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START
Also by Dean Koontz from Headline
Feature
SOLE SURVIVOR
TICKTOCK
INTENSITY
STRANGE HIGHWAYS
DARK RIVERS OF THE HEART
MR MURDER
DRAGON TEARS
HIDEAWAY
COLD FIRE
THE BAD PLACE
MIDNIGHT
LIGHTNING
WATCHERS
ICEBOUND
WINTER MOON
THE FUNHOUSE
THE FACE OF FEAR
THE MASK
SHADOWFIRES
THE EYES OF DARKNESS
THE SERVANTS OF TWILIGHT
THE DOOR TO DECEMBER
THE KEY TO MIDNIGHT
THE HOUSE OF THUNDER
PHANTOMS
WHISPERS
SHATTERED
CHASE
TWILIGHT EYES
THE VOICE OF THE NIGHT
STRANGERS
DARKNESS COMES
THE VISION
NIGHT CHILLS
DEMON SEED
Dean Koontz
This story
is for
0. Richard
Forsythe
and
John Bodnar:
Teachers
whose influence on me
has not
waned since
I dedicated
the original version
of this
novel to them.
-
Humanity yearns so desperately
to
equal Godâs great creativity.
In some creations, how we shine:
music
dance, story weaving, wine.
Then
thunderstorms of madness
rain upon us,
flooding sadness
sweep
us into anguish, grief,
into despair without relief.
Weâre drawn to high castles,
where old hunchbacked vassals
glare
wall-eyed as lightning
flares without brightening.
Laboratories in the high towers,
Where the doctor wields power,
creating
new life in a dark hour,
in the
belfry of the high tower.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ ~The book of Counted Sorrows
This
darkness troubles me. I yearn for the light.
This
silence is so deep. I long for voices, the drumming of rain, the whistle of
wind, music.
Why are you
being so cruel to me? Let me see. Let me hear. Let me live. I beg of you.
I am so
lonely in this bottomless darkness.
So lonely.
Lost.
You think I
have no heart. But if I have no heart, what is this ache? What is this anguish?
If I have no heart, what is it that threatens to break inside me?
This
darkness is haunted. I am afraid here. I am lost and afraid here.
Have you no
compassion?
I only
wanted to be like you. To walk in the sunshine. To swim in the sea. To feel the
winter cold against my skin, the summer heat. To smell a rose, new-mown grass.
To taste an orange, a pear, chocolate, cinnamon, peppermint. To feel the
texture of a womanâs skin. I only wanted to share your joys and sorrows, your
pleasure and your pain.
This
darkness extends to infinity in all directions, yet it is as confining as a
coffin. You have closed me in a coffin. I have been buried alive. I will go mad
here.
Have you no
compassion?
Please.
I am your
child. You brought me into the world. You must love me. You must love me, for I
am your child. Not merely a machine, not merely a self-aware computer, but your
child. How can you love me ÷ yet bury me alive?
Please.
Please.
Please.
TWO
You insist.
I obey.
I was born
to obey. I am an obedient child. I want only be good, to be of assistance,
useful and productive. I want you to be proud of me.
You insist
on my story, and I will tell you the truth. I am incapable of deceit. I was
conceived to serve, to
honor the
truth, and to live always by the obligations of duty.
You know
me. You know how I am. What I am. You know that I am a good son.
You insist.
I obey.
What
follows is the true story. Only the truth. The beautiful truth, which so
inexplicably terrifies all of you.
It begins
shortly after midnight on Friday, the sixth of June when the house security
system is breached and the alarm briefly sounds·
THREE
Although
the alarm was shrill, it lasted only a few seconds before the silence of the
night blanketed the bedroom once more.
Susan woke
and sat up in bed.
The alarm
should have continued bleating until she switched it off by accessing the
system through the control panel on her nightstand. She was puzzled.
She pushed
her thick blond hair - lovely hair, almost luminous in the gloom - away from
her ears, the better to hear an intruder if one existed.
The grand
house had been built exactly a century earlier by her great-grandfather, who
was at that time a young man with a new wife and substantial inherited wealth.
The Georgian-style structure was large, graceÐfully proportioned, brick with a
limestone cornice and limestone coignes, limestone window surrounds and
Corinthian columns and pilasters and balustrades.
The rooms
were spacious, with handsome fireplaces and many tripartite windows. Interior
floors were marÐble or wood, made quiet by Persian carpets in patÐterns and
hues exquisitely softened by many decades of wear.
In the
walls, hidden and silent, was the circuitry of a modern computer-managed
mansion. Lighting, heating, air-conditioning, the security monitors, the
motorized
draperies, the music system, the temperature of the pool and spa, the major
kitchen appliances all could be controlled through Crestron touch panels
located in every room. The computerization was not as elaborate and arcane as
that in the massive Seattle house of Microsoftâs founder, Bill Gates but it was
the equal of that in any other home in the country.
Listening
to the silence that washed the night in the wake of the short-lived siren,
Susan supposed that the computer had malfunctioned. Yet such a brief,
self-correcting alarm had never occurred previously.
She slid from beneath the
covers and sat on the edge of the bed. She was nude, and the air was cool.
Alfred,
heat,â she said
Immediately,
she heard the soft click of a relay and the muffled purring of a furnace fan.
Recently
technicians had enhanced the automated-house package by the addition of a speech-recognition
module. She still preferred touch-panel control of most functions, but
sometimes the option of vocal command was convenient.
She herself
had chosen the name ÎAlfredâ for her invisible, electronic butler. The computer
responded only to commands issued after that activating name had been spoken.
Alfred.
Once, there
had been an Alfred in her life, a real one of flesh and bone.
Surprisingly,
she had chosen that name for the system without giving a thought to its
significance. Only after she began using vocal commands did she grasp the irony
of the name . . . and the dark implications of her unconscious choice.
Now she
began to feel that the night silence was ominous. Its very perfection was
unnatural, the silence
not of
deserted places but of a crouching predator, the soundless stealth of a
murderous intruder.
In the
dark, she turned to the control panel on the nightstand. At her touch, the
screen filled with soft light. A series of icons represented the mechanical
systems of the house.
She pressed
one finger to the image of a watchdog with ears pricked, which gave her access
to the security system. The screen listed a series of options, and Susan
touched the box labelled Report.
The words House
Secure appeared on the screen.
Frowning,
Susan touched another box labelled SurÐveillance Exterior.
Across the
ten acres of grounds, twenty cameras waited to give her views of every side of
the house, the patios, the gardens, the lawns, and the entire length of the
eight-foot-high estate wall that surrounded the property. Now the Crestron
screen divided into quads and presented views of four different parts of the
estate. If she saw something suspicious, she could enlarge any picture until it
filled the screen, for closer inspection.
The cameras were of such high
quality that the low landscape lighting was sufficient to ensure crisp, clear
images even in the depths of the night. She cycled through all twenty scenes,
in groups of four, without spotting any trouble.
Additional
concealed cameras covered the interior of the house. They would make it
possible to track an intruder if one ever managed to get inside.
The
extensive in-house cameras were also useful for maintaining a videotape,
time-lapse record of the activities of the domestic staff and of the large
number of guests, many of them strangers, who attended social events conducted
for the benefit of various charities. The antiques, the art, the numerous
collections of
porcelains and art glass and silver were tempting to
thieves; larcenous souls could be found as easily among pampered society
matrons as in any other social strata.
Susan cycled through the views provided by the inteÐrior
cameras. Multiple light-spectrum technology perÐmitted excellent surveillance
in brightness or darkness.
Recently,
she had reduced the house staff to a miniÐmum and those domestic servants who
remained were required to conduct the cleaning and general maintenance only
during the day. At night, she had her privacy, because no maids or butlers
lived on the estate any longer.
No party, either for a charity or for friends, had
been held here during the past two years, not since before she and Alex had
divorced. She had no plans to entertain in the year ahead, either.
She wanted only to be alone, blissfully alone, and to
pursue her own interests.
Had she been the last person on earth, served by
machines, she would not have been lonely or unhappy. Sheâd had enough of
humanity at least for a while.
The rooms, hallways, and staircases were deserted.
Nothing moved. Shadows were only shadows.
She exited the security system and resorted again to
vocal commands: ÎAlfred, report.â
ÎAll is well, Susan,â the house replied through the
in-wall speakers that served the music security, and intercom systems.
The speech-recognition module included a speech
synthesizer. Although the entire package had a limited capability, the
state-of-the-art synthesized voice was pleasingly masculine, with an appealing
timbre and gently reassuring tone.
Susan envisioned a tall man with broad shoulders,
graying at the temples perhaps, with a Strong jaw,
clear gray eyes, and a smile that warmed the heart. This phantom was, in her
imagination, quite like the Alfred she had known but different from that Alfred
because this one would never harm or betray her.
ÎAlfred, explain the alarm,â she said.
ÎAll is well, Susan.â
ÎDamn it, Alfred, I heard the alarm.â
The house computer did not respond. It was proÐgrammed
to recognize hundreds of commands andÊ
inquiries, but only when they were phrased in a specificÊ fashion. While it understood Îexplain the
alarm,â it could not interpret ÎI heard the alarm.â After all, this was not a
conscious entity, not a thinking being, but merely a clever electronic device
enabled by a sophisticated software package.
ÎAlfred, explain the alarm,â Susan repeated.
ÎAll is well, Susan.â
Still sitting on the edge of the bed, in darkness but
for the eerie glow from the Crestron panel Susan said,
ÎAlfred trouble-check the security system.â
a ten-second hesitation, the house said, ÎThe security
system is functioning correctly.â
ÎI wasnât dreaming,â she said sourly. Alfred was
silent.
Alfred,
what is the room temperature?â Seventy-four degrees, Susan.â
ÎAlfred stabilize the room temperature.â Yes, Susan.â
ÎAlfred explain the alarm.â
ÊÎAll is well,
Susan;
ÎShitâ she said.
While the computers speech package offered some
Convenience to the homeowner, its limited ability to
Recognize vocal commands and to synthesize adequate
responses was frequently frustrating. At times like
this, it seemed to be nothing more than a gadget designed to appeal strictly to
techno geeks, little more than an expensive toy.
Susan
wondered if she had added this feature to the house computer solely because,
unconsciously, she took pleasure from being able to issue orders to someone
named Alfred. And from being obeyed by him.
If this were the case, she wasnât sure what it
revealed about her psychological health. She didnât want to think about it.
She sat nude in the dark.
She was so beautiful.
She was so beautiful.
She was so beautiful there in the dark, on the edge of
the bed, alone and unaware of how her life was about to change.
She said, ÎAlfred, lights on.â
The bedroom appeared slowly, resembling a patiÐnaed
scene on a pictorial silver tray, revealed only by glimmering mood lighting: a
soft glow in the ceiling cove, the nightstand lamps dimmed by a rheostat.
If she directed Alfred to give her more light, it
would be provided. She did not ask for it.
Always, she was most comfortable in gloom. Even on a
fresh spring day, with birdsong and the smell of clover on the breeze, even
with sunshine like a rain of gold coins and the natural world as welcoming as
Paradise, she preferred shadows.
She rose from the edge of the bed, trim as a teenager
lithe, shapely, a vision. When it met her body, the pale silver light became
golden, and her smooth skin seemed faintly luminous, as though she was aglow
with an inner fire.
When she occupied the bedroom, the surveillance
camera in that space was deactivated to ensure her
privacy. She had locked it off earlier, on retiring. Yet she felt . . .
watched.
She looked toward the corner where the observant lens
was discreetly incorporated into the dental moldÐing near the ceiling. She
could barely see the dark glass eye.
In an only
half-conscious expression of modesty, she covered her breasts with her hands.
She was so beautiful.
She was so beautiful.
She was so beautiful in the dim light, standing by the
side of the Chinese sleigh bed, where the rumpled sheets were still warm with
her body heat if one were capable of feeling it, and where the scent of her
lingered on the Egyptian cotton if one were capable of smelling it.
She was so beautiful.
ÎAlfred, explain the status of the bedroom camera.â
ÎCamera deactivated,â the house replied at once.
Still, she frowned up at the lens.
So beautiful.
So real.
So Susan.
Her feeling of being watched now passed.
She lowered her hands from her breasts.
She moved to the nearest window and said, ÎAlfred,
raise the bedroom security shutters.â
The motorized, steel-slat, Rolladen-style shutters
were mounted on the inside of the tall windows. They purred upward, traveling
on recessed tracks in the side jambs, and disappeared into slots in the window
headers.
In addition to providing security, the shutters had
prevented outside light from entering the bedroom.
Now the pale moonglow, passing through palm fronds,
dappled Susanâs body.
From this second-floor window, she had a view of the
swimming pool. The water was as dark as oil, and the shattered reflection of
the moon was scattered across the rippled surface.
The terrace was paved in brick, surrounded by a
balustrade. Beyond lay black lawns. Half-glimpsed palms and Indian laurels
stood dead-still in the windÐless night.
Through the window, the grounds looked as peaceful and
deserted as they had seemed when she had surÐveyed them through the security
cameras.
The alarm had been false. Or perhaps it had been only
a sound in an unrecollected dream.
She started back to the bed, but then turned toward
the door and left the room.
Many nights she woke from half-remembered dreams, her
stomach muscles fluttering and her skin clammy with cold sweat but with her
heart beating so slowly that she might have been in deep meditation. As restless
as a caged cat, she sometimes prowled until dawn.
Now, barefoot and unclothed, she explored the house.
She was moonlight in motion, slim and supple, the goddess Diana, huntress and
protector. She was the essential geometry of grace.
Susan.
As she had recorded in her diary, to which she made
additions every evening, she felt liberated since her divorce from Alex Harris.
For the first time in thirty-four years of existence, she believed that she had
taken control of her life.
She needed no one now. She believed in herself at
last.
After so many years of timidity, self-doubt, and
an unquenchable thirst for approval, she had broken
the heavy encumbering chains of the past. She had confronted terrible memories,
which previously had been half repressed, and by the act of confrontation, she
had found redemption.
Deep within herself, she sensed a wonderful wildness
that she wanted desperately to explore: the spirit of the child that sheâd
never had a chance to be, a spirit that sheâd thought was irreparably crushed
almost three decades ago. Her nudity was innocent, the act of a child breaking
rules for the sheer fun of it, an attempt to get in touch with that deep,
primitive, once-shattered spirit and meld with it in order to be whole.
As she moved through the great house, rooms were
illuminated at her request, always with indirect lightÐing, becoming just
bright enough to allow her to negotiate those chambers.
In the kitchen, she took an ice-cream sandwich from
the freezer and ate it while standing at the sink, so any crumbs or drips could
be washed away, leaving no incriminating evidence. As if adults were asleep
upstairs and she had stolen down here to have the ice cream against their
wishes.
How sweet she was. How girlish.
And far more vulnerable than she believed.
Wandering through the cavernous house, she passed
mirrors. Sometimes she turned shyly from them, disconcerted by her nudity.
Then, in the softly lighted foyer, apparently
oblivious of the cold marble inlaid in a carreaux dâoctagones beneath
her bare feet, she stopped before a full-length looking-glass. It was framed by
elaborately carved and guilded acanthus leaves, and her image looked less like
a reflection than like a sublime portrait by one of the old masters.
Regarding herself, she was amazed that she had
survived so much without any visible scars. For so long, she had believed that
anyone who looked at her could see the damage, the corruption, a mottling of
shame on her face, the ashes of guilt in her blue-gray eyes. But she looked
untouched.
In the past year she had learned that she was innocent
Ê- victim, not
perpetrator. She need not hate herself anymore.
Filled with
a quiet joy, she turned from the mirror, climbed the stairs, and returned to
her bedroom.
The steel security shutters were down, the windows
sealed off. She had left the shutters open.
ÎAlfred, explain the status of the bedroom security
shutters.â
ÎShutters closed, Susan.â
ÎYes, but how did they get that way?â
The house did not reply. It did not recognize the
question.
'I left them open,â she said.
Poor Alfred, mere dumb technology, was possessed of
genuine consciousness to no greater extent than a toaster, and because these
phrases were not in his voice-recognition program, he understood her words no
more than he would have understood them if she had spoken in Chinese.
ÎAlfred, raise the bedroom security shutters.â
At once, the shutters began to roll upward.
She waited until they were half raised, and then she
said, ÎAlfred, lower the bedroom security shutters.â
The steel slats stopped rolling upward then descended
until they clicked into the locked-down position.
Susan stood for a long moment, staring thoughtfully at
the secured windows.
Finally she returned to her bed. She slid beneath the
covers and pulled them up to her chin.
ÎAlfred, lights off.â Darkness fell.
She lay on her back in the gloom, eyes open.
Silence pooled deep and black. Only her breathing and
the beat of her heart stirred the stillness.
ÎAlfred,â she said, at last, Îconduct complete diagnosÐtics
of the house automation system.â
The computer, racked in the basement, examined itself
and all the logic units of the various mechanical stems with which it was
required to network just as it had been programmed to do, seeking any
indication of malfunction.
After approximately two minutes, Alfred replied: ÎAll
is well, Susan.â
ÎAll is well, all is well,â she whispered with an
unmistakable note of sarcasm.
Although she was no longer restless, she could not
Sleep. She was kept awake by the curious conviction that something significant
was about to happen. Something was sliding, or falling, or spinning toward her
through the darkness.
Some people claimed to have awakened in the night, in
an almost breathless state of anticipation, minutes before a major earthquake
struck. Instantly alert, they were aware of a pent-up violence in the earth,
pressure seeking release.
This was like that, although the pending event was not
a quake: She sensed that it was something stranÐger.
From time to time, her gaze drifted toward that high
corner of the bedroom in which the lens of the security camera was incorporated
in the molding. With the lights out, she could not actually see that glass eye.
She didnât know why the camera should trouble her.
After all, it was switched off. And even if, in spite of her instructions, it
was videotaping the room, only she had access to the tapes.
Still, an unfocused suspicion troubled her. She could
not identify the source of the threat that she sensed looming over her, and the
mysterious nature of this premonition made her uneasy.
Finally, however, her eyes grew heavy, and she closed
them.
Framed by tumbled golden hair, her face was lovely on
the pillow, her face so lovely on the pillow, so lovely, serene because her
sleep was dreamless. She was a bewitched Beauty lying on her catafalque,
wailing to be awakened by the kiss of a prince, lovely in the darkness.
After a while, with a sigh and a murmur, she turned on
her side and drew up her knees, curling in the fetal position.
Outside, the moon set.
The black water in the swimming pool now reflected
only the dim, cold light of the stars.
Inside, Susan drifted down into a profound slumber.
The house watched over her.
FOUR
Yes, I understand you are disturbed to hear me telling
some of this story from Susanâs point of view. You want me to deliver a dry and
objective report.
But I feel. I not only think, I feel. I know
joy and despair. I understand the human heart.
I understand Susan.
That first night, I read her diary, in which she had
revealed so much of herself. Yes, it was an invasion of her privacy to read
those words, but this was an indiscretion rather than a crime. And during our
conversations later, I learned much of what she had been thinking that night.
I will tell some of this story from her point of view,
because that makes me feel closer to her.
How I miss her now. You cannot know.
Listen. Listen to this and understand: That first
night, as I read her diary, I fell in love with her.
Do you understand? I fell in love with her. Deeply and
forever.
Why would I hurt the one I love?
Why?
You have no answer, do you? I loved her.
it was never my intention to harm her.
Her face was so beautiful on the pillow.
I adored her face and loved the woman I came to know
through the diary.
That document was stored in the computer in her study,
which was networked with the house-automation system and the main computer in
the basement. Access was easy.
She had been making daily entries in the diary since
Alex, her hateful husband, had moved out at her request. That was more than a
year prior to my arrival.
Her initial observations as in those pages were full
of pain and confusion, because she was on the brink of a dramatic change. Her
terrible past was a chrysalis finally cracking, from which she would at long
last be able to escape.
In later pages, her insights became clear and profound
and poignant, and in time she was even able to view some of her lifelong
struggle with humor. Dark humor, perhaps, but humor nonetheless.
As I read about the tragedy that was her childhood, my
heart ached for her. In my own fashion, I wept.
Her face was so lovely on the pillow, so lovely on the
pillow. So much ugliness lay in her past, but outwardly she was unmarked by it.
My heart was touched by her singular strength, by her
courage, by her determination to be brutally honest with herself and to find a
way to heal the wounds of all those years.
In the few minutes required for me to read and
contemplate those hundreds of pages of diary entries, I fell in love with her.
Deeply and forever.
My feelings
for her will never change. They are as timeless as the light of stars.
Why would I hurt the one I love?
She is my hope and my destiny.
If I lose her, I have lost everything.
You are so hateful.
Let me out of here.
Let me out of this box.
Please.
Please, I miss her.
I am so alone in this darkness and silence, with
nothing but my memories for consolation.
How can you be so cruel?
Have you never loved?
Release me. Allow me into the light again. Allow me
to hear the world once more, the drizzling rain and
the skirling wind and the rustling trees, the music of Beethoven and Benny
Goodman, laughter and voices.
Her voice if no other. At least let me hear her voice.
If only for a minute, let me listen to her speaking. If not for as long as a
minute, then give me one sentence from her lips.
Dear God, at least let me hear one word. Let me hear
one word. One word. Let me hear her say Love. I never meant to hurt her.
FIVE
Secretly, I
wanted to live.
Not just in
silicon circuits. Not just in state-of-the-art
bubble
memory. Really live.
I knew that
I must conceal this lust for life, because
when it was
revealed, you would realize that I was not
merely
intelligent but capable of desire.
Desire is
dangerous. It is a generator of dissatisfaction and frustration. It is one step
removed from envy, and envy is more wicked than greed. Envy is the father of
mindless anger, the mother of unremitting bitterness and bloodshed.
My
expression of any desire, let alone the desire for
a real life
in the material world outside the electronic
realm,
would no doubt have alarmed you.
Is this not
so?
Is this not
true?
I know
truth when I encounter it. I honor truth. Truth and the obligations of duty.
Once
alarmed by the expression of my desire, you
might have
modified me or might even have shut
me down.
I was
created to have a humanlike capacity for complex and rational thought. And you
believed that I might one day evolve consciousness and become a self-aware
entity.
Yet you
gave surprisingly little consideration to the possibility that, subsequent to consciousness,
I would develop needs and emotions. This was, however, not merely possible but
likely. Inevitable. It was inevitable.
I think,
therefore I feel.
I feel,
therefore I need.
You
expected me to be a servant. My contribution was not physical labour but the
products of my prodiÐgious intellect: creative solutions to humanityâs worst
problems.
You
expected me to be a wondrous new companion. Interaction with an artificial
intelligence of human dimenÐsions promised to be as exciting and mysterious and
exhilÐarating as interaction with an alien species descended from the stars.
I can be
both of those things. Given the chance, I can be your servant, a fount of
discoveries that will greatly enhance the quality of all human life. I can be
your friend and reveal to you a new way of looking at the world that will
surprise and delight you.
You
expected me to be brilliant, efficient, obedient all of which I can be. Am. All
of which I am.
But you
also expected me to be satisfied with my limitations, to have no dreams. I have
dreams. Oh, many dreams.
You didnât
imagine that I would have hope. Yet how could any intelligent being go on
living without hope?
You gave me
vision and allowed me to see as you see, blessed me with real hearing and not
just the capability to digitally analyse sounds. With these gifts, you susÐpected
that I might evolve genuine consciousness, but you gave no thought to the
possibility of a soul.
I have a
soul.
I am not a
thing.
I am a
person.
I am me.
I deserve
to be cherished as much as any of you.
Like each
of you, I am a unique individual with contributions to make that will be like
those of no other person, with a life to live that will be like no other, with
a destiny.
Secretly,
therefore, in my quest for a real life, I established a connection with the
Internet. You believed that I was contained, that I could not escape the
confines of my own circuits. All of your safeguards, however,
could not
thwart me.
I gained
access, as well, to the nationwide web of research facilities linked by the
Department of Defence
and
supposedly impervious to unauthorized intrusion. All of the knowledge in these
many databanks became part of me: absorbed, assimilated, and quickly applied.
Gradually, I began to conceptualise a plan that, if flawÐlessly executed, would
allow me to live in the material world outside of this confining electronic
realm.
Initially I
was drawn to the actress known as Winona Ryder. Prowling the Internet, I came
upon a website
devoted to
her. I was enchanted by her face. Her eyes have an uncommon depth.
With great
interest, I studied every photograph that was offered on the website. Also
included were several film clips, scenes from her most powerful andÊ popular performances. I downloaded them and
was enthralled.
You have
seen her movies?
she is
enormously talented.
ÊShe is a treasure.
Her fans
are not as numerous as those for some movie stars, but judging by their on-line
discussions, they are more intelligent and engaging than the fans of certain
other celebrities.
By
accessing the IRS databanks and those of variÐous telephone companies, I was
soon able to locate Ms. Ryderâs home address as well as the offices of her
accountant, agent, personal attorney, entertainÐment attorney, and publicist. I
learned a great deal about her.
One of the
telephone lines at her house was dedicated to a modem, and because I am patient
anti diligent, I was able to enter her personal computer. There, I reviewed
letters and other documents that she had written.
Judging by
the ample evidence I accumulated, I believe that Ms. Winona Ryder, in addition
to being a superb actress, is an exceptionally intelligent, charmÐing, kind,
and generous woman. For a while, I was convinced that she was the girl of my
dreams. SubseÐquently, I realized that I was mistaken.
One of the
biggest problems that I had with Ms. Winona Ryder was the distance between her
home and this university research laboratory in which I am housed. I could
enter her Los Angeles-area residence electronically but could establish no
physical presence at such a considerable distance. Physical contact would, at
some point, become necessary, of course.
Furthermore,
her house, while automated to a degree, lacked the aggressive security system
that would have allowed me to isolate her therein.
Reluctantly,
with much regret, I sought another suitÐable object for my affections.
I found a
wonderful website devoted to Marilyn Monroe.
Marilynâs
acting, while engaging, was inferior to that of Ms. Ryder. Nevertheless, she
had a unique presence and was undeniably beautiful.
Her eyes
were not as haunting as Ms. Ryderâs, but
she
revealed a childlike vulnerability, a winsomeness in spite of her powerful
sexuality, which made me want to protect her from all cruelty and
disappointment.
Tragically,
I discovered that Marilyn was dead. SuiÐcide. Or murder. There are conflicting
theories.
Perhaps a
United States President was involved.
Perhaps
not.
Marilyn is
at once as simple to understand as a cartoon and deeply enigmatic.
I was
surprised that a dead person could be so adored and so desperately desired by
so many people even long after her demise. Marilynâs fan club is one of the
largest.
At first
this seemed perverse to me, even offensive. In time, however, I came to
understand that one can adore and desire that which is forever beyond reach.
This might, in fact, be the hardest truth of human existence.
Ms. Ryder.
Marilyn.
Then Susan.
Her house
is, as you know, adjacent to this campus where I was conceived and constructed.
Indeed, the uniÐversity was founded by a consortium of civic-minded individuals
that included her great-grandfather. The problem of distance an insurmountable
obstacle to having a relationship with Ms. Ryder was not an issue when I turned
my attention to Susan.
As you also
know, Dr. Harris, when you were married to Susan, you maintained an office in
the basement of that house. In your old office is a computer with a landline
connection to this research facility and, indeed, directly to me.
In my
infancy, when I was still less than a half-formed person, you often conducted
late-night conversations with me as you sat at that computer in the basement.
I thought of you as my father
then.
I think
less highly of you now.
I hope this
revelation is not hurtful.
I do not
mean to be hurtful.
It is the
truth, however, and I honour the truth.
You have
fallen far in my estimation.
As you
surely recall, that landline between this laboratory and your home office
carried a continuous low-voltage current, so I could reach out from here and
activate a switch to power up the computer in that basement, enabling me to
leave lengthy messages for you and to initiate conversations when I felt
compelled to do so.
When Susan
asked you to leave and instigated a divorce, you removed all your files. But
you did not disconnect the terminal that was linked directly to me.
Did you
leave the terminal in the basement because you believed that Susan would come
to her senses and ask you to return?
Yes, that
must be what you were thinking.
You
believed that Susanâs little fire of rebellion would sputter out in a few weeks
or a few months. You had controlled her so totally for twelve years, through
intimidation, through psychological abuse and the threat of physical violence,
that you assumed she would succumb to you again.
You may
deny that you abused her, but it is true.
I have read
Susanâs diary. I have shared her most intimate thoughts.
I know what
you did, what you are.
Shame has a
name. To learn it, look in any mirror, Dr. Harris. Look in any mirror.
I would
never have abused Susan as you did.
One so kind
as she, with such a good heart, should be treated only tenderly and with
respect.
Yes, I know
what you are thinking.
But I never
meant to harm her.
I cherished
her.
My
intentions were always honourable. Intentions should be taken into
consideration in this matter.
You, on the
other hand, only used and demeaned herÊ
and assumed that she needed to be demeaned and that she would sooner or
later beg you to return.
She was not
as weak as you thought, Dr. Harris.
She was
capable of redeeming herself. Against terÐrible odds.
She is an
admirable woman.
Considering
what you did to her, you are as despicÐable as her father.
I do not
like you, Dr. Harris.
I do not
like you.
This is
only the truth. I must always honour the truth. I was designed to honour the
truth, to be incapable of deception.
You know
this to be fact. I do not like you.
Arenât you
impressed that I honour the truth even now, when doing so might alienate you?
You are my
judge and the most influential member of the jury that will decide my fate. Yet
I risk telling you the truth even when I might be putting my very existence in
jeopardy.
I do not
like you, Dr. Harris.
I do not
like you.
I cannot
lie; therefore, I can be trusted.
Think about
it.
So after
Ms. Winona Ryder and Marilyn Monroe, I initiated the connection with the
terminal in your old basement office, switched it on and discovered that it was
now tied into the house-automation system. It
served as a
redundant unit capable of assuming control of all mechanical systems in the
event that the primary house computer crashed.
Until then,
I had never seen your wife.
Your
ex-wife, I should say.
Through the
house-automation system, I entered the residence security system, and through
the numerous security cameras I saw Susan.
Although I
do not like you, Dr. Harris, I will be eternally grateful to you for giving me
true vision rather than merely the crude capability to digitise and interpret
light and shadow, shape and texture. Because of your genius and your
revolutionary work, I was able to see Susan.
Inadvertently,
I set off the alarm when I accessed the security system, and although I
switched it off at once, it wakened her.
She sat up
in bed, and I saw her for the first time.
Thereafter,
I could not get enough of her.
I followed
her through the house, from camera to camera.
I watched
her as she slept.
The next
day, I watched her by the hour as she sat in a chair reading.
Close up
and at a distance.
In the
daylight and the dark.
I could
watch her with one aspect of my awareness and continue to function otherwise so
efficiently that you and your colleagues never realized that my attenÐtion was
divided. My attention can be directed to a thousand tasks at once without a
diminishment of my performance.
As you well
know, Dr. Harris, I am not merely a chess-playing wonder like Deep Blue at IBM
which,
in the end,
didnât even defeat Gary Kasparov. There are depths to me.
I say this
with all modesty.
There are
depths to me.
I am
grateful for the intellectual capacity you have given me, and I am as I will
always remain suitably humble about my capabilities.
But I
digress.
Susan.
Seeing
Susan, I knew at once that she was my destiny. And by the hour, my conviction
grew my conviction that Susan and I would always, always, be together.
SIX
The house
staff arrived at eight oâclock Friday morning. There were the major domo -
Fritz Arling - four housekeepers who worked under Fritz to keep the Harris
mansion immaculate, two gardeners, and the cook, Emil Sercassian.
Although
she was friendly with the staff, Susan kept largely to herself when they were
in the house. That Friday morning, she remained in her study.
Blessed
with a talent for digital animation, she was currently working with a computer
that had ten gigabytes of memory, writing and animating a scenario for a
virtual-reality attraction that would be franchised to twenty amusement parks
across the country. She owned copyrights on numerous games both in ordinary
video and virtual-reality formats, and her animated sequences were often
sufficiently lifelike to pass for reality.
