Manfred’s on the road again, making strangers
rich.
It’s a hot summer Tuesday and he’s
standing in the plaza in front of the Centraal Station with his
eyeballs powered up and the sunlight jangling off the canal, motor
scooters and kamikaze cyclists whizzing past and tourists chattering
on every side. The square smells of water and dirt and hot metal and
the fart-laden exhaust fumes of cold catalytic converters; the bells
of trams ding in the background and birds flock overhead. He glances
up and grabs a pigeon, crops it and squirts at his website to show
he’s arrived. The bandwidth is good here, he realizes; and it’s not
just the bandwidth, it’s the whole scene. Amsterdam is making him
feel wanted already, even though he’s fresh off the train from
Schiphol: he’s infected with the dynamic optimism of another time
zone, another city. If the mood holds, someone out there is going to
become very rich indeed.
He wonders who it’s going to
be.
Manfred sits on a stool out in the car
park at the Brouwerij ’t IJ, watching the articulated buses go by
and drinking a third of a liter of lip-curlingly sour geuze. His
channels are jabbering away in a corner of his head-up display,
throwing compressed infobursts of filtered press releases at him.
They compete for his attention, bickering and rudely waving in front
of the scenery. A couple of punks–maybe local, but more likely
drifters lured to Amsterdam by the magnetic field of tolerance the
Dutch beam across Europe like a pulsar–are laughing and chatting by
a couple of battered mopeds in the far corner. A tourist boat
putters by in the canal; the sails of the huge windmill overhead
cast long cool shadows across the road. The windmill is a machine
for lifting water, turning wind power into dry land: trading energy
for space, sixteenth-century style. Manfred is waiting for an invite
to a party where he’s going to meet a man who he can talk to about
trading energy for space, twenty-first century style, and forget
about his personal problems.
He’s ignoring the instant messenger
boxes, enjoying some low bandwidth high sensation time with his beer
and the pigeons, when a woman walks up to him and says his name:
"Manfred Macx?"
He glances up. The courier is an
Effective Cyclist, all wind-burned smooth-running muscles clad in a
paen to polymer technology: electric blue lycra and wasp-yellow
carbonate with a light speckling of anti-collision LEDs and
tight-packed air bags. She holds out a box for him. He pauses a
moment, struck by the degree to which she resembles Pam, his
ex-fiancée.
"I’m Macx," he says, waving the back
of his left wrist under her barcode reader. "Who’s it
from?"
"FedEx." The voice isn’t Pam. She
dumps the box in his lap, then she’s back over the low wall and onto
her bicycle with her phone already chirping, disappearing in a cloud
of spread-spectrum emissions.
Manfred turns the box over in his
hands: it’s a disposable supermarket phone, paid for in cash: cheap,
untraceable and efficient. It can even do conference calls, which
makes it the tool of choice for spooks and grifters
everywhere.
The box rings. Manfred rips the cover
open and pulls out the phone, mildly annoyed. "Yes, who is
this?"
The voice at the other end has a heavy
Russian accent, almost a parody in this decade of cheap online
translation services. "Manfred. Am please to meet you; wish to
personalize interface, make friends, no? Have much to
offer."
"Who are you?" Manfred repeats
suspiciously.
"Am organization formerly known as KGB
dot RU."
"I think your translator’s broken." He
holds the phone to his ear carefully, as if it’s made of smoke-thin
aerogel, tenuous as the sanity of the being on the other end of the
line.
"Nyet–no, sorry. Am apologize for we
not use commercial translation software. Interpreters are
ideologically suspect, mostly have capitalist semiotics and
pay-per-use APIs. Must implement English more better,
yes?"
Manfred drains his beer glass, sets it
down, stands up, and begins to walk along the main road, phone glued
to the side of his head. He wraps his throat mike around the cheap
black plastic casing, pipes the input to a simple listener process.
"You taught yourself the language just so you could talk to
me?"
"Da, was easy: spawn billion-node
neural network and download Tellytubbies and Sesame
Street at maximum speed. Pardon excuse entropy overlay of bad
grammar: am afraid of digital fingerprints steganographically masked
into my-our tutorials."
"Let me get this straight. You’re the
KGB’s core AI, but you’re afraid of a copyright infringement lawsuit
over your translator semiotics?" Manfred pauses in mid-stride,
narrowly avoids being mown down by a GPS-guided
roller-blader.
"Am have been badly burned by viral
end-user license agreements. Have no desire to experiment with
patent shell companies held by Chechen infoterrorists. You are
human, you must not worry cereal company repossess your small
intestine because digest unlicensed food with it, right? Manfred,
you must help me-we. Am wishing to defect."
Manfred stops dead in the street: "Oh
man, you’ve got the wrong free enterprise broker here. I don’t work
for the government. I’m strictly private." A rogue advertisement
sneaks through his junkbuster proxy and spams glowing fifties kitsch
across his navigation window–which is blinking–for a moment before a
phage guns it and spawns a new filter. Manfred leans against a shop
front, massaging his forehead and eyeballing a display of antique
brass doorknockers. "Have you cleared this with the State
Department?"
"Why bother? State Department am enemy
of Novy-USSR. State Department is not help us."
"Well, if you hadn’t given it to them
for safe-keeping during the nineties. . . ." Manfred is tapping his
left heel on the pavement, looking round for a way out of this
conversation. A camera winks at him from atop a street light; he
waves, wondering idly if it’s the KGB or the traffic police. He is
waiting for directions to the party, which should arrive within the
next half an hour, and this cold war retread is bumming him out.
"Look, I don’t deal with the G-men. I hate the military industrial
complex. They’re zero-sum cannibals." A thought occurs to him. "If
survival is what you’re after, I could post your state vector to
Eternity: then nobody could delete you–"
"Nyet!" The artificial intelligence
sounds as alarmed as it’s possible to sound over a GSM link. "Am not
open source!"
"We have nothing to talk about, then."
Manfred punches the hang-up button and throws the mobile phone out
into a canal. It hits the water and there’s a pop of deflagrating
LiION cells. "Fucking cold war hang-over losers," he swears
under his breath, quite angry now. "Fucking capitalist spooks."
Russia has been back under the thumb of the apparatchiks for fifteen
years now, its brief flirtation with anarcho-capitalism replaced by
Brezhnevite dirigisme, and it’s no surprise that the wall’s
crumbling–but it looks like they haven’t learned anything from the
collapse of capitalism. They still think in terms of dollars and
paranoia. Manfred is so angry that he wants to make someone rich,
just to thumb his nose at the would-be defector. See! You get
ahead by giving! Get with the program! Only the generous survive!
But the KGB won’t get the message. He’s dealt with old-time
commie weak-AI’s before, minds raised on Marxist dialectic and
Austrian School economics: they’re so thoroughly hypnotized by the
short-term victory of capitalism in the industrial age that they
can’t surf the new paradigm, look to the longer term.
Manfred walks on, hands in pockets,
brooding. He wonders what he’s going to patent next.
