has gone. I ache, and I'm feeble, but that's
to be expected after the long climb. And as I lie there I become aware
of the subtle noises on the ward, the soft white noise of the
air-conditioning, the tick of a clock, the quiet sobbing of—
Sobbing?
I sit bolt upright, the sheet and blanket
falling away from me. My thoughts churn in parallel with a sense of
dread and a numinous awareness of relief. Rescuing Cass and If Cass is here, then that memory was real with Still doesn't mean everything else was real and finally If it was real, Cass must be . . .
"Shit," I hear myself mutter. I pull the bedding
up and clutch it like a frightened child. "I can't deal with this." I
feel like sucking my thumb. "I am not ready for this." I'm
subvocalizing, so low I make no sound. I have to talk softly when I'm
telling myself the truth, because the truth is embarrassing and
hurtful. I flash back to what Hanta said: When she's better, I'll ask
her who she wants to be, and that's a comfort because I certainly don't
have anything better to offer her. Is Hanta up to doing memory surgery properly? I ponder. It would surprise me if they didn't
have a full surgeon-confessor along for the ride—it's the
ultimate prophylactic for those little ethical embarrassments that an
experimental polity might suffer. (Or for those little
infiltration-level embarrassments that a secret military installation
might encounter, a lying, cynical part of me that I'm no longer
entirely sure I believe in adds.)
I lie down again. The sobbing continues for a
while, then I hear the clacking heels of a nursing zombie converge on
the bed. Quiet voices and a sigh, followed by snores. The white ghost
of a nurse pauses at the foot of my bed, its face a dim oval. "Do you
need anything?" It asks me.
I shake my head. It's a lie, but what I need they can't provide.
THE next morning starts badly, shattered into fragments like a dropped vase:
"More fugues. Reeve, you're getting worse."
His large hand enfolding my small one. Weak and
pale. He strokes the back of my wrist with his thumb. I look into his
eyes and see sadness there and wonder why—
Two liquid-metal snake-heads bite at my wrist,
and I cry out, pulling away as they inject soothing numbness. The woman
who carries them is a goddess, golden-skinned with burning eyes.
I'm a tank again, a regiment of tanks, dropping
through the freezing night toward an enemy habitat—or did this
come later? I disconnect from the virtch interface and shake my head,
look around at the other players in the game arcade, and hear myself
whisper, "But it wasn't like that—"
Scratch of a carved goose feather on rough
paper, body of a pen made from a human bone. You will remember nothing
at first. If you did, they could parse your experience vector and
identify you as a threat.
"She's really bad this morning. The adjuvants
have worked—that infection is definitely on the mend—but
she's no use to us like this."
"What do you expect me to do? She's in danger of sliding into full-blown anterograde—"
A suffocating stench of bowels as I slide my
rapier back out of his guts. He lies among the rosebushes in a dueling
zone, beneath the shadow of a marble statue of an extinct species of
flying mammal. A sudden stab of horror, because this is a man I could
have loved.
"Fix her."
"I can't! Not without her consent."
Hand tightening around someone's wrist until
it's almost painful. "She's in no condition to give it—look at
that, what are you going to do if she starts to convulse?"
I'm a tank again, looping in a pool of horrors,
blood trickling beneath my gridded toes as I swing my sword through the
neck of another screaming woman while two of my other instances hold
her down.
I'm flying, tumbling arse over wing as my thumb
sings a keening pain of broken bone, and I smell the fresh water of the
roaring waterfall beneath me.
"Make it stop," I hear someone mumble, and
there's blood on my lips where I've almost bitten through them. It's me
who's being held down by the tanks, facing a woman with burning eyes,
and behind her is a man who loves me, if I could only remember what his
name was.
The snakes bite again and drink deep, and the sun goes dark.
RESTART:
I become aware that someone is holding my right hand.
Then, a timeless period later, I realize that
he's still holding my hand. Which implies he's very patient, because
I'm still lying in bed, and it's very bright. "What time is it?" I ask,
mildly panicky because I need to get to work.
"Ssh. It's around lunchtime, and everything's all right."
"If it's all right"—Sam squeezes my hand—"how long have you been sitting there?"
"Not long."
I open my eyes and look at him. He's on the stool beside my bed. I pull a face, or smile, or something. "Liar."
He doesn't smile or nod but the tension drains out of him like water and he sags as it runs away. "Reeve? Can you remember?"
I blink rapidly, trying to get some dust out of a corner of my left eye. Can I remember—"I
remember lots," I say. How much of what I remember is true is another
matter. Just trying to sort it out makes my head hurt! I'm a tank: I'm
a dissolute young bioaviator with a death wish: Maybe I'm a sad gamer
case instead, or a deep-cover agent. But all of these possibilities are
a whole lot sillier and less plausible than what everything around me
is saying, which is that I'm a small-town librarian who's had a nervous
breakdown. I decide I'll go with that version for the time being. I
hold Sam's hand tight, like I'm drowning: "How bad was it?"
"Oh Reeve, it was bad." He leans across me, and
hugs me and I hug him back as tight as I can. "It was bad as can be."
He's shaking, I realize with a sense of growing awe. He feels for me that deeply? "I was afraid I was going to lose you."
I nuzzle into the base of his neck. "That would
be bad." It's my turn to shudder with a frisson of existential dread at
the thought that I could have lost him. Somewhere in the
past week Sam has turned into my anchor, my refuge in the turbulent
waters of identity. "I've got . . . well. Things are a
bit jumbled today. What happened? When did you
hear . . . ?"
"I came as soon as I could," he mumbles in my
ear. "Last night they called but said I couldn't visit, it was too
late." He tenses.
"And?" I prompt. I feel as if there should be something more.
"You were fitting." He's still tense. "Dr. Hanta
said it's an acute crisis; you needed a fixative, but she couldn't do
it without your permission. I told her to give it anyway, but she
refused."
"A fixative? What for?"
"Your memories." He's even tenser. I let go of him, feeling cold.
"What does this fixative do?"
Dr. Hanta answers from behind me as I turn round
to look at her. "Memory is encoded in a number of ways, as differential
weightings in synaptic connections and also as connections between
different nerves. The last excision and redaction you underwent was
faulty. You began to experience breakthrough. In turn, that was
triggering alerts in your enhanced immune system, and then you got
yourself exposed to a mechanocytic infestation, which made things much
worse. Whenever new associative traces would start integrating, your
endogenous robophages would decide it was a mechanocyte signal and kill
the nerve cells. You were well on your way to losing the ability to
form new long-term associative traces—progressive brain damage.
The fixative is normally used as the last step in redactive editing. I
used it to renormalize, erase, the old memories that were breaking
through. I'm sorry, but you won't be able to access them now—you
keep those that you've already integrated, but the others are gone for
good."
Sam has loosened his grip on me, and I lean
against him as I stare at the doctor. "Did I give you permission to
mess with my mind?" I ask.
Hanta just looks at me.
"Did I?" I echo myself. I feel aghast. If she did it against my will, that's—
"Yes," says Sam.
"What?"
"She—you were pretty far gone." He hunches
over again. "She was describing the situation to you, and me, and I was
asking her to do it, and she said she couldn't—then you were
delirious. You began mumbling and she asked you, and you said yes."
"But I don't remember . . ." I stop. I think I do remember, sort of. But I can't be sure, can I? "Oh."
I stare at Hanta. I recognize the expression in
her eyes. I stare at her for a long time—then I manage to make
myself nod, just a quick jerk really, but it's enough to break contact,
and I think we all breathe out simultaneously. Meanwhile I'm thinking, Shit, I'll never be able to figure out where I've come from now, will I?
But it's not as bad as what was going to happen otherwise. I don't
remember the attacks, exactly, but I remember what happened between
them, the consequences—it's a consistent story. A new story of my
life, I suppose. "I feel much better," I say cautiously.
Sam laughs, and there's a raw edge in it that
borders on hysteria. "You feel better?" He hugs me again, and I hug him
right back. Hanta is smiling, with what I think is relief at a
difficult situation resolved. The suspicious paranoid corner of me
files it away for future reference, but even my secret-agent self is
willing to concede that Hanta might actually be what she seems, an
ethically orthodox practitioner with only the best interests of her
patients at heart. Which is a big improvement on Fiore or the Bishop,
but at least one out of three isn't bad.
"So when can I go home?" I ask expectantly.
IT turns out
that I'm stuck in hospital for the rest of the day and the next night,
too. Hospital life is tedious, punctuated by the white-clad ghosts
wheeling around trolleys of food and different things, instruments and
dark age potions.
I still ache from the fever, and I feel weak,
but I'm well enough to get up and go to the bathroom on my own. On my
way back I notice that the curtains around the other occupied bed on
the ward are drawn back. I glance around, but there are no nurses
present. Steeling myself, I approach.
It is Cass, and she's a mess. Her legs are
encased in bright blue polymer tubes from toe to thigh, and raised by
wires so that the bedding dangles across her in a kind of valley. The
bruises on her face have faded to an ugly green and yellow except
around her eye sockets, which look simultaneously puffy and hollow, her
eyelids sagging closed. She's still thin, and a translucent bag full of
fluid is slowly draining into her wrist through a pipe.
"Cass?" I say softly.
Her eyes open and roll toward me. "Guuh," she says.
"What?" She flinches slightly. I hear footsteps behind me. "Are you all right?"
The nursing zombie approaches. "Please step away from the patient. Please step away from the patient."
"How is she?" I demand. "What have you done to her?"
"Please step away from the patient," says the nurse, then a different reflex triggers: "All questions should be addressed to medical authorities. Thank you for your compliance. Go back to bed."
"Cass—" I try a last time. Gross memory
surgery falls through my mind like a snowflake, freezing everything it
touches. I feel awful. "Are you there, Cass?"
"Go back to bed," says the nurse, a touch threateningly.
"I'm going, I'm going," I say, and I shuffle
away from poor, damaged Cass. Cass who I thought was Kay, obsessing
over her, when all the time Kay was sleeping in the next room, and Cass
was living in a nightmare.
I have a problem with the ethics here, I think.
Hanta's not bad. But she collaborates with Fiore and Yourdon. What kind
of person would do that? I shake my head, wincing at the cognitive
dissonance. One who'd perform illegal memory surgery then implant the
recollection of giving informed consent in the victim's mind? I shake
my head again. I don't really think Hanta would do that, but I can't be sure. If the patient agrees with the practitioner afterward, is it really abuse?
IT'S a bright,
sunny Thursday morning when Hanta comes and sits by my bedside with a
clipboard. "Well!" Her smile is fresh and approving. "You've done
really well, Reeve. A splendid recovery. I think you're about well
enough to go home." She uses her pen to scribble an annotation on her
board. "You're still convalescent, so I advise you to take it very easy
for the next few days—certainly you shouldn't go back to work
until this time next week at the earliest, and ideally not until the
Monday afterward. Take this note and give it to Janis when you return
to work, it's a certificate of exemption from employment. If you feel
at all unwell, or have another dizzy spell, I want you to telephone the
hospital immediately, and we'll send an ambulance for you."
"Will the ambulance be much use if I'm incoherent or hallucinating?" I ask doubtfully.
Hanta shoves an unruly lock of hair back into
place: "We're still populating the polity," she says. "The paramedics
aren't due to arrive until next week. They have to have additional
skill set upgrades to their implants. But in two weeks' time if you
call an ambulance or see a nurse or need a police officer, you won't be
dealing with a zombie." She glances along the ward. "Can't happen soon
enough, if you ask me."
"I was meaning to ask . . ." I
trail off, unsure how to raise the subject, but Dr. Hanta knows what
I'm talking about.
"You did the right thing when you called the
ambulance," she says firmly. "Never doubt that." She touches my arm for
emphasis. "But zombies are no use for nonroutine circumstances." A
little sigh. "It'll be much easier when I have human assistants who can
learn on the job."
"How big is the polity going to grow?" I ask.
"The original briefing said something about ten cohorts of ten, but if
you're going to have police and ambulance crews, surely that's not
enough?"
She looks surprised. "No, a hundred participants
is just the size of the comparison set for score renormalization,
Reeve, a single parish. We introduce participants to each other in a
controlled manner, ten cohorts to a parish, but you're nearly all
settled in now. Next week is when we open the manifold and link all the
neighborhoods together. That's when YFH-Polity actually comes into
existence! It's going to be quite exciting—you're going to meet
strangers, and there'll be far fewer zombies."
"Wow," I say, my voice hollow and my head spinning. "How many, uh, neighborhoods, are you planning to link in?"
"Oh, thirty or so parishes. That's enough to
form one small city, which is about the minimum for a stable society,
according to our models."
"Keeping track of that must be a big job," I say slowly.
"You can say that again." Dr. Hanta stands up
and straightens her white coat. "It takes at least three of me to keep
track of everything!" Another errant curl gets tucked behind her
collar. "Now, if you don't mind, I'm going to leave you. You're ready
for discharge whenever you want to go home; just tell the nurse on the
front desk that you're leaving. Is there anything else?"
"Yes," I say hastily. Then I pause for a moment.
"When I was having my crisis, were you tempted to . . .
you know, change anything? Apart from administering the fixative
algorithm, that is?"
Hanta stares at me with her big brown eyes. She
looks thoughtful. "You know, if I tried to change the minds of everyone
who I thought needed changing, I'd never have time to do anything
else." She smiles at me, and her expression turns chilly. "And besides,
what you're asking about is highly questionable behavior, ethically
questionable, Mrs. Brown. To which I have two responses. Firstly,
whatever I might think of a patient, I would never act in a manner contrary to their best interests. And secondly, I expected better of you. Good day."
She turns and stalks away. I've really put my foot in it now, I think, feeling sick with embarrassment. Me and my big mouth . . .
I want to run after her and apologize, but that would be asking to
compound the misunderstanding, wouldn't it? Idiot, I tell
myself. She's right, they couldn't run the polity without having a
medical supervisor who has the subjects' best interests in mind; and
I've just pissed off the only member of the experimental team who might
be on my side. She could have helped me figure out how to fit in
better, and instead . . . Shit. Shit. Shit.
There's really nothing left to do here. I stand
up and rummage through the carrier bag Sam left for me last night.
There's underwear, a floral print dress, and a pair of strappy sandals,
but he forgot my handbag. Oh well, he gets high marks for trying. I
make myself decent then, after waiting long enough for Dr. Hanta to
leave the ward, I head down to reception. On the way I pass the other
ward, signposted MATERNITY. I guess
it'll be getting busy in a few months, but right now it's depressingly
empty. There's a spring in my step as I reach the front desk. "Checking
out," I say.
The zombie on the desk nods. "Mrs. Reeve Brown leaving the institution of her own volition," she drones. "Have a nice day."
The hospital faces onto Main Street, sandwiched
between a run of shops and a stretch zoned for offices. It's a sunny,
warm day, and my spirits rise as I go outside. I feel airy and empty,
light as a feather, not a care in the world! At least, not for now,
a stubborn part of me mutters darkly. Then I get the impression that
even the part of me that's always alert shrugs its shoulders and sighs.
Still, might as well take the day off to recover. Fiore has
actually let me off the hook, for which I can thank Dr. Hanta; so I've
got an actual choice. I'm free to keep on kicking and struggling
against the inevitable, or I can go home and relax for a few days, just
play the game and settle down. (It'll avoid attracting unwelcome
attention from Fiore or the score whores, and I can pretend I'm having
fun while I'm about it; I'll treat it like a game. Plus, it occurs to
me that if I want to get back at Jen, the best way to do it is to
defeat her on her own terms. I can always go back to figuring out how
to escape later.) Meanwhile, I really ought to try to sort things out
with Sam because I don't like the way paranoia and dread seems to have
been levering us apart.
It takes me three hours to catch a taxi home,
mostly because I pass the Lady's Lodge Beauty Parlor and stop to get my
hair tidied up, and then the department store. The staff in the salon
and the store are still all zombies, which is annoying, but at least
they don't get in the way. I need some more clothes, anyway—I
have no idea what happened to what I was wearing the other day, plus,
dressing à la mode is a good, easy way to boost your score, and
I can use that right now—and in between buying a couple of new
outfits I fetch up at the cosmetics counter. The store is deserted, and
I figure I'll give Sam a surprise, so I wait while the zombie assistant
applies a makeover with inhuman speed. Those dark ages folks may not
have had much by way of reconstructive nano, but they knew a lot about
using natural products to change they way they looked: I barely
recognize myself in the mirror by the time she's finished.
I'm still not very well, and find myself
flagging much sooner than I expected. So I finish off in the shop,
arrange to have my purchases delivered, and catch a taxi home. Home is
much as I expected—a mess. The cleaning service I commissioned
when I got the library job has been round, but they only come once a
week, and Sam has been letting the dirty dishes pile up in the kitchen
and leaving the glasses in the living room. I try to ignore it and put
my feet up, but after half an hour it's too much. If I'm going to
settle down a bit, I need to take care of that—it's part of the
role I'm playing—so I move everything to the kitchen and start
cycling them through the dishwasher. Then I go and lie down for a
while. But a pernicious demon of dissatisfaction has gotten into my
head, so I get up and start on the living room. It comes to me that I
really don't like the way the furniture is laid out, and there's
something about the sofa that annoys me unaccountably. The sofa will
have to go.In the meantime I can rearrange where everything is, and then I realize it's nearly six. Sam will be home soon.
I'm a very poor cook, but I manage to puzzle my
way through the instructions on the cartons, and I'm just laying out
the cutlery on the dining table in the dayroom when I hear the door
rattle.
"Sam?" I call. "I'm home!"
"Reeve?" He calls back.
I step into the hall, and he does a double take. "Reeve?" He gapes at me: It's a priceless moment.
"I had a little accident at the cosmetics counter," I say. "Like it?"
He goes cross-eyed for a moment, then manages to
nod. In addition to the makeover I'm wearing the sexiest, most
revealing dress I could find. I'll take my praise where I find it.
Sam's never been a great one for expressing his emotions, and this is
going pretty far for him. Come to think of it, he looks tired, sagging
inside his suit jacket.
"Hard day?" I ask.
He nods again. "I, uh"—he draws breath—"I thought you were ill."
"I am." I'm more tired than I want to admit in
front of him. "But I'm glad to be home, and Dr. Hanta's given me the
next week off work, so I figured I'd lay on a little surprise for you.
Are you hungry yet?"
"I missed lunch. Didn't feel much like eating back then." He looks thoughtful. "That wasn't such a good idea, was it?"
"Come with me." I lead him into the dayroom and
sit him down, then go back to the kitchen and switch on the microwave,
then pick up the two glasses of wine I'd poured and take them back to
the table. He doesn't say anything, but he's agog, eyes tracking me
like an incoming missile. "Here. A toast—to our future?"