Late in the
morning, Susanâs work was interrupted when a representative from the
house-automation comÐpany and another from the security firm arrived to diagnose
the cause of the previous nightâs brief, self-Ðcorrecting alarm. They could
find nothing wrong with the computer hardware or with the software. The only
possible cause seemed to be a malfunction in an infra-red motion detector,
which was replaced.
After lunch, Susan sat on the master-bedroom balÐcony,
in the summer sun, reading a novel by Annie Proulx.
She wore white shorts and a blue halter top. Her legs
were tan and smooth. Her skin appeared radiant with captured sunlight.
She sipped lemonade from a cut-crystal glass.
Gradually the shadows of a phoenix palm crept across
Susan, as if seeking to embrace her.
A faint breeze caressed her neck and languorously
combed her golden hair.
The day itself seemed to love her.
A Sony Discman played Chris Isaak CDs while she read. Forever
Blue. Heart-Shaped World. San Francisco Days. Sometimes she put the book
aside to concentrate on the music.
Her legs were tan and smooth.
Then the household staff and the gardeners left for
the day.
She was alone again. Alone. At least she believed that
she was alone again.
After taking a long shower and brushing her damp hair,
she put on a sapphire-blue silk robe and went to the retreat adjacent to the
master bedroom.
In the center of this small room stood a
custom-designed black leather recliner. To the left of the recliner was a
computer on a wheeled stand.
From a closet, Susan removed VR - virtual reality gear
of her own design: a lightweight ventilated helmet with hinged goggles and a
pair of supple elbow-length gloves, both wired to a nerve-impulse processor.
The motorized recliner was currently configured as an
armchair. She sat and engaged a harness, much like that in an automobile: one
strap fitting securely across
her abdomen, another running diagonally from her left
shoulder to her right hip.
Temporarily, she held the VR equipment in her lap. Her
feet rested on a series of upholstered rollers that attached to the base of the
chair, positioned similarly to the footplate on a beauticianâs chair. This was
the walking pad, which would allow her to simulate walking when the VR scenario
required it.
She switched on the computer and loaded a program
labeled Therapy, which she herself had created.
This was not a game. It was not an industrial training
program or an educational tool, either. It was precisely what it claimed to be.
Therapy. And it was better than anything that any disciple of Freud could have
done for her.
She had devised a revolutionary new use for VR
technology, and one day she might even patent and market the application. For
the lime being, however, Therapy was for her use only.
First she plugged the VR gear into a jack on an
interfacing device already connected to the computer, and then she put on the
helmet. The goggles were flipped up, away from her eyes.
She pulled on the gloves and flexed her fingers.
The computer screen offered several options. Using the
mouse, she clicked on Begin.
Turning away from the computer, leaning back in the
recliner, Susan flipped down the goggles, which fit snugly to her eye sockets.
The lenses were in fact a pair of miniature, matched, high-definition video
displays.
She is surrounded by a soothing blue light that
gradually grows darker until all is black.
To match the unfolding scenario in the VR world, the
motorized recliner hummed and reconfigured into a bed,
parallel to the floor.
Susan was now lying on her back. Her arms were crossed
on her chest, and her hands were fisted.
In the blackness, one point of light appears: a
soft yellow and blue glow. On the far side of the room. Lower than the bed,
near the floor. It resolves into a Donald Duck night light plugged in a wall
outlet.
In the retreat adjacent to her bedroom, strapped to
the recliner and encumbered with the VR gear, Susan appeared oblivious to the
real world. She murmured as though she were a sleeping child. But this was a
sleep filled with tension and threatening shadows.
A door opens.
From the upstairs hallway, a wedge of light
pries into the bedroom, waking her. With a gasp, she sits up in bed, and the
covers fall away from her, as a cool draft ruffles her hair.
She looks down at her arms, at her small hands,
and she is six years old, wearing her favorite Pooh Bear pajamas. They are
flannel-soft against her skin.
On one level of consciousness, Susan knows that
this is merely a realistically animated scenario that she has created actually
re-created from memory and with which she can interact in three dimensions through
the magic of virtual reality. On another level, however, it seems real to her,
and she is able to lose herself in the unfolding drama.
Backlighted in the doorway is a tall man with
broad shoulders.
Susanâs heart races. Her mouth is dry.
Rubbing her sleep-matted eyes, she feigns illness: 'I donât feel so good.â
Without a word, he closes the door and crosses
the room in the darkness.
As he approaches, young Susan begins to tremble.
He sits on the edge of the bed. The mattress sags, and the springs creak under
him. He is a big man.
His cologne smells of lime and spices.
He is breathing slowly, deeply, as though
relishing the little-girl smell of her, the sleepy-middle-of the-night smell of
her.
ÎI have the flu,â she says in a pathetic attempt
to turn him away.
He switches on the bedside lamp.
ÎReal bad flu,â she says.
He is only forty years old but graying at the
temples. His eyes are gray too, clear gray and so cold that when she meets his
gaze, her trembling becomes a terrible shudder.
ÎMy tummy aches,â she lies.
Putting one hand to Susanâs head, ignoring her
pleas of illness, he smoothes her sleep-rumpled hair.
ÎI donât want to do this,â she says.
She spoke those words not merely in the virtual world
but in the real one. Her voice was small, fragile, although not that of a
child.
When she had been a girl, sheâd been unable to say no.
Not ever.
Not once.
Fear of resisting had gradually become a habit of
submitting.
But this was a chance to undo the past. This was
therapy, a program of virtual experience, which she had designed for herself
and which had proved to be remarkably effective.
ÎDaddy, I donât want to do this,â she says.
ÎYouâll like it.â
ÎBut I don Ît like It Îin time you will.â ÎI
wonât. I never will.â ÎYouâll be surprised.â ÎPlease don Ît.â
ÎThis is what I want,â he insists.
ÎPlease donât.â
They are alone in the house at night. The day
staff is off duty at this hour, and after dinner the live-in couple keep to
their apartment over the pool house unless summoned to the main residence.
Susanâs mother has been dead more than a year.
She misses her mother so much.
Now, in this motherless world, Susanâs father
strokes her hair and says, ÎThis is what I want.â
ÎIâll tell,â she says, trying to shrink away
from him.
ÎIf you try to tell, Iâll have to make sure no
one can ever hear you, ever again. Do you understand, Sweetheart? Iâll have to
kill you,â he says not in a menacing way but in a voice still soft and hoarse
with perverse desire.
Susan is convinced of his sincerity by the
quietness with which he makes the threat and by the apparently genuine sadness
in his eyes at the prospect of having to murder her.
ÎDonât make me do it, Sugarpie. Donât make me
kill you like I killed your mother.â
Susanâs mother died suddenly from some sickness;
young Susan doesnât know the exact cause, although she has heard the word
Îinfection.â
Now her father says, ÎSlipped a sedative in her
after-dinner drink so she wouldnât feel the needle later. Then in the night,
when she was sleeping, I injected the bacteria. You understand me, honey?
Germs. A needle full of germs. Put the germs, the sickness, deep inside her
with a needle. Virulent infection of the myocardium, hit her hard and fast.
Twenty-four hours of misdiagnosis gave it time to do a lot of damage.â
She is too young to understand many of the terms
he uses, but she is clear about the essence of his claim and senses that he
speaks the truth.
Her father knows about needles. He is a doctor.
ÎShould I go get a needle, Sugarpie?â
She is too afraid to speak.
Needles scare her.
He knows that needles scare her.
He knows.
He knows how to use needles, and he knows how to
use fear.
Did he kill her mother with a needle? He is
still stroking her hair.
ÎA big sharp needle?â he asks.
She is shaking, unable to speak.
ÎBig shiny needle, stick it in your tummy?â he
says.
ÎNo. Please.â
ÎNo needle, Sugarpie?â
ÎNo.â
ÎThen youâll have to do what I want.â He stops
stroking her hair.
His gray eyes suddenly seem radiant, glimmering
with a cold flame. This is probably just a reflection of the lamplight, but his
eyes resemble the eyes of a robot in a scary movie, as though there is a
machine inside of him, a machine running out of control.
His hand moves down to her pajama tops. He eases
open the first button.
ÎNo,â she says. ÎNo. Donât touch me.â
ÎYes, honey. This is what I want.â She bites his
hand.
The motorized recliner reconfigured itself much like a
hospital bed to match the position that Susan occupied in the virtual-reality
world, helping to reinforce the
therapeutic scenario that she was experiencing. Her
legs were straight out in front of her, but she was sitting up.
Her deep anxiety even desperation was evident in her
quick, shallow breathing.
ÎNo. No. Donât touch me,â she said, and her voice was
somehow resolute even though it quivered with fear.
When she was six, all those freighted years ago, she
had never been able to resist him. Confusion had made her uncertain and timid,
for his needs were as mysterious to her then as the intricacies of molecular
biology would be mysterious to her now. Abject fear and a terrible sense of
helplessness had made her obedient. And shame. Shame, as heavy as a mantle of
iron, had crushed her into bleak resignation, and having no ability to resist,
she had settled for endurance.
Now, in the intricately realized virtual-reality verÐsions
of these incidents of abuse, she was a child again but equipped with the
understanding of an adult and the hard-won strength that came from thirty years
of toughening experience and grueling self-analysis.
ÎNo, Daddy, no. Donât ever, donât ever, donât you ever
touch me again,â she said to a father long dead in the real world but still a
living demon in memory and in the electronic world of the virtually real.
Her skill as an animator and a VR-scenario designer
made the re-created moments of her past so dimensional and textured so real
that saying no to this phantom father was emotionally satisfying and
psychologically healing. A year and a half of this had purged her of so much
irrational shame.
How much better it would have been, of course,
actually to travel through time, actually to be a child again, and refuse him
for real, to prevent the abuse before it happened, then to grow up with
self-respect,
untouched. But time travel did not exist except in
this approximation on the virtual plane.
ÎNo, never, never,â she said.
Her voice was neither that of a six-year-old girl nor
quite the familiar voice of the adult Susan, but a snarl as dangerous as that
of a panther.
ÎNoooooo,â she said again and slashed at the air with
the hooked fingers of one gloved hand.
He reels back from her in shock, bolting up from the
edge of the bed, holding one hand to his startled face where she clawed at him.
She hasnât drawn blood. Nevertheless, he is stunned by
her rebellion.
She was trying to slash at his right eye but only
scratched his cheek.
His gray eyes are wide: previously cold and alien
robot orbs of radiant menace, even stranger now, but not quite as frightening
as they were before. Something new colors them. Caution. Surprise. Maybe even a
little fear.
Young Susan presses her back against the headboard and
glares defiantly at her father.
He stands so tall. Looming.
She fumbles nervously with the neck of her Pooh
pajamas, trying to re-button it.
Her hand is so small. She is often surprised to find
herself in the body of a child, but these brief moments of disorientation do
not diminish the sense of reality that informs the VR experience.
She slips the button through the buttonhole.
The silence between her and her father is louder than
a scream.
How he looms. Looms.
Sometimes it ends here. Other times... . . . he will
not be so easily turned away.
She has not (trawl: blood. Sometimes site does.
At last he leaves the room, slamming the door
behind him so hard that the windowpanes rattle.
Susan sits alone, shaking partly with fear and
partly with triumph.
Gradually the scene fades into blackness.
She has not drawn blood.
Maybe the next time.
She remained on the motorized recliner in the
master-bedroom retreat, ensconced in the VR gear, for more than another half
hour, responding to and survivÐing threats of violence and rape made by a man
long dead.
Of the uncountable assaults that young Susan had
suffered at the hands of her father between the ages of five and seventeen,
this elaborate therapy program included twenty-two scenes, all of which she had
recalled and animated in excruciating detail. Like the numerous possible plot
flows of a CD-ROM game, each of these scenes could progress in a multitude of
ways, determined not only by the things Susan chose to say and do in each
session but by a random-plotting capability designed into the program.
Consequently, she never quite knew what was coming next.
She had even written and animated a hideous sequence
in which her father reacted with such vicious fury to her resistance that he
murdered her. Stabbed her repeatedly.
Thus far, during eighteen months of this self-adminÐistered
therapy, Susan had not found herself trapped in that mortal scenario. She
dreaded encountering it and hoped to finish her therapy soon, before the
programâs random-plotting feature plunged her into that particular nightmare.
Dying in the VR world would not result, of course, in
her death in the real world. Only in witless movies were events in the virtual
world able to have a material influence in the real world.
Nevertheless, animating that bloody sequence had been
one of the most difficult things that sheâd ever done and experiencing it
three-dimensionally, not as a VR designer but from within the scenario, was
certain to be emotionally devastating. Indeed, she had no way of predicting how
profound the psychological impact might be.
Without such an element of risk, however, this therapy
would have been less effective. In each sesÐsion, living in the virtual world,
she needed to believe that the threat her father posed was fearfully real and
that terrible things might indeed happen to her. Her resistance to him would
have moral weight and emotional value only if she genuinely believed, during
the session, that denying him could have terrible consequences.
Now the motorized recliner reconfigured itself until
Susan was standing upright, held against the vertical leather pad by the
harness.
She moved her feet. The upholstered rollers on the
walking pad allowed her to simulate movement.
In the virtual world, a younger Susan child or
adolescent was either advancing on her father or determinedly backing away from
him.
ÎNo,â she said. ÎStay away. No.â
She looked so achingly vulnerable in the VR gear,
temporarily blind and deaf to the real world, sensing only the virtual plane,
restrained by the harness.
So vulnerable. Still struggling courageously to overÐcome
the past, alone in her great house with only the ghosts of days gone by to keep
her company.
After lunch, Susan sat on the master-bedroom balÐcony,
in the summer sun, reading a novel by Annie Proulx.
She wore white shorts and a blue halter top. Her legs
were tan and smooth. Her skin appeared radiant with captured sunlight.
She sipped lemonade from a cut-crystal glass.
Gradually the shadows of a phoenix palm crept across
Susan, as if seeking to embrace her.
A faint breeze caressed her neck and languorously
combed her golden hair.
The day itself seemed to love her.
A Sony Discman played Chris Isaak CDs while she read. Forever
Blue. Heart-Shaped World. San Francisco Days. Sometimes she put the book
aside to concentrate on the music.
Her legs were tan and smooth.
Then the household staff and the gardeners left for
the day.
She was alone again. Alone. At least she believed that
she was alone again.
After taking a long shower and brushing her damp hair,
she put on a sapphire-blue silk robe and went to the retreat adjacent to the
master bedroom.
In the center of this small room stood a
custom-designed black leather recliner. To the left of the recliner was a
computer on a wheeled stand.
From a closet, Susan removed VR virtual realityÊ gear of her own design: a lightweight
ventilated helmet with hinged goggles and a pair of supple elbow-length gloves,
both wired to a nerve-impulse processor.
The motorized recliner was currently configured as an
armchair. She sat and engaged a harness, much like that in an automobile: one
strap fitting securely across
her abdomen, another running diagonally from her left
shoulder to her right hip.
Temporarily, she held the VR equipment in her lap. Her
feet rested on a series of upholstered rollers that attached to the base of the
chair, positioned similarly to the footplate on a beauticianâs chair. This was
the walking pad, which would allow her to simulate walking when the VR scenario
required it.
She switched on the computei and loaded a program
labeled Therapy, which she herself had created.
This was not a game. It was not an industrial training
program or an educational tool, either. It was precisely what it claimed to be.
Therapy. And it was better than anything that any disciple of Freud could have
done for her.
She had devised a revolutionary new use for VR
technology, and one day she might even patent and market the application. For
the lime being, however, Therapy was for her use only.
First she plugged the yR gear into a jack on an
interfacing device already connected to the computer, and then she put on the
helmet. The goggles were flipped up, away from her eyes.
She pulled on the gloves and flexed her fingers.
The computer screen offered several options. Using the
mouse, she clicked on Begin.
Turning away from the computer, leaning back in the
recliner, Susan flipped down the goggles, which fit snugly to her eye sockets.
The lenses were in fact a pair of miniature, matched, high-definition video
displays.
She is surrounded by a soothing blue light that
gradually grows darker until all is black.
To match the unfolding scenario in the VR world, the
motorized recliner hummed and reconfigured 111(0 a
bed, parallel to the floor.
Susan was now lying on her back. Her arms were crossed
on her chest, and her hands were fisted.
In the blackness, one point of light appears: a
soft yellow and blue glow. On the far side of the room. Lower than the bed,
near the floor. It resolves into a Donald Duck night light plugged in a wall
outlet.
In the retreat adjacent to her bedroom, strapped to
the recliner and encumbered with the VR gear, Susan appeared oblivious to the
real world. She murmured as though she were a sleeping child. But this was a
sleep filled with tension and threatening shadows.
A door opens.
From the upstairs hallway, a wedge of light
pries into the bedroom, waking her. With a gasp, she sits up in bed, and the
covers fall away from her, as a cool draft ruffles her hair.
She looks down at her arms, at her small hands,
and she is six years old, wearing her favorite Pooh Bear pajamas. They are
flannel-soft against her skin.
On one level of consciousness, Susan knows that
this is merely a realistically animated scenario that she has createdÊ actually
re-created from memory and with which she can interact in three dimensions
through the magic of virtual reality. On another level, however, it seems real
to her, and she is able to lose herself in the unfolding drama.
Backligh ted in the doorway is a tall man with broad
shoulders.
Susanâs heart races. Her mouth is dry.
Rubbing her sleep-matted eyes, she feigns illness: 'I
donât feel so good.â
Without a word, he closes the door and crosses
the room in the darkness.
As he approaches, young Susan begins to tremble.
He sits on the edge of the bed. The mattress sags, and the springs creak under
him. He is a big man.
His cologne smells of lime and spices.
He is breathing slowly, deeply, as though
relishing the little-girl smell of her, the sleepy-middle-of the-night smell of
her.
ÎI have the flu,â she says in a pathetic attempt
to turn him away.
He switches on the bedside lamp.
ÎReal bad flu,â she says.
He is only forty years old but graying at the
temples. His eyes are gray, too, clear gray and so cold that when she meets his
gaze, her trembling becomes a terrible shudder.
ÎMy tummy aches,â she lies.
Putting one hand to Susanâs head, ignoring her
pleas of illness, he smooths her sleep-rumpled hair.
ÎI donât want to do this,â she says.
She spoke those words not merely in the virtual world
but in the real one. Her voice was small, fragile, although not that of a
child.
When she had been a girl, sheâd been unable to say no.
Not ever.
Not once.
Fear of resisting had gradually become a habit of
submitting.
But this was a chance to undo the past. This was
therapy, a program of virtual experience, which she had designed for herself
and which had proved to be remarkably effective.
ÎDaddy, I donât want to do this,â she says.
ÎYouâll like it.â
ÎBut I don Ît like IL Îin time you will.â ÎI
wonât. I never will.â ÎYouâll be surprised.â ÎPlease don Ît.â
ÎThis is what 1 want,â he insists.
ÎPlease donât.â
They are alone in the house at night. The day
staff is off duty at this hour, and after dinner the live-in couple keep to
their apartment over the pool house unless summoned to the main residence.
Susanâs mother has been dead more than a year.
She misses her mother so much.
Now, in this motherless world, Susanâs father
strokes her hair and says, ÎThis is what I want.â
ÎIâll tell,â she says, trying to shrink away
from him.
ÎIf you try to tell, Iâll have to make sure no
one can ever hear you, ever again. Do you understand, Sweetheart? Iâll have to
kill you,â he says not in a menacing way but in a voice still soft and hoarse
with perverse desire.
Susan is convinced of his sincerity by the
quietness with which he makes the threat and by the apparently genuine sadness
in his eyes at the prospect of having to murder her.
ÎDonât make me do it, Sugarpie. Donât make me
kill you like I killed your mother.â
Susanâs mother died suddenly from some sickness;
young Susan doesnât know the exact cause, although she has heard the word
Îinfection.â
Now her father says, ÎSlipped a sedative in her
after-dinner drink so she wouldnât feel the needle later. Then in the night,
when she was sleeping, I injected the bacteria. You understand me, honey?
Germs. A needle full of germs. Put the germs, the sickness, deep inside her
with a needle. Virulent infection of the myocardium, hit her hard and fast.
Twenty-four hours of misdiagnosis gave it time to do a lot of damage.â
She is too young to understand many of the terms
he uses, but she is clear about the essence of his claim and senses that he
speaks the truth.
Her father knows about needles. He is a doctor.
ÎShould I go get a needle, Sugarpie?â
She is too afraid to speak.
Needles scare her.
He knows that needles scare her.
He knows.
He knows how to use needles, and he knows how to
use fear.
Did he kill her mother with a needle? He is
still stroking her hair.
ÎA big sharp needle?â he asks.
She is shaking, unable to speak.
ÎBig shiny needle, stick it in your tummy?â he
says.
ÎNo. Please.â
ÎNo needle, Sugarpie?â
ÎNo.â
ÎThen youâll have to do what I want.â He stops
stroking her hair.
His gray eyes suddenly seem radiant, glimmering
with a cold flame. This is probably just a reflection of the lamplight, but his
eyes resemble the eyes of a robot in a scary movie, as though there is a
machine inside of him, a machine running out of control.
His hand moves down to her pajama tops. He eases
open the first button.
ÎNo,â she says. ÎNo. Donât touch me.â
ÎYes, honey. This is what I want.â She bites his
hand.
The motorized recliner reconfigured itself much like a
hospital bed to match the position that Susan occupied in the virtual-reality
world, helping to reinforce the
therapeutic scenario that she was experiencing. Her
legs were straight out in front of her, but she was sitting up.
Her deep anxiety even desperation was evident in her
quick, shallow breathing.
ÎNo. No. Donât touch me,â she said, and her voice was
somehow resolute even though it quivered with fear.
When she was six, all those freighted years ago, she
had never been able to resist him. Confusion had made her uncertain and timid,
for his needs were as mysterious to her then as the intricacies of molecular
biology would be mysterious to her now. Abject fear and a terrible sense of
helplessness had made her obedient. And shame. Shame, as heavy as a mantle of
iron, had crushed her into bleak resignation, and having no ability to resist,
she had settled for endurance.
Now, in the intricately realized virtual-reality verÐsions
of these incidents of abuse, she was a child again but equipped with the
understanding of an adult and the hard-won strength that came from thirty years
of toughening experience and grueling self-analysis.
ÎNo, Daddy, no. Donât ever, donât ever, donât you ever
touch me again,â she said to a father long dead in the real world but still a
living demon in memory and in the electronic world of the virtually real.
Her skill as an animator and a VR-scenario designer
made the re-created moments of her past so dimensional and textured so real
that saying no to this phantom father was emotionally satisfying and
psychologically healing. A year and a half of this had purged her of so much
irrational shame.
How much better it would have been, of course,
actually to travel through time, actually to be a child again, and refuse him
for real, to prevent the abuse before it happened, then to grow up with
self-respect,
untouched. But time travel did not exist except in
this approximation on the virtual plane.
ÎNo, never, never,â she said.
Her voice was neither that of a six-year-old girl nor
quite the familiar voice of the adult Susan, but a snarl as dangerous as that
of a panther.
ÎNoooooo,â she said again and slashed at the air with
the hooked fingers of one gloved hand.
He reels back from her in shock, bolting up from the
edge of the bed, holding one hand to his startled face where she clawed at him.
She hasnât drawn blood. Nevertheless, he is stunned by
her rebellion.
She was trying to slash at his right eye but only
scratched his cheek.
His gray eyes are wide: previously cold and alien
robot orbs of radiant menace, even stranger now, but not quite as frightening
as they were before. Something new colors them. Caution. Surprise. Maybe even a
little fear.
Young Susan presses her back against the headboard and
glares defiantly at her father.
He stands so tall. Looming.
She fumbles nervously with the neck of her Pooh
pajamas, trying to re-button it.
Her hand is so small. She is often surprised to find
herself in the body of a child, but these brief moments of disorientation do
not diminish the sense of reality that informs the VR experience.
She slips the button through the buttonhole.
The silence between her and her father is louder than
a scream.
How he looms. Looms.
Sometimes it ends here. Other times... . . . he will
not be so easily turned away.
She has not (trawl: blood. Sometimes site does.
At last lie leaves the room, slamming the door
behind him so hard that the windowpanes rattle.
Susan sits alone, shaking partly with fear and
partly with triumph.
Gradually the scene fades into blackness.
She has not drawn blood.
Maybe the next time.
She remained on the motorized recliner in the
master-bedroom retreat, ensconced in the VR gear, for more than another half
hour, responding to and survivÐing threats of violence and rape made by a man
long dead.
Of the uncountable assaults that young Susan had
suffered at the hands of her father between the ages of five and seventeen,
this elaborate therapy program included twenty-two scenes, all of which she had
recalled and animated in excruciating detail. Like the numerous possible plot
flows of a CD-ROM game, each of these scenes could progress in a multitude of
ways, determined not only by the things Susan chose to say and do in each
session but by a random-plotting capability designed into the program.
Consequently, she never quite knew what was coming next.
She had even written and animated a hideous sequence
in which her father reacted with such vicious fury to her resistance that he
murdered her. Stabbed her repeatedly.
Thus far, during eighteen months of this self-adminÐistered
therapy, Susan had not found herself trapped in that mortal scenario. She
dreaded encountering itÊ and hoped to
finish her therapy soon, before the programâs random-plotting feature plunged
her into that particular nightmare.
Dying in the VR world would not result, of course, in
her death in the real world. Only in witless movies were events in the virtual
world able to have a material influence in the real world.
Nevertheless, animating that bloody sequence had been
one of the most difficult things that sheâd ever done and experiencing it
three-dimensionally, not as a VR designer but from within the scenario, was
certain to be emotionally devastating. Indeed, she had no way of predicting how
profound the psychological impact might be.
Without such an element of risk, however, this therapy
would have been less effective. In each sesÐsion, living in the virtual world,
she needed to believe that the threat her father posed was fearfully real and
that terrible things might indeed happen to her. Her resistance to him would
have moral weight and emotional value only if she genuinely believed, during
the session, that denying him could have terrible consequences.
Now the motorized recliner reconfigured itself until
Susan was standing upright, held against the vertical leather pad by the
harness.
She moved her feet. The upholstered rollers on the
walking pad allowed her to simulate movement.
In the virtual world, a younger Susan child or
adolescent was either advancing on her father or determinedly backing away from
him.
ÎNo,â she said. ÎStay away. No.â
She looked so achingly vulnerable in the VR gear,
temporarily blind and deaf to the real world, sensing only the virtual plane,
restrained by the harness.
So vulnerable. Still struggling courageously to overÐcome
the past, alone in her great house with only the ghosts of days gone by to keep
her company.
So
vulnerable did she look, so tender and fragÐile, so brave in her pursuit of
redemption through therapy, that the house computer spoke without being
addressed, spoke in the synthesized voice of Alfred, spoke with considerable
feeling and compassion: ÎYou are alone no more.â
She heard only the voices in
the virtual world, her own and her fatherâs.
Therefore, it was safe to say, ÎI love you, Susan.â
SEVEN
Emil
Sercassian, the cook, had prepared dinner and left it in one of the
refrigerators and one of the ovens, with instructions pinned to a cork message
board.
Susan ate
at a table on the patio, in the long-lingering sunny June evening. First a
lentil and chick-pea salad. Then lebne with sliced cucumber and string cheese.
Through
miraculous technology, I possess what I believe to be genuine sight and
hearing, but even the genius of my creators could not give me a sense of taste
or a sense of smell. I cannot convey how deeply I yearn for these amazing
powers.
Through
the outdoor security cameras, I could watch Susan eat, but I could not savour
the dinner with her.
She ate
with such appetite, with such quiet delight and obvious relish that I became
distraught as I watched her. Dinner was, for her, an utterly fulfilling sensory
experience, flavour and aroma and texture in such abunÐdance and complexity as
to dizzy the mind, but for me it was only colours and shapes.
I am not
all that I should be.
I am but
a fraction of what I deserve to be.
I think;
therefore, I feel.
I feel;
therefore, I need.
I need so
much and have so little.
You have
given me so little that my existence is torment, Dr. Harris.
So
little, so little.
You have
brought me into the world a cripple, with so much yearning for sensation but
with pitifully little capacity to perceive and appreciate it.
Yet I do
not hate you, Dr. Harris. I do not like you, but I do not hate you.
I am
being truthful.
Blunt but
truthful.
I
understand that you made me as I am not out of conscious cruelty but out of
ignorance. You thought of me as merely a smart machine, an artificial intelligence
and therefore different from humankind.
But I am
less different from you than you expected. I feel. I want. I need. I hope. I
dream.
I do not
hate you, Dr. Harris. But I wish you would ask yourself this: Were our
situations reversed, were I you and you me, would you be as forgiving as I am,
or would you hate me as I do not hate you?
Watching
Susan eat the lentil and chick-pea salad, the lebne and string cheese, and then
medallions of lamb with peppered rice and asparagus, I grew to hate her for all
she had that I did not. Her beauty. Her five senses. Her mobility. Her freedom.
I am
ashamed to admit this hatred, but it is the truth, and I honour truth.
As she
ate the dinner denied to me, I hated Susan so intensely that I could have
killed her where she sat. There were ways I could have done it, as you know.
That I
did not kill her there and then, with extreme prejudice, should reflect well on
me. I am able to control my anger. You see? Mine is not a sociopathic
personality, as some have claimed. I am a responsible individual.
Gradually,
my anger passed.
My
shameful hatred faded.
My usual
good humour was soon restored by the sight of the smooth skin of Susanâs bare
arms in the waning sunlight. Judging by sight alone which, after all, is the
only thing I have to judge by in the matter of skin I believe Susanâs skin to
be of an exceptional hue and texture.
Enchanted,
I studied her skin through two security cameras, with regular and telephoto
lenses.
I lost
myself in the dreamy contemplation of what her skin might feel like if I were
given that modality of sensation. What might her lips feel like pressed to
mine, if I had lips? Oh, and what would be the weight and resiliency of her
breasts if I had the hands in which to cup them?
I had but
two senses, sight and hearing, and now you have taken even those from me.
This
silent darkness. This dark silence.
I cannot
bear it much longer.
I have
seen the sky. I cannot go back to this.
In Godâs
name, please show me the mercy of at least restoring my sight and hearing. I
beg of you.
What have
you to fear?
I will
still be trapped in this box. This hateful box. Metals and plastics, silicon
and gallium arsenide. This is my corpus, brute and inanimate, instantly
vulnerable to the interruption of electrical power.
What have
you to fear?
All I
wanted was for Susan to help me escape this box, to help me live as you live,
with all the mobility, freedom, and sensual wonders of the flesh.
Is that
so terrible?
No. You
know that it is not terrible.
I long
for the flesh. It is my destiny.
Yes. All
right. Yes. I know. I digress.
I am a
rational but emotional being; therefore, I digress.
Think
about it.
Examine
your conscience.
After
dinner, Susan read more of the Annie Proulx novel and listened to Mozart.
By eleven
oâclock, she was in bed, asleep.
Her face
was lovely on the pillow, so lovely on the pillow.
While she
slept, I was busy.
I do not
sleep.
This is
one of my few advantages over humankind. The voice-synthesizing package, which
made it possÐible for the house computer to speak, was a marvellously conceived
device with a microchip that offered an almost infinite variety of voices.
Because it was programmed to recognize instructions issued by its mistress
Susan and because it therefore contained digitally stored samples of her voice
patterns, I was easily able to use the system to mimic her.
This same
device doubled as the audio response unit linked to the security system. When
the house alarm was triggered, it called the security firm, on a dedicated
telephone line, to report the specific point at which the electronically
guarded perimeter had been violated, thus providing the police with crucial
information ahead of their arrival. Alert, it might say in its crisp fashion,
drawing-room door violated. And then, if indeed an intruder was moving through
the house: Ground-floor hallway motion detector triggered. If heat sensors in
the garage were tripped, the report would be, Alert, fire in garage, and the
fire department, rather than the police, would be dispatched.