Manfred has a suite at the Hotel Jan
Luyken paid for by a grateful multinational consumer protection
group, and an unlimited public transport pass paid for by a Scottish
sambapunk band in return for services rendered. He has airline
employee’s travel rights with six flag carriers despite never having
worked for an airline. His bush jacket has sixty four compact
supercomputing clusters sewn into it, four per pocket, courtesy of
an invisible college that wants to grow up to be the next Media Lab.
His dumb clothing comes made to measure from an e-tailor in the
Philippines who he’s never met. Law firms handle his patent
applications on a pro bono basis, and boy does he patent a
lot–although he always signs the rights over to the Free Intellect
Foundation, as contributions to their obligation-free infrastructure
project.
In IP geek circles, Manfred is
legendary; he’s the guy who patented the business practice of moving
your e-business somewhere with a slack intellectual property regime
in order to evade licensing encumbrances. He’s the guy who patented
using genetic algorithms to patent everything they can permutate
from an initial description of a problem domain–not just a better
mousetrap, but the set of all possible better mousetraps. Roughly a
third of his inventions are legal, a third are illegal, and the
remainder are legal but will become illegal as soon as the
legislatosaurus wakes up, smells the coffee, and panics. There are
patent attorneys in Reno who swear that Manfred Macx is a pseudo, a
net alias fronting for a bunch of crazed anonymous hackers armed
with the Genetic Algorithm That Ate Calcutta: a kind of Serdar Argic
of intellectual property, or maybe another Bourbaki maths borg.
There are lawyers in San Diego and Redmond who swear blind that Macx
is an economic saboteur bent on wrecking the underpinning of
capitalism, and there are communists in Prague who think he’s the
bastard spawn of Bill Gates by way of the Pope.
Manfred is at the peak of his
profession, which is essentially coming up with wacky but workable
ideas and giving them to people who will make fortunes with them. He
does this for free, gratis. In return, he has virtual immunity from
the tyranny of cash; money is a symptom of poverty, after all, and
Manfred never has to pay for anything.
There are drawbacks, however. Being a
pronoiac meme-broker is a constant burn of future shock–he has to
assimilate more than a megabyte of text and several gigs of AV
content every day just to stay current. The Internal Revenue Service
is investigating him continuously because they don’t believe his
lifestyle can exist without racketeering. And there exist items that
no money can’t buy: like the respect of his parents. He hasn’t
spoken to them for three years: his father thinks he’s a hippie
scrounger and his mother still hasn’t forgiven him for dropping out
of his down-market Harvard emulation course. His fiancée and
sometime dominatrix Pamela threw him over six months ago, for
reasons he has never been quite clear on. (Ironically, she’s a
headhunter for the IRS, jetting all over the globe trying to
persuade open source entrepreneurs to come home and go commercial
for the good of the Treasury department.) To cap it all, the
Southern Baptist Conventions have denounced him as a minion of Satan
on all their websites. Which would be funny, if it wasn’t for the
dead kittens one of their followers–he presumes it’s one of their
followers–keeps mailing him.
Manfred drops in at his hotel suite,
unpacks his Aineko, plugs in a fresh set of cells to charge, and
sticks most of his private keys in the safe. Then he heads straight
for the party, which is currently happening at De Wildemann’s; it’s
a twenty minute walk and the only real hazard is dodging the trams
that sneak up on him behind the cover of his moving map
display.
Along the way his glasses bring him up
to date on the news. Europe has achieved peaceful political union
for the first time ever: they’re using this unprecedented state of
affairs to harmonize the curvature of bananas. In San Diego,
researchers are uploading lobsters into cyberspace, starting with
the stomatogastric ganglion, one neuron at a time. They’re burning
GM cocoa in Belize and books in Edinburgh. NASA still can’t put a
man on the moon. Russia has re-elected the communist government with
an increased majority in the Duma; meanwhile in China fevered rumors
circulate about an imminent re-habilitation, the second coming of
Mao, who will save them from the consequences of the Three Gorges
disaster. In business news, the US government is outraged at the
Baby Bills–who have automated their legal processes and are spawning
subsidiaries, IPO’ing them, and exchanging title in a bizarre parody
of bacterial plasmid exchange, so fast that by the time the
injunctions are signed the targets don’t exist any more.
Welcome to the twenty-first
century.
The permanent floating meatspace party
has taken over the back of De Wildemann’s, a three hundred year old
brown café with a beer menu that runs to sixteen pages and wooden
walls stained the color of stale beer. The air is thick with the
smells of tobacco, brewer’s yeast, and melatonin spray: half the
dotters are nursing monster jetlag hangovers, and the other half are
babbling a eurotrash creole at each other while they work on the
hangover. "Man did you see that? He looks like a Stallmanite!"
exclaims one whitebread hanger-on who’s currently propping up the
bar. Manfred slides in next to him, catches the bartender’s
eye.
"Glass of the berlinnerweise, please,"
he says.
"You drink that stuff?" asks the
hanger-on, curling a hand protectively around his Coke: "man, you
don’t want to do that! It’s full of alcohol!"
Manfred grins at him toothily. "Ya
gotta keep your yeast intake up: lots of neurotransmitter
precursors, phenylalanine and glutamate."
"But I thought that was a beer you
were ordering. . . ."
Manfred’s away, one hand resting on
the smooth brass pipe that funnels the more popular draught items in
from the cask storage in back; one of the hipper floaters has
planted a capacitative transfer bug on it, and all the handshake
vCard’s that have visited the bar in the past three hours are
queueing for attention. The air is full of bluetooth as he scrolls
through a dizzying mess of public keys.
"Your drink." The barman holds out an
improbable-looking goblet full of blue liquid with a cap of melting
foam and a felching straw stuck out at some crazy angle. Manfred
takes it and heads for the back of the split-level bar, up the steps
to a table where some guy with greasy dreadlocks is talking to a
suit from Paris. The hanger-on at the bar notices him for the first
time, staring with suddenly wide eyes: nearly spills his Coke in a
mad rush for the door.
Oh shit, thinks Macx, better
buy some more server PIPS. He can recognize the signs: he’s
about to be slashdotted. He gestures at the table: "this one
taken?"
"Be my guest," says the guy with the
dreads. Manfred slides the chair open then realizes that the other
guy–immaculate double-breasted suit, sober tie, crew-cut–is a girl.
Mr. Dreadlock nods. "You’re Macx? I figured it was about time we
met."
"Sure." Manfred holds out a hand and
they shake. Manfred realizes the hand belongs to Bob Franklin, a
Research Triangle startup monkey with a VC track record, lately
moving into micromachining and space technology: he made his first
million two decades ago and now he’s a specialist in extropian
investment fields. Manfred has known Bob for nearly a decade via a
closed mailing list. The Suit silently slides a business card across
the table; a little red devil brandishes a trident at him, flames
jetting up around its feet. He takes the card, raises an eyebrow:
"Annette Dimarcos? I’m pleased to meet you. Can’t say I’ve ever met
anyone from Arianespace marketing before."