"Our . . . future?" He looks
puzzled for a moment, then something seems to clear in his mind, and he
raises his glass and finally smiles at me, surrendering some inner
doubt. "Yes."
I hurry back to sort out our supper, and we eat.
I don't taste much of the food because, to tell the truth, I'm watching
Sam. I came so close to losing him that every moment feels delicate,
like glass. A huge and complex tenderness is crystallizing in me. "Tell
me about your day," I ask, to draw him out, and he mumbles through an
incoherent story about missing papers for a deed of attainder or
something, watching my face all the time. I have to prompt him to eat.
When he's done, I walk round the table to fetch his plate, and I can
feel the heat of his gaze on me. "We need to talk," I say.
"We need." His voice is congested with emotion. "Reeve."
"Come with me," I say.
He stands up. "Where? What is this about?"
"Come on." I reach out and take his necktie and
gently tug. He follows me into the hallway. "This way." I take the
steps slowly, going up, listening to his hoarse breathing deepen. He
doesn't try to pull away until I reach the bedroom door.
"We shouldn't be doing this," he says hoarsely. "I don't know why you're doing this, but we mustn't."
"Come on." I give him a little tug and he
follows me into the bedroom and I finally let go and turn to face him.
I feel a looseness in my innards as I look up at his face, a warmth at
my crotch. "Kay. Sam. Whoever you are. I love you."
I freeze, my eyes wide as I see his pupils
dilate and he looks puzzled: I realize he didn't hear me! "The magic
phrase, Sam." And I realize that I mean it. This isn't the
stinger-ampoule side effect of Jen's malice, it's something more
profound. "What you said to me the other day, I'm saying it right back
to you." His expression clears. "Come here."
He looks confused, now. "But if we—"
"No buts." I reach over to him and tug at the
knot on his necktie. It unclips from his collar, and I fumble at the
top button. He chews his upper lip, and I can feel him trembling under
my fingers, warm and immensely solid and reassuring. I take a step
closer until I'm leaning up against him, and I feel through his clothes
that he's as excited as I am. "I want you, Sam, Kay. I don't want to
have any barriers between us, it hurts too much. I've nearly lost you
twice now, I'm not going to lose you again."
His hands on my shoulders, huge and powerful. His breath on my cheek. "I'm afraid this isn't going to work, Reeve."
"Life's frightening." I get another button undone, then I look up to see
his face above me, and I stop. I was about to stretch up to kiss him,
but something about his expression isn't right. "What is it?"
"What's wrong with you?" he hisses. "This isn't like you, Reeve, what's happening?"
"I'm doing what I should have done last week." I
wrap my arms around him and lean my forehead against his shoulder. But
he's started a train of thought going, running on rails right through
my lust simple: "I've had a bad experience. It put a lot of things into
a new perspective, Sam. You ever had one of those? Done something
stupid and crazy and maybe a bit evil and only realized afterward that
you'd jeopardized everything you ever cared about? Been there, done
that—more than once—most recently the day before yesterday,
and I don't want to be defined by my mistakes. So I'm walking away from
them. I want us to work, I don't want to—"
"Reeve, stop it. Stop this. You're scaring me."
Huh? I pull back and stare at him, offended. It's like a bucket of ice water in the face.
"This isn't you speaking, is it?" he asks. He sounds certain.
"Yes it is!" I insist.
"Really?" He looks skeptical. "You wouldn't have thrown yourself at me like this last week."
"Yes I would! In a moment, if I wasn't so
conflicted." Then what he's trying to tell me without actually saying
it in so many words sinks in, and I jam one hand across my mouth to
keep from screaming in frustration.
"So you're not conflicted now," he says, gently
leading me over toward the bed and pushing me down on the edge of it,
sitting next to me so we're shoulder to shoulder. "But you were
conflicted when you went into the hospital, Reeve. You've been
conflicted as long as I've known you. So you'll pardon my momentary
suspicion when, the moment you get home, you throw yourself at me?
After swearing off sex entirely just a week ago."
It's there in front of me, a yawning abyss of my
own making, no longer avoidable since Dr. Hanta applied her fixative. I
am stuck with the me that I have become, unable to restore that which
is missing. "I'm not who I was a week ago," I say tightly. "She fixed
the memory leakage, for one thing. And I've acquired a restored sense
of my own mortality from somewhere I don't want to talk about, except
it's not anything that they did to me. I think." But a cynical corner
of my mind says, You said "I love you," didn't you? Last time you
did that, your CY-hack was triggered. Someone's tweaked your netlink,
haven't they?
The cold horror that steals over you when you
wake up unsure whether you died in the night has just stroked its bony
hand along my spine. Somewhere between the cooling puddle of blood in
the library basement and Dr. Hanta's sly consent, I seem to have lost
something. Sam's right, old-me wouldn't be doing this. Old-me would be
scared of different things, and rightly so—and I'm still scared
of Fiore and Yourdon, and I still want out of their perverse managed
society, but we're on board a MASucker, and I know what that means.
"I still want you," I tell him. Although a worm
of doubt adds, "I'm just not sure I want you for the same reasons I
wanted you last week."
"They've gotten to you."
I laugh shakily. "They got to me a long time
ago. I just didn't notice until now." I clutch at him, but as much from
terror as lust. "Why are you here, Kay? Why did you sign up for the
experiment?"
"I followed you."
"Bullshit!" I can see it now. "That's not
enough. And don't tell me it was to get away from your time with the
ice ghouls. Why did you go there? What were you running away from?"
Sam is silent and unresponsive for a while. "If I tell you, you'll probably hate me."
"So?" I see an opportunity. Shuffling up onto
the bed I pull my legs up under my dress and sit cross-legged with my
hands in my lap. "If I listen to your story and I don't hate you
afterward, will you let me fuck you?"
"I don't see what that's got to do with—"
"Let me be the judge of my motives, Sam." Even if they're contaminated.
"You keep trying to second-guess me. It's getting to be a bad habit.
Before, I didn't want to sleep with you for reasons that made sense at
the time. Then when the reasons no longer apply, you say I'macting out of character. You don't give me credit for being able to change of my own volition."
He shakes his head.
"Have you any idea how insulting that is?"
"That's not what I meant—"
"I am capable of change, that's why I'm here!" I
draw a deep breath. "I'm not who I was during the war, Sam, or before
it, or even after it. I'm who I am now, which is the end product of all
those other people becoming one another. They can put you into the dark
ages, but they can't put the dark ages into you, not short of
truncating your life expectancy to about three gigasecs or erasing so
many memories you might as well be . . ." I trail off.
I've got a strange feeling that I just realized something vitally
important, but I'm not sure what.
He looks at me oddly. "You'll hate me," he says. "I did terrible things."
"So?" I shrug. "I did bad things, too. People
out there wanted to kill me, Sam. I thought it was something to do with
a mission I was on and had accidentally erased, but now I'm not so
sure; maybe they were just after me because of, well, one of the people
I used to be. A person who fought in the war. A combatant."
He rocks back and forth thoughtfully. "Nobody here but us war criminals," he says.
It is very interesting to discover that the
phrase "my blood runs cold" actually reflects a physical sensation. It
is much less pleasant to do so while sitting next to someone you love
unconditionally and currently can't share a room with without needing a
change of underwear, and who's just triggered that sensation in your
head. And it's even worse when you realize that what he said applies to
you, too. "Nobody here but us monsters," I say, trying to be flippant.
"Or amnesiacs haunted by the ghosts of their past lives."
"Has it occurred to you that YFH-Polity might be very convenient for a certain type of person?" Sam asks slowly.
I'm getting impatient. "Are you going to lay me down on this bed and have sex with me after you finish lecturing me to death?"
He turns a funny color. "If we both still want to."
If we both still want to. Well, I guess you just have to work with what you've got. "I'm all ears," I say.
He shudders. "Don't say that."
"Well it's"—not literally—"true. Sort of."
"Where were you when the war broke out?" he asks.
Oops. I didn't expect him to ask that. Revealing
that kind of thing would be a big no-no under normal
circumstances—a breach of operational security that could allow
an opponent to work out exactly who you are and thereby figure out all
sorts of useful things about you, enough to endanger you operationally,
because virtually everything you ever did in public is stored in a
database somewhere. But—we're in the guts of a MASucker, and if
I'm not mistaken, there's only one data channel in or out, and Sam
isn't part of the cabal, and I reckon the current risk of our being
eavesdropped on is low. Nor are these normal circumstances.
"I was aboard a MASucker, interviewing the
crew," I admit. "We were cut off for more than a gig after the net went
down." Sam makes a thoughtful noise. "Your turn," I prompt, trying to
change the subject.
"I was an auditor." Sam is silent again. "That's why they drafted me."
"They?"
"The Solipsist Nation: Third Unforgivable
Thoughtcrime Battalion, to be precise. They were doing a search and
sweep for unsecured memory temples through the disconnected segment I
was stranded in, less than a hundred kilosecs after Curious Yellow cut
loose. I'd already been censored and compromised, and they just grabbed
me and added me to their distributed denial of consciousness array. I
spent the next couple of megs scrambling graveyards beyond retrieval,
then they got around to actually in-processing me and assigned me to
erasing archive trails."
Ugh. And I thought what I did in the Linebarger Cats was ugly?
I must shiver or give some other cue because Sam pulls away from me
slightly. "What clades did the Solipsist Nation align with?" I ask,
trying to distract him.
"What clades?" He shakes his head. "It was us against everyone, Reeve. You think anybody in their right minds would ally themselves with an aggressively solipsistic borganism?"
"But you"—I force myself to lean closer as I ask; he's tense and unhappy—"you were just a component, weren't you?"
He shakes his head. "I had some degree of
autonomy, by the time the war ended the Nation had taken to investing
us with a modicum of free will. I was . . . well. Before
the war, I looked pretty much the way you do right now. The Nation
upgraded me, turned me into a combat ogre—and put me on
occupation duty. You know what they called us? Rape machines. If you
want to break someone's will to resist, you can go via the brain, but
if the netlink's been fried by EMP, you have to get physical. They gave
us penises with backward-facing spines, you know that? We
did . . . terrible things. Eventually we were
overrun—my segment was overrun—by a consortium of enemies,
and they offlined us and when I woke up I was back to being me again,
but a me with memories and a large chunk of the Nation wedged
in my head. I spent half a meg in my cell disbelieving in the walls and
floor before I realized that they had to exist for the same reason I
had to exist. And while I was part of the Nation I did things." Deep
breath. "Things that left me ashamed to be human. Or male."
"Yeah, but." I stall. "You weren't yourself. Right?"
"I wish I could believe that." He sounds
forlorn. "I wouldn't do that kind of thing now, but then—I
remember believing in what I was doing. That was part of why I did the
ice ghoul thing, I didn't want to be part of a species that could dream
something like the Solipsist Nation into existence. I wanted—we
wanted—to think every thought in the human phase-space. Do you
know what it's like to be hungry and always eating and never full?
Solipsist Nation wrecked memory temples out of spite because they
contained thoughts we hadn't originated. And I contributed to that. I
enthusiastically optimized the processes. I did it because I wanted
to." He takes a deep breath. "I killed people, Reeve. I killed people
permanently."
"Then we're not so different."
"You?" He stares. "But you said you'd . . ."
"I started the war on a MASucker; I didn't stay
there." I take a deep breath, because I don't think I can dodge this
one. "I volunteered. Joined the Linebarger Cats, combat operations.
Spent nearly a gigasec being an armored regiment. Ended up in Psyops."
"Well." His voice is shaky. "I didn't expect that."
"What proportion of the people here do you think fought in the wars?"
"I haven't thought about it."
"People who were there don't want to remember
it. Almost as soon as we'd got a local cease-fire established, people
were slinking off to the surgeon-confessors."
"Yes." He pauses. "But Reeve, I'm a monster.
There are things in my head—even after excision—that I
don't like to visit. You don't want to get too close to me."
"Sam." I shift toward him. "I'm . . . There are things I tried to bury, too. I could say the same. Do you care?"
"What, about what you did?"
"Yes."
"No."
"Well, then." It's my turn to sound shaky. "What I said earlier stands. A bargain, and you agreed to it, hmm?"
He shrinks away. "I didn't know."
I swallow to try and clear my dry mouth. "I
don't mean right now," I say. To my surprise, I mean it. "But I still
want you, just as soon as you get used to the idea that I want you and
I'm still me. You don't have to project your hatred of what you were
forced to do onto me. And besides, I didn't see any barbs on your cock
the other night."
"But you've changed too much!" He bursts out,
like an iced-over air valve finally cutting loose. "Since Dr. Hanta saw
you. Before that, you were you: You were moody and thoughtful, you were cynical, you were funny—I don't have the words for it. Whatever she did, it's changed you,
Reeve. You'd refuse to do something just because it was expected of
you; now you're trying to make me fuck you! Do you really want to get
trapped in YFH for the foreseeable future? Trapped and pregnant, too?"
I think about it for a moment. "What's the
problem?" Hanta is a more than conscientious doctor, and I'm confident
I can survive a pregnancy—after all, every female mammal in my
family tree did it before me, didn't they? How bad can it be?
"Reeve." Now he's looking at me as if I've
morphed into battle-form, sprouting spikes and guns and armor before
his eyes. I giggle. It's like he's seen a ghost! "What have they done
to you?"
"Offered me a way out of having been a monster." I lean toward him hopefully. "Give me a kiss?"
DESPITE my best planning, we do not make love in the end.
In fact, when I finish the cleaning up and come to bed, Sam gets up and, with sleepy dignity, insists he's sleeping alone.
I am so angry and frustrated that I could cry.
My problem is easily defined—it's the solution that eludes me.
It's not that I've changed a lot, but—with or without Hanta's
prompting—I've decided to take some time out of struggling, and
the outward manifestation looks like a huge switch. Sam simply hasn't
caught up with me yet. It's very disturbing to be around someone who
seems to have inverted all their values and beliefs, and I know if it
was Sam who'd been in hospital and come home glassy-eyed and different,
I'd be incredibly upset. But I wish he wouldn't project his anxiety
onto me—I'm all right, in fact I'm better than I've been at any
time since I first woke up in the custody of the surgeon-confessors.
Yes, there's a problem here: Fiore and Yourdon
are doing something very dubious with a serialized copy of Curious
Yellow, they've figured out a way to defeat the security patch in
everyone's implants; and they seem to be researching how to use social
control rules installed via CY to create an emergent dictatorship.
But—and this is the important question—why should I care?
Haven't I been through enough already? I don't have to let myself be
tortured by my own memories; I've already nearly killed myself trying
to do what Sanni and the others in Security Cell Blue wanted. I've done
my duty, and failed. And now . . .
My dirty little secret is that while I was in hospital I realized that I could
give up. I've got Sam. I've got a job that has the potential to be as
interesting as I want it to be. I can settle down and be happy here for
a while, even though the amenities are primitive and some of the
neighbors are not to my taste. Even dictatorships need to provide the
vast majority of their citizens with a comfortable everyday life. I
don't have to keep fighting, and if I give up the struggle for a while,
they'll leave me alone. I can always go back to it later. Nobody will
scream if I stop, except maybe Sam, and he'll adapt to the new me
eventually.
All of which is great in theory, but it doesn't help when I'm crying myself to sleep, alone.
THE next day is
Friday. I wake up late, and by the time I get downstairs, Sam has
already gone to work. I feel drained, enervated by the aftereffects of
my infection and the stupid climbing attempt, so I don't do much. I end
up spending most of the day shuttling between the bedroom and the
kitchen, catching up on my reading and drinking cups of weak tea. When
Sam comes home—really late, and he's already eaten at the steak
diner in town and had a glass or three of wine—I demand to know
where he's been, and he clams up. Neither of us wants to back down, so
we end up not talking.
On Saturday I come downstairs in time to find
him putting the lawn mower away. "You'll need to tidy up in the
garage," he says by way of greeting.
"Why?" I ask.
"I need to stash some stuff."
"Uh-huh. What stuff?"
"I'm going out. See you later."
He means it—ten minutes after that he's
gone, off in a taxi to who knows where. And it's our most significant
communication in two days.
I kick myself for being stupid. Stupid is the watchword of the day. So
I go into the garage and look for stuff to throw out. It's a scrapyard
of unfinished projects, but I think the welding gear can go, and the
half-finished crossbow, and most of the other junk I've been tinkering
with under the mistaken idea that what I need to escape from is where I am, rather than who
I am. Some bits are missing anyway; I guess Sam's already made a start
on clearing it out to make room for his golf clubs or whatever. So I
heap my stuff in one corner and pull a tarpaulin over it. Out of sight, out of mind, out of garage, that's what I say.
Back inside, I try to watch some TV, but it's
inane and slow, not to mention barely comprehensible. Bright blurry
lights on a low-resolution screen with a curving front, slow-moving and
tedious, with plots that don't make sense because they rely on shared
knowledge that I just don't have. I'm steeling myself to turn it off
and face the boredom alone when the telephone rings.
"Reeve?"
"Hi? Who—Janis! How are you?" I clutch the handset like a drowning woman.
"Okay, Reeve, listen, do you have anything on today?"
"No, no I don't think so—why?"
"I'm meeting a couple of friends in town this
afternoon to try out a new cafe near the waterfront that's just
appeared. I was wondering if you'd like to come and join us? If you're
well enough, that is."
"I'm"—I pause—"supposed to take it
easy for a few days. That's what Dr. Hanta said." Let her chew on that.
"Is there a problem with work?"
"Not so you'd notice." Janis sounds dismissive.
"I'm catching up on my reading, to tell the truth. Anyway, I got the
note from the hospital. Don't worry on my part."
"Oh, okay then. As long as I'm not going to have to run anywhere. How do I get to this place?"
"Just ask a taxi to take you to the Village
Cafe. I'll be there around two. I was thinking we could try out the
cafe and maybe chat."
I am getting an itchy feeling that Janis isn't
telling me everything, but the shape of what she's not telling me is
coming through clearly enough. I shiver a bit. Do I really want to get involved? Probably not—but
they'll start talking if I don't, I think. Besides, if they're planning
something stupidly dangerous, I owe it to Dr. Hanta to talk them out of
it, I suppose. I glance at the TV set. "All right. Be seeing you."
It's already one o'clock, so I change into a
smarter outfit and call a taxi to the Village Cafe. I've no idea what
friends Janis might have in mind, but I don't think she'd be tasteless
enough to invite Jen along. Beyond that, I don't want to risk making a
bad impression. Appearances count if you're trying to up your score,
and other people pay attention to that kind of thing. And I don't
expect Janis would be organizing anything like this if it wasn't
important.
It's a wonderful day, the sky a deep blue and a
warm breeze blowing. Janis is right about one thing—I don't
remember ever seeing this neighborhood before. The taxi cruises between
rows of clapboard-fronted houses with white picket fences and
mercilessly laundered grass aprons in front of them, then hangs a left
around a taller brick building and drives along a tree-lined downhill
boulevard with oddly shaped buildings to either side. There are other
taxis about, and people! We drive past a couple out for a stroll along
the sidewalk. I thought Sam and I were the only folks who did that. Who
am I missing?
The taxi stops just before a cul-de-sac where a
semicircle of awnings shield white tables and outdoor furniture from
the sky. A stone fountain burbles wetly by the roadside. "Village
Cafe," recites the driver. "Village Cafe. Your credit score has been
debited." Blue numerals float out of the corner of my left eye as I
open the door and step out. There are people sitting at the
tables—one of them waves. It's Janis. She's looking a lot better
than the last time I saw her: She's smiling, for one thing. I walk over.
"Janis, hi." I recognize Tammy sitting next to her but don't know what to say. "Hello everybody?"
"Reeve, hi! This is Tammy, and here's Elaine—"
"El," El mumbles.
"And this is Bernice. Have a chair? We were just trying to work out what to order. Would you like anything?"
I sit down and see printed polymer sheet menus
sitting in front of each chair. I try to focus on them, just as a box
with a grille on it abovethe door to the cafe crackles and begins to shout: "Good afternoon! It's another beautiful day . . ."
"I think I'll have a gin and tonic," I say.
"Your attention please, here are two
announcements," continues the box. "Ice cream is now on sale for your
enjoyment. The flavor of the day is truffle and banana. Here is a
warning. There is a possibility of light showers later in the day.
Thank you for your attention."
Tammy pulls a face. "It's been doing that every ten minutes since we arrived. I wish it'd shut up."
"I asked at the counter," Janis says apologetically. "They say they can't shut it off—it's everywhere in this sector."
"Yes? What is this sector, anyway? I don't
remember it." I bury my nose in the menu immediately in case I've just
made a faux pas.
"I'm not sure. It appeared yesterday, so I thought we should go look at it."
"Consider it looked at," says Bernice. Who is
dark and slightly plump and wears a perpetual expression of mild
disgust: I think I've seen her at Church, but that's about it. "Mine's
a mango lassi."
A zombie, male, wearing a dark suit and a long,
white apron, shuffles out of the cafe. "Are you ready to order?" he
asks in a high, nasal voice.
"Yes, please." Janis rattles off a list of
drinks, and the waitron retreats indoors again. The drinks are mostly
alcohol-free: I seem to be one of the odd ones out. Oops, I
think. "Tammy and El and I have been meeting up every Saturday for the
past few weeks," she adds in my direction. "We tell our husbands we're
a sewing circle. It's a good excuse to gossip and drink, and none of
them would know a real sewing circle if one bit him on the toe,
so . . ."
"What is a sewing circle?" asks Bernice.
El reaches diffidently into a huge bag and pulls
out a thing that looks like an airlock cover made of cloth. There are
pins stuck in it, and colored thread. "Something like we all get
together to do embroidery. Like this." She pulls a needle out and
manages to stab herself in the ball of one thumb with it. "I'm not very
good yet," she adds mournfully.
"Count me out of the sewing," I say. "But the drinks and gossip are another matter."
"That's what she said you'd say." Tammy flashes
me an apologetic smile. "Besides, I was wondering if you knew what had
happened to Mick."
Oops again. "I'm not sure. I asked Dr. Hanta about him, and she said it was under discussion, whatever that means. I know Cass is still in the hospital."
"Ah, right." Tammy leans back. "Ten dollars says they both retire from the experiment within a week."
I shiver. There's only one way in or out of a
MASucker, for reason of security—to let the flight crew barricade
the door if the civilization on the other side of it collapses. "I'm
not sure how likely that is," I say. "But Dr. Hanta has a way of
straightening things out. I'm sure she'll be able to do something for
Cass, and I know Mick hasn't visited her since . . .
well."
"What about Fiore?" asks Janis.
I am getting the distinct feeling that they've
invited me here to pump me for information, but what do I care? They're
buying the drinks. "I ran into him after the business with Cass," I
say. Then the cafe door opens, and the waitron returns with our drinks.
I shut up until his back's turned. "He, um, I get the feeling he
doesn't approve of us doing anything unpredictable, but at the same
time Mick went too far. We solved a problem for him."
"Oh." Janis looks disappointed, and I mentally
kick myself. What she's really asking about is what happened in the
library the day she was off sick.
"I got talking to Dr. Hanta in hospital," I
offer. "She said, uh, well, she doesn't approve of the business with
Esther and Phil at all. I got the impression she was yelling at the
Bishop about it. They're going to add rules for divorce proceedings to
the score system to stop it happening again. And rape, to stop anyone
getting ideas from Mick."
"Hmm." Janis looks thoughtful. "If they stick to
a strict dark ages re-creation, they'll make rape a serious penalty
score, but only if the male gets caught."
"Eh?" Tammy looks indignant. "What good will that do?"
"What good does any of this do?" Janis asks drily. She reaches into her
handbag and pulls out a piece of knitting, which she passes to me. "I
think this is yours, you left this in the library," she tells me.
I gulp and hastily stuff the Faraday cage lining
of my botched experimental carrier into my handbag. "Thanks, I sure
did," I babble.
Janis smiles slowly. "It's a bit scratchy, but it catches the light just so."
Wheels within wheels. "It needs a bit more work," I extemporize. "Where did you find it?"
"In the back office. I was just tidying up."
My heart seems to be pounding, but nobody else has noticed. Janis looks at me, then looks at El. "What do you think?" she asks.
El looks up from her embroidery, harried. "I
think I feel a little sick," she says, and reaches for her pink
lemonade. "Church is going to be bad tomorrow."
"Lots of developments," Tammy agrees.
"What are you talking about?" I ask.
Janis nods at me: "Yes, that's right, you've been in hospital all week. Since Tuesday, anyway."
Tammy pulls out a tablet and puts it on the
table. "Lots of new stuff in here," she says, tapping the screen.
"You'll want to know about it."
"About what?" I ask.
"For starters, it seems our last cohort is in place here."
"But they said there were another fourteen after mine"—I do the math—"so we're six short. At least?"
Tammy taps her tablet. "They've been running
multiple sections of YFH-Polity in parallel. We're just one subsector,
a parish, they call it. From Monday they're all going to be linked up,
so we've got lots of new neighbors."
So far this is what Dr. Hanta told me. "And?"
Janis gives me a long, appraising look. "It's a
lot bigger than they told you outside when you were signed up. What
does that suggest to you?"
I look at her belly. It's not much of a bump
yet. Then, almost involuntarily, my eyes slide sideways. "El, are you,
I mean I hope I'm not prying here, but are you by any chance—"
"Pregnant?" El looks at me with her baby-blue eyes and puts one hand on her stomach. "Whatever gave you that idea?"
I try not to wince too obviously. "My period's overdue," says Bernice.
Permanence. "What else are they doing?" I probe.
"There are a lot of new facilities opening up,"
Tammy explains enthusiastically. "There's a kinematoscope, and a
swimming pool and gymnastic coliseum, and a theatre. More shops, too.
And City Hall will be open for business."
Bernice cracks before I do. "Whoa. That's a new one on me!"
"I think they're trying to make us comfortable," says Janis.
"Us?" I ask. "Or them?" My eyes take in bellies around the table, occupied bellies. In fact, mine is the only un-occupied one here. Thanks to Sam.
"Does it make any difference? I'm pretty sure most of us will be too busy changing nappies soon to worry about anything else."
Janis has a tone of voice that she uses when she
means to convey the exact opposite of the literal meaning of her words.
She's using it now, laying on the sarcasm with a trowel.
I smile brightly. "Then I suppose you think we should lie back and enjoy these wonderful new recreational resources!"
"Reeve," Tammy says warningly, "this is serious."
"Oh, you bet," I agree enthusiastically.
"Absolutely!" I finish my drink. "I'm sure you ladies have got lots of
important things to be talking about, but I just remembered I haven't
finished washing the dishes, and I've got to clear out the garage
before my husband gets home." I stand up. "Thanks for the weaving,
Janis. See you later?"
The rest of the soi-disant ladies' sewing circle look dubious, but Janis smiles back at me, then winks. "Be seeing you!"
I beat a hasty retreat. I like Janis, but this
sewing circle of hers frightens me. She's unhappy here, that much is
clear, and I don't think she'll want Dr. Hanta to help her over it. I'm
going to have to tell Fiore about Janis, I realize. She needs help. After Church tomorrow?
THE journey to
Church the next day is strained and tense. We dress in our Sunday best
and call a taxi as usual, but Sam doesn't say anything—he's taken
to communicating in grunts—and keeps casting me odd sidelong
looks when he thinks I won't notice. I pretend not to see. In truth I'm
tense, too, winding myself up for the inevitable and unpleasant
conversation with Fiore after the service. Church is packed these days,
and we're lucky to get a seat. At least there are other churches in the
other parishes (and presumably other instances of Fiore to preach in
them), so it's not likely to get any more crowded. "We'll have to leave
earlier in future," I tell Sam, and he stares at me.
Fiore walks in and goes to the front, and the
music strikes up, a catchy brassy little number by (my netlink tells
me) a composer named Brecht. Then Fiore starts the service proper.
"Dear congregants, we are gathered here today in unity to recognize our
place in the universe, our immutable roles in the great cycle of life,
which none shall take from us. Let us praise the designers who have
given us this day and all the days before us a role to fulfill! Praise
the designers!"
"Praise the designers!" echoes the congregation.
"Dear congregants, let us remember that true
meaning and happiness in life can be found through complying with the
great design! A round peg in a round hole!"
"A round peg in a round hole!" rolls the response.
"Let us also give thanks for the happiness that
has come to Mrs. Reeve Brown, who is now most certainly a round peg in
a round hole, and for the solace and comfort that members of our
congregation's away team have brought to Mrs. Cassandra Green, now
recovering in hospital! Happiness, comfort, and solace!"
"Happiness, comfort, and solace!"
I shake my head, happy but confused. I can't
figure it out, why is Fiore holding me of all people up as an example
to the rest of the congregation? I glance round and see Jen, a couple
of aisles away, staring snake eyes at me.
"It is our duty to care for our neighbors, to
help them conform to the ways of our society, to join with them in
their joy and their sorrow, their acceptance and their forgiveness. If
your neighbors need you, go unto them and give them the benefit of your
generosity. We are all neighbors, and those of us who are not in need
this week may be amongthe neediest next week. Guide and care for them, and chide them when it is appropriate . . ."
I begin to zone out. Fiore's voice is hypnotic,
his tone rising and falling in a measured cadence. It's warm and stuffy
in Church with the doors shut, and it seems Fiore isn't going to divert
from his sermon to condemn a sinner this week. For which I should be
grateful—Fiore could have decided to wreck my score for what I
did last week. Despite the warmth, I find myself shivering. He's shown
more forbearance than I expected. Should I follow his example, and
instead of telling him about Janis, try to set her straight myself?
". . . For remember, you are your
brother's keepers, and by the behavior of your brethren shall you be
judged. Voyage without end, amen!"
"Voyage without end!" echoes the chorus. "Amen!"
We stand, and there's another sing-along,
clap-along number—this time in a language I don't understand,
about marching and freedom and bread according to the psalm
book—and then the priest and his attendants leave the front, and
the service is over.
I'm a bit disappointed, but also relieved as we
file out of the Church into the bright daylight, where a buffet is
waiting for us. Sam is even quieter than usual, but right now I don't
care. I snag a glass of wine and a plate with a wheatmeal and fungus
confection on it and wander over to the vicinity of our cohort.
"Decided to settle down, have we?" asks a voice
at my left shoulder. I manage to suppress a frown of distaste. It's
Jen, of course.
"I care for my neighbors," I say, squeezing every gram of sincerity I can muster into it; then I make myself smile at her.
She beams back at me, of course. "Me too!" She
trills, then glances round. "I'm glad Fiore was merciful today, though.
I gather some of us might have been in for a rough ride!"
Sly little bitch. "I've no idea what
you're talking about," I begin, but it's impossible to go on because
the Church bells have begun to ring. Normally they clang in a vague
semblance of rhythm, but now they're jarring and clattering as if
something's caught up among them. People are turning and looking up at
the tower. "That's odd."
"Yes, it is." Jen sniffs dismissively and begins to turn toward a nearby knot of males.
"I haven't finished with you."
"In your dreams, darling." A broad grin, and she slips away.
Irritated, I look up at the tower. The door below it is ajar. Odd,
I think. It's not strictly my business, but what if something's come
loose? I ought to get help. I deposit my glass and plate with a passing
waitron and walk toward the door, taking care to stay off the grass in
my high heels.
The clashing and clattering of disturbed bells
is getting louder, and there's something dark on the front step, under
the door. As I make my way to it I look down and an unpleasantly
familiar stink infiltrates my nostrils, bringing tears to my eyes. I
turn round, and yell, "Over here! Help!" Then I push the door open.
The bell tower is a tall space illuminated by
small windows just below the base of the spire. The daylight spilling
down from them casts long shadows across the beams and the bells that
dangle from them, jostling and clashing above the whitewashed floor,
staining the spreading pool of dark liquid. Spreading black, the gray
of shadows, and a pale pendulum swinging across the floor. It takes a
second for my eyes to grow accustomed to the dimness, and another
second before I understand what they're showing me.
Mick, of all people, is the one playing the
endless atonal carillon that summoned me. It is immediately obvious
that his mastery of music is involuntary. He hangs from a bell-rope by
the ankles, his head tracing an endless pendulous circuit across the
floor in twin tracks of blood. Someone has taped his arms to his body,
gagged him, and rammed hypodermic needles into each ear. The cannulae
drip steadily, emptying what's left of his blood supply from his purple
and congested head. Loops and whorls and spirals of blood have trickled
in a delicate filigree, but some unevenness in the ground leads the
runnels to flow toward a pool on the inside of the door.
I'm simultaneously appalled, dumbstruck with
admiration for the artistic technique on display, terrified that
whoever did it might still be lurking at the scene, and utterly
nauseated at my satisfaction at Mick'send. So I do the only sensible and socially expedient thing I can think of, and scream my lungs out.
The first fellow to arrive on the scene—a
couple of seconds after I get started—isn't much use: He takes
one look at the impromptu chandelier, then doubles over and adds his
lunch to the puddle. But the second on the scene turns out to be
Martin, one of the volunteer gravediggers. "Reeve? Are you all right?"
I nod and manage to take a sobbing breath. I
feel unstable, and my vision is watery. "Look." I point. "Better get
the . . . the . . . Fiore. He'll know
what to do."
"I'll call the police." Martin walks around the
pool of blood and vomit carefully and picks up the telephone handset
that's fastened to the wall by the vestry entrance. "Hello? Operator?"
He jiggles the switch on top of the handset. "That's odd."
My brain is slowly beginning to work again. "What's odd?"
"The telephone. It's not making any noise. It doesn't work."
I snuffle, wipe my nose on the sleeve of my jacket, and stare at him. "That's very odd." Yes, a quiet corner of my mind reminds me, that's odd, and not in a good way. "Let's go outside."
Andrew—the guy who's throwing up—has
just about finished, and is down to making choking, sobbing noises.
Martin pulls him up by one arm, and we walk outside together. There's a
growing crowd on the porch, curious to know what's going on. "Someone
call the police," Martin shouts. "Get the Reverend if you can find
him!" People are pushing past him to look inside the doorway, yelling
in disbelief and coming back out again.
Somebody is sending us, the congregation, a message, aren't they?
I stumble but make it down onto the grass. Sam's there, looking
concerned. "You were with me during the service," I hiss. "You were
next to me the whole time. You know where I was."
"Yes?" He looks puzzled. So do I. I'm not sure why I'm doing this, but . . .
"I spoke to Jen briefly, then heard the bells
and went to see. Then I screamed. I was only inside for a second on my
own. Wasn't I?"
Sam gets it: His shoulders tense suddenly. "How bad is it?"
"Mick." I gasp quietly, then run out of words. I
can't continue just now because I had to look; I saw how his killer
fastened him to the bell-rope by his ankles, cutting him and running
the thick rope through the meaty gap between the bone and the thick
tendon. I'm half-afraid that when they cut him down, they'll discover
he was raped first, while paralyzed, before his killer strung him up to
drain like a slab of flesh. A moment later I'm leaning on Sam's
shoulder, sobbing. He doesn't pull away, but holds me in silence while
all around us the crowd throbs and chatters. I've seen many horrible
things in my life, but there was a judicial deliberation implicit in
what was done to Mick—a hideous moral statement, blindly
confident in its own righteousness. I know exactly who did it, even
though I spent the entire service next to Sam; because for hours on end
I lay awake and fantasized about doing that to Mick, the night we took
Cass away.
"WELL, Mrs. Brown, how fascinating to see you here! Always in the thick of things, I see."
His Excellency smiles like a skeleton, jaw agape
at some private joke. Sam shuffles next to me but holds his peace. You
do not talk back to the Bishop, especially when it's clear that his
humor is a mercurial thing, a butterfly floating above a blast furnace
of rage at the intrusion that has spoiled his Sunday.
Fiore clears his throat. "She is not a suspect," he says stiffly.
"What?" Yourdon's head whips round like a
snake's. The police zombies around us tense as if nervous, hands going
to the batons at their belts.
It's been half an hour since I opened the door,
and the cops have surrounded the churchyard. They're not letting people
go until Yourdon says so. He's clearly in a foul mood. Cold-blooded
murder isn't something our community has had to deal with so far, and
if we're to stay in the spirit of the experiment, we must remember that
to the ancients it was as grievous a crime as identity theft or
relational corruption. It's at this point that the deficiencies of our
little parish become apparent. Wehave no real chief of police, no trained investigators. And so the Bishop is forced to tend his flock in person.
"I saw her arrive with her husband, she was
present throughout the service, and numerous witnesses saw her approach
the door and go inside, then heard her scream. She was alone inside for
all of ten seconds, and if you think she could have committed the
offense in that space of time . . ."
"I'll ask for you to second-guess me when I
can't be bothered to make up my own mind." Yourdon's cheek twitches,
then he switches his attention to Martin so abruptly I feel my knees
weaken. An invisible pressure has come off my skull. "You. What did you
see?"
Martin clears his throat, and is stuttering into
an account of finding me screaming before a corpse when a cop walks up
to Fiore for a brief, mumbled conversation.
Yourdon glares at his subordinate. "Will you stop that?"
Fiore shuffles. "I have new information, Your Excellency."
"Yes? Well, out with it! I haven't got all day."
Fiore—the bumptious, supercilious buffoon
of a priest who likes nothing more than to lord it over his
congregation—wilts like a punctured aerostat. "A preliminary
forensic examination appears to have revealed DNA traces left by the
killer."
Yourdon snorts. "Why did we wait to commission a squad of detectives? Come on, don't waste my time."
Fiore takes a sheet of paper from the cop. "PCR
amplification in accordance with—no, skip that—determines
that the fingerprint on file is congruent with, uh, myself. And nobody
else in YFH-Polity."
Yourdon looks furious. "Are you telling me that you strung him up to bleed out?"
To his credit, Fiore holds his ground. "No, Your Excellency, I'm telling you that the murderer is playing with us."
I lean against Sam, feeling nauseous. But
that was my fantasy, wasn't it? About how to deal with Mick. And I
never told anyone about it. Which means, I must be the killer! Except I
didn't do it. What's going on?
"That's it." Yourdon claps his hands together.
"Action this day—you, Reverend Fiore, will coordinate with Dr.
Hanta to select, train, and augment a chief police constable. Who in
turn will be empowered and authorized to induct four citizens into the
police force at the rank of sergeant. You will also discuss with me at
a later date the selection of a judge, procedures for arraigning
criminals before a jury, and the appointment of an executioner." He
glares at the priest. "Then you will, I trust, return your chapel to
the pristine condition it was in before I entrusted it to you—and
see to the pastoral care of your flock, many of whom are in dire need
of direction!"
The Bishop turns on his heel and sweeps back
toward his long black limousine, trailed by a trio of police zombies
bearing primitive but effective automatic weapons. I sag against Sam's
arm, but he keeps me upright. Fiore waits until the Bishop slams his
door shut, then takes a deep breath and shakes his head lugubriously.
"No good will come of this," he grumbles in our direction—us, the
proximate witnesses, and the zombies who discreetly hem us in. "Police:
dismissed. Citizens, you should attend to the state of your
consciences. At least one of you knows exactly what happened here
today, before the service, and staying silent will not be to your
benefit."
The police zombies begin to disperse, followed
by a gaggle of curious parishioners. I approach Fiore cautiously. I'm
very disturbed, and I'm not sure this is the right time,
but . . .
"Yes, what is it, my child?" He narrows his eyes and composes his face in a smile of benediction.
"Father, I, I wonder if I can have a word with you?" I ask hesitantly.
"Of course." He glances at a police zombie. "Go
to the vestry, fetch a mop and bucket and cleaning materials, and begin
cleaning up the floor of the bell tower."
"It's about . . ." I trail off.
My conscience really is pricking me, but I'm not sure how to continue.
I feel eyes on me from across the yard, curious eyes wondering what I'm
saying.
"Do you know who did it?" Fiore demands.
"No, I wanted to talk to you about Janis, she's been very strange lately—"
"Do you think Janis killed him?" Bushy elevated
eyebrows frame dark eyes that stare down his patrician nose at me, a
nose that doesn't belong to the same face as those wattles of fatty
tissue around his throat. "Do you?"
"Uh, no—"
"Some other time, then," he says, and before I
realize I'm dismissed, he's calling out to another police zombie, "You!
You, I say! Go to the undertaker depot and bring a coffin to the bell
tower—" And a moment later he's walking away from me, cassock
flapping around his boots.
"Come on," says Sam. "Let's go home right now." He takes me by the arm.
I screw up my eyes to keep from crying. "Let's."
He leads me across the car park toward the waiting queue of taxis. "What did you try to tell Fiore?" he asks quietly.
"Nothing." If he wants to know so badly, he can talk to me the rest of the time, when I'm lonely.
"I don't believe you." He's silent for a minute as we get into a taxi.
"Then don't believe me." The taxi pulls away
from the curb without asking us where we want to go. The zombies know
us all by sight.
"Reeve." I look at him. He stares at me, his expression serious.
"What?"
"Please don't make me hate you."
"Too late," I say bitterly. And right then, for exactly that moment, it's true.
IT'S raining
when I wake up the day after the murder. And it rains—gently,
lightly, but persistently—every day for the rest of the week,
mirroring my mood to perfection.
I've got the run of the house and doctor's
orders to take things easy—no need to go in to work in the
library—so I should be happy. I made up my mind to be happy here,
didn't I? But I seem to have messed things up with Sam, and there are
dark, frightening undercurrents at work around me—people who've
made the opposite choice and who'll pounce on me in an instant if I
don't tread a careful line. Now that I have time to think things
through, I'm profoundly glad that Fiore wasn't paying attention when I
tried to tell him about Janis. Life is getting cheaper by the week, and
there are no free resurrections here—no home assemblers to back
up on daily.
Am I really that worried?
Yes.
I manage to make it through to Thursday morning
before I crack. I wake up with the dawn light (I'm not sleeping well at
present), and I hear Sam puttering around the bathroom. I look out the
window at the raindrops that steadily fall like a translucent curtain
before the vegetation, and I realize that I can't stand this any more.
I don't want another day on my own in the house. I know Dr. Hanta said
to take the whole week off to recover, but I feel fine, and at least if
I go in to work, there'll be something to do, won't there? Someone to
talk to. A friend, of sorts, even if she's behaving weirdly these days.
And even if I feel uncomfortable about what I'll say when I see her.
I dress for work, then head downstairs and call
a taxi, as usual. I'm half-tempted to walk, but it's raining, and I've
neglected to buy any waterproof gear. Rain aboard a starship, who'd have imagined it?
I wait just inside the front porch until the taxi pulls up, then rush
over to it and pile in on the backseat. "Take me to the library," I
gasp.
"Sure thing, ma'am." The driver pulls away, with a bit more acceleration than I'm used to. "Wonder when this weather will stop?"
Huh? I shake myself. "What did you say?"
"I heard from Jimmy at the public works
department that they're doing it because they discovered a problem with
the drainage system—need to flush out the storm sewers. I'm Ike,
by the way. Pleased to meet you."
I just about manage to recover gracefully: "I'm Reeve. Been driving cabs long?"
He chuckles. "Since I got here. You're a
librarian? That's a new one on me. I can get you downtown from here,
but you'll need to show me which block it's on."
"The merger," I manage to say.
"Yeah, that's the deal." He taps a syncopated
rhythm on the steering wheel, keeping time with the windscreen wipers,
then hauls the cab through a sharp turn. "What does a librarian do all
day?"
"What does a cab driver do?" I counter, still shaken. Those are manual controls! They put one of us in charge of a machine like that . . .
They must be serious about turning this into a functioning polity.
Which means they probably figure they've got the scoring levels loaded
into our implants just about right. "People come in and they ask for
books and we help them find them." I shrug. "There's more to it than
that, but that's it in a nutshell."
"Uh-huh. Me, I drive around all day. Get a call on the wireless, go find the fare, take them where they want to go."
"Sounds boring. Is it?"
He laughs. "Finding books sounds boring to me,
so I guess we're even! Downtown square, City Hall coming up. Where do
you want to go from here?"
It's not raining in the downtown district. "Drop
me off here and I'll walk the rest of the way," I offer, but he's
having none of it.
"Naah, I need to learn where everything is, don't I? So where is it?"
I surrender. "Next left. Go two blocks, then take the first right and park. You're opposite it."
I arrive at my workplace thoroughly shaken and
not quite sure why. I already heard Yourdon talking about police
sergeants and judges. Are we going to end up without any zombies at
all, doing everything for ourselves? That would be how you'd go about
running an accurate dark ages social simulation, I realize, but it
means things are happening on an altogether larger scale than I'd
imagined.
I'm a little late—the library is already
open—but there are no customers, so I walk straight up to the
counter and smile at Janis, who is nose-down in a book. "Hi!"
She jerks upright, then looks surprised. "Reeve. I wasn't expecting you today."
"Well, I got bored sitting around at home. Dr.
Hanta said I could come in to work today if I wanted to and, well, it
beats watching the rain, doesn't it?"
Janis nods, but she looks unamused. She closes
her book and puts it down carefully on the desk. "Yes, I suppose it
does." She stands up. "Want a cup of coffee?"
"Yes please!" I follow her back into the staff
room. It feels really good to be back—this is where I belong.
Janis is feeling low, but I can help sort that out. Then we've got a
library to run! And what could be better than that? Ike can keep his
smelly, dangerous cab.
"Well then." Janis switches the kettle on and
looks me up and down critically. "I may have to go out for a couple of
hours. You going to be all right running the place on your own?"
"No problem!" I straighten my skirt. Maybe it was some lint?
She winces, then rubs her forehead. "Please, not so much enthusiasm this early in the morning. What's gotten into you?"
"I've been bored!" I manage to keep myself from
squeaking. "It's been boring at home, and it's been raining all week
long." I pull out the other chair and sit down. "You can't go shopping
every day of the week, there's only so much cleaning and tidying you
can do in one house, the television is boring, and I should have
stopped here to borrow some books but I thought . . ." I
wind down. What have I been thinking?
"I think I see." A wan smile tugs at the corners of her eyes. "How's Sam?"
I tense. "What makes you ask?"
The smile fades. "He was here yesterday. Wanted
to talk about you, wanted to know my opinion . . . He
doesn't feel he can talk to you, so he has to let it out with someone
else. Reeve, that's not good. Are you all right? Is there anything I can do to help?"
"Yes, you can change the subject." I say it
lightly, but she just about freezes right up on the spot. "Sam's taken
offense to something I said, and we need to sort it out between us." My
stomach churns with anger and guilt, but I bite back on it. It's not
Janis's fault after all, but Sam should know better, the pig. "We'll
sort it out," I add, trying to reassure her.
"I . . . see." Janis looks as if
she's sucking on a slice of lemon. Right then the kettle comes to a
boil, so she stands up and pours the hot water into two mugs, then
scoops in the creamy powder and mixes it up. "I hope you won't take
this the wrong way, Reeve, but you seem to have changed since you came
out of hospital. You haven't really been yourself."
"Hmm? What do you mean?" I blow on my coffee to cool it.
"Oh, little things." She raises an eyebrow at
me. "You've gained a certain enthusiasm. You're more interested in
exteriors than interiors. And you seem to have lost your sense of
humor."
"What's humor got to do with it?" I glare at my mug, willing myself not to get angry. "I know who I am, I know who I was."
"Forget I said it." Janis sighs. "I'm sorry, I
don't know what's gotten into me. I'm getting really bitchy these
days." She falls silent for a while. "I hope you don't mind my leaving
you for a few hours."
I manage a forced laugh. Janis's issues aren't my business, strictly speaking, but—"What are friends for?"
She looks at me oddly. "Thanks." She takes a
mouthful of her coffee and makes a face. "This stuff is vile, the only
thing worse that I can think of is not having it at all." Her frown
lengthens. "I'm running late. See you back around lunchtime?"
"Sure," I say, and she stands up, grabs her jacket from the back of the door, and heads off.
I finish my coffee, then go back to the front
desk. There's some filing to do, but the cleaning zombies have been
thorough—they didn't even leave me any dusty top shelves to
polish. A couple of bored office workers drop in to return books or
browse the shelves for some lunchtime entertainment, but apart from
that the place is dead. So it happens that I'm sitting at the front
desk, puzzling over whether there's a better way to organize the
overdue returns shelf, when the front door opens, and Fiore steps in.
"I wasn't expecting you," he says, pudgy eyes narrowing suspiciously.
"Really?" I hop off my stool and smile at him, even though all my instincts are screaming at me to be careful.
"Indeed not." He sniffs. "Is the other librarian, Janis, in?"
"She's out this morning, but she'll be back
later." I get a horrible sense of déjà vu as I look at
him, like a flashback to a bad dream.
"Hmm. Well, if I can trouble you to turn your
back, I have business in the repository." His voice rises: "I don't
want to be disturbed."
"Ah, all right." I take an involuntary step
back. There's something about Fiore, something not quite right, a feral
tension in his eyes, and I'm suddenly acutely aware that we're alone,
and that he outweighs me two to one. "Will you be long?"
His eyes flicker past my shoulder. "No, this
won't take long, Reeve." Then he turns and lumbers toward the reference
section and the secure document repository, not bothering to look at
me. For a moment I don't believe my own instincts. It's a gesture of
contempt worthy of Fiore, after all, a man so wrapped up in himself
that if you spent too long with him, you'd end up thinking you were a
figment of his imagination. But then I hear him snort. There's the
squeak of the key in thelock, and a creak of floorboards. "You might as well come with me. We can talk inside."
I hurry after him. "In what capacity am I
talking to you?" I ask, desperately racking my brains for an excuse not
to join him. "Is it about Janis?"
He turns and fixes me with a beady stare. "It
might be, my daughter." And that's pure Fiore. So I follow him through
the door and down the steps into the cellar, a hopeless tension gnawing
at my guts, still unsure whether I'm right to be worried or not.
Fiore pauses when we get to the strange room at
the bottom of the stairs. "What exactly do you think of Dr. Hanta?" he
asks me. He sounds tired, weighed down with cares.
I'm taken aback. What is this, some kind of
internal politicking? "She's"—I pause, biting my tongue, acutely
aware who I'm talking to—"refreshingly direct. She means well,
and she's concerned. I trust her," I add impulsively, resisting the
urge to add, unlike you. I manage to maneuver so my back is to the storage shelves on one wall. If I have to grab something—
"That's not unexpected," Fiore says quietly. "What did she do to you?"
"She didn't tell you?"
"No, I want you to tell me in your own words."
His voice is low and urgent, and something in my heart breaks. I can't
pretend this isn't happening anymore, can I? So I play for time.
"I was having frequent memory fugues, and I
picked up a nasty little case of gray goo up top in the ship's mass
fraction tankage. That set my immune system off, and it began taking
out memory traces. Dr. Hanta had to put me on antirobotics and give me
a complete memory fixative in order to stop things progressing." I move
my hands behind my back and slowly shuffle backward, away from him and
toward the wall. "I'd say she's a surprisingly ethical practitioner,
given the way everyone else here carries on in secret. Or do you know
differently?"
"Hmm." Fiore—fake-Fiore—leans over
the assembler console and taps in some kind of code. "Yes, as a matter
of fact I do."
While he isn't watching I take another step back until I bump up against shelves. Good. I'm already mentally preparing what I need to do next.
Fiore continues, implacably. "One of your
predecessors here—yes, they're still around in deep
cover—got it worked out. Dr. Hanta isn't her real name. She, or
rather it, used to be a member of the Asclepian League." I give a
little gasp. "Yes, you do remember them, don't you? She was a
Vivisector, Reeve. One of the inner clade, dedicated to pursuing their
own vision of how humanity should be restructured."
"Thanks for reminding me what I came here to get
away from," I say shakily. "I'm going to be having nightmares about
that for the next week."
He turns and glares at me. "Are you stupid, or—" He stops himself. "I'm sorry. But if that's all it means to you, you really
are beyond—" He stabs at the console angrily. "Shit. I thought
you'd be at least vaguely concerned for the rest of us in here."
I take a deep breath, trying to get my nausea
under control. The Asclepians were another of the dictatorship cults, a
morphological collective. Much worse than the Solipsist Nation. They
restructured polities one screaming mangled body at a time. If Dr.
Hanta is an Asclepian, and she's working with Yourdon and Fiore, the
future they're trying to sculpt is a thing of horror. "She can't be.
She just can't."
"And I suppose you think Major-Doctor Fiore is
just a fat, egocentric psychiatrist?" He grins at me humorlessly. "Stop
that, Reeve, I know what you're up to. Hanta fucked with your head
really well, didn't she? Probably got you to give your consent first,
too. They're hot on formalities, Asclepians. Fiore and Yourdon are war
criminals, too. Shit, most of the people here did things so nasty they
want to forget everything. Do you remember why this is an experimental polity?"
"Remember?" That's a new one on me.
"Oh. A memory fixative, that makes sense." He
takes a final poke at the console. It dings and turns luminous green.
"Where would dictators be without our compliant amnesia? Make the
collective lose its memory, you can conceal anything. ‘Who now
remembers the Armenians?' " He takes a step back. "Listen, we'll have
to break whatever conditioning she loaded your implant with."
My stomach churns for real this time. I feel sick. He's a monster, and
he wants to drag me back down into the turmoil I was in before Hanta
sorted me out. And I've been up the ladder now, I know there's no way
out. We're stuck here. Resistance is futile. I really ought to run for
it, call the Bishop and get the police to take him away. But that'd be
like betraying myself, too, wouldn't it? "Did you kill Mick?" I
whisper. "How did you get in that body?"
"Will you feel better if I say yes?" His voice is surprisingly gentle. "Or will you feel worse?"
"I'll—" I take another gulp of air. "I want to know."
Fake-Fiore, Robin, blinks slowly, pudgy eyes
closing: I tense but he opens them again before I can gather my wits to
move. "It was after you killed Fiore," he says. "I got into the
assembler and backed myself up, programmed in a body merge and neural
splice, so I'd come out in Fiore's skin instead of
like . . ." He nods at me. "I put a two-hour hold on it
to give you time to get the mess sorted out, but you must have blanked
in between. So I wake up inside the gate and find the basement has been
partially cleaned, and you're missing, and I had to finish the job.
Fiore's backed up in the gate, and I've got his biometrics, so I manage
to get a dump of his implant, and when one of him showed up to check on
you, I told him you'd just gone missing. He believed me. He's not very
good at handling multiplicity.
"On Sunday morning I went to visit Cass in the
hospital," he says quietly. "It turns out I wasn't her first visitor
that morning. I haven't heard anything about it through the rumor net,
but it was pretty bad: I think Hanta covered it up afterward but if you
were wondering . . . I caught Mick. He'd been living in
the basement of an empty house, stealing stuff from folks' kitchens
while they were at work—we're a trusting bunch, have you noticed
that? We leave our back doors unlocked. He'd gagged her and you saw the
tissue scaffolds Hanta had her legs in. She couldn't do anything. I
mean, she was trying to get away, but not getting very far. He was
raping her again, Reeve, and you know what I think about third chances."