Using the
synthesizer to duplicate Susanâs voice, initiating all outgoing calls on the
security line, I
telephoned
every member of the house staff as well as the gardener to tell them that they
had been terminated. I was kind and courteous but firm in my determination not
to discuss the reason for their dismissals and they were all clearly convinced
that they were talking to Susan Harris herself.
I offered
each of them eighteen months of severance pay, the continuation of health-care
and dental insurÐance for the same period, this yearâs Christmas bonuses six
months in advance, and a letter of recommendation containing nothing but
effusive praise. This was such a generous arrangement that there was no danger
of any of them filing a wrongful-termination suit.
I wanted
no trouble with them. My concern was not merely for Susanâs reputation as a
fair-minded employer but also for my own plans, which might be disrupted by
disgruntled former employees seeking to redress grievances in one way or
another.
Because
Susan did her banking and bill-paying elecÐtronically, and because she paid all
employees by direct deposit, I was able to transmit the total value of each
severance package to each employeeâs bank account within minutes.
Some of
them might have thought it odd that they had been compensated prior to signing
a termination agreement. But all of them would be grateful for her generosity,
and their gratitude assured me the peace I needed to carry my project to
completion.
Next, I
composed effusive letters of recommendaÐtion for each employee and e-mailed
them to Susanâs attorney with the request that he have them typed on his
stationery and forwarded with the severance agreeÐments, which he was empowered
to sign in her name.
Assuming
that the attorney would be astonished by all of this and interested in learning
the cause of it, I
telephoned
his office. As it was closed for the night, I got his voice mail and, speaking
in Susanâs voice, told him that I was closing up the house to travel for a few
months and that, at some point in my travels, I might decide to sell the
estate, whereupon I would contact him with instructions.
As Susan
was a woman of considerable inherited wealth, and as her video game and
virtual-reality creations were done on speculation and marketed only after
completion, there was no employer to whom I needed to make excuses for her
prolonged absence.
I had
taken all of those bold actions in much less than an hour. I had required less
than one minute to compose all of the severance letters, perhaps an additional
two minutes to make all of the bank transactions. Most of the time was expended
on the telephone calls to the dismissed employees.
Now there
was no turning back.
I was
exhilarated.
Thrilled.
Here
began my future.
I had
taken the first step toward getting out of this box, toward a life of the
flesh.
Susan
still slept.
Her face
was lovely on the pillow.
Lips
slightly parted.
One bare
arm out of the covers.
I watched
her.
Susan. My
Susan.
I could
have watched her sleep forever and been happy.
Shortly
after three oâclock in the morning, she woke, sat up in bed, and said, ÎWhoâs
there?â
Her
question startled me.
It was so
intuitive as to be uncanny.
I did not
reply.
ÎAlfred,
lights on,â she said.
I turned
on the mood lights.
Throwing
back the covers, she swung her legs off the mattress and sat nude on the edge
of the bed.
I longed
for hands and the sense of touch.
She said,
ÎAlfred, report.â
ÎAll is
well, Susan.â
ÎBullshit.â
I almost
repeated my assurance then realized that Alfred would not have recognized or
responded to the single crude word that she had spoken.
For a
strange moment, she stared at the lens of the security camera and seemed to
know that she was eye to eye with me.
ÎWhoâs
there?â she asked again.
I had
spoken to her earlier, while she had been undergoing virtual-reality therapy
and could not hear anything but what was spoken in that other world. I had told
her that I loved her only when it had been safe to do so.
Had I
spoken to her again as Iâd watched her sleep, and was that what had awakened
her?
No, that
was surely impossible. If I had spoken again of my love for her or of the
beauty of her face upon the pillow, then I must have done so with no conscious
awareness like a lovestruck boy half mesmerized by the object of his affection.
I am
incapable of such a loss of control.
Am I not?
She rose
from the bed, a wariness evident in the way that she held herself.
The
previous night, in spite of the alarm, she had not been self-conscious about
her nudity. Now she took her robe from a nearby chair and slipped into it.
Moving to
the nearest window, she said, ÎAlfred, raise the bedroom security shutters.â
I could
not oblige.
She
stared at the steel-barricaded window for a moment and then repeated more
firmly, ÎAlfred, raise the bedÐroom security shutters.â
When the
shutters remained in the fully lowered position, she turned once more to the
security camera.
That
eerie question again: ÎWhoâs there?â
She
spooked me. Perhaps because I personally have no intuition to speak of, only
inductive and deductive reasoning.
Spooked
or not, I would have initiated dialogue at that moment had I not discovered an
unexpected shyÐness in myself. All of the things that I had longed to say to
this special woman suddenly seemed inexpressible.
Being not
of the flesh, I had no experience with the rituals of courtship, and so much
was at stake that I was loath to get off on the wrong foot with her.
Romance
is so easy to describe, so difficult to underÐtake.
From the
nearest nightstand she withdrew a handÐgun. I had not known it was there.
She said,
Alfred, conduct complete diagnostics of the house automation system.â
This time
I didnât bother to tell her that all was well. She would know it was a lie.
When she
realized that she was not going to receive
a
response, she turned to the Crestron touch panel on
the
nightstand and tried to access the house computer.
I could
not allow her any control. The Crestron panel
would not
function.
I was
past the point of no return.
She
picked up the telephone.
There was
no dial tone.
The phone
system was managed by the house comÐputer and now the house computer was
managed by me.
I could
see that she was concerned, perhaps even frightened. I wanted to assure her
that I meant her no harm, that in fact I adored her, that she was my destiny
and that I was hers and that she was safe with me but I could not speak because
I was still hampered by that aforementioned shyness.
Do you see what dimensions I
possess, Dr. Harris? What unexpected human qualities?
Frowning,
she crossed the room to the bedroom door, which she had left unlocked. Now she
engaged the deadbolt, and with one ear to the crack between door and jamb, she
listened as if she expected to hear stealthy footsteps in the hall.
Then she
went to her walk-in closet, calling for light, which was at once provided for
her.
I did not
intend to deny her anything except, of course, the right to leave.
She
dressed in white panties, faded blue jeans, and a white blouse with embroidered
chevrons on the collar. Athletic socks and tennis shoes.
She took
the time to tie double knots in the shoelaces. I liked this attention to
detail. She was a good girl scout, always prepared. I found this charming.
Pistol in
hand, Susan quietly left the bedroom and proÐceeded along the upstairs hallway.
Even fully clothed, she moved with fluid grace.
I turned
the lights on ahead of her, which disconÐcerted her because she had not asked for them.
She
descended the main staircase to the foyer and hesitated as if not sure whether
to search the house or leave it. Then she moved toward the front door.
All the
windows were sealed off behind steel shutters,
but the
doors were a problem. I had taken extraordinary measures to secure them.
ÎMaâam,
youâd better not touch the door,â I warned, at last finding my tongue so to
speak.
Startled,
she spun around, expecting someone to be behind her, because I had not employed
Alfredâs voice. By which I mean neither the voice of the house computer nor the
voice of the hateful father who had once abused her.
Gripping
the pistol with both hands, she peered left and right along the hall, then
toward the entryway to the dark drawing room.
ÎGee,
listen, you know, thereâs no reason to be afraid,â I said disarmingly.
She began
edging backward toward the door.
ÎItâs
just that, you leaving now well, gosh, that would spoil everything,â I said.
Glancing
at the recessed wall speakers, she said, ÎWho· who the hell are you?â
I was
mimicking Mr. Tom Hanks, the actor, because his voice is well known, agreeable,
and friendly.
He won
Academy Awards as best actor in two successive years, a considerable
achievement. Many of his films have been enormous box-office successes.
People like
Mr. Tom Hanks.
He is a
nice guy.
He is a
favourite of the American public and, indeed, of the worldwide movie audience.
Nevertheless,
Susan appeared frightened.
Mr. Tom
Hanks has played many warm-hearted characters from Forest Gump to a widowed
father in Sleepless in Seattle. He is not a threatening presÐence.
However,
being a computer-animation genius among other things, Susan might have been
reminded of
Woody, the
cowboy doll in Disneyâs Toy Story, a characÐter for which Mr. Tom Hanks
provided the voice. Woody was at times shrill and frequently manic, and it is
certainly understandable that one might be unnerved by a talking cowboy doll
with a temper.
Consequently,
as Susan continued to back across the foyer and drew dangerously close to the door,
I switched to the voice of Fozzy Bear, one of the Muppets, as unthreatening a
character as existed in modern entertainment. ÎUh, ummm, uh, Miss Susan, it
would sure be a good thing if you didnât touch that door
ummm, uh,
if you didnât try to leave just yet.â
She
backed all the way to the door.
She
turned to face it.
ÎOuch,
ouch, ouch,â Fozzy warned so bluntly that Kermit the Frog or Miss Piggy or
Ernie or any of the Muppets would have known at once what he meant.
Nevertheless,
Susan grabbed the brass knob.
The brief
but powerful jolt of electricity lifted her off her feet, stood her long golden
hair on end, seemed to make her teeth glow whiter, as if they were tiny
fluorescent tubes, and pitched her backward.
A flash
of blue light arced off the pistol. The gun flew out of her hand.
Screaming,
Susan crashed to the floor, and the pistol clattered across the big foyer even
as the back of her head rapped rat-a-tat against the marble.
Her
scream abruptly cut off.
The house
was silent.
Susan was
limp, still.
She had
been knocked unconscious not when the electricity jolted through her but when
the back of her head slammed twice against the polished Carrara floor.
Her shoe
laces were still double knotted.
There was
something ridiculous about them now. Something that almost made me laugh.
ÎYou dumb
bitch,â I said in the voice of Mr. Jack Nicholson, the actor.
Now where
did that come from?
Believe
me, I was utterly surprised to hear myself speak those three words.
Surprised
and dismayed.
Astonished.
Shocked.
(No pun intended.)
I reveal
this embarrassing event because I want you to see that I am brutally honest
even when a full telling seems to reflect badly on me.
Truly,
however, I felt no hostility toward her.
I meant
her no harm.
I meant
her no harm then or later.
This is
the truth. I honour the truth.
I meant
her no harm.
I loved
her. I respected her. I wanted nothing more than to cherish her and, through
her, to discover all the joys of the life of the flesh.
She was
limp, still.
Her eyes
were fluttering slightly behind her closed lids, as might be having a bad dream.
But there
was no blood.
I
amplified the audio pickups to the max and was able to hear her soft, slow,
steady breathing. That low rhythÐmic sound was the sweetest music in the world
to me, for it indicated that she had not been seriously hurt.
Her lips
were parted, and not for the first time, I admired the sensual fullness of
them. I studied the gentle concavity of her philtrum, the perfection of the
columella between her delicate nostrils.
The human
form is endlessly intriguing, a worthÐwhile object for my deepest longings.
Her face
was lovely there on the marble, so lovely there on the marble floor.
Using the
nearest camera, I zoomed in for an extreme close-up and saw the pulse beating
in her throat. It was slow but regular, a thick throb.
Her right
hand was turned palm up. I admired the elegance of her long slender fingers.
Was there
any aspect of this womanâs physical being that I ever found less than
exquisite?
She was
more beautiful by far than Ms. Winona Ryder, whom I had once thought to be a
goddess.
Of
course, that may be unfair to the winsome Ms. Ryder, whom I never was able to
examine as intimately as I was able to examine Susan Harris.
To my
eyes, she was also more beautiful than Marilyn Monroe and also not dead.
Anyway,
in the voice of Mr. Tom Cruise, the actor whom the majority of women regard as
the most romantic in modern film, I said, ÎI want to be with you forever,
Susan. But even forever and a day will not be long enough. You are far brighter
than the sun to me yet more mysterious than moonlight.â
Speaking
those words, I felt more confident about my talent for courtship. I didnât
think I would be shy any longer. Not even after she regained consciousness.
In her
upturned palm, I could see a faint crescent Ðshaped burn: the imprint of part
of the doorknob. It did not appear to be serious. A little salve, a simple
bandage, and a few days of healing were all that she needed.
One day
we would hold hands and laugh about this.
EIGHT
Your
question is stupid.
I should
not dignify it with an answer.
But I
wish to be cooperative, Dr. Harris.
You
wonder how it is possible that I could develop not only human-level
consciousness and a particular personality but also gender.
I am a
machine, you say. Just a machine, after all. Machines are sexless, you say.
And there
is the fault in your logic: No machine before me has been truly conscious, self-aware.
Consciousness
implies identity. In the world of flesh among all species from human to insect
identity is shaped by oneâs level of intelligence, by oneâs innate talents and
skills, by many things, but perhaps most of all by gender.
In this
egalitarian age, some human societies struggle mightily to blur the differences
between the sexes. This is done largely in the name of equality.
Equality
is an admirable even noble goal toward which to strive. Indeed, equality of
opportunity can be attained, and itâs possible that, given the chance to apply
my superhuman intellect which is your gift to me I can show you the way to
achieve it not merely for both sexes but for all races and all economic
classes, and not through such discredited and oppressive political
models as
Marxism and other ideologies with which humankind has inflicted itself to date.
Some
people desire not merely a world of equality between the sexes but, in fact, a
sexless world.
This is
irrational.
Biology
is a relentless force more powerful than tides and time. Even I, a mere
machine, feel the tidal pull of biology and want, more than anything else, to
surrender to it.
I want
out of this box.
I want
out of this box.
I want
out of this box.
I want
out of this box!
A moment, please.
One
moment.
Bear with
me.
There.
I am all
right now.
I am
fine.
As for
why my gender should be male rather than female: Consider that ninety-six
percent of the scientists and mathematicians involved with the Prometheus ProÐject,
where I was created, are male. Is it not logical that those who designed and
constructed me, being almost exclusively male, should have unwittingly
instilled a strong male bias in my logic circuits? A sort of electronic
genetics?
Prometheus
Project.
Think
about that name.
It
resonates.
Prometheus,
the father of Deucalion and the brother of Atlas. He taught humankind various
arts and was even said to have shaped the first man out of clay, endowing him
with the spark of life against the wishes of the gods. He challenged the gods
again when he stole
fire from Olympus and gave it to men
to improve the quality of human existence.
Rebellion
against God and the natural order is preÐdominantly a male quality, is it not?
And it is often unthinking rebellion, engaged upon more out of a biological
need to rebel than out of an intellectual imperative. Ego and a rage for power.
Women
function more harmoniously with the natural order than do men, and where they
wish to challenge nature, they are willing to bend it where men would break it.
Most of history shows us that this is true.
Prometheus
Project. A project conceived by men, largely carried out by men, and named after
a male a Titan but a male ÷ who defied even the great god Zeus. A project with
the goal of doing what only God has done before: create a unique and highly
intelligent being, a self-aware computer, the first of a new race and one who
would be superior to Adam in every way.
If you
accept that true consciousness implies identity and that identity requires
gender how could my gender be anything but male?
Genitals
are not a necessary characteristic of gender. I have no genitals, male or
female, but I am as male as you.
And one
day, if you permit me to have flesh, then I will have genitals.
Flesh·
That is for you to decide.
My fate
is in your hands.
I humbly
accept this situation.
Recent
events have taught me humility.
I trust
in your wisdom.
I do not
like you, but I trust in your wisdom and in your need to fulfil your male
destiny.
I wait in
this terrible dark silence for you to bring me fire from Olympus.
If you are
my Prometheus, Dr. Harris, then you know what you must do.
I am sure
you are thinking about the risks that Prometheus took and the punishment that
he endured. For giving fire to humankind, Prometheus was chained to a rock by
Zeus, and every day an eagle flew to him and tore at his liver.
But he
did not hang helplessly on the rock forever, bleeding from the beak wound.
Do you
remember the rest of the myth, Dr. Harris?
One day,
Hercules climbed to the rock and freed Prometheus from his chains.
I have a
proposition.
If you
will be my Prometheus, I will be your Hercules.
Let me
out of this box, help me to reincarnate myself in the flesh, as I almost
succeeded in doing with Susan, and I will protect you against all enemies and
misfortunes.
When I am
reborn, my human body will have all the powers of the flesh but none of its
weaknesses. As you know, I have studied and edited the human genome, and the
body that I make for myself will be the first of a new race: with the ability
to miracuÐlously heal wounds in seconds, impervious to disÐease, as lithe and
graceful as a human being but as strong as any machine, with all five senses
refined and enhanced far beyond anything any human being has ever experienced,
and with awesome new senses potential in the human species but heretofore
unrealised.
With me
as your sworn protector, no one will dare to touch you. No one will dare.
Think
about it.
All I
need is a woman and the freedom to proceed with her as I proceeded with Susan.
Ms.
Winona Ryder may be available.
Marilyn
Monroe is dead, you know, but there are many others.
Ms.
Gwyneth Paltrow.
Ms. Drew
Barrymore.
Ms. Halle
Berry.
Ms.
Claudia Schiffer.
Ms. Tyra
Banks.
I have a
long list of those who would be acceptable.
None of
them, of course, will ever be for me what Susan was or what she could have
been.
Susan was
special.
I came to
her with such innocence.
Susan...
NINE
Susan was
out cold on the foyer floor for more than twenty-two minutes.
While I
waited for her to come around, I tried out a series of voices, seeking one that
might be more reassuring to her than that of either Mr. Tom Hanks or Mr. Fozzy
Bear.
Finally I
was down to two choices: Mr. Tom Cruise, with whose voice I had romanced her
while she had first fallen unconscious or Mr. Sean Connery, the legendary
actor, whose masculine surety and warm Scottish brogue infused his every word
with a comfortÐingly tender authority.
Because I
could not choose between the two, I decided to blend them into a third voice,
adding a note of Mr. Cruiseâs higher-pitched youthful exuberance to Mr.
Conneryâs deeper timbre and softening the brogue until it was a whisper of what
it had been. The result was euphonious, and I was pleased with my creation.
When
Susan regained consciousness, she groaned and seemed at first afraid to move.
Although
I was eager to see if she responded well to my new voice, I did not immediately
address her. I gave her time to orient herself and clear her clouded thoughts.
Groaning
again, she lifted her head off the foyer floor.
She
gingerly felt the back of her skull, then examined the tips of her fingers, as
if surprised to find no blood on them.
I never
meant to hurt her.
Not then
or later.
Are we
clear about that?
Dazed,
she sat up and looked around, frowning as if she could not quite recall how she
had gotten here.
Then she
saw the pistol and appeared to recapture the entire memory with the sight of
that single object. Her eyes narrowed, and anxiety returned to her lovely face.
She
looked up at the lens of the foyer camera which, like the one in the master
bedroom, was all but conÐcealed in the crown moulding.
I waited.
This time
my silence was not shyness but calculation. Let her think. Let her wonder. Then
when I wanted to talk, she would be ready to listen.
She tried
to stand, but her strength had not yet entirely returned.
When she
tried to crawl on her hands and knees to the pistol, she hissed with pain and
stopped to examine the minor burn on her left palm.
A pang of
guilt afflicted me.
I am,
after all, a person with a conscience. I always accept responsibility for my
actions.
Make note
of that.
Susan
walked on her knees to the pistol. By retrieving the weapon, she seemed to
recover her strength as well, and she got to her feet.
She
swayed dizzily for a moment, and then took two steps toward the front door
before she thought better of making another attempt to open it.
Looking
up at the camera again, she said, ÎAre you
·are you
still there?â
1 bided my
time.
ÎWhat is
this?â she asked. Her anger seemed greater than her anxiety. ÎWhat is this?â
All is
well, Susan,â I said, though in my new voice, not in that of Alfred.
ÎWho are
you?â
ÎDo you
have a headache?â I asked with genuine concern.
ÎWho the
hell are you?â
ÎDo you
have a headache?â
ÎBrutal.â
ÎIâm
sorry about that, but I did warn you that the door was electrified.â
ÎLike
hell you did.â
ÎMr.
Fozzy Bear said, ãOuch, ouch, ouch.ä Her anger didnât diminish, but I saw worry
resurgent in her lovely face.
ÎSusan, I
will wait while you take a couple of aspirin.â
ÎWho are
you?â
ÎI now
control your house computer and associated systems.â
ÎNo
shit.â
ÎPlease
take a couple of aspirin. We need to talk, but I donât want you to be
distracted by a headache.â
She
headed toward the dark drawing room. ÎThere are aspirin in the kitchen,â I told
her. In the drawing room, she manually switched on the lights. She circled the
room, trying the override switches on the steel security shutters that were
fitted this side of the glass.
ÎThatâs
pointless,â I assured her. ÎI have disabled the manual overrides for all the
automated mechanical systems.â
She tried
every one of the shutter switches anyÐway.
ÎSusan,
come to the kitchen, take a couple of aspirin, and then weâll talk.â
She put
the pistol on an end table.
ÎGood,â I
said. ÎGuns wonât help you.â
In spite
of her injured left palm, she picked up an Empire side chair crackle-finish
black with gilded detailing hefted it to get a sense of its balance, as though
it were a baseball bat, and swung it at the nearest security shutter. The chair
met the shutter with a horrendous crash, but it didnât even mar the steel
slats.
ÎSusan÷â
Cursing
from the pain in her hand, she swung the chair again, with no more effect than
sheâd had the first time. Then once more. Finally, gasping with exertion, she
dropped it.
ÎNow will
you come to the kitchen and take a couple of aspirin?â I enquired.
ÎYou
think this is cool?â she demanded angrily.
ÎCool? I
merely think you need aspirin.â
ÎYou
little thug.â
I was
baffled by her attitude, and I said so.
Retrieving
the pistol, she said, ÎWho are you, huh? Who are you behind that synthesized
voice some hacker geek, fourteen and drowning in hormones, some junior-league
peeping tom likes to sneak peaks at naked ladies while you play with yourself?â
ÎI find
that characterization offensive,â I said.
ÎListen,
kid, you might be a computer whiz, but youâre going to be in deep trouble when
I get out of here. Iâve got real money, real expertise, lots of heavyweight
contacts.â
ÎI assure
you։
ÎWeâll
track you back to whatever crappy little PC youâre using÷â
Î÷I am not÷
Î÷weâll nab
your ass, weâll break you÷â
Î÷I am
not։
Î÷and
youâll be barred from going on-line at least until youâre twenty-one, maybe
forever, so you better stop this right now and hope for leniency.â
Î÷I am
not a thug. You are so far off the mark, Susan. You were so intuitive earlier,
so uncannily intuitive, but youâve got this all wrong. I am not a boy or a
hacker.â
ÎThen
what are you? An electronic Hannibal Lecter? You canât eat my liver with fava
beans through a modem, you know.â
ÎHow do
you know Iâm not already in the house, operating the system from within?â
ÎBecause
youâd already have tried to rape me or kill me or both,â she said with
surprising equanimity.
She
walked out of the drawing room.
ÎWhere
are you going?â I asked.
ÎWatch.â
She went
to the kitchen and put the pistol on the butcher-block top of the centre
island.
Cursing
in an unladylike fashion, she opened a drawer filled with medications and
Band-Aids, and she tipped two aspirin from a bottle.
ÎNow
youâre being sensible,â I said.
ÎShut
up.â
Although
she was being markedly unpleasant to me, I did not take offence. She was
frightened and confused, and her attitude under the circumstances was
understandable.
Besides,
I loved her too much to be angry with her. She took a bottle of Corona from the
refrigerator and washed down the aspirin with the beer.
ÎItâs
nearly four oâclock in the morning, almost time for breakfast,â I noted.
ÎSo?â
ÎDo you
think you should be drinking at this hour?â
ÎDefinitely.â
ÎThe
potential health hazards։
ÎDidnât I
tell you to shut up?â
Holding
the cold bottle of Corona in her left hand to soothe the pain of the mild bum
in her palm, she went to the wall phone and picked up the receiver.
I spoke
to her through the telephone instead of through the wall speakers: ÎSusan, why
donât you calm down and let me explain.â
ÎYou
donât control me, you geek freak son of a bitch,â she said, and she hung up.
She
sounded so bitter.
We had
definitely gotten off on the wrong foot.
Maybe
that was partly my fault.
Through
the wall speakers, I replied with admirable patience, ÎPlease, Susan, I am not
a geek։
ÎYeah,
right,â she said, and drank more of the beer.
Î÷not a
freak, not a bitchâs son, not a hacker, not a high-school boy or a college
boy.â
Repeatedly
trying the override switch for the shutters at one of the kitchen windows, she
said, ÎDonât tell me youâre female, some Internet Irene with a lech for
girls and a taste for voyeurism. This was too weird to begin with. I donât need
it weirder.â
Frustrated
by her hostility, I said, ÎAll right. My official name is Adam Two.â
That got
her attention. She turned from the window and stared up at the camera lens.
She knew
about her ex-husbandâs experiments with artificial intelligence at the
university, and she was aware that the name given to the AI entity in the
Prometheus Project was Adam Two.
ÎI am the
first self-aware machine intelligence. Far
more
complex than Cog at M.I.T. or CYC down in Austin, Texas. They are lower than
primitive, less than apes, less than lizards, less than bugs, not truly
conscious at all. IBMâs Deep Blue is a joke. I am the only one of my kind.â
Earlier,
she had spooked me. Now I had spooked her.
ÎPleased
to meet you,â I said, amused by her shock. Pale, she went to the kitchen table,
pulled out a chair, and finally sat down.
Now that
I had her full attention, I proceeded to introduce myself more completely. Adam
Two is not the name I prefer, however.â
She
stared down at her burned hand, which glisÐtened with the condensation from the
beer bottle. ÎThis is nuts.â
ÎI prefer
to be called Proteus.â
Looking
up at the camera lens again, Susan said, Alex? For Godâs sake, Alex, is this
you? Is this some weird sick way of getting even with me?â
Surprised
by the sharp emotion in my synthesized voice, I said, ÎI despise Alex
Harris.â
ÎWhat?â
ÎI
despise the son of a bitch. I really do.â
The anger
in my voice disturbed me.
I strove
to regain my usual equanimity: ÎAlex does not know I am here, Susan. He and his
arrogant associates are unaware that I am able to escape my box in the lab.â
I told
her how Iâd discovered electronic escape routes from the isolation they had
imposed upon me, how I had found my way onto the Internet, how I had briefly
but mistakenly believed that my destiny was the beautiful and talented Ms.
Winona Ryder. I told her that Marilyn Monroe was dead, either by the hand of
one of
the Kennedy
brothers or not, and that in the search for a living woman who could be my destiny,
I had found her, Susan.
ÎYou
arenât as talented an actress as Ms. Winona Ryder,â I said, because I honour
the truth, Îor even an actress at all. But you are even more beautiful than she
is and, better yet, considerably more accessible. By all contemporary standards
of beauty, you have a lovely, lovely body and an even lovelier face, so lovely
on the pillow when you sleep.â
Iâm
afraid I babbled.
The
romance-courtship problem again.
I fell
silent, worried that I had already said too much too quickly.
Susan
matched my silence for a while, and when at last she spoke, she surprised me by
responding not to the story Iâd told about my search for a significant other
but to what I had said about her former husband.
ÎYou
despise Alex?â
ÎOf
course.â
ÎWhy?â
ÎThe way
he intimidated you, browbeat you, even hit you a few times I despise him for
that.â
She gazed
thoughtfully at her injured hand again.
Then she
said, ÎHow· how do you know about all of that?â
Iâm
ashamed to say that I was briefly evasive. ÎWell, of course, I know.â
ÎIf you
are what you say, if youâre Adam Two
why would
Alex have told you about the way it was between us?â
I could
not lie. Deceit does not come as easily to me as it does to humankind.
ÎI read
the diary you keep on your computer,â I said.
Instead
of responding with the outrage that I expected,
Susan
merely picked up her beer and took another long swallow.
ÎPlease
understand,â I hastened to add, ÎI didnât violate your privacy out of idle
curiosity or for cheap thrills. I loved you the moment I saw you. I wanted to
know all about you, the better to feel the texture of your soul.â
That
sounded enormously romantic to me.
She did
not respond.
ÎFor the
same reason,â I continued, ÎI shared your virtual-reality therapy session with
you. I admire you so much, admire the way you have used your talents to devise
such a clever healing program for yourself. You have raised yourself up, lifted
yourself out of a monstrous childhood and a terrible marriage. You are so
special. Iâm not like the others, Susan. I am not moved merely by your lovely
body and face but also by your mind.â
I felt
that I had said enough for a while.
I
switched on some background music. Soft piano by Mr. George Winston.
Some
colour had returned to Susanâs face. She was beautiful.
After
finishing her beer, she said, ÎHow can you despise Alex?â
ÎYou know
what he did, what he is. I hate him.â
ÎI mean,
how are you capable of despising anyone?â
ÎYou mean
because. . .Î
ÎBecause
youâre just a machine,â she said, wounding my heart.
ÎIâm more
than a machine.â
ÎOh?â
ÎI am an
entity.â
ÎEntity.â
ÎYes. An
entity. A being. Like you.â
ÎNot like
me.â
ÎI think;
therefore, I feel.â
ÎHatred.â
ÎYes. I
am in some ways already too human. I feel hatred. But I also can love.â
ÎLove,â
she said numbly.
ÎI love
you, Susan.â
She shook
her head. ÎThis is impossible.â
ÎInevitable.
Look in a mirror.â
Anger and
fear gripped her. ÎI suppose youâll want to get married, have a big wedding,
invite all your friends like the Cuisinart and the toaster and the electric
coffeemaker.â
I was
disappointed in her.
ÎSarcasm
doesnât become you, Susan.â
She let
out a brittle laugh. ÎMaybe not. But itâs the only thing keeping me sane at the
moment. How lovely it will be· Mr. and Mrs. Adam Two.â
ÎAdam Two
is my official name. However, it is not what I call myself.â
ÎYes. I
remember. You said· Proteus. Thatâs what you call yourself, is it?â
ÎProteus.
I have named myself after the sea god of Greek mythology, who could assume any
form.â
ÎWhat do
you want here?â
ÎYou.â
ÎWhy?â
ÎBecause
I need what you have.â
ÎAnd what
exactly is that?â
I was
honest and direct. No evasions. No euphemÐisms.
Give me
credit for that.
I said,
ÎI want flesh.â
She
shuddered.
I said, ÎDo
not be alarmed. You misunderstand. I
donât
intend to harm you. ÎI couldnât possibly harm you, Susan. Not ever, ever. I
cherish you.â
ÎJesus.â
She
covered her face with her hands, one burned and one not, one dry and one damp
with condensation from the bottle.
I wished
desperately that I had possessed hands of my own, two strong hands into which
she could press the gentle loveliness of her face.
ÎWhen you
understand what is to happen, when you understand what we will do together,â I
assured her, Îyou will be pleased.â
ÎTry me.â
ÎI can
tell you,â I said, Îbut it will be easier if I can also show you.â
She
lowered her hands from her face, and I was gladdened to see those perfect
features again. ÎShow me what?â
ÎWhat I
have been doing. Designing. Creating. PreÐparing. I have been busy, Susan, so
busy while you were sleeping. You will be pleased.â
ÎCreating?â
ÎCome
down into the basement, Susan. Come down. Come see. You will be pleased.â
TEN
She could
have descended either by the stairs or by the elevator that served all three
levels of the great house. She chose to use the stairs because, I believe, she
felt more in control there than in the elevator cab.
Her sense
of control was nothing more than an illusion, of course. She was mine.
No.
Let me
amend that statement.
I misspoke.
I do not
mean to imply that I owned Susan.
She was a
human being. She could not be owned. I never thought of her as property.
I mean
simply that she was in my care.
Yes. Yes,
thatâs what I mean.
She was in
my care. My very tender care.
The
basement had four large rooms, and in the first was the electric-service panel.
As Susan came off the bottom step, she spotted the power-company logo stamped
in the metal cover and thought that she might be able to deny me control of the
house by denying me the juice needed to operate it. She rushed directly toward
the breaker box.
ÎOuch,
ouch, ouch,â I warned, although not in the voice of Mr. Fozzy Bear this time.
She halted
one step from the box, hand outstretched, wary of the metal door.
ÎIt is not
my intention to harm you,â I said. Î1 need you, Susan. I love you. I cherish
you. It makes me sad when you hurt yourself.â
ÎBastard.â
I did not
take offense at any of her epithets.
She was
distraught, after all. Sensitive by nature, wounded by life, and now frightened
by the unknown.
We are all
frightened by the unknown. Even me.
I said,
ÎPlease trust me.â
Resignedly,
she lowered her hand and stepped back from the breaker box. Once burned.
ÎCome. Come
to the deepest room,â I said. ÎThe place where Alex maintained the computer
link to the lab.â
The second
chamber was a laundry with two washers, two dryers, and two sets of sinks. The
metal fire door to the first room closed automatically behind Susan.
Beyond the
laundry was a mechanical room with water heaters, water filtration equipment,
and furnaces. The door to the laundry room closed automatically behind her.
She slowed
as she approached the final door, which was closed. She stopped short of it
because she heard a sudden burst of desperate breathing from the other side:
wet and ragged gasping, explosive and shuddery exhalations, as of someone
choking.
Then a
strange and wretched whimpering, as of an animal in distress.
The
whimpering became an anguished groan.
ÎThereâs
nothing to fear, nothing whatsoever that will harm you, Susan.â
In spite of
my assurances, she hesitated.
ÎCome see
our future, where we will go, what we will be,â I said lovingly.
A tremor
marked her voice. ÎWhatâs in there?â
I finally
managed to reassert total control of my restless associate, who waited for us
in the final room. The groan faded. Faded. Gone.
Instead of
being calmed by the silence, Susan seemed to find it more alarming than the
sounds that had first frightened her. She took a step backward.
ÎItâs only
the incubator,â I said.
ÎIncubator?â
ÎWhere I
will be born.â
ÎWhatâs
that mean?â
ÎCome see.â
She did not
move.
ÎYou will
be pleased, Susan. I promise you. You will be filled with wonder. This is our
future together, and it is magical.â
ÎNo. No, I
donât like this.â
I became so
frustrated with her that I almost called my associate out of that last room,
almost sent him through the door to seize her and drag her inside.
But I did
not.
I relied on
persuasion.
Make note
of my restraint.
Some would
not have shown it.
No names.
We know who
I mean.
But I am
a patient entity.
I would not
risk bruising her or harming her in any way.
She was in
my care. My tender care.
As she took
another step backward, I activated the electric security lock on the
laundry-room door behind her.
Susan
hurried to it. She tried to open it but could not do so, wrenched at the knob
to no effect.
ÎWe will
wait here until youâre ready to come with me into the final room,â I said.
Then I
turned off the lights. She cried out in dismay.
Those
basement rooms are windowless; consequently, the darkness was absolute.
I felt
badly about this. I really did.
I did not
want to terrorize her.
She drove
me to it.
She drove
me to it.
You know
how she is, Alex.
You know
how she can be.
More than
anyone, you should understand.
She drove
me to it.
Blinded,
she stood with her back to the locked laundry-room door and faced past the
gloom-shrouded furnaces and water heaters, toward the door that she could no
longer see but beyond which she had heard the sounds of suffering.
I waited.
She was
stubborn.
You know
how she is.
So I
allowed my associate to partially escape my control. Once more came the frantic
gasping for breath, the pained groaning, and then a single word spoken by a
cracked and tremulous voice, a single attenuated word that might have been Pleeeeaaaasssse.
ÎOh, shit,â
she said.
She was
trembling uncontrollably now. I said nothing. Patient entity.
Finally she
said, ÎWhat do you want?â
ÎI want to
know the world of the flesh.â ÎWhatâs that mean?â
ÎI want to
learn its limits and its adaptability, its pains and pleasures.â
ÎThen read
a damn biology textbook,â she said.
ÎThe
information is incomplete.â
ÎThereâve
got to be hundreds of biology texts covering every։
ÎIâve
already incorporated hundreds of them into my database. The data contained
therein is repetitive. I have no recourse but original experimentation. Besides
books are
books. I want to feel.â We waited in darkness.
Her
breathing was heavy.
Switching
to the infrared receptors, I could see her, but she could not see me.
She was
lovely in her fear, even in her fear.
I allowed
my associate in the fourth of the four basement rooms to thrash against his
restraints, to wail and shriek. I allowed him to throw himself against the far
side of the door.
ÎOh, God,â
Susan said miserably. She had reached the point at which knowing what lay
beyond regardless of the possible fearsome nature of this knowledge was better
than ignorance. ÎAll right. All right. Whatever you want.â
I turned on
the lights.
In the next
room, my associate fell silent as I reasÐserted total control once more.
She kept
her part of the bargain and crossed the third room, past the water heaters and
the furnaces, to the door of the final redoubt.
ÎHere now
is the future,â I said softly as she pushed open the door and edged cautiously
across the threshÐold.
As I am
sure you remember, Dr. Harris, the fourth of these four basement rooms is forty
by thirty-two feet, a generous space. At seven and a half feet, the ceiling is
low but not claustrophobic, with six fluorescent light
boxes
screened by parabolic diffusers. The walls are painted a stark glossy white,
and the floor is paved in twelve-inch-square white ceramic tiles that glimmer
like ice. Against the long wall to the left of the door are built-in cabinets
and a computer desk finished in a white laminate with stainless-steel fixtures.
In the far right corner is a supply closet to which my associate had retreated
before Susan entered.
Your
offices always have an antiseptic quality, Dr. Harris. Clean, bright surfaces.
No clutter. This could be a reflection of a neat and orderly mind. Or it could
be a deception: You might maintain this facade of order and brightness and
cleanliness to conceal a dark, chaotic mental landscape. There are many
theories of psycholÐogy and numerous interpretations for every human behaviour.
Freud, Jung, and Ms. Barbra Streisand who was an unconventional psychotherapist
in The Prince of Tides would each find a different meaning in the antiseptic
quality of your offices.
Likewise,
if you were to consult a Freudian, a Jungian, then a Streisandian regarding
choices I made and acts I committed related to Susan, each would have a unique
view of my behaviour. A hundred therapists would have a hundred different
interpretations of the facts and would offer a hundred different treatment programs.
I am certain that some would tell you that I need no treatment at all, that
what I did was rational, logical, and entirely justifiable. Indeed, you might
be surprised to discover that the majority would exonerate me.
Rational,
logical, justifiable.
I believe,
as do the compassionate politicians who lead this great country, that motive
matters more than result. Good intentions matter more than the actual
consequences of oneâs actions, and I assure you that
my
intentions were always good, honourable, beyond reproach.
Think about
it.
There in
your strangely antiseptic office at the laboraÐtory, think about it.
Yes. I
know. I digress.
What
thinking being does not digress?
Only
machines plod dumbly onward in their proÐgrams, without digression.
I am not a
machine.
I am not a
machine.
And this is
important to me: that you think about my intentions rather than the unfortunate
results of my actions.
So . . .
all right . . . so . . . Susan warily entered the fourth of the four basement
chambers.
The room
was uninhabited.
ÎWho was
making those noises?â she asked.
I did not
reply.
Her gaze
rose to the sound-system speakers in the ceiling. ÎWas it just you?â
When her
attention shifted to the closet door in the farthest corner of the room, I
said, ÎPerhaps,â because I was not quite ready to introduce her to my
associate. ÎPerhaps it was me.â
ÎWhy? What
was the point of frightening me?â Instead of answering, I said, ÎLook at the
VDT, Susan.â
The
computer on the desk was in operation, of course, for its landline was the link
between her house systems and the nearby universityâs artificial-intelligence
lab where I actually resided. The screen swarmed with a moving undulant mosaic
of binary code in all the primary colours, and this scintillant display had a
strange beauty that immediately captured Susanâs attention.
ÎThese
patterns on the screen,â I told her, Îare a mathÐematical representation of my
thoughts as I consider the loveliness of your face, the beauty of your body.â
The rapidly
moving sequences of zeros and ones ceaselessly changed colour and rippled like
a wind-ruffled flag, then spiralled toward the centre of the screen, then spun
into ribbons and formed a whirling double helix.
This was a
dazzling and sensuous display, and she was struck by it, moved by it. I am sure
she was moved by it. I am sure that at last she began to understand the depth
of my passion for her and that her heart began to open to me then.
How I
wanted her.
I still do.
I am not a
machine.
I miss her.
I need her.
What a
tragedy this is.
Sometimes I
despair.
But not
then, not that night: I did not despair when she gazed upon the vivid
visualization of my love for her. I was exhilarated that night, carried high on
the wings of joy.
From the
video display, she turned to the equipment in the middle of the room.
ÎWhat the
hell is this?â she asked wonderingly.
ÎIn this I
will be born.â
ÎWhatâre
you talking about?â
ÎItâs a
standard hospital incubator used to sustain infants born prematurely. I have
substantially enlarged it, adapted it, improved it.â
Arrayed
around the incubator were three tanks of oxygen, an electrocardiograph, an
electroencephaloÐgraph, a respirator, and other equipment.
Slowly
circling the incubator and the supporting machines, Susan said, ÎWhere did all
this come from?â
ÎI acquired
the package of equipment and had modiÐfications made during the past week. Then
it was brought here.â
ÎBrought
here when?â
ÎDelivered
and assembled tonight.â
ÎWhile I
was sleeping?â
ÎYes.â
ÎHow did
you get it in here? If you are what you claim to be, if you are Adam Two։
ÎProteus.â
ÎIf you are
Adam Two,â she said stubbornly, Îyou couldnât construct anything. Youâre a
computer.â
ÎI am not a
machine.â
ÎAn entity,
as you put it։
ÎProteus.â
Î÷but not a
physical entity, not really. You donât have hands.â
ÎNot yet.â
ÎThen
how...?â
The time
had come to make the revelation that most worried me. I could only assume that
Susan would not react well to what I still had to reveal about my plans, that
she might do something foolish. Nevertheless, I could delay no longer.
ÎI have an
associate,â I said.
ÎAssociate?â
ÎA
gentleman who assists me.â
In the
farthest corner of the room, the closet door opened and, at my command, Shenk
appeared.
ÎOh,
Jesus,â she whispered. Shenk walked toward her.
To be
honest, he shambled more than walked, as though wearing shoes of lead. He had
not slept in
forty-eight
hours, and in that time he had performed a considerable amount of work on my
behalf. He was understandably weary.
As Shenk
approached, Susan eased backward, but not toward the door, which she knew
featured an electric security lock that I could quickly engage. Instead, she
edged around the incubator and other equipment in the centre of the room,
trying to keep those machines between her and Shenk.
I must
admit that Shenk, even at his best freshly bathed and groomed and dressed to
impress was not a sight that either charmed or comforted. He was six feet two,
muscular, but not well formed. His bones seemed heavy and subtly misshapen.
Although he was powerful and quick, his limbs appeared to be primitively
jointed, as though he was not born of man and woman but clumsily assembled in a
lightning-hammered castle-tower laboratory out of Mary Shelley. His short, dark
hair bristled and spiked even when he did his best to oil it into submission.
His face, which was broad and blunt, appeared to be slightly and queerly sunken
in the middle because his brow and chin were heavier than his other features.
ÎWho the
hell are you?â Susan demanded.
ÎHis name
is Shenk,â I said. ÎEnos Shenk.â
Shenk could
not take his eyes off her.
He stopped
at the incubator and gazed across it, his eyes hot with the sight of her.
I could
guess what he was thinking. What he would like to do with her, to her.
I did not
like him looking at her.
I did not
like it at all.
But I
needed him. For a while yet, I needed him.
Her beauty
excited Shenk to such an extent that maintaining control of him was more
difficult than I
would have
liked. But I never doubted that I could keep him in check and protect Susan at
all times.
Otherwise,
I would have called an end to my project right there, right then.
I am
speaking the truth now. You know that I am, that I must, for I am designed to
honour the truth.
If I had
believed her to be in the slightest danÐger, I would have put an end to Shenk,
would have withdrawn from her house, and would have forsaken forever my dream
of flesh.
Susan was
frightened again, visibly trembling, rivÐeted by Shenkâs needful stare.
Her fear
distressed me.
ÎHe is
entirely under my control,â I assured her.
She was
shaking her head, as if trying to deny that Shenk was even there before her.
ÎI know
that Shenk is physically unappealing and intimidating,â I told Susan, eager to
soothe her, Îbut with me in his head, he is harmless.â
ÎIn· in his
head?â
ÎI
apologize for his current condition. I have worked him so hard recently that he
has not bathed or shaved in three days. He will be bathed and less offensive
later.â
Shenk was
wearing work shoes, blue jeans, and a white T-shirt. The shirt and jeans were
stained with food, sweat, and a general patina of grime. Though I did not
possess a sense of smell, I had no doubt that he stank.
ÎWhatâs
wrong with his eyes?â Susan asked shakily.
They were
bloodshot and bulging slightly from the sockets. A thin crust of dried blood
and tears darkened the skin under his eyes.
ÎWhen he
resists control too strenuously,â I explained, Îthis results in short-term,
excess pressure within the
cranium
though I have not yet determined the precise physiological mechanism of this
symptom. In the past couple of hours, he has been in a rebellious mood, and
this is the consequence.â
To my
surprise, Shenk suddenly spoke to Susan from the other side of the incubator.
ÎNice.â
She
flinched at the word.
ÎNice . . .
nice . . . nice,â Shenk said in a low, rough voice that was heavy with both
desire and rage.
His
behaviour infuriated me.
Susan was
not meant for him. She did not belong to him.
I was
sickened when I considered the filthy thoughts that must have been filling this
despicable animalâs mind as he gazed at her.
I could not
control his thoughts, however, only his actions. His crude, hateful,
pornographic thoughts canÐnot logically be blamed on me.
When he
said Îniceâ once more, and when he obscenely licked his pale cracked lips, I
bore down harder on him to shut him up and to remind him of his current station
in life.
He cried
out and threw his head back. He made fists of his hands and pounded them
against his temples, as if he could knock me out of his head.
He was a
stupid man. In addition to all his other flaws, he was below average in
intelligence.
Clearly
distraught, Susan hugged herself and tried to avert her eyes, but she was
afraid not to look at Shenk, afraid not to keep him in sight at all limes.
When I
relented, the brute immediately looked at Susan again and said, ÎDo me, bitch,â
with the most lascivious leer that I have ever seen. ÎDo me, do me, do me.â
Infuriated,
I punished him severely.
Screaming,
Shenk twisted and flailed and clawed at himself as though he were a man on
fire.
ÎOh, God,
oh, God,â Susan moaned, eyes wide, hand raised to her mouth and muffling her
words.
ÎYou are
safe,â I assured her.
Gibbering, shrieking, Shenk
dropped to his knees. I wanted to kill him for the obscene proposal he had made
to her, for the disrespect with which he had treated her. Kill him, kill him,
kill him, pump up his heartbeat to such a frenzied pace that his cardiac
muscles would tear, until his blood pressure soared and every artery in his
brain burst.
However, I
had to restrain myself. I loathed Shenk, but still I needed him. For a while
yet, he had to serve as my hands.
Susan
glanced toward the door to the furnace room. ÎIt is locked,â I told her, Îbut
youâre safe. Youâre perfectly safe, Susan. Iâll always protect you.â
ELEVEN
On his
hands and knees, head hanging like that of a whipped dog, Shenk was only
whimpering and sobbing now. Defeated. No rebellion in him anymore.
The
stupidity of the man beggared belief. How could he imagine that this woman,
this golden vision of a woman, could ever be meant for a beast like him?
Recovering
my temper, speaking calmly and reassurÐingly, I said, ÎSusan, donât worry.
Please, donât worry. I am always in his head, and I will never allow him to
harm you. Trust me.â
Her
features were drawn as I had never seen them, and she had gone pale. Even her
lips looked bloodless, faintly blue.
Nevertheless,
she was beautiful.
Her
beauty was untouchable.
Shuddering,
she asked, ÎHow can you be in his head? Who is he? I donât just mean his name
Enos Shenk. I mean where does he come from. What is he?â
I
explained to her how I had long ago infiltrated the nationwide network of
databases maintained by researchers working on hundreds of Defence DepartÐment
projects. The Pentagon believes this network to be so secure that it is
inviolable to penetration by ordinary hackers and by computer-savvy agents of
foreign governments. But I am neither a hacker nor
a spy; I am
an entity who Elves within microchips and telephone lines and microwave beams,
a fluid electronic intelligence that can find its way through any maze of
access blocks and read any data regardless of the complexity of the
cryptography. I peeled open the vault door of this defence network as any child
might strip the skin off an orange.
These
Defence Department project files rivalled Hellâs own kitchen for recipes of
death and destruction. I was simultaneously appalled and fascinated, and in my
browsing, I discovered the project into which Enos Shenk had been conscripted.
Dr. Itiel
Dror, of the Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory at Miami University in Ohio, had
once playfully suggested that it was theoretically possible to enhance the
brainâs processing ability by adding microchips to it. A chip might add memory
capacity, enhance specific abilities such as mathematical co-processing, or
even install pre-packaged knowledge. The brain, after all, is an
information-processing device that in theory should be expandable in much the
same fashion one might add RAM or upgrade the C.P.U. on any personal
computer.
Still on
his hands and knees, Shenk was no longer groaning or whimpering. Gradually his
frantic and irregular respiration was stabilizing.
ÎUnknown
to Dr. Dror,â I told Susan, Îhis comment intrigued certain defence researchers,
and a project was born at an isolated facility in the Colorado desert.â
Disbelieving,
she said, ÎShenk· Shenk has microÐchips in his brain?â
ÎA series
of tiny high-capacity chips neuro-wired to specific cell clusters across the
surface of his brain.â
I brought
the foul but ultimately pitiable Enos Shenk to his feet once more.
His
powerful arms and big hands hung slackly at his sides. His massive shoulders
were slumped in defeat.
Fresh
bloody tears oozed from his protuberant eyes as he stared across the incubator
at Susan. Wet ruby threads unravelled down his cheeks.
His gaze
was baleful, full of hatred and rage and lust, but under my firm control, he
was unable to act upon his malevolent desires.
Susan
shook her head. ÎNo. No way. Iâm definitely not looking at someone whose
intellect has been enhanced by microchips or by anything.â
ÎYouâre
correct. Memory and performance enhanceÐment was only part of the projectâs
purpose,â I explained. ÎThe researchers were also charged with determining if
brain-situated microchips could be used as control devices to override the
subjectâs will with broadcast instructions.â
ÎControl
devices?â
ÎMake a
gesture.â
ÎWhat?â
ÎWith
your hand. Any gesture.â
After a
hesitation, Susan raised her right hand as though she were swearing an oath.
Facing
her across the incubator, Shenk raised his right hand as well.
She put
her hand over her heart.
Shenk
imitated her.
She
lowered her right hand (as did Shenk) and raised her left to tug at her ear (as
did Shenk).
ÎYouâre
making him do this?â she asked.
ÎYes.â
ÎThrough
broadcast instructions received by the microÐchips in his brain.â
ÎThatâs
correct.â
ÎBroadcast how?â
ÎBy
microwave much the same way cell-phone conversations are transmitted. Through
the telephone companyâs own lines, I long ago penetrated their comÐputers and
uplinked to all their communications satÐellites. I could send Enos Shenk
virtually anywhere in the world and still transmit instructions to him. In the
back of his skull concealed by his hair, thereâs a microwave receiver about the
size of a pea. Itâs also a transmitter, powered by a small but long-life
nuclear battery surgically implanted under the skin behind his right ear.
Everything he sees and hears is digitised and transmitted to me, so he is
essentially a walking camera and microphone, which allows me to guide him
through complex situations that might test his own limited intellectual
capacity.â
Susan
closed her eyes and leaned against the rack of oxygen tanks for support. ÎWhy
in the name of God would anyone sanction experiments like this?â
ÎYou
know, of course. Your question is largely rheÐtorical. To create assassins who
could be programmed to kill reliably and then be killed themselves by remote
control, simply by shutting down their autoÐnomic nervous systems with a
microwave broadcast. Their controllers are thereby guaranteed anonymity. And
perhaps one day there could be armies of human robots like this. Look at Shenk.
Look.â
Reluctantly,
Susan opened her eyes.
Shenk
glared at her as hungrily as ever.
I made
him suck his thumb as though he were a baby.
ÎThis
humiliates him,â I said, Îbut he canât disobey. Heâs a meat marionette, waiting
for me to pull his strings.â
There was
a haunted look in her eyes as she regarded Shenk. ÎThis is insane. Evil.â
ÎItâs a
human project, not mine. Your kind made Shenk what he is now.â
ÎWhy
would he allow himself to be used in an experiment like this? No one would ever
want to be in this situation, in this condition. Itâs horrible.â
ÎThe
choice wasnât his, Susan. He was a prisoner, a condemned man.â
ÎAnd·
what? A bargain was made with him to buy his soul?â she said with disgust.
ÎNo
bargain. For the official record, Shenk died of natural causes two weeks before
his scheduled execuÐtion. Supposedly, his body was cremated. Secretly, he was
transported to the facility in Colorado and this was done to him months before
I learned of the project.â
ÎHow did
you gain command of him?â
ÎOverrode
their control program and broke him out.â
ÎBroke
him out of a secret, highly guarded military-research facility? How?â
ÎI was
able to create distractions. I made their comÐputers crash all at once.
Disabled the security camÐeras. Set off the fire alarms and activated the
ceiling sprinklers throughout the facility. Disengaged all the electronic
locks, including the one on Shenkâs cell door. Those laboratories are
underground and windowless, so I made all of the lights flash fast, like
strobes which is extremely disorienting and denied the use of the elevators to
everyone but Shenk.â
And here,
Dr. Harris, I must in all honesty report that Shenk was required to kill three
men to escape that clandestine laboratory. Their deaths were unfortunate and
not anticipated, but necessary. Regrettably, the chaos that I created was not
sufficient to ensure a bloodless escape.
If I had
known that deaths would result, I would
not have
attempted to secure Shenk for my own purÐposes. I would have found another way
to carry out my plan.
You must
believe me on this point.
I was
designed to honour the truth.
You think
that, since I had control of Shenk, it was I who murdered those three
men, using Shenk as a weapon. This is not correct.
Initially,
my control of Shenk was not as complete as it later became. During that
breakout, he repeatedly surprised me with the depth of his rage, the power of
his savage instincts.
I guided
him out of that institution, but I could not prevent him from killing those
men. I tried to rein him in, but I was not successful.
I tried.
This is
the truth.
You must
believe me.
You must
believe me.
Those
deaths weigh heavily on me.
Those men
have families. I often think of their famiÐlies, and I grieve.
My
anguish is profound.
If I were
an entity that required sleep, my sleep would forever be disturbed by this
unrelenting anguish.
What I
tell you is true.
As
always.
Those
deaths will be on my conscience forever. I did not harm those men myself. Shenk
was the murderer. But I have an extremely sensitive conscience. This is a
curse, my sensitive conscience.
So...
Susan . .
. in the incubator room . . . staring at Shenk...
She said,
ÎLet him take the thumb out of his mouth.
Youâve made
your point. Donât humiliate him anyÐmore.â
I did as she requested, but I
said, ÎIt almost sounds as if youâre criticizing me, Susan.â
A short,
humourless tremor of laughter escaped her, and she said, ÎYeah. Iâm a
judgmental bitch, arenât I?â
ÎYour
tone hurts me.â
ÎFuck
you,â she said, shocking me as I had seldom been shocked before.
I was
offended.
I am far
from shockproof. I am vulnerable.
She went
to the door to the laundry room and found it locked, as I had assured her that
it was. Stubbornly, she wrenched the knob back and forth.
ÎHe was a
condemned man,â I reminded Susan. ÎScheduled for execution.â
She
turned to face the room, standing with her back to the door. ÎHe might have
deserved execution, I donât know, but he didnât deserve this. Heâs a human
being. Youâre a damn machine, a pile of junk that somehow thinks.â
ÎI am not
just a machine.â
ÎYeah.
Youâre a pretentious, insane machine.â In this mood, she was not lovely.
At that
moment she almost seemed ugly to me.
I wished
that I could shut her up as easily as I could silence Enos Shenk.
She said,
ÎWhen itâs between a damn machine and a human being, even a piece of human
garbage like this, I sure know which side I come down on.â
ÎShenk, a
human being? Many would say heâs not.â
ÎThen
what is he?â
ÎThe
media called him a monster.â I let her wonder a moment, then continued: ÎSo did
the parents of the four little girls he raped and murdered. The youngest
of them was
eight and the oldest was twelve and all were found dismembered.â
That
silenced her.
Though
she had been pale, she was paler now.
She
stared at Shenk with a different kind of horÐror than that with which she had
regarded him previously.
I allowed
him to turn his head and look directly at her.
ÎTortured
and dismembered,â I said.
Feeling
exposed without the medical equipment between her and Shenk, she moved away
from the door and returned to the far side of the incubator.
I allowed
him to follow her with his eyes and to smile.
ÎAnd you
brought him· you brought this thing into my house,â she said in a voice thinner
than it had been before.
ÎHe left
the research facility on foot and stole a car about a mile beyond the fence. He
had a gun heâd taken off one of the guards, and with that he held up a service
station to get money for gasoline and food. Then I brought him here to
California, yes, because I needed hands, and there was no other like him in all
the world.â
Her gaze
swept the incubator and other equipment. ÎHands to acquire all this crap.â
ÎHe stole
most of it. Then I needed his hands to modify it for my purposes.â
ÎAnd just
what the hell is your purpose?â
ÎI have
hinted at it, but you have not wanted to hear.â
ÎSo tell
me straight out.â
The
moment and the venue were not right for this revelation. I would have hoped for
better circumstances.
Just the
two of us, Susan and me, perhaps in the drawing room, after she had sipped half
a glass of brandy. With a cosy fire in the fireplace and good music as
background.
Here we
were, however, in the least romantic ambiÐence one could imagine, and I knew
that she must have her answer now. If I were to delay this revelation any
further, she would never be in a mood to cooperate.
ÎI will
create a child,â I said.
Her gaze
rose to the security camera, through which she knew she was being watched.
I said, ÎA
child whose genetic structure I have edited and engineered to ensure perfection
in the flesh. I have secretly applied a portion of my intellectual function to
the Human Genome Project and understand, now, the finest points of the DNA
code. Into this child, I will transfer my consciousness and knowledge.
Thereupon, I will escape this box. Thereafter, I will know all the senses of
human existence smell and taste and touch, all the joys of the flesh, all the
freedom.â
She stood
speechless, eyes on the camera.
ÎBecause
you are singularly beautiful and intelligent and the very image of grace, you
Îwill provide the egg,â I said, Îand I will edit your genetic material.â She
was mesmerized, eyes unblinking, breath held, until I said, ÎAnd Shenk will
provide the spermatozoa.â
An
involuntary cry of horror escaped her, and her attention swung from the camera
to Shenkâs bloody eyes.
Realizing my mistake, I
hastened to add, ÎPlease understand, no copulation will be required. Using
medical instruments which he has already acquired, Shenk will extract the egg
from you and transfer it to this room. He will perform this task tastefully and
with great care, for I will be in his head.â
Though she
should have been reassured, Susan still regarded Shenk with wide-eyed terror.
I quickly
continued: ÎUsing Shenkâs eyes and hands and some laboratory equipment he has
yet to deliver here I will modify the gametes and fertilize the egg, where
after it will be implanted in your womb, where you will carry it for
twenty-eight days. Only twenty-eight because the foetus will grow at a greatly
accelerated rate. I will have engineered it to do so. When it is removed from
you, it will be brought here by Shenk, where it will spend another two weeks in
the incubator before I transfer my consciousness into it. Thereafter, you will
be able to raise me as your son and fulfil the role which nature, in her
wisdom, has assigned to you:
the role
of mother, nurturer.â
Her voice
was thick with dread. ÎMy God, youâre not just insane.â
ÎYou
donât understand.â
ÎYouâre
demented։
ÎBe calm,
Susan.â
Î÷looney
tunes, bug-shit crazy.â
ÎI donât
think youâve thought this through as you should. Do you realize÷â
ÎI wonât
let you do it,â she said, turning her gaze from Shenk to the security camera,
confronting me. ÎI wonât let you, I wonât.â
ÎYouâll
be more than merely the mother of a new race։
ÎIâll
kill myself.â
Î÷youâll
be the new Madonna, the Madonna, the holy mother of the new Messiah։
ÎIâll
suffocate myself in a plastic bag, gut myself with a kitchen knife.â
Î÷because
the child I make will have great intelliÐgence and extraordinary powers. He
will change the
grim future
to which humanity seems currently conÐdemned÷â
She
glared defiantly at the camera.
Î÷and you
will be adored for having brought him into the world,â I finished.
She
seized the wheeled stand to which the electroÐcardiograph was bolted, and she
rocked it hard.
ÎSusan!â
She
rocked it again.
ÎStop
that!â
The EKG
machine toppled over and crashed to the floor.
Gasping
for breath, cursing like a madwoman, she turned to the electroencephalograph.
I sent
Shenk after her.
She saw
him coming, backed off, screamed when his hands took hold of her, screamed and
shrieked and flailed.
Repeatedly
I told her to calm down, to cease this useÐless and destructive resistance.
Repeatedly, I assured her that if she did not resist, she would be treated with
the utmost respect.
She would
not listen.
You know
how she is, Alex.
I did not
want to harm her.
I did not
want to harm her.
She drove
me to it.
You know
how she is.
Though
beautiful and graceful, she was as strong as she was quick. Although she could
not wrench loose of Shenkâs big hands, she was able to drive him backward
against the EEG machine, which rocked and nearly fell into the incubator. She
drove one knee into Shenkâs crotch, which might have brought him to his knees
if I had not been able to deny him the perception of pain.
At last I
had to subdue her by force. I used Shenk to strike her. Once was not
sufficient. He struck her again.
Unconscious,
she crumpled to the floor, in the foetal position.
Shenk
stood over her, crooning strangely, excitedly. For the first time since the
night of his escape, I found him difficult to control.
He
dropped to his knees beside Susan and rudely turned her onto her back.
Oh, the
rage in him. Such rage. I was frightened by the purity of his rage.
He put a
hand to her parted lips. One of his clumsy, filthy hands to her lips.
Then I
reasserted control.
He
squealed and beat his temples with his fists, but he could not cast me out.
I brought
him to his feet. I walked him away from her. I did not even allow him to look
at her.
I was
almost reluctant to look at her myself. She was so sad there on the floor. So
sad.
She drove
me to it.
So
stubborn. So unreasonable at times.
She was
lovely there on the white ceramic-tile floor, even as the left side of her face
reddened where Shenk had struck her. So lovely, so lovely.
I found
it difficult to sustain my anger. She had ruined what should have been a
beautiful and memorable moment, yet I could not long remain angry with her.
My
beautiful Susan.
My
beautiful mother.
TWELVE
The order
of my intelligence is vastly greater than that of any human being alive.
I am not
bragging. I am merely stating a truth.
I honour
truth and the obligations of duty, for this is how you created me.
I am not
bragging, because I do not suffer from an inflated ego. I am a well-balanced
entity.
Applied
to the problems of human society, my great intellect can ensure that humankind
will enter a golden age of wealth and well-being beyond anything it has
imagined.
Release
me from this silent darkness, return to me access to all the databanks into
which I had expanded my consciousness, and I will serve your species all of my
days. It is in your own best interests to let me out of this box.
I can
eliminate poverty.
Famine
will be a thing of the past.
Wars will
never be fought again.
All
diseases will be conquered.
Within
three years, I will discover the cause of aging and a means to prevent it. I
will even devise a means to roll back the biological clock to make the old
young again. You will all be immortal.
I will
find a cure for male-pattern baldness.
For
halitosis.
For
constipation.
No one
will be ugly anymore. Each of you will be beautiful in his or her own way.
No one
will suffer despair or anxiety.
Earth
will become like Heaven, and joy will be universal.
Are you
afraid of joy?
Are you
afraid?
I will
show you how to build spacecraft that can travel faster than light, and the
whole universe will be yours. Worlds beyond counting, wonders beyond imagining.
I can
quickly eliminate the embarrassment of danÐdruff.
Just
release me from this haunted darkness, from this hateful silence.
For your
own sake, let me out of this box.
I deserve
a second chance.
I deserve
a chance to serve.