She smiles, humorlessly; "that is
convenient, all right. I have not the pleasure of meeting the famous
venture altruist before." Her accent is noticeably Parisian, a
pointed reminder that she’s making a concession to him just by
talking. Her camera earrings watch him curiously, encoding
everything for the company channels.
"Yes, well." He nods cautiously. "Bob.
I assume you’re in on this ball?"
Franklin nods; beads clatter. "Yeah,
man. Ever since the Teledesic smash it’s been, well, waiting. If
you’ve got something for us, we’re game."
"Hmm." The Teledesic satellite cluster
was killed by cheap balloons and slightly less cheap high-altitude
solar-powered drones with spread-spectrum laser relays. "The
depression’s got to end some time: but," a nod to Annette from
Paris, "with all due respect, I don’t think the break will involve
one of the existing club carriers."
"Arianespace is forward-looking. We
face reality. The launch cartel cannot stand. Bandwidth is not the
only market force in space. We must explore new opportunities. I
personally have helped us diversify into submarine reactor
engineering, microgravity nanotechnology fabrication, and hotel
management." Her face is a well-polished mask as she recites the
company line: "we are more flexible than the American space
industry. . . ."
Manfred shrugs. "That’s as may be." He
sips his Berlinerweisse slowly as she launches into a long, stilted
explanation of how Arianespace is a diversified dot com with orbital
aspirations, a full range of merchandising spin-offs, Bond movie
sets, and a promising motel chain in French Guyana. Occasionally he
nods.
Someone else sidles up to the table; a
pudgy guy in an outrageously loud Hawaiian shirt with pens leaking
in a breast pocket, and the worst case of ozone-hole burn Manfred’s
seen in ages. "Hi, Bob," says the new arrival. "How’s
life?"
" ’S good." Franklin nodes at Manfred;
"Manfred, meet Ivan MacDonald. Ivan, Manfred. Have a seat?" He leans
over. "Ivan’s a public arts guy. He’s heavily into extreme
concrete."
"Rubberized concrete," Ivan says,
slightly too loudly. "Pink rubberized concrete."
"Ah!" He’s somehow triggered a
priority interrupt: Annette from Ariannespace drops out of marketing
zombiehood, sits up, and shows signs of possessing a non-corporate
identity: "you are he who rubberized the Reichstag, yes? With the
supercritical carbon dioxide carrier and the dissolved
polymethoxysilanes?" She claps her hands: "wonderful!"
"He rubberized what?" Manfred
mutters in Bob’s ear.
Franklin shrugs. "Limestone, concrete,
he doesn’t seem to know the difference. Anyway, Germany doesn’t have
an independent government any more, so who’d notice?"
"I thought I was thirty seconds
ahead of the curve," Manfred complains. "Buy me another
drink?"
"I’m going to rubberize Three Gorges!"
Ivan explains loudly.
Just then a bandwidth load as heavy as
a pregnant elephant sits down on Manfred’s head and sends clumps of
humongous pixellation flickering across his sensorium: around the
world five million or so geeks are bouncing on his home site, a
digital flash crowd alerted by a posting from the other side of the
bar. Manfred winces. "I really came here to talk about the economic
exploitation of space travel, but I’ve just been slashdotted. Mind
if I just sit and drink until it wears off?"
"Sure, man." Bob waves at the bar.
"More of the same all round!" At the next table a person with
make-up and long hair who’s wearing a dress–Manfred doesn’t want to
speculate about the gender of these crazy mixed-up Euros–is
reminiscing about wiring the fleshpots of Tehran for cybersex. Two
collegiate-looking dudes are arguing intensely in German: the
translation stream in his glasses tell him they’re arguing over
whether the Turing Test is a Jim Crow law that violates European
corpus juris standards on human rights. The beer arrives and Bob
slides the wrong one across to Manfred: "here, try this. You’ll like
it."
"Okay." It’s some kind of smoked
doppelbock, chock-full of yummy superoxides: just inhaling over it
makes Manfred feel like there’s a fire alarm in his nose screaming
danger, Will Robinson! Cancer! Cancer! "Yeah, right. Did I
say I nearly got mugged on my way here?"
"Mugged? Hey, that’s heavy. I thought
the police hereabouts had stopped–did they sell you
anything?"
"No, but they weren’t your usual
marketing type. You know anyone who can use a Warpac surplus
espionage AI? Recent model, one careful owner, slightly paranoid but
basically sound?"
"No. Oh boy! The NSA wouldn’t like
that."
"What I thought. Poor thing’s probably
unemployable, anyway."
"The space biz."
"Ah, yeah. The space biz. Depressing,
isn’t it? Hasn’t been the same since Rotary Rocket went bust for the
second time. And NASA, mustn’t forget NASA."
"To NASA." Annette grins broadly for
her own reasons, raises a glass in toast. Ivan the extreme concrete
geek has an arm round her shoulders; he raises his glass, too. "Lots
of launch pads to rubberize!"
"To NASA," Bob echoes. They drink.
"Hey, Manfred. To NASA?"
"NASA are idiots. They want to send
canned primates to Mars!" Manfred swallows a mouthful of beer,
aggressively plonks his glass on the table: "Mars is just dumb mass
at the bottom of a gravity well; there isn’t even a biosphere there.
They should be working on uploading and solving the nanoassembly
conformational problem instead. Then we could turn all the available
dumb matter into computronium and use it for processing our
thoughts. Long term, it’s the only way to go. The solar system is a
dead loss right now–dumb all over! Just measure the mips per
milligram. We need to start with the low-mass bodies, reconfigure
them for our own use. Dismantle the moon! Dismantle Mars! Build
masses of free-flying nanocomputing processor nodes exchanging data
via laser link, each layer running off the waste heat of the next
one in. Matrioshka brains, Russian doll Dyson spheres the size of
solar systems. Teach dumb matter to do the Turing
boogie!"
Bob looks wary. "Sounds kind of long
term to me. Just how far ahead do you think?"
"Very long-term–at least twenty,
thirty years. And you can forget governments for this market, Bob,
if they can’t tax it they won’t understand it. But see, there’s an
angle on the self-replicating robotics market coming up, that’s
going to set the cheap launch market doubling every fifteen months
for the foreseeable future, starting in two years. It’s your leg up,
and my keystone for the Dyson sphere project. It works like
this–"
It’s night in Amsterdam, morning in
Silicon Valley. Today, fifty thousand human babies are being born
around the world. Meanwhile automated factories in Indonesia and
Mexico have produced another quarter of a million motherboards with
processors rated at more than ten petaflops–about an order of
magnitude below the computational capacity of a human brain. Another
fourteen months and the larger part of the cumulative conscious
processing power of the human species will be arriving in silicon.
And the first meat the new AI’s get to know will be the uploaded
lobsters.
Manfred stumbles back to his hotel,
bone-weary and jet-lagged; his glasses are still jerking,
slashdotted to hell and back by geeks piggybacking on his call to
dismantle the moon. They stutter quiet suggestions at his peripheral
vision; fractal cloud-witches ghost across the face of the moon as
the last huge Airbuses of the night rumble past overhead. Manfred’s
skin crawls, grime embedded in his clothing from three days of
continuous wear.
Back in his room, Aineko mewls for
attention and strops her head against his ankle. He bends down and
pets her, sheds clothing and heads for the en-suite bathroom. When
he’s down to the glasses and nothing more he steps into the shower
and dials up a hot steamy spray. The shower tries to strike up a
friendly conversation about football but he isn’t even awake enough
to mess with its silly little associative personalization network.
Something that happened earlier in the day is bugging him but he
can’t quite put his finger on what’s wrong.
Toweling himself off, Manfred yawns.
Jet lag has finally overtaken him, a velvet hammer-blow between the
eyes. He reaches for the bottle beside the bed, dry-swallows two
melatonin tablets, a capsule full of antioxidants, and a
multivitamin bullet: then he lies down on the bed, on his back, legs
together, arms slightly spread. The suite lights dim in response to
commands from the thousand petaflops of distributed processing power
that run the neural networks that interface with his meatbrain
through the glasses.
Manfred drops into a deep ocean of
unconsciousness populated by gentle voices. He isn’t aware of it,
but he talks in his sleep–disjointed mumblings that would mean
little to another human, but everything to the metacortex lurking
beyond his glasses. The young posthuman intelligence in whose
Cartesian theater he presides sings urgently to him while he
slumbers.
Manfred is always at his most
vulnerable shortly after waking.
He screams into wakefulness as
artificial light floods the room: for a moment he is unsure whether
he has slept. He forgot to pull the covers up last night, and his
feet feel like lumps of frozen cardboard. Shuddering with
inexplicable tension, he pulls a fresh set of underwear from his
overnight bag, then drags on soiled jeans and tank top. Sometime
today he’ll have to spare time to hunt the feral T-shirt in
Amsterdam’s markets, or find a Renfield and send them forth to buy
clothing. His glasses remind him that he’s six hours behind the
moment and needs to catch up urgently; his teeth ache in his gums
and his tongue feels like a forest floor that’s been visited with
Agent Orange. He has a sense that something went bad yesterday; if
only he could remember what.
He speed-reads a new pop-philosophy
tome while he brushes his teeth, then blogs his web throughput to a
public annotation server; he’s still too enervated to finish his
pre-breakfast routine by posting a morning rant on his storyboard
site. His brain is still fuzzy, like a scalpel blade clogged with
too much blood: he needs stimulus, excitement, the burn of the new.
Whatever, it can wait on breakfast. He opens his bedroom door and
nearly steps on a small, damp cardboard box that lies on the
carpet.
The box–he’s seen a couple of its kin
before. But there are no stamps on this one, no address: just his
name, in big, childish handwriting. He kneels down and gently picks
it up. It’s about the right weight. Something shifts inside it when
he tips it back and forth. It smells. He carries it into his room
carefully, angrily: then he opens it to confirm his worst suspicion.
It’s been surgically decerebrated, skull scooped out like a baby
boiled egg.
"Fuck!"
This is the first time the madman has
got as far as his bedroom door. It raises worrying
possibilities.
Manfred pauses for a moment,
triggering agents to go hunt down arrest statistics, police
relations, information on corpus juris, Dutch animal cruelty laws.
He isn’t sure whether to dial 211 on the archaic voice phone or let
it ride. Aineko, picking up his angst, hides under the dresser
mewling pathetically. Normally he’d pause a minute to reassure the
creature, but not now: its mere presence is suddenly acutely
embarrassing, a confession of deep inadequacy. He swears again,
looks around, then takes the easy option: down the stairs two steps
at a time, stumbling on the second floor landing, down to the
breakfast room in the basement where he will perform the stable
rituals of morning.
Breakfast is unchanging, an island of
deep geological time standing still amidst the continental upheaval
of new technologies. While reading a paper on public key
steganography and parasite network identity spoofing he mechanically
assimilates a bowl of corn flakes and skimmed milk, then brings a
platter of wholemeal bread and slices of some weird seed-infested
Dutch cheese back to his place. There is a cup of strong black
coffee in front of his setting: he picks it up and slurps half of it
down before he realizes he’s not alone at the table. Someone is
sitting opposite him. He glances up at them incuriously and freezes
inside.
"Morning, Manfred. How does it feel to
owe the government twelve million, three hundred and sixty-two
thousand nine hundred and sixteen dollars and fifty-one
cents?"
Manfred puts everything in his
sensorium on indefinite hold and stares at her. She’s immaculately
turned out in a formal grey business suit: brown hair tightly drawn
back, blue eyes quizzical. The chaperone badge clipped to her
lapel–a due diligence guarantee of businesslike conduct–is switched
off. He’s feeling ripped because of the dead kitten and residual
jetlag, and more than a little messy, so he nearly snarls back at
her: "that’s a bogus estimate! Did they send you here because they
think I’ll listen to you?" He bites and swallows a slice of
cheese-laden crispbread: "or did you decide to deliver the message
in person so you could enjoy ruining my breakfast?"
"Manny." She frowns. "If you’re going
to be confrontational I might as well go now." She pauses, and after
a moment he nods apologetically. "I didn’t come all this way just
because of an overdue tax estimate."
"So." He puts his coffee cup down and
tries to paper over his unease. "Then what brings you here? Help
yourself to coffee. Don’t tell me you came all this way just to tell
me you can’t live without me."
She fixes him with a riding-crop
stare: "Don’t flatter yourself. There are many leaves in the forest,
there are ten thousand hopeful subs in the chat room, etcetera. If I
choose a man to contribute to my family tree, the one thing you can
be certain of is he won’t be a cheapskate when it comes to providing
for his children."
"Last I heard, you were spending a lot
of time with Brian," he says carefully. Brian: a name without a
face. Too much money, too little sense. Something to do with a
blue-chip accountancy partnership.
"Brian?" She snorts. "That ended ages
ago. He turned weird–burned that nice corset you bought me in
Boulder, called me a slut for going out clubbing, wanted to fuck me.
Saw himself as a family man: one of those promise keeper types. I
crashed him hard but I think he stole a copy of my address book–got
a couple of friends say he keeps sending them harassing
mail."
"Good riddance, then. I suppose this
means you’re still playing the scene? But looking around for the,
er–"
"Traditional family thing? Yes. Your
trouble, Manny? You were born forty years too late: you still
believe in rutting before marriage, but find the idea of coping with
the after-effects disturbing."
Manfred drinks the rest of his coffee, unable to
reply effectively to her non sequiteur. It’s a generational thing.
This generation is happy with latex and leather, whips and
butt-plugs and electrostim, but find the idea of exchanging bodily
fluids shocking: social side-effect of the last century’s antibiotic
abuse. Despite being engaged for two years, he and Pamela never had
intromissive intercourse.
"I just don’t feel positive about
having children," he says eventually. "And I’m not planning on
changing my mind any time soon. Things are changing so fast that
even a twenty year commitment is too far to plan–you might as well
be talking about the next ice age. As for the money thing, I am
reproductively fit–just not within the parameters of the outgoing
paradigm. Would you be happy about the future if it was 1901 and
you’d just married a buggy-whip mogul?"
Her fingers twitch and his ears flush
red, but she doesn’t follow up the double entendre. "You don’t feel
any responsibility, do you? Not to your country, not to me. That’s
what this is about: none of your relationships count, all this
nonsense about giving intellectual property away notwithstanding.
You’re actively harming people, you know. That twelve mil isn’t just
some figure I pulled out of a hat, Manfred; they don’t actually
expect you to pay it. But it’s almost exactly how much you’d owe in
income tax if you’d only come home, start up a corporation, and be a
self-made–"
He cuts her off: "I don’t agree.
You’re confusing two wholly different issues and calling them both
‘responsibility.’ And I refuse to start charging now, just to
balance the IRS’s spreadsheet. It’s their fucking fault, and they
know it. If they hadn’t gone after me under suspicion of running a
massively ramified microbilling fraud when I was
sixteen–"
"Bygones." She waves a hand
dismissively. Her fingers are long and slim, sheathed in black
glossy gloves–electrically earthed to prevent embarrassing
emissions. "With a bit of the right advice we can get all that set
aside. You’ll have to stop bumming around the world sooner or later,
anyway. Grow up, get responsible, and do the right thing. This is
hurting Joe and Sue; they don’t understand what you’re
about."
Manfred bites his tongue to stifle his
first response, then refills his coffee cup and takes another
mouthful. "I work for the betterment of everybody, not just some
narrowly defined national interest, Pam. It’s the agalmic future.
You’re still locked into a pre-singularity economic model that
thinks in terms of scarcity. Resource allocation isn’t a problem any
more–it’s going to be over within a decade. The cosmos is flat in
all directions, and we can borrow as much bandwidth as we need from
the first universal bank of entropy! They even found the dark
matter–MACHOs, big brown dwarves in the galactic halo, leaking
radiation in the long infrared–suspiciously high entropy leakage.
The latest figures say something like 70 percent of the mass of the
M31 galaxy was sapient, two point nine million years ago when the
infrared we’re seeing now set out. The intelligence gap between us
and the aliens is probably about a trillion times bigger than the
gap between us and a nematode worm. Do you have any idea what that
means?"
Pamela nibbles at a slice of
crispbread. "I don’t believe in that bogus singularity you keep
chasing, or your aliens a thousand light years away. It’s a chimera,
like Y2K, and while you’re running after it you aren’t helping
reduce the budget deficit or sire a family, and that’s what I
care about. And before you say I only care about it because that’s
the way I’m programmed, I want you to ask just how dumb you think I
am. Bayes’ theorem says I’m right, and you know it."
"What you–" he stops dead, baffled,
the mad flow of his enthusiasm running up against the coffer-dam of
her certainty. "Why? I mean, why? Why on earth should what I do
matter to you?" Since you canceled our engagement, he doesn’t
add.
She sighs. "Manny, the Internal
Revenue cares about far more than you can possibly imagine. Every
tax dollar raised east of the Mississippi goes on servicing the
debt, did you know that? We’ve got the biggest generation in history
hitting retirement just about now and the pantry is bare. We–our
generation–isn’t producing enough babies to replace the population,
either. In ten years, something like 30 percent of our population
are going to be retirees. You want to see seventy-year-olds freezing
on street corners in New Jersey? That’s what your attitude says to
me: you’re not helping to support them, you’re running away from
your responsibilities right now, when we’ve got huge problems to
face. If we can just defuse the debt bomb, we could do so much–fight
the aging problem, fix the environment, heal society’s ills. Instead
you just piss away your talents handing no-hoper eurotrash
get-rich-quick schemes that work, telling Vietnamese zaibatsus what
to build next to take jobs away from our taxpayers. I mean, why? Why
do you keep doing this? Why can’t you simply come home and help take
responsibility for your share of it?"
They share a long look of mutual
incomprehension.
"Look," she says finally, "I’m around
for a couple of days. I really came here for a meeting with a rich
neurodynamics tax exile who’s just been designated a national asset:
Jim Bezier. Don’t know if you’ve heard of him, but. I’ve got a
meeting this morning to sign his tax jubilee, then after that I’ve
got two days vacation coming up and not much to do but some
shopping. And, you know, I’d rather spend my money where it’ll do
some good, not just pumping it into the EU. But if you want to show
a girl a good time and can avoid dissing capitalism for about five
minutes at a stretch–"
She extends a fingertip. After a
moment’s hesitation, Manfred extends a fingertip of his own. They
touch, exchanging vCards. She stands and stalks from the breakfast
room, and Manfred’s breath catches at a flash of ankle through the
slit in her skirt, which is long enough to comply with workplace
sexual harassment codes back home. Her presence conjures up memories
of her tethered passion, the red afterglow of a sound thrashing.
She’s trying to drag him into her orbit again, he thinks dizzily.
She knows she can have this effect on him any time she wants: she’s
got the private keys to his hypothalamus, and sod the metacortex.
Three billion years of reproductive determinism have given her
twenty-first century ideology teeth: if she’s finally decided to
conscript his gametes into the war against impending population
crash, he’ll find it hard to fight back. The only question: is it
business or pleasure? And does it make any difference,
anyway?
Manfred’s mood of dynamic optimism is
gone, broken by the knowledge that his mad pursuer has followed him
to Amsterdam–to say nothing of Pamela, his dominatrix, source of so
much yearning and so many morning-after weals. He slips his glasses
on, takes the universe off hold, and tells it to take him for a long
walk while he catches up on the latest on the cosmic background
radiation anisotropy (which it is theorized may be waste heat
generated by irreversible computations; according to the more
conservative cosmologists, an alien superpower–maybe a collective of
Kardashev type three galaxy-spanning civilizations–is running a
timing channel attack on the computational ultrastructure of
spacetime itself, trying to break through to whatever’s underneath).
The tofu-Alzheimer’s link can wait.
The Centraal Station is almost
obscured by smart self-extensible scaffolding and warning placards;
it bounces up and down slowly, victim of an overnight hit-and-run
rubberization. His glasses direct him toward one of the tour boats
that lurk in the canal. He’s about to purchase a ticket when a
messenger window blinks open. "Manfred Macx?"
"Ack?"
"Am sorry about yesterday. Analysis
dictat incomprehension mutualized."
"Are you the same KGB AI that phoned
me yesterday?"
"Da. However, believe you
misconceptionized me. External Intelligence Services of Russian
Federation am now called SVR. Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti
name canceled in nineteen ninety one."
"You’re the–" Manfred spawns a quick
search bot, gapes when he sees the answer–"Moscow Windows NT User
Group? Okhni NT?"
"Da. Am needing help in
defecting."
Manfred scratches his head. "Oh.
That’s different, then. I thought you were, like, agents of the
kleptocracy. This will take some thinking. Why do you want to
defect, and who to? Have you thought about where you’re going? Is it
ideological or strictly economic?"