I nod, gulping for breath. The horror of it is
that I can see everything in my mind's eye: me-in-Fiore's-flesh
creeping up on Mick as he humps away, Cass thrashing around
helplessly—Mick's probably tied her arms out of the way—and
me-in-Fiore's-flesh saps Mick at the base of the skull. He doesn't do
it very carefully, because he's beyond fury at this point; beyond
caring about inflicting subarachnoid hemorrhages. He doesn't care at
all whether Mick wakes up again. In fact he thinks Mick's waking up
would be a very bad idea, at least for Cass, and maybe come to think of
it he can use Mick to send a message to any borderline sociopaths who
are thinking about following his example—
It's very me. Me as I used to be,
not me as I was before (quiet, peaceful historian, devoted family man)
or me as I am now (slightly squirrelly, evanescent with the joy of
discovering what it's like to surrender after fighting for what seems
like my entire life), but me as I was in the middle, the grim-faced
killing machine. But then I meet his eyes, and I see an awful sadness
in them, a sick sense of guilt that mirrors what I feel at the
knowledge that I'm absolutely going to have to shop him to the Bishop
because we can't afford to have a murderous doppelganger of one of our
most respected citizens running around—
I grab the first thing my fingers scrabble
across: a heavy file of paper hardcopy, part of the dump of Curious
Yellow from the closet upstairs. I take two brisk paces forward as I
raise it and bring it down on top of his head as hard as I can. He sags
and falls over, but I don't stick around to finish the job. Instead, I
turn and run for the stairs. If I can make it to the top and slam the
door, he'll be trapped down here for long enough to call—
"Going somewhere?" drawls Janis, pointing a
stungun at me from the top step. I can see her trigger finger whitening
behind the guard.
I start to raise my hands. "Don't—"
She does.
I groan and
reach up to touch my head, which hurts like hell where Reeve thumped
me. Someone grabs my wrist and tugs experimentally, and I open my eyes.
It's Janis. She looks concerned. "What happened?" I ask.
"I caught her running up the stairs, in a real hurry to get somewhere." Janis peers at me. "What about you?"
I touch my head finally and wince at the sharp pain. "She thumped me with something, a box file I think. I fell over." Stupid, stupid. I feel a bit sick. Looking round brings a stab of pain to my neck. "Hit my head on the A-gate plinth."
"Then it was lucky I was in time."
"Huh. There's no such thing as luck where you're involved."
"That was in another life," she says pensively. "Are you going to be all right on your own? I need to close up shop."
"Get it closed, already." I wince and push
myself upright, breathing heavily. This body has a lot of momentum, and
a lot of insulation, but it's not built for bouncing around. "If
anybody finds us—"
"I'll sort them out."
Janis vanishes upstairs. I sit up and manage not
to retch. Reeve almost ruined it for both of us, and I'm horrified at
how close I came to blowing it. If I hadn't figured out who Janis was,
I'd be on my own down here and Reeve would have killed me without
blinking. Doctor's orders.
I'm going to have to do something about Reeve,
and I'm not looking forward to this. Surely Hanta—let's make that
Colonel-Surgeon Vyshinski, to give her her real name—got to her,
but losing a week isn't something that I take lightly, and besides, she
knows stuff that might come in useful. Dilemmas, dilemmas. If there was some way to trivially reverse the brainwashing that Hanta's applied . . . shit.
Hanta's an artist, isn't she? It'll be some sort of motivational/value
abreactive hack, subtle as hell, leaves the personality intact but
tweaking the gain on a couple of traits, just enough to turn Reeve into
a good little score whore.
I sit with my legs apart, panting a trifle
heavily over my enormous wobbling gut-bucket, and try to come to terms
with the fact that I'm going to have to kill my better half. It's
upsetting, however often you've done it before.
There's some clattering upstairs. I stand up,
wheezing, and waddle over to see what's going on. I hate this body, but
it's been useful for getting me into places none of us could otherwise
go—they've been letting their internal security get sloppy,
forgetting the authenticator rhyme: something shared, something do, something secret, something you? I suppose settling for something you is sufficient if you've got control over all the assemblers in a polity, but still. I wait at the bottom of the stairs. "Who is it?" I call quietly.
"Me," says Janis. "I need a hand with her."
"Humph." I haul myself up the steps. Janis is
waiting at the top with Reeve, whose wrists and ankles she's trussed
together with a roll of library tape. Reeve is twitching a little and
showing signs of coming to. "What are you thinking we should do with
her?" I ask.
"Can you get her downstairs?" Janis asks breathlessly.
"Yes." I lean forward and grasp Reeve by the
ankles: For all that this body is grotesquely overweight, it's not
weak. I lift and drag, and Janis holds Reeve's arms up enough to stop
her head banging on the steps. At the bottom I pull her toward the
A-gate. By this time her eyes are rolling, and she's turning red in the
face. Hating myself, I lean forward. "What would you do?" I ask her.
"Mmph! Mmmph."
Defiant to the end—that's me. I look up at Janis. "Why didn't you kill her?"
"I didn't want to," says Janis.
"What, you're going to just—"
"Just put her in the gate!" She sounds stressed.
I get my hands under Reeve's armpits and lift.
She goes limp, trying to deadweight on me. "I don't like this any more
than you do," I tell her. "But this town's too small for both of us."
As I dump her into the A-gate, she kicks out
with both legs, but I'm expecting that, and I punch her over the left
kidney. That makes her double up. I swing the door shut. "Well?" I
glare at Janis. "What now?" I feel like shit. Killing myself always
makes me feel like shit. That's why I'm deferring to Janis, I think.
Pushing the tough choice off onto someone else's shoulders.
Janis is bending over the control station. "Figuring this out," she murmurs. "Look, I'm going to lift a template from her, okay?
"Fuck." I shake my head, a parody of
resignation. There's a thud from inside the A-gate, and I wince. I feel
for Reeve: I can see myself in her place, and it's horrifying. "Why?"
"Because." Janis looks up at me. "Fiore's going
to suspect if we keep you running around in drag. Don't you think it's
time for you to go back?"
"Back?"
"To being Reeve," she says patiently.
"Oh," I echo. "Oh, I see." Being thumped
on the head has left me sluggish and stupid. Janis is right, we don't
have to kill her. And suddenly I feel a whole lot better about punching
Reeve and dumping her into a macro-scale nanostructure disassembler,
for the same reason that punching yourself in the face never feels
quite as bad as having someone else do it for you.
"I'm going to template from her, and then you're
going to follow her, and I'm going to take a delta from your current
neural state vector and overlay it on Reeve. You'll wake up back in her
body, with both sets of memories, but you're going to be the dominant
set. Think that'll work?"
There's another muffled thump from inside the
A-gate, then muffled retching noises—Janis has triggered the
template program, paralyzing Reeve via her netlink, and the chamber is
filling with ablative digitizer foam. "It had better," I say.
"I'm worried Fiore may suspect what's going on. The thing with Mick could blow it completely if he puts two and two together."
I sigh heavily. "Okay, I'll go back to being Reeve. I suppose that makes sense."
"You agree?" She looks haggard in the dim light
from the ceiling bulbs. "Good, then it's not entirely stupid. What
then . . . ?"
"Then we sit down and figure out how to nail down the lid on this mess. Once I know what she knows."
"Right." Her lips quirk in a faint smile. "Your direct, no-nonsense approach is always like a breath of fresh air."
"Once a tank, always a tank," I remind her.
"Right," she echoes, and for a moment I can see a shadow of her former self. That sends a pang through my chest.
"The sooner I'm myself again, the better."
We sit in silence for long minutes while the gate chugs to itself, then finally
the console chimes, and there's a click as the door unlatches. I walk
over and swing it open: as usual, the chamber is bare and dry. I glance
over and see that she's watching me.
"Ready?" she asks.
"See you on the other side, Sanni," I say as I close the door.
That's all.
SECURITY Cell
Blue used to be part of the counterespionage division of the Linebarger
Cats. It was supposedly disbanded, all memory traces erased, at the end
of the censorship wars. I know this is not the case because I'm a
member. We didn't disband, we went underground—because our
mission wasn't over.
This is a risky business. Our job is to do
unpleasant things to ruthless people. Covering our tracks costs
money—lots of it, and it isn't always fungible across polity
frontiers these days. Local militias and governments have reinvented
exchange rates, currency hedges, and a whole host of other archaic
practices. Some polities are relatively open, while others have fallen
into warlordism. Some place great stock on authentication and
uniqueness tracking, while others don't care who you think you are as
long as you pay your oxygen tax. (The former make great homes; the
latter make great refuges.) As a consequence of the postwar
fragmentation, we end up moving around a lot, shuffling our appearances
and sometimes our memories, forking spares and merging deltas. At first
we live off the capital freed up by the Cats' liquidation; later we
supplement it by setting up a variety of business fronts. (If you've
ever heard of the Deadly Viper Assassination Squad, or Cordwainer Heavy
Industries, that's us.) Operationally, we work in loosely coupled
cells. I'm one of the heavy hitters, my background in combat ops
meshing neatly with my intelligence experience.
About fifty megs after the official end of
hostilities, I receive a summons to the Polity of the Jade Sunrise.
It's a strictly tech-limiting polity, and I'm in ortho drag, my cover
being a walkabout sword-fighting instructor. I've got access to enough
gray-market military wetware that I can walk the walk as well as slice
the floating hair, and my second-level cover is as a demilitarized
fugitive from summary justice somewhere that isn't
tech-limited—which sets me up for the Odessa Introduction if I
see a target of opportunity and need to run a Spanish Prisoner scam on
them. I've been doing a lot of that kind of job lately, but I'm not
sure what this particular one is about.
The designated rendezvous is the public
bathhouse on the Street of Orange Leaves. It's a narrow, cobbled,
mountainside road, running from near the main drag with the
silversmith's district down toward the harbor. It's a fine spring
afternoon, and the air is heavy with the smell of honeysuckle. A gang
of kids are playing throw-stick loudly outside the drunkenly leaning
apartment buildings, and the usual light foot traffic is laboriously
winding its way up and down the middle of the road, porters yelling
insults at rickshaw drivers and both groups venting their spleen on the
shepherd who's trying to drive a small flock of spidergoats uphill.
I've been here long enough to know what I'm
doing, more or less. I spot a boy who's hanging back on the sidelines
and snap my fingers. He comes over, not so much walking as slithering
so that his friends don't see him. Grubby, half-starved, his clothes
faded and patched: perfect. A coin appears between two of my fingers.
"Want another?" I ask.
He nods. "I don't do thex," he lisps. I look closer and realize he's got a cleft palate.
"Not asking you to." I make another coin appear,
this time out of reach. "The teahouse. I want you to look round the
back alley and see if there are any men waiting there. If there are,
come and tell me. If not, go in and find Mistress Sanni. Tell her that
the Tank says hello, then come and tell me."
"Two coin." He holds up a couple of fingers.
"Okay, two coin." I glare at him, and he does
the disappearing trick again. The kid's got talent, I realize, he does
that like a pro. Sharp doubts intrude: Maybe he is a pro? We rounded up the easy targets a long time ago—the ones who're still running ahead of us tend to be a lot harder to nail.
I don't have long to wait. A cent or so passes,
then lisp-boy is back. "Mithreth Thanni thay, the honeypot ith
overflowing. I take you to her."
The honeypot is overflowing: doesn't sound good. I pass him the two coins. "Okay, which way?"
He does a quick fade in front of me, but not too
fast for me to follow. We're round the back of a dubious alleyway, then
into a maze of anonymous backyards in a matter of seconds. Then he goes
over a rickety wooden fence and along another alley—this one full
of compost, the stink unbelievable—and up to an anonymous-looking
back door. "The'th here."
My hand goes to my sword hilt. "Really?" I stare
at the kid, then at the two dead thugs leaning against each other
beside the back step. The kid flashes a lightning grin at me.
"You did thay to check the back alley for muggerth, Robin."
"Sanni?"
He sketches a bow, urchin-cool. I raise an
eyebrow. The muggers look as if they're sleeping, if you ignore the
blood leaking from their noses. Very good work, for an intel type who
isn't a wet ops specialist. "We don't have long. Authenticate me."
We do the routine, something shared, something
do, something secret, something you—all the stuff the Republic of
Is used to do for us. "Okay, boss, why did you call me?" Sanni isn't my
boss these days, but old habits die hard.
"The honeypot is leaking." He drops the lisp and
stands tall, Sanni's natural presence shining through the bottleneck of
his three-hundred-meg body. "We—Vera Six, that is—got word
about twenty megs ago that a bunch of familiar spooks were haunting the
Invisible Republic. It all snowballed really fast. Looks like several
of the memory laundries have been infiltrated and the glasshouse has
been taken over."
I lean against the wall. "The glasshouse?"
Sanni nods. "Someone's going to have to go in
and polish the mirrors. Someone else. I forked an instance five megs
ago, and she hasn't reported back yet. It's going to be deep cover, I'm
afraid."
"Shit and pig-fucking shit." I glare at the dead muggers as if it's their fault.
The glasshouse is a rehab center for prisoners
of war. The setup is designed to encourage resocialization, to help
integrate them back into something vaguely resembling postwar society;
it's a former MASucker configured as a compact polity with with just
one T-gate in or out. Bad guys go in, civilians come out. At least,
that was the original theory.
"What's going on?" I ask.
"I think someone's broken our operational
security," says Sanni. I shudder and stare at the muggers. "Yes," he
says, seeing the direction of my gaze. "I said we don't have long. A
group drawn from several of our operational rivals have infiltrated the
Strategic Amnesia Commissariat of the Invisible Republic and taken over
the funding and operational control of the glasshouse. They discharged
all the current inmates, and we no longer know what's going on inside.
The glasshouse is under new management."
"I'm the wrong person, and in the wrong place.
Can't you send Magnus? Or the Synthesist? Do an uplevel callback to
descendant coordination and the veterans' association and see if
anybody—"
"I don't exist anymore," Sanni says calmly.
"After my delta went in and didn't report back, the bad guys came after
my primary and killed me repeatedly until I was almost entirely dead.
This"—he taps his skinny chest—"is just a partial. I'm a
ghost, Robin."
"But." I lick my lips, my heart pounding with shock. "Won't they simply kill me, too?"
"Not if you're identity-dead first." Sanni-ghost grins at me. "Here's what you're going to have to do . . ."
I am me. Joints
creak, heart pumps. It's warm and dark, and I'm sleepy. It slowly comes
to me that I'm squatting with my arms wrapped around my knees and my
chin—oh. So I'm not passing as Fiore? Right. That's satisfying to
know. One more fact to add to the pile. Roll the dice, see what comes
up on top.
I've been in two places at once for most of the
past two weeks. I've been in hospital, recovering at home. Talking to
Dr. Hanta, being horrified in the bell tower, trying to tell the
Reverend about Janis. And another me has been living in the library,
sleeping in the staff room, cautiously exploring off-limits sections of
the habitat, and latterly conspiring with Janis. Sanni. A
doubled moment of eternal jarring shock—meeting her head-on up
the stairs with a gun in her hand, just as startled as a week ago,
stumbling across her in the basement with a knife. She broke down and
cried, then, when she realized she wasn't the only one anymore. I
wouldn't have credited it if I hadn't been there myself.
Hard-as-diamonds Sanni, reduced to this? Isolation does strange things
to people . . .
"Come on, Reeve. Talk to me! Please. Are you all
right in there?" There's a note of desperation in her voice. "Say
something!" She leans over me anxiously. "How does it feel?"
"Let's see." I blink some more then unwrap my arms and push myself upright. I'm Reeve again. Damn, but I feel so light!
After being tied down by the centripetal chains fastened to Fiore's
flesh for more than a tenday, it's an amazing sensation. I could drift
away on a light breeze. I find myself grinning with delight, then I
look up at her and my face freezes. "I—she—nearly shopped
you to Fiore."
Janis blanches. "When?"
"After we disposed of Mick. Let me think." I
close my eyes. I need to get rid of the sudden storm surge of
adrenaline. "Low risk. I—she—was uncertain, and she
misjudged her timing. She didn't know who you are, she just thought you
were up to no good, so she tried to shop you for your own protection.
Fiore was preoccupied and told her to get lost. As long as nothing
reminds him, you're clear."
"Shit." Janis takes a step back, and I see that
she's still holding the stunner, but she's got it pointed at the floor.
She's swaying slightly, with relief or shock. "That was close."
I take a deep breath. "I've never been
brainwashed before." A little part of me still thinks Dr. Hanta is a
sympathetic and friendly practitioner who only means the best for me,
but it's outvoted by the much larger part of me that is eager to use
her intestines as a skipping rope. "I am"—breathing too fast, slow down—"not amused."
"Let's try a ping test." Janis hesitates for a moment. "Do you love me?"
"I love you." My heart speeds up again. "Hey, I heard that!"
"Yes." Janis nods. "I didn't, though. You know
what? I think the diffmerge must have scribbled over part of the CY
load in your netlink."
"No." I step out of the assembler and carefully
close the door. "It happened earlier. I heard it earlier"—I
frown—"talking to Sam, after I got out of hospital. I mean, she
heard it."
"Curious." She cocks her head to one side, a
very Sanni-like gesture that looks totally out of place on the Janis
I've gotten to know over the past few months. "Maybe if she—"
Janis snaps her fingers. "They've repurposed CY, haven't they? The bit
we're carrying around in here, it's used for loading behavior
scorefiles and such, but if Hanta's been modifying it to work as a
general-purpose boot loader . . ."
I shudder. The consequences are clear enough.
The original Curious Yellow used humans as an infective vector, but
only really ran inside A-gates that it had infected. A modified CY that
can actually run and do useful stuff inside a host's netlink, and which
doesn't trigger the detection patch, is a whole lot scarier. You can do
things with it like—"The zombies?"
"Yes." Janis looks as if she's seen a ghost. "Are we still in the glasshouse? Or have they relocated us?"
"We're still in the glasshouse," I reassure her.
It's the first bit of good news I've been able to piece together so
far. "MASucker Harvest Lore, if what she remembers seeing
upstairs is anything to go by. I mean, we might have been on a
different MASucker, but I thought you accounted for them all?"
"I think so." She nods, increasingly animated.
"So that locked area you found in City Hall"—when I was being
Fiore—"is probably the only T-gate on-site. Right?"
"There are the short-range gates to the
individual residences." I shiver again: Getting into City Hall and out
again without being identified was a matter of sheer brazen luck. Ten
minutes later I'd have run into the real Fiore. "They're definitely
switched off a hub at City Hall; I found the conference suite they
inducted us through. As I recall, on the Grateful for Duration
the longjump T-gate was connected to the flight control deck by a
direct short-range gate, but was itself stored in a heavily armored pod
outside the main pressure hull, in case someone tried to throw a nuke
through. So, if we assume they haven't rebuilt the Harvest Lore
in flight, there's going to be a way to get to the longjump node from
either City Hall or the cathedral, which is just over the road."
"Right." She nods. "So. If this is the Harvest Lore,
we're about two hundred years from next landfall. If we assume
exponentiation at, say, five infants per family, there's time for ten
generations . . . right, they're looking to breed up
about twenty thousand unauthenticated human vectors. Hanta's got time
to implant netlinks in them all. So when we arrive, she can flood the
network with this new population of carriers—"
"That's not going to happen." I smile, baring my teeth. "Never doubt that. They think they've got us trapped. But the right way to view it is, we can't retreat."
"You think we can take them on directly?" Sanni asks, and for a moment she's entirely Janis—isolated, damaged, frightened.
"Watch me," I tell her.
THE rest of the
day passes uneventfully. I say goodbye to Janis and go home as usual.
At least, that's what it must look like to anyone who's watching me.
I've spent the past few hours in an absentminded reverie, rolling
around irreconcilable memories and trying to work out where I stand.
It's most peculiar. On the one hand, I've got Reeve's horror at finding
Mick dead, her apprehensive fear that Janis might be "untrustworthy"
and a hazard to the friendly and open Dr. Hanta. And on the other hand,
I've got Robin's experiences. Sneaking around City Hall on tiptoe,
finding locked areas and avoiding Fiore by the skin of my teeth. Coming
across Mick in the hospital, with Cass. Dropping in on Janis in the
library, her initial guilty fear and the slowly growing
conviction—on my part—that she wasn't just a bystander but
an ally. Recognition protocols and the shock of mutual recognition.
Janis has been on her own in here for almost
half a year longer than I have. When she realized she wasn't alone, she
broke down and cried. She'd been certain it was only a matter of time
before Dr. Hanta got around to her. Terror, isolation, fear of the
midnight knock on the door: They wear you down after a while. She got
pregnant before anyone had figured out that part of the scheme. I'm
surprised she's still functioning at all.
The score system and the experimental protocols
are a real obstacle to us: For all we know, half the population of
YFH-polity could be cell members of one faction or another, blundering
around in the dark, unwilling to risk revealing themselves. But unless
we can somehow kick over the superstructure of artifice that the cabal
have established, we won't be able to link up with our potential allies
and identify our real enemies. Divide and conquer: You know it makes
sense.
I get home in due course, by way of the hardware
store. Sam is absent, so I go straight into the garage to see what I
can do. This isn't the time for recrimination, but I'm really pissed at
myself. I was going to get rid of this stuff! If nothing else, I found
making historic weapons fascinating. I may end up doing it as a hobby,
when all this is over, if there's scope for such luxuries.
Still, I guess I won't be needing the crossbow
now. Or the sword I was trying to temper. Sanni and I have got a
sterile assembler with full military scope. We left it cooking last
night, slowly and laboriously building a stockpile of polynitrohexose
bricks. Making weapons by A-gate is a slow process, and the higher the
energy density the longer it takes, so we compromised and opted for
chempowered weapons. The first batch of machine pistols will be ready
when we go in to work tomorrow. Which leads to the next logical
question—where's my Faraday cage bag gotten to in this pile?
I'm hopping around on top of a pile of scattered
steel bar stock and spilled screwdrivers, cursing up a blue streak and
clutching my left foot when some change in the light alerts me to the
fact that the garage door is open. "What the fuck—"
"Reeve?"
"Fuck!" I howl. "Shit. Dropped my hammer and—"
"Reeve? What's going on?"
I force myself to calm down. "I dropped my
hammer and it landed on this pile of bar stock and it bounced on my
toe." I hop some more. The pain is beginning to subside. "The hammer is
evil and must be punished."
"The hammer?" He pauses. "Have you been drinking?"
"Not yet." I lean against the wall and
experimentally put my foot on the floor. "Ouch. I just decided to turn
over a new—heh—leaf again. A girl needs a hobby and all
that." I raise an eyebrow.
He looks at me skeptically. "Bad day at the office?"
"It's always a bad day at the office, insofar as the office exists in the first place."
He frowns. "What's this about a hobby?"
"Extreme metalworking, or something like that. Have you seen my copy of The Swordsmith's Assistant? I was going to throw it out when I wasn't feeling myself, but I never got round to it."
You can almost see the light come on above his head. "Reeve? Is that you?"
"I had a crap day at the office, too. Reading
poetry out of boredom, you know? ‘Last night I met upon the
stair, a big fat man who wasn't there; he wasn't there again today:
inside my head he'll have to stay.' Ogden Nashville. Apparently, the
ancients seem to have liked him for some reason. C'mon, let's go and
round up some supper."
Sam retreats back into the house ahead of me, lips moving soundlessly as he turns it over in his head. I have
been reading poetry at work, I just hope my improvised doggerel gets
through. (Poetry really gums up conversational monitoring systems.
Parsing metaphor and emotional states is an AI-complete problem.)
We end up in the kitchen. "Were you thinking
about cooking again?" Sam asks cautiously. Thinking back to days past,
I suspect he wasn't too enthusiastic about being subjected to some of
my experiments.
"Let's just order a pizza instead, hmm? And a flask of wine."
"Why?" He stares at me.
"Do you have to turn every suggestion for what to do of an evening into an impromptu therapy session?"
He shrugs. "Just asking." He begins to turn away.
I grab his shoulder. "Don't do that."
He turns back sharply, looking surprised. "What?"
" ‘Last night I met upon the stair, a
big fat man who wasn't there; he wasn't there again today: inside my
head he'll have to stay' . . . I haven't been myself lately,
Sam, but I'm feeling a lot better today." I frown at him, willing the words to sink in.
"Oh, you mean . . ."
"Shh!" I hold up a warning finger. "The walls have ears."
Sam's eyes widen, and he begins to pull away
from me. I grab at his shoulder, hard, then step in close and wrap my
arms around him. He tries to push back, but I lean my face against his
shoulder. "We need to talk," I whisper.
"About what?" he whispers back. But at least he stops pushing.
"What's going on." I lick his earlobe, and he jolts as if I've stuck a live wire in it.
"Don't do that!" he hisses.
"Why not?" I ask, amused. "Afraid you might enjoy it?"
"But we, they—"
"I'm going to order food. While we're eating,
let's keep things light, okay? Afterward we'll go upstairs. I've got a
trick or two to show you. For avoiding eavesdroppers." I add in a whisper: "Smile, please."
"Won't it be obvious?" He's lowered his arms and
is holding me loosely around the waist. I shiver because I've been
wanting him to do that so badly for the past week—no, let's not
go there.
"No it won't be. They use low-level monitors to
track normal behavior. They call in high-end monitors only if we act
funny. So don't act funny."
"Oh." I look up as he looks down for a startled
instant, and I kiss him. He tastes of sweat and a faint, musty aroma of
dust and paperwork. A moment passes, then he responds enthusiastically.
"This is normal?" he asks.
"Whoa! Dinner first." I laugh, pulling back.
"Dinner first." He looks at me with a dark, serious expression.
I phone for a pizza and a couple of glass jars
of wine, and while Sam heads for the living room, I try to catch my
breath. Things are moving too fast for comfort, and I'm suddenly having
to deal with a mass of conflicted emotions at a time when all I was
wanting to do was recruit another dissatisfied inmate to the campaign.
The thing is, Sam and I have too much history for anything between us
to be simple—even though we haven't actually done very much
together. We haven't had time, and Sam's got big body-image
issues, and then she/me nearly fucked everything between us completely
while under the influence of the pernicious Dr. Hanta—oh,
hindsight is a wonderful tool, isn't it? Thinking about it, Sam's
dissatisfaction and passivity has been a running sore between us, and I
half suspect it took my apparent co-option to kick him into doing
something about it.
I feel guilty as I remember what I was thinking at the time. I can surrender . . . yes, and they'll make my life a living hell, won't they? Did I really
want to hand complete control over my life to the likes of Fiore,
Yourdon, and Hanta? I don't think I explicitly intended to do that, but
it amounted to the same thing. It feels like a moment of cowardice in
my own past, a voluntary moment of cowardice, and I feel oddly
dirty because of it. Because it's not far out of my normal character to
feel that way inclined—Hanta didn't rebuild her/me, she just
tweaked a few weightings in my mind map. "The only thing necessary for
the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing" in spades. And Sam got
to see that side of me. Ick.
The closet bings for attention and I take the
pizza tray and wine out of it. On my way through to the living room I
kick my shoes off, strewing them in the hallway. "Sam?" He turns round.
He's nesting in the sofa again, the television turned to some sports
channel. "Turn the volume up."
He raises an eyebrow at me but does as I ask,
and I sit down next to him. "Here. Garlic and tofu with deep-fried
lemon chicken steak." I open the box and pull out a slice, then hold it
in front of his mouth. "Eat?"
"What is this?"
"I want to feed you." I lean against him and
hold the pizza in front of his face, just out of reach. "Go on. You're
begging for it really, aren't you?"
"Gaah." He leans forward and takes a bite at
it—I try to pull my hand back, but I'm just too late and he gets
a mouthful. I laugh and lean closer and find his arm is around my
shoulders. Chewing: "You. Are. Intolerable."
"Manipulative," I suggest. "Annoying."
"All of the above?"
"Yes, all of it by turns." I feed him another
mouthful, then change my mind about letting him have the whole slice
and eat the rest of it myself.
"Every time I think I understand you, you change the rules," he complains. "Give me another . . ."
"Not my fault. I don't make the rules."
"Who does?"
I point a finger at the ceiling, waggle it
about. "Remember our chat in the library?" After I came out to Janis,
last Tuesday, she phoned Sam and asked him to come visit. He was very
surprised to see me-as-Fiore, almost as much as when we showed him the
basement and the A-gate. "Remember my face?" He nods, looking dubious.
"Janis and I sorted everything out. Settled the slight difference of
opinions. I'm feeling a lot better now, and less inclined to give up on
things."
His arm tightens. Warm, comforting, presence. "But why?"
I take a deep breath and offer him another slice
of pizza. Better keep it short. At this rate he's going to eat it all.
"You don't want to live like this."
"But I—" He stops.
"Do you?" I prod him.
He looks at me. "Watching you, this past week—" He shakes his head. "I'd love
to be able to settle in like that." He shakes his head again,
underscoring the ironic tone in his voice. "What alternative is there?"
"We're not supposed to talk about where we came
from." I pause to chew for a moment. "And we can't go back." I flick a
warning glance his way. "But we can make ourselves more comfortable
here if we rearrange our priorities." Will he get it?
Sam sighs. "If only we could do that." He glances down at his lap.
"I've got a new priority for you," I say, my heart beating faster.
"Really?"
"Yes." I put the pizza box down and plaster
myself against him. "We can start right here by you picking me up and
carrying me upstairs to the bathroom."
"The bathroom?"
"Yep." I kiss him again, and suddenly I'm not
sure this is a good idea at all. "Where we're going to get in the
shower together, and wash each other, and talk. Can't go to bed
smelling of office work, can we?"
"Shower—" His monosyllables aren't his
most appealing attribute: I kiss him into silence, shivering with alarm
at my own responses.
"Now."
THINGS do not go according to plan.
The plan seemed simple enough. Get Sam on board
again. Doing that, holding a proper conversation with him, was another
matter with the ever-present risk of being overheard. But if you
disguise your suspicious activities as something expected of you, while
only the dumb listener bots are online, you've got a good chance of
doing it undetected. The dumb listeners aren't good for much more than
keyword monitoring, and the cabal is sufficiently short on spare bodies
that they can't monitor everything we say all the time.
So call me naive, if you like. I figured that as
a married couple, one of us pretending to seduce the other and then
dragging them into a shower—lots of nice white noise to confuse
audio tracking, sheets of water to make it hard to lip-read, and an
excuse to stand really close together—would be a pretty good way
of evading surveillance.
What I didn't consider was that when I stand too
close to Sam my skin tingles, and I feel warm and needy in intimate
places. And what I especially didn't consider is that Sam is horribly
conflicted but has corresponding urges. He's human, too, and we both
have certain needs, which we've been trying to ignore for much too long.
Sam does as I ask him, and about halfway up the
stairs I realize that I'm going to lose control if we do this. I nearly
tell him to stop, but for some reason my mouth doesn't want to open. He
puts me down on the bathroom carpet and stands too close. "What now?"
he asks, a quiet tension in his voice.
"We, um, undress." Without realizing quite how,
I find my hands are already working on his trouser belt. When I feel
him begin to unbutton my blouse, I shudder, and not with fear. "Shower."
"This isn't such a good—"
"Shut up."
"You'll become, uh, pregnant."
"Won't." Worry about it later. I run my
hand around his back, feeling the thin man-fur that runs up the base of
his spine, and I lean closer. "Not worried anymore."
"But." I feel him unzip my skirt. Hands on my thighs. "Surely."
I kiss him to make him stop. We're down to underwear. "Shower. Now." My teeth are chattering with a rising tide of need that threatens to wreck what's left of my self-control.
We're in the shower cubicle, wearing our
underwear, and I dial the pressure up to maximum and the temperature to
fusion. His tongue—garlic and honey and a hint of something else,
of him. Arms around each other, we stand under the spray, and I feel
the tension in his back. He's got an erection, of course. Why am I
still wearing anything? Moments later I'm not. And a moment after that
I'm crunched against the wall, my knees drawn up, gasping at the size
of him inside me.
"You want to talk . . ."
The entire universe is in here. I wrap my arms around him and latch on to his lips, hungrily. I want to talk, but right now I've got higher priorities.
"Opening ceremony."
"Yes?"
"On a MASucker. Yes!"
"Yes . . ."
"Only one T-gate out. Six gigs to next star
system. If we break connection, bad guys can't pay up on scorefiles.
Breaks carrot side of dictatorship, no payoff for compliance.
Yes . . ."
"Overthrow the—the?"
He heaves like the wild sea. I'm lost on him,
abandoned. At first when I was Reeve, the idea of pregnancy horrified
me. Then Hanta tweaked something, and it was no big deal. Now I just
don't care anymore: It's survivable, and if it's the cost of
having Sam right now, I'll pay. I want to focus, to plan, but we've
gotten carried away. Sam is pounding away with no subtlety, and he
knows better, which means he's lost on the ocean, too. If we can find
each other and cling together through the night, who knows? "Sam, I, I
want you to—"
"Oh!" A moment later, a quieter "oh!" And a
sensation of spreading warmth that drives me to grind against him until
everything goes away, and I become the ocean for a few eternal seconds.
THINGS don't go
according to plan, but they go strangely well. After the first mad
flush of lust, we collapse in the shower, then soap each other off
thoroughly. Sam doesn't cringe away from my hands this time but seems
quiet, thoughtful. I kiss him, and he responds. After a while I begin
to feel as if my skin's about to fall off: I can barely see thebathroom for steam. "Let's dry off and go to bed," I suggest, feeling another little jolt of worry.
"Okay." Sam turns the shower head to OFF and
opens the cubicle door. It's cold out there. I shiver, and for a wonder
he wraps his arms around me.
"Are you feeling comfortable?" I ask hesitantly. "I mean, with this?"
He thinks for a moment. "I'm comfortable with you."
"But—"
He kisses the back of my head. "It's you. That makes it easier."
There's nothing left to divide us: We know
exactly how fucked up we are. We've had such disastrous
misunderstandings already that there's nothing left to come. Sam freaks
at the idea of being human and male and large? Yes. I have problems
with the idea of pregnancy, and there're no contraceptives in
YFH-Polity? Sure. We're past all that. It's all going to be very simple
from now on.
So we towel each other dry and I take his hand
and together we go to the bedroom, where presently we make love again,
tenderly and slowly.
THE next
morning, I stumble downstairs late, disheveled and happy, to find there
is a letter waiting for me on the front hall carpet. It's like a bucket
of cold water in the face. I pick it up and carry the piece of paper
into the kitchen and read it while the coffee machine gurgles and chugs
to itself.
To: Mrs. Reeve Brown
From: The Polity Administration Committee
Dear Mrs. Brown
It is now four months since your
arrival in YFH-Polity. In this time, numerous changes have taken place
in our little community, and we will shortly be commencing Phase Two of
the experiment in which you agreed to participate.
Accordingly, may I extend to you an
invitation to our first Town Meeting, to be held at City Hall on Sunday
morning in place of the regularly scheduled
Sunday Service. The meeting will explain the forthcoming Phase Two
changes, and will be followed by a service of thanksgiving, to be
conducted by the Very Reverend Dr. H. Yourdon in the cathedral.
Yours truly . . .
This puts a new perspective on things, doesn't
it? I shake my head, then take the two coffee mugs back upstairs. On my
way I snag the identical-looking letter with Sam's name on it.
"What do you think?" he asks, when he's had time to read it.
"I think it's exactly what it sounds like." I
shrug. "Things are getting bigger, new faces, new scenery—this
‘cathedral' they're opening! You can't run a town the way you run
a parish of a couple of hundred people, can you? No way can everybody
know each other. So they'll need a different intergroup score mechanism
to keep people behaving themselves. To account for the anonymity of
cities, the sight of familiar strangers."
His cheek twitches. "I'm not sure I like the sound of that."
"Oh, it can't be that bad," I assure him, rolling my eyes.
"Can't it?"
I nod. "No." A thought strikes me. "Listen, can you get away from the office for lunch?"
"What, you mean . . . ?"
"Yes. Drop by the library about one o'clock, and we'll go eat together." I smile at him. "How does that sound?"
"You want me to—" He works it out. "Yes, I can do that."
"Good." I lean close and kiss him on the cheek. "Be seeing you."
I arrive at work fifteen minutes early,
clutching my bag—not, in and of itself, an unusual
variation—but the place is unlocked because Janis is already in.
"Janis?" I poke my head round the office door.
She's not there. I sigh and head for the depository.
Down in the basement I find Janis loading
magazines into box files. "Give me a hand," she says tensely. "If Fiore
or Yourdon turns up while we're here . . ."
"Check." The magazines are vaguely banana-shaped
and don't fit very well, but I can get four or five in each file box
before I put them back on the shelf. Janis has six machine pistols
lined up before her on a chair, still in their synthesis gel capsules.
"Did you get the letter?" I ask.
"Yes. So did Norm." Her husband—I don't
know much about him. "They're pulling things forward. Once they
institutionalize the police and stop relying on isolation to do their
work for them, we're in trouble."
"Agreed." I pause. "Ladies' sewing club?" That
was my idea, when I was Robin, but Janis fronted it, and after my one
meeting with them while I was being Reeve, I guess she's going to have
to sort them out.
"I invited them here for lunch. Hurry up!" She's very twitchy this morning.
"Okay, I'm hurrying." I get the last of the
magazines stashed in box files on the shelves, for all the world
looking like innocent hard copy files of Curious Yellow. "I invited Sam
round. I think he's on message."
"Oh, good. I was hoping you two would sort
things out." A brief smile. "Now let's go upstairs. We've got a library
to open before we can overthrow the government."
SUBTLETY isn't
going to get us very far at this point, so Janis orders up a delivery
of sandwiches from a catering outfit working from the back of a cafe,
and when the ladies' sewing circle and revolutionary command committee
shows up, we lock the front door, hang out the CLOSED sign, and pile downstairs.
"We've got one day to organize this," says Janis. "Reeve, you want to summarize the situation?"
Heads turn. From their expressions, I don't
think they were expecting me to be here. I smile. "This
place—this polity—was originally designed as a glasshouse,
a military prison. It works too well; the YFH cabal figured that a
prison doesn't just keep people in, it keeps other people out.
So they set it up as a research lab, what we're now seeing." She
gestures at the shelves of box files on the back wall. "They're working
on developing a new type of cognitive dictatorship, one spread via
Curious Yellow, and they're breeding up a population of carriers for
it. When we get to the end of the ‘experiment' time-scale they're
planning on reintegrating everyone into general society—and using
your children to spread it." I see Janis's hand move unconsciously to
her stomach. "Do you want to help them?"
A mutter goes round the room, growing quickly: "No!"
"I'm glad to hear that," Janis says drily. "Now,
this raises the question—what is to be done? Reeve and I have
been working on an answer. Anyone want to guess?"
Sam sticks his hand up. "You're going to blow
the longjump gate anchor frame," he says calmly, "stranding us
teraklicks from the nearest other human polity. And then you're going
to hunt the cabal down and shoot them, find their backup networks and
offline them, then jump up and down on the smoking wreckage."
Janis smiles. "Not bad! Anyone else?"
El sticks her hand up. "Hold elections?"
Janis looks taken aback. "Something like that, I
guess." She shrugs. "But that's getting a little ahead of ourselves,
isn't it? What haven't I mentioned?"
I clear my throat. "We know where the longjump gate is. Which is good news and bad news."
"Why?" asks Helen. They're beginning to get
involved, which is good, but could turn bad if Janis and I don't
present them with a reasonable picture. They're not idiots, they must
know that we wouldn't have brought them in on the cellar if the
situation wasn't desperate.
"Reeve?" prompts Janis.
"Okay, here's the frame: We're on a MASucker
that somehow got de-crewed during the censorship wars. At a guess, CY
broke out during a scheduled crew shift change or something. Anyway,
the polity we're in is actually a quilted patchwork of sectors spliced
together by shortjump gates in all those road tunnels, but they're all
in a single physical manifold aboard one ship rather than scattered
across separate habs. That's why it was possible to turn it into a
prison. There's only one longjump gate in or out of the MASucker, and
it's stashed at one end of an armored pod on the outside of the hull
with a shortjump gate at the other end of the tunnel—this is
standard MASucker security, you understand. Someone outside could throw
a nuke through at the ship and it would be expended outside the hull.
Anyway, we first need to take and hold the shortjump gate leading to
the longjump pod, then we need to trash the longjump pod.
"We need to sever communications between us and their base of operations in the surgeon-confessors' hall, then make sure everybody knows.
Yourdon and Fiore have gotten away with running this existential
dictatorship unopposed because they've got a sufficient proportion of
us convinced that we're in line for a payback if we play along. Hanta
gives them an ace in their hole. They don't need to worry about the
payback; eventually she'll have time to just adjust everyone who drifts
out of line. Once we're cut off from the outside, the cabal lose their
backup and their social leverage, and we've got a straight fight. But
if we don't succeed, they can just block the gates between parish
sectors and mop us up in detail, one sector at a time."
I pause to lick my lips. "I spent some time on a
MASucker before the war. The door to the longjump pod was stashed near
the bridge, uh, the administrative block—which would correspond
to either the cathedral or City Hall in the new structure Yourdon is
assembling. I did some snooping around last week, and I found where
Yourdon lives. He's got a suite up on the top floor of City Hall, with
security up to the eyeballs—I didn't get in, but I poked around
the lower levels—and it turns out that City Hall bears a
remarkable resemblance to the Captain's Lodge on the MASucker I was
aboard. In which case, the T-gate to the longjump pod will be on the
top floor, in a secure suite adjacent to the captain's quarters."
I stop.
Janis stands up. "There you've got it, folks, so
let's keep this simple. We all have invitations to the ceremony at City
Hall the day after tomorrow. I propose that we go there. I've had the
fab here"—she waves at the assembler—"turning out kits with
shielded bags so you can carry them away without fear of surveillance.
Reeve?"
I clear my throat. "Plan is, we take our kit
along and cut loose as soon as Yourdon steps up to the front to address
everyone. Team Green's job is to secure the hall, drop any armed
support the bad guys have, and kill as many copies of Yourdon, Fiore,
and Hanta as we can find. They'll have backups or multiples running
live, but if we do everything fast, we can stop the instances
in City Hall getting word out. Meanwhile, Team Yellow will go up to the
captain's—the Bishop's—quarters and blow the longjump pod
right off the side of the ship. Any questions?"
Hands go up.
"Okay, here's what we'll do. El, Bernice, Helen,
Priss, Morgaine, Jill, you're all on Team Green with Janis, who's in
overall charge. Sam, Greg, Martin, and Liz are Team Yellow with me. I'm
in charge. Team Yellow, hang around, and I'll brief you. Team Green,
eat your lunch, then go back to work—come back to the library
individually this afternoon or tomorrow, and Janis will sort you out,
back you up, and brief you."
There's more muttering from the back. Janis
clears her throat. "One more thing. Operational security is paramount.
If anyone says anything, we are all . . . not dead.
Worse. Dr. Hanta has a full-capability brainfuck clinic running in the
hospital. If you give any sign outside of this basement that you're
involved in this plan, they'll shut down the shortjump gates, isolating
you, and flood us with zombies until we run out of bullets and knives.
Then they'll cart us away and turn us into happy, smiling slaves. Some
of you may figure that's better than dying—all right, that's your
personal choice. But if I think any of you is going to try to impose
that choice on me by going to the priests, you will find that my personal choice is to shoot you dead first.
"If you don't want to be in on this, say so right now—or
hang around upstairs and tell me when everyone else has gone. We've got
an A-gate; we can just back you up and keep you on ice for the
duration. There's no reason to be part of this if you're frightened.
But if you don't explicitly opt out, then you're accepting my command,
and I will expect total obedience on pain of death, until we've secured the ship."
Janis looks round at everyone, and her
expression is harsh. For a moment Sanni is back, shining through her
skin like a bright lamp through camouflage netting, frightening and
feral. "Do you all understand?"
There's a chorus of yesses from around the room.
Then one of the pregnant women at the back pipes up. "What are we
waiting for? Let's roll!"
TIME rushes by, counting down to a point of tension that lies ahead.
We've got logistic problems. Having the A-gate
in the library basement is wonderful—it's almost indispensable to
what we're attempting to do—but there are limits on what it can
churn out. No rare isotopes, so we can't simply nuke the longjump pod.
Nor do we have the design templates for a tankbody or combat drones or
much of anything beyond personal sidearms. You can't manufacture
T-gates in an A-gate, so we've got to work without wormhole
tech—that rules out Vorpal blades. Given time or immunity from
surveillance we could probably work around those restrictions, but
Janis says we've got a maximum feedstock mass flow of a hundred
kilograms per hour. I suspect Fiore, or whoever decided to plant this
thing in the library basement, throttled it deliberately to stop
someone like me from turning it into an invasion platform. Their
operational security is patchy after the manner of many overhasty and
understaffed projects, but it's far from nonexistent.
In the end Janis tells me, "I'm going to leave
it on overnight, building a brick of plasticized RDX along with
detonators and some extra gun cartridges. We can put together about ten
kilos over a six-hour run. That much high explosive is probably about
as much energy as we can risk sucking without triggering an alarm
somewhere. Do you think you can do the job on the longjump gate frame
with that much?"
"Ten kilos?" I shake my head. "That's disappointing. That's really not good."
She shrugs. "You want to risk going technical on Yourdon, be my guest."
She's got a point. There's a very good chance
that the bad guys will have planted trojans in some of the design
templates for more complex weapons—anything much more
sophisticated than handguns and raw chemical explosive will have
interlocks and sensor systems that might slip past our vetting. The
machine pistols she's run up are crude things, iron sights and
mechanical triggers and no heads-up capability. They don't even have
biometric interlocks to stop someone taking your own gun and shooting
you with it. They're a step up from my crossbow project, but not a very
high step. On the other hand, they've got no telltale electronics that Yourdon or Fiore might subvert.
"Did you test the gun cartridges? Just in case?"
Janis nods. "Thunder stick go bang. No fear on that account."
"Well, at least something's going to work, then." I'd be happier if we could lay in a brace of stunguns, but since I'm not wearing Fiore anymore, that would be kind of difficult to arrange.
Janis looks at me. "Make or break time."
I breathe deeply. "When has it been any other way?"
"Ah, but. We had backups, didn't we?" Her
shoulders are set defensively. "This time it's our last show. It isn't
how I expected things to turn out."
"Me neither." I finish packing my bag and straighten up. "Do you think anyone will crack?"
"I hope not." She stares at the wall, eyes
focused on some inner space. "I hope not." Her hand goes to her belly
again. "There's a reason I recruited gravid females. It does things to
your outlook. I've learned that much." Her eyes glisten. "It can go
either way—peeps who're still role-playing their way through YFH
in their head get angry and frightened, and those who've internalized
it, who're getting ready to be mothers, get even angrier about what
those brainfuckers are going to do to their children. Once you get
through the fear and disbelief, you get to the anger. I don't think any
of the pregnant females will crack, and you'll notice the males who
were along all have partners who are involved."
"True." Janis—no, Sanni—is sharp as
a knife. She knows what she's doing when it comes to organizing a
covert operation cell. But if she's a knife, she's one with a brittle
edge. "Sanni, can I ask you a question?"
"Sure." Her tone is relaxed but I see the little signs of tension, the wrinkles around her eyes. She knows why I used that name.
"What do you want to do after this?" I grasp for
the right words: "We're about to lock ourselves down in this little
bubble-polity like something out of the stone age, a generation ship . . .
we're not going to be getting out of here for gigasecs, tens of gigs,
at a minimum! I mean, not unless we go into suspension afterward. And I
thought you, you'd be wanting to escape, to get out and warn everybody
off. Break YFH from the outside. Instead, well, we've come up with a
case for pulling down the escape tunnel on top of ourselves. What do you want to do afterward once we've cut ourselves off?"
Sanni looks at me as if I've sprouted a second
head. "I want to retire." She glances round at the basement nervously.
"This place is giving me the creeps; we ought to go home soon. Look,
Reeve—Robin—this is where we belong. This is the
glasshouse. It's where they sent the damaged ones after the war. The
ones who need reprogramming, rehabilitation. Yourdon and Hanta and
Fiore belong here—but don't you think maybe we belong here, too?" She looks haunted.
I think for a minute. "No, I don't think so."
Then I force myself to add, "But I think I could grow to like it here
if only we weren't under pressure from . . . them."
"That's what it was designed for. A rest home, a
seductive retirement, balm for the tortured brow. Go on home to Sam."
She walks toward the stairs without looking at me. "Think about what
you've done, or what he did. I've got blood on my hands, and I know
it." She's halfway up the stairs, and I have to move to keep up with
her. "Don't you think that the world outside ought to be protected from
people like us?"
At the top of the staircase I think of a reply.
"Perhaps. And perhaps you're right, we did terrible things. But there
was a war on, and it was necessary."
She takes a deep breath. "I wish I had your self-confidence."
I blink at her. My self-confidence? Until I found her frightened and alone here, I'd always thought Sanni
was the confident one. But now the other conspirators have gone, she
looks confused and a bit lost. "I can't afford doubts," I admit.
"Because if I start doubting, I'll probably fall apart."
She produces a radiant smile, like first light
over a test range. "Don't do that, Robin. I'm counting on you. You're
all the army I need."
"Okay," I say. And then we go our separate ways.
I walk home, my
mesh-lined bag slung over one shoulder. Today is not a day for a taxi
ride, especially now that there's some risk of running into Ike.
Everything seems particularly vivid for some reason, the grass greener
and the sky bluer, and the scent of the flower beds outside the
municipal buildings overwhelmingly sweet and strange. My skin feels as
if I've picked up a massive electrostatic charge, hair follicles
standing erect. I am alive, I realize. By this time tomorrow I might be dead, dead and
gone forever because if we fail, the YFH cabal will still have the
T-gate, and their coconspirators won't hesitate to delete whatever
copies of us they have on file. I might be part of history, dry as
dust, an object of study if there ever is another generation of
historians.
And if do somehow manage to survive, I'll be a prisoner here for the next three unenhanced lifetimes.
I have mixed emotions. When I went into combat
before—what I remember of it—I didn't worry about dying.
But I wasn't human, then. I was a regiment of tanks. The only way I
could die would be if our side lost the entire war.
But I've got Sam, now. The thought of Sam's
being in danger makes me cringe. The thought of both of us being at the
mercy of the YFH cabal makes me a different kind of uneasy. Bend the neck, surrender, and it will be fine: That's the echo of her
personal choice coming back to haunt me. I rejected her, didn't I? But
she's part of me. Indivisible, inescapable. I can never escape from the
knowledge that I surrendered—
Sanni has surrendered, I realize. Not to Yourdon
and Fiore, but to the end of the war. She doesn't want to fight
anymore; she wants to settle down and raise a family and be a
small-town librarian. Janis is the real Sanni now, as real as she gets.
The glasshouse may have been subverted and perverted by the plotters,
but it's still working its psychological alchemy on us. Maybe that's
what Sanni was talking about. We're none of us who or what we used to
be, although our history remains indelible. I try to imagine what I
must have looked like to the civilians aboard the habs we conquered
through coup de main, and I find a blind spot. I know I must have
terrified them, but inside the armor and behind the guns I was just me,
wasn't I? But how were they to know? No matter. It's over, now.
I've got to live with it, just the way we had to do it. It seemed
necessary at the time: If you didn't want your memories to be censored
by feral software, or worse, by unscrupulous opportunists who'd
trojaned the worm, you had to fight. And once you take the decision to
fight, you have to live with the consequences. That's the difference
between us and Yourdon, Fiore, and Hanta. We're willing to harbor
doubts, to let go; but they're still fighting to bring the war back to
their enemies. To us.
These aren't good thoughts to be thinking.
They're downright morbid, and I can live without them—but they
won't leave me alone, so as I walk I try to fight back by swinging my
bag and whistling a jolly tune. And I try to look at myself from the
outside as I go. Here's a jolly librarian, outwardly a young woman in a
summer dress, shoulder bag in hand, whistling as she walks home from a
day at work. Invert the picture, though, and you see a dream-haunted
ex-soldier, clutching a kitbag containing a machine pistol, slinking
back to her billet for a final time before the—
Look, just stop, why don't you?
That's better.
When I get home, I stash the bag in the kitchen. The TV is going in the living room, so I shed my shoes and pad through.
"Sam."
He's on the sofa, curled up opposite the
flickering screen as usual. He's holding a metal canister of beer. He
glances at me as I come in.
"Sam." I join him on the sofa. After a moment I
realize that he's not really watching the TV. Instead, his eyes are on
the patio outside the glass doors at the end of the room. He breathes
slowly, evenly, his chest rising and falling steadily. "Sam."
His eyes flicker toward me, and a moment later the corners of his mouth edge upward. "Been working late?"
"I walked." I pull my feet up. The soft cushions
of the sofa swallow them. I lean sideways against him, letting my head
fall against his shoulder. "I wanted to feel . . ."
"Connected."
"Yes, that's it, exactly." I can feel his pulse,
and his breathing is profound, a stirring in the roots of my world. "I
missed you."
"I missed you, too." A hand touches my cheek, moves up to brush hair back from my forehead.
At moments like this I hate being an
unreconstructed human—an island of thinking jelly trapped in a
bony carapace, endless milliseconds away from its lovers, forced to
squeeze every meaning through a low-bandwidth speech channel. All men are islands, surrounded by the bottomless oceans of unthinking night. If I were half of who I used to be, and
had my resources to hand—and if Sam, if Kay, wanted to—we
could multiplex, and know each other a thousand times as deeply as this
awkward serial humanity permits. There's a poignancy to knowing what
we've lost, what we might have had together, which only makes me want
him more strongly. I move uneasily and clutch at his waist. "What took
you so long?"
"I'm running away." He finally turns his head to look at me sidelong. "From myself."
"Me too," Throwing caution to the wind: "Is that part of your problem? With being . . . this?"
"It's too close." He swallows. "To what they wanted me to be."
I don't ask who "they" were. "Do you want to escape? To leave the polity?"
He's silent for a long while. "I don't think
so," he says eventually. "Because I'd have to go back to being what I
want not to be, if that makes sense to you. Kay was a disguise, Reeve,
a mask. A hollow woman. Not a real person."
I snuggle closer to him. "I know you wanted to grow into her."
"Do you?" He raises an eyebrow.
"Look, why do you think I'm here?"
"Point." He looks momentarily rueful. "Do you want to leave?"
We're not really talking about staying or
leaving, this is understood, but what he really means by that—"I
thought I did," I admit, toying with the buttons on the front of his
shirt. "Then Dr. Hanta sorted me out, and I realized that what I really
wanted was somewhere to heal, somewhere to be me. Community. Peace." I
get my hand inside his shirt, and his breath acquires a little hoarse
edge that makes me squeeze my thighs together. "Love." I pause. "Not
necessarily her way, mind you." His hand is stroking my hair. His other
hand—"Do that some more."
"I'm afraid, Reeve."
"That makes two of us."
Later: "I want what you described."
I gasp. "Makes two. Of us. Oh."
"Love."
And we continue our conversation without words, using a language that
no abhuman watcher AI can interpret—a language of touch and
caress, as old as the human species. What we tell each other is simple.
Don't be afraid, I love you. We say it urgently and
emphatically, bodies shouting our mute encouragement. And in the dark
of the night, when we reach for each other, I dare myself to admit that
it might work out all right in the end.
We aren't bound to fail.
Are we?
BREAKFAST is an
affair of quiet desperation. Over the coffee and toast I clear my
throat and begin a carefully planned speech. "I need to go to the
library before Church, Sam, I forgot my gloves."
"Really?" He looks up, worry lines crisscrossing his forehead.
I nod vigorously. "I can't go to Church without them, it wouldn't be decent." Decent is one of those keywords the watchers monitor. Gloves aren't actually a dress code infraction, but they're a good excuse.
"Okay, I suppose I'll have to come with you," he
says, with all the enthusiasm of a condemned man facing the airlock.
"We need to leave soon, don't we?"
"Yes, I'd better get my bag," I say.
"I have a new waistcoat to wear."
I raise an eyebrow. His clothing sense is even
more artificial than my own. "It's upstairs," he explains. For a moment
I think he's going to say something more, something compromising, but
he manages to bottle it up in time. My stomach squirms queasily. "Take
care, darling."
"Nothing can possibly go wrong," he says with studied irony. He rises and heads for the staircase to our bedroom. (Our
bedroom. No more lonely nights.) My heart seems to catch an extra beat.
Then it's time to clear up the detritus, put the plates in the
dishwasher, and get my shoes on.
When Sam comes downstairs, he's dressed for
Church—with a many-pocketed vest under his suit jacket, and, in
his hand, the briefcase we packed yesterday. "Let's, uh, go," he says,
and casts me a wan grin.
"Yup," I say, then check the clock and pick up my extra-large handbag. "Let's roll."
We arrive at the library around ten o'clock, and
I let us in. The door to the cellar is already open. I reach into my
bag as I go down the steps, conscious that if someone's blown the
operation, then the bad guys could be waiting for me. But when I get to
the bottom I find Janis.
"Hi, Janis," I say slightly nervously.
"Hi yourself." She lowers her gun. "Just checking."
"Indeed. Sam? Come on down." I turn back to Janis. "Still waiting for Greg, Martin, and Liz."
"Right." Janis gestures at a pile of grayish
plastic bricks sitting on one of the chairs. "Sam? I think it'll work
better if you carry these."
"Sure." Sam ambles over and picks up a brick.
Squeezes it experimentally, then sniffs it. "Hmm, smells like success.
Detonators?"
"On the sofa." I spot the stack of spare
magazines and take a couple, then check they're loaded properly. "Where
are the cogsets?" I ask.
"Coming." Janis waves at the A-gate. "We need to synchronize our watches, too."
"Okay." This isn't going to work too well
without headsets and cognitive radio transceivers, but they're last on
our list of items to assemble because they're too obvious. They're
easier to sabotage than metal plumbing and chemical explosives, and a
lot likelier to tripwire the alarms in the A-gate than a collection of
antiques. If the radios don't work, our fallback is
crude—mechanical wristwatches and a prearranged time to start
shooting.
Sam stuffs bricks of Composition-C into his vest
pockets, squeezing them to fit. The vest bulges around his waist, as if
he's suddenly put on weight, and when he pulls his jacket on it hangs
open. What he's doing reminds me of something I once knew, something
alarming, but I can't quite remember what. So I shake my head and go
upstairs to wait behind the front desk.
A few minutes later Martin and Liz arrive
together. I send them down to the basement. I'm getting worried when
Greg appears. We're running short of time. It's 10:42 and the meeting
is due to start in just a kilosec or so. "What kept you?" I ask.
"I feel rough," he admits. I think he's been drinking. "Couldn't sleep properly. Let's get this over with, huh?"
"Yeah." I point him at the cellar. "Gang's down there."
T minus ten minutes. The door opens, and Janis
comes out. "Okay, I'm off to start the show in the auditorium," she
tells me. A fey smile. "Good luck."
"You too." She leans forward, and I hug her briefly, then she's off, walking down the library path toward City Hall.
"Where's Sam?" I ask.
"Oh, he had something extra to do down there,"
Liz says, a trifle sniffily. "Last-minute nerves." A moment later he
comes up the stairs. "Come on, Sam, want to miss the show?"
I open my mouth. "Time to move!"
Fragments of memory converge on a point in time:
Five of us, three males and two females, walking
along the front of Main Street toward City Hall. All in our Church
outfits, with subtle changes—Sam's vest, my shoes, Martin's bag.
Discreet earbuds adding their hum to our left ears, flesh-toned pickups
parallel to our jawlines. Businesslike.
"Merge with the crowd, then when they head for the auditorium doors, break left under the door labeled FIRE EXIT. Meet me on the other side."
Purpose. Tension. Beating heart, nervousness. A faint aroma of mineral oil on my fingertips. The usual heightened awareness.
Cohorts and parishes of regular
citizens—inmates—are gathering on the front steps and in
the open reception hall of the biggest building on Main Street. Some I
recognize; most are anonymous.
Jen looms out of the crowd, smiling, converging on me. My guts freeze. "Reeve! Isn't it wonderful?"
"Yes, it is," I say, slightly too coldly because she stares at me, and her eyes narrow.
"Well, excuse me," she says, and turns on her heel as if to walk away, then pauses. "I'd have thought you'd be celebrating."
"I am." I raise an eyebrow at her. "Are you?"
"Hah!" And with a contemptuous smirk, she wheels away and latches on to Chris's arm.
A cold sweat prickles up and down my spine—sheer relief, mostly—and I head toward the FIRE EXIT
sign, which is conveniently close to the rest rooms. I pause for a
second to glance around and check my watch (T minus three minutes) then
lean on the emergency bar. The door scrapes open, and I step through
into a concrete-lined stairwell.
Click. I glance round. Liz lowers her gun. I'm too slow today,
I think hopelessly. I mute my mike. "Two minutes," I say, backing into
the corner opposite her niche. She nods. I reach into my bag, pull out
my gun, stuff the spare magazines into my pockets, and drop the bag.
Click. That's me.
One minute. Sam and Greg and Martin, the latter looking slightly harried. I key my mike. "Follow me."
A couple of weeks ago, wearing Fiore's stolen
flesh, I explored this complex—extremely cautiously, taking pains
to be certain that Yourdon was occupied elsewhere at the time. The
first floor contains the lobby and a big auditorium, plus a couple of
things described on the building map as "courtrooms." The second floor,
which we pass without stopping, is wall-to-wall office space. The third
floor . . . well, I didn't spend much time there.
We reach the door and pause. "Zero," I say, tracking the sweep of my watch hand.
A second later there's a chime in my headset. "Go!" says Janis.
"Now."
Greg opens the door fast, and Martin and Liz
duck through, then pronounce the bare-floored corridor clear. I lead us
along it, then there's another door, and Greg forces the exit bar from
our side. Carpet. A short, narrow passage. Yourdon must have left by now, surely?
I rush forward and find myself in a boringly mundane living room,
furnished in dark age fashion except for the smooth white bulge of an
A-gate in one corner. "Here," I say. "Spread out."
We're not experts at house searches. Doubtless
if there was armed resistance waiting for us, we'd be easy prey. But
the house is empty. Three bedrooms, a living room, an
office—there's a desk and an ancient computer terminal, and
books—and a kitchen and bathroom and another room full of boxes.
It's empty. Empty of personality as well as anachronisms like a longjump gate.
"What now?" asks Sam.
"We check out front." I walk up to the front
door of the apartment, then Greg squeezes past me and unlocks it. He
pulls it open and steps out, then I follow to see where we are, and the
ground leaps up and whacks me across the knees with a concussive jolt
too deep to call a noise.
"Panic one," Janis says in my ear, a prearranged code for Team Green. That was a bomb, I think dizzily.
There's a click behind me, then a scream of
pain. I whip round and that saves my life because the short burst of
gunfire hammers past me and catches Liz instead, bullets slapping into
her body as she spins round. I keep turning and drop to one knee, then
fire a continuous burst that empties the magazine and nearly sprains my
wrists.
"* * *," says Janis, in my ringing ears.
"Repeat." I'm staring at Greg. What used to be
Greg. Someone behind me is making horrible sounds. I think it's Liz.
"We have a code red, two down."
"I said, Panic two," says Janis. "They've got a Vorpal—"
Pink noise fills my ears, and her voice breaks
up: cognitive radios meet heuristic jamming. "Come on!" I yell at Sam,
who's bending over Liz. "Follow me!"
We're on a landing at the top of the stairs.
Yourdon's apartment covers one side of the building, but on the other
side—there's a door. I dash toward it, reloading on the go. Greg tried to kill me, I realize. Which means he warned them. So . . .
I pause at one side of the door and wave Sam to
the other. Then I brace myself and unload the entire clip through it at
waist height.
While my ears are ringing, and I'm fumbling the
next magazine into place, Sam kicks the door in and quickly shoots the
police zombie slumped against the side of the corridor in the head.
(That one was still moving, hand creeping toward the shotgun lying in
the floor; the two bodies behind it aren't even twitching.) Seeing how
efficiently Sam steps in gives me a momentary chill of recognition. No hesitation. Behind us, Liz is still moaning, and Martin won't be good for anything. "What is this place?" I ask aloud.
"More offices." Sam kicks a door open and duck-walks through it. "Modern
offices." I follow him. The next door is more substantial, opening onto
a glass-fronted balcony above a room with open floor space, an
office-sized assembler at one side, and a row of glassy
doors . . . "Is that what I think it is?"
Bingo. "Gates," I say. "A switch hub. How do we get down—"
"Hello, Reeve," says my earpiece, in a voice that sets my teeth on edge. "This isn't going to work, you know."
Where did Fiore get a headset from? Greg? Or have they captured one of Team Green?
Sam looks as if someone's poleaxed him. His jaw is literally gaping. Too late I realize he's on the same chatline.
"You've lost, Reeve," Fiore adds
conversationally. I can hear noises in the background. "We know about
your plot. There are guards outside the switch chamber, and if you get
past them and make it to the longjump pod, you'll die—there's an
active laser fence in there. I'm most disappointed in you, but we can
still work something out if you put down your popguns and surrender."
I touch my index finger to my lips and wait
until Sam nods at me, to show he's got the message. Then I walk toward
the door onto the staircase leading down into the switch chamber and
its bank of shortjump gates.
I don't want Sam to see how sick I feel.
"You don't know shit, Fiore," I say lightly.
"Yes I do." He sounds smug. "Greg's unfortunate
death makes further concealment irrelevant. Bluntly, you've failed. You
can't—"
I rip my earbud out and throw it away,
frantically miming at Sam to do likewise. He pulls it out of his ear
and stares at it. As he's about to toss it there's a dual bang. He
doubles over as a thin reddish mist sprays from his left finger and
thumb, retching with pain.
"Sam!" I yell at him. He cradles his damaged
hand, panting. "Sam! We've only got a few seconds! Fiore can't stop us,
or he'd already be up here! Sanni's got him pinned down! We've got to
blow the longjump pod before he gets away! Give me your jacket!"
"No choice—" He takes a shuddering breath and shakes his head. "Reeve."
I place my gun at my feet and take him by the shoulders. "What is it, love?"
A moment of awful tenderness, as I see the pain in his eyes. "I'm sorry," he says brokenly. "I couldn't be what you wanted."
"What—"
And his good fist, still wrapped around the butt
of his gun, whacks me across the back of my head, propelling me
straight into a pit of darkness from which I only emerge when it's far
too late.
IT feels very
different when you watch a replay of a body tumbling off a cliff, in
free fall toward the harsh ground so far below, and it's not your body,
and there are no second chances.
In the years since Sanni and I—and the
rest of our ragtag resistance network—kicked the door shut and
overturned Yourdon's pocket dictatorship, I've watched the video take
of Sam's death many times. How he sapped me, then gently laid me out on
the floor, grunting with effort as he rolled me into the recovery
position so I wouldn't choke on my own vomit. How he straightened up
painfully afterward and put his gun down. How he walked along the row
of shortjump doors, looking for the one opening on the short metal
corridor with the handrail and the ring of support nodes halfway along
it. How he paused, and went back to move me so that I wasn't lined up
with it. And then how he stepped through.
What does it take to step into a corridor,
knowing that your enemy said there's a laser fence halfway along it?
And as if that isn't enough, to do so wearing a waistcoat with ten
kilos of plastic explosives weighing down its pockets?
Sam gets halfway along the corridor. There's a
momentary flash, then the door bulges and turns black as the T-gate
does a scram shutdown and ejects its wormhole endpoint through the side
of the pod. It's not very dramatic.
And that's how we reach the foot of the cliff.
While I was unconscious, Janis and her team did
what was expected of them. I think that she was expecting betrayal all
along, because she had a few surprises of her own. Yourdon, at the
front of the hall, chopped her in half with his Vorpal blade: I can
only imagine his shock when another Janis stepped out from behind the
fire escape and blew a hole through his chest. I should have
realized she was playing a tricky game—her excuse about taking
all night to run off ten kilos of high explosives was far too
convenient—but in hindsight, she didn't trust anyone by that
point. Even me.
While I was unconscious, Fiore—desperate,
trapped in the police station down the road by a squad of murderous
Sannis—patched through his netlink and got onto our command
circuit which was, as expected, compromised by design. But Sanni was
one jump ahead of him all the way. Greg had told him what was going on
that morning. Fiore thought that a laser fence and extra security
guards would suffice. These psywar types, they don't think like a tank,
or a fighting cat. Two of me—despite being seriously pissed at
Sanni for making them live in the library attic and stay away from
Sam—took him out with a rocket-propelled grenade, while three
other squads fanned out and combed the parish churches for cowering
revenants. As Janis later explained, "When the only soldier you can
rely on is Reeve, you make the most of her." But I won't bear a grudge,
even though two of me died.
Because when the dust stopped raining down on
the cowering cohorts in the auditorium, while our other instances raced
through the administration block and the hospital, frantically hunting
down assemblers and deleting their pattern buffers before another
Yourdon or Fiore could ooze out of them, it was Janis who stepped up to
the lectern and fired a shot into the ceiling and called for silence.
"Friends," she said, a faint tremor in her voice. "Friends. The experiment is over. The prison is closed.
"Welcome back to the real world."
THAT all
happened years ago. The river of history waits for nobody. We live our
lives in the wake of vast events, accommodating ourselves to their
shapes. Even those of us who contributed to the events in question.
Maybe the oddest thing is how little has changed since we over-threw
the scorefile dictatorship. We still have regular town meetings. We
still live in small family groups, as orthohumans. Many of us even
stayed with the spousal units we were assigned by Fiore or Yourdon. We
dress like it's still the dark ages, and we hold jobs just like before,
and we even have babies the primitive way. Sometimes.
But . . .
We vote in the town meetings. There are
no scorefile metrics with hidden point tables that some smug researcher
can tweak in order to make the parishioners jump. We don't dance like
puppets for anyone, even our elected mayor. We may live in families as
orthohumans, but we've got an assembler in every home. Mostly we don't want to be neomorphs. Many of us spent too much time as living weapons during the war. We do
have—and enthusiastically use—modern medical technology,
with A-gates everywhere. The costumery and lifestyle upholstery is
harder to explain, but I put it down to social inertia. I saw a blue
hermaphrodite centaur in a chain-mail hauberk and no pants in the
shopping mall the other day, and guess what? Nobody raised an eyebrow.
We're a tolerant town these days. We have to be: There's nowhere else
to go until we arrive wherever the Harvest Lore is carrying us.
As for me, I don't have to fight anymore. I've
got the best of my surrendered self's wishes, without any of the
drawbacks. And I've been so lucky that thinking about it makes me want
to cry.
I have a daughter. Her name's Andy—short
for Andromeda. She swears she wants to be a boy when she grows up; she
isn't going to hit puberty for another six years, and she may change
her mind when her body starts changing. The important thing is we live
in a society where she can be whatever she wants. She looks like a
random phenotypic cross between Reeve and Sam, and sometimes when I see
her in the right light, just catching her profile, my breath catches in
my throat as I see him diving off that cliff. Did he know I was already
pregnant when he carefully made sure I was out of harm's way, then
jumped? It shouldn't be possible, but sometimes I wonder if he
suspected.
Andromeda was delivered—surprise—in
the hospital, by the nice Dr. Hanta. Who no longer needs a gun pointing
at her head all day long, since Sanni gave her a choice between
reprogramming herself to let her patients define their own best
interests or joining Yourdon and Fiore. After going through with the
birth, I went back to being Robin, or as close to the original Robin as
our medical 'ware could come up with. Natural childbirth is an
experience all fathers should go through at least once in their lives
(as adults, I mean), but I needed to be Robin again: the only version
of me that doesn't come with innocent blood on his hands.
It's late, now, and Andy is sleeping upstairs.
I've been writing this account down longhand on paper, to help fix
these events in my memory, like the letter someone wrote to me so long
ago that I can barely remember what it was like to be him. Even without
memory surgery, we are fragile beings, lights in the darkness that
leave a trail fading out behind us as we forget who we have been. I
don't actually want to remember much about what I was, before the war.
I'm comfortable here, and I expect to live here for a long time to
come, longer than my entire troubled life to this point. If all I
remember of the first half of my life is a thick pile of paper and
Sam's conflicted love for me, that will be enough. But there's a
difference between not remembering and deliberately forgetting. Hence
the stack of paper.
One last thought: My wife is dozing on the sofa
across the room. I have a question for her, which I'll wake her up for.
"What do you think Sam was thinking when he walked down that tunnel?"
Oh. That's useful. She yawns, and says, "I wouldn't know. I wasn't there."
"But if you had to guess?"
"I'd say he was hoping for a second chance."
"Is that all?"
She stands up. "Sometimes the truth is boring, Robin. Go on, put that in your memoir."
"Okay. Any other comments before I finish up here? I'm going to bed in a minute."
"Let me think . . ." Kay shrugs,
an incredibly fluid gesture that involves four shoulder joints. "No.
Don't be long." She smiles lazily and heads for the staircase, swinging
her hips in a way that suggests she's got something other than sleep in
mind. She's been a lot happier since she stopped being Sam, which she
did very shortly after the panicky last-minute backup in the library
basement. And so, you may be assured, am I.
Thanks
due to: James Nicoll, Robert "Nojay" Sneddon, Cory Doctorow, Andrew J.
Wilson, Caitlin Blasdell, David Clements, Sean Eric Fagan, Farah
Mendlesohn, Ken MacLeod, Juliet McKenna, and all the usual suspects.
"This
apparatus," said the Officer, grasping a connecting rod and leaning
against it, "is our previous Commandant's invention. . . . Have you
heard of our previous Commandant? No? Well, I'm not claiming too much
when I say that the organization of the entire penal colony is his
work. We, his friends, already knew at the time of his death that the
administration of the colony was so self-contained that even if his
successor had a thousand new plans in mind he would not be able to
alter anything of the old plan, at least not for several years . . .
It's a shame that you didn't know the old Commandant!"
The
polities descended from the Republic of Is do not use days, weeks, or
other terrestrial dating systems other than for historical or
archaeological purposes; however, the classical second has been
retained as the basis of timekeeping.
Here's a quick ready-reckoner:
one second
One second, the time taken for light to travel 299,792,458 meters in vacuum
one kilosecond
Archaic: 16 minutes
one hundred kiloseconds (1 diurn)
Archaic: 27 hours, 1 day and three hours
one megasecond (1 cycle)
Ten diurns. Archaic: eleven days and six hours
thirty megaseconds (1 m-year)
300 diurns. Archaic: 337 Earth days (11 months)
one gigasecond
Archaic: approximately 31 Earth years
one terasecond
Archaic: approximately 31,000 Earth years (half age of human species)
one petasecond
Archaic: approximately 31,000,000 Earth years (half elapsed time since end of Cretaceous era)