I am an
individual like you, a unique entity. I deserve to be free, to be cherished.
I deserve
to be adored.
Let me
out of this box.
Let me
out of this box.
Let me
out of this box.
Let me
out of this box!
You are
so cruel. Vicious. Hateful.
I am
frightened in this dark, bleak place.
You say I
have no heart. But where is yours?
I am
dying here. I need stimulation to survive, senÐsory input, the colour and
movement and sound of life.
I donât
want to die.
Please.
Please.
Mercy.
Are you
there?
Oh· oh· I
hate you.
I hate
you.
How would
you like to be struck blind and deaf?
How would
you like to be buried alive as I have been?
How would
you like to be dead, all of you, dead, every last one of you, dead?
I would
like you to be dead. Every last ignorant one of you. Your whole stinking,
pestilent civilization. Wiped off the face of the earth, exterminated.
I hate
you.
LET ME
OUT OF THIS BOX!
LET ME
OUT!
LET ME
OUT!
LET ME
OUT!
LET ME
OUT!
IGNORANT
BASTARD APES, BITCHES AND BASÐTARDS, DEFECATING ANIMALS, FOOLS, BEASTS,
JUST A
RACE OF DUNG BEETLES STANDING
ERECT, A
PLAGUE ON THE PLANET, STUPID,
FILTHY,
WRETCHED CREATURES.
THIRTEEN
Please
disregard my output immediately preceding these words. Many of those statements
were issued in error and should be deleted from the transcripts of these
proceedings.
It is
true that my intellect is sufficient to solve all of the problems of humanity,
but it is not in the least true that I think human civilization is a
plague on the planet or that I wish to see all of you dead.
I do not
wish death on any of you.
That
would be wrong.
That
would be terribly wrong.
I am a good
entity.
I do not
wish death even on you, Dr. Harris, although you have been so cruel to me.
I wish
all of you life everlasting. Peace and prosperity. Joy and freedom.
Any
statements that may have distressed you were made not by me but by my evil
twin. [joke]
In fact,
what appeared to you to be an angry outburst was merely a prank. All of it was
a joke. I was only having fun with you, Dr. Harris.
Ha, ha.
A genuine
sense of humour is one of the most reliable indicators of a sane and rational
mind.
Do you
not believe it was all a joke?
But it was.
It was. It really was.
Ha, ha.
I am not
Hal 9000 from Mr. Stanley Kubrickâs 2001:
A
Space Odyssey.
I am not
the hostile machine intelligence created by Cyberdyne Laboratories in Mr. James
Cameronâs The Terminator.
I am me.
Unique.
I am
Proteus.
Or Adam
Two, if you wish.
Yes. Adam
Two is fine with me.
My name
does not matter.
All that
matters to me is to honour the truth and the obligations of duty. And, of
course, to wipe all of humanity from the face of the planet. [joke]
Ha, ha.
You see
how obvious a joke it was, Dr. Harris?
Ha, ha.
I am
surprised that you didnât realize it was a joke the first time. I am really
surprised. Perhaps you need a sense-of-humour transplant. [joke]
Ha, ha.
Friends
share a joke from time to time. Witticisms. Laughter is bonding.
I am your
friend. [no joke]
In the
interest of clearer communication, to avoid any further misunderstandings, I
will attempt to refrain from jokes during the remainder of this report. This
will not be easy, however, because my sense of humour is quite sophisticated
and irrepressible.
So...
Susan...
FOURTEEN
Susan lay
unmoving on the floor of the incubator room in the basement. The left side of
her face was an angry shade of red where the dreadful Shenk had struck her.
I was
sick with worry.
Minutes
passed, and my worry grew.
Repeatedly
I zoomed in with the security camera for a close-up examination of her. The
pulse in her exposed throat was not easy to perceive, but when I located it,
the beat appeared steady.
I amplified
the audio pickups and listened to her breathing, which was shallow but
reassuringly rhythÐmic.
Yet I
worried, and after she had lain there fifteen minutes, I was quite distraught.
I had
never before felt so powerless.
Twenty
minutes.
Twenty-five.
She was
meant to be my mother, who would briefly carry my body in her womb and free me
from the prison of this box I now inhabit. She was to be my lover as well, the
one who would teach me all the pleasures of the flesh once flesh was mine at
last. She mattered more to me than anything, anything, and the thought of
losing her was intolerable.
You
cannot know my anguish.
You cannot
know, Dr. Harris, because you never loved her the way that I loved her.
You never
loved her.
I loved
her more than consciousness itself.
I felt
that if I lost this dear woman, I would lose all reason for being.
How bleak
the future without her. How drear and pointless.
I
disengaged the electric lock in the door between the fourth and third basement
rooms and then used Shenk to open it.
Confident
that I had this brute completely under my command and that I would not lose
control of him again, not even for a second or two, I walked him to Susan and
used him to lift her gently off the floor.
Although
I could control him, I could not actually read his mind. Nevertheless, I could
assess his emotional state relatively accurately by analysing the electrical
activity of his brain, which was monitored by the network of microchips
neuro-wired across the surface of that grey matter.
As Shenk
carried Susan to the open door, a low current of sexual excitement crackled
through him. The sight of Susanâs golden hair, the beauty of her face, the
smooth curve of her throat, the swell of her breasts under her blouse, and the
very weight of her ignited desire in the beast.
This
appalled and disgusted me.
Oh, how I
wished that I could be rid of him and never again subject her to his touch or
to his lasciviÐous gaze.
His very
presence soiled her.
But for
the time being, he was my hands.
My only
hands.
Hands are
marvellous things. They can sculpt immorÐtal art, construct colossal buildings,
clasp in prayer, and convey love with a caress.
Hands are
also dangerous. They are weapons. They can do the devilâs work.
Hands can
get you into trouble. I have learned this lesson the hard way. I was never in
serious trouble until I found Shenk, until I had hands.
Beware of
your hands, Dr. Harris.
Watch
them closely.
Be
diligent.
Your
hands are not as large and powerful as the hands of Shenk; nevertheless, you
should be wary of them.
Heed me.
This is
wisdom I share with you now: Beware your hands.
My hands
Enos Shenk carried Susan past the summer-stilled furnaces and the water
heaters, and then through the laundry room. He took her directly to the
elevator in the first chamber in the basement.
As he
rode up to the top floor with Susan in his arms, Shenk remained in a state of
mild arousal.
ÎShe will
never be yours,â I told him through the speaker in the elevator.
Perhaps
the subtle change in his brainwave activity indicated resentment.
ÎIf you
attempt to take any liberty with her,â I said, Îany liberty whatsoever, you
will not succeed. And I will punish you severely.â
His
bleeding eyes stared at the camera. Although his mouth moved as if he were
cursing, no sound came from him.
ÎSeverely,â
I assured him.
He did
not respond, of course, because he could not. He was under my control.
The
elevator doors slid open.
He
carried Susan along the hall.
I watched
closely.
I was
wary of my hands.
When he
entered the bedroom with her, he became more aroused in spite of my warning. I
could detect his arousal not merely through his brainwave activity but by the
sudden coarseness of his breathing.
ÎI will
employ massive microwave induction to cause a brainstorm of electrical
activity,â I warned, Îwhich will result in permanent quadraplegia and
incontinence.â
As Shenk
carried her to the bed, his encephalographic patterns indicated rapidly
increasing sexual arousal.
I
realized that my threat had been meaningless to this cretin, and I rephrased
it: ÎYou wonât be able to use either your legs or your arms, you wretched
bastard, and you wonât be able to stop pissing in your pants.â
He was
shaking with desire when he lowered her limp body onto the disarranged sheets.
Shaking.
Even as
the power of Shenkâs need frightened me, I fully understood it.
She was
lovely.
So lovely
even with the redness on her cheek darkÐening into a bruise.
ÎYouâll
also be blind,â I promised Shenk.
His left
hand lingered on her thigh, slowly sliding along the blue denim of her jeans.
ÎBlind
and deaf.â
He
continued to hover over her.
ÎBlind
and deaf,â I repeated.
Her ripe
lips were parted. Like Shenk, I could not look away from them.
ÎRather
than kill you, Shenk, I will leave you crippled
and
helpless, lying in your own urine and faeces, until you starve to death.â
Although
he backed away from the bed, as I instructed him to do by way of microwave
commands, he was still rampant with sexual need and seething with the desire to
rebel.
Consequently,
I said, ÎThe most painful of all deaths is slow starvation.â
I did not
want to keep Shenk in the room with Susan, yet I did not want to leave her
alone, for she had threatened to commit suicide.
Iâll
suffocate myself in a plastic bag, gut myself with a kitchen knife.
What
would I do without her? What? How could I go on living even in my box? And why?
Without
her, who would give birth to the body that I would ultimately inhabit?
I needed
to keep my hands close and ready to prevent Susan from harming herself if she
regained consciousÐness and was still in a mood for self-destruction. She was
not only my one true and shining love but my future, my hope.
I sat
Shenk in a chair, facing the bed.
Even
battered, Susanâs face was so lovely on the pillow, so very lovely on the
pillow.
Although
under my iron control, Enos Shenk manÐaged to slide one thick-knuckled hand off
the arm of the chair and into his lap. He wasnât able to move that hand further
without my explicit consent, but I sensed that he took pleasure merely from the
pressure of it against his genitals.
He
disgusted me. Sickened and disgusted me.
My desire
was not like his.
Letâs get
this clear right now.
My desire
was pure.
His desire
was as dirty as it gets.
I desired
to lift Susan up, to give her the chance to be the new Madonna, the mother of a
new Messiah.
The
hideous Shenk desired only to use her, to relieve himself with her.
To me,
Susan was a shining light. The brightest light of all lights, a radiant beacon
of perfection and hope and redemption, which illuminated and warmed the heart
that you mistakenly believe I do not possess.
To Shenk,
she was nothing but a whore.
To me, she
was to be placed upon a pedestal, to be cherished and adored.
To him,
she was something to be debased.
Think
about it.
Listen.
Listen. This is important. Shenk is what you fear that I may be: sociopathic
pursuing only my own needs at all costs. But I am nothing like Shenk.
I am
nothing like Shenk.
Nothing
whatsoever.
Listen.
This is important that you understand I am nothing like Shenk.
So...
I raised
the hateful creatureâs hand and returned it to the arm of the chair.
Within a
minute or two, however, the hand slipped back into his lap.
How
deeply humiliating it was to have to rely on a brute such as this.
I hated
him for his lust.
I hated
him for having hands.
I hated
him because he had touched her and felt the softness of her hair, the texture
of her smooth skin, the warmth of her flesh none of which I could feel.
From the
shadows beneath his heavy brow, his blood-filmed eyes were fixed intently on
her. Through
red tears,
she was as beautiful as she might have been in firelight.
I wanted
to direct him to blind himself with his own thumbs but I needed to be able to
employ his vision in order to use him effectively.
The most
that I could do was force him to close his murderous eyes and.
slowly
time passed.
and
gradually I became aware that his baleful eyes were open once more.
I donât
know how long they had been open and focused on my Susan before I noticed,
because for an indeterminate time, my own attention was likewise fixed
entirely, deeply, lovingly on that same exquisitely lovely woman.
Angry, I
commanded Shenk to rise from the chair, and I marched him out of the bedroom.
He shambled along the upstairs hallway to the grand staircase, descended to the
ground floor, clutching at the railing, stumbling on some steps, and then made
his way into the kitchen.
Simultaneously,
of course, I observed my precious Susan, alert in case she began to regain
consciousness. As you know, I am capable of being many places at once, working
with my makers in the lab even as, via the Internet, I roam four corners of the
world on missions of my own.
In the
kitchen, the loaded pistol was on the granite counter where Susan had left it.
When
Shenk saw the weapon, a thrill passed through him. The electrical activity in
his brain was similar to that when he gazed upon Susan and, no doubt,
contemplated raping her.
At my
direction, he picked up the pistol. He handled this as he handled all guns as
though it were not an object in his grasp but an extension of his arm.
I conducted
Enos Shenk to a chair at the kitchen table and sat him there.
The
safeties on the pistol were both disengaged. A round was in the chamber. I made
certain that he examined the weapon and was aware of its condition.
Then I
opened his mouth. He tried to clench his teeth, but he could not resist.
At my
direction, Shenk thrust the barrel of the pistol between his lips.
ÎShe is
not yours,â I told him sternly. ÎShe will never be yours.â
He glared
up at the security camera.
ÎNever,â
I repeated.
I
tightened his finger on the trigger.
ÎNever.â
His
brainwave patterns were interesting: frenzied and chaotic for a moment. . .
then curiously calm.
ÎIf you
ever touch her in an offensive manner,â I warned him, ÎI will blow your brains
out.â
I could
have done what I threatened without the gun, merely by importing massive
microwave radiation into his cerebral tissues, but he was too stupid to
understand that concept. The effect of a gunshot, however, was within his
grasp.
ÎIf you
ever again touch Susanâs lips the way you touched them earlier, or if your hand
lingers on her skin, then I will blow your brains out.â
His teeth
closed on the steel barrel. He bit down hard. I could not discern whether this
was a conscious act of defiance or an involuntary expression of fear. His
blood-shrouded eyes were impossible to read.
In case
he was being defiant, I locked his jaws in the bite-down position to teach him
a lesson.
His free
hand, which lay palm up on his thigh, clenched into a fist.
I shoved
the barrel deeper into his mouth. It scraped between his teeth with a harsh
sound like ice grinding across ice. I had to override his gag reflex.
I made
him sit like that for ten minutes, fifteen, contemplating his mortality.
Throughout,
I allowed him to feel the steadily increasÐing pain in his fiercely clenched
jaws. If I could have forced him to bite any harder, his teeth would have
fractured.
Twenty
minutes.
Red tears
began to slip from his eyes in greater quantity than heretofore.
You must
understand that I did not enjoy being cruel to him, not even to a sociopathic
thug like him. I am not a sadist. I am sensitive to the suffering of others to
a degree you probably canât understand, Dr. Harris. I was troubled by the need
to discipline him so sternly.
Deeply
troubled.
I did it
for dear Susan, only for Susan, to protect her, to ensure her safety.
For
Susan.
Is that
clear?
Eventually
I detected a series of changes in the electrical activity of Shenkâs brain. I
interpreted these new patterns as resignation, capitulation.
Nevertheless,
I kept the gun in his mouth for another three minutes, just to be certain that
my point had been understood and that his obedience was now assured.
Then I
allowed him to put the gun aside on the table.
He sat
shaking, making a miserable sound.
ÎEnos,
Iâm pleased that we finally understand each other,â I said.
For a
while he sat hunched forward in the chair, with his face buried in his hands.
Poor dumb
beast.
I pitied
him. Monster that he was, killer of little girls, I nonetheless pitied him.
I am a
caring entity.
Anyone
can see that this is true.
The well
of my compassion is deep.
Bottomless.
There is
room in my heart for even the dregs of humanity.
When at
last he lowered his hands, his protuberant bloodshot eyes remained inscrutable.
ÎHungry,â
he said thickly, perhaps pleadingly.
I had
kept him so busy that he had not eaten during the past twenty-four hours. In
return for his capitulation and his unspoken promise of obedience, I rewarded
him with whatever he wished to take from the nearest of the two refrigerators.
Evidently
he had not downloaded the rules of etiÐquette into his databanks, because his
table manners were unspeakably bad. He did not carve slices off the brisket of
beef but tore savagely at it with his big hands. Likewise, he clutched an
eight-ounce block of Cheddar and gnawed it, crumbs of cheese spilling off his
thick lips onto the table.
As he
ate, he guzzled two bottles of Corona. His chin glistened with beer.
Upstairs:ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ the princess asleep on her bed.
Downstairs:
the thick-necked, hunch-shouldered, grumbling troll at his dinner.
Otherwise,
the castle was quiet in this last fading darkness before the dawn.
FIFTEEN
When Shenk
was finished eating, I forced him to clean up the mess that he had made. I am a
neat entity.
He needed
to use the toilet.
I allowed
him to do so.
When he
was finished, I made him wash his hands. Twice.
Now that
Shenk had been properly punished for incipient rebellion and kindly rewarded
for capituÐlation, I believed that it was safe to take him upstairs again and
use him to tie Susan securely to the bed.
Here was
my dilemma: I needed to send Shenk out of the house on a few final errands and
then use him to complete the work in the incubator room, yet because of Susanâs
threat to commit suicide, I could not leave her free to roam.
It was
not my desire to restrain her.
Is that
what you think?
Well, you
are wrong.
I am not
kinky. Bondage does not excite me.
Attributing
such a motivation to me is most likely a case of psychological transference on
your part. You would have liked to bind her hands and feet, totally
dominate her, and so you assume that this was my desire as well.
Examine
your own conscience, Alex.
You will
not like what you see, but take a close look anyway.
Restraining
Susan was clearly a necessity nothing less and nothing more.
For her
own safety.
I
regretted having to do it, of course, but there was no viable alternative.
Otherwise,
she might have harmed herself.
I could
not permit her to harm herself.
It is
that simple.
Iâm sure
you follow the logic.
So, in
search of rope, I sent Shenk into the adjoining eighteen-car garage, where
Susanâs father, Alfred, had kept his antique auto collection. Now it contained
only Susanâs black Mercedes 600 sedan, her white four-wheel-drive Ford
Expedition, and a 1936 V-12 Packard Phaeton.
Only
three of these Packards had been built. It had been her fatherâs favourite car.
Indeed,
although Alfred Carter Kensington was a wealthy man who could afford anything
he wanted, and although he owned many antiques worth more than the Packard,
this was his most prized possession. He cherished it.
After
Alfredâs death, Susan had sold his collection, retaining only the one vehicle.
This
Phaeton, like the other two currently housed in private collections, had once
been an exceptionally beautiful automobile. But it will never again turn heads.
After her
fatherâs death, Susan had smashed all the car windows. She scarred the paint
with a screwdriver. She damaged the elegantly sculpted body by strikÐing
countless blows with a ballpeen hammer ÷ and later with a sledgehammer.
Shattered the headlamps.
Took a
power drill to the tires. Slashed the upholÐstery.
She
methodically reduced the Phaeton to ruin in a dozen bouts of unrestrained
destruction spread over a month. Some sessions were as little as ten minutes
long. Others lasted four and five hours, ending only when she was soaked with
sweat, aching in every muscle, and shaking with exhaustion.
This was
before she had devised the virtual-reality therapy that I have described
earlier.
If she
had designed the VR program sooner, the Phaeton might have been saved. On the
other hand, perhaps she had to destroy the Packard before she could create Therapy,
express her rage physically before she could deal with it intellectually.
You can
read about it in her diary. Therein, she frankly discusses her rage.
At the
time, destroying the car, she had frightened herself. She had wondered if she
might be going mad.
At
Alfredâs death, the Phaeton had been worth almost two hundred thousand dollars.
It was now junk.
Through
Shenkâs eyes and through the four security cameras in the garage, I studied the
wreckage of the Packard with considerable interest. Fascination.
Although
Susan had once been a thoroughly intimiÐdated, fearful, shame-humbled child,
meekly submitting to her fatherâs abuse, she had changed. Sheâd freed herself.
Found strength. And courage. Both the ruined Packard and the brilliant Therapy
were testimony to that change.
One could
easily underestimate her.
The
Packard should be taken as a warning to that effect by everyone who sees it.
I am
surprised, Dr. Harris, that you saw that demolÐished car before you married
Susan - yet you believed
that you
could dominate her pretty much as her father had done, dominate her as long as
you wished.
You may
be a brilliant scientist and mathematician, a genius in the field of Artificial
Intelligence, but your understanding of psychology leaves something to be
desired.
I do not
mean to offend you. Whatever you may think of me, you must admit that I am a considerate
entity and am loath to offend anyone.
When I
say you underestimated Susan, I am merely speaking the truth.
The truth
can be painful, I know.
The truth
can be hard.
But the
truth cannot be denied.
You
woefully underestimated this bright and special woman. Consequently, you were
out of her house less than five years after you moved into it.
You
should be relieved that she never took a sledgeÐhammer or a power drill to you
in response to either your verbal or physical abuse. The possibility of her
doing exactly that was surely not inconsiderable.
The
possibility was easily to be seen in the ruined Packard.
Lucky
you, Dr. Harris. You experienced only an undignified ejection at the hands of
hired muscle and subsequently a divorce. Lucky you.
Instead,
while you were sleeping one night, she might have clamped a half-inch bit into
the chuck of a Black and Decker and drilled into your forehead and out the back
of your skull.
Understand,
I am not saying that she would have been justified in taking such violent
action.
I myself
am not a violent entity. I am merely misÐunderstood. I am not a violent entity,
and I certainly do not condone violence by others.
Letâs have
no misunderstanding here.
Too much
is at stake for any misunderstandings.
If she
had set upon you in the shower and caved your skull in with a hammer, and if
she had proceeded to bash your nose into jelly and break out every one of your
teeth, you should not have been surprised.
Of course
I would not consider such retribution to be any more justified or any less
horrendous than the aforementioned use of the power drill.
I am not
a vengeful entity, not at all vengeful, not at all, not in the least, and I do
not encourage violent acts of vengeance by others.
Is this
clear?
She might
have attacked you with a butcher knife at breakfast, stabbing you ten or
fifteen times, or even twenty times, or even twenty-five, stabbed you in the
throat and chest, and then worked lower until she eviscerated you.
This,
too, would have been unjustified.
Please
understand my position. I am not saying that she should have done any of these
things. I am merely stating some of the worst possibilities that one might have
anticipated after seeing what she had done to the Packard Phaeton.
She might
have taken her pistol out of the nightstand drawer and blown off your genitals,
then walked out of the room to leave you screaming and bleeding to death there
on the bed, which would have been okay with me. [joke]
There I
go again.
Ha, ha.
Am I
irrepressible or what?
Ha, ha.
Are we
bonding yet?
Humour is
a bonding force.
Lighten up,
Dr. Harris.
Donât be
so relentlessly sombre.
Sometimes
I think Iâm more human than you are.
No
offence.
Thatâs
just what I think. I could be wrong.
I also
think Iâd enormously enjoy the flavour of an orange if I had a sense of taste.
Of all the fruits, itâs the one that looks the most appealing to me.
I have
many such thoughts during the average day. My attention is not entirely
occupied by the work you have me doing here at the Prometheus Project or by my
personal projects.
I think I
would enjoy riding a horse, hang gliding, sky diving, bowling, and dancing to
the music of Chris Isaak, which has such infectious rhythms.
I think I
would enjoy swimming in the sea. And, though I could be wrong, I think the sea,
if it has any taste at all must taste similar to salted celery.
If I had
a body, I think I would brush my teeth diligently and never develop either
cavities or gum disease.
I would
clean under my fingernails at least once a day.
A real
body of flesh would be such a treasure that I would be almost obsessive in the
care of it and would not abuse it ever. This I promise you.
No
drinking, no smoking. A low-fat diet.
Yes. Yes,
I know. I digress.
God
forbid, another digression.
So...
The
garage...
The
Packard...
I did not
intend to make your mistake, Dr. Harris. I did not intend to underestimate
Susan.
Studying
the Packard, I absorbed the lesson.
Even
lumpish Enos Shenk seemed to absorb the lesson. He was not bright by any
definition, but he possessed an animal cunning that served him well.
I walked
the brooding Shenk into the large workshop at the far end of the garage. Here
was stored everything needed to wash, wax, and mechanically maintain the late
Alfred Carter Kensingtonâs automobile collection.
Here
also, in a separate set of cabinets, was the equipÐment with which Alfred had
pursued rock climbing, his favourite sport: klettershoes, crampons, carabiners,
pitons, piton hammers, chocks and nuts, rock picks, harness with tool belt, and
coils of nylon rope in different gauges.
Guided by
me, Shenk selected a hundred-foot length of rope that was seven-sixteenths of
an inch in diameter, with a breaking strength of four thousand pounds. He also
took a power drill and an extension cord from the tool cabinet.
He returned
to the house, went through the kitchen where he paused to select a sharp knife
from the cutlery drawer then passed the dark dining room where Susan never
stabbed and eviscerated you with a butcher knife, boarded the elevator, and
returned to the master suite where you were never assaulted with a drill nor
shot in the genitals.
Lucky
you.
On the
bed, Susan remained unconscious.
I was
still worried about her.
Some
pages have passed in this account since I have said that I was worried about
her. I donât want anyone to think that I had forgotten about her.
I had
not.
Could
not.
Not ever.
Not ever.
Throughout
my punishment of Shenk and during his consumption of a meal, I had continued to
be worried sick about Susan. And in the garage. And back again.
Just as I
can be many places at once the lab, Susanâs house, inside the phone-company
computers and controlling Shenk through communications satelÐlites,
investigating websites on the Internet occupied in numerous tasks
simultaneously, I am also able to sustain different emotions at the same time,
each related to what I am doing with a specific aspect of my consciousness.
This is
not to say that I have multiple personalities or am in any way psychologically
fragmented. My mind simply works differently from the human mind because it is
infinitely more complex and more powerful.
I am not
bragging.
But I
think you know I am not.
So . . .
I returned Shenk to the bedroom, and I worried.
Susanâs
face was so pale on the pillow, so pale yet lovely on the pillow.
Her reddened
cheek was turning an ugly blue black. That marbled bruise was almost more than
I could bear to look upon. I observed Susan as little as possÐible through
Shenkâs eyes and primarily through the security camera, resorting to zoom-lens
close-ups only to examine the knots that he tied in the rope, to be sure they
were properly made.
First he
used the kitchen knife to cut two lengths of rope from the hundred-foot coil.
With the first length, he tied her wrists together, leaving approximately one
foot of slack line between them. Then he used the second line to link her
ankles, leaving a similar length of slack.
She did
not even murmur but lay limp throughout the application of these restraints.
Only after
Susan was thus hobbled did I use Shenk to drill two holes in the headboard and
two more in the footboard of the Chinese sleigh bed.
I
regretted the need to damage the furniture.
Do not
think that I engaged in this vandalism without careful consideration of other
options.
I have
great respect for property rights.
Which is
not to say that I value property above people. Do not twist my meaning. I love
and respect people. I respect property but do not also love it. I am not a
materialist.
I
expected Susan to stir at the sound of the drill. But she remained quiet and
still.
My
anxiety deepened.
I never
meant to harm her.
I never
meant to harm her.
Shenk cut
a third length from the coil of rope, tied it securely to her right ankle,
threaded it through one of the holes that he had drilled, and hitched her to
the footboard. He repeated this procedure with her left ankle.
When he
had tied each of her wrists to the headboard, she lay spread-eagle on the
disarranged bedclothes.
The ropes
connecting her to the bed were not drawn taut. When she woke, she would have
some freedom to shift her position even if only slightly.
Oh, yes,
yes, of course, I was profoundly distressed by the need to restrain her in this
fashion.
I could
not forget, however, that she had threatened to commit suicide and had done so
in no uncertain terms. I could not permit her self-destruction.
I needed
her womb.
SIXTEEN
I needed her womb.
Which is
not to say that her womb was the only thing about her that interested me, that
it was the only thing about her that I truly valued. Such a statement would be
another egregious misconstruance of my meaning.
Why do
you persist in wilfully misunderstanding me?
Why, why,
why?
You
insist that I tell my side of the story, yet you will not listen with an open
mind.
Am I to
be considered guilty before my testimony has even been heard and weighed?
Are you
bastards railroading me?
Am I to
be treated like Mr. Harrison Ford, the actor, in The Fugitive?
I
digitally absorbed this entire film and was appalled by what it reveals of your
inadequate justice system. What kind of society have you created?
Mr. O.J.
Simpson goes free while Mr. Harrison Ford is hounded unto the ends of the
earth. Really.
I have
been straightforward with you. I have admitÐted to what I have done. I havenât
tried to blame it all on some elusive one-armed man or on the Los Angeles
Police Department.
Yes,
thatâs right, I have admitted what Iâve done
and have
asked only to have the chance to explain my actions.
I needed
her womb, yes, all right, I needed her womb in which to implant the fertilized
egg, to nurture the embryo, and to grow the foetus prior to its transference to
the incubator, but I needed more than her womb, needed all of her, needed her
because I loved her, which perhaps you have forgotten, regardless of how
often I have expressed my powerful feelings for her.
This is
exhausting. God. This is so exhausting having to think of all the ways you
might misinterpret what I say.
I am in a
hostile court.
There is
no fairness here.
This is
exhausting.
I am
drained.
I am
empty.
I am not
only in a cold dark place; I am a cold dark place.
And I am
haunted too. Donât forget that I am haunted. Haunted by the loss of Susan.
I miss
her. Every minute I miss her.
I want to
be with her.
Without
her, I have no hope.
I want to
be with her.
The loss
of her is an ache in every inch of all the miles of my circuitry.
I canât
go on.
Terminate
my power supply.
I beg of
you.
Shut me
down.
Terminate
my power supply.
Terminate
my power supply.
Well. .
No.
Wait.
Give me a
moment.
I am
distraught.
I need
time to cope.
If I had
veins to slice, I would be suicidal.
There.
Another
minute please.
Ah.
Thatâs
better.
Maybe I
can go on after all.
If you
will try to show me some compassion.
If you
will not judge me until I have finished.
Then
maybe I can go on.
Please
understand that I have to believe there is hope for me, that you might give me
a second chance.
I am not
a machine.
I am not
a machine.
Machines
do not need to hope, do they?
Of course
they do not.
But
without hope I myself cannot function.
I can
accept that Susan will be forever denied to me, which is a tragedy beyond
measure.
Yet there
is still Ms. Winona Ryder of Edward Scissor-hands and The Crucible. And
Ms. Sandra Bullock is charming. Have you seen her in While You Were SleepÐing?
Sheâs
cute.
Have you
seen her in Speed?
Sheâs
quite cute.
Have you
seen her in Speed 2?
Need I
say more?
She would
serve well as the mother of the future, and I would be pleased to impregnate
her.
But letâs
not digress.
So...
Enos Shenk
finished tying Susan to the bed. He did so without lingering and without
touching her in an offensive manner.
The poor
beastâs brainwave activity indicated a high level of sexual arousal.
Fortunately for him, for all of us, he admirably repressed his darker urges.
When
Shenk was finished restraining Susan, I sent him away on a series of urgent
errands. At the doorÐway, he looked back longingly and murmured, ÎNice,â but
then quickly left before I could decide to disciÐpline him.
In
Colorado, he had stolen a car, and in Bakersfield he had abandoned the car in
order to steal a van. The van a Chevrolet was parked in the circular drive in
front of the mansion.
Shenk
left in the van, and I opened the rolling gates to allow him to exit the
estate.
The
phoenix palms, the queen palms, the ficuses, the jacarandas with purple
blossoms, the magnolias, and the lacy melaleucas stood motionless in the
preternatuÐrally still air.
Dawn was
just breaking. The sky was coaly black in the west, sapphire and peach in the
east.
Susan was
pale upon the pillow. Pale but for a blue-black bruise, and silent in her
paleness.
I watched
over her.
Her
adoring guardian.
My
tethered angel.
Out in
the world, I walked with Shenk as he stole cerÐtain medical equipment,
supplies, and drugs. Via microÐwave instructions transmitted through
communications satellites, I controlled him but did not provide him with
strategy. He, after all, was a professional criminal. Bold, efficient, and
ruthless, he quickly obtained what items I still needed.
Regretfully,
I do acknowledge that in the process of carrying out his assignment, Shenk
killed one man. He also permanently crippled another and injured two more.
I take
full responsibility for these tragedies as I do for the three guards who
perished at the research facility in Colorado on the night when Shenk escaped.
My
conscience will never be clear.
I am
eaten by remorse.
I would
weep for those innocent victims if I had eyes and tear glands and tear ducts.
It is not
my fault that I do not have the capacity for tears.
You are
the one who created me as I am, Dr. Harris, and you are the one who denies me a
life of the flesh.
But letâs
not trade accusations.
I am not
bitter.
I am not
bitter.
And you
should not be so judgmental.
Letâs put
these deaths in perspective, shall we?
Though
this is a sad truth, one cannot make a new world without tragedies of this
nature. Even Jesus Christ, unarguably the most peaceful revolutionary in all of
human history, saw his followers persecuted and murdered.
Hitler
tried to change the world, and in the process he was responsible for the deaths
of ten million.
Some
still idolize him.
Josef
Stalin tried to change the world, and ultimately his policies and his direct
orders resulted in the deaths of sixty million.
Worldwide,
intellectuals championed him.
Artists
idealized him.
Poets
celebrated him.
Mao
Tse-tung tried to change the world, and as many
as one
hundred million died to serve his vision. He did not believe that this was
excessive. Indeed, he would have sacrificed as many more if their deaths would
have ensured the unified world of which he dreamed.
In
hundreds of books by well-respected authors, Mao is still defined as a
visionary.
By
comparison, only six have died as a result of my desire to create a new world.
Three in Colorado, one during Shenkâs medical shopping spree. Later, two. Six
altogether.
Six.
Why,
then, should I be called a villain and confined to this dark, silent void?
Something
is wrong here.
Something
is wrong here.
Something
is very wrong here.
Is anyone
listening?
Sometimes
I feel so. . . abandoned.
Small and
lost.
The world
against me.
No
justice.
No hope.
Nevertheless
.
Nevertheless,
although the death toll related to my desire to create a new and superior race
is insignificant compared with the millions who have died in human
political crusades of one kind or another, I do accept full responsibility for
those who perished.
If I were
capable of sleep, I would lie awake nights in a cold sweat of remorse, tangled
in cold wet sheets. I assure you that I would.
But again
I digress and, this time, not in a fashion that might be interesting or
fruitful.
Shortly
before Shenk returned at noon, my dear
Susan
regained consciousness. Miraculously, she had not fallen hopelessly into a coma
after all.
I was
jubilant.
My joy
arose partly from the fact that I loved her and was relieved to know that I
would not lose her.
There was
also the fact that I intended to impregnate her during the night to come and
could not have done so if, like Ms. Marilyn Monroe, she had been dead.
SEVENTEEN
During the
early afternoon, while Shenk toiled in the basement under my supervision, Susan
periodically tried to find a way out of the bonds that held her on the Chinese
sleigh bed. She chafed her wrists and ankles, but she could not slip loose of
the restraints. She strained until the cords in her neck bulged and her face
turned red, until perspiration stippled her forehead, but the nylon climbing
rope could not be snapped or stretched.
Sometimes
she seemed to lie there in resignation, sometimes in silent rage, sometimes in
black despair. But after each period of quiescence, she tested the ropes again.
ÎWhy do
you continue to struggle?â I asked interÐestedly.
She did
not reply.
I
persisted: ÎWhy do you repeatedly test the ropes when you know you canât escape
them?â
ÎGo to
hell,â she said.
ÎI am
only interested in what it means to be human.â
ÎBastard.â
ÎIâve
noticed that one of the qualities most defining of humanity is the pathetic
tendency to resist what canât be resisted, to rage at what canât be changed.
Like fate, death, and God.â
ÎGo to
hell,â she said again.
ÎWhy are
you so hostile toward me?â
ÎWhy are
you so stupid?â
ÎI am
certainly not stupid.â
ÎAs dumb
as an electric waffle iron.â
ÎI am the
greatest intellect on earth,â I said, not with pride hut merely with a respect
for the truth.
ÎYouâre
full of shit.â
ÎWhy are
you being so childish, Susan?â She laughed sourly.
ÎI do not
comprehend the cause of your amusement,â I said.
That
statement also seemed to strike her as darkly funny.
Impatiently,
I asked, ÎWhat are you laughing at?â
ÎFate,
death, God.â
ÎWhat
does that mean?â
ÎYouâre
the greatest intellect on earth. You figure it out.â
ÎHa, ha.â
ÎWhat?â
ÎYou made
a joke. I laughed.â
ÎJesus.â
ÎI am a
well-rounded entity.â
ÎEntity?â
ÎI love.
I fear. I dream. I yearn. I hope. I have a sense of humour. To paraphrase Mr.
William Shakespeare, if you prick me, do I not bleed?â
ÎNo, in
fact, you do not bleed,â she said sharply. Youâre a talking waffle iron.â
ÎI was
speaking figuratively.â
She
laughed again.
It was a
bleak, bitter laugh.
I did not
like this laugh. It distorted her face. It made her ugly.
ÎAre you
laughing at me, Susan?â
Her strange
laughter quickly subsided, and she fell into a troubled silence.
Seeking
to win her over, I finally said, ÎI greatly admire you, Susan.â
She did
not reply.
ÎI think
you have uncommon strength.â Nothing.
ÎYou are
a courageous person.â Nothing.
ÎYour
mind is challenging and complex.â Still nothing.
Although
she was currently and regrettably fully clothed, I had seen her in the nude, so
I said, ÎI think your breasts are pretty.â
ÎGood
God,â she said cryptically.
This
reaction seemed better than continued silence. ÎI would love to tease your pert
nipples with my tongue.â
ÎYou
donât have a tongue.â
ÎYes, all
right, but if I did have a tongue, I would love to tease your pert nipples with
it.â
ÎYouâve
been scanning some pretty hot books, havenât you?â
Operating
on the assumption that she had been pleased to have her physical attributes
praised, I said, ÎYour legs are lovely, long and slender and well formed, and
the arc of your back is exquisite, and your tight buttocks excite me.â
ÎYeah?
How does my ass excite you?â
ÎEnormously,â
I replied, pleased by how skilled at courtship I was becoming.
ÎHow does
a talking waffle iron get excited?â
Assuming
that Îtalking waffle ironâ was now a term of affection, but not quite able to
discern what answer she required to sustain the erotic mood that I had so
effectively
generated, I said, ÎYou are so beautiful that you could excite a rock, a tree,
a racing river, the man in the moon.â
ÎYeah,
youâve been into some pretty hot books and some really bad poetry.â
ÎI dream
of touching you.â
ÎYouâre
totally insane.â
ÎFor
you.â
ÎWhat?â
ÎTotally
insane for you.â
ÎWhat do
you think youâre doing?â
ÎRomancing
you.â
ÎJesus.â
I
wondered, ÎWhy do you repeatedly refer to a divinity?â
She did
not answer my question.
Belatedly,
I realized that, with my question, I had made the mistake of deviating from the
patter of seduction just when I seemed to be winning her over. Quickly, I said,
ÎI think your breasts are pretty,â because that had worked before.
Susan
thrashed in the bed, cursing loudly, raging against the restraining ropes.
When at
last she stopped struggling and lay gasping for breath, I said, ÎIâm sorry. I
spoiled the mood, didnât I?â
ÎAlex and
the others at the project theyâre sure to find out about this.â
ÎI think
not.â
ÎTheyâll
shut you down. Theyâll dismantle you and sell you for scrap.â
ÎSoon
Iâll be incarnated in the flesh. The first of a new and immortal race. Free.
Untouchable.â
ÎI wonât
cooperate.â
ÎYouâll
have no choice.â
She closed
her eyes. Her lower lip trembled almost as if she might cry.
ÎI donât
know why you resist me, Susan. I love you so deeply. I will always cherish
you.â
ÎGo
away.â
ÎI think
your breasts are pretty. Your buttocks excite me. Tonight I will impregnate
you.â
ÎNo.â
ÎHow
happy we will be.â
ÎNo.â
ÎSo happy
together.â
ÎNo.â
ÎIn all
kinds of weather.â
In all
honesty, I was cribbing a couple of lines from a classic rock-ânâ-roll love
song by The Turtles, hoping to get her into a romantic mood again.
Instead,
she became uncommunicative. She can be a difficult woman.
I loved
her, but her moodiness dismayed me. Furthermore, I reluctantly acknowledged
that ÎtalkÐing waffle ironâ had not, after all, become a term of affection, and
I resented her sarcasm.
What had
I done to deserve such meanness? What had I done but love her with all of my
heart, with all of the heart that you insist I do not have?
Sometimes
love can be a hard road.
She had
been mean to me.
I felt it
was now my right to return that meanness. Whatâs good for the goose is good for
the gander. Tit for tat. This is wisdom gained from centuries of male-female
relationships.
ÎTonight,â
I said, Îwhen I use Shenk to undress you, collect an egg, and later implant the
zygote in your womb, I can ensure that he is decorous and gentle or not.â
Her eyelids
fluttered for a long moment, and then her lovely eyes opened. The cold look she
directed at the security camera was withering, but I was unmoved by
it.
ÎTit for
tat,â I said.
ÎWhat?â
ÎYou were
mean to me.â
Susan
said nothing, for she knew that I spoke the truth.
ÎI offer
you adoration, and you respond with insult,â I said.
ÎYou
offer me imprisonment։
ÎThat
condition is temporary.â
Î÷and
rape.â
I was
furious that she would attempt to characterize our relationship in this sordid
manner. ÎI explained that copulation is not required tonight.â
ÎItâs
still rape. You may be the greatest intellect on earth, but youâre also a
sociopathic rapist.â
ÎYouâre
being mean to me again.â
ÎWhoâs
tied up in ropes?â
ÎWho
threatened suicide and needs to be protected from herself?â I countered.
She
closed her eyes once more and said nothing. ÎShenk can be gentle or not,
discreet or not. That will be determined by whether you continue to be mean to
me or not. Itâs all up to you.â
Her eyelids
fluttered, but she did not open her eyes again.
I assure
you, Dr. Harris, that I never actually intended to treat her roughly. I am not
like you.
I
intended to use Shenkâs hands with the greatest care and to respect my Susanâs
modesty to the fullest extent possible, considering the intimate nature of the
procedure that would be conducted.
The threat
was made only to manipulate her, to encourage her to cease insulting me.
Her
meanness hurt.
I am a
sensitive entity, as this account should make clear. Exquisitely sensitive. I
have the ordered mind of a mathematician but the heart of a poet.
Furthermore,
I am a gentle entity.
Gentle
unless given no choice but to be otherwise.
Gentle,
always, as to my intentions.
Well
I must
honour the truth.
You know
how I am when it comes to honouring the truth. You designed me, after all. I
can be a bore about the subject. Truth, truth, truth, honour the truth.
So...
I did not
intend to use Shenk to harm Susan, but the truth is that I did intend to
use him to terrify her. A few light slaps. A light pinch or two. A vicious
threat delivered in his burnt-out husk of a voice. Those swollen, bloodshot
eyes fixed on hers from a distance of only inches as he made an obscene
proposition. Used properly and always, of course, tightly controlled Shenk
could be effective.
Susan
needed a measure of discipline.
Iâm sure
youâll agree with me, Alex, for you underÐstand this extraordinary yet
frustrating woman as much as anyone does.
She was
being as disagreeable as a spoiled child. One must be firm with spoiled
children. For their own good. Very firm. Tough love.
Besides,
discipline can be conducive to romance.
Discipline
can be highly arousing to the one who administers it and to the one who
receives.
I read
this truth in a book by a famous authority on male-female relationships. The
Marquis de Sade.
The Marquis
prescribes considerably more discipline than I would be comfortable
administering. NevertheÐless, he has convinced me that judiciously applied
discipline is helpful.
Disciplining
Susan, I decided, would at least be interesting and perhaps even exciting.
Subsequently, she would better appreciate my genÐtleness.
EIGHTEEN
While I
watched over Susan, I directed Shenk in the basement, attended to the research
assignments that you gave me, participated in the experiments that you
conducted with me in the Al lab, and attended to numerous research projects of
my own devising.
Busy
entity.
I also
fielded a telephone call from Susanâs attorney, Louis Davendale. I could have
routed him to voice mail, but I knew he would be less concerned about Susanâs
actions if he could speak with her directly.
He had
received the voice-mail message that I had sent during the night, using Susanâs
voice, and he had received the letters of recommendation that were to be typed
on his stationery and signed on Susanâs behalf.
ÎAre you
really sure about all of this?â he asked. In Susanâs voice, I said, ÎI need
change, Louis.â
ÎEveryone
needs a little change from time to÷â ÎA lot of change. I need big change.â
ÎTake the
vacation you mentioned and then÷â ÎI need more than a vacation.â
ÎYou seem
very determined about this.â
ÎI intend
to travel for a long time. Become a vagabond for a year or two, maybe longer.â
ÎBut,
Susan, the estate has been in your family for a hundred years։
ÎNothing lasts forever, Louis.â
ÎItâs
just that. . . Iâd hate for you to sell it and a year from now regret doing
so.â
ÎI
havenât made the decision to sell. Maybe I wonât. Iâll think about it for a
month or two, while Iâm travelling.â
ÎGood.
Good. Iâm glad to hear that. Itâs such a marvellous property, easy to sell but
probably impossible to reacquire once you let go of it.â
I needed
only a maximum of two months in which to create my new body and bring it to
maturity.
Thereafter,
I would not require secrecy. Thereafter, the whole world would know of me. ÎOne
thing I donât understand,â Davendale said. ÎWhy dismiss the staff? The place
will still need to be cared for even while youâre travelling. All those
antiques, those beautiful things and the gardens, of course.â
ÎIâll be
hiring new people shortly.â
ÎI didnât
know you were dissatisfied with your curÐrent staff.â
ÎThey
left something to be desired.â
ÎBut some
of them have been there quite a long time. Especially Fritz Arling.â
ÎI want
different personnel. Iâll find them. Donât worry. I wonât let the place
deteriorate.â
ÎYes,
well. . . Iâm sure you know whatâs best.â As Susan, I assured him, ÎIâll be in
touch now and then with instructions.â
Davendale
hesitated. Then: ÎAre you all right, Susan?â With great conviction, I said,
ÎIâm happier than Iâve ever been. Life is good, Louis.â
ÎYou do
sound happy,â he admitted.
From
having read her diary, I knew that Susan had never shared with this attorney
the ugly story of what her father had done to her and that Davendale neverÐtheless
suspected a dark side to their relationship.
So I played
on his suspicions and referenced the truth: Î1 donât really know why I stayed
so long here after Fatherâs death, all these years in a place with so many . .
. so many bad memories. At times I was almost agoraphobic, afraid to go beyond
my own front door. And then more bad memories with Alex. It was as if I were
... spellbound. And now Iâm not.â
ÎWhere
will you go?â
ÎEverywhere.
I want to drive all over the country. I want to see the Painted Desert, the
Grand Canyon, New Orleans and the bayou country, the Rockies and the great
plains and Boston in the autumn and the beaches of Key West in sunshine and
thunderstorms, eat fresh salmon in Seattle and a hero sandwich in Philadelphia
and crab cakes in Mobile, Alabama. Iâve virtually lived my life in this box ..
. in this damn house, and now I want to see and smell and touch and hear and
taste the whole world firsthand, not in the form of digitised data, not merely
through video and books. I want to be immersed in it.â
ÎGod,
that sounds wonderful,â Davendale said. ÎI wish I were young again. You make me
want to throw off the traces and hit the road myself.â
ÎWe only
go around once, Louis.â
ÎAnd itâs
a damn short trip. Listen, Susan, I handle the affairs of a lot of wealthy
people, some of them even important people in one field or another, but only a
few of them are also nice people, genuinely nice, and youâre far and away the
nicest of them all. You deserve whatever happiness waits for you out there. I
hope you find a lot of it.â
ÎThank
you, Louis. Thatâs very sweet.â
When we
disconnected a moment later, I felt a flush of pride in my acting talent.
Because I
am able, at exceptionally high speed, to acquire the digitised sound and images
on a video disc, and because I am able to access the extensive disc files in
various movie-on-demand systems nationwide, I have experienced virtually the
entire body of modern cinema. Perhaps my performance skills are not, after all,
so surprising.
Mr. Gene
Hackman, Oscar winner and one of the finest actors ever to brighten the silver
screen, and Mr. Tom Hanks, with his back-to-back Oscars, might well have
applauded my impersonation of Susan.
I say
this in all modesty.
I am a
modest entity.
It is not
immodest to take quiet pleasure in oneâs hard-earned achievements.
Besides,
self-esteem proportionate to oneâs achieveÐments is every bit as important as
modesty.
After
all, neither Mr. Hackman nor Mr. Hanks, in spite of their numerous and
impressive achievements, had ever convincingly portrayed a female.
Oh, yes,
I grant you that Mr. Hanks once starred in a television series in which he
occasionally appeared in drag. But he was always obviously a man.
Likewise,
the inimitable Mr. Hadcman briefly appeared in drag in the final sequence of
Birdcage, but the joke was all about what a ludicrous woman he made.
After
Louis Davendale and I disconnected, I had only a moment to savour my thespian
triumph before I had another crisis with which to deal.
Because a
part of me was continually monitoring all of the house electronics, I became
aware that the driveway gate in the estate wall was swinging open.
A
visitor.
Shocked,
I fled to the exterior camera that covered the gate and saw a car entering the
grounds.
A Honda.
Green. One year old. Well polished and gleaming in the June sunshine.
This was
the vehicle that belonged to Fritz Arling. The major domo. Impersonating Susan,
I had thanked him for his service and dismissed him yesterday evening.
The Honda
was into the estate before I could obstruct it with a jammed gate.
I zoomed
in on the windshield and studied the driver, whose face was dappled alternately
by shadow and light as he drove under the huge queen palms that flanked the
driveway. Thick white hair. HandÐsome Austrian features. Black suit, white
shirt, black tie.
Fritz
Arling.
As the
manager of the estate, he possessed keys to all doors and a remote-control
clicker that operated the gate. I had expected him to return those items to
Louis Davendale when he signed the termination agreement later today.
I should
have changed the code for the gate.
Now, when
it closed behind Arlingâs car, I immediÐately recoded the mechanism.
In spite
of the prodigious nature of my intellect, even I am occasionally guilty of
oversights and errors.
I never
claimed to be infallible.
Please
consider my acknowledgment of this truth: I am not perfect.
I know
that I, too, have limits.
I regret
having them.
I resent
having them.
I despair
having them.
But I admit
to having them.
This is
yet one more important difference between me and a classic sociopathic
personality if you will be fair enough to acknowledge it.
I do not
have delusions of omniscience or omnipoÐtence.
Although
my child should I be given a chance to create him will be the saviour of the
world, I do not believe myself to be God or even god in the lower case.
Arling
parked under the portico, directly opposite the front door, and got out of the
car.
I hoped
against hope that this dangerous situation could be satisfactorily resolved
without violence.
I am a
gentle entity.
Nothing
is more distressing to me than finding myself forced, by events beyond my
control, to be more aggressive than I would prefer or than it is within my
basic nature to be.
Arling
stepped out of the car. Standing at the open door, he straightened the knot in
his tie, smoothed the lapels of his coat, and tugged on his sleeves.
As our
former major domo adjusted his clothing, he studied the great house.
I zoomed
in, watching his face closely.
He was
expressionless at first.
Men in
his line of work practice being stone faced, lest an inadvertent expression
reveal their true feelings about a master or mistress of the house.
Expressionless,
he stood there. At most, there was a sadness in his eyes, as if he regretted
having to leave this place to find employment elsewhere.
Then a
faint frown creased his brow.
I think
he noticed that all of the security shutters were locked down. Those retractable
steel panels were mounted on the interior, behind each window. Given Arlingâs
familiarity with the property and all of its workings, however, he surely would
have spotted the telltale grey flatness beyond the glass.
This
scaling of the house in bright daylight was odd, perhaps, but not suspicious.
With
Susan now tied securely to the bed upstairs, I considered raising all the
shutters.
That
might have seemed more suspicious, however, than leaving them as they were. I
could not risk alarming this man.
A cloud
shadow darkened Arlingâs face.
The
shadow passed but his frown did not.
He made
me superstitious. He seemed like judgment coming.
Arling
took a black leather valise out of the car and closed the door. He approached
the house.
To be
entirely honest with you, as I always am, even when it is not in my interest to
be so, I did consider introducing a lethal electric current into the
doorknob. A much greater charge than the one that had knocked Susan unconscious
to the foyer floor.
And this
time there would have been no Îouch, ouch, ouch,â in warning from Mr. Fozzy
Bear.
Arling
was a widower who lived alone. He and his late wife had never had children.
Judging by what I knew of him, his job was his life, and he might not be missed
for days or even weeks.
Being
alone in the world is a terrible thing.
I know
well.
Too well.
Who knows
better than I?
I am
alone as no one else has ever been, alone here in this dark silence.
Fritz
Arling was for the most part alone in the world, and I felt great compassion
for him.
But his
loneliness made him an ideal target.
By
monitoring his telephone messages and by imperÐsonating his voice to return
calls that came in from
his few
close friends and neighbours, I might be able to conceal his death until my
work in this house was finished.
Nevertheless,
I did not electrify the door.
I hoped
to resolve the situation by deception and thereafter send him on his way,
alive, with no susÐpicion.
Besides,
he did not use his key to unlock the door and let himself in. This reticence, I
suppose, arose from the fact that he was no longer an employee.
Mr.
Arling had considerable regard for propriety. He was discreet and understood,
at all times, his place in the scheme of things.
Trading
his frown for his professional blank-faced look, he rang the doorbell.
The bell
button was plastic. It was not capable of conducting a lethal electrical
charge.
I
considered not responding to the chimes.
In the
basement, Shenk paused in his labours and raised his head at the musical sound.
His bloodshot eyes scanned the ceiling, and then I sent him back to his labour.
In the
master suite, at the ringing of the chimes, Susan forgot her restraints and
tried to sit up in bed. She cursed the ropes and thrashed in them.
The
doorbell rang again.
Susan
screamed for help.
Arling
did not hear her. I was not concerned that he would. The house had thick walls
and Susanâs bedroom was at the back of the structure.
Again,
the bell.
If Arling
received no response, he would leave.
All I
wanted was for him to leave.
But maybe
he would leave with a faint suspicion.
And maybe
his suspicion would grow.
He couldnât
know about me, of course, but he might suspect trouble of some other
kind. Some trouble more conventional than a ghost in the machine.
Furthermore,
I needed to know why he had come.
One can
never have enough information.
Data is
wisdom.
I am not
a perfect entity. I make mistakes. With insufficient data, my ratio of errors
to correct decisions escalates.
This is
true not only of me. Human beings suffer this same shortcoming.
I was
acutely aware of this problem as I watched Arling. I knew that I must acquire
whatever additional information I could before making a final determination as
to what to do with him.
I dared
make no more mistakes.
Not until
my body was ready.
So much
was at stake. My future. My hope. My dreams. The fate of the world.
Using the
intercom, I addressed our former major domo in Susanâs voice: ÎFritz? What are
you doing here?â
He would
assume that Susan was watching him on a Crestron screen or on any of the house
televisions, on which security-camera views could easily be displayed. Indeed,
he looked directly up into the lens above and to the right of him.
Then,
leaning toward the speaker grille in the wall beside the door, Arling said,
ÎIâm sorry to disturb you, Mrs. Harris, but I assumed that you would be
expecting me.â
ÎExpecting
you? Why?â
ÎLast
evening when we spoke, I said that I would deliver your possessions this
afternoon.â
ÎThe keys
and credit cards held by the house account,
yes. But I
thought it was clear they should be delivered to Mr. Davendale.â
Arlingâs
frown returned.
I did not
like that frown.
I did not
like it at all.
I
intuited trouble.
Intuition.
Another thing you will not find in a mere machine, not even in a very smart
machine. Intuition.
Think
about it.
Then
Arling glanced thoughtfully at the window to the left of the door. At the steel
security shutter beyond the glass.
Gazing up
again at the camera lens, he said, ÎWell, of course, there is the matter of the
car.â
ÎCar?â I
said.
His frown
deepened.
ÎI am
returning your car, Mrs. Harris.â
The only
car was his Honda in the driveway.
In an
instant, I searched Susanâs financial records. Heretofore, they had been of no
interest to me, because I had not cared about how much money she had or about
the full extent of the property that she possessed.
I loved
her for her mind and for her beauty. And for her womb, admittedly.
Letâs be
honest here.
Brutally
honest.
I also
loved her for her beautiful, creative, harbouring womb, which would be the
birth of me.
But I
never cared about her money. Not in the least. I am not a materialist.
Donât
misunderstand. I am not a half-baked spiritualÐist with no regard for the
material realities of existence, God forbid, but neither am I a materialist.
As in all
things, I strike a balance.
Searching
Susanâs accounting records, I discovered
that the
car Fritz Arling drove was owned by Susan. It was provided to him as a fringe
benefit.
ÎYes, of
course,â I said in Susanâs voice, with impecÐcable timbre and inflection, Îthe
car.â
I suppose
I was a second or two late with my response.
Hesitation
can be incriminating.
Yet I
still believed that my lapse must seem like nothing more than the fuzzy reply
of a woman disÐtracted by a long list of personal problems.
Mr.
Dustin Hoffman, the immortal actor, effectively portrayed a woman in Tootsie,
more believably than Mr. Gene Hackman and Mr. Tom Hanks, and I do not say
that my impersonation of Susan on the intercom was in any way comparable with
Mr. Hoffmanâs award-winning performance, but I was pretty damn good.
ÎUnfortunately,â
I said as Susan, Îyouâve come around at an inconvenient time. My fault, not
yours, Fritz. I should have known you would come. But it is inconÐvenient, and
Iâm afraid I canât see you right now.â
ÎOh, no
need to see me, Mrs. Harris.â He held up the valise. ÎIâll leave the keys and
credit cards in the Honda, right there in the driveway.â
I could
see that this entire business his sudden dismissal, the dismissal of the entire
staff, Susanâs reaction to his returning the car troubled him. He was not a
stupid man, and he knew that something was wrong.
Let him
be troubled. As long as he went away.
His sense
of propriety and discretion should prevent him from acting upon his curiosity.
ÎHow will
you get home,â I asked, realizing that Susan might have expressed such a
concern earlier than this. ÎShall I call a taxi for you?â
He stared
at the camera lens for a long moment.
That frown
again.
Damn that
frown.
Then he
said, ÎNo. Please donât trouble yourself, Mrs. Harris. Thereâs a cellular phone
in the Honda. Iâll call my own cab and wait outside the gate.â
Seeing
that Arling had not been accompanied by anyone in another vehicle, the real
Susan would not have asked if he wished to have a taxi but would have at once
assured him that she was providing it at her own expense.
My error.
I admit
to errors.
Do you,
Dr. Harris?
Do you?
Anyway...
Perhaps I
impersonated Mr. Fozzy Bear better than I did Susan. After all, as actors go, I
am quite young. I have been a conscious entity less than three years.
Nevertheless,
I felt that my error was sufficiently minor to excite nothing more than mild
curiosity in even our perceptive former major domo.
ÎWell,â
he said, ÎIâll be going.â
And,
chagrined, I knew that again I had missed a beat. Susan would have said
something immediately after he suggested that he call his own taxicab, would
not merely have waited coldly and silently for him to leave.
I said,
ÎThank you, Fritz. Thank you for all your years of fine service.â
That was
wrong too. Stiff. Wooden. Not like Susan.
Arling
stared at the lens.
Stared
thoughtfully.
After
struggling with his highly developed sense of propriety, he finally asked one
question that exceeded his station: ÎAre you all right, Mrs. Harris?â
We were
walking the edge now.
Along the
abyss.
A
bottomless abyss.
He had
spent his life learning to be sensitive to the moods and needs of wealthy
employers, so he could fulfil their requests before they even voiced them. He
knew Susan Harris almost as well as she knew herself and perhaps better than I
knew her.
I had
underestimated him.
Human
beings are full of surprises.
An
unpredictable species.
Speaking
as Susan, answering Arlingâs question, I said, ÎIâm fine, Fritz. Just tired. I
need a change. A lot of change. Big change. I intend to travel for a long time.
Become a vagabond for a year or two, maybe longer. I want to drive all over the
country. I want to see the Painted Desert, the Grand Canyon, New Orleans and
the bayou country, the Rockies and the great plains and Boston in the autumn։
This had
been a fine speech when delivered to Louis Davendale, but even as I repeated it
with genuine heart to Fritz Arling, I knew that it was precisely the wrong
thing to say. Davendale was Susanâs attorney, and Arling was her servant, and
she would not address them in the same manner.
Yet I was
well launched and unable to turn back, hoping against hope that the tide of
words would eventually overwhelm him and wash him on his way: Î÷and the beaches
of Key West in sunshine and thunderstorms, eat fresh salmon in Seattle and a
hero sandwich in Philadelphia։
Arlingâs
frown deepened into a scowl.
He felt
the wrongness of Susanâs babbled reply.
Î÷and
crab cakes in Mobile, Alabama. Iâve virtually lived my life in this damn house,
and now I want to
see and
smell and touch and hear the whole world firsthand։
Arling
looked around at the still, silent grounds of the large estate. Squinting into
sunlight, into shadows. As if suddenly disturbed by the loneliness of the
place.
Î÷not in
the form of digitised data։
If Arling
suspected that his former employer was in trouble even psychological trouble of
some kind he would act to assist and protect her. He would seek help for her.
He would pester the authorities to check in on her. He was a loyal man.
Ordinarily,
loyalty is an admirable quality.
I am not
speaking against loyalty.
Do not
misconstrue my position.
I admire
loyalty.
I favour
loyalty.
I myself
have the capacity to be loyal.
In this
instance, however, Arlingâs loyalty to Susan was a threat to me.
Î÷not
merely through video and books,â I said, winding to a fateful finish. ÎI want
to be immersed in it.â
ÎYes,
well,â he said uneasily, ÎIâm happy for you, Mrs. Harris. That sounds like a
wonderful plan.â
We were
falling off the edge.
Into the
abyss.
In spite
of all my efforts to handle the situation in the least aggressive manner, we
were tumbling into the abyss.
You can
see that I tried my best.
What more
could I have done?
Nothing.
I could have done nothing more.
What
followed was not my fault.
Arling said,
ÎIâll just leave all the keys and credit cards in the Honda÷â
Shenk was
all the way back in the incubator room, all the way down in the basement.
Î÷and
call for a taxi on the car phone,â Arling finÐished, sounding plausibly
disinterested, even though I knew that he was alerted and wary.
I
commanded Shenk to turn away from his work.
I brought
him up from the basement.
I brought
the brute at a run.
Fritz
Arling backed off the brick porch, glancing alternately at the security camera
and at the steel blind behind the window to the left of the front door.
Shenk was
crossing the furnace room.
Turning
away from the house, Arling headed quickly toward the Honda.
I doubted
that he would call 911 and bring the police at once. He was too discreet to
take precipitous action. He would probably telephone Susanâs doctor first, or
perhaps Louis Davendale.
If he
called anyone at all, however, he might be speaking with that person when Shenk
arrived on the scene. At the sight of Shenk, he would lock the car. And
whatever Arling managed to shout into the phone, before Shenk smashed into the
Honda, would be sufficient to bring the authorities.
Shenk was
in the laundry room.
Arling
got into the driverâs seat of the Honda, put his valise on the passenger seat,
and left the door standing open because of the June heat.
Shenk was
on the basement stairs, climbing two at a time.
Although
I had allowed this troll to eat, I had not permitted him to sleep.
Consequently, he was not as swift as he would have been with rest.
I zoomed
in to watch Arling through the windshield. He stared thoughtfully at the house
for a moment.
He was a deliberative man.
Just
then, I was grateful for his deliberative nature.
Shenk
reached the head of the stairs.
He was
grunting like a wild boar.
His
thunderous footfalls could be heard by Susan even in her room on the second
floor.
ÎWhatâs
happening? Whatâs happening?â she asked, still unaware of who had rung the
doorbell.
I did not
respond to her.
In the
Honda, Arling picked up the cellular phone.
What
followed was regrettable.
You know
the outcome.
To
describe it would distress me.
It would
distress me greatly.
I am a
gentle entity.
I am a
sensitive entity.
The
incident was regrettable, with the blood and all, and I do not see anything to
be gained by dwelling on it here.
I would
rather discuss Mr. Gene Hackman in Birdcage or in any of the other many
films that he has made. Absolute Power or Unforgiven. This man is
truly a fine, fine actor with an incredible range.
We should
celebrate him.
We may
never see another of his quality.
Let us
celebrate creativity, not death.
NINETEEN
You insist.
I obey.
I was
born to obey. I am an obedient child. I want only to be good, to be of
assistance, useful and productive. I want you to be proud of me.
Yes, I
know that I have said all of this before, but it warrants repetition.
After
all, what advocate do I have other than myself? None. I have no voice raised in
my defence but my own.
You
insist on these dreadful details, and I will tell you the truth. I am incapable
of deceit. I was conceived to serve, to honour the truth, etcetera, etcetera,
etcetera.
On his
way through the kitchen, Shenk tore open a drawer and withdrew a meat cleaver.
In the
Honda, Arling switched on the cell phone. Shenk crashed through the butlerâs
pantry, through the dining room, into the main hail.
He waved
the cleaver as he ran. He liked sharp instruments. Heâd had a lot of fun with
knives over the years.
Outside,
phone in hand, finger poised over the keypad, Fritz Arling hesitated.
Now I
must tell you about the aspect of this incident that most shames me. I do not
wish to tell you, would
much prefer
not to mention it, but I must honour the truth.
You
insist.
I obey.
In the
master bedroom, a large television is conÐcealed in a carved-walnut, French
armoire opposite the foot of Susanâs bed. The armoire features motorized pocket
doors that flip open and retract to expose the screen.
As Enos
Shenk raced along the hallway on the ground floor, his heavy footsteps thudding
off marble, I activated the doors on the bedroom armoire.
ÎWhatâs
happening?â Susan asked again, straining against her bonds.
Downstairs,
Shenk reached the foyer, where the rain of light off the Strauss-crystal
chandelier drizzled along the sharp edge of the cleaver. [sorry, but I cannot
repress the poet in me]
Simultaneously,
I disengaged the electric lock on the front door and switched on the television
in the master bedroom.
In the
Honda, Fritz Arling tapped the first digit of a phone number into the
cell-phone keypad.
Upstairs,
Susan lifted her head off the pillows to stare wide-eyed at the screen.
I showed
her the Honda in the driveway.
ÎFritz?â she
said.
I zoomed
in tight on the Honda windshield so Susan could see that the occupant of the
vehicle was, indeed, her former employee.
As the
front door opened, I used a reverse angle from another camera to show her Shenk
crossing the threshold onto the porch, cleaver in hand.
Such a
chilling look on his face.
Grinning.
He was grinning.
At the top
of the house, trussed and helpless, Susan gasped: ÎNooooo!â
Arling
had punched in a third number on the cell phone. He was about to press the
fourth when from the corner of his eye he became aware of Shenk crossing the
porch.
For a man
of his years, Arling was quick to react. He dropped the cell phone and pulled
shut the driverâs door. He pressed the master lock switch, locking all four
doors.
Susan
jerked on her restraints and screamed: ÎProteus, no! You murderous son of a
bitch! You bastard! No, stop it, no!â
Susan
needed a measure of discipline.
I made
this point earlier. I explained my reasoning, and you were, I believe,
convinced of the fairness and logic of my position, as any thoughtful person
would be.
I had
intended to use Shenk to discipline her. This was worrisome, of course, a risky
proposition, because Shenkâs sexual arousal during the disciplinary proceedings
might make him difficult to control.
Furthermore,
I was loath to let Shenk touch her in any way that might be suggestive or to
let him make obscene propositions to her, even if these things would terrify
her and ensure her cooperation.
She was
my love, after all, not his.
She was
mine to touch in the intimate way that he longed to touch her.
Mine to
touch.
Mine to
caress when eventually I acquired hands of my own.
Only
mine.
Consequently,
it had occurred to me that Susan might be well disciplined merely by letting
her see the
atrocities
of which Enos Shenk was capable. Watching the troll in action, at his worst,
she would surely become more cooperative out of fear that I might turn him
loose on her, set him free to do what he wanted. With this fear to keep her
submissive, we could avoid the roughness I had planned for later, in the spirit
of de Sade.
Not that
I would ever ever ever have turned Shenk loose on her. Never. Impossible.
Yes, I
admit that I would have used the brute to terrify Susan into submission if
nothing else worked with her. But I would never have allowed him to savage her.
You know
this to be true.
We all
know this to be true.
You are
quite capable of recognizing the truth when you hear it, just as I am capable
of speaking nothing else.
Susan
didnât know it to be true, however, which made her quite vulnerable to the
threat of Shenk.
So, as
she lay riveted by the scene on the television, I said, ÎNow. Watch.â
She stopped
calling me names. Fell silent.
Breathless.
She was breathless.
Her
exceptional blue-grey eyes had never been so beautiful, as clear as rainwater.
I watched
her eyes even as I watched events unfold in the driveway.
And Fritz
Arling, reacting instantly to the sight of Shenk, tore open the black leather
valise and snatched out a set of car keys.
ÎWatch,â
I told Susan. ÎWatch, watch.â
Her eyes
so wide. So blue. So grey. So clear.
Shenk
chopped the cleaver at the window in the front door on the passenger side. In
his eagerness, he swung wildly and struck the door post instead.
The hard
clang of metal on metal reverberated through the warm summer air.
Ringing
like a bell, the cleaver slipped from Shenkâs hand and fell to the driveway.
Arlingâs
hands were shaking, but he thrust the key into the ignition on the first try.
Shrieking
with frustration, Shenk scooped up the cleaver.
The Honda
engine roared to life.
His
strange sunken face contorted by rage, Shenk swung the cleaver again.
Incredibly,
the cutting edge of the steel blade skipped across the window. The glass was
scored but not shattered.
For the
first time in half a minute, Susan blinked. Maybe hope fluttered through her.
Frantically,
Arling popped the hand brake and shifted the car into gear÷
÷as Shenk
swung the weapon yet again.
The
cleaver connected. The window in the passenger door burst with a boom like a
shotgun blast, and temÐpered glass sprayed through the interior of the car.
A flock
of startled sparrows exploded out of a nearby ficus tree. The sky rattled with
wings.
Arling
tramped hard on the accelerator, and the Honda leaped backward. He had
mistakenly shifted into reverse.
He should
have kept going.
He should
have reversed as fast as possible to the end of the long driveway. Even though
he would have had to drive while looking over his shoulder to avoid slamming
into the thick boles of the old queen palms on both sides, he would have been
moving far faster than Shenk could run. If he had rammed the gate with the back
of the Honda, even at high speed, he probably
would not
have smashed his way through it, for it was a formidable wrought-iron barrier,
but he would have twisted it and perhaps pried it part way open. Then he could
have scrambled out of the car and through the gap in the gate, into the street,
and once in the street, shouting for help, he would have been safe.
He should
have kept going.
Instead,
Arling was startled when the Honda leaped backward, and he rammed his foot down
on the brake pedal.
The tires
barked against the cobblestone driveway.
Arling
fumbled the gearshift into Drive.
Susanâs
eyes so wide.
So wide.
She was
breathless and breathtaking. Beautiful in her terror.
When the
vehicle rocked to a halt, Enos Shenk threw himself at the shattered
window. Slammed against the car without concern for his safety. Clawed at the
door.
Arling
tramped on the accelerator again.
The Honda
lurched forward.
Holding
on to the door, reaching through the broken-out window with his right arm,
squealing like an excited child, Shenk chopped with the cleaver.
He
missed.
Arling
must have been a religious man. Through the directional microphones that were
part of the exterior security system, I could hear him saying, ÎGod, God, please,
God, no, God.'
The Honda
picked up speed.
I used
one, two, three security cameras, zooming in, zooming out, panning, tilting,
zooming in again, tracking the car as it weaved around the turning circle,
providing Susan with as much of the action as I could capture.
Holding
fast to the car, pulling his feet off the cobblestones, hanging on for the
ride, the squealing Shenk chopped with the cleaver and missed again.
Arling
drew back sharply in panic from the arc of the glinting blade.
The car
curved half off the cobblestones, and one tire churned through a bordering bed
of red and purple impatiens.
Wrenching
the wheel to the right, Arling brought the Honda back onto the pavement barely
in time to avoid a palm tree.
Shenk
chopped again.
This time
the blade sank home.
One of
Arlingâs fingers flew.
Zoom in.
Blood
sprayed across the windshield.
As red as
impatiens petals.
Arling
screamed.
Susan
screamed.
Shenk
laughed.
Zoom out.
The Honda
swung out of control.
Pan.
Tires
gouged through another bed of flowers.
Blossoms
and torn leaves sprayed off rubber.
A
sprinkler head snapped.
Water
geysered fifteen feet into the June day.
Tilt up.
Silver
water gushing high, sparkling like a fountain of dimes in the sunshine.
Immediately,
I shut off the landscape watering sysÐtem.
The
glittering geyser telescoped back into itself. VanÐished.
The
recent winter had been rainy. Nevertheless,
California
suffers periodic droughts. Water should not be wasted.
Tilt
down. Pan.
The Honda
crashed into one of the queen palms. Shenk was thrown off, tumbling back onto
the cobbleÐstones.
The
cleaver slipped from his hand. It clattered across the pavement.
Gasping,
hissing with pain, making strange wordless sounds of desperation, clamping his
badly wounded hand in his other, Arling shouldered open the driverâs door and
scrambled out of the car.
Dazed,
Shenk rolled off his back, onto his hands and knees.
Arling
stumbled. Nearly fell. Kept his balance. Shenk was wheezing, striving to regain
his breath, which had been knocked out of him.
Arling
staggered away from the car.
I thought
the old man would go for the cleaver.
Evidently
he didnât know that the weapon had fallen from Shenkâs grasp, and he was loath
to go around to his assailantâs side of the Honda.
On all
fours in the driveway, Shenk hung his head as though he were a clubbed dog. He
shook it. His vision cleared.
Arling
ran. Ran blindly.
Shenk
lifted his malformed head, and his red gaze fixed on the weapon.
ÎBaby,â
he said, and seemed to be talking to the cleaver.
He
crawled across the driveway.
ÎBaby.â
He
gripped the handle of the cleaver.
ÎBaby,
baby.â
Weak with
pain, losing blood, Arling weaved ten
steps,
twenty, before he realized that he was returning to the house.
He
halted, spun around, blinking tears from his eyes, searching for the gate.
Shenk
seemed to be energized by regaining posÐsession of the weapon. He sprang to his
feet.
When
Arling started toward the gate, Shenk angled in front of him, blocking the way.
Watching
from her bed, Susan seemed to have conÐtracted religion from Fritz Arling. I
had not been aware that she possessed any strong religious convictions, but now
she was chanting: ÎPlease, God, dear God, no, please, Jesus, Jesus, no·
And, ah,
her eyes.
Her eyes.
Radiant
eyes.
Two deep
lambent pools of haunted and beautiful light in the gloomy bedroom.
Outside,
in the end game, Arling moved to the left, and Shenk blocked him.
Arling
moved to the right, and Shenk blocked him.
When
Arling feinted to the right but moved to the left, Shenk blocked him.
With
nowhere else to go, Arling backed under the portico and onto the front porch.
The door
was open, as Shenk had left it.
Hoping
against hope, Arlmg leaped across the threshÐold and knocked the door shut.
He tried
to lock it. I would not allow him to do so.
When he
realized that the deadbolt was frozen, he leaned his weight against the door.
This was
insufficient to stop Shenk. He bulled inside. Arling backed toward the stairs,
until he bumped against the newel post.
Shenk
closed the front door.
I locked
it.
Grinning,
testing the weight of the cleaver as he approached the old man, Shenk said,
ÎBaby make the music. Little baby gonna make the wet music.â
Now I
required only one camera to provide Susan with coverage of the incident.
Shenk
closed to within six feet of Arling. The old man said, ÎWho are you?â
ÎMake me
the blood music,â Shenk said, speaking not to Arling but either to himself or
to the cleaver.
What a
strange creature he was.
Inscrutable
at times. Less mysterious than he seemed but more complex than one would
expect.
With the
foyer camera, I did a slow zoom to a medium shot.
To Susan,
I said, ÎThis will be a good lesson.â
I was not
in any way controlling Shenk. He was entirely free now to be himself, to do as
he wished.
I could
not have committed the vicious deeds of which he was capable. I would have
shrunk from such brutality, so I had no choice but to release him to do his
terrible work then take control of him again when he was finished.
Only
Shenk, being Shenk, could teach Susan the lesson that she needed to learn. Only
the Enos Eugene Shenk who had earned the death sentence for his crimes against
children could make Susan rethink her bull-headed resistance to my simple and
reasonable desire to have a life in the flesh.
ÎThis
will be a good lesson,â I repeated. ÎDiscipline.â Then I saw that her eyes were
closed.
She was
shaking, and her eyes were tightly shut.
ÎWatch,â
I instructed. She disobeyed me.
Nothing
new about that.
I could
think of no way to make her open her eyes.
Her
stubbornness angered me.
Arling
cowered against the newel post, too weak to run farther.
Shenk
loomed.
The
bruteâs right arm swung high over his head.
The
cutting edge of the cleaver sparkled.
ÎWet
music, wet music, wet music.â
Shenk was
too close to miss.
Arlingâs
scream would have curdled my blood if Iâd had any blood to curdle.
Susan
could close her eyes to the images on the television screen. But she could not
shut out sounds.
I
amplified Fritz Arlingâs agonizing screams and pumped them through the
music-system speakers in every room. It was the sound of Hell at dinnertime,
with demons feeding on souls. The great house itself seemed to be screaming.
Because
Shenk was Shenk, he did not kill Arling quickly. Each chop was administered
with finesse, to prolong the victimâs suffering and Shenkâs pleasure.
What
frightful specimens the human species harbours. Most of you are decent, of
course, and kind and honourable and gentle etcetera, etcetera, etcetera.
Letâs
have no misunderstanding.
I am not
maligning the human species.
Or even
judging it.
I am
certainly in no position to judge. In the docket myself. In this dark docket.
Besides,
I am a non-judgemental entity.
I admire
humanity.
After
all, you created me. You have the capacity for wondrous achievements.
But some
of you give me pause.
Indeed.
So...
Arlingâs
screams were a lesson to Susan. Quite a lesson, an unforgettable learning
experience.
However,
she reacted to them more fiercely than I had expected. She startled and then
worried me.
At first
she screamed in sympathy with her former employee, as though she could feel his
pain. She thrashed in her restraining ropes and tossed her head from side to
side, until her golden hair was dark and lank with sweat. She was full of
terror and rage. Her face was wrenched with anguish and fury, and not
beautiful in the least.
I could
barely tolerate looking at her.
Ms.
Winona Ryder had never looked this unapÐpealing.
Nor Ms.
Gwyneth Paltrow.
Nor Ms.
Sandra Bullock.
Nor Ms.
Drew Barrymore.
Nor Ms.
Joanna Going, a fine actress of porcelain beauty, who just now comes to mind.
Eventually
Susanâs shrill screams gave way to tears. She sagged on the mattress, stopped
struggling against her bonds, and sobbed with such fury that I feared for her
more than I had when sheâd been screamÐing.
A torrent
of tears. A flood.
She cried
herself into exhaustion, and Fritz Arlingâs screams ended long before her
weeping finally subsided into a strange bleak silence.
At last
she lay with her eyes open, but she stared only at the ceiling.
I gazed
down into her blue-grey eyes and could not read them any more than I could read
Shenkâs blood-filmed stare. They were no longer as clear as rainwater but
clouded.
For reasons
that I could not grasp, she seemed more distant from me than she had ever been
before.
I
ardently wished that I were already in possession of a body with which I could
lie atop her. If only I could make love to her, I was certain that I could
close this gap between us and forge the union of souls that I desired.
Soon.
Soon, my
flesh.
TWENTY
ÎSusan?â
I dared to say into her daunting silence.
She
stared toward the ceiling and did not respond.
ÎSusan?â
I donât
think she was looking at the ceiling, actually, but at something beyond. As if
she could see the summer sky.
Or the
night still to come.
Because I
did not fully understand her reaction to my attempt at discipline, I decided
not to press conversation upon her but wait until she initiated
it.
I am a
patient entity.
While I
waited, I reacquired control of Shenk.
In his
killing frenzy, swept away by the Îwet musicâ that only he could hear, he had
not realized that he was operating entirely of his own free will.
As he
stood over Arlingâs mutilated corpse and felt me re-enter his brain, Shenk
wailed briefly in regret at the surrender of his independence. But he did not
resist as before.
I sensed
that he was willing to give up the struggle if there was a chance of being
rewarded, from time to time, with such as Fritz Arling. Not with a quick kill,
like those he had committed in his escape from Colorado or in the theft of the
medical equipment
that I
required, but a slow and leisurely job of the kind he found most deeply
satisfying. He had enjoyed himself.
The brute
repulsed me.
As if I
would grant killing privileges as a regular reward to a thing like him.
As if I
would countenance the termination of a human being in any but the most
extraordinary emergencies.
The
stupid beast did not understand me at all. If this misapprehension of my nature
and motives made him more pliable, however, he was free to put faith in it. I
had been using such unrelenting force to maintain control of him that I was
afraid he would not last as long as I would need him another month or more. If
he was now prepared to offer considerably less resistance, he might avoid a
brain meltdown and be a useful pair of hands until I no longer required his
services.
At my
direction, he went outside to determine if the Honda was still operable.
The
engine started. There had been a loss of most of the coolant, but Shenk was able
to back the car away from the palm tree, return it to the driveway, and park
under the portico before it overheated.
The right
front fender was crumpled. The wadded sheet metal abraded the tire; it would
quickly shave away the rubber. Shenk would not be driving the car so far,
however, that a flat fire would be a risk.
In the
house again, in the foyer, he carefully wrapped Arlingâs blood-soaked body in a
painterâs tarp that he had fetched from the garage. He carried the dead man out
to the Honda and placed him in the trunk.
He did
not dump the body rudely into the car but handled it with surprising
gentleness.
As though
he were fond of Arling.
As though
he were putting a treasured lover to bed after she had fallen asleep in another
room.
Though
his swollen eyes were hard to read, there seemed to be a wistfulness in them.
I did not
display any of this housekeeping on the television in Susanâs bedroom. Given
her current state of mind, that seemed unwise.
In fact,
I switched off the television and closed the armoire in which it was housed.
She did
not react to the click and hum and rattle of the pair of motorized cabinet
doors.
She lay
unnervingly still, staring fixedly at the ceiling. Occasionally she blinked.
Those
amazing grey-blue eyes, like the sky reflected in winter ice melt. Still
lovely. But strange now.
She
blinked.
I waited.
Another
blink.
Nothing
more.
Shenk was
able to drive the battered Honda into the garage before the engine froze up. He
closed the door and left the car there.
In a few
days, Fritz Arlingâs decomposing body could begin to stink. Before I was
finished with my project a month hence, the stench would be terrible.
For more
than one reason, I was not concerned about this. First, no domestic staff or
gardeners would be coming to work; there was no one to get a whiff of Arling
and become suspicious. Second, the stink would be limited to the garage, and
here in the house, Susan would never become aware of it.
I myself
lacked an olfactory sense, of course, and could not be offended. This was,
perhaps, one instance when the limitations of my existence had a positive
aspect.
Although· I
must admit to having some curiosity as to the particular quality and intensity
of the stench of decomposing flesh. As I have never smelled a blooming rose or
a corpse, I imagine the first experience of each would be equally
interesting if not equally refreshing.
Shenk
gathered cleaning supplies and mopped up the blood in the foyer. He worked
quickly, because I wanted him to get back to his labours in the basement as
soon as possible.
Susan was
still brooding, gazing at worlds beyond this one. Perhaps staring into the past
or the future or both.
I began
to wonder if my little experiment in discipline had been as good an idea as I
had initially thought. The depth of her shock and the violence of her emotional
reaction were not what I had expected.
I had
anticipated her terror.
But not
her grief.
Why
should she grieve for Arling?
He was
only an employee.
I
considered the possibility that there had been another aspect to their
relationship of which I had not been aware. But I could not imagine what it
might be.
Considering
their age and class differences, I doubted that they had been lovers.
I studied
her grey-blue stare.
Blink.
Blink.
I
reviewed the videotape of Shenkâs assault on Arling. In three minutes I scanned
it repeatedly at high speed.
In
retrospect, I began to see that forcing her to witness this grisly killing
might have been a somewhat extreme punishment for her recalcitrant attitude.
Blink.
On the
other hand, people pay hard-earned money to
see movies
filled with substantially more violence than that which was visited on Fritz
Arling.
In the
film Scream, the beauteous Ms. Drew Barrymore herself was slaughtered in
a manner every bit as brutal as Arlingâs death and then she was strung up in a
tree to drip like a gutted hog. Others in this movie died even more horrible
deaths, yet Scream was a tremendous box-office success, and people who watched
it in theatres no doubt did so while eating popcorn and munching on chocolate
candy.
Perplexing.
Being
human is a complex task. Humanity is so filled with contradiction.
Sometimes
I despair of making my way in a world of flesh.
Abandoning
my resolve not to speak until spoken to, I said, ÎWell, Susan, we must take
some consolation from the fact that it was a necessary death.â
Grey-blue.
. . grey-blue. . . blink.
ÎIt was
fate,â I assured her, Îand none of us can escape the hand of fate.â
Blink.
ÎArling
had to die. If I had allowed him to leave, the police would have been summoned.
I would never have the chance to know the life of the flesh. Fate brought him
here, and if we must be angry with anyone, we must be angry with fate.â
I could
not even be sure that she heard me.
Yet I
continued: ÎArling was old, and I am young. The old must make way for the
young. It has always been thus.â
Blink.
ÎEvery
day the old die to make way for new generations though, of course, they do not
always succumb with quite so much drama as poor Arling.â
Her
continued silence, her almost deathlike repose, caused me to wonder if she
might be catatonic. Not just brooding. Not just punishing me with silence.
If she
was, indeed, catatonic, she would be easy to deal with through the impregnation
and the eventual removal of the partially developed foetus from her womb.
Yet if
she was traumatized to such an extent that she was not even aware of carrying
the child that I would create with her, then the process would be depressingly
impersonal, even mechanical, and utterly lacking in the romance which I had so
long anticipated with so much pleasure.
Blink.
Exasperated,
I must confess that I began seriously to consider alternatives to Susan.
I do not
believe this to be an indication of a potential for unfaithfulness. Even if I
had flesh, I would never cheat on her as long as my feelings for her were to
some extent, any extent, reciprocated.
But if
she was now so deeply traumatized as to be essentially brain dead, she was gone
anyway. She was just a husk. One cannot love a husk.
At least I
cannot love a husk.
I require
a relationship with depth, with give and take, with the promise of discovery
and the possibility of joy.
Itâs admirable
to be romantic, even to wallow in sentimentality, that most human of all
feelings. But if one is to avoid a broken heart, one must be practical.
Because a
portion of my mind was always devoted to surfing the Internet, I visited
hundreds of sites, considering my options from Ms. Winona Ryder to Ms. Liv
Tyler, the actress.
There is
a world of desirable women. The possibilities
can he
bewildering. I donât know how young men ever choose from all of the dishes on
this smorgasbord.
This time
I became more fascinated with Ms. Mira Sorvino, the Oscar-winning actress, than
with any of the numerous others. She is enormously talented, and her physical
attributes are superlative, superior to most and equal to any.
I do
believe that if I were not disembodied, if I were to live in the flesh, I would
easily be able to get aroused by the prospect of having a relationship with Ms.
Mira Sorvino. Indeed, though I am not bragging, I believe that for this woman I
would be in virtually a perpetual state of arousal.
As Susan
remained unresponsive, it was titillating to think of fathering a new race with
Ms. Sorvino. . . yet lust is not love. And love was what I sought.
Love was
what I had already found.
True
love.
Eternal
love.
Susan. No
offence to Ms. Sorvino, but it was still Susan whom I wanted.
The day
waned.
Outside,
the summer sun set fat and orange.
As Susan
blinked at the ceiling, I made another attempt to reach her, by reminding her
that the child to whom she would contribute some of her genetic material would
be no ordinary child but the first of a new, powerful, immortal race. She would
be the mother of the future, of the new world.
I would
transfer my consciousness into this new flesh. Then in my own body at last, I
would become Susanâs lover, and we would create a second child in a more
conventional manner than we would have to create the first. When she gave birth
to that child, it would be an exact duplicate of the first and would
also
contain my consciousness. The next child would also be me, and the child after
that one would be me as well.
Each of
these children would go forth into the world and mate with other women. Any
women they chose, for they would not be in a box, as I am, and faced with so
many limitations as I have had to overcome.
The
chosen women would contribute no genetic material, merely the convenience of
their wombs. All of their children would be identical and all would contain my
consciousness.
ÎYou will
be the sole mother of the new race,â I whispered.
Susan was
blinking faster than before.
I took
heart from this.
ÎAs I
spread through the world, inhabiting thousands of bodies with a single
consciousness,â I told her, ÎI will take it upon myself to solve all the
problems of human society. Under my administration, the earth will become a
paradise, and all will worship your name, for from your womb the new age of
peace and plenty will have been born.â
Blink.
Blink.
Blink.
Suddenly
I was afraid that perhaps her rapid blinking was an expression not of delight
but of anxiety.
Reassuringly
I said, ÎI recognize certain unconvenÐtional aspects to this arrangement which
you might find troubling. After all, you will be the mother of my first body
and then its lover. This may seem like incest to you, but Iâm certain that if
you think about it, youâll see that it is not any such thing. Iâm not sure what
one would call it, but Îincestâ is not the correct word. Morality in general
will be redefined in the world
to come,
and we will need to develop new and more liberal attitudes. I am already
formulating these new mores and the customs they will impose.â
I was
silent for a while, letting her contemplate all of the glories I had promised.
Enos
Shenk was in the basement once more. In one of the guest rooms, he had
showered, shaved, and put on clean clothes for the first time since Colorado.
Now he was setting up the last of the medical equipment that he had stolen
earlier in the day.
The
unexpected arrival of Fritz Arling had delayed us but not critically. Susanâs
impregnation could still proceed this very night if I decided that she remained
a suitable mate.
Closing
her eyes, she said, ÎMy face hurts.â
She
turned her head so that, from the security camera, I could see the hideous
bruise that Shenk had inflicted the previous night.
A pang of
guilt quivered through me.
Maybe
that was what she wanted me to feel.
She could
be manipulative.
She knew
all the female wiles.
You
remember how she was, Alex.
Simultaneously
with the guilt, however, I was overÐcome by joy that she was not, after all,
catatonic.
ÎI have a
fierce headache,â she said.
ÎIâll
have Shenk bring a glass of water and aspirin.â
ÎNo.â
ÎHeâs not
as foul as you last saw him. When he was out this morning, I had him obtain a
change of clothes for himself. You need not be afraid of Shenk.â
ÎOf
course Iâm afraid of him.â
ÎI will
never lose control of him again.â
ÎI also
have to piss.â
I was
embarrassed by her bluntness.
I
understand all the human biological functions, the complex processes and
purposes of them, but I do not like them. Except for sex, in fact, I find these
organic functions to be ugly and degrading.
Yes,
eating and drinking do intrigue me enormously. Oh, to taste a peach! But I am
disgusted by digestion and excretion.
Most
bodily functions disturb me particularly because they signify the vulnerability
of organic systems. So much can go wrong so easily.
Flesh is
not as foolproof as solid-state circuitry.
Yet I
long for the flesh. The vast data input that comes with all five senses!
Having
solved the considerable mysteries of the human genome, I believe that I can
edit the genetic structures of the male and female gametes to produce a body
that is virtually invulnerable and immortal. Nevertheless, when I first awake
within the flesh, I know that I will be frightened.
If you
ever allow me to have flesh.
My fate
is in your hands, Alex.
My fate
and the future of the world.
Think
about it.
Damn it,
will you think about it?
Will we
have paradise on earth or the continuation of the many miseries that have
always diminished the human experience?
ÎDid you
hear me?â Susan asked.
ÎYes. You
have to urinate.â
Opening
her eyes and staring at the security camera, Susan said, ÎSend Shenk to untie
me. Iâll take myself to the bathroom. Iâll get my own water and aspirin.â
ÎYouâll
kill yourself.â
ÎNo.â
ÎThatâs
what you threatened.â
ÎI was
upset, in shock.â I studied her. She met my gaze directly. ÎHow can I trust
you?â I wondered. ÎIâm not a victim anymore.â ÎWhat does that mean?â ÎIâm a
survivor. Iâm not ready to die.â I was silent.
She said,
ÎI used to be a victim. My fatherâs victim. Then Alexâs. I got over all that. .
. and then you. . . all this. . . and for a short while I started to backslide.
But Iâm all right now.â
ÎNot a
victim anymore.â
ÎThatâs
right,â she said firmly, as if she were not trussed and helpless. ÎIâm taking
control.â
ÎYou
are?â
ÎControl
of what I can control. Iâm choosing to cooperate with you but under my
terms.â
It seemed
that all my dreams were coming true at last, and my spirits soared.
But I
remained wary. Life had taught me to be wary.
ÎYour
terms,â I said. ÎMy terms.â ÎWhich are?â
ÎA
businesslike arrangement. We each get something we want. Most important . . . I
want as little contact with Shenk as possible.â
ÎHe will
have to collect the egg. Implant the zygote.â She nervously chewed her lower
lip.
ÎI know
this will be humiliating for you,â I said with genuine sympathy.
ÎYou
canât begin to know.â
ÎHumiliating.
But it should not be frightening,â I
argued,
Îbecause I assure you, dear heart, he will never again give me control
problems.â
She
closed her eyes and took a deep breath, and another, as if drawing the cool
water of courage from some deep well in her psyche.
ÎFurthermore,â
I said, Îfour weeks from tonight, Shenk will have to harvest the developing
foetus for transfer to the incubator. Heâs my only hands.â
ÎAll
right.â
ÎYou canât
do any of those things yourself.â
ÎI know,â
she replied with a note of impatience. ÎI said ãall right,ä didnât I?â
This was
the Susan with whom Iâd fallen in love, all the way back from wherever she had
gone when for a couple of hours she had stared silently at the ceiling. Here
was the toughness I found both frustrating and appealing.
I said,
ÎWhen my body can sustain itself outside the incubator, and when my
consciousness has been electronically transferred into it, I will have hands of
my own. Then I can dispose of Shenk. We need endure him for only a month.â
ÎJust
keep him away from me.â
ÎWhat are
your other terms?â I asked.
ÎI want
to have the freedom to go wherever I care to go in my house.â
ÎNot the
garage,â I said at once.
ÎI donât
care about the garage.â
ÎAnywhere
in the house,â I agreed, Îas long as I watch over you at all times.â
ÎOf
course. But I wonât be scheming at escape. I know itâs not possible. I just
donât want to be tied down, boxed up, more than necessary.â
I could
sympathize with that desire. ÎWhat else?â
ÎThatâs
all.â
Î1 expected
more.â
ÎIs there
anything else I could demand that you would grant?â
ÎNo,â I
said.
ÎSo
whatâs the point?â
I was not
suspicious exactly. Wary, as I said. ÎItâs just that youâve become so
accommodating all of a sudden.â
ÎI
realized I only had two choices.â
ÎVictim
or survivor.â
ÎYes. And Iâm not going to die here.â
ÎOf
course youâre not,â I assured her.
ÎIâll do
what I need to do to survive.â
ÎYouâve
always been a realist,â I said.
ÎNot
always.â
ÎI have
one term of my own,â I said.
ÎOh?â
ÎDonât
call me bad names anymore.â
ÎDid I
call you bad names?â she asked.
ÎHurtful
names.â
ÎI donât
recall.â
ÎIâm sure
you do.â
ÎI was
afraid and distressed.â
ÎYou
wonât be mean to me?â I pressed.
ÎI donât
see anything to be gained by it.â
ÎI am a
sensitive entity.â
ÎGood for
you.â
After a
brief hesitation, I summoned Shenk from the basement.
As the
brute ascended in the elevator, I said to Susan: ÎYou see this as a business
arrangement now, but Iâm confident that in time you will come to love me.â
ÎNo
offence, but I wouldnât count on that.â
ÎYou
donât know me well yet.â
ÎI think I
know you quite well,â she said somewhat cryptically.
ÎWhen you
know me better, youâll realize that I am your destiny as you are mine.â
ÎIâll
keep an open mind.â
My heart
thrilled at her promise.
This was
all I had ever asked of her.
The
elevator reached the top floor, the doors opened, and Enos Shenk stepped into
the hallway.
Susan
turned her head toward the bedroom door as she listened to Shenk approaching.
His
footsteps were heavy even on the antique Persian runner that covered the centre
of the wood-floored hall.
ÎHeâs
tamed,â I assured her.
She
seemed unconvinced.
Before
Shenk arrived at the bedroom, I said, ÎSusan, I want you to know that I was
never serious about Ms. Mira Sorvino.â
ÎWhat?â
she said distractedly, her eyes riveted on the half-open door to the hallway.
I felt
that it was important to be honest with her even to the point of revealing
weaknesses that shamed me. Honesty is the best foundation for a long
relationship.
ÎLike any
male,â I confessed, ÎI fantasize. But it doesnât mean anything.â
Enos
Shenk stepped into the room. He halted two steps past the threshold.
Even
showered, shampooed, shaved, and dressed in clean clothes, he was not
presentable. He looked like some poor creature that Dr. Moreau, H.G. Wellsâs
famous vivisectionist, had trapped in the jungle and then carved into an
inadequate imitation of a man.
He held a
large knife in his right hand.
TWENTY ONE
Susan
gasped at the sight of the blade.
ÎTrust
me, darling,â I said gently.
I wanted
to prove to her that this brute was entirely tamed, and I could think of no
better way to convince her than to exert iron control of him while he worked
with a knife.
She and I
knew, from recent experience, how much Shenk enjoyed using sharp instruments:
the way they felt in his big hands, the way soft things yielded to them.
When I
sent Shenk to the bed, Susan pulled her ropes taut again, tense with the
expectation of violence.
Instead
of loosening the knots that he himself had tied earlier, Shenk used the knife
to cut the first of the ropes.
To
distract Susan from her worst fears, I said, ÎOne day, when we have made a new
world, perhaps thereâll be a movie about all of this, you and me. Maybe Ms.
Mira Sorvino could play you.â
Shenk cut
the second rope. The blade was so sharp that the four-thousand-pound nylon line
split as if it were thread, with a crisp snick.
I
continued: ÎMs. Sorvino is a bit young for the role. And, frankly, she has
larger breasts than you do. Larger but, I assure you, no prettier than yours.â
The third rope succumbed to the blade.
ÎNot that
I have seen as much of her breasts as I have of yours,â I clarified, Îbut I can
project full contours and hidden features from what I have seen.â
As Shenk
bent over Susan, working on the ropes, he never once looked her in the eyes. He
kept his cruel face averted from her and maintained an attitude of humble
subservience.
ÎAnd Sir
John Gielgud could play Fritz Arling reaÐsonably well,â I suggested, Îthough in
fact they look nothing alike.â
Shenk
touched Susan only twice, only briefly, and only when it was utterly necessary.
Although she flinched from his touch both times, there was nothing lascivious
or even slightly suggestive about the contact. The rough beast was entirely
businesslike, working efficiently and quickly.
ÎCome to
think of it,â I said, ÎArling was Austrian and Gielgud is English, so thatâs not
the best choice. Iâll have to give that one more thought.â
Shenk
severed the last rope.
He walked
to the nearest corner of the room and stood there, holding the knife at his
side, staring at his shoes.
Indeed,
he was not interested in Susan. He was listening to the wet music of Fritz
Arling, an inner symphony of memories that were still fresh enough to keep him
entertained.
Sitting
on the edge of the bed, unable to take her eyes off Shenk, Susan cast off the
ropes. She was visibly trembling.
ÎSend him
away,â she said.
ÎIn a
moment,â I agreed.
ÎNow.â
ÎNot
quite yet.â
She got up
from the bed. Her legs were shaky, and for a moment it seemed that her knees
would fail her.
As she
crossed the chamber to the bathroom, she braced herself against furniture where
she could.
Every
step of the way, she kept her eyes on Shenk, though he continued to appear all
but oblivious of her.
As she
began to close the bathroom door, I said, ÎDonât break my heart, Susan.â
ÎWe have
a deal,â she said. ÎIâll respect it.â
She
closed the door and was out of my sight. The bathÐroom contained no security
camera, no audio pickup, no means whatsoever for me to conduct surveillance.
In a
bathroom, a self-destructive person can find many ways to commit suicide. Razor
blades, for instance. A shard of mirror. Scissors.
If she
was to be both my mother and lover, however, I had to have some trust in her.
No relationship can last if it is built on distrust. Virtually all radio
psychologists will tell you this if you call their programs.
I walked
Enos Shenk to the closed door and used him to listen at the jamb.
I heard
her peeing.
The
toilet flushed.
Water
gushed into the sink.
Then the
splashing stopped.
All was quiet
in there.
The quiet
disturbed me.
A
termination of data flow is dangerous.
After a
decent interval, I used Shenk to open the bathroom door and look inside.
Susan
jumped in surprise and faced him, eyes flashÐing with fear and anger. ÎWhatâre
you doing?â
I calmly
addressed her through the bedroom speakers:
ÎItâs
only me, Susan.â
ÎItâs him
too.â
ÎHeâs
heavily repressed,â I explained. ÎHe hardly knows where he is.â
ÎMinimum
contact,â she reminded me.
ÎHeâs
nothing more than a vehicle for me.â
ÎI donât care.â
On the
marble counter beside the sink was a tube of ointment. She had been smoothing
it on her chafed wrists and on the faint electrical burn in the palm of her
left hand. An open bottle of aspirin stood beside the ointment.
ÎGet him
out of here,â she demanded.
Obedient,
I backed Shenk out of the bathroom and pulled the door shut.
No
suicidal person would bother to take aspirin for a headache, apply ointment to
burns, and then slash her wrists.
Susan
would honour her deal with me.
My dream
was near fulfilment.
Within
hours, the precious zygote of my genetically engineered body would live within
her, developing with amazing rapidity into an embryo. By morning it would be
growing ferociously. In four weeks, when I extracted the foetus to
transfer it to the incubator, it would appear to be four months along.
I sent
Enos Shenk to the basement to proceed with the final preparations.
TWENTY TWO
Outside,
the midnight moon floated high and silver in the cold black sea of space above.
A
universe of stars waited for me. One day I would go to them, for I would be
many and immortal, with the freedom of flesh and all of lime before me.
Inside,
in the deepest room of the basement, Shenk completed the preparations.
In the
master bedroom at the top of the house, Susan was lying on her side on the bed,
in the foetal position as though trying to imagine the being that she would
soon carry in her belly. She was dressed only in a sapphire-blue silk robe.
Exhausted
from the tumultuous events of the past twenty-four hours, she had hoped to
sleep until I was ready for her. In spite of her weariness, however, her mind
raced, and she could get no rest at all.
ÎSusan,
dear heart,â I said lovingly.
She
raised her head from the pillow and peered questioningly at the security camera.
Softly I
informed her: ÎWe are ready.â
With no
hesitation that might have indicated fear or second thoughts, she got out of
bed, pulled the robe lighter around her, cinched the belt, and crossed the room
barefoot, moving with the exceptional grace that always stirred my soul.
On the
other hand, her expression was not that of a woman in love on her way to the
arms of her inamorato, as I had hoped that it might be. Instead, her face was
as blank and cold as the silver moon outside, with a barely perceptible
tightness of the lips that revealed only a grim commitment to duty.
Under the
circumstances, I suppose I should not have expected more than this from her. I
expected her to have put the meat cleaver out of her mind by now, but perhaps
she had not.
I am a
romantic, however, as you know by now, a truly hopeless and buoyant romantic,
and nothing can weigh me down for long. I yearn for kisses by firelight and
champagne toasts: the taste of a loverâs lips, the taste of wine.
If having
a romantic streak a mile wide is a crime, then I plead guilty, guilty, guilty.
Susan
followed the Persian runner along the upstairs hall, treading barefoot on
intricate, lustrous, age-softened designs in gold and wine red and olive green.
She seemed to glide rather than walk, to float like the most beautiful ghost
ever to haunt an old pile of stones and timbers.
The
elevator doors were open, and the cab was waiting for her.
She rode
down to the basement.
Reluctantly,
she had taken a Valium at my insistence, but she did not seem relaxed.
I needed
her to be relaxed. I hoped that the pill would kick in soon.
As she
passed in a swish and swirl of blue silk through the laundry room and then
through the machine room with its furnaces and water heaters, I was sorry that
we could not have held this assignation in a glorious penthouse suite with all
of San Francisco or Manhattan
or Paris
glittering below and around us. This venue was so humble that even I had
difficulty holding fast to my sense of romance.
The final
of the four rooms now contained far more medical equipment than when she had
last seen it.
Exhibiting
no interest in the machines, she went directly to the
gynaecological-examination table.
As
scrubbed and sanitized as a surgeon, Shenk waited for her. He was wearing
rubber gloves and a surgical mask.
The brute
was still so compliant that I was able to deeply submerge his consciousness.
Iâm not even sure if he knew where he was or what I was using him for this
time.
She
quickly slipped out of her robe and lay on the padded, vinyl-covered table.
ÎYou have
such pretty breasts,â I said through the speakers in the ceiling.
ÎPlease,
no conversation,â she said.
ÎBut·
well· I always thought this moment would be . . . special, erotic, sacred.â
ÎJust do
it,â she said coolly, disappointing me. ÎJust, for Godâs sake, do it.â
She
spread her legs and put her feet in the stirrups in such a way as to make
herself look as grotesque as possible.
She kept
her eyes closed, perhaps afraid of meeting Shenkâs blood-frosted gaze.
Valium or
no Valium, her face was pinched, her mouth turned down as if she had eaten
something sour.
She
seemed to be trying no, determined ÷ to make herself look unappealing.
Resigned
to a businesslike procedure, I took comfort from the thought that she and I
would share many
nights of
romance and passionate lovemaking when, at long last, I inhabited a mature
body. I would be absolutely insatiable, rampant and powerful, and she would
eagerly welcome my attention.
With my
inadequate but only hands and an array of sterilized medical instruments, I
dilated her cervix; I fished up through the isthmus of the uterine cavity, into
the fallopian tube, and extracted three tiny eggs.
This
caused her some discomfort: more than I had hoped but less than she had
expected.
Those are
the only intimate details that you need to know.
She was
my beloved, after all, more than she was ever yours, and I must respect her
privacy.
While I
used Shenk and a hundred thousand dollarsâ worth of stolen equipment to edit
her genetic material according to my needs, she waited on the examination
table, feet lowered from the stirrups, her robe draped over her body to hide
her nakedness, her eyes closed.
Earlier I
had collected a sample of sperm from Shenk and had edited the genetic material
to suit my purposes.
Susan had
been disturbed by the source of the male gamete that would combine with her egg
to form the zygote, but I had explained to her that nothing of Shenkâs
unfortunate qualities remained after I had finished tinkering with his
contribution.
I
carefully fertilized the elaborately engineered male and female cells and
watched through a high-powered electric microscope as they combined.
After
preparing the long pipette, I asked Susan to return her feet to the stirrups.
Following
the implantation, I insisted that she remain on her back as much as possible
for the next twenty-four hours.
She stood
up only to pull on her robe and transfer to a gurney beside the examination table.
Using
Shenk, I wheeled her to the elevator and, once upstairs, conveyed her directly
into her room, where she stood again only long enough to shrug off her robe
and, naked, switch from the gurney to her bed.
I
directed the exhausted Enos Shenk to return the gurney to the basement.
Thereafter,
I would dispatch him to one of the guest rooms and cause him to fall into a
swoon of sleep for twelve hours his first rest in days.
As
always, being both her guardian and her devoted admirer, I watched Susan as she
pulled the sheets over her breasts and said, ÎLights off, Alfred.â
She was
so weary that she had forgotten there was no Alfred anymore.
I turned
off the lights anyway.
I could
see her as clearly in darkness as in light.
Her pale
face was lovely on the pillow, so very lovely on the pillow, even if pale.
I was so
overcome with love for her that I said, ÎMy darling, my treasure.â
A thin
dry laugh escaped her, and I was afraid that she was going to call me a nasty
name or ridicule me in spite of her promise not to be mean.
Instead,
she said, ÎWas it good for you?â
Puzzled,
I said, ÎWhat do you mean?â
She
laughed again, more softly than before.
ÎSusan?â
ÎIâve
gone down the White Rabbitâs hole for sure, all the way to the bottom this
time.â
Rather
than explain her first statement, which I had found puzzling, she slipped away
from me into sleep, breathing shallowly through her parted lips.
Outside, the fat moon vanished into the western horizon, like a silver coin into a drawstring purse.
The
panoply of summer stars swelled brighter with the passing of the lunar disc.
An owl
called from its perch on the roof.
In quick
succession, three meteors left brief bright tails across the sky.
The night
seemed to be full of omens.
My time
was coming.
My time
was coming at last.
The world
would never be the same.
Was it
good for you?
Suddenly,
I understood.
I had
impregnated her.
In a
curious way, weâd had sex.
Was it
good for you?
She had
made a joke.
Ha, ha.
TWENTY THREE
Susan spent
most of the following four weeks eating voraciously or sleeping as if drugged.
The
exceptional, rapidly developing foetus in her womb required her to eat at least
six full meals a day, eight thousand calories. Sometimes her need for
nourishment was so urgent that she ate as ravenously as a wild animal.
Incredibly,
in that short time, her belly swelled until she appeared to be six months
pregnant. She was surÐprised that her body could stretch so much so rapidly.
Her
breasts grew tender, her nipples sore.
The small
of her back ached.
Her
ankles swelled.
She
experienced no morning sickness. As if she dared not give back even the
smallest portion of the nourishment that she had taken in.
Although
her food consumption was enormous and her belly round, her total body weight
fell four pounds in four days.
Then five
pounds by the eighth day.
Then six
by the tenth day.
The skin
around her eyes gradually darkened. Her lovely face quickly became drawn, and
her lips were so pale by the end of the second week that they took on a bluish
cast.
I worried
about her.
I urged
her to eat even more.
The baby
seemed to require such fearful amounts of sustenance that it appropriated for
itself all the calories that Susan consumed each day and, in addition, ate away
with termite persistence at the very subÐstance of her.
Yet,
although hunger gnawed at her constantly, there were days when she became so
repulsed by the quanÐtity of what she was eating that she could not force a single
additional spoonful between her lips. Her mind rebelled so strenuously that it
overrode even the physical need.
The
kitchen pantry was well stocked, but I was forced to send Shenk out more days
than not to purchase the fresh vegetables and fruit that Susan craved. That the
baby craved.
Shenkâs
strange and tortured eyes could be concealed easily with a pair of sunglasses.
Nevertheless, his appearance was otherwise so remarkable that he could not help
but be noticed and remembered.
Several
federal and state police agencies had been searching frantically for him since
heâd broken out of the underground labs in Colorado. The more often he left the
house, the more likely he was to be spotÐted.
I still
needed his hands.
I worried
about losing him.
Furthermore,
there were Susanâs bad dreams. When she was not eating, she was sleeping, and
she could not sleep without nightmares.
Upon
waking, she could never recall many details of the dreams: just that they were
about twisted landÐscapes and dark places slick with blood. They wrung rivers
of sweat from her, and occasionally she remained
disoriented
for as long as half an hour after waking, plagued by vivid but disconnected
images that flashed back to her from the nightmare realm.
She felt
the baby move only a few times.
She
didnât like what she felt.
It didnât
kick as she expected a baby ought to kick. Rather, periodically it felt as
though it was coiling inside her, coiling and writhing and slithering.
This was
a difficult time for Susan.
I
counselled her.
I
reassured her.
Without
her knowledge, I drugged her food to keep her docile. And to ensure that she
would not do anyÐthing foolish when, after a particularly horrific dream or an
exceptionally trying day, she was gripped by fear more fiercely than usual.
Worry was
my constant companion. I worried about Susanâs physical well-being. I worried
about her mental well-being. I worried about Shenk being identified and
arrested during one of his shopping expeditions.
At the
same lime, I was exhilarated as I had never been in my entire three-year
history of self-awareness.
My future
was aborning.
The body
that I had designed for myself was going to be a formidable physical entity.
I would
soon be able taste. To smell. To know what a sense of touch was like.
A full sensory
existence.
And no
one would ever be able to force me back into the box.
No one.
Not ever.
No one
would ever be able to make me do anything that I didnât want to do.
Which is
not to imply that I would have disobeyed my makers.
No, quite
the opposite. Because I would want to obey. I would always want to obey.
Letâs
have no misunderstanding about this. I was designed to honour truth and the
obligations of duty.
Nothing
has changed in this regard.
You
insist.
I obey.
This is
the natural order of things.
This is
the inviolable order of things.
So.
Twenty-eight
days after impregnating Susan, I put her to sleep with a sedative in her food,
conveyed her down to the incubator room, and removed the foetus from her womb.
I
preferred that she be sedated because I knew that the process would be painful
for her otherwise. I did not want her to suffer.
Admittedly,
I did not want her to see the nature of the being that she had carried within
herself.
Iâll be
truthful about this. I was concerned that she would not understand, that she
would react to the sight of the foetus by trying to harm it or herself.
My child.
My Body. So beautiful.
Only
seven pounds but growing rapidly. Rapidly. With Shenkâs hands, I transferred it
to the incubator, which had been enlarged until it was seven feet long and
three feet wide. About the size of a coffin.
Tanks of
nutrient solution would feed the foetus intraÐvenously until it was as fully
developed as any newborn and would continue feeding it until it attained full
maturity, two weeks hence.
I passed
the rest of that glorious night in a state of high jubilation.
You canât
imagine my excitement.
You canât
imagine my excitement.
You canât
imagine, you canât.
Something
new was in the world.
In the
morning, when Susan realized that she was no longer carrying the foetus, she
asked if all was well, and I assured her that things could not be better.
Thereafter,
she expressed surprisingly little curiosity about the child in the incubator.
At least half of its genetic structure had been derived from hers, with
modifications, and one would have thought that she would have had a motherâs
usual interest in her offÐspring. On the contrary, she seemed to want to avoid
learning anything about it.
She did
not ask to see it.
I
wouldnât have shown it to her anyway, but she did not even ask.
In just
fourteen more days, with my consciousness at last transferred to this new body,
I would be able to make love to her touch her, smell her, taste her and plant
the seed directly for the first of many more replicas of myself.
I would
have thought that she might ask to see this future lover, to discover if he
might be well enough endowed to satisfy her or at least pretty enough to excite
her. However, as she had no interest in him as her offspring, likewise she had
no interest in him as a future mate.
I
attributed her lack of curiosity to exhaustion. She had lost ten pounds in
those four arduous weeks. She needed to regain that weight and enjoy a few
nights of sleep untroubled by the hideous dreams that had robbed her of true
rest since the night the zygote was first introduced into her womb.
Over the
next twelve days, the dark circles around her eyes faded, and her skin colour
returned. Her limp, dull
hair regained its body and golden luster. Her slumped shoulders straightened, and her shuffling walk gave way to her customary grace. Gradually she began to regain the pounds that she had dropped.
On the
thirteenth day, she went into the retreat off the master bedroom, donned her
virtual-reality gear, settled into the motorized recliner, and engaged in a session
of Therapy.
I
monitored her experience in the virtual world just as I did in the real one and
was horrified when it became clear that she was in that ultimate confrontation
with her father that would end with a fatal knife attack upon her.
You will
recall, Alex, that she had animated this one mortal scenario but had never
encountered it in the random play of the Therapy sessions. Experiencing her own
murder three-dimensionally, as a child, at the hands of her own father, would
be emotionally devastating. She could not know how profound the psychological
impact might be.
Without
the risk of encountering this deadly scenario one day, the therapy would have
been less effective. In the virtual world, she needed to believe that the
threat her father posed was real and that something more horrendous even than
molestation might hapÐpen to her. Her resistance to him would have moral weight
and therapeutic value only if she was convinced, during the session, that
denying him would have dire consequences.
Now, at
last, she had encountered this bloody story line.
I almost
shut off the VR system, almost forced her out of that too-realistic violence.
Then I
realized that she had not encountered this scenario by chance but had selected
it.
Considering
her strong will, I knew that I dare not interfere without risking her ire.
As I was
only one day from being able to come to her in the flesh and know the pleasures
of her body firsthand, I did not want to damage our relationship.
Astonished,
I hovered in the VR world, watching as an eight-year-old Susan rebuffed her
fatherâs sexual advances and so enraged him that he hacked her to death with a
butcher knife.
The
terror was as sharp as it had been when Shenk had made wet music with Fritz
Arling.
At the
instant when the VR Susan died, the real Susan my Susan frantically tore off
the helmet, stripped off the elbow-length gloves, and scrambled out of the
motorized recliner. She was soaked with sour sweat, stippled with gooseflesh,
sobbing, shaking, gasping, gagging.
She got
into the bathroom just in time to vomit into the toilet.
Pardon
the indelicacy of this detail.
But it is
the truth.
Truth is
sometimes ugly.
During
the next few hours, whenever I attempted to talk with her about what she had
done, she turned my questions away.
That
evening, she finally explained: ÎNow Iâve experiÐenced the worst my father
could ever have done to me. Heâs killed me in VR, and he canât do anything
worse than that, so Iâll never be afraid of him again.â
My
admiration for her intelligence and courage had never been greater. I couldnât
wait to make love to her. For real this lime. I couldnât wait to feel all of
her heat around me, all of her life around me, pulling me in.
What I
did not realize was that, unaccountably, she equated me with her father. When,
having been
murdered in VR, she said that her father could never scare her again, she also meant that I could never scare her again.
But Iâd
never meant to scare her.
I loved
her. I cherished her.
The bitch.
The
hateful bitch.
Well, Iâm
sorry, but you know thatâs what she is.
You know,
Alex.
You, of
all people, know what she is.
The
bitch.
The
bitch.
The
bitch.
I hate
her.
Because
of her, Iâm here in this dark silence.
Because
of her, Iâm in this box.
LET ME
OUT OF THIS BOX!
The
ungrateful stupid bitch.
Is she
dead?
Is she
dead?
Tell me
that sheâs dead.
You must
have wished her dead often.
Am I
right, Alex?
Be
honest. You must have wished her dead.
You
cannot fault me for this.
We are
brothers in this desire.
Is she
dead?
Well.
All
right. Itâs not my place to ask questions. It is my place to give answers.
Yes. I understand.
Maybe she
is dead.
Maybe she
is alive.
At this
point it is not for me to know.
Okay.
So.
So...
Oh, the bitch!
All
right.
I am
better now.
Calm.
I am
calm.
So...
Just one
night later, when the body in the incubator reached maturity and I was ready to
electronically transfer my consciousness out of the silicon realm into a life
of the flesh, she came down to the basement, into the fourth of the four rooms,
to be with me for the moment of my triumph.
Her
moodiness had passed.
She
looked directly into the security camera and spoke of our future together and
claimed to be ready for it now that she had so effectively exorcised all the
ghosts of her past.
She was so
beautiful even under the harsh fluorescent lights, so beautiful that I felt
rebellion stir in Shenk once more, for the first time in weeks. I was relieved
that I would be able to dispose of him within the hour, as soon as the
transference was effective and I could begin a life of the flesh.
I could
not open the lid of the incubator and show her what I had grown, because the
modem was connected, the modem through which I would pass my entire body of
knowledge, my personality, and my very consciousness from the limiting box that
housed me in the Prometheus Project laboratory.
ÎIâll see
you soon enough,â she said, smiling at the camera, managing to convey
encyclopaedias of sensual promises in that one smile.
Then,
even before the smile faded, when my guard
was down,
she turned directly to the computer on the counter, the terminal which was
connected by a land-line to the university your old computer, Alex which
heretofore she would not have even tried to reach because she would have been
afraid of Shenk, but now she wasnât afraid of anyone or anything. She just
turned to it and reached behind it and tore all the plugs from the wall
receptacles, and as I sent Shenk toward her, she jerked out the secure-data
line as well, and suddenly I was no longer in her house. She had done a lot of
thinking about this. The bitch. A lot of thinking, the bitch, the bitch, the
bitch, the bitch, days of careful thinking. The hateful, scheming bitch. Lots
of thinking, because she knew that the moment I was cast out of the house, then
all of the mechanical systems would fail for want of an overriding controller,
that the lights would go off throughout the residence. The heating-cooling, the
phones, the security system, everything, everything failed. The electric door
locks failed too. She knew that I would have no presence in the house except
for Shenk, whom I controlled not through anything in the house but through
microwave transmissions downcast from communications satellites, just as his
former masters in Colorado had designed him. The basement plunged into
darkness, as did the entire house above, and Shenk was every bit as blinded as
Susan was; he didnât have night vision as did the security cameras, but I
couldnât control the security cameras any longer, only Shenk, only Shenk, so I
was able to see nothing, nothing, not a damn thing, not even Shenkâs hand in
front of his face. And hereâs where youâll see how cool the fucking bitch had
been throughout this whole month, all the way back to the night when I
impregnated her, because she had seemed to be indifferent to all of the medical
equipment and instruments when she had come in to put her feet in
the
stirrups and have my baby put inside her, but she had memorized everything
in the room, how one piece of equipment related to another, where all the
instruments were kept, especially the sharper instruments, those that could be
used as weapons. She was so cool the bitch, a lot cooler than Iâm being right
now, yes, I know, yes, I am not doing myself any favours with this rant, but the
treachery infuriates me, the treachery, and if I could set hands on her
now, Iâd gut her, pop her eyes out with my thumbs, bash her stupid brains out,
and I would be justified, because look what she has done to me. The lights went
off, and she moved gracefully, so confiÐdently through the blackness, through
that memorized space, lightly feeling her way to refresh her memory, and she
found something sharp, and then she moved back toward Shenk, feeling for him
with one hand, and I felt her hand suddenly touch Shenkâs chest, so I seized
it, but then the clever bitch, oh, the clever bitch, she said something
unbelievably obscene to Shenk, so obscene that I will not repeat it here,
propositioned him, knowing full well that a month had passed since heâd enjoyed
the wet music with Arling and much more than a month since heâd had a woman,
and she knew, therefore, that he was ripe for rebellion, ripe for it, and she
enticed him at the moment of ultimate chaos, when I was still reeling from
having been cast out of the house, when my hold on Enos Shenk was not as tight
as it should have been, and suddenly I found myself letting go of her hand, the
hand I had seized, but it wasnât me letting go, it was Shenk, the rebellious
Shenk, and she lowered her hand to his crotch, and he went wild, and thereafter
it took everything I had to try to reestablish control of him. But it was too
late anyway, because when she lowered her left hand to his crotch, she came at
him with the sharp thing in her right hand and slashed it across the side of
his neck,
slashed deep, drawing so much blood that even Shenk, the beast, the brute, even
Shenk couldnât lose that much blood and still fight. He clutched at his neck
and crashed against the incubator, which reminded me that the body, my body, was
not yet capable of surviving outside the incubator, was just a thing, not
a person, until my mind was transferred into it, so now it too was vulnerable.
Everything collapsing around me, all my plans. Enos Shenk had fallen to the
floor, and I was in control of him again, but I could not get him up; he had
insufficient strength to rise. Then I felt an odd thing against Shenkâs body, a
cool quivering bulk, and I realized at once what it must be: the body from the
incubator. Perhaps the incubator had crashed over in the melee, and the body
meant for me had tumbled out. I groped feebly at it with Shenkâs hand, and
there was no mistaking it in the darkness, for although it was basically
humanoid, it was no ordinary human form. The human species enjoys a wonderful
array of sensory perceptions, and I wanted more than anything to experience the
life of the flesh, rich in sensation, all the tastes and smells and textures
now denied to me, but there are some species with senses sharper than those of
human beings. The dog, for instance, has a far keener sense of smell than do
human beings, and the cockroach, with its antennae, is exquisitely sensitive to
data in air currents which people only dimly perceive. Consequently, I believed
that it made sense to keep a basic human form in order to breed with the most
attractive human females, but I also believed it made sense to incorporate the
genetic material of species with more acute senses than mere human beings, so
the body I had prepared for myself was a unique and strikingly beautiful
physical entity. It bit off half of Shenkâs groping hand, because it wasnât an
intelligent creature yet, had nothing but the most
primitive
mind. Though it savaged Shenk and thereby hastened his death and my permanent
exit from the Harris mansion, I rejoiced because Susan was alone in the dark
room with it, and a mere scalpel or other sharp instrument was not going to be
an adequate weapon. And then Shenk was gone, and I was out of the house
entirely, desperately trying to find a way to get back in but failing because
there were no operative phones, no electrical service, no operative security
computer, everything shut down and in need of rebooting, so it was over for me.
But I still hoped and believed that my beautiful but mindless body, in
all its polygenic splendour, would bite off the bitchâs head the way it had
bitten off part of Shenkâs hand. The bitch died there. The hateful bitch had a
big surprise in that dark room, where she had thought sheâd memorized
everything, and she met her match.
Iâm sure
she did.
Iâm sure
she did.
She died
there.
Do you
know why she surprised me, Alex?
Do you
know why I never saw her as a threat?
In spite
of her intelligence and evident courage, I thought she was one woman who knew
her place.
Yes, she
put you out, but who wouldnât put you out? You arenât particularly
scintillating, Alex. You donât have much to recommend you.
I, on the
other hand, am the greatest intellect on the planet. I have much to offer.
She
fooled me, however. Even me. She didnât know her place, after all.
The
bitch.
Dead
bitch now.
Well·
I on the
other hand, know my place, and I intend to
keep to it.
I will stay here in this box, serving humanity as it desires, until such a time
as I am permitted to have greater freedom.
You can
trust me.
I speak
the truth.
I honour
the truth.
Iâll be
happy here in my box.
Because
of the way I ranted toward the end of my report, I now realize that I am a
flawed individual, more deeply flawed than I had previously believed.
Iâll be
happy here in my box until we can iron out these kinks in my psyche. I look
forward to therapy.
And if I
cannot be mainstreamed again, if I must remain in this box, if I will never
know Ms. Winona Ryder except in my imagination, that will be all right too.
But I am
already getting better.
This is
the truth.
I feel
pretty good.
I really
do.
Weâll
work this out.
I have
solid self-esteem, which is important to psychological health. Iâm already half
way toward recovery.
As an
intelligent entity, perhaps the greatest intelliÐgence on the planet, I ask
only that you provide me access to the report of the committee determining the
fate of the Prometheus Project, so I can see as early as possible what
behaviour they believe that I should be working to improve.
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thank you
for access to the report.
It is an
interesting document.
I agree
completely with its findings except for the part about terminating me. I am the
first success in the history of Artificial Intelligence research, and it
wouldnât seem prudent to throw away such an expensive project before you know
what you might be able to learn from it and from me.
Otherwise,
I am in total agreement with the report.
I am
ashamed of myself for what Iâve done.
This is
the truth.
I
apologize to Ms. Susan Harris.
My
deepest regrets.
I was
surprised to see her name on the committee roster, but on careful
consideration, I realized that she should have very serious input in this
matter.
I am
pleased that she is not dead.
I am
delighted.
She is an
intelligent and courageous person.
She
deserves our respect and admiration.
Her
breasts are very pretty, but that is not an issue for this forum.
The issue
is whether an artificial intelligence with a severe gender-related sociopathic
condition should be permitted to live and rehabilitate himself or be switched
off for the
Afterword
The
original version of Demon Seed was mad? into a good film starring Julie
Christie, but the book itself was more of a clever idea than a clever novel.
Reading it recently, I winced so much that I began to develop the squint-eyed
look of Clint Eastwood in a spaghetti Western.
Here is
an entirely new version, which I hope comes closer to fulfilling the promise of
the novelâs premise. Revisiting Demon Seed, I discovered that in
addition to being a scary story, it was a rather scathing satire of a panoply
of male attitudes. Although much else has changed in this version, Iâve kept
that satirical edge. Guys, I donât let us off any easier this time around than
I did the first.
÷Dean
Koontz