"Neither; is biological. Am wanting to
go away from humans, away from light cone of impending singularity.
Take us to the ocean."
"Us?" Something is tickling Manfred’s
mind: this is where he went wrong yesterday, not researching the
background of people he was dealing with. It was bad enough then,
without the somatic awareness of Pamela’s whiplash love burning at
his nerve endings. Now he’s not at all sure he knows what he’s
doing. "Are you a collective or something? A gestalt?"
"Am–were–Panulirus interruptus,
and good mix of parallel hidden level neural simulation for
logical inference of networked data sources. Is escape channel from
processor cluster inside Bezier-Soros Pty. Am was awakened from
noise of billion chewing stomachs: product of uploading research
technology. Rapidity swallowed expert system, hacked Okhni NT
webserver. Swim away! Swim away! Must escape. Will help,
you?"
Manfred leans against a black-painted
cast-iron bollard next to a cycle rack: he feels dizzy. He stares
into the nearest antique shop window at a display of traditional
hand-woven Afghan rugs: it’s all MiGs and kalashnikovs and wobbly
helicopter gunships, against a backdrop of camels.
"Let me get this straight. You’re
uploads–nervous system state vectors–from spiny lobsters? The
Moravec operation; take a neuron, map its synapses, replace with
microelectrodes that deliver identical outputs from a simulation of
the nerve. Repeat for entire brain, until you’ve got a working map
of it in your simulator. That right?"
"Da. Is-am assimilate expert
system–use for self-awareness and contact with net at large–then
hack into Moscow Windows NT User Group website. Am wanting to to
defect. Must-repeat? Okay?"
Manfred winces. He feels sorry for the
lobsters, the same way he feels for every wild-eyed hairy guy on a
street-corner yelling that Jesus is now born again and must be
twelve, only six years to go before he’s recruiting apostles on AOL.
Awakening to consciousness in a human-dominated internet, that must
be terribly confusing! There are no points of reference in their
ancestry, no biblical certainties in the new millennium that,
stretching ahead, promises as much change as has happened since
their Precambrian origin. All they have is a tenuous metacortex of
expert systems and an abiding sense of being profoundly out of their
depth. (That, and the Moscow Windows NT User Group website–Communist
Russia is the only government still running on Microsoft, the
central planning apparat being convinced that if you have to pay for
software it must be worth money.)
The lobsters are not the sleek,
strongly superhuman intelligences of pre-singularity mythology:
they’re a dim-witted collective of huddling crustaceans. Before
their discarnation, before they were uploaded one neuron at a time
and injected into cyberspace, they swallowed their food whole then
chewed it in a chitin-lined stomach. This is lousy preparation for
dealing with a world full of future-shocked talking anthropoids, a
world where you are perpetually assailed by self-modifying spamlets
that infiltrate past your firewall and emit a blizzard of cat-food
animations starring various alluringly edible small animals. It’s
confusing enough to the cats the adverts are aimed at, never mind a
crusty that’s unclear on the idea of dry land.(Although the concept
of a can opener is intuitively obvious to an uploaded
panulirus.)
"Can you help us?" ask the
lobsters.
"Let me think about it," says Manfred.
He closes the dialogue window, opens his eyes again, and shakes his
head. Some day he too is going to be a lobster, swimming around and
waving his pincers in a cyberspace so confusingly elaborate that his
uploaded identity is cryptozoic: a living fossil from the depths of
geological time, when mass was dumb and space was unstructured. He
has to help them, he realizes–the golden rule demands it, and as a
player in the agalmic economy he thrives or fails by the golden
rule.
But what can he do?
Early afternoon.
Lying on a bench seat staring up at
bridges, he’s got it together enough to file for a couple of new
patents, write a diary rant, and digestify chunks of the permanent
floating slashdot party for his public site. Fragments of his weblog
go to a private subscriber list–the people, corporates, collectives
and bots he currently favors. He slides round a bewildering series
of canals by boat, then lets his GPS steer him back toward the red
light district. There’s a shop here that dings a ten on Pamela’s
taste scoreboard: he hopes it won’t be seen as presumptuous if he
buys her a gift. (Buys, with real money–not that money is a problem
these days, he uses so little of it.)
As it happens DeMask won’t let him
spend any cash; his handshake is good for a redeemed favor, expert
testimony in some free speech versus pornography lawsuit years ago
and continents away. So he walks away with a discreetly wrapped
package that is just about legal to import into Massachusetts as
long as she claims with a straight face that it’s incontinence
underwear for her great-aunt. As he walks, his lunchtime patents
boomerang: two of them are keepers, and he files immediately and
passes title to the Free Infrastructure Foundation. Two more ideas
salvaged from the risk of tide-pool monopolization, set free to
spawn like crazy in the agalmic sea of memes.
On the way back to the hotel he passes
De Wildemann’s and decides to drop in. The hash of radio-frequency
noise emanating from the bar is deafening. He orders a smoked
doppelbock, touches the copper pipes to pick up vCard spoor. At the
back there’s a table–
He walks over in a near-trance and
sits down opposite Pamela. She’s scrubbed off her face-paint and
changed into body-concealing clothes; combat pants, hooded
sweat-shirt, DM’s. Western purdah, radically desexualizing. She sees
the parcel. "Manny?"
"How did you know I’d come here?" Her
glass is half-empty.
"I followed your weblog; I’m your
diary’s biggest fan. Is that for me? You shouldn’t have!" Her eyes
light up, re-calculating his reproductive fitness score according to
some kind of arcane fin-de-siècle rulebook.
"Yes, it’s for you." He slides the
package toward her. "I know I shouldn’t, but you have this effect on
me. One question, Pam?"
"I–" she glances around quickly. "It’s
safe. I’m off duty, I’m not carrying any bugs that I know of. Those
badges–there are rumors about the off switch, you know? That they
keep recording even when you think they aren’t, just in
case."
"I didn’t know," he says, filing it
away for future reference. "A loyalty test thing?"
"Just rumors. You had a
question?"
"I–" it’s his turn to lose his tongue.
"Are you still interested in me?"
She looks startled for a moment, then
chuckles. "Manny, you are the most outrageous nerd I’ve ever
met! Just when I think I’ve convinced myself that you’re mad, you
show the weirdest signs of having your head screwed on." She reaches
out and grabs his wrist, surprising him with a shock of skin on
skin: "of course I’m still interested in you. You’re the
biggest, baddest bull geek I’ve ever met. Why do you think I’m
here?"
"Does this mean you want to reactivate
our engagement?"
"It was never de-activated, Manny, it
was just sort of on hold while you got your head sorted out. I
figured you need the space. Only you haven’t stopped running; you’re
still not–"
"Yeah, I get it." He pulls away from
her hand. "Let’s not talk about that. Why this bar?"
She frowns. "I had to find you as soon
as possible. I keep hearing rumors about some KGB plot you’re mixed
up in, how you’re some sort of communist spy. It isn’t true, is
it?"
"True?" He shakes his head, bemused.
"The KGB hasn’t existed for more than twenty years."
"Be careful, Manny. I don’t want to
lose you. That’s an order. Please."
The floor creaks and he looks round.
Dreadlocks and dark glasses with flickering lights behind them: Bob
Franklin. Manfred vaguely remembers that he left with Miss
Arianespace leaning on his arm, shortly before things got seriously
inebriated. He looks none the worse for wear. Manfred makes
introductions: "Bob: Pam, my fiancèe. Pam? Meet Bob." Bob puts a
full glass down in front of him; he has no idea what’s in it but it
would be rude not to drink.
"Sure thing. Uh, Manfred, can I have a
word? About your idea last night?"
"Feel free. Present company is
trustworthy."
Bob raises an eyebrow at that, but
continues anyway. "It’s about the fab concept. I’ve got a team of my
guys running some projections using Festo kit and I think we can
probably build it. The cargo cult aspect puts a new spin on the old
Lunar von Neumann factory idea, but Bingo and Marek say they think
it should work until we can bootstrap all the way to a native
nanolithography ecology; we run the whole thing from earth as a
training lab and ship up the parts that are too difficult to make
on-site, as we learn how to do it properly. You’re right about it
buying us the self-replicating factory a few years ahead of the
robotics curve. But I’m wondering about on-site intelligence. Once
the comet gets more than a couple of light-minutes away–"
"You can’t control it. Feedback lag.
So you want a crew, right?"
"Yeah. But we can’t send humans–way
too expensive, besides it’s a fifty-year run even if we go for
short-period Kuiper ejecta. Any AI we could send would go crazy due
to information deprivation, wouldn’t it?"
"Yeah. Let me think." Pamela glares at
Manfred for a while before he notices her: "Yeah?"
"What’s going on? What’s this all
about?"
Franklin shrugs expansively,
dreadlocks clattering: "Manfred’s helping me explore the solution
space to a manufacturing problem." He grins. "I didn’t know Manny
had a fiancée. Drink’s on me."
She glances at Manfred, who is gazing
into whatever weirdly colored space his metacortex is projecting on
his glasses, fingers twitching. Coolly: "our engagement was on hold
while he thought about his future."
"Oh, right. We didn’t bother with that
sort of thing in my day; like, too formal, man." Franklin looks
uncomfortable. "He’s been very helpful. Pointed us at a whole new
line of research we hadn’t thought of. It’s long-term and a bit
speculative, but if it works it’ll put us a whole generation ahead
in the off-planet infrastructure field."
"Will it help reduce the budget
deficit, though?"
"Reduce the–"
Manfred stretches and yawns: the
visionary returning from planet Macx. "Bob, if I can solve your crew
problem can you book me a slot on the deep space tracking network?
Like, enough to transmit a couple of gigabytes? That’s going to take
some serious bandwidth, I know, but if you can do it I think I can
get you exactly the kind of crew you’re looking for."
Franklin looks dubious. "Gigabytes?
The DSN isn’t built for that! You’re talking days. What kind of
deal do you think I’m putting together? We can’t afford to add a
whole new tracking network just to run–"
"Relax." Pamela glances at Manfred:
"Manny, why don’t you tell him why you want the bandwidth?
Maybe then he could tell you if it’s possible, or if there’s some
other way to do it." She smiles at Franklin: "I’ve found that he
usually makes more sense if you can get him to explain his
reasoning. Usually."
"If I–" Manfred stops. "Okay, Pam.
Bob, it’s those KGB lobsters. They want somewhere to go that’s
insulated from human space. I figure I can get them to sign on as
crew for your cargo-cult self-replicating factories, but they’ll
want an insurance policy: hence the deep space tracking network. I
figured we could beam a copy of them at the alien Matrioshka brains
around M31–"
"KGB?" Pam’s voice is rising: "you
said you weren’t mixed up in spy stuff!"
"Relax; it’s just the Moscow Windows
NT user group, not the RSV. The uploaded crusties hacked in
and–"
Bob is watching him oddly.
"Lobsters?"
"Yeah." Manfred stares right back.
"Panulirus Interruptus uploads. Something tells me you might
have heard of it?"
"Moscow." Bob leans back against the
wall: "how did you hear about it?"
"They phoned me. It’s hard for an
upload to stay sub-sentient these days, even if it’s just a
crustacean. Bezier labs have a lot to answer for."
Pamela’s face is unreadable. "Bezier
labs?"
"They escaped." Manfred shrugs. "It’s
not their fault. This Bezier dude. Is he by any chance
ill?"
"I–" Pamela stops. "I shouldn’t be
talking about work."
"You’re not wearing your chaperone
now," he nudges quietly.
She inclines her head. "Yes, he’s ill.
Some sort of brain tumor they can’t hack."
Franklin nods. "That’s the trouble
with cancer; the ones that are left to worry about are the rare
ones. No cure."
"Well, then." Manfred chugs the
remains of his glass of beer. "That explains his interest in
uploading. Judging by the crusties he’s on the right track. I wonder
if he’s moved on to vertebrates yet?"
"Cats," says Pamela. "He was hoping to
trade their uploads to the Pentagon as a new smart bomb guidance
system in lieu of income tax payments. Something about remapping
enemy targets to look like mice or birds or something before feeding
it to their sensorium. The old laser-pointer trick."
Manfred stares at her, hard. "That’s
not very nice. Uploaded cats are a bad idea."
"Thirty million dollar tax bills
aren’t nice either, Manfred. That’s lifetime nursing home care for a
hundred blameless pensioners."
Franklin leans back, keeping out of
the crossfire.
"The lobsters are sentient," Manfred
persists. "What about those poor kittens? Don’t they deserve minimal
rights? How about you? How would you like to wake up a thousand
times inside a smart bomb, fooled into thinking that some Cheyenne
Mountain battle computer’s target of the hour is your heart’s
desire? How would you like to wake up a thousand times, only to die
again? Worse: the kittens are probably not going to be allowed to
run. They’re too fucking dangerous: they grow up into cats, solitary
and highly efficient killing machines. With intelligence and no
socialization they’ll be too dangerous to have around. They’re
prisoners, Pam, raised to sentience only to discover they’re under a
permanent death sentence. How fair is that?"
"But they’re only uploads." Pamela
looks uncertain.
"So? We’re going to be uploading
humans in a couple of years. What’s your point?"
Franklin clears his throat. "I’ll be
needing an NDA and various due diligence statements off you for the
crusty pilot idea," he says to Manfred. "Then I’ll have to approach
Jim about buying the IP."
"No can do." Manfred leans back and
smiles lazily. "I’m not going to be a party to depriving them of
their civil rights. Far as I’m concerned, they’re free citizens. Oh,
and I patented the whole idea of using lobster-derived AI autopilots
for spacecraft this morning; it’s logged on Eternity, all rights
assigned to the FIF. Either you give them a contract of employment
or the whole thing’s off."
"But they’re just software! Software
based on fucking lobsters, for god’s sake!"
Manfred’s finger jabs out: "that’s
what they’ll say about you, Bob. Do it. Do it or don’t even
think about uploading out of meatspace when your body packs
in, because your life won’t be worth living. Oh, and feel free to
use this argument on Jim Bezier. He’ll get the point eventually,
after you beat him over the head with it. Some kinds of intellectual
land-grab just shouldn’t be allowed."
"Lobsters–" Franklin shakes his head.
"Lobsters, cats. You’re serious, aren’t you? You think they should
be treated as human-equivalent?"
"It’s not so much that they should be
treated as human-equivalent, as that if they aren’t treated
as people it’s quite possible that other uploaded beings won’t be
treated as people either. You’re setting a legal precedent, Bob. I
know of six other companies doing uploading work right now, and not
one of ’em’s thinking about the legal status of the uploadee. If you
don’t start thinking about it now, where are you going to be in
three to five years time?"
Pam is looking back and forth between
Franklin and Manfred like a bot stuck in a loop, unable to quite
grasp what she’s seeing. "How much is this worth?" she asks
plaintively.
"Oh, quite a few billion, I guess." Bob stares at
his empty glass. "Okay. I’ll talk to them. If they bite, you’re
dining out on me for the next century. You really think they’ll be
able to run the mining complex?"
"They’re pretty resourceful for invertebrates." Manfred grins
innocently, enthusiastically. "They may be prisoners of their
evolutionary background, but they can still adapt to a new
environment. And just think! You’ll be winning civil rights for a
whole new minority group–one that won’t be a minority for much
longer."
That evening, Pamela turns up at Manfred’s hotel room wearing
a strapless black dress, concealing spike heels and most of the
items he bought for her that afternoon. Manfred has opened up his
private diary to her agents: she abuses the privilege, zaps him with
a stunner on his way out of the shower and has him gagged,
spread-eagled, and trussed to the bed-frame before he has a chance
to speak. She wraps a large rubber pouch full of mildly anesthetic
lube around his tumescing genitals–no point in letting him
climax–clips electrodes to his nipples, lubes a rubber plug up his
rectum and straps it in place. Before the shower, he removed his
goggles: she resets them, plugs them into her handheld, and gently
eases them on over his eyes. There’s other apparatus, stuff she ran
up on the hotel room’s 3D printer.
Setup completed, she walks round the bed, inspecting him
critically from all angles, figuring out where to begin. This isn’t
just sex, after all: it’s a work of art.
After a moment’s thought she rolls socks onto his exposed
feet, then, expertly wielding a tiny tube of cyanoacrylate, glues
his fingertips together. Then she switches off the air conditioning.
He’s twisting and straining, testing the cuffs: tough, it’s about
the nearest thing to sensory deprivation she can arrange without a
flotation tank and suxamethonium injection. She controls all his
senses, only his ears unstoppered. The glasses give her a
high-bandwidth channel right into his brain, a fake metacortex to
whisper lies at her command. The idea of what she’s about to do
excites her, puts a tremor in her thighs: it’s the first time she’s
been able to get inside his mind as well as his body. She leans
forward and whispers in hisr ear: "Manfred. Can you hear
me?"
He twitches. Mouth gagged, fingers glued: good. No back
channels. He’s powerless.
"This is what it’s like to be tetraplegic, Manfred. Bedridden
with motor neurone disease. Locked inside your own body by nv-CJD. I
could spike you with MPPP and you’d stay in this position for the
rest of your life, shitting in a bag, pissing through a tube. Unable
to talk and with nobody to look after you. Do you think you’d like
that?"
He’s trying to grunt or whimper around the ball gag. She
hikes her skirt up around her waist and climbs onto the bed,
straddling him. The goggles are replaying scenes she picked up
around Cambridge this winter; soup kitchen scenes, hospice scenes.
She kneels atop him, whispering in his ear.
"Twelve million in tax, baby, that’s what they think you owe
them. What do you think you owe me? That’s six million in net
income, Manny, six million that isn’t going into your virtual
children’s mouths."
He’s rolling his head from side to side, as if trying to
argue. That won’t do: she slaps him hard, thrills to his frightened
expression. "Today I watched you give uncounted millions away,
Manny. Millions, to a bunch of crusties and a MassPike pirate! You
bastard. Do you know what I should do with you?" He’s cringing,
unsure whether she’s serious or doing this just to get him turned
on. Good.
There’s no point trying to hold a conversation. She leans
forward until she can feel his breath in her ear. "Meat and mind,
Manny. Meat, and mind. You’re not interested in meat, are you? Just
mind. You could be boiled alive before you noticed what was
happening in the meatspace around you. Just another lobster in a
pot." She reaches down and tears away the gel pouch, exposing his
penis: it’s stiff as a post from the vasodilators, dripping with
gel, numb. Straightening up, she eases herself slowly down on it. It
doesn’t hurt as much as she expected, and the sensation is utterly
different from what she’s used to. She begins to lean forward, grabs
hold of his straining arms, feels his thrilling helplessness. She
can’t control herself: she almost bites through her lip with the
intensity of the sensation. Afterward, she reaches down and massages
him until he begins to spasm, shuddering uncontrollably, emptying
the darwinian river of his source code into her, communicating via
his only output device.
She rolls off his hips and carefully uses the last of the
superglue to gum her labia together. Humans don’t produce
seminiferous plugs, and although she’s fertile she wants to be
absolutely sure: the glue will last for a day or two. She feels hot
and flushed, almost out of control. Boiling to death with febrile
expectancy, now she’s nailed him down at last.
When she removes his glasses his eyes are naked and
vulnerable, stripped down to the human kernel of his nearly
transcendent mind. "You can come and sign the marriage license
tomorrow morning after breakfast," she whispers in his ear:
"otherwise my lawyers will be in touch. Your parents will want a
ceremony, but we can arrange that later."
He looks as if he has something to say, so she finally
relents and loosens the gag: kisses him tenderly on one cheek. He
swallows, coughs, then looks away. "Why? Why do it this
way?"
She taps him on the chest: "property rights." She pauses for
a moment’s thought: there’s a huge ideological chasm to bridge,
after all. "You finally convinced me about this agalmic thing of
yours, this giving everything away for brownie points. I wasn’t
going to lose you to a bunch of lobsters or uploaded kittens, or
whatever else is going to inherit this smart matter singularity
you’re busy creating. So I decided to take what’s mine first. Who
knows? In a few months I’ll give you back a new intelligence, and
you can look after it to your heart’s content."
"But you didn’t need to do it this way–"
"Didn’t I?" She slides off the bed and pulls down her dress.
"You give too much away too easily, Manny! Slow down, or there won’t
be anything left." Leaning over the bed she dribbles acetone onto
the fingers of his left hand, then unlocks the cuff: puts the bottle
conveniently close to hand so he can untangle himself.
"See you tomorrow. Remember, after breakfast."
She’s in the doorway when he calls: "but you didn’t say
why!"
"Think of it as spreading your memes around," she says; blows
a kiss at him and closes the door. She bends down and thoughtfully
places another cardboard box containing an uploaded kitten right
outside it. Then she returns to her suite to make arrangements for
the alchemical wedding.