By nature, men are nearly alike;
by practice, they get to be wide apart.
-Confucius
Moral reforms and deteriorations are moved by large forces, and
they are mostly caused by reactions from the habits of a preceding
period. Backwards and forwards swings the great pendulum, and
its alterna-tions are not determined by a few distinguished folk
clinging to the end of it.
-Sir Charles Petrie, THE VICTORIANS
A thete visits a mod parlor; noteworthy features of
modern armaments.
The bells of St. Mark’s were ringing changes up on the mountain
when Bud skated over to the mod parlor to upgrade his skull gun.
Bud had a nice new pair of blades with a top speed of anywhere
from a hundred to a hundred and fifty kilometers, depending on how
fat you were and whether or not you wore aero. Bud liked wearing
skin-tight leather, to show off his muscles. On a previous visit to the
mod parlor, two years ago, he had paid to have a bunch of ‘sites
implanted in his muscles-little critters; too small to see or feel, that
twitched Bud’s muscle fibers electrically according to a program
that was supposed to maximize bulk. Combined with the
testosterone pump embedded in his forearm, it was like working out
in a gym night and day, except you didn’t have to actually do
anything and you never got sweaty. The only drawback was that all
the little twitches made him kind of tense and jerky. He’d gotten
used to it, but it still made him a little hinky on those skates,
especially when he was doing a hundred clicks an hour through a
crowded street. But few people hassled Bud, even when he knocked
them down in the street, and after today no one would hassle him
ever again.
Bud had walked away, improbably unscratched, from his last
job-decoy-with something like a thousand yuks in his pocket.
He’d spent a third of it on new clothes, mostly black leather, another
third of it on the blades, and was about to spend the last third at the
mod parlor. You could get skull guns a lot cheaper, of course, but
that would mean going over the Causeway to Shanghai and getting a
back-alley job from some Coaster, and probably a nice bone
infection in with the bargain, and he’d probably pick your pocket
while he had you theezed. Besides, you could only get into a
Shanghai if you were virgin. To cross the Causeway when you were
already packing a skull gun, like Bud, you had to bribe the shit
out of numerous Shanghai cops. There was no reason to economize
here. Bud had a rich and boundless career ahead of him, vaulting up
a hierarchy of extremely dangerous drug-related occupations for
which decoy served as a paid audition of sorts. A start weapons
system was a wise investment.
The damn bells kept ringing through the fog. Bud mumbled a
command to his music system, a phased acoustical array splayed
across both eardrums like the seeds on a strawberry. The volume
went up but couldn’t scour away the deep tones of the carillon,
which resonated in his long bones. He wondered whether, as long as
he was at the mod parlor, he should have the batteries drilled out of
his right mastoid and replaced. Supposedly they were ten-year jobs,
but he’d had them for six and he listened to music all the time, loud.
Three people were waiting. Bud took a seat and skimmed a
mediatron from the coffee table; it looked exactly like a dirty,
wrinkled, blank sheet of paper. “‘Annals of Self-Protection,’” he
said, loud enough for everyone else in the place to hear him. The
logo of his favorite meedfeed coalesced on the page. Mediaglyphics,
mostly the cool animated ones, arranged themselves in a grid. Bud
scanned through them until he found the one that denoted a
comparison of a bunch of different stuff, and snapped at it with his
fingernail. New mediaglyphics appeared, surrounding larger cine
panes in which Annals staff tested several models of skull guns
against live and dead targets. Bud frisbeed the mediatron back onto
the table; this was the same review he’d been poring over for the
last day, they hadn’t updated it, his decision was still valid.
One of the guys ahead of him got a tattoo, which took about ten
seconds. The other guy just wanted his skull gun reloaded, which
didn’t take much longer. The girl wanted a few ‘sites replaced in her
racting grid, mostly around her eyes, where she was starting to
wrinkle up. That took a while, so Bud picked up the mediatron
again and went in a ractive, his favorite, called Shut Up or Die!
The mod artist wanted to see Bud’s yuks before he installed the
gun, which in other surroundings might have been construed as an
insult but was standard business practice here in the Leased
Territories. When he was satisfied that this wasn’t a stick-up, he
theezed Bud’s forehead with a spray gun, scalped back a flap of
skin, and pushed a machine, mounted on a delicate robot arm like a
dental tool, over Bud’s forehead. The arm homed in automatically
on the old gun, moving with alarming speed and determination.
Bud, who was a little jumpy at the best of times because of his
muscle stimulators, flinched a little. But the robot arm was a
hundred times faster than he was and plucked out the old gun
unerringly. The proprietor was watching all of this on a screen and
had nothing to do except narrate: “The hole in your skull’s kind of
rough, so the machine is reaming it out to a larger bore-okay, now
here comes the new gun.”
A nasty popping sensation radiated through Bud’s skull when
the robot arm snapped in the new model. It reminded Bud of the
days of his youth, when, from time to time, one of his playmates
would shoot him in the head with a BB gun. He instantly developed
a low headache.
“It’s loaded with a hundred rounds of popcorn,” the proprietor
said, “so you can test out the yuvree. Soon as you’re comfortable
with it, I’ll load it for real.” He stapled the skin of Bud’s forehead
back together so it’d heal invisibly. You could pay the guy extra to
leave a scar there on purpose, so everyone would know you were
packing, but Bud had heard that some chicks didn’t like it. Bud’s
relationship with the female sex was governed by a gallimaufry of
primal impulses, dim suppositions, deranged theories, overheard
scraps of conversation, half-remembered pieces of bad advice, and
fragments of no-doubt exaggerated anecdotes that amounted to rank
superstition. In this case, it dictated that he should not request the
scar.
Besides, he had a nice collection of Sights-not very tasteful
sunglasses with crosshairs hudded into the lens on your dominant
eye. They did wonders for marksmanship, and they were real
obvious too, so that everyone knew you didn’t fuck with a man
wearing Sights.
“Give it a whirl,” the guy said, and spun the chair around-it
was a big old antique barber chair upholstered in swirly plastic-so
Bud was facing a mannikin in the corner of the room. The mannikin
had no face or hair and was speckled with little burn marks, as was
the wall behind it.
“Status,” Bud said, and felt the gun buzz lightly in response.
“Stand by,” he said, and got another answering buzz. He turned
his face squarely toward the mannikin.
“Hut,” he said. He said it under his breath, through unmoving
lips, but the gun heard it; he felt a slight recoil tapping his head
back, and a startling POP sounded from the mannikin, accompanied
by a flash of light on the wall up above its head. Bud’s headache
deepened, but he didn’t care.
“This thing runs faster ammo, so you’ll have to get used to
aiming a tad lower,” said the guy. So Bud tried it again and this time
popped the mannikin right in the neck.
“Great shot! That would have decapped him if you were using
Hellfire,” the guy said. “Looks to me like you know what you’re
doing-but there’s other options too. And three magazines so you
can run multiple ammos.”
“I know,” Bud said, “I been checking this thing out.” Then, to
the gun, “Disperse ten, medium pattern.” Then he said “hut” again.
His head snapped back much harder, and ten POPs went off at once,
all over the mannikin’s body and the wall behind it. The room was
getting smoky now, starting to smell like burned plastic.
“You can disperse up to a hundred,” the guy said, “but the
recoil’d probably break your neck.”
“I think I got it down,” Bud said, “so load me up. First
magazine with electrostun rounds. Second magazine with Cripplers.
Third with Hellfires. And get me some fucking aspirin.”
Source Victoria; description of its environs.
Source Victoria’s air intakes erupted from the summit of the Royal
Ecological Conservatory like a spray of hundred-meter-long calla
lilies. Below, the analogy was perfected by an inverted tree of
rootlike plumbing that spread fractally through the diamondoid
bedrock of New Chusan, terminating in the warm water of the South
China Sea as numberless capillaries arranged in a belt around the
smartcoral reef, several dozen nieters beneath the surface. One big
huge pipe gulping up seawater would have done roughly the same
thing, just as the lilies could have been replaced by one howling
maw, birds and litter whacking into a bloody grid somewhere before
they could gum up the works.
But it wouldn’t have been ecological. The geotects of Imperial
Tectonics would not have known an ecosystem if they’d been living
in the middle of one. But they did know that ecosystems were
especially tiresome when they got fubared, so they protected the
environment with the same implacable, plodding, green-visored
mentality that they applied to designing overpasses and culverts.
Thus, water seeped into Source Victoria through microtubes, much
the same way it seeped into a beach, and air wafted into it silently
down the artfully skewed exponential horns of those thrusting calla
lilies, each horn a point in parameter space not awfully far from
some central ideal. They were strong enough to withstand typhoons
but flexible enough to rustle in a breeze. Birds, wandering inside,
sensed a gradient in the air, pulling them down into night, and
simply chose to fly out. They didn’t even get scared enough to shit.
The lilies sprouted from a stadium-sized cut-crystal vase, the
Diamond Palace, which was open to the public. Tourists,
aerobicizing pensioners, and ranks of uniformed schoolchildren
marched through it year in and year out, peering through walls of
glass (actually solid diamond, which was cheaper) at various phases
of the molecular disassembly line that was Source Victoria. Dirty air
and dirty water came in and pooled in tanks. Next to each tank was
another tank containing slightly cleaner air or cleaner water. Repeat
several dozen times. The tanks at the end were filled with perfectly
clean nitrogen gas and perfectly clean water.
The line of tanks was referred to as a cascade, a rather abstract
bit of engineer’s whimsy lost on the tourists who did not see
anything snapshot-worthy there. All the action took place in the
walls separating the tanks, which were not really walls but nearly
infinite grids of submicroscopic wheels, ever-rotating and manyspoked.
Each spoke grabbed a nitrogen or water molecule on the
dirty side and released it after spinning around to the clean side.
Things that weren’t nitrogen or water didn’t get grabbed, hence
didn’t make it through. There were also wheels for grabbing handy
trace elements like carbon, sulfur, and phosphorus; these were
passed along smaller, parallel cascades until they were also perfectly
pure. The immaculate molecules wound up in reservoirs. Some of
them got combined with others to make simple but handy molecular
widgets. In the end, all of them were funneled into a bundle of
molecular conveyor belts known as the Feed, of which Source
Victoria, and the other half-dozen Sources of Atlantis/Shanghai,
were the fountainheads.
Financial complications of Bud’s lifestyle;
visit to a banker.
Bud surprised himself with how long he went before he had to use
the skull gun in anger. Just knowing it was in there gave him such
an attitude that no one in his right mind would Rick with him,
especially when they saw his Sights and the black leather. He got
his way just by giving people the evil eye.
It was time to move up the ladder. He sought work as a
lookout. It wasn’t easy. The alternative pharmaceuticals industry ran
on a start, justin-time delivery system, keeping inventories low so
that there was never much evidence for the cops to seize. The snuff
was grown in illicit matter compilers, squirreled away in vacant
low-rent housing blocks, and carried by the runners to the actual
street dealers. Meanwhile, a cloud of lookouts and decoys circulated
probabilistically through the neighborhood, never stopping long
enough to be picked up for loitering, monitoring the approach of
cops (or cops’ surveillance pods) through huds in their sunglasses.
When Bud told his last boss to go Rick himself, he’d been
pretty sure he could get a runner job. But it hadn’t panned out, and
since then a couple more big airships had come in from North
America and disgorged thousands of white and black trash into the
job market. Now Bud was running out of money and getting tired of
eating the free food from the public matter compilers.
The Peacock Bank was a handsome man with a salt-and-pepper
goatee, smelling of citrus and wearing an exceedingly snappy
doublebreasted suit that displayed his narrow waist to good effect.
He was to be found in a rather seedy office upstairs of a travel
agency in one of the lurid blocks between the Aerodrome and the
brothel-lined waterfront.
The banker didn’t say much after they shook hands, just
crossed his arms pensively and leaned back against the edge of his
desk. In this attitude he listened to Bud’s freshly composed
prevarication, nodding from time to time as though Bud had said
something significant. This was a little disconcerting since Bud
knew it was all horseshit, but he had heard that these dotheads
prided themselves on customer service.
At no particular point in the monologue, the banker cut Bud off
simply by looking up at him brightly. “You wish to secure a line of
credit,” he said, as if he were pleasantly surprised, which was not
terribly likely.
“I guess you could say that,” Bud allowed, wishing he’d known
to put it in such fine-sounding terminology.
The banker reached inside his jacket and withdrew a piece of
paper, folded in thirds, from his breast pocket. “You may wish to
peruse this brochure,” he said to Bud, and to the brochure itself he
rattled off something in an unfamiliar tongue. As Bud took it from
the banker’s hand, the blank page generated a nice animated color
logo and music. The logo developed into a peacock. Beneath it, a
video presentation commenced, hosted by a similar-looking gent-
sort of Indian looking but sort of Arab too. “‘The Parsis welcome
you to Peacock Bank,’” he said.
“What’s a Parsi?” Bud said to the banker, who merely lowered
his eyelids one click and jutted his goatee at the piece of paper,
which had picked up on his question and already branched into an
explanation. Bud ended up regretting having asked, because the
answer turned out to be a great deal of general hoo-ha about these
Parsis, who evidently wanted to make very sure no one mistook
them for dotheads or Pakis or Arabs-not that they had any problem
with those very fine ethnic groups, mind you. As hard as he tried not
to pay attention, Bud absorbed more than he wanted to know about
the Parsis, their oddball religion, their tendency to wander around,
even their fucking cuisine, which looked weird but made. his mouth
water anyway. Then the brochure got back to the business at hand,
which was lines of credit.
Bud had seen this all before. The Peacock Bank was running
the same racket as all the others: If they accepted you, they’d shoot
the credit card right into you, then and there, on the spot. These
guys implanted it in the iliac crest of the pelvis, some opted for the
mastoid bone in the skull-anywhere a big bone was close to the
surface. A bone mount was needed because the card had to talk on
the radio, which meant it needed an antenna long enough to hear
radio waves. Then you could go around and buy stuff just by asking
for it; Peacock Bank and the merchant you were buying from and
the card in your pelvis handled all the details.
Banks varied in their philosophy of interest rates, minimum
monthly payments, and so on. None of that mattered to Bud. What
mattered was what they would do to him if he got into arrears, and
so after he had allowed a decent interval to pass pretending to listen
very carefully to all this crap about interest rates, he inquired, in an
offhanded way, like it was an afterthought, about their collection
policy. The banker glanced out the window like he hadn’t noticed.
The soundtrack segued into some kind of a cool jazz number
and a scene of a multicultural crew of ladies and gentlemen, not
looking much like degraded credit abusers at all, sitting around a
table assembling chunky pieces of ethnic jewelry by hand. They
were having a good time too, sipping tea and exchanging lively
banter. Sipping too much tea, to Bud’s suspicious eye, so opaque to
so many things yet so keen to the tactics of media manipulation.
They were making rather a big deal out of the tea.
He noted with approval that they were wearing normal clothes,
not uniforms, and that men and women were allowed to mingle.
“Peacock Bank supports a global network of clean, safe, and
commodious workhouses, so if unforeseen circumstances should
befall you during our relationship, or if you should inadvertently
anticipate your means, you can rely on being housed close to home
while you and the bank resolve any difficulties. Inmates in Peacock
Bank workhouses enjoy private beds and in some cases private
rooms. Naturally your children can remain with you for the duration
of your visit. Working conditions are among the best in the industry,
and the high added-value content of our folk jewelry operation
means that, no matter the extent of your difficulties, your situation
will be happily resolved in practically no time.”
“What’s the, uh, strategy for making sure people actually, you
know, show up when they’re supposed to show up?” Bud said. At
this point the banker lost interest in the proceedings, straightened
up, strolled around his desk, and sat down, staring out the window
across the water toward Pudong and Shanghai. “That detail is not
covered in the brochure,” he said, “as most of our prospective
customers do not share your diligent attention to detail insofar as
that aspect of the arrangement is concerned.”
He exhaled through his nose, like a man eager not to smell
something, and adjusted his goatee one time. “The enforcement
regime consists of three phases. We have pleasant names for them,
of course, but you might think of them, respectively, as: one, a
polite reminder; two, well in excess of your pain threshold; three,
spectacularly fatal.”
Bud thought about showing this Parsi the meaning of fatal right
then and there, but as a bank, the guy probably had pretty good
security. Besides, it was pretty standard policy, and Bud was
actually kind of glad the guy’d given it to him straight. “Okay, well,
I’ll get back to you,” he said. “Mind if I keep the brochure?”
The Parsi waved him and the brochure away. Bud took to the
streets again in search of cash on easier terms.
A visit from royalty; the Hackworths take an airship
holiday; Princess Charlotte’s birthday party;
Hackworth encounters a member of the peerage.
Three geodesic seeds skated over the roofs and gardens of Atlantis!
Shanghai on a Friday afternoon, like the germs of some moon-size
calabash. A pair of mooring masts sprouted and grew from cricket
ovals at Source Victoria Park. The smallest of the airships was
decorated with the royal ensign; she kept station overhead as the
two large ones settled toward their berths. Their envelopes, filled
with nothing, were predominantly transparent. Instead of blocking
the sunlight, they yellowed and puckered it, projecting vast abstract
patterns of brighter and not-as-bright that the children in their best
crinolines and natty short-pants suits tried to catch in their arms. A
brass band played. A tiny figure in a white dress stood at the rail of
the airship Atlantis, waving at the children below. They all knew
that this must be the birthday girl herself, Princess Charlotte, and
they cheered and waved back.
Fiona Hackworth had been wandering through the Royal
Ecological Conservatory bracketed by her parents, who hoped that
in this way they could keep mud and vegetable debris off her skirts.
The strategy had not been completely successful, but with a quick
brush, John and Gwendolyn were able to transfer most of the dirt
onto their white gloves. From there it went straight into the air.
Most gentlemen’s and ladies’ gloves nowadays were constructed of
infinitesimal fabricules that knew how to eject dirt; you could thrust
your gloved hand into mud, and it would be white a few seconds
later.
The hierarchy of staterooms on Æther matched the status of its
passengers perfectly, as these parts of the ship could be decompiled
and remade between voyages. For Lord Finkle-McGraw, his three
children and their spouses, and Elizabeth (his first and only
grandchild so far), the airship lowered a private escalator that
carried them up into the suite at the very prow, with its nearly 180-
degree forward view.
Aft of the Finkle-McGraws were a dozen or so other Equity
Lords, merely earl- or baron-level, mostly ushering grandchildren
rather than children into the class B suites. Then it was executives,
whose gold watch chains, adangle with tiny email-boxes, phones,
torches, snuffboxes, and other fetishes, curved round the dark
waistcoats they wore to deemphasize their bellies. Most of their
children had reached the age when they were no longer naturally
endearing to anyone save their own parents; the size when their
energy was more a menace than a wonder; and the level of
intelligence when what would have been called innocence in a
smaller child was infuriating rudeness. A honeybee cruising for
nectar is pretty despite its implicit threat, but the same behavior in a
hornet three times larger makes one glance about for some handy
swatting material. So on the broad escalators leading to the firstclass
staterooms, one could see many upper arms being violently
grabbed by hissing fathers with their top hats askew and teeth
clenched and eyes swiveling for witnesses.
John Percival Hackworth was an engineer. Most engineers
were assigned to tiny rooms with fold-down beds, but Hackworth
bore the loftier title of Artifex and had been a team leader on this
very project, so he rated a second-class stateroom with one double
bed and a fold-out for Fiona. The porter brought their overnight
bags around just as zfther was clearing her mooring mast-a
twenty-meter diamondoid truss that had already dissolved back into
the billiard-table surface of the oval by the time the ship had turned
itself to the south. Lying as close as it did to Source Victoria, the
park was riddled with catachthonic Feed lines, and anything could
be grown there on short notice.
The Hackworths’ stateroom was to starboard, and so as they
accelerated away from New Chusan, they got to watch the sun set
on Shanghai, shining redly through the city’s eternal cloak of coalsmoke.
Gwendolyn read Fiona stories in bed for an hour while John
perused the evening edition of the Times, then spread out some
papers on the room’s tiny desk. Later, they both changed into their
evening clothes, primping quietly in twilight so as not to wake
Fiona. At nine o’clock they stepped into the passageway, locked the
door, and followed the sound of the big band to Æther’s grand
ballroom, where the dancing was just getting underway. The floor
of the ballroom was a slab of transpicuous diamond. The lights were
low. They seemed to float above the glittering moonlit surface of
the Pacific as they did the waltz, minuet, Lindy, and electric slide
into the night.
. . .
Sunrise found the three airships hovering over the South China Sea,
no land visible. The ocean was relatively shallow here, but only
Hackworth and a few other engineers knew that. The Hackworths
had a passable view from their stateroom window, but John woke
up early and staked out a place on the diamond floor of the
ballroom, ordered an espresso and a Times from a waiter, and
passed the time pleasantly while Gwen and Fiona got themselves
ready for the day. All around them he could hear children
speculating on what was about to happen.
Gwen and Fiona arrived just late enough to make it interesting
for John, who took his mechanical pocket watch out at least a dozen
times as he waited, and finally ended up clutching it in one hand,
nervously popping the lid open and shut. Gwen folded her long legs
and spread her skirts out prettily on the transparent floor, drawing
vituperative looks from several women who remained standing. But
John was relieved to see that most of these women were relatively
low-ranking engineers or their wives; none of the higher-ups needed
to come to the ballroom.
Fiona collapsed to her hands and knees and practically shoved
her face against the diamond, her fundament aloft. Hackworth
gripped the creases of his trousers, hitched them up just a bit, and
sank to one knee.
The smart coral burst out of the depths with violence that
shocked Hackworth, even though he’d been in on the design, seen
the trial runs. Viewed through the dark surface of the Pacific, it was
like watching an explosion through a pane of shattered glass. It
reminded him of pouring a jet of heavy cream into coffee, watching
it rebound from the bottom of the cup in a turbulent fractal bloom
that solidified just as it dashed against the surface. The speed of this
process was a carefully planned sleight-of-hand; the smart coral had
actually been growing down on the bottom of the ocean for the last
three months, drawing its energy from a supercon that they’d grown
across the seafloor for the occasion, extracting the necessary atoms
directly from the seawater and the gases dissolved therein. The
process happening below looked chaotic, and in a way it was; but
each lithocule knew exactly where it was supposed to go and what it
was supposed to do. They were tetrahedral building blocks of
calcium and carbon, the size of poppyseeds, each equipped with a
power source, a brain, and a navigational system. They rose from
the bottom of the sea at a signal given by Princess Charlotte; she
had awakened to find a small present under her pillow, unwrapped it
to find a golden whistle on a chain, stood out on her balcony, and
blown the whistle.
The coral was converging on the site of the island from all
directions, some of the lithocules traveling several kilometers to
reach their assigned positions. They displaced a volume of water
equal to the island itself, several cubic kilometers in all. The result
was furious turbulence, an upswelling in the surface of the ocean
that made some of the children scream, thinking it might rise up and
snatch the airship out of the sky; and indeed a few drops pelted the
ship’s diamond belly, prompting the pilot to give her a little more
altitude. The curt maneuver forced hearty laughter from all of the
fathers in the ballroom, who were delighted by the illusion of
danger and the impotence of Nature.
The foam and mist cleared away at some length to reveal a new
island, salmon-colored in the light of dawn. Applause and cheers
diminished to a professional murmur. The chattering of the
astonished children was too loud and high to hear.
It would be a couple of hours yet. Hackworth snapped his
fingers for a waiter and ordered fresh fruit, juice, Belgian waffles,
more coffee. They might as well enjoy Æther’s famous cuisine
while the island sprouted castles, fauns, centaurs, and enchanted
forests.
Princess Charlotte was the first human to set foot on the
enchanted isle, tripping down the gangway of Atlantis with a couple
of her little friends in tow, all of them looking like tiny wildflowers
in their ribboned sun-bonnets, all carrying little baskets for
souvenirs, though before long these were handed over to
governesses. The Princess faced Æther and Chinook, moored a
couple of hundred meters away, and spoke to them in a normal tone
of voice that was, however, heard clearly by all; a nanophone was
hidden somewhere in the lace collar of her pinafore, tied into
phased-audio-array systems grown into the top layers of the island
itself.
“I would like to express my gratitude to Lord Finkle-McGraw
and all the employees of Machine-Phase Systems Limited for this
most wonderful birthday present. Now, children of
Atlantis/Shanghai, won’t you please join me at my birthday party?”
The children of Atlantis/Shanghai all screamed yes and
rampaged down the multifarious gangways of Æther and Chinook,
which had all been splayed out for the occasion in hopes of
preventing bottlenecks, which might lead to injury or, heaven
forbid, rudeness. For the first few moments the children simply
burst away from the airships like gas escaping from a bottle. Then
they began to converge on sources of wonderment: a centaur, eight
feet high if he was an inch, walking across a meadow with his son
and daughter cantering around him: Some baby dinosaurs. A cave
angling gently into a hillside, bearing promising signs of
enchantment. A road winding up another hill toward a ruined castle.
The grownups mostly remained aboard the airships and gave
the children a few minutes to flame out, though Lord Finkle-
McGraw could be seen making his way toward Atlantis, poking
curiously at the earth with his walking-stick, just to make sure it was
fit to be trod by royal feet.
A man and a woman descended the gangway of Atlantis: in a
floral dress that explored the labile frontier between modesty and
summer comfort, accessorized with a matching parasol, Queen
Victoria II of Atlantis. In a natty beige linen suit, her husband, the
Prince Consort, whose name, lamentably, was Joe. Joe, or Joseph as
he was called in official circumstances, stepped down first, moving
in a somewhat pompous one-small-step-for-man gait, then turned to
face Her Majesty and offered his hand, which she accepted
graciously but perfunctorily, as if to remind everyone that she’d
done crew at Oxford and had blown off tension during her studies at
Stanford B-School with lap-swimming, rollerbiading, and jeet kune
do. Lord Finkle-McGraw bowed as the royal espadrilles touched
down. She extended her hand, and he kissed it, which was racy but
allowed if you were old and stylish, like Alexander ChungSik
Finkle-McGraw.
“We thank Lord Finkle-McGraw, Imperial Tectonics Limited,
and Machine-Phase Systems Limited once again for this lovely
occasion. Now let us all enjoy these magnificent surroundings
before, like the first Atlantis, they sink forever beneath the waves.”
The parents of Atlantis/Shanghai strolled down the gangways,
though many had retreated to their staterooms to change clothes
upon catching sight of what the Queen and Prince Consort were
wearing. The big news, already being uploaded to the Times by
telescope-wielding fashion columnists on board Æther was that the
parasol was back.
Gwendolyn Hackworth hadn’t packed a parasol, but she was
untroubled; she’d always had a kind of natural, unconscious
alamodality. She and John strolled down onto the island. By the
time Hackworth’s eyes had adjusted to the sunlight, he was already
squatting and rubbing a pinch of soil between his fingertips. Gwen
left him to obsess and joined a group of other women, mostly
engineers’ wives, and even a baronet-level Equity Participant or
two.
Hackworth found a concealed path that wound through trees up
a hillside to a little grove around a cool, clear pond of fresh water-
he tasted it just to be sure. He stood there for a while, looking out
over the enchanted island, wondering what Fiona was up to right
now. This led to daydreaming: perhaps she had, by some miracle,
encountered Princess Charlotte, made friends with her, and was
exploring some wonder with her right now. This led him into a long
reverie that was interrupted when he realized that someone was
quoting poetry to him.
“Where had we been, we two, beloved Friend!
If in the season of unperilous choice,
In lieu of wandering, as we did, through vales
Rich with indigenous produce, open ground
Of Fancy, happy pastures ranged at will,
We had been followed, hourly watched, and noosed,
Each in his several melancholy walk
Stringed like a poor man’s heifer at its feed,
Led through the lanes in forlorn servitude.”
Hackworth turned to see that an older man was sharing his view.
Genetically Asian, with a somewhat rwangy North American
accent, the man looked at least seventy. His translucent skin was
still stretched tight over broad cheekbones, but the eyelids, ears, and
the hollows of his cheeks were weathered and wrinkled. Under his
pith helmet no fringe of hair showed; the man was completely bald.
Hackworth gathered these clues slowly, until at last he realized who
stood before him.
“Sounds like Wordsworth,” Hackworth said.
The man had been staring out over the meadows below. He
cocked his head and looked directly at Hackworth for the first time.
“The poem?”
“Judging by content, I’d guess The Prelude.”
“Nicely done,” the man said.
“John Percival Hackworth at your service.” Hackworth stepped
toward the other and handed him a card.
“Pleasure,” the man said. He did not waste breath introducing
himself.
Lord Alexander Chung-Sik Finkle-McGraw was one of several
duke-level Equity Lords who had come out of Apthorp. Apthorp
was not a formal organization that could be looked up in a phone
book; in financial cant, it referred to a strategic alliance of several
immense companies, including Machine-Phase Systems Limited
and Imperial Tectonics Limited. When no one important was
listening, its employees called it John Zaibatsu, much as their
forebears of a previous century had referred to the East India
Company as John Company.
MPS made consumer goods and ITL made real estate, which
was, as ever, where the real money was. Counted by the hectare, it
didn’t amount to much-just a few strategically placed islands
really, counties rather than continents-but it was the most
expensive real estate in the world outside of a few blessed places
like Tokyo, San Francisco, and Manhattan. The reason was that
Imperial Tectonics had geotects, and geotects could make sure that
every new piece of land possessed the charms of Frisco, the
strategic location of Manhattan, the feng-shui of Hong Kong, the
dreary but obligatory Lebensraum of L.A. It was no longer
necessary to send out dirty yokels in coonskin caps to chart the
wilderness, kill the abos, and clear-cut the groves; now all you
needed was a hot young geotect, a start matter compiler, and a
jumbo Source.
Like most other neo-Victorians, Hackworth could recite
Finkle-McGraw’s biography from memory. The future Duke had
been born in Korea and adopted, at the age of six months, by a
couple who’d met during grad school in Iowa City and later started
an organic farm near the Iowa/South Dakota border.
During his early teens, a passenger jet made an improbable
crashlanding at the Sioux City airport, and Finkle-McGraw, along
with several other members of his Boy Scout troop who had been
hastily mobilized by their scoutmaster, was standing by the runway
along with every ambulance, fireman, doctor, and nurse from a
radius of several counties. The uncanny efficiency with which the
locals responded to the crash was widely publicized and became the
subject of a made-for-TV movie. Finkle-McGraw couldn’t
understand why. They had simply done what was reasonable and
humane under the circumstances; why did people from other parts
of the country find this so difficult to understand?
This tenuous grasp of American culture might have been owing
to the fact that his parents home-schooled him up to the age of
fourteen. A typical school day for Finkle-McGraw consisted of
walking down to a river to study tadpoles or going to the public
library to check out a book on ancient Greece or Rome. The family
had little spare money, and vacations consisted of driving to the
Rockies for some backpacking, or up to northern Minnesota for
canoeing. He probably learned more on his summer vacations than
most of his peers did during their school years. Social contact with
other children happened mostly through Boy Scouts or church-the
Finkle-McGraws belonged to a Methodist church, a Roman Catholic
church, and a tiny synagogue that met in a rented room in Sioux
City.
His parents enrolled him in a public high school, where he
maintained a steady 2.0 average out of a possible 4. The coursework
was so stunningly inane, the other children so dull, that Finkle-
McGraw developed a poor attitude. He earned some repute as a
wrestler and cross-country runner, but never exploited it for sexual
favors, which would have been easy enough in the promiscuous
climate of the times. He had some measure of the infuriating trait
that causes a young man to be a nonconformist for its own sake and
found that the surest way to shock most people, in those days, was
to believe that some kinds of behavior were bad and others good,
and that it was reasonable to live one’s life accordingly.
After graduating from high school, he spent a year running
certain parts of his parents’ agricultural business and then attended
Iowa State University of Science and Technology (“Science with
Practice”) in Ames. He enrolled as an agricultural engineering major
and switched to physics after his first quarter. While remaining a
nominal physics major for the next three years, he took classes in
whatever he wanted: information science, metallurgy, early music.
He never earned a degree, not because of poor performance but
because of the political climate; like many universities at the time,
ISU insisted that its students study a broad range of subjects,
including arts and humanities. Finkle-McGraw chose instead to read
books, listen to music, and attend plays in his spare time.
One summer, as he was living in Ames and working as a
research assistant in a solid-state physics lab, the city was actually
turned into an island for a couple of days by an immense flood.
Along with many other Midwesterners, Finkle-McGraw put in a few
weeks building levees out of sandbags and plastic sheeting. Once
again he was struck by the national media coverage-reporters from
the coasts kept showing up and announcing, with some
bewilderment, that there had been no looting. The lesson learned
during the Sioux City plane crash was reinforced. The Los Angeles
riots of the previous year provided a vivid counterexample. Finkle-
McGraw began to develop an opinion that was to shape his political
views in later years, namely, that while people were not genetically
different, they were culturally as different as they could possibly be,
and that some cultures were simply better than others. This was not
a subjective value judgment, merely an observation that some
cultures thrived and expanded while others failed. It was a view
implicitly shared by nearly everyone but, in those days, never
voiced.
Finkle-McGraw left the university without a diploma and went
back to the farm, which he managed for a few years while his
parents were preoccupied with his mother’s breast cancer. After her
death, he moved to Minneapolis and took a job with a company
founded by one of his former professors, making scanning tunneling
microscopes, which at that time were newish devices capable of
seeing and manipulating individual atoms. The field was an obscure
one then, the clients tended to be large research institutions, and
practical applications seemed far away. But it was perfect for a man
who wanted to study nanotechnology, and McGraw began doing so,
working late at night on his own time. Given his diligence, his selfconfidence,
his intelligence (“adaptable, relentless, but not really
brilliant”), and the basic grasp of business he’d picked up on the
farm, it was inevitable that he would become one of the few
hundred pioneers of nanotechnological revolution; that his own
company, which he founded five years after he moved to
Minneapolis, would survive long enough to be absorbed into
Apthorp; and that he would navigate Apthorp’s political and
economic currents well enough to develop a decent equity position.
He still owned the family farm in northwestern Iowa, along
with a few hundred thousand acres of adjoining land, which he was
turning back into a tall-grass prairie, complete with herds of bison
and real Indians who had discovered that riding around on horses
hunting wild game was a better deal than pissing yourself in gutters
in Minneapolis or Seattle. But for the most part he stayed on New
Chusan, which was for all practical purposes his ducal estate.
. . .
“Public relations?” said Finkle-McGraw.
“Sir?” Modern etiquette was streamlined; no “Your Grace” or
other honorifics were necessary in such an informal setting.
“Your department, sir.”
Hackworth had given him his social card, which was
appropriate under these circumstances but revealed nothing else.
“Engineering. Bespoke.”
“Oh, really. I’d thought anyone who could recognise
Wordsworth must be one of those artsy sorts in P.R.”
“Not in this case, sir. I’m an engineer. Just promoted to
Bespoke recently. Did some work on this project, as it happens.”
“What sort of work?”
“Oh, P.I. stuff mostly,” Hackworth said. Supposedly Finkle-
McGraw still kept up with things and would recognize the
abbreviation for pseudo-intelligence, and perhaps even appreciate
that Hackworth had made this assumption.
Finkle-McGraw brightened a bit. “You know, when I was a lad
they called it A.I. Artificial intelligence.”
Hackworth allowed himself a tight, narrow, and brief smile.
“Well, there’s something to be said for cheekiness, I suppose.”
“In what way was pseudo-intelligence used here?”
“Strictly on MPS’s side of the project, sir.” Imperial Tectonics
had done the island, buildings, and vegetation. Machine-Phase
Systems-Hackworth’s employer-did anything that moved.
“Stereotyped behaviors were fine for the birds, dinosaurs, and so on,
but for the centaurs and fauns we wanted more interactivity,
something that would provide an illusion of sentience.”
“Yes, well done, well done, Mr. Hackworth.”
“Thank you, sir.”
“Now, I know perfectly well that only the very finest engineers
make it to Bespoke. Suppose you tell me how an aficionado of
Romantic poets made it into such a position.”
Hackworth was taken aback by this and tried to respond
without seeming to put on airs. “Surely a man in your position does
not see any contradiction-”
“But a man in my position was not responsible for promoting
you to Bespoke. A man in an entirely different position was. And I
am very much afraid that such men do tend to see a contradiction.”
“Yes, I see. Well, sir, I studied English literature in college.”
“Ah! So you are not one of those who followed the straight and
narrow path to engineering.”
“I suppose not, sir.”
“And your colleagues at Bespoke?”
“Well, if I understand your question, sir, I would say that, as
compared with other departments, a relatively large proportion of
Bespoke engineers have had-well, for lack of a better way of
describing it, interesting lives.”
“And what makes one man’s life more interesting than
another’s?”
“In general, I should say that we find unpredictable or novel
things more interesting.”
“That is nearly a tautology.” But while Lord Finkle-McGraw
was not the sort to express feelings promiscuously, he gave the
appearance of being nearly satisfied with the way the conversation
was going. He turned back toward the view again and watched the
children for a minute or so, twisting the point of his walking-stick
into the ground as if he were still skeptical of the island’s integrity.
Then he swept the stick around in an arc that encompassed half the
island. “How many of those children do you suppose are destined to
lead interesting lives?”
“Well, at least two, sir-Princess Charlotte, and your
granddaughter.”
“You’re quick, Hackworth, and I suspect capable of being
devious if not for your staunch moral character,” Finkle-McGraw
said, not without a certain archness. “Tell me, were your parents
subjects, or did you take the Oath?”
“As soon as I turned twenty-one, sir. Her Majesty-at that
time, actually, she was still Her Royal Highness-was touring North
America, prior to her enrollment at Stanford, and I took the Oath at
Trinity Church in Boston.”
“Why? You’re a clever fellow, not blind to culture like so
many engineers. You could have joined the First Distributed
Republic or any of a hundred synthetic phyles on the West Coast.
You would have had decent prospects and been free from all this”-
Finkle-McGraw jabbed his cane at the two big airships-
”behavioural discipline that we impose upon ourselves. Why did
you impose it on yourself, Mr. Hackworth?”
“Without straying into matters that are strictly personal in
nature,” Hackworth said carefully, “I knew two kinds of discipline
as a child:
none at all, and too much. The former leads to degenerate
behaviour. When I speak of degeneracy, I am not being priggish,
sir-I am alluding to things well known to me, as they made my
own childhood less than idyllic.”
Finkle-McGraw, perhaps realizing that he had stepped out of
bounds, nodded vigorously. “This is a familiar argument, of
course.”
“Of course, sir. I would not presume to imply that I was the
only young person ill-used by what became of my native culture.”
“And I do not see such an implication. But many who feel as
you do found their way into phyles wherein a much harsher regime
prevails and which view us as degenerates.”
“My life was not without periods of excessive, unreasoning
discipline, usually imposed capriciously by those responsible for
laxity in the first place. That combined with my historical studies
led me, as many others, to the conclusion that there was little in the
previous century worthy of emulation, and that we must look to the
nineteenth century instead for stable social models.”
“Well done, Hackworth! But you must know that the model to
which you allude did not long survive the first Victoria.”
“We have outgrown much of the ignorance and resolved many
of the internal contradictions that characterised that era.”
“Have we, then? How reassuring. And have we resolved them
in a way that will ensure that all of those children down there live
interesting lives?”
“I must confess that I am too slow to follow you.”
“You yourself said that the engineers in the Bespoke
department-the very best-had led interesting lives, rather than
coming from the straight and narrow. Which implies a correlation,
does it not?”
“Clearly.”
“This implies, does it not, that in order to raise a generation of
children who can reach their full potential, we must find a way to
make their lives interesting. And the question I have for you, Mr.
Hackworth, is this:
Do you think that our schools accomplish that? Or are they like the
schools that Wordsworth complained of?”
“My daughter is too young to attend school-but I should fear
that the latter situation prevails.”
“I assure you that it does, Mr. Hackworth. My three children
were raised in those schools, and I know them well. I am
determined that Elizabeth shall be raised differently.”
Hackworth felt his face flushing. “Sir, may I remind you that
we have just met-I do not feel worthy of the confidences you are
reposing in me.
“I’m telling you these things not as a friend, Mr. Hackworth,
but as a professional.”
“Then I must remind you that I am an engineer, not a child
psychologist.
“This I have not forgotten, Mr. Hackworth. You are indeed an
engineer, and a very fine one, in a company that I still think of as
mine-though as an Equity Lord, I no longer have a formal
connection. And now that you have brought your part of this project
to a successful conclusion, I intend to put you in charge of a new
project for which I have reason to believe you are perfectly suited.”
Bud embarks on a life of crime; an insult to a
tribe & its consequences.
Bud rolled his first victim almost by accident. He’d taken a wrong
turn into a cul-de-sac and inadvertently trapped a black man and
woman and a couple of little kids who’d blundered in there before
him. They had a scared look about them, like a lot of the new
arrivals did, and Bud noticed the way the man’s gaze lingered on his
Sights, wondering whether those crosshairs, invisible to him, were
centered on him, his lady, or his kid.
Bud didn’t get out of their way. He was packing, they weren’t,
it was up to them to get out of his way. But instead they just froze
up. “You got a problem?” Bud said.
“What do you want?” the man said.
It had been a while since anyone had manifested such sincere
concern for Bud’s desires, and he kind of liked it. He realized that
these people were under the impression that they were being
mugged. “Oh, same as anyone else. Money and shit,” Bud said, and
just like that, the man took some hard ucus out of his pocket and
handed them over-and then actually thanked him as he backed
away.
Bud enjoyed getting that kind of respect from black people-it
reminded him of his noble heritage in the trailer parks of North
Florida-and he didn’t mind the money either. After that day he
began looking for black people with that same scared uncertain look
about them. These people bought and sold off the record, and so
they carried hard money. He did pretty well for himself for a couple
of months. Every so often he would stop by the flat where his bitch
Tequila lived, give her some lingerie, and maybe give Harv some
chocolate.
Harv was presumed by both Bud and Tequila to be Bud’s son.
He was five, which meant that he had been conceived in a much
earlier cycle of Bud and Tequila’s break-up-and-make-up
relationship. Now the bitch was pregnant again, which meant that
Bud would have to bring even more gifts to her place when he came
around. The pressures of fatherhood!
One day Bud targeted a particularly well-dressed family
because of their fancy clothes. The man was wearing a business suit
and the woman a nice clean dress, and they were carrying a baby all
dressed up in a white lacy thing, and they had hired a porter to help
them haul their luggage away from the Aerodrome. The porter was a
white guy who vaguely reminded Bud of himself, and he was
incensed to see him acting as a pack animal for blacks. So as soon
as these people got away from the bustle of the Aerodrome and into
a more secluded neighborhood, Bud approached them, swaggering
in the way he’d practiced in the mirror, occasionally pushing his
Sights up on his nose with one index finger.
The guy in the suit was different from most of them. He didn’t
try to act like he hadn’t seen Bud, didn’t try to skulk away, didn’t
cringe or slouch, just stood his ground, feet planted squarely, and
very pleasantly said, “Yes, sir, can I be of assistance?” He didn’t talk
like an American black, had almost a British accent, but crisper.
Now that Bud had come closer, he saw that the man had a strip of
colored cloth thrown around his neck and over his lapels, dangling
down like a scarf. He looked well-housed and well-fed for the most
part, except for a little scar high up on one cheekbone.
Bud kept walking until he was a little too close to the guy. He
kept his head tilted back until the last minute, like he was kicking
back listening to some loud tunes (which he was), and then
suddenly snapped his head forward so he was staring the guy right
in the face. It was another way to emphasize the fact that he was
packing, and it usually did the trick. But this guy did not respond
with the little flinch that Bud had come to expect and enjoy. Maybe
he was from some booga-booga country where they didn’t know
about skull guns.
“Sir,” the man said, “my family and I are on the way to our
hotel. We have had a long journey, and we are tired; my daughter
has an ear infection. If you would state your business as
expeditiously as possible, I would be obliged.”
“You talk like a fucking Vicky,” Bud said.
“Sir, I am not what you refer to as a Vicky, or I should have
gone directly there. I would be obliged if you could be so kind as to
moderate your language in the presence of my wife and child.”
It took Bud a while to untangle this sentence, and a while
longer to believe that the man really cared about a few dirty words
spoken within earshot of his family, and longer yet to believe that he
had been so insolent to Bud, a heavily muscled guy who was
obviously packing a skull gun.
“I’m gonna fucking say whatever I fucking want to your bitch
and your flicking brat,” Bud said, very loud. Then he could not keep
himself from grinning. Score a few points for Bud!
The man looked impatient rather than scared and heaved a deep
sigh. “Is this an armed robbery or something? Are you sure you
know what you are getting into?”
Bud answered by whispering “hut” under his breath and firing
a Crippler into the man’s right bicep. It went off deep in the muscle,
like an M-80, blowing a dark hole in the sleeve of the man’s jacket
and leaving his arm stretched out nice and straight-the trike now
pulling without anything to oppose it. The man clenched his teeth,
his eyes bulged, and for a few moments he made strangled grunting
noises from way down in his chest, making an effort not to cry out.
Bud stared at the wound in fascination. It was just like shooting
people in a ractive.
Except that the bitch didn’t scream and beg for mercy. She just
turned her back, using her body to shield the baby, and looked over
her shoulder, calmly, at Bud. Bud noticed she had a little scar on her
cheek too.
“Next I take your eye,” Bud said, “then I go to work on the
bitch.”
The man held up his good hand palm out, indicating surrender.
He emptied his pocket of hard Universal Currency Units and handed
them over. And then Bud made himself scarce, because the
monitors-almond-size aerostats with eyes, ears, and radios-had
probably picked up the sound of the explosion and begun
converging on the area. He saw one hiss by him as he rounded the
corner, trailing a short whip antenna that caught the light like a
hairline crack in the atmosphere.
Three days later, Bud was hanging around the Aerodrome,
looking for easy pickings, when a big ship came in from Singapore.
Immersed in a stream of thousand arrivals was a tight group of some
two dozen solidly built, very dark-skinned black men dressed in
business suits, with Strips of colored cloth draped around their
necks and little scars on their cheekbone.
It was later that night that Bud, for the first time in his life,
heard the word Ashanti. “Another twenty-five Ashanti just came in
from L.A.!” said a man in a bar. “The Ashanti had a big meeting in
the conference room at the Sheraton!” said a woman on the street.
Waiting in a queue for one of the free matter compilers, a bum said,
“One of them Ashanti gave me five yuks. They’re fine folks.”
When Bud ran into a guy he knew, a former comrade in the
decoy trade, he said, “Hey, the place is crawling with them Ashanti,
ain’t it?”
“Yup,” said the guy, who had seemed unaccountably shocked
to see Bud’s face on the Street, and who was annoyingly distracted
all of a sudden, swiveling his head to look all ways.
“They must be having a convention or something,” Bud
theorized. “I rolled one of ’em the other night.”
“Yeah, I know,” his friend said.
“Huh? How’d you know that?”
“They ain’t having a convention, Bud. All of those Ashanti-
except the first one-came to town hunting for you.”
Paralysis struck Bud’s vocal cords, and he felt lightheaded,
unable to concentrate.
“I gotta go,” his friend said, and removed himself from Bud’s
vicinity.
For the next few hours Bud felt as though everyone on the
street was looking at him. Bud was certainly looking at them,
looking for those suits, those colored strips of cloth. But he caught
sight of a man in shorts and a T-shirt-a black man with very high
cheeks, one of which was marked with a tiny scar, and almost
Asian-looking eyes in a very high state of alertness. So he couldn’t
rely on the Ashanti wearing stereotyped clothing.
Very soon after that, Bud swapped clothes with an indigent
down on the beach, giving up all his black leather and coming away
with a T-shirt and shorts of his own. The T-shirt was much too
small; it bound him under the armpits and pressed against his
muscles so that he felt the eternal twitching even more than usual.
He wished he could turn the stimulators off now, relax his muscles
even for one night, but that would require a trip to the mod parlor,
and he had to figure that the Ashanti had the mod parlors all staked
out.
He could have gone to any of several brothels, but he didn’t
know what kind of connections these Ashanti might have-or even
what the hell an Ashanti was, exactly-and he wasn’t sure he could
get a boner under these circumstances anyway.
As he wandered the streets of the Leased Territories, primed to
level his Sights at any black person who blundered into his path, he
reflected on the unfairness of his fate. How was he to know that guy
belonged to a tribe?
Actually, he should have known, just from the fact that he wore
nice clothes and didn’t look like all the other people. The very
apartness of those people should have been a dead giveaway. And
his lack of fear should have told him something. Like he couldn’t
believe anyone would be stupid enough to mug him.
Well, Bud had been that stupid, and Bud didn’t have a phyle of
his own, so Bud was screwed. Bud would have to go get himself
one real quick, now.
He’d already tried to join the Boers a few years back. The
Boers were to Bud’s kind of white trash what these Ashanti were to
most of the blacks. Stocky blonds in suits or the most conservative
sorts of dresses, usually with half a dozen kids in tow, and my god
did they ever stick together. Bud had paid a few visits to the local
laager, studied some of their training ractives on his home
mediatron, put in some extra hours at the gym trying to meet their
physical standards, even gone to a couple of horrific bible-study
sessions. But in the end, Bud and the Boers weren’t much of a
match. The amount of church you had to attend was staggering-it
was like living in church. And he’d studied their history, but there
were only so many Boer/Zulu skirmishes he could stand to read
about or keep straight in his head. So that was out; he wasn’t getting
into any laager tonight.
The Vickys wouldn’t take him in a million years, of course.
Almost all the other tribes were racially oriented, like those Parsis
or whatever. The Jews wouldn’t take him unless he cut a piece of his
dick off and learned to read a whole nother language, which was a
bit of a tall order since he hadn’t gotten round to learning how to
read English yet. There were a bunch of cœnobitical phyles-
religious tribes-that took people of all races, but most of them
weren’t very powerful and didn’t have turf in the Leased Territories.
The Mormons had turf and were very powerful, but he wasn’t sure if
they’d take him as quickly and readily as he needed to be taken.
Then there were the tribes that people just made up out of thin air-
the synthetic phyles-but most of them were based on some shared
skill or weird idea or ritual that he wouldn’t be able to pick up in
half an hour.
Finally, sometime around midnight, he wandered past a man in
a funny gray jacket and cap with a red star on it, trying to give away
little red books, and it hit him: Sendero. Most Senderistas were
either Incan or Korean, but they’d take anyone. They had a nice
clave here in the Leased Territories, a clave with good security, and
every one of them, down to the last man or woman, was batshit.
They’d be more than a match for a few dozen Ashantis. And you
could join anytime just by walking in the gates. They would take
anyone, no questions asked.
He’d heard it was not such a good thing to be a Communist, but
under the circumstances he figured he could hold his nose and quote
from the little red book as necessary. As soon as those Ashantis left
town, he’d bolt.
Once he made up his mind, he couldn’t wait to get there. He
had to restrain himself from breaking into a jog, which would be
sure to draw the attention of any Ashantis on the street. He couldn’t
bear the idea of being so close to safety and then blowing it.
He rounded a corner and saw the wall of the Sendero Clave
four stories high and two blocks long, one solid giant mediatron
with a tiny gate in the middle. Mao was on one end, waving to an
unseen multitude, backed up by his horsetoothed wife and his
beetle-browed sidekick Lin Biao, and Chairman Gonzalo was on the
other, teaching some small children, and in the middle was a slogan
in ten-meter-high letters: STRIVE TO UPHOLD THE
PRINCIPLES OF MAO-GONZALO-THOUGHT!
The gate was guarded, as always, by a couple of twelve-yearold
kids in red neckerchiefs and armbands, ancient bolt-action rifles
with real bayonets leaning against their collarbones. A blond white
girl and a pudgy Asian boy. Bud and his son Harv had whiled away
many an idle hour trying to get these kids to laugh: making silly
faces, mooning them, telling jokes. Nothing ever worked. But he’d
seen the ritual: They’d bar his path with crossed rifles and not let
him in until he swore his undying allegiance to Mao-Gonzalothought,
and then-
A horse, or something built around the same general plan, was
coming down the street at a hand-gallop. Its hooves did not make
the pocking noise of iron horseshoes. Bud realized it was a
chevaline-a four-legged robot thingy.
The man on the chev was an African in very colorful clothing.
Bud recognized the patterns on that cloth and knew without
bothering to check for the scar that the guy was Ashanti. As soon as
he caught Bud’s eye, he kicked it up another gear, to a tantivy. He
was going to cut Bud off before he could reach Sendero. And he
was too far away, yet, to be reached by the skull gun, whose
infinitesimal bullets had a disappointingly short range.
He heard a soft noise behind him and swiveled his head
around, and something whacked him on the forehead and stuck
there. A couple more Ashantis had snuck up on him barefoot.
“Sir,” one of them said, “I would not recommend operation of
your weapon, unless you want the round to detonate in your own
forehead. Hey?” and he smiled broadly, enormous perfectly white
teeth, and touched his own forehead. Bud reached up and felt
something hard glued to the skin of his brow, right over the skull
gun.
The chev dropped to a trot and cut toward him. Suddenly
Ashantis were everywhere. He wondered how long they’d been
tracking him. They all had beautiful smiles. They all carried small
devices in their hands, which they aimed at the pavement, trigger
fingers laid alongside the barrels until the guy on the chev told them
otherwise. Then, suddenly, they all seemed to be aimed in his
direction.
The projectiles stuck to his skin and clothing and burst
sideways, flinging out yards and yards of weightless filmy stuff that
stuck to itself and shrank. One struck him in the back of the head,
and a swath of the stuff whipped around his face and encased it. It
was about as thick as a soap bubble, and so he could see through it
pretty well-it had peeled one of his eyelids back so he couldn’t
help but see-and everything now had that gorgeous rainbow tinge
characteristic of soap bubbles. The entire shrink-wrapping process
consumed maybe half a second, and then Bud, mummified in
plastic, toppled over face-forward. One of the Ashantis was good
enough to catch him. They laid him down on the Street and rolled
him over on his back. Someone poked the blade of a pocketknife
through the film over Bud’s mouth so that he could breathe again.
Several Ashantis set about the chore of bonding handles to the
shrinkwrap, two up near the shoulders and two down by the ankles,
as the man on the chev dismounted and knelt over him.
This equestrian had several prominent scars on his cheeks.
“Sir,” the man said, smiling, “I accuse you of violating certain
provisions of the Common Economic Protocol, which I will detail at
a more convenient time, and I hereby place you under personal
arrest. Please be aware that anyone who has been so arrested is
subject to deadly force in the event he tries to resist-which-ha!
ha!-does not seem likely at present-but it is a part of the
procedure that I am to say this. As this territory belongs to a nationstate
that recognizes the Common Economic Protocol, you are
entitled to a hearing of any such charges within the judicial
framework of the nation-state in question, which in this case
happens to be the Chinese Coastal Republic. This nation-state may
or may not grant you additional rights; we will find out in a very
few moments, when we present the situation to one of the relevant
authorities. Ah, I believe I see one now.”
A constable from the Shanghai Police, legs strapped into a
pedomotive, was coming down the street with the tremendous
loping strides afforded by such devices, escorted by a couple of
power-skating Ashantis. The Ashantis had big smiles, but the
constable looked stereotypically inscrutable.
The chief of the Ashantis bowed to the constable and
graciously spun out another lengthy quotation from the fine print of
the Common Economic Protocol. The constable kept making a
gesture that was somewhere between a nod and a perfunctory bow.
Then the constable turned to Bud and said, very fast: “Are you a
member of any signatory tribe, phyle, registered diaspora, franchiseorganized
quasi-national entity, sovereign polity, or any other form
of dynamic security collective claiming status under the CEP?”
“Are you shitting me?” Bud said. The shrink-wrap squished his
mouth together so he sounded like a duck.
Four Ashantis took the four handles and hoisted Bud off the
ground. They began to follow the loping constable in the direction
of the Causeway that led over the sea to Shanghai. “How ’bout it,”
Bud quacked through the hole in the shrink-wrap, “he said I might
have other rights. Do I have any other rights?”
The constable looked back over his shoulder, turning his head
carefully so he wouldn’t lose his balance on that pedomotive. “Don’t
be jerk,” he said in pretty decent English, “this is China.”
Hackworth’s morning ruminations; breakfast and
departure for work.
Thinking about tomorrow’s crime, John Percival Hackworth slept
poorly, rising three times on the pretext of having to use the loo.
Each time he looked in on Fiona, who was sprawled out in her white
lace nightgown, arms above her head, doing a backflip into the arms
of Morpheus. Her face was barely visible in the dark room, like the
moon seen through folds of white silk.
At five A.M., a shrill pentatonic reveille erupted from the
North Koreans’ brutish mediatrons. Their clave, which went by the
name Sendero, was not far above sea level: a mile below the
Hackworths’ building in altitude, and twenty degrees warmer on the
average day. But whenever the women’s chorus chimed in with their
armor-piercing refrain about the all-seeing beneficence of the
Serene Leader, it felt as if they were right next door.
Gwendolyn didn’t even stir. She would sleep soundly for
another hour, or until Tiffany Sue, her lady’s maid, came bustling
into the room and began to lay out her clothes: stretchy lingerie for
the morning workout, a business frock, hat, gloves, and veil for
later.
Hackworth drew a silk dressing gown from the wardrobe and
poured it over his shoulders. Binding the sash around his waist, the
cold tassels splashing over his fingers in the dark, he glanced
through the doorway to Gwendolyn’s closet and out the other side
into her boudoir. Against that room’s far windows was the desk she
used for social correspondence, really just a table with a top of
genuine marble, strewn with bits of stationery, her own and others’,
dimly identifiable even at this distance as business cards, visiting
cards, note cards, invitations from various people still going through
triage. Most of the boudoir floor was covered with a tatty carpet,
worn through in places all the way down to its underlying matrix of
jute, but hand-woven and sculpted by genuine Chinese slave labor
during the Mao Dynasty. Its only real function was to protect the
floor from Gwendolyn’s exercise equipment, which gleamed in the
dim light scattering off the clouds from Shanghai: a step unit done
up in Beaux-Arts ironmongery, a rowing machine cleverly
fashioned of writhing sea-serpents and hard-bodied nereids, a rack
of free weights supported by four callipygious caryatids-not
chunky Greeks but modern women, one of each major racial group,
each tricep, gluteus, latissimus, sartorius, and rectus abdominus
casting its own highlight. Classical architecture indeed. The
caryatids were supposed to be role models, and despite subtle racial
differences, each body fit the current ideal: twenty-two-inch waist,
no more than 17% body fat. That kind of body couldn’t be faked
with undergarments, never mind what the ads in the women’s
magazines claimed; the long tight bodices of the current mode, and
modern fabrics thinner than soap bubbles, made everything obvious.
Most women who didn’t have superhuman willpower couldn’t
manage it without the help of a lady’s maid who would run them
through two or even three vigorous workouts a day. So after Fiona
had stopped breast-feeding and the time had loomed when Gwen
would have to knacker her maternity clothes, they had hired Tiffany
Sue-just another one of the child-related expenses Hackworth had
never imagined until the bills had started to come in. Gwen accused
him, half-seriously, of having eyes for Tiffany Sue. The accusation
was almost a standard formality of modern marriage, as lady’s maids
were all young, pretty, and flawlessly huffed. But Tiffany Sue was a
typical thete, loud and classless and heavily made up, and
Hackworth couldn’t abide her. If he had eyes for anyone, it was
those caryatids holding up the weight rack; at least they had
impeccable taste going for them.
Mrs. Hull had not heard him and was still bumping sleepily
around in her quarters. Hackworth put a crumpet into the toaster
oven and went out on their flat’s tiny balcony with a cup of tea,
catching a bit of the auroral breeze off the Yangtze Estuary.
The Hackworths’ building was one of several lining a blocklong
garden where a few early risers were already out walking their
spaniels or touching their toes. Far down the slopes of New Chusan,
the Leased Territories were coming awake: the Senderos streaming
out of their barracks and lining up in the streets to chant and sing
through their morning calisthenics. All the other thetes, coarcted
into the tacky little claves belonging to their synthetic phyles,
turning up their own mediatrons to drown out the Senderos, setting
off firecrackers or guns-he could never tell them apart-and a few
internal-combustion hobbyists starting up their primitive full-lane
vehicles, the louder the better. Commuters lining up at the tube
stations, waiting to cross the Causeway into Greater Shanghai, seen
only as a storm front of neon-stained, coal-scented smog that
encompassed the horizon.
This neighborhood was derisively called Earshot. But
Hackworth didn’t mind the noise so much. It would have been a sign
of better breeding, or higher pretentions, to be terribly sensitive
about it, to complain of it all the time, and to yearn for a townhouse
or even a small estate farther inland.
Finally the bells of St. Mark’s chimed six o’clock. Mrs. Hull
burst into the kitchen on the first stroke and expressed shame that
Hackworth had beaten her to the kitchen and shock that he had
defiled it. The matter compiler in the corner of the kitchen came on
automatically and began to create a pedomotive for Hackworth to
take to work.
Before the last bell had died away, the rhythmic whack-whackwhack
of a big vacuum pump could be heard. The engineers of the
Royal Vacuum Utility were already at work expanding the eutactic
environment. The pumps sounded big, probably Intrepids, and
Hackworth reckoned that they must be preparing to raise a new
structure, possibly a wing of the University.
He sat down at the kitchen table. Mrs. Hull was already
marmalading his crumpet. As she laid out plates and silver,
Hackworth picked up a large sheet of blank paper. “The usual,” he
said, and then the paper was no longer blank; now it was the front
page of the Times.
Hackworth got all the news that was appropriate to his station
in life, plus a few optional services: the latest from his favorite
cartoonists and columnists around the world; clippings on various
peculiar crackpot subjects forwarded to him by his father, ever
anxious that he had not, even after all this time, sufficiently edified
his son; and stories relating to the Uitlanders-a subphyle of New
Atlantis, consisting of persons of British ancestry who had fled
South Africa several decades previously. Hackworth’s mother was
an Uitlander, so he subscribed to the service.
A gentleman of higher rank and more far-reaching
responsibilities would probably get different information written in
a different way, and the top stratum of New Chusan actually got the
Times on paper, printed out by a big antique press that did a run of a
hundred or so, every morning at about three A.M.
That the highest levels of the society received news written
with ink on paper said much about the steps New Atlantis had taken
to distinguish itself from other phyles.
Now nanotechnology had made nearly anything possible, and
so the cultural role in deciding what should be done with it had
become far more important than imagining what could be done with
it. One of the insights of the Victorian Revival was that it was not
necessarily a good thing for everyone to read a completely different
newspaper in the morning; so the higher one rose in the society, the
more similar one’s Times became to one’s peers’.
Hackworth almost managed to dress without waking
Gwendolyn, but she began to stir while he was stringing his watch
chain around various tiny buttons and pockets in his waistcoat. In
addition to the watch, various other charms dangled from it, such as
a snufrbox that helped perk him up now and then, and a golden pen
that made a little chime whenever he received mail.
“Have a good day at work, dear,” she mumbled. Then, blinking
once or twice, frowning, and focusing on the chintz canopy over the
bed: “You finish it today, do you?”
“Yes,” Hackworth said. “I’ll be home late. Quite late.”
“I understand.”
“No,” he blurted. Then he pulled himself up short. This was it,
he realized.
“Darling?”
“It’s not that-the project should finish itself. But after work, I
believe I’ll get a surprise for Fiona. Something special.”
“Being home for dinner would be more special than anything
you could get her.”
“No, darling. This is different. I promise.”
He kissed her and went to the stand by the front door. Mrs.
Hull was awaiting him, holding his hat in one hand and his briefcase
in the other. She had already removed the pedomotive from the
M.C. and set it by the door for him; it was smart enough to know
that it was indoors, and so its long legs were fully collapsed, giving
him almost no mechanical advantage. Hackworth stepped onto the
tread plates and felt the straps reach out and hug his legs.
He told himself that he could still back out. But a flash of red
caught his eye, and he looked in and saw Fiona creeping down the
hallway in her nightie, her flaming hair flying all directions, getting
ready to surprise Gwendolyn, and the look in her eyes told him that
she had heard everything. He blew her a kiss and walked out the
door, resolute.
Bud is prosecuted, noteworthy features of the Confucian
judicial system; he receives an invitation to take a
long walk on a short pier.
Bud had spent the last several days living in the open, in a prison on
the low, smelly delta of the Chang Jiang (as most of his thousands
of fellow inmates called it) or, as Bud called it, the Yangtze. The
walls of the prison were lines of bamboo stakes, spaced at intervals
of a few meters, with strips of orange plastic fluttering gaily from
their tops. Yet another device had been mounted on Bud’s bones,
and it knew where those boundaries were. From place to place one
could see a corpse just on the other side of the line, body striped
with the lurid marks of cookie-cutters. Bud had mistaken these for
suicides until he’d seen a lynching in progress: a prisoner who was
thought to have stolen some other fellow’s shoes was picked up
bodily by the mob, passed from hand to hand overhead like a
crowd-surfing rock singer, all the time flailing frantically trying to
grab something. When he reached the line of bamboo poles, he was
given one last shove and ejected, his body virtually exploding as he
flew through the invisible plane of the perimeter.
But the ever-present threat of lynching was a minor irritation
compared to the mosquitoes. So when Bud heard the voice in his
ears telling him to report to the northeast corner of the compound,
he didn’t waste any time-partly because he wanted to get away
from that place and partly because, if he didn’t, they could pop him
by remote control. They could have just told him to walk directly to
the courtroom and take a seat and he would have done it, but for
ceremonial purposes they sent a cop to escort him.
The courtroom was a high-ceilinged room in one of the old
buildings along the Bund, not lavishly furnished. At one end was a
raised platform, and on that was an old folding table with a red cloth
tossed over it. The red cloth had gold threads woven through it to
make a design: a unicorn or a dragon or some shit like that. Bud had
trouble discriminating among mythical beasts.
The judge came in and was introduced as Judge Fang by the
larger of his two gofers: a bulky, rounded-headed Chinese guy who
smelled tantalizingly of menthol cigarettes. The constable who had
escorted Bud to the courtroom pointed to the floor, and Bud,
knowing his cue, dropped to his knees and touched his forehead to
the floor.
The Judge’s other gofer was a tiny little Amerasian woman
wearing glasses. Hardly anyone used glasses anymore to correct
their vision, and so it was a likely bet that this was actually some
kind of phantascope, which let you see things that weren’t there,
such as ractives. Although, when people used them for purposes
other than entertainment, they used a fancier word:
phenomenoscope.
You could get a phantascopic system planted directly on your
retinas, just as Bud’s sound system lived on his eardrums. You could
even get telæsthetics patched into your spinal column at various key
vertebrae. But this was said to have its drawbacks: some concerns
about long-term nerve damage, plus it was rumored that hackers for
big media companies had figured out a way to get through the
defenses that were built into such systems, and run junk
advertisements in your peripheral vision (or even spang in the
fucking middle) all the time-even when your eyes were closed.
Bud knew a guy like that who’d somehow gotten infected with a
meme that ran advertisements for roach motels, in Hindi,
superimposed on the bottom right-hand corner of his visual field,
twenty-four hours a day, until the guy whacked himself.
Judge Fang was surprisingly young, probably not out of his
thirties yet. He sat at the red cloth-covered table and started to talk
in Chinese. His two gofers stood behind him. A Sikh was here; he
stood up and said a few words back to the Judge in Chinese. Bud
couldn’t figure out why there was a Sikh here, but he’d become
accustomed to Sikhs turning up where they were least sought.
Judge Fang said in a New York City accent, “The
representative from Protocol has suggested that we conduct these
proceedings in English. Any objections?”
Also present was the guy he had mugged, who was holding the
one arm rather stiffly but seemed otherwise healthy. His wife was
with him too.
“I’m Judge Fang,” the Judge continued, looking straight at Bud.
“You can address me as Your Honor. Now, Bud, Mr. Kwamina here
has accused you of certain activities that are illegal in the Coastal
Republic. You are also accused of actionable offenses under the
Common Economic Protocol, to which we are a subscriber. These
offenses are closely related to the crimes I already mentioned, but
slightly different. Are you getting all this?”
“Not exactly, Your Honor,” Bud said.
“We think you mugged this guy and blew a hole in his arm,”
Judge Fang said, “which is frowned upon. Capiche?”
“Yes, sir.”
Judge Fang nodded at the Sikh, who took the cue.
“The CEP code,” said the Sikh, “governs all kinds of economic
interactions between people and organizations. Theft is one such
interaction. Maiming is another, insofar as it affects the victim’s
ability to fend for himself economically. As Protocol does not aspire
to sovereign status, we work in cooperation with the indigenous
justice system of CEP signatories in order to pursue such cases.”
“You familiar with the Confucian system of justice, Bud?” said
Judge Fang. Bud’s head was beginning to get dizzy from snapping
back and forth like a spectator at a tennis match. “I’m guessing no.
Okay, even though the Chinese Coastal Republic is no longer
strictly or even vaguely Confucian, we still run our judicial system
that way-we’ve had it for a few thousand years, and we think it’s
not half bad. The general idea is that as judge, I actually perform
several roles at once: detective, judge, jury, and if need be,
executioner.”
Bud snickered at this crack, then noticed that Judge Fang did
not appear to be in an especially jocose mood. His New Yorkish
ways had initially fooled Bud into thinking that Judge Fang was
something of a Regular Guy.
“So in the first-mentioned role,” Judge Fang continued, “I
would like for you, Mr. Kwamina, to tell me whetheryou recognize
the suspect.”
“He is the man,” said Mr. Kwamina, aiming one index finger at
Bud’s forehead, “who threatened me, shot me, and stole my money.”
“And Mrs. Kum?” Judge Fang said. Then, as an aside to Bud,
he added, “In their culture, the woman does not adopt her husband’s
family name.”
Mrs. Kum just nodded at Bud and said, “He is the guilty party.”
“Miss Pao, do you have anything to add?”
The tiny woman in the spectacles looked at Bud and said, in
Texan-accented English, “From this man’s forehead I removed a
voice-activated nanoprojectile launcher, colloquially known as a
skull gun, loaded with three types of ammunition, including socalled
Crippler rounds of the type used against Mr. Kwamina.
Nanopresence examination of the serial numbers on those rounds,
and comparison of the same with fragments removed from Mr.
Kwamina’s wound, indicated that the round used on Mr. Kwamina
was fired from the gun embedded in the suspect’s forehead.”
“Dang,” Bud said.
“Okay,” Judge Fang said, and reached up with one hand to rub
his temples for just a moment. Then he turned to Bud. “You’re
guilty.”
Hey! Don’t I get to put up a defense?” Bud said. “I object!”
“Don’t be an asshole,” Judge Fang said.
The Sikh said, “As the offender has no significant assets, and
as the value of his labor would not be sufficient to compensate the
victim for his injury, Protocol terminates its interest in this case.”
“Got it,” Judge Fang said. “Okay, Bud, my man, do you have
any dependents?”
“I got a girlfriend,” Bud said. “She’s got a son named Harv who
is my boy, unless we counted wrong. And I heard she’s pregnant.”
“You think she is, or you know she is?”
“She was last time I checked-a couple months ago.”
“What’s her name?”
“Tequila.”
A muffled snort came from one of the Protocol trainees-the
young woman-who put one hand over her mouth. The Sikh
appeared to be biting his lip.
“Tequila?” Judge Fang said, incredulous. It was becoming clear
that Judge Fang tried a lot of these cases and relished the odd scrap
of entertainment value.
“There are nineteen women named Tequila in the Leased
Territories,” said Miss Pao, reading something out of her
phenomenoscope, “one of whom delivered a baby girl named
Nellodee three days ago. She also has a five-year-old boy named
Harvard.”
“Oh, wow,” Bud said.
“Congratulations, Bud, you’re a pa,” Judge Fang said. “I gather
from your reaction that this comes as something of a surprise. It
seems evident that your relationship with this Tequila is tenuous,
and so I do not find that there are any mitigating circumstances I
should take into account in sentencing. That being the case, I would
like you to go out that door over there”-Judge Fang pointed to a
door in the corner of the courtroom-“and all the way down the
steps. Leave through the exit door and cross the street, and you will
find a pier sticking out into the river. Walk to the end of that pier
until you are standing on the red part and await further instructions.”
Bud moved tentatively at first, but Judge Fang gestured
impatiently, so finally he went out the door and down the stairway
and out onto the Bund, the street that ran along the waterfront of the
Huang Pu River, and that was lined with big old European-style
buildings. A pedestrian tunnel took him under the road to the actual
waterfront, which was crowded with Chinese people strolling
around, and legless wretches dragging themselves hither and thither.
Some middle-aged Chinese people had set up a sound system
playing archaic music and were ballroom-dancing. The music and
dance style would have been offensively quaint to Bud at any other
point in his life, but now for some reason the sight of these
somewhat fleshy, settled-looking people, twirling around gently in
one another’s arms, made him feel sad.
Eventually he found the right pier. As he strolled out onto it, he
had to shoulder his way past some slopes carrying a long bundle
wrapped in cloth, who were trying to get onto the pier ahead of him.
The view was nice here; the old buildings of the Bund behind him,
the vertiginous neon wall of the Pudong Economic Zone exploding
from the opposite bank and serving as backdrop for heavy river
traffic-mostly chains of low-lying barges.
The pier did not turn red until the very end, where it began to
slope down steeply toward the river. It had been coated with some
kind of grippy stuff so his feet wouldn’t fly out from under him. He
turned around and looked back up at the domed court building,
searching for a window where he might make out the face of Judge
Fang or one of his gofers. The family of Chinese was following him
down the pier, carrying their long bundle, which was draped with
garlands of flowers and, as Bud now realized, was probably the
corpse of a family member. He had heard about these piers; they
were called funeral piers.
Several dozen of the microscopic explosives known as cookiecutters
detonated in his bloodstream.
Nell learns to work the matter compiler; youthful
indiscretions; all is made better.
Nell had grown too long for her old crib mattress, and so Harv, her
big brother, said he would help get a new one. He was big enough,
he offhandedly mentioned, to do that sort of thing. Nell followed
him into the kitchen, which housed several important boxy entities
with prominent doors. Some were warm, some cool, some had
windows, some made noises. Nell had frequently seen Harv, or
Tequila, or one of Tequila’s boyfriends, removing food from them,
in one stage or another of doneness.
One of the boxes was called the M.C. It was built into the wall
over the counter. Nell dragged a chair and climbed up to watch as
Harv worked at it. The front of the M.C. was a mediatron, which
meant anything that had pictures moving around on it, or sound
coming out of it, or both. As Harv poked it with his fingers and
spoke to it, little moving pictures danced around. It reminded her of
the ractives she played on the big mediatron in the living room,
when it wasn’t being used by someone bigger.
“What are those?” Nell said.
“Mediaglyphics,” Harv said coolly. “Someday you’ll learn how
to read.”
Nell could already read some of them.
“Red or blue?” Harv asked magnanimously.
“Red.”
Harv gave it an especially dramatic poke, and then a new
mediaglyphic came up, a white circle with a narrow green wedge at
the top. The wedge got wider and wider. The M.C. played a little
tune that meant you were supposed to wait. Harv went to the fridge
and got himself a juice box and one for Nell too. He looked at the
M.C. disdainfully. “This takes so long, it’s ridiculous,” he said.
“Why?”
“‘Cause we got a cheap Feed, just a few grams per second.
Pathetic.”
“Why do we got a cheap Feed?”
“Because it’s a cheap house.”
“Why is it a cheap house?”
“Because that’s all we can afford because of the economics,”
Harv said. “Mom’s gotta compete with all kinds of Chinese and
stuff that don’t have any self-respect and so they’ll work for
nothing. So Mom’s gotta work for nothing.” He looked at the M.C.
again and shook his head. “Pathetic. At the Flea Circus they got a
Feed that’s, like, this big around.” He touched his fingertips together
in front of him and made a big circle with his arms. “But this one’s
probly like the size of your pinkie.”
He stepped away from the M.C. as if he could no longer stand
to share a room with it, sucked powerfully on his juice box, and
wandered into the living room to get in a ractive. Nell just watched
the green wedge get bigger and bigger until it filled half the circle,
and then it began to look like a green circle with a white wedge in it,
getting narrower and narrower, and finally the music came to a
bouncy conclusion just as the white wedge vanished.
“It’s done!” she said.
Harv paused his ractive, swaggered into the kitchen, and poked
a mediaglyphic that was an animated picture of a door swinging
open. The M.C. took to hissing loudly. Harv watched her scared
face and ruffled her hair; she could not fend him off because she had
her hands over her ears. “Got to release the vacuum,” he explained.
The sound ended, and the door popped open. Inside the M.C.,
folded up neatly, was Nell’s new red mattress.
“Give it to me! Give it to me!” Nell shouted, furious to see
Harv’s hands on it. Harv amused himself for a second playing keepaway,
then gave it to her. She ran to the room that she shared with
Harv and slammed the door as hard as she could. Dinosaur, Duck,
Peter, and Purple were waiting for her. “I got us a new bed,” she
told them. She grabbed her old crib mattress and heaved it into the
corner, then unfolded the new one precisely on the floor. It was
disappointingly thin, more blanket than mattress. But when she had
it all laid out on the floor, it made a whooshing noise-not loud-
the sound of her brother’s breathing laie at night. It thickened as it
inhaled, and when it was done, it looked like a real mattress. She
gathered Dinosaur and Duck and Peter and Purple up into her arms
and then, just to make sure, jumped up and down on it several
hundred times.
“You like it?” Harv said. He had opened the door.
“No! Get out!” Nell screamed.
“Nell, it’s my room too,” Harv said. “I gotta deke your old
one.”
Later, Harv went out with his buddies, and Nell was alone in
the house for a while. She had decided that her kids needed
mattresses too, and so she dragged the chair to the counter and
climbed up on top, right in front of the M.C., and tried to read the
mediaglyphics. A lot of them she didn’t recognize. But she
remembered that Tequila just used words when she couldn’t read
something, so she tried talking to it instead.
“Please secure the permission of an adult,” the M.C. said, over
and Over again.
Now she knew why Harv always poked at things rather than
talking to them. She poked at the M.C. for a long time until finally
she came to the same mediaglyphics that Harv had used to choose
her mattress. One showed a man and woman sleeping in a very large
bed. A man and woman in a somewhat smaller bed. A man by
himself. A child by herself. A baby.
Nell poked at the baby. The white circle and red wedge
appeared, the music played, the M.C. hissed and opened.
She spread it out on the floor and formally presented it to
Dinosaur, who was too little to know how to jump up and down on
it; so Nell showed him for a while. Then she went back to the M.C.
and got mattresses for Duck, Peter, and Purple. Now, much of the
room was covered with mattresses, and she thought how fun it
would be to have the whole room just be one big mattress, so she
made a couple of the very largest size. Then she made a new
mattress for Tequila and another new one for her boyfriend Rog.
When Harv came back, his reaction swerved between terror
and awe. “Mom’s gonna have Rog beat the shit out of us,” he said.
“We gotta deke all this stuff now.”
Easy come, easy go. Nell explained the situation to her kids
and then helped Harv stuff all of the mattresses, except her own,
into the deke hopper. Harv had to use all his strength to shove the
door closed. “Now we just better hope this stuff all dekes before
Mom gets home,” he said. “It’s gonna take a while.”
Later they went to bed and both lay awake for a while,
dreading the sound of the front door opening. But neither Mom nor
Rog came home that night. Mom finally showed up in the morning,
changed into her maid outfit, and ran for the bus to the Vicky Clave,
but she just left all her garbage on the floor instead of throwing it in
the hopper. When Harv checked the hopper later, it was empty.
“We dodged a bullet,” he said. “You gotta be careful how you
use the matter compiler, Nell.”
“What’s a matter compiler?”
“We call it the M.C. for short.”
“Why?”
“Because M.C. stands for matter compiler, or so they say.”
“Why?”
“It just does. In letters, I guess.”
“What are letters?”
“Kinda like mediaglyphics except they’re all black, and they’re
tiny, they don’t move, they’re old and boring and really hard to
read. But you can use ‘em to make short words for long words.”
Hackworth arrives at work; a visit to the Design
Works; Mr. Cotton’s vocation.
Rain beaded on the specular toes of Hackworth’s boots as he strode
under the vaulting wrought-iron gate. The little beads reflected the
silvery gray light of the sky as they rolled off onto the pedomotive’s
tread plates, and dripped to the gray-brown cobblestones with each
stride. Hackworth excused himself through a milling group of
uncertain Hindus. Their hard shoes were treacherous on the
cobblestones, their chins were in the air so that their high white
collars would not saw their heads off. They had ~arisen many hours
ago in their tiny high-rise warrens, their human coin lockers on the
island south of New Chusan, which was Hindustani. They had
crossed into Shanghai in the wee hours on autoskates and
velocipedes, probably paid off some policemen, made their way to
the Causeway joining New Chusan to the city. MachinePhase
Systems Limited knew that they were coming, because they came
every day. The company could have set up an employment office
closer to the Causeway, or even in Shanghai itself. But the company
liked to have job-seekers come all the way to the main campus to
fill out their applications. The difficulty of getting here prevented
people from coming on a velleity, and the eternal presence of these
people-like starlings peering down hungrily at a picnic-reminded
everyone who was lucky enough to have a job that others were
waiting to take their place.
The Design Works emulated a university campus, in more
ways than its architects had really intended. If a campus was a green
quadrilateral described by hulking, hederated Gothics, then this was
a campus. But if a campus was also a factory of sorts, most of
whose population sat in rows and columns in large stufl~y rooms
and did essentially the same things all day, then the Design Works
was a campus for that reason too.
Hackworth detoured through Merkle Hall. It was Gothic and
very large, like most of the Design Works. Its vaulted ceiling was
decorated with a hard fresco consisting of paint on plaster. Since
this entire building, except for the fresco, had been grown straight
from the Feed, it would have been easier to build a mediatron into
the ceiling and set it to display a soft fresco, which could have been
changed from time to time. But neo-Victorians almost never used
mediatrons. Hard art demanded commitment from the artist. It could
only be done once, and if you screwed it up, you had to live with the
consequences.
The centerpiece of the fresco was a flock of cybernetic cherubs,
each shouldering a spherical atom, converging on some central
work-in-progress, a construct of some several hundred atoms,
radially symmetric, perhaps intended to look like a bearing or
motor. Brooding over the whole thing, quite large but obviously not
to scale, was a white-coated Engineer with a monocular
nanophenomenoscope strapped to his head. No one really used them
because you couldn’t get depth perception, but it looked better on
the fresco because you could see the Engineer’s other eye, steelblue,
dilated, scanning infinity like the steel oculus of Arecibo. With
one hand the Engineer stroked his waxed mustache. The other was
thrust into a nanomanipulator, and it was made obvious, through
glorious overuse of radiant tromp l’oeil, that the atom-humping
cherubs were all dancing to his tune, naiads to the Engineer’s
Neptune.
The corners of the fresco were occupied with miscellaneous
busywork; in the upper left, Feynman and Drexler and Merkle,
Chen and Singh and Finkle-McGraw reposed on a numinous
buckyball, some of them reading books and some pointing toward
the work-in-progress in a manner that implied constructive
criticism. In the upper right was Queen Victoria II, who managed to
look serene despite the gaudiness of her perch, a throne of solid
diamond. The bottom fringe of the work was crowded with small
figures, mostly children with the occasional longsuffering mom,
ordered chronologically. On the left were the spirits of generations
past who had showed up too early to enjoy the benefits of
nanotechnology and (not explicitly shown, but somewhat ghoulishly
implied) croaked from obsolete causes such as cancer, scurvy, boiler
explosions, derailments, drive-by shootings, pogroms, blitzkriegs,
mine shaft collapses, ethnic cleansing, meltdowns, running with
scissors, eating Drano, heating a cold house with charcoal briquets,
and being gored by oxen. Surprisingly, none of them seemed sullen;
they were all watching the activities of the Engineer and his
cherubic workforce, their cuddly, uplifted faces illuminated by the
light streaming from the center, liberated (as Hackworth the
engineer literal-mindedly supposed) by the binding energy of the
atoms as they plummeted into their assigned potential wells.
The children in the center had their backs to Hackworth and
were mostly seen in silhouette, looking directly up and raising their
arms toward the light. The kids in bottom right balanced the angelic
host on the bottom left; these were the spirits of unborn children yet
to benefit from the Engineer’s work, though they certainly looked
eager to get born as soon as possible. Their backdrop was a
luminescent, undulous curtain, much like the aurora, which was
actually a continuation of the flowing skirts of Victoria II seated on
her throne above.
“Pardon me, Mr. Cotton,” Hackworth said, almost sotto voce.
He had worked here once, for several years, and knew the etiquette.
A hundred designers were sitting in the hall, neatly arranged in
rows. All had their heads wrapped up in phenomenoscopes. The
only persons who were aware of Hackworth’s presence in the hall
were Supervising Engineer Dung, his lieutenants Chu, DeGrado,
and Beyerley, and a few water-boys and couriers standing erect at
their stations around the perimeter. It was bad form to startle the
engineers, so you approached them loudly and spoke to them softly.
“Good morning, Mr. Hackworth,” Cotton said.
“Good morning, Demetrius. Take your time.”
“I’ll be with you in a moment, sir.”
Cotton was a southpaw. His left hand was in a black glove.
Laced through it was a network of invisibly tiny rigid structures,
motors, position sensors, and tactile stimulators. The sensors kept
track of his hand’s position, how much each joint of each knuckle
was bent, and so on. The rest of the gear made him feel as though he
were touching real objects.
The glove’s movements were limited to a roughly
hemispherical domain with a radius of about one cubit; as long as
his elbow stayed on or near its comfy elastomeric rest, his hand was
free. The glove was attached to a web of infinitesimal wires that
emerged from filatories placed here and there around the
workstation. The filatories acted like motorized reels, taking up
slack and occasionally pulling the glove one way or another to
simulate external forces. In fact they were not motors but little wire
factories that generated wire when it was needed and, when slack
needed to be taken up or a wire needed a tug, sucked it back in and
digested it. Each wire was surrounded by a loose accordion sleeve a
couple of millimeters in diameter, which was there for safety, lest
visitors stick their hands in and slice off fingers on the invisible
wires.
Cotton was working with some kind of elaborate structure
consisting, probably, of several hundred thousand atoms.
Hackworth could see this because each workstation had a mediation
providing a two-dimensional view of what the user was seeing. This
made it easy for the supen’isors to roam up and down the aisles and
see at a glance what each employee was up to.
The structures these people worked with seemed painfully
bulky to Hackworth, even though he’d done it himself for a few
years. The people here in Merkle Hall were all working on massmarket
consumer products, which by and large were not very
demanding. They worked in symbiosis with big software that
handled repetitive aspects of the job. It was a fast way to design
products, which was essential when going after the fickle and
impressionable consumer market. But systems designed that way
always ended up being enormous. An automated design system
could always make something work by throwing more atoms at it.
Every engineer in this hall, designing those nanotechnological
toasters and hair dryers, wished he could have Hackworth’s job in
Bespoke, where concinnity was an end in itself, where no atom was
wasted and every subsystem was designed specifically for the task
at hand. Such work demanded intuition and creativity, qualities
neither abundant nor encouraged here in Merkle Hall. But from time
to time, over golf or karaoke or cigars, Dung or one of the other
supervisors would mention some youngster who showed promise.
Because Lord Alexander Chung-Sik Finkle-McGraw was
paying for Hackworth’s current project, the Young Lady’s
Illustrated Primer, price was no object. The Duke would brook no
malingering or corner-cutting, so everything was as start as Bespoke
could make it, every atom could be justified.
Even so, there was nothing especially interesting about the
power supply being created for the Primer, which consisted of
batteries of the same kind used to run everything from toys to
airships. So Hackworth had farmed that part of the job out to
Cotton, just to see whether he had potential.
Cotton’s gloved hand fluttered and probed like a stuck horsefly
in the center of the black web. On the mediatronic screen attached to
his workstation, Hackworth saw that Cotton was gripping a
medium-size (by Merkie Hall standards) subassembly, presumably
belonging to some much larger nanotechnological system.
The standard color scheme used in these phenomenoscopes
depicted carbon atoms in green, sulfur in yellow, oxygen in red, and
hydrogen in blue. Cotton’s assembly, as seen from a distance, was
generally turquoise because it consisted mostly of carbon and
hydrogen, and because Hackworth’s point of view was so far away
that the thousands of individual atoms all blended together. It was a
gridwork of long, straight, but rather bumpy rods laid across each
other at right angles. Hackworth recognized it as a rod logic
system-a mechanical computer.
Cotton was trying to snap it together with some larger part.
From this Hackworth inferred that the auto-assembly process
(which Cotton would have tried first) hadn’t worked quite right, and
so now Cotton was trying to maneuver the part into place by hand.
This wouldn’t fix what was wrong with it, but the tel~sthetic
feedback coming into his hand through those wires would give him
insight as to which bumps were lining up with which holes and
which weren’t. It was an intuitive approach to the job, a practice
furiously proscribed by the lecturers at the Royal Nanotechnological
Institute but popular among Hackworth’s naughty, clever
colleagues.
“Okay,” Cotton finally said, “I see the problem.” His hand
relaxed. On the mediatron, the subassembly drifted away from the
main group under its own momentum, then slowed, stopped, and
began to fall back toward it, drawn in by weak van den Waals
forces. Cotton’s right hand was resting on a small chordboard; he
whacked a key that froze the simulation, then, as Hackworth noted
approvingly, groped the keys for a few seconds, typing in some
documentation. Meanwhile he was withdrawing his left hand from
the glove and using it to pull the rig off his head; its straps and pads
left neat indentations in the nap of his hair.
“Is this the smart makeup?” Hackworth said, nodding at the
screen.
“The next step beyond,” Cotton said. “Remote-control.”
“Controlled how? Yuvree?” Hackworth said, meaning
Universal Voice Recognition Interface.
“A specialised variant thereof, yes sir,” Cotton said. Then,
lowering his voice, “Word has it they considered makeup with
nanoreceptors for galvanic skin response, pulse, respiration, and so
on, so that it would respond to the wearer’s emotional state. This
superficial, need I say it, cosmetic issue concealed an undertow that
pulled them out into deep and turbulent philosophical waters-”
“What? Philosophy of makeup?”
“Think about it, Mr. Hackworth-is the function of makeup to
respond to one’s emotions-or precisely not to do so?”
“These waters are already over my head,” Hackworth admitted.
“You’ll be wanting to know about the power supply for
Runcible,” Cotton said, using the code name for the Illustrated
Primer. Cotton had no idea what Runcible was, just that it needed a
relatively long-lived power supply.
“Yes.”
“The modifications you requested are complete. I ran the tests
you specified plus a few others that occurred to me-all of them are
documented here.” Cotton grabbed the heavy brasslike pull of his
desk drawer and paused for a fraction of a second while the
embedded fingerprint-recognition logic did its work. The drawer
unlocked itself, and Cotton pulled it open to reveal a timeless
assortment of office drawer miscellany, including several sheets of
paper-some blank, some printed, some scrawled on, and one sheet
that was blank except for the word RUNCIBLE printed at the top in
Cotton’s neat draughtsman’s hand. Cotton pulled this one out and
spoke to it: “Demetnius James Cotton transferring all privileges to
Mr. Hackworth.”
“John Percival Hackworth in receipt,” Hackworth said, taking
the page from Cotton. “Thank you, Mr. Cotton.”
“You’re welcome, sir.”
“Cover sheet,” Hackworth said to the piece of paper, and then
it had pictures and writing on it, and the pictures moved-a
schematic of a machine-phase system cycling.
“If I’m not being too forward by enquiring,” Cotton said, “will
you be compiling Runcible soon?”
“Today most likely,” Hackworth said.
“Please feel free to inform me of any glitches,” Cotton said,
just for the sake of form.
“Thank you, Demetnius,” Hackworth said. “Letter fold,” he
said to the piece of paper, and it creased itself neatly into thirds.
Hackworth put it in the breast pocket of his jacket and walked out of
Merkie Hall.
Particulars of Nell & Harv’s domestic situation;
Harv brings back a wonder.
Whenever Nell’s clothes got too small for her, Harv would pitch
them into the deke bin and then have the M.C. make new ones.
Sometimes, if Tequila was going to take Nell someplace where they
would see other moms with other daughters, she’d use the M.C. to
make Nell a special dress with lace and ribbons, so that the other
moms would see how special Nell was and how much Tequila loved
her. The kids would sit in front of the mediatron and watch a
passive, and the moms would sit nearby and talk sometimes or
watch the mediatron sometimes. Nell listened to them, especially
when Tequila was talking, but she didn’t really understand all the
words.
She knew, because Tequila repeated it often, that when Tequila
got pregnant with Nell, she had been using something called the
Freedom Machine-a mite that lived in your womb and caught eggs
and ate them. Victorians didn’t believe in them, but you could buy
them from Chinese and Hindustanis, who, of course, had no
scruples. You never knew when they’d all gotten too worn out to
work anymore, which is how Tequila had ended up with Nell. One
of the women said you could buy a special kind of Freedom
Machine that would go in there and eat a fetus. Nell didn’t know
what a fetus was, but all of the women apparently did, and thought
that the idea was die kind of thing that only the Chinese or
Hindustanis would ever think up. Tequila said she knew all about
that sort of Freedom Machine but didn’t want to use one, because
she was afraid it might be gross.
Sometimes Tequila would bring back pieces of real cloth from
her work, because she said that the rich Victorians she worked for
would never miss them. She never let Nell play with them, and so
Nell did not understand the difference between real cloth and the
kind that came from the M.C.
Harv found a piece of it once. The Leased Territories, where
they lived, had their own beach, and Harv and his friends liked to go
prospecting there, early in the morning, for things that had drifted
across from Shanghai, or that the Vickys in New Atlantis Clave had
flushed down their water-closets. What they were really looking for
was pieces of stretchy, slippery Nanobar. Sometimes the Nanobar
was in the shape of condoms, sometimes it came in larger chunks
that were used to wrap things up and preserve them from the
depredations of mites. In any case, it could be gathered up and sold
to certain persons who knew how to clean it and weld one piece of
Nanobar to another and make it into protective suits and other
shapes.
Harv had quietly stuffed the piece of cloth into his shoe and
then limped home, not saying a word to anyone. That night Nell,
lying on her red mattress, was troubled by vague dreams about
strange lights and finally woke up to see a blue monster in her room:
It was Harv underneath his blanket with a torch, doing something.
She climbed out very slowly so as not to disturb Dinosaur, Duck,
Peter, and Purple, and stuck her head beneath the blanket, and found
Harv, holding the little flashlight in his teeth, working at something
with a pair of toothpicks.
“Harv,” she said, “are you working on a mite?”
“No, dummy.” Harv’s voice was hushed, and he had to
mumble around the little button-shaped torch he was holding in his
teeth. “Mites are lots smaller. See, look!”
She crawled forward a little more, drawn as much by warmth
and security as by curiosity, and saw a limp mottled brown thing a
few centimeters on a side, fuzzy around the edges, resting on
Hanv’s crossed ankles.
“What is it?”
“It’s magic. Watch this,” Harv said. And worrying at it with his
toothpick, he teased something loose.
“It’s got string coming out of it!” Nell said.
“Sssh!” Harv gripped the end of the thread beneath his
thumbnail and pulled. It looked quite short, but it lengthened as he
pulled, and the fuzzy edge of the piece of fabric waffled too fast to
see, and then the thread had come loose entirely. He held it up for
inspection, then let it drift down onto a heap of others just like it.
“How many does it have?” Nell said.
“Nell,” Harv said, turning to face her so that his light shone
into her face, his voice coming out of the light epiphanically, “you
got it wrong. It’s not that the thing has threads in it-it is threads.
Threads going under and over each other. If you pulled out all of the
threads, nothing would be left.”
“Did mites make it?” Nell asked.
“The way it’s made-so digital-each thread going over and
under other threads, and those ones going over and under all the
other threads-” Harv stopped for a moment, his mind overloaded
by the inhuman audacity of the thing, the promiscuous reference
frames. “It had to be mites, Nell, nothing else could do it.”
Security measures adopted by Atlantis/Shanghai.
Atlantis/Shanghai occupied the loftiest ninety percent of New
Chusan’s land area-an inner plateau about a mile above sea level,
where the air was cooler and cleaner. Parts of it were marked off
with a lovely wroughtiron fence, but the real border was defended
by something called the dog pod grid-a swarm of quasiindependent
aerostats.
Aerostat meant anything that hung in the air. This was an easy
trick to pull off nowadays. Nanotech materials were stronger.
Computers were infinitesimal. Power supplies were much more
potent. It was almost difficult not to build things that were lighter
than air. Really simple things like packaging materials-the
constituents of litter, basically-tended to float around as if they
weighed nothing, and aircraft pilots, cruising along ten kilometers
above sea level, had become accustomed to the sight of empty,
discarded grocery bags zooming past their windshields (and getting
sucked into their engines). As seen from low earth orbit, the upper
atmosphere now looked dandruffy. Protocol insisted that everything
be made heavier than need be, so that it would fall, and capable of
being degraded by ultraviolet light. But some people violated
Protocol.
Given that it was so easy to make things that would float in air,
it was not much of a stretch to add an air turbine. This was nothing
more than a small propeller, or series of them, mounted in a tubular
foramen wrought through the body of the aerostat, drawing in air at
one end and forcing it out the other to generate thrust. A device built
with several thrusters pointed along different axes could remain in
one position, or indeed navigate through space.
Each aerostat in the dog pod grid was a mirror-surfaced,
aerodynamic teardrop just wide enough, at its widest part, to have
contained a pingpong ball. These pods were programmed to hang in
space in a hexagonal grid pattern, about ten centimeters apart near
the ground (close enough to stop a dog but not a cat, hence “dog
pods”) and spaced wider as they got higher. In this fashion a
hemispherical dome was limned around the sacrosanct airspace of
the New Atlantis Clave. When wind gusted, the pods all swung into
it like weathervanes, and the grid deformed for a bit as the pods
were shoved around; but all of them eventually worked their way
back into place, swimming upstream like minnows, propelling the
air turbines. The ‘hines made a thin hissing noise, like a razor blade
cutting air, that, when multiplied by the number of pods within
earshot, engendered a not altogether cheerful ambience.
Enough wrestling with the wind, and a pod’s battery would run
down. Then it would swim over and nuzzle its neighbor. The two
would mate in midair, like dragonflies, and the weaker would take
power from the stronger. The system included larger aerostats called
nurse drones that would cruise around dumping large amounts of
power into randomly selected pods all over the grid, which would
then distribute it to their neighbors. If a pod thought it was having
mechanical trouble, it would send out a message, and a fresh pod
would fly out from the Royal Security installation beneath Source
Victoria and relieve it so that it could fly home to be decompiled.
As numerous eight-year-old boys had discovered, you could
not climb the dog pod grid because the pods didn’t have enough
thrust to support your weight; your foot would just mash the first
pod into the ground. It would try to work its way loose, but if it
were stuck in mud or its turbines fouled, another pod would have to
come out and replace it. For the same reason you could pluck any
pod from its place and carry it away. When Hackworth had
performed this stunt as a youth, he had discovered that the farther it
got from its appointed place the hotter it became, all the while
politely informing him, in clipped military diction, that he had best
release it or fall victim to vaguely adumbrated consequences. But
nowadays you could just steal one or two whenever you felt like it,
and a new one would come out and replace it; once they figured out
they were no longer part of the grid, the pods would self-scramble
and become instant souvenirs.
This user-friendly approach did not imply that grid-tampering
went ignored, or that such activities were approved of. You could
walk through the grid whenever you chose by shoving a few pods
out of the way-unless Royal Security had told the pods to
electrocute you or blast you into chum. If so, they would politely
warn you before doing it. Even when they were in a more passive
mode, though, the aerostats were watching and listening, so that
nothing got through the dog pod grid without becoming an instant
media celebrity with hundreds of uniformed fans down in Royal
Joint Forces Command.
Unless it was microscopic. Microscopic invaders were more of
the threat nowadays. Just to name one example, there was Red
Death, a.k.a. the Seven Minute Special, a tiny aerodynamic capsule
that burst open after impact and released a thousand or so corpusclesize
bodies, known colloquially as cookie-cutters, into the victim’s
bloodstream. It took about seven minutes for all of the blood in a
typical person’s body to recirculate, so after this interval the cookiecutters
would be randomly distributed throughout the victim’s
organs and limbs.
A cookie-cutter was shaped like an aspirin tablet except that
the top and bottom were domed more to withstand ambient
pressure; for like most other nanotechnological devices a cookiecutter
was filled with vacuum. Inside were two centrifuges, rotating
on the same axis but in opposite directions, preventing the unit from
acting like a gyroscope. The device could be triggered in various
ways; the most primitive were simple seven-minute time bombs.
Detonation dissolved the bonds holding the centrifuges
together so that each of a thousand or so balhisticules suddenly flew
outward. The enclosing shell shattered easily, and each ballisticule
kicked up a shock wave, doing surprisingly little damage at first,
tracing narrow linear disturbances and occasionally taking a chip
out of a bone. But soon they slowed to near the speed of sound,
where shock wave piled on top of shock wave to produce a sonic
boom. Then all the damage happened at once. Depending on the
initial speed of the centrifuge, this could happen at varying distances
from the detonation point; most everything inside the radius was
undamaged but everything near it was pulped; hence, “cookiecutter.”
The victim then made a loud noise like the crack of a whip,
as a few fragments exited his or her flesh and dropped through the
sound barrier in air. Startled witnesses would turn just in time to see
the victim flushing bright pink. Bloodred crescents would suddenly
appear all over the body; these marked the geometric intersection of
detonation surfaces with skin and were a boon to forensic types,
who could thereby identify the type of cookie-cutter by comparing
the marks against a handy pocket reference card. The victim was
just a big leaky sack of undifferentiated gore at this point and, of
course, never survived.
Such inventions had spawned concern that people from Phyle
A might surreptitiously introduce a few million lethal devices into
the bodies of members of Phyle B, providing the technically
sweetest possible twist on the trite, ancient dream of being able
instantly to turn a whole society into gravy. A few inroads of that
kind had been made, a few mass closedcasket funerals had been
held, but not many. It was hard to control these devices. If a person
ate or drank one, it might end up in their body, but it might just go
into the food chain and get recycled into the body of someone you
liked. But the big problem was the host’s immune system, which
caused enough of a histological fuss to tip off the intended victims.
What worked in the body could work elsewhere, which is why
phyles had their own immune systems now. The impregnable-shield
paradigm didn’t work at the nano level; one needed to hack the
mean free path. A well-defended clave was surrounded by an aerial
buffer zone infested with immunocules-microscopic aerostats
designed to seek and destroy invaders. In the case of
Atlantis/Shanghai this zone was never shallower than twenty
kilometers. The innermost ring was a greenbelt lying on both sides
of the dog pod grid, and the outer ring was called the Leased
Territories.
It was always foggy in the Leased Territories, because all of
the immunocules in the air sen’ed as nuclei for the condensation of
water vapor. If you stared carefully into the fog and focused on a
point inches in front of your nose, you could see it sparkling, like so
many microscopic searchlights, as the immunocules swept space
with lidar beams. Lidar was like radar except that it used the smaller
wavelengths that happened to be visible to the human eye. The
sparkling of tiny lights was the evidence of microscopic
dreadnoughts hunting each other implacably through the fog, like
U-boats and destroyers in the black water of the North Atlantic.
Nell sees something peculiar; Harv explains all.
One morning Nell looked out the window and saw the world had
turned the color of pencil lead. Cars, velocipedes, quadrupeds, even
power-skaters left towering black vortices in their wakes.
Harv came back from being out all night. Nell screamed when
she saw him because he was a charcoal wraith with two monstrous
growths on his face. He peeled back a filter mask to reveal grayishpink
skin underneath. He showed her his white teeth and then took
up coughing. He went about this methodically, conjuring tangles of
spun phlegm from his deepest alveoli and projecting them into the
toilet. Now and then he would stop just to breathe, and a faint
whistling noise would come from his throat.
Harv did not explain himself but went about working with his
things. He unscrewed the bulges on his mask and took out black
things that kicked up little black dust storms when he tossed them
onto the floor. He replaced them with a couple of white things that
he took from a Nanobar wrapper, though by the time he was
finished, the white things were covered with his black fingerprints,
the ridges and whorls perfectly resolved. He held the Nanobar
wrapper up to the light for a moment.
“Early protocol,” he rasped, and pitched it toward the
wastebasket.
Then he held the mask up to Nell’s face, guided the straps
around her head, and tightened them down. Her long hair got caught
in the buckles and pinched, but her objections were muffled by the
mask. It took a little effort to breathe now. The mask pressed against
her face when she inhaled and whooshed when she exhaled.
“Keep it on,” Harv said. “It’ll protect you from toner.”
“What’s toner?” she mumbled. The words did not make it out
through the mask, but Harv guessed them from the look in her eyes.
“Mites,” he said, “or so they say down at the Flea Circus
anyway.” He picked up one of the black things taken from the mask
and flicked it with a fingertip. A cineritious cloud swirled out of it,
like a drop of ink in a glass of water, and hung swirling in the air,
neither rising nor falling. Sparkles of light flashed in the midst of it
like fairy dust. “See, there’s mites around, all the time. They use the
sparkles to talk to each other,” Harv explained. “They’re in the air,
in food and water, everywhere. And there’s rules that these mites
are supposed to follow, and those rules are called protocols. And
there’s a protocol from way back that says they’re supposed to be
good for your lungs. They’re supposed to break down into safe
pieces if you breathe one inside of you.” Harv paused at this point,
theatrically, to summon forth one more ebon loogie, which Nell
guessed must be swimming with safe mite bits. “But there are
people who break those rules sometimes. Who don’t follow the
protocols. And I guess if there’s too many mites in the air all
breaking down inside your lungs, millions-well maybe those safe
pieces aren’t so safe if there’s millions. But anyways, the guys at the
Flea Circus say that sometimes the mites go to war with each other.
Like maybe someone in Shanghai makes a mite that doesn’t follow
the protocol, and gets his matter compiler to making a whole lot of
them, and sends them all across the water to New Atlantis Clave to
snoop on the Vickys, or even maybe to do them harm. Then some
Vicky-one of their Protocol Enforcement guys-makes a mite to
go out and find that mite and kill it, and they get into a war.
That’s what’s happening today, Nell. Mites fighting other mites.
This dust-we call it toner-is actually the dead bodies of all those
mites.”
“When will the war be over?” Nell asked, but Harv could not
hear her, having entered into another coughing jag.
Eventually Harv got up and tied a strip of white Nanobar
around his face. The spot over his mouth immediately began turning
gray. He ejected used cartridges from his mite gun and inserted new
ones. It was shaped like a gun, but it sucked air in instead of
shooting things out. You loaded it with drum-shaped cartridges
filled with accordion-pleated paper. When you turned it on, it made
a little whooshing noise as it sucked air-and hopefully mites-
through the paper. The mites got stuck in there. “Gotta go,” he said,
goosing the trigger on the gun a couple of times. “Never know what
I might find.” Then he headed for the exit, leaving black toner
footprints on the floor, which were scoured away by the swirling air
currents in his wake, as if he had never passed that way.
Hackworth compiles the Young Lady’s Illustrated
Primer; particulars of the underlying technology.
Bespoke was a Victorian house on a hill, a block long and replete
with wings, turrets, atria, and breezy verandas. Hackworth was not
senior enough to merit a turret or a balcony, but he did have a view
into a garden where gardenia and boxwood grew. Sitting at his desk,
he could not see the garden, but he could smell it, especially when
the wind blew in from the sea.
Runcible was sitting on his desk in the form of a stack of
papers, most of them signed JOHN PERCIVAL HACKWORTH.
He unfolded Cotton’s document. It was still running the little
industrial cartoon. Cotton had clearly enjoyed himself. No one ever
got fired for going with enhanced photorealism, but Hackworth’s
own signature look was lifted from nineteenth-century patent
applications: black on white, shades of gray implied with nearly
microscopic crosshatching, old-fashioned letterpress font a little
rough around the edges. It drove clients wild-they always wanted
to blow up the diagrams on their drawing-room mediatrons. Cotton
got it. He’d done his diagram in the same style, and so his
nanotechnological battery chugged away on the page looking much
like the gear train of an Edwardian dreadnought.
Hackworth put Cotton’s document atop the Runcible stack and
guillotined it against the desktop a couple of times, superstitiously
trying to make it look neat. He carried it to the corner of his office,
over by the window, where a new piece of furniture had recently
been rolled in by the porter: a cherrywood cabinet on brass casters.
It came up to his waist. On top was a polished brass mechanism-an
automatic document reader with detachable tray. A small door in the
back betrayed a Feed port, onecentimeter, typical of household
appliances but startlingly wimpy in a heavy industrial works,
especially considering that this cabinet contained one of the most
powerful computers on earth-five cc’s of Bespoke rod logic. It
used about a hundred thousand watts of power, which came in over
the superconducting part of the Feed. The power had to be
dissipated, or else the computer would incinerate itself and most of
the building too. Getting rid of that energy had been much more of
an engineering job than the rod logic. The latest Feed protocol had a
solution built in: a device could now pull ice off the Feed, one
microscopic chunk at a time, and output warm water.
Hackworth put the stack of documents into the feed tray on top
and told the machine to compile Runcible. There was a cardshuffling
buzz as the reader grabbed the edge of each page
momentarily and extracted its contents. The flexible Feed line,
which ran from the wall into the back of the cabinet, jerked and
stiffened orgasmically as the computer’s works sucked in a
tremendous jolt of hypersonic ice and shot back warm water. A
fresh sheet of paper appeared in the cabinet’s output tray.
The top of the document read, “RUNCIBLE VERSION 1.0-
COMPILED SPECIFICATION.”
The only other thing on the document was a picture of the final
product, nicely rendered in Hackworth’s signature pseudo-engraved
style. It looked exactly like a book.
On his way down the vast helical stair in the largest and most
central of Bespoke’s atria, Hackworth pondered his upcoming
crime. It was entirely too late to go back now. It flustered him that
he had unconsciously made up his mind months ago without
marking the occasion.
Though Bespoke was a design rather than a production house,
it had its own matter compilers, including a couple of fairly big
ones, a hundred cubic meters. Hackworth had reserved a more
modest desktop model, one-tenth of a cubic meter. Use of these
compilers had to be logged, so he identified himself and the project
first. Then the machine accepted the edge of the document.
Hackworth told the matter compiler to begin immediately, and then
looked through a transparent wall of solid diamond into the eutactic
environment.
The universe was a disorderly mess, the only interesting bits
being the organized anomalies. Hackworth had once taken his
family out rowing on the pond in the park, and the ends of the
yellow oars spun off compact vortices, and Fiona, who had taught
herself the physics of liquids through numerous experimental
beverage spills and in the bathtub, demanded an explanation for
these holes in water. She leaned over the gunwhale, Gwendolyn
holding the sash of her dress, and felt those vortices with her hands,
wanting to understand them. The rest of the pond, simply water in
no particular order, was uninteresting.
We ignore the blackness of outer space and pay attention to the
stars, especially if they seem to order themselves into constellations.
“Common as the air” meant something worthless, but Hackworth
knew that every breath of air that Fiona drew, lying in her little bed
at night, just a silver glow in the moonlight, was used by her body to
make skin and hair and bones. The air became Fiona, and
deserving-no, demanding-of love. Ordering matter was the sole
endeavor of Life, whether it was a jumble of self-replicating
molecules in the primordial ocean, or a steam-powered English mill
turning weeds into clothing, or Fiona lying in her bed turning air
into Fiona.
A leaf of paper was about a hundred thousand nanometers
thick; a third of a million atoms could fit into this span. Smart paper
consisted of a network of infinitesimal computers sandwiched
between mediatrons. A mediation was a thing that could change its
color from place to place; two of them accounted for about twothirds
of the paper’s thickness, leaving an internal gap wide enough
to contain structures a hundred thousand atoms wide.
Light and air could easily penetrate to this point, so the works
were contained within vacuoles-airless buckminsterfullerene shells
overlaid with a reflective aluminum layer so that they would not
implode en masse whenever the page was exposed to sunlight. The
interiors of the buckyballs, then, constituted something close to a
eutactic environment. Here resided the rod logic that made the paper
smart. Each of these spherical computers was linked to its four
neighbors, north-east-southwest, by a bundle of flexible pushrods
running down a flexible, evacuated buckytube, so that the page as a
whole constituted a parallel computer made up of about a billion
separate processors. The individual processors weren’t especially
smart or fast and were so susceptible to the elements that typically
only a small fraction of them were working, but even with those
limitations the smart paper still constituted, among other things, a
powerful graphical computer.
And still, Hackworth reflected, it had nothing on Runcible,
whose pages were thicker and more densely packed with
computational machinery, each sheet folded four times into a
sixteen-page signature, thirty-two signatures brought together in a
spine that, in addition to keeping the book from falling apart,
functioned as an enormous switching system and database.
It was made to be robust, but it still had to be born in the
eutactic womb, a solid diamond vacuum chamber housing a start
matter compiler. The diamond was doped with something that let
only red light pass through; standard engineering practice eschewed
any molecular bonds that were tenuous enough to be broken by
those lazy red photons, underachievers of the visible spectrum. Thus
the growth of your prototype was visible through the window-a
good last-ditch safety measure. If your code was buggy and your
project grew too large, threatening to shatter the walls of the
chamber, you could always shut it down via the ludicrously lowtech
expedient of shutting off the Feed line.
Hackworth wasn’t worried, but he watched the initial phases of
growth anyway, just because it was always interesting. In the
beginning was an empty chamber, a diamond hemisphere, glowing
with dim red light. In the center of the floor slab, one could see a
naked cross-section of an eight-centimeter Feed, a central vacuum
pipe surrounded by a collection of smaller lines, each a bundle of
microscopic conveyor belts carrying nanomechanical building
blocks-individual atoms, or scores of them linked together in
handy modules.
The matter compiler was a machine that sat at the terminus of a
Feed and, following a program, plucked molecules from the
conveyors one at a time and assembled them into more complicated
structures.
Hackworth was the programmer. Runcible was the program. It
was made up of a number of subprograms, each of which had
resided on a separate piece of paper until a few minutes ago, when
the immensely powerful computer in Hackworth’s office had
compiled them into a single finished program written in a language
that the matter compiler could understand.
A transparent haze coalesced across the terminus of the Feed,
mold on an overripe strawberry. The haze thickened and began
adopting a shape, some parts a little higher than others. It spread
across the floor away from the Feed line until it had filled out its
footprint: one quadrant of a circle with a radius of a dozen
centimeters. Hackworth continued to watch until he was sure he
could see the top edge of the book growing out of it.
In the corner of this lab stood an evolved version of a copy
machine that could take just about any kind of recorded information
and transmogrify it into something else. It could even destroy a
piece of information and then attest to the fact that it had been
destroyed, which was useful in the relatively paranoid environment
of Bespoke. Hackworth gave it the document containing the
compiled Runcible code and destroyed it. Provably.
When it was finished, Hackworth released the vacuum and
lifted the red diamond dome. The finished book stood upright atop
the system that had extruded it, which was turned into a junkheap as
soon as it was touched by the air. Hackworth picked up the book in
his right hand and the extruder in his left, and tossed the latter into a
junk bin.
He locked the book in a desk drawer, picked up his top hat,
gloves, and walking-stick, stepped into his walker, and set off for
the Causeway. Toward Shanghai.
Nell & Harv’s general living situation;
the Leased Territories; Tequila.
China was right across the water, and you could see it if you went
down to the beach. The city there, the one with skyscrapers, was
called Pudong, and beyond that was Shanghai. Harv went there with
his friends sometimes. He said it was bigger than you could
imagine, old and dirty and full of strange people and sights.
They lived in the L.T., which according to Harv was short for
Leased Territories in letters. Nell already knew the mediaglyphics
for it. Harv had also taught her the sign for Enchantment, which was
the name of the Territory where they lived; it was a princess
sprinkling golden specks from a stick onto some gray houses, which
turned yellow and bright when the specks touched them. Nell
thought that the specks were mites, but Harv insisted that mites
were too small to be seen, that the stick was a magic wand and the
specks were fairy dust. In any case, Harv made her remember that
mediaglyph so that if she ever got lost, she could find her way
home.
“But it’s better if you just call me,” Harv said, “and I’ll come
and find you.”
“Why?”
“Because there’s bad people out there, and you shouldn’t walk
through the L.T. alone, ever.”
“What bad people?”
Harv looked troubled, heaved multiple sighs, fidgeted. “You
know that ractive I was in the other day, where there were pirates,
and they tied up the kids and were going to make them walk the
plank?”
“Yeah.”
“There are pirates in the L.T. too.”
“Where?”
“Don’t bother looking. You can’t see ‘em. They don’t look like
pirates, with the big hats and swords and all. They just look like
normal people. But they’re pirates on the inside, and they like to
grab kids and tie ‘em up.”
“And make them walk the plank?”
“Something like that.”
“Call the police!”
“I don’t think the police would help. Maybe they would.”
Police were Chinese. They came across the Causeway from
Shanghai. Nell saw them up close once, when they came into the
house to arrest Mom’s boyfriend Rog. Rog wasn’t home, just Nell
and Harv were, and so Harv let them in and let them sit in the living
room and fetched tea for them. Harv spoke some words of
Shanghainese to them, and they grinned and ruffled his hair. He told
Nell to stay in their bedroom and not come out, but Nell came out
anyway and peeked. There were three policemen, two in uniforms
and one in a suit, and they sat smoking cigarettes and watching
something on the mediatron until Rog came back. Then they had an
argument with him and took him out, shouting the whole way. After
that, Rog didn’t come around anymore, and Tequila started going
out with Mark.
Unlike Rog, Mark had a job. He worked in the New Atlantis
Clave cleaning windows of the Vickys’ homes. He would come
home late in the afternoon all tired and dirty and take a long shower
in their bathroom. Sometimes he would have Nell come into the
bathroom with him and help scrub his back, because he couldn’t
quite reach one spot in the middle. Sometimes he would look at
Nell’s hair and tell her that she needed a bath, and then she would
take off her clothes and climb into the shower with him and he
would help wash her.
One day she asked Harv whether Mark ever gave him a
shower. Harv got upset and asked her a lot of questions. Later, Harv
told Tequila about it, but Tequila had an argument with him and
sent him to his room with one side of his face red and puffy. Then
Tequila talked to Mark. They argued in the living room, the thumps
booming through the wall as Harv and Nell huddled together in
Harv’s bed.
Harv and Nell both pretended to go to sleep that night, but Nell
heard Harv getting up and sneaking out of the house. She didn’t see
him for the rest of the night. In the morning, Mark got up and went
to work, and then Tequila got up and put a lot of makeup all over
her face and went to work.
Nell was alone the whole day, wondering if Mark was going to
make her take a shower that evening. She knew from the way Harv
had reacted that the showers were a bad thing, and in a way it felt
good to know this because it explained why it felt wrong. She did
not know how to stop Mark from making her take the shower this
evening. She told Dinosaur, Duck, Peter, and Purple about it.
These four creatures were the only animals that had sun’ived a
great massacre perpetrated during the previous year by Mac, one of
Mom’s boyfriends, who in a fit of rage had gathered up all of the
dolls and stuffed animals in Nell’s room and stuffed them into the
knacking hatch.
When Harv had opened it up a few hours later, he had found all
of the toys vanished except for these four. He had explained that the
deke bin would only work on things that had come from the M.C.
originally, and that anything that had been made “by hand”
(a~troublesome concept to explain) was rejected. Dinosaur, Duck,
Peter, and Purple were old ragged things that had been made “by
hand.”
When Nell told them her story, Dinosaur was brave and said
that she should fight Mark Duck had some ideas, but they were silly
ideas, because Duck was just a little kid. Peter thought she should
run away. Purple thought she should use magic and sprinkle Mark
with fairy dust; some of it would be like the mites that (according to
Hanr) the Vickys used to protect themselves from bad people.
In the kitchen was some food that Tequila had brought home
last night, including chopsticks with little mediatrons built into their
handles so that mediaglyphics ran up and down them while you ate.
Nell knew that there must be mites in there, to make those
mediaglyphics, and so she took one of the chopsticks as her magic
wand.
She also had a silvery plastic balloon that Harv had made her in
the M.C. All the air had gone out of it. She reckoned it would make
a nice shield like she had once seen on the arm of a knight in one of
Harv’s ractives. She sat in the corner of the room on her mattress
with Dinosaur and Purple in front of her, and Duck and Peter behind
her, and waited, clutching her magic wand and her shield.
But Mark didn’t come home. Tequila came home and
wondered where Mark was, but didn’t seem to mind that he wasn’t
there. Finally Harv came back, late that night, after Nell had gone to
bed, and hid something under his mattress. The next day Nell
looked: It was a pair of heavy sticks, each about a foot long, joined
in the middle by a short chain, and the whole thing was smeared
with reddish-brown stuff that had gone sticky and crusty.
The next time Nell saw Harv, he told her that Mark was never
coming back, that he was one of the pirates he’d warned her about,
and that if anyone else ever tried to do such things to her, she should
run away and scream and tell Harv and his friends right away. Nell
was astonished; she had not understood just how tricky pirates were
until this moment.
Hackworth crosses the Causeway into Shanghai;
ruminations.
The Causeway joining New Chusan and the Pudong Economic Zone
was Atlantis/Shanghai’s whole reason for existence, being in fact a
titanic Feed restrained by mountainous thrust bearings at each end.
From the standpoint of mass & cash flow, the physical territory of
New Chusan itself, a lung of smart coral respiring in the ocean, was
nothing more or less than the fountainhead of China’s consumer
economy, its only function to spew megatons of nanostuff into the
Middle Kingdom’s everramifying Feed network, reaching millions
of new peasants every month.
For most of its length the Causeway skimmed the high tide
level, but the middle kilometer arched to let ships through; not that
anyone really needed ships anymore, but a few recalcitrant swabbies
and some creative tour operators were still plying the Yangtze
estuary in junks, which looked precious underneath the catenary
arch of the big Feed, strumming the ancient-meets-modern chord for
adherents of the National Geographic worldview. As Hackworth
reached the apogee, he could see similar Causeways to port and
starboard, linking the outskirts of Shanghai with other artificial
islands. Nippon Nano looked Fujiesque, a belt of office buildings
around the waterline, houses above that, the higher the better, then a
belt of golf courses, the whole top third reserved for gardens,
bamboo groves, and other forms of micromanaged Nature. In the
other direction was a little bit of Hindustan. The geotecture of their
island owed less to the Mogul period than to the Soviet, no effort
being made to shroud its industrial heart in fractal artifice. It
squatted out there some ten kilometers from New Chusan,
sabotaging many expensive views and serving as the butt of snotty
wog jokes. Hackworth never joined in these jokes because he was
better informed than most and knew that the Hindustanis stood an
excellent chance of stomping all over the Victorians and the
Nipponese in the competition for China. They were just as smart,
there were more of them, and they understood the peasant thing.
From the high point of the arch, Hackworth could look across
the flat territory of outer Pudong and into the high-rise district of
metropolis. He was struck, as ever, by the sheer clunkiness of old
cities, the acreage sacrificed, over the centuries, to various stabs at
the problem of Moving Stuff Around. Highways, bridges, railways,
and their attendant smoky, glinting yards, power lines, pipelines,
port facilities ranging from sampan-and-junk to stevedore-andcargo-
net to containership, airports. Hackworth had enjoyed San
Francisco and was hardly immune to its charm, but
Atlantis/Shanghai had imbued him with, the sense that all the old
cities of the world were doomed, except possibly as theme parks,
and that the future was in the new cities, built from the bedrock up
one atom at a time, their Feed lines as integral as capillaries were to
flesh. The old neighborhoods of Shanghai, Feedless or with
overhead Feeds kludged in on bamboo stilts, seemed frighteningly
inert, like an opium addict squatting in the middle of a frenetic
downtown street, blowing a reed of sweet smoke out between his
teeth, staring into some ancient dream that all the bustling
pedestrians had banished to unfrequented parts of their minds.
Hackworth was heading for one of those neighborhoods right now,
as fast as he could walk.
If you counterfeited directly from a Feed, it would be noticed
sooner or later, because all matter compilers fed information back to
the Source.
You needed your very own private Source, disconnected from the
Feed network, and this was a difficult thing to make. But a
motivated counterfeiter could, with some ingenuity and patience,
put together a Source capable of providing an assortment of simple
building blocks in the range of ten to a hundred daltons. There were
a lot of people like that in Shanghai, some more patient and
ingenious than others.
Hackworth in the hong of Dr. X.
The scalpel’s edge was exactly one atom wide; it delaminated the
skin of Hackworth’s palm like an airfoil gliding through smoke. He
peeled off a strip the size of a nailhead and proffered it to Dr. X,
who snatched it with ivory chopsticks, dredged it through an
exquisite cloisonné bowl filled with chemical dessicant, and
arranged it on a small windowpane of solid diamond.
Dr. X’s real name was a sequence of shushing noises,
disembodied metallic buzzes, unearthly quasi-Germanic vowels,
and half-swallowed R’s, invariably mangled by Westerners.
Possibly for political reasons, he preferred not to pick a fake
Western name like many Asians, instead suggesting, in a vaguely
patronizing way, that they should just be satisfied with calling him
Dr. X-that letter being the first in the Pinyin spelling of his name.
Dr. X placed the diamond slide into a stainless-steel cylinder.
At one end was a teflon-gasketed flange riddled with bolt-holes. Dr.
X handed it to one of his assistants, who carried it with both hands,
as if it were a golden egg on a silken pillow, and mated it with
another flange on a network of massive stainless-steel plumbing that
covered most of two tabletops. The assistant’s assistant got the job
of inserting all the shiny bolts and torque-wrenching them down.
Then the assistant flicked a switch, and an old-fashioned vacuum
pump whacked into life, making conversation impossible for a
minute or two. During this time Hackworth looked around Dr. X’s
laboratory, trying to peg the century and in some cases even the
dynasty of each item. A row of mason jars stood on a high shelf,
filled with what looked like giblets floating in urine. Hackworth
supposed that they were the gall bladders of now-extinct species, no
doubt accruing value by the moment, better than any mutual fund. A
locked gun cabinet and a prim~val Macintosh desktop-publishing
system, green with age, attested to the owner’s previous forays into
officially discouraged realms of behavior. A window had been cut
into one wall, betraying an airshaft no larger than a grave, from the
bottom of which grew a gnarled maple. Other than that, the room
was packed with so many small, numerous, brown, wrinkled, and
organic-looking objects that Hackworth’s eyes lost the ability to
distinguish one from the next. There were also some samples of
calligraphy dangling here and there, probably snatches of poetry.
Hackworth had made efforts to learn a few Chinese characters and
to acquaint himself with some basics of their intellectual system, but
in general, he liked his transcendence out in plain sight where he
could keep an eye on it-say, in a nice stained-glass window-not
woven through the fabric of life like gold threads through a brocade.
Everyone in the room could tell by its sound when the
mechanical pump was finished with its leg of the relay. The vapor
pressure of its own oil had been reached. The assistant closed a
valve that isolated it from the rest of the system, and then they
switched over to the nanopumps, which made no noise at all. They
were turbines, just like the ones in jet engines but very small and
lots of them. Casting a critical eye over Dr. X’s vacuum plumbing,
Hackworth could see that they also had a scavenger, which was a
cylinder about the size of a child’s head, wrinkled up on the inside
into a preposterous surface area coated with nanodevices good at
latching onto stray molecules. Between the nanopumps and the
scavenger, the vacuum rapidly dropped to what you might expect to
see halfway between the Milky Way and Andromeda galaxies. Then
Dr. X himself quivered up out of his chair and began shuffling
around the room, powering up a gallimaufry of contraband
technology.
This equipment came from diverse technological epochs and
had been smuggled into this, the Outer Kingdom, from a variety of
sources, but all of it contributed to the same purpose: It sun’eyed the
microscopic world through X-ray diffraction, electron microscopy,
and direct nanoscale probing, and synthesized all of the resulting
information into a single three-dimensional view.
If Hackworth had been doing this at work, he would already be
finished, but Dr. X’s system was a sort of Polish democracy
requiring full consent of all participants, elicited one subsystem at a
time. Dr. X and his assistants would gather around whichever
subsystem was believed to be farthest out of line and shout at each
other in a mixture of Shanghainese, Mandarin, and technical English
for a while. Therapies administered included but were not limited
to: turning things off, then on again; picking them up a couple of
inches and then dropping them; turning off nonessential appliances
in this and other rooms; removing lids and wiggling circuit boards;
extracting small contaminants, such as insects and their egg cases,
with nonconducting chopsticks; cable-wiggling; incenseburning;
putting folded-up pieces of paper beneath table legs; drinking tea
and sulking; invoking unseen powers; sending runners to other
rooms, buildings, or precincts with exquisitely calligraphed notes
and waiting for them to come back carrying spare parts in dusty,
yellowed cardboard boxes; and a similarly diverse suite of
troubleshooting techniques in the realm of software. Much of this
performance seemed to be genuine, the rest merely for Hackworth’s
consumption, presumably laying the groundwork for a renegotiation
of the deal.
Eventually they were looking at the severed portion of John
Percival Hackworth on a meter-wide sheet of mediatronic paper that
one of the assistants had, with great ceremony, unfurled across a
low, black lacquer table. They sought something that was bulky by
nanotech standards, so the magnification was not very high-even
so, the surface of Hackworth’s skin looked like a table heaped with
crumpled newspapers. If Dr. X shared Hackworth’s queasiness, he
didn’t show it. He appeared to be sitting with hands folded in the lap
of his embroidered silk robe, but Hackworth leaned forward a bit
and saw his yellowed, inch-long fingernails overhanging the black
Swiss cross of an old Nintendo pad. The fingers moved, the image
on the mediation zoomed forward. Something smooth and inorganic
unfolded at the top of their field of view: some kind of remotely
controlled manipulator. Under Dr. X’s direction it began to sift
through the heap of desiccated skin.
They found a lot of mites, of course, both natural and artificial.
The natural ones looked like little crabs and had been quietly
inhabiting the outer layers of other creatures’ bodies for hundreds of
millions of years. The artificial ones had all been developed in the
past few decades. Most of them consisted of a spherical or
ellipsoidal hull with various attachments. The hull was a vacuole, a
wee bit of the eutactic environment to coddle the mite’s machinephase
innards. The hull’s diamondoid structure was protected from
the light by a thin layer of aluminum that made mites look like
miniature spaceships-only with the air on the outside and the
vacuum inside.
Attached to the hulls were various bits of gear: manipulators,
sensors, locomotion systems, and antennas. The antennas were not
at all like the ones on an insect-they were usually flat patches
studded with what looked like close-cropped fuzz-phased-array
systems for sweeping beams of visible light through the air. Most of
the mites were also clearly marked with the manufacturer’s name
and a part number; this was demanded by Protocol. A few of them
were unmarked. These were illicit and had been invented either by
people like Dr. X; by outlaw phyles who spurned Protocol; or by the
covert labs that most people assumed were run by all the zaibatsus.
During half an hour’s rooting around through Hackworth’s
skin, roaming around an area perhaps a millimeter on a side, they
obsen’ed a few dozen artificial mites, not an unusual number
nowadays. Almost all of them were busted. Mites didn’t last very
long because they were small but complicated, which left little
space for redundant systems. As soon as one got hit with a cosmic
ray, it died. They also had little space for energy storage, so many of
them simply ran out of juice after a while. Their manufacturers
compensated for this by making a lot of them.
Nearly all of the mites were connected in some way with the
Victorian immune system, and of these, most were immunocules
whose job was to drift around the dirty littoral of New Chusan using
lidar to home in on any other mites that might disobey protocol.
Finding one, they killed the invader by grabbing onto it and not
letting go. The Victorian system used Darwinian techniques to
create killers adapted to their prey, which was elegant and effective
but led to the creation of killers that were simply too bizarre to have
been thought up by humans, just as humans designing a world never
would have thought up tile naked mole rat. Dr. X took time out to
zoom in on an especially freakish killer locked in a death-grip
around an unlabeled mite. This did not necessarily mean that
Hackworth’s flesh had been invaded, rather that the dead mites had
become part of the dust on a table somewhere and been ground into
his skin when he touched it.
To illustrate the kind of mite he was presently looking for,
Hackworth had brought along a cocklebur that he had teased from
Fiona’s hair after they had gone for a walk in the park. He had
shown it to Dr. X, who had understood immediately, and eventually
he found it. It looked completely different from all the other mites,
because, as a cocklebur, its sole job was to stick to whatever
touched it first. It had been generated a few hours previously by the
matter compiler at Bespoke, which, following Hackworth’s
instructions, had placed a few million of them on the outer surface
of the Illustrated Primer. Many of them had been embedded in
Hackworth’s flesh when he had first picked the book up.
Many remained on the book, back at the office, but Hackworth
had anticipated that. He made it explicit now, just so Dr. X and his
staff wouldn’t get any ideas: “The cocklebur has an internal timer,”
he said, “that will cause it to disintegrate twelve hours after it was
compiled. We have six hours left in which to extract the
information. It’s encrypted, of course.”
Dr. X smiled for the first time all day.
. . .
Dr. X was the ideal man for this job because of his very
disreputability. He was a reverse engineer. He collected artificial
mites like some batty Victorian lepidopterist. He took them apart
one atom at a time to see how they worked, and when he found
some clever innovation, he squirreled it away in his database. Since
most of these innovations were the result of natural selection, Dr. X
was usually the first human being to know about them.
Hackworth was a forger, Dr. X was a honer. The distinction
was at least as old as the digital computer. Forgers created a new
technology and then forged on to the next project, having explored
only the outlines of its potential. Honers got less respect because
they appeared to sit still technologically, playing around with
systems that were no longer start, hacking them for all they were
worth, getting them to do things the forgers had never envisioned.
Dr. X selected a pair of detachable manipulator arms from his
unusually large arsenal. Some of these had been copied from New
Atlantan, Nipponese, or Hindustani designs and looked familiar to
Hackworth; others, however, were bizarre naturalistic devices that
seemed to have been torn loose from New Atlantan immunocules-
evolved structures, rather than designed. The Doctor employed two
of these arms to grip the cocklebur. It was an aluminum-covered
megabuckyball in a sunburst of barbed spines, several of which
were decorated with fragments of shishkebabed skin.
Under Hackworth’s direction he rotated the cocklebur until a
small spine-free patch came into view. A circular depression,
marked with a regular pattern of holes and knobs, was set into the
surface of the ball, like a docking port on the side of a spacecraft.
Inscribed around the circumference of this fitting was his maker’s
mark: IOANNI HACVIRTUS FECIT.
Dr. X did not need an explanation. It was a standard port. He
probably had half a dozen manipulator arms designed to mate with
it. He selected one and maneuvered its tip into place, then spoke a
command in Shanghainese.
Then he pulled the rig off his head and watched his assistant
pour him another cup of tea. “How long?” he said.
“About a terabyte,” Hackworth said. This was a measure of
storage capacity, not of time, but he knew that Dr. X was the sort
who could figure it out.
The ball contained a machine-phase tape drive system, eight
reels of tape rigged in parallel, each with its own read/write
machinery. The tapes themselves were polymer chains with
different side groups representing the logical ones and zeroes. It was
a standard component, and so Dr. X already knew that when it was
told to dump, it would spew out about a billion bytes a second.
Hackworth had just told him that the total stored on the tapes was a
trillion bytes, so they had a thousand seconds to wait. Dr. X took
advantage of the time to leave the room, supported by assistants,
and tend to some of the other parallel threads of his enterprise,
which was known informally as the Flea Circus.
Hackworth departs from Dr. X’s laboratory; further
ruminations; poem from Finkle-McGraw;
encounter with ruffians.
Dr. X’s assistant swung the door open and nodded insolently.
Hackworth swung his top hat into place and stepped out of the Flea
Circus, blinking at the reek of China: smoky like the dregs of a
hundred million pots of lapsang souchong, mingled with the sweet
earthy smell of pork fat and the brimstony tang of plucked chickens
and hot garlic. He felt his way across the cobbles with the tip of his
walking-stick until his eyes began to adjust. He was now poorer by
several thousand ucus. A sizable investment, but the best a father
could make.
Dr. X’s neighborhood was in the Ming Dynasty heart of
Shanghai, a warren of tiny brick structures sheathed in gray stucco,
topped with tiled roofs, frequently surrounded by stucco walls. Iron
poles projected from the second-story windows for drying clothes,
so that in the narrow streets the buildings appeared to be fencing
with each other. This neighborhood was near the foundation of the
ancient city wall, built to keep out acquisitive Nipponese ronin,
which had been torn down and made into a ring road.
It was part of the Outer Kingdom, which meant that foreign
devils were allowed, as long as they were escorted by Chinese.
Beyond it, deeper into the old neighborhood, was supposedly a
scrap of the Middle Kingdom proper-the Celestial Kingdom, or
C.K., as they liked to call it-where no foreigners at all were
allowed.
An assistant took Hackworth as far as the border, where he
stepped into the Chinese Coastal Republic, an entirely different
country that comprised, among many other things, virtually all of
Shanghai. As if to emphasize this, young men loitered on corners in
Western clothes, listening to loud music, hooting at women, and
generally ignoring their filial duties.
He could have taken an auto-rickshaw, which was the only
vehicle other than a bicycle or skateboard narrow enough to
negotiate the old streets. But you never could tell what kind of
surveillance might be present in a Shanghai taxi. The departure of a
New Atlantis gentleman from the Flea Circus late at night could
only stimulate the imaginations of the gendarmes, who had
intimidated the criminal element to such a degree that they were
now feeling restless and looking for ways to diversify. Sages, seers,
and theoretical physicists could only speculate at what, if any,
relationship might exist between the Shanghai Police Department’s
astonishing scope of activities and actual law enforcement:
Deplorable, but Hackworth was thankful for it as he sampled
the French Settlement’s ramified backstreets. A handful of figures
skulked across an intersection several blocks away, bloody light
from a mediatron glancing off their patchwork Nanobar outfits, the
kind of thing only street criminals would need to wear. Hackworth
comforted himself by reasoning that this must be a gang from one of
the Leased Territories who had just come over the Causeway. They
wouldn’t possibly be so rash as to assault a gentleman in the street,
not in Shanghai. Hackworth detoured around the intersection
anyway. Having never done anything illegal in his life, he was
startled to understand, all of a sudden, that a ruthless constabulary
was a crucial resource to more imaginative sorts of criminals, such
as himself.
Countless times that afternoon, Hackworth had been overcome
by shame, and as many times he had fought it off with
rationalization: What was so bad about what he was doing? He was
not selling any of the new technologies that Lord Finkle-McGraw
had paid Bespoke to develop. He was not profiting directly. He was
just trying to secure a better place in the world for his descendants,
which was every father’s responsibility.
Old Shanghai was close to the Huang Pu; the mandarins had
once sat in their garden pavilions enjoying the river view. Within a
few minutes Hackworth had crossed a bridge into Pudong and was
navigating narrow ravines between illuminated skyscrapers, heading
for the coast a few miles farther to the east.
Hackworth had been catapulted out of the rank-and-file and
into Bespoke’s elite ranks by his invention of the mediatronic
chopstick. He’d been working in San Francisco at the time. The
company was thinking hard about things Chinese, trying to one-up
the Nipponese, who had already figured out a way to generate
passable rice (five different varieties, yet!) direct from Feed,
bypassing the whole paddy/coolie rat race, enabling two billion
peasants to hang up their conical hats and get into some serious
leisure time-and don’t think for one moment that the Nipponese
didn’t already have some suggestions for what they might do with
it. Some genius at headquarters, stewing over Nippon’s prohibitive
lead in nanotechnological rice production, decided the only thing for
it was to leapfrog them by mass-producing entire meals, from
wonton all the way to digital interactive fortune cookies. Hackworth
got the seemingly trivial job of programming the matter compiler to
extrude chopsticks.
Now, doing this in plastic was idiotically simple-polymers
and nanotechnology went together like toothpaste and tubes. But
Hackworth, who’d eaten his share of Chinese as a student, had
never taken well to the plastic chopsticks, which were slick and
treacherous in the blunt hands of a gwailo. Bamboo was better-and
not that much harder to program, if you just had a bit of
imagination. Once he’d made that conceptual leap, it wasn’t long
before he came up with the idea of selling advertising space on the
damn things, chopstick handles and Chinese columnar script being a
perfect match. Before long he was presenting it to his superiors:
eminently user-friendly bamboid chopsters with colorful advertising
messages continuously scrolling up their handles in real time, like
news headlines in Times Square. For that, Hackworth was kicked
upstairs to Bespoke and across the Pacific to Atlantis/Shanghai.
He saw these chopsticks everywhere now. To the Equity Lords,
the idea had been worth billions; to Hackworth, another week’s
paycheck. That was the difference between the classes, right there.
He wasn’t doing that badly, compared to most other people in
the world, but it still rankled him. He wanted more for Fiona. He
wanted Fiona to grow up with some equity of her own. And not just
a few pennies invested in common stocks, but a serious position in a
major company.
Starting your own company and making it successful was the
only way. Hackworth had thought about it from time to time, but he
hadn’t done it. He wasn’t sure why not; he had plenty of good ideas.
Then he’d noticed that Bespoke was full of people with good ideas
who never got around to starting their own companies. And he’d
met a few big lords, spent considerable time with Lord Finkle-
McGraw developing Runcible, and seen that they weren’t really
smarter than he. The difference lay in personality, not in native
intelligence.
It was too late for Hackworth to change his personality, but it
wasn’t too late for Fiona.
Before Finkle-McGraw had come to him with the idea for
Runcible, Hackworth had spent a lot of time pondering this issue,
mostly while carrying Fiona through the park on his shoulders. He
knew that he must seem distant to his daughter, though he loved her
so-but only because, when he was with her, he couldn’t stop
thinking about her future. How could he inculcate her with the
nobleman’s emotional stance-the pluck to take risks with her life,
to found a company, perhaps found several of them even after the
first efforts had failed? He had read the biographies of several
notable peers and found few common threads between them.
Just when he was about to give up and attribute it all to random
chance, Lord Finkle-McGraw had invited him over to his club and,
out of nowhere, begun talking about precisely the same issue.
Finkle-McGraw couldn’t prevent his granddaughter Elizabeth’s
parents from sending her to the very schools for which he had lost
all respect; he had no right to interfere. It was his role as a
grandparent to indulge and give gifts. But why not give her a gift
that would supply the ingredient missing in those schools?
It sounds ingenious, Hackworth had said, startled by
FinkleMcGraw’s offhanded naughtiness. But what is that
ingredient?
I don’t exactly know, Finkle-McGraw had said, but as a
starting-point, I would like you to go home and ponder the meaning
of the word subversive.
Hackworth didn’t have to ponder it for long, perhaps because
he’d been toying with these ideas so long himself. The seed of this
idea had been germinating in his mind for some months now but
had not bloomed, for the same reason that none of Hackworth’s
ideas had ever developed into companies. He lacked an ingredient
somewhere, and as he now realized, that ingredient was
subversiveness. Lord Alexander Chung-Sik Finkle-McGraw, the
embodiment of the Victorian establishment, was a subversive. He
was unhappy because his children were not subversives and was
horrified at the thought of Elizabeth being raised in the stodgy
tradition of her parents. So now he was trying to subvert his own
granddaughter.
A few days later, the gold pen on Hackworth’s watch chain
chimed. Hackworth pulled out a blank sheet of paper and
summoned his mail. The following appeared on the page:
THE RAVEN
A CHRISTMAS TALE, TOLD BY A SCHOOL-BOY TO HIS LITTLE
BROTHERS AND SISTERS
by
Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1798)
Underneath an old oak tree
There was of swine a huge company
That grunted as they crunched the mast:
For that was ripe, and fell full fast.
Then they trotted away, for the wind grew high:
One acorn they left, and no more might you spy.
Next came a Raven, that liked not such folly:
He belonged, they did say, to the witch Melancholy!
Blacker was he than blackest jet,
Flew low in the rain, and his feathers not wet.
He picked up the acorn and buried it straight
By the side of a river both deep and great.
Where then did the Raven go?
He went high and low,
Over hill, over dale, did the black Raven go.
Many Autumns, many Springs
Travelled he with wandering wings:
Many summers, many Winters-
I can’t tell half his adventures.
At length he came back, and with him a She
And the acorn was grown to a tall oak tree.
They built them a nest in the topmost bough,
And young ones they had, and were happy enow.
But soon came a Woodman in leathern guise,
His brow, like a pent-house, hung over his eyes.
He’d an axe in his hanth not a word he spoke,
But with many a hem! and a sturdy stroke,
At length he brought down the poor Raven’s own oak.
His young ones were killed; for they could not depart,
And their mother did die of a broken heart.
The boughs from the trunk the Woodman did sever;
And they floated it down on the course of the river.
They sawed it in planks, and its bark they did strip,
And with this tree and others they made a good ship.
The ship, it was launched; but in sight of the land
Such a storm there did rise as no ship would withstand.
It bulged on a rock, and the waves rush’d in fast;
Round and round flew the Raven, and cawed to the blast.
He heard the last shriek of the perishing souls-
See! see! o’er the topmast the mad water rolls!
Right glad was the Raven, and off he went fleet,
And Death riding home on a cloud he did meet,
And he thank’d him again and again for this treat:
They had taken his all, and REVENGE IT WAS SWEET!
Mr. Hackworth:
I hope the above poem illuminates the ideas I only touched on
during our meeting of Tuesday last, and that it may contribute
to your parœmiological studies.
Coleridge wrote it in reaction to the tone of contemporary
children’s literature, which was didactic, much like the stuff
they feed to our children in the “best” schools. As you can see,
his concept of a children’s poem is refreshingly nihilistic.
Perhaps this sort of material might help to inculcate the soughtafter
qualities.
I look forward to further conversations on the subject.
Finkle-McGraw
This was only the starting-point of development that had lasted
for two years and culminated today. Christmas was just over a
month away. Four-year-old Elizabeth Finkle-McGraw would
receive the Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer from her grandfather.
Fiona Hackworth would be getting a copy of the Illustrated
Primer too, for this had been John Percival Hackworth’s crime: He
had programmed the matter compiler to place the cockleburs on the
outside of Elizabeth’s book. He had paid Dr. X to extract a terabyte
of data from one of the cockleburs. That data was, in fact, an
encrypted copy of the matter compiler program that had generated
the Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer. He had paid Dr. X for the use
of one of his matter compilers, which was connected to private
Sources owned by Dr. X and not connected to any Feed. He had
generated a second, secret copy of the Primer.
The cockleburs had already self-destructed, leaving no
evidence of his crime. Dr. X probably had a copy of the program on
his computers, but it was encrypted, and Dr. X was smart enough
simply to erase the thing and free up the storage, knowing that the
encryption schemes apt to be used by someone like Hackworth
could not be cracked without divine intervention.
Before long the streets widened, and the hush of tires on
pavement blended with the buller of waves against the gradual
shores of Pudong. Across the bay, the white lights of the New
Atlantis Clave rose up above the particolored mosaic of the Leased
Territories. It seemed a long way off, so on impulse Hackworth
rented a velocipede from an old man who had set up a stall in the lee
of the Causeway’s thrust bearing. He rode out onto the Causeway
and, invigorated by the cool moist air on his face and hands, decided
to pedal for a while. ‘When he reached the arch, he allowed the
bike’s internal batteries to carry him up the slope. At the summit he
turned it off and began to coast down the other side, enjoying the
speed.
His top hat flew off. It was a good one, with a smart band that
was supposed to make these mishaps a thing of the past, but as an
engineer, Hackworth had never taken the manufacturer’s promise
seriously. Hackworth was going too fast to make a safe U-turn, and
so he put on the brakes.
When he finally got himself turned around, he was unable to
see his hat. He did see another cyclist coming toward him. It was a
young man, covered in a slick Nanobar outfit. Except for his head,
which was smartly adorned with Hackworth’s top hat.
Hackworth was prepared to ignore this jape; it was probably
the only way the boy could safely get the hat down the hill, as
prudence dictated keeping both hands on the handlebars.
But the boy did not seem to be applying his brakes, and as he
accelerated toward Hackworth, he actually sat up, taking both hands
off the handlebars, and gripped the brim of the hat with both hands.
Hackworth thought the boy was preparing to throw it back as he
went by, but instead he pulled it down onto his head and grinned
insolently as he shot past.
“Say! Stop right there! You have my hat!” Hackworth shouted,
but the boy did not stop. Hackworth stood astride his bicycle and
watched unbelievingly as the boy began to fade into the distance.
Then he turned on the bicycle’s power assist and began chasing
him.
His natural impulse had been to summon the police. But since
they were on the Causeway, this would mean the Shanghai Police
again. In any case, they could not possibly have responded fast
enough to catch this boy, who was well on his way to the end of the
Causeway, where he could fork off into any of the Leased
Territories.
Hackworth nearly caught him. Without the power assist it
would have been no contest, as Hackworth exercised daily in his
club while this boy had the pudgy, pasty look typical of thetes. But
the boy had a considerable head start. By the time they reached the
first ramp leading down into the Leased Territories, Hackworth was
only ten or twenty meters away, just close enough that he could not
resist following the boy down the ramp. An overhead sign read:
ENCHANTMENT.
They both picked up more speed on the ramp, and once again
the boy reached up to grip the brim of the top hat. This time the
bike’s front wheel turned the wrong way. The boy erupted from the
seat. The bicycle skittered into the irrelevant distance and clattered
into something. The boy bounced once, rolled, and skidded for a
couple of meters. The hat, its crown partially collapsed, rolled on its
brim, toppled, and wobbled to a stop. Hackworth hit the brakes hard
and overshot the boy for some distance. As before, it took him
longer than he would have liked to get turned around.
And then he knew for the first time that the boy was not alone
but part of a gang, probably the same group he’d seen in Shanghai;
that they’d followed him onto the Causeway and taken advantage of
his fallen top hat to lure him into the Leased Territories; and that the
rest of the gang, four or five boys on bicycles, was coming toward
him down the ramp, coming fast; and in the fog of light from all of
the Leased Territories’ mediatronic billboards glittered the
chromium chains of their nunchuks.
Miranda; how she became a ractor; her early career.
From the age of five, Miranda wanted to be in a ractive. In her early
teens, after Mother had taken her away from Father and Father’s
money, she’d worked as a maid-of-all-work, chopping onions and
polishing people’s sterling-silver salvers, cake combs, fish trowels,
and grape shears. As soon as she got good enough with hair and
makeup to pass for an eighteen-year-old, she worked as a governess
for five years, which paid a little better. With her looks she probably
could have gotten a job as a lady’s maid or parlormaid and become
an Upper Servant, but she preferred the governess job. Whatever
bad things her parents had done to her along the way, they had at
least put her through some nice schools, where she’d learned to read
Greek, conjugate Latin verbs, speak a couple of Romance
languages, draw, paint, integrate a few simple functions, and play
the piano. Working as a governess, she could put it all to use.
Besides, she preferred even bratty children to adults.
When the parents finally dragged their worn-out asses home to
give their children Quality Time, Miranda would run to her
subterranean quarters and get into the cheapest, trashiest ractive she
could find. She wasn’t going to make the mistake of spending all
her money being in fancy ractives. She wanted to be a payee, not a
payer, and you could practice your racting just as well in a dead
shoot-’em-up as a live Shakespeare.
As soon as she had saved up her ucus, she made the longdreamed-
of trip to the mod parlor, strode in with her jawline riding
high as the hull of a clipper ship above a black turtleneck, looking
very like a ractor, and asked for the Jodie. That turned a few heads
in the waiting room. From there on it was all very good, madam,
and please make yourself comfortable here and would you like tea,
madam. It was the first time since she and her mother had left home
that anyone had offered her tea, instead of ordering her to make
some, and she knew perfectly well it would be the last time for
several years, even if she got lucky.
The tat machine worked on her for sixteen hours; they dripped
Valium into her arm so she wouldn’t whine. Most tats nowadays
went on like a slap on the back. “You sure you want the skull?”
“Yeah, I’m sure.” “Positive?” “Positive.” “Okay-” and SPLAT
there was the skull, dripping blood and lymph, blasted through your
epidermis with a wave of pressure that nearly knocked you out of
the chair. But a dermal grid was a whole different thing, and a Jodie
was top of the line, it had a hundred times as many ‘sites as the lores
grid sported by many a porn starlet, something like ten thousand
of them in the face alone. The grossest part was when the machine
reached down her throat to plant a trail of nanophones from her
vocal cords all the way up to her gums. She closed her eyes for that
one.
She was glad she’d done it on the day before Christmas
because she couldn’t have handled the kids afterward. Her face
swelled up just like they said it would, especially around the lips
and eyes where the ‘site density was greatest. They gave her creams
and drugs, and she used them. The day after that, her mistress
double-taked when Miranda came upstairs to fix the children
breakfast. But she didn’t say anything, probably assuming she’d
gotten slapped around by a drunken boyfriend at a Christmas party.
Which was hardly Miranda’s style, but it was a comfortable
assumption for a New Atlantan woman to make.
When her face had gotten back to looking exactly the same as
it had before her trip to the tat parlor, she packed everything she
owned into a carpet bag and took the tube into the city.
The theatre district had its good end and its bad end. The good
end was exactly what and where it had been for centuries. The bad
end was a vertical rather than a horizontal development, being a
couple of old office skyscrapers now fallen into disreputable uses.
Like many such structures they were remarkably unpleasant to look
at, but from the point of view of a ractive company, they were ideal.
They had been designed to support a large number of people
working side by side in vast grids of semiprivate cubicles.
“Let’s have a gander at your grid, sweetheart,” said a man
identifying himself as Mr. Fred (“not my real name”) Epidermis,
after he had removed his cigar from his mouth and given Miranda a
prolonged, methodical, full-body optical grope.
“My grid ain’t no Sweetheart,” she said. SweetheartTM and
HeroTM were the same grid as purveyed to millions of women and
men respectively. The owners didn’t want to be ractors at all, just to
look good when they happened to be in a ractive. Some were stupid
enough to fall for the hype that one of these grids could serve as the
portal to stardom; a lot of those girls probably ended up talking to
Fred Epidermis.
“Ooh, now I’m all curious,” he said, writhing just enough to
make Miranda’s lip curl. “Let’s put you on stage and see what you
got.”
The cubicles where his ractors toiled were mere head stages.
He had a few body stages, though, probably so he could bid on fully
ractive porn. He pointed her toward one of these. She walked in,
slammed the door, turned toward the wall-size mediatron, and got
her first look at her new Jodie.
Fred Epidermis had put the stage into Constellation Mode.
Miranda was looking at a black wall speckled with twenty or thirty
thousand individual pricks of white light. Taken together, they
formed a sort of three-dimensional constellation of Miranda,
moving as she moved. Each point of light marked one of the ‘sites
that had been poked into her skin by the tat machine during those
sixteen hours. Not shown were the filaments that tied them all
together into a network-a new bodily system overlaid and
interlaced with the nervous, lymph, and vascular systems.
“Holy shit! Got a fucking Hepburn or something here!” Fred
Epidermis was exclaiming, watching her on a second monitor
outside the stage.
“It’s a Jodie,” she said, but she stumbled over the words as the
field of stars moved, tracking the displacements of her jaw and lips.
Outside, Fred Epidermis was wielding the editing controls, zooming
in on her face, which was dense as a galactic core. By comparison,
her arms and legs were wispy nebulas and the back of her head
nearly invisible, with a grand total of maybe a hundred ‘sites placed
around her scalp like the vertices of a geodesic dome. The eyes were
empty holes, except (she imagined) when she closed her eyes. Just
to check it out, she winked into the mediatron. The ‘sites on her
eyelids were dense as grass blades on a putting green, but
accordioned together except when the lid expanded over the eye.
Fred Epidermis recognized the move and zoomed in so violently on
her winking eye that she nearly threw herself back on her ass. She
could hear him chortling. “You’ll get used to it, honey,” he said.
“Just hold still so I check the ‘sites on your lips.”
He panned to her lips, rotated them this way and that, as she
puckered and pursed. She was glad they’d drugged her out of her
mind while they were doing the lips; thousands of nanosites in
there.
“Looks like we got ourselves an artiste here,” Fred Epidermis
said. “Lemme try you in one of our most challenging roles.”
Suddenly a blond, blue-eyed woman was standing in the
mediatron, perfectly aping Miranda’s posture, wearing big hair, a
white sweater with a big letter F in the middle, and a preposterously
short skirt. She was carrying big colored puffy things. Miranda
recognized her, from old passives she’d seen on the mediatron, as an
American teenager from the previous century. “This is Spirit. A
little old-fashioned to you and me, but popular with tube feeders,”
said Fred Epidermis. “‘Course your grid’s way overkill for this, but
hey, we’re about giving the customer what they want-moving
those bids, you know.”
But Miranda wasn’t really listening; for the first time ever, she
was watching another person move exactly as she moved, as the
stage mapped Miranda’s grid onto this imaginary body. Miranda
pressed her lips together as if she’d just put on lipstick, and Spirit
did the same. She winked, and Spirit winked. She touched her nose,
and Spirit got a face full of pom-pon.
“Let’s run you through a scene,” said Fred Epidermis.
Spirit vanished and was replaced by an electronic form with
blanks for names, numbers, dates, and other data. He flashed
through it before Miranda could really read it; they didn’t need a
contract for a dry run.
Then she saw Spirit again, this time from two different camera
angles. The mediatron had split up into several panes. One was a
camera angle on Spirit’s face, which still did whatever Miranda’s
face did. One was a two-shot showing Spirit and an older man,
standing in a room full of big machines. Another pane showed a
closeup of the old man, who as Spirit realized was being played by
Fred Epidermis. The old man said, “Okay, keep in mind we usually
play this through a head stage, so you don’t control Spirit’s arms
and legs, just her face-”
“How do I walk around?” Miranda said. Spirit’s lips moved
with hers, and from the mediatron came Spirit’s voice-squeaky
and breathy at the same time. The stage was programmed to take the
feeds from the nanophones in her throat and disp them into a
different envelope.
“You don’t. Computer decides where you go, when. Our dirty
little secret: This isn’t really that ractive, it’s just a plot tree-but
it’s good enough for our clientele because all the leaves of the
tree-the ends of the branches, you understand-are exactly the
same, namely what the payer wants-you follow? Well, you’ll see,”
said the old man on the screen, reading Miranda’s confusion in
Spirit’s face. What looked like guarded skepticism on Miranda
came across as bubble-brained innocence on Spirit.
“Cue! Follow the fucking cues! This isn’t improv workshop!”
shouted the old man.
Miranda checked the other panes on the display. One she
reckoned was a map of the room, showing her location and the old
man’s, with arrows occasionally pulsing in the direction of
movement. The other was a prompter, with a line waiting for her,
flashing red.
“Oh, hello, Mr. Willie!” she said, “I know school’s out, and
you must be very tired after a long day of teaching shop to all of
those nasty boys, but I was wondering if I could ask you for a big,
big favor.”
“Certainly, go ahead, whatever,” said Fred Epidermis through
the face and body of Mr. Willie, not even pretending to emote.
“Well, it’s just that I have this appliance that’s very important
to me, and it seems to have broken. I was wondering if you knew
how to fix-one of these,” Miranda said. On the mediatron, Spirit
said the same thing. But Spirit’s hand was moving. She was holding
something up next to her face. An elongated glossy white plastic
thing. A vibrator.
“Well,” said Mr. Willie, “it’s a scientific fact that all electrical
devices work on the same principles, so in theory I should be able to
help you. But I must confess, I’ve never seen an appliance quite like
that one. Would you mind explaining what it is and what it does?”
“I’d be more than happy to-” said Miranda, but then the
display froze and Fred Epidermis cut her off by shouting through
the door. “Enough already,” he said. “I just had to make sure you
could read.”
He opened the stage door and said, “You’re hired. Cubicle 238.
My commission is eighty percent. The dormitory’s upstairs-pick
your own bunk, and clean it out. You can’t afford to live anywhere
else.”
Harv brings Nell a present; she experiments
with the Primer.
When Harv came back home, he was walking with all of his weight
on one foot. When the light struck the smudges on his face in the
right way, Nell could see streaks of red mixed in with the dirt and
the toner. He was breathing fast, and he swallowed heavily and
often, as though throwing up were much on his mind. But he was
not empty-handed. His arms were crossed tightly across his belly.
He was carrying things in his jacket.
“I made out, Nell,” he said, seeing his sister’s face and
knowing that she was too scared to talk first. “Didn’t get much, but
got some. Got some stuff for the Flea Circus.”
Nell wasn’t sure what the Flea Circus was, but she had learned
that it was good to have stuff to take there, that Harv usually came
back from the Flea Circus with an access code for a new ractive.
Harv shouldered the light switch on and kneeled in the middle
of the room before relaxing his arms, lest some small thing fall out
and be lost in a corner. Nell sat in front of him and watched.
He took out a piece of jewelry swinging ponderously at the end
of a gold chain. It was circular, smooth gold on one side and white
on the other. The white side was protected under a flattened glass
dome. It had numbers written around the edge, and a couple of
slender metal things like daggers, one longer than the other, joined
at their hilts in the center. It made a noise like mice trying to eat
their way through a wall in the middle of the night.
Before she could ask about it, Harv had taken out other things.
He had a few cartridges from his mite trap. Tomorrow Harv would
take the cartridge down to the Flea Circus and find out if he’d
caught anything, and whether it was worth money.
There were other things like buttons. But Harv saved the
biggest thing for last, and he withdrew it with ceremony.
“I had to fight for this, Nell,” he said. “I fought hard because I
was afraid the others would break it up for parts. I’m giving it to
you.”
It appeared to be a flat decorated box. Nell could tell
immediately that it was fine. She had not seen many fine things in
her life, but they had a look of their own, dark and rich like
chocolate, with glints of gold.
“Both hands,” Harv admonished her, “it’s heavy.”
Nell reached out with both hands and took it. Harv was right, it
was heavier than it looked. She had to lay it down in her lap or
she’d drop it. It was not a box at all. It was a solid thing. The top
was printed with golden letters. The left edge was rounded and
smooth, made of something that felt warm and soft but strong. The
other edges were indented slightly, and they were cream-colored.
Harv could not put up with the wait. “Open it,” he said.
“How?”
Harv leaned toward her, caught the upper-right corner under
his finger, and flipped it. The whole lid of the thing bent upward
around a hinge on the left side, pulling a flutter of cream-colored
leaves after it.
Underneath the cover was a piece of paper with a picture on it
and some more letters.
On the first page of the book was a picture of a little girl sitting
on a bench. Above the bench was a thing like a ladder, except it was
horizontal, supported at each end by posts. Thick vines twisted up
the posts and gripped the ladder, where they burst into huge flowers.
The girl had her back to Nell; she was looking down a grassy slope
sprinkled with little flowers toward a blue pond. On the other side of
the pond rose mountains like the ones they supposedly had in the
middle of New Chusan, where the fanciest Vickys of all had their
æstival houses. The girl had a book open on her lap.
The facing page had a little picture in the upper left, consisting
of more vines and flowers wrapped around a giant egg-shaped letter.
But the rest of that page was nothing but tiny black letters without
decoration. Nell turned it and found two more pages of letters,
though a couple of them were big ones with pictures drawn around
them. She turned another page and found another picture. In this
one, the little girl had set aside her book and was talking to a big
black bird that had apparently gotten its foot tangled up in the vines
overhead. She flipped another page.
The pages she’d already turned were under her left thumb.
They were trying to work their way loose, as if they were alive. She
had to press down harder and harder to keep them there. Finally
they bulged up in the middle and slid out from underneath her
thumb and, flop-flop-flop, returned to the beginning of the story.
“Once upon a time,” said a woman’s voice, “there was a little
girl named Elizabeth who liked to sit in the bower in her
grandfather’s garden and read story-books.” The voice was soft,
meant just for her, with an expensive Victorian accent.
Nell slammed the book shut and pushed it away. It slid across
the floor and came to rest by the sofa.
The next day, Mom’s boyfriend Tad came home in a bad
mood. He slammed his six-pack down on the kitchen table, pulled
out a beer, and headed for the living room. Nell was trying to get
out of the way. She picked up Dinosaur, Duck, Peter Rabbit, and
Purple, her magic wand, a paper bag that was actually a car her kids
could drive around in, and a piece of cardboard that was a sword for
killing pirates. Then she ran for the room where she and Harv slept,
but Tad had already come in with his beer and begun rooting
through the stuff on the sofa with his other hand, trying to find the
control pad for the mediatron. He threw a lot of Harv’s and Nell’s
toys on the floor and then stepped on the book with his bare foot.
“Ouch, god damn it!” Tad shouted. He looked down at the
book in disbelief. “What the fuck is this?!” He wound up as if to
kick it, then thought better of it, remembering he was barefoot. He
picked it up and hefted it, looking straight at Nell and getting a fix
on her range and azimuth. “Stupid little cunt, how many times do I
have to tell you to keep your flicking shit cleaned up?!” Then he
turned away from her slightly, wrapping his arm around his body,
and snapped the book straight at her head like a frisbee.
She stood watching it come toward her because it did not occur
to her to get out of the way, but at the last moment the covers flew
open. The pages spread apart. They all bent like feathers as they hit
her in the face, and it didn’t hurt at all.
The book fell to the floor at her feet, open to an illustrated
page.
The picture was of a big dark man and a little girl in a cluttered
room, the man angrily flinging a book at the little girl’s head.
“Once upon a time there was a little girl named Cunt,” the book
said.
“My name is Nell,” Nell said.
A tiny disturbance propagated through the grid of letters on the
facing page.
“Your name’s mud if you don’t fucking clean this shit up,” Tad
said. “But do it later, I want some fucking privacy for once.”
Nell’s hands were full, and so she shoved the book down the
hallway and into the kids’ room with her foot. She dumped all her
stuff on her mattress and then ran back and shut the door. She left
her magic wand and sword nearby in case she should need them,
then set Dinosaur, Duck, Peter, and Purple into bed, all in a neat
line, and pulled the blanket up under their chins. “Now you go to
bed and you go to bed and you go to bed and you go to bed, and be
quiet because you are all being naughty and bothering Tad, and I’ll
see you in the morning.”
“Nell was putting her children to bed and decided to read them
some stories,” said the book’s voice.
Nell looked at the book, which had flopped itself open again,
this time to an illustration showing a girl who looked much like
Nell, except that she was wearing a beautiful flowing dress and had
ribbons in her hair. She was sitting next to a miniature bed with four
children tucked beneath its flowered coverlet: a dinosaur, a duck, a
bunny, and a baby with purple hair. The girl who looked like Nell
had a book on her lap. “For some time Nell had been putting them
to bed without reading to them,” the book continued, “but now the
children were not so tiny anymore, and Nell decided that in order to
bring them up properly, they must have bedtime stories.”
Nell picked up the book and set it on her lap.
Nell’s first experiences with the Primer.
The book spoke in a lovely contralto, with an accent like the very
finest Vickys. The voice was like a real person’s-though not like
anyone Nell had ever met. It rose and fell like siow surf on a warm
beach, and when Nell closed her eyes, it swept her out into an ocean
of feelings.
Once upon a time there was a little Princess named Nell who
was imprisoned in a tall dark castle on an island in the middle
of a great sea, with a little boy named Harv, who was her
friend and protector. She also had four special friends named
Dinosaur, Duck, Peter Rabbit, and Purple.
Princess Nell and Harv could not leave the Dark Castle,
but from time to time a raven would come to visit them . . .
“What’s a raven?” Nell said.
The illustration was a colorful painting of the island seen from
up in the sky. The island rotated downward and out of the picture,
becoming a view toward the ocean horizon. In the middle was a
black dot. The picture zoomed in on the black dot, and it turned out
to be a bird. Big letters appeared beneath. “R A V E N,” the book
said. “Raven. Now, say it with me.”
“Raven.”
“Very good! Nell, you are a clever girl, and you have much
talent with words. Can you spell raven?”
Nell hesitated. She was still blushing from the praise. After a
few seconds, the first of the letters began to blink. Nell prodded it.
The letter grew until it had pushed all the other letters and
pictures off the edges of the page. The loop on top shrank and
became a head, while the lines sticking out the bottom developed
into legs and began to scissor. “R is for Run,” the book said. The
picture kept on changing until it was a picture of Nell. Then
something fuzzy and red appeared beneath her feet. “Nell Runs on
the Red Rug,” the book said, and as it spoke, new words appeared.
“Why is she running?”
“Because an Angry Alligator Appeared,” the book said, and
panned back quite some distance to show an alligator, waddling
along ridiculously, no threat to the fleet Nell. The alligator became
frustrated and curled itself into a circle, which became a small letter.
“A is for Alligator. The Very Vast alligator Vainly Viewed Nell’s
Valiant Velocity.”
The little story went on to include an Excited Elf who was
Nibbling Noisily on some Nuts. Then the picture of the Raven came
back, with the letters beneath. “Raven. Can you spell raven, Nell?”
A hand materialized on the page and pointed to the first letter.
“R,” Nell said.
“Very good! You are a clever girl, Nell, and good with letters,”
the book said. “What is this letter?” and it pointed to the second one.
This one Nell had forgotten. But the book told her a story about an
Ape named Albert.
A young hooligan before the court of Judge Fang; the
magistrate confers with his advisers; Justice is served.
“The revolving chain of a nunchuk has a unique radar signature-
reminiscent of that of a helicopter blade, but noisier,” Miss Pao said,
gazing up at Judge Fang over the half-lenses of her
phenomenoscopic spectacles. Her eyes went out of focus, and she
winced; she had been lost in some enhanced three-dimensional
image, and the adjustment to dull reality was disorienting. “A
cluster of such patterns was recognized by one of Shanghai P.D.’s
sky-eyes at ten seconds after 2351 hours.”
As Miss Pao worked her way through this summary, images
appeared on the big sheet of mediatronic paper that Judge Fang had
unrolled across his brocade tablecloth and held down with carved
jade paperweights. At the moment, the image was a map of a Leased
Territory called Enchantment, with one location, near the
Causeway, highlighted. In the corner was another pane containing a
standard picture of an anticrime sky-eye, which always looked, to
Judge Fang, like an American football as redesigned by fetishists:
glossy and black and studded.
Miss Pao continued, “The sky-eye dispatched a flight of eight
smaller aerostats equipped with cine cameras.”
The kinky football was replaced by a picture of a teardropshaped
craft, about the size of an almond, trailing a whip antenna,
with an orifice at its nose protected by an incongruously beautiful
iris. Judge Fang was not really looking; at least three-quarters of the
cases that came before him commenced with a summary almost
exactly like this one. It was a credit to Miss Pao’s seriousness and
diligence that she was able to tell each story afresh. It was a
challenge to Judge Fang’s professionalism for him to listen to each
one in the same spirit.
“Converging on the scene,” Miss Pao said, “they recorded
activities.”
The large map image on Judge Fang’s scroll was replaced by a
cine feed. The figures were far away, flocks of relatively dark pixels
nudging their way across a rough gray background like starlings
massing before a winter gale. They got bigger and more clearly
defined as the aerostat flew closer to the action.
A man was curled on the street with his arms wrapped around
his head. The nunchuks had been put away by this point, and hands
were busy going through the innumerable pockets that were to be
found in a gentleman’s suit. At this point the cine went into slowmo.
A watch flashed and oscillated hypnotically at the end of its
gold chain. A silver fountain pen glowed like an ascending rocket
and vanished into the folds of someone’s mite-proof raiment. And
then out came something else, harder to resolve: larger, mostly dark,
white around the edge. A book, perhaps.
“Heuristic analysis of the cine feeds suggested a probable
violent crime in progress,” Miss Pao said.
Judge Fang valued Miss Pao’s services for many reasons, but
her deadpan delivery was especially precious to him.
“So the sky-eye dispatched another flight of aerostats,
specialized for tagging.”
An image of a tagger stat appeared: smaller and narrower than
the cinestats, reminiscent of a hornet with the wings stripped off.
The nacelles containing the tiny air turbines, which gave such
devices the power to propel themselves through the air, were
prominent; it was built for speed.
“The suspected assailants adopted countermeasures,” Miss Pao
said, again using that deadpan tone. On the cine feed, the criminals
were retreating. The cinestat followed them with a nice tracking
shot. Judge Fang, who had watched thousands of hours of film of
thugs departing from the scenes of their crimes, watched with a
discriminating eye. Less sophisticated hoodlums would simply have
run away in a panic, but this group was proceeding methodically,
two to a bicycle, one person pedaling and steering while the other
handled the countermeasures. Two of them were discharging
fountains of material into the air from canisters on their bicycles’
equipment racks, like fire extinguishers, waving the nozzles in all
directions. “Following a pattern that has become familiar to law
enforcement,” Miss Pao said, “they dispersed adhesive foam that
clogged the intakes of the stats’ air turbines, rendering them
inoperative.”
The big mediatron had also taken to emitting tremendous
flashes of light that caused Judge Fang to close his eyes and pinch
the bridge of his nose. After a few of these, the cine feed went dead.
“Another suspect used strobe illumination to pick out the locations
of the cinestats, then disabled them with pulses of laser light-
evidently using a device, designed for this purpose, that has recently
become widespread among the criminal element in the L.T.”
The big mediatron cut back to a new camera angle on the
original scene of the crime. Across the bottom of the scroll was a
bar graph depicting the elapsed time since the start of the incident,
and the practiced Judge Fang noted that it had jumped backward by
a quarter of a minute or so; the narrative had split, and we were now
seeing the other fork of the plot. This feed depicted a solitary gang
member who was trying to climb aboard his bicycle even as his
comrades were riding away on contrails of sticky foam. But the bike
had been mangled somehow and would not function. The youth
abandoned it and fled on foot.
Up in the corner, the small diagram of the tagging aerostat
zoomed in to a high magnification, revealing some of the device’s
internal complications, so that it began to look less like a hornet and
more like a cutaway view of a starship. Mounted in the nose was a
device that spat out tiny darts drawn from an interior magazine. At
first these were almost invisibly tiny, but as the view continued to
zoom, the hull of the tagging aerostat grew until it resembled the
gentle curve of a planet’s horizon, and the darts became more
clearly visible. They were hexagonal in crosssection, like pencil
stubs. When they were shot out of the tag stat’s nose, they sprouted
cruel barbs at the nose and a simple empennage at the tail.
“The suspect had experienced a ballistic interlude earlier in the
evening,” Miss Pao said, “regrettably not filmed, and relieved
himself of excess velocity by means of an ablative technique.”
Miss Pao was outdoing herself. Judge Fang raised an eyebrow
at her, briefly hitting the pause button. Chang, Judge Fang’s other
assistant, rotated his enormous, nearly spherical head in the
direction of the defendant, who was looking very small as he stood
before the court. Chang, in a characteristic gesture, reached up and
rubbed the palm of his hand back over the short stubble that covered
his head, as if he could not believe he had such a bad haircut. He
opened his sleepy, slitlike eyes just a notch, and said to the
defendant, “She say you have road rash.”
The defendant, a pale asthmatic boy, had seemed too awed to
be scared through most of this. Now the corners of his mouth
twitched. Judge Fang noticed with approval that he controlled the
impulse to smile.
“Consequently,” Miss Pao said, “there were lapses in his
Nanobar integument. An unknown number of tag mites passed
through these openings and embedded themselves in his clothing
and flesh. He discarded all of his clothing and scrubbed himself
vigorously at a public shower before returning to his domicile, but
three hundred and fifty tag mites remained in his flesh and were
later extracted during the course of our examination. As usual, the
tag mites were equipped with inertial navigation systems that
recorded all of the suspect’s subsequent movements.”
The big cine feed was replaced by a map of the Leased
Territories with the suspect’s movements traced out with a red line.
This boy did a lot of wandering about, even going into Shanghai on
occasion, but he always came back to the same apartment.
“After a pattern was established, the tag mites automatically
spored,” Miss Pao said.
The image of the barbed dart altered itself, the midsection-
which contained a taped record of the dart’s movements-breaking
free and accelerating into the void.
“Several of the spores found their way to a sky-eye, where their
contents were downloaded and their serial numbers checked against
police records. It was determined that the suspect spent much of his
time in a particular apartment. Surveillance was placed on that
apartment. One of the residents clearly matched the suspect seen on
the cine feed. The suspect was placed under arrest and additional tag
mites found in his body, tending to support our suspicions.”
“Oooh,” Chang blurted, absently, as if he’d just remembered
something important.
“What do we know about the victim?” Judge Fang said.
“The cine stat could track him only as far as the gates of New
Atlantis,” Miss Pao said. “His face was bloody and swollen,
complicating identification. He had also been tagged, naturally-the
tagger aerostat cannot make any distinction between victim and
perpetrator-but no spores were received; we can assume that all of
his tag mites were detected and destroyed by Atlantis/Shanghai’s
immune system.”
At this point Miss Pao stopped talking and swiveled her eyes in
the direction of Chang, who was standing quiescently with his hands
clasped behind his back, staring down at the floor as if his thick
neck had finally given way under the weight of his head. Miss Pao
cleared her throat once, twice, three times, and suddenly Chang
came awake. “Excuse me, Your Honor,” he said, bowing to Judge
Fang. He rummaged in a large plastic bag and withdrew a
gentleman’s top hat in poor condition. “This was found at the
scene,” he said, finally reverting to his native Shanghainese.
Judge Fang dropped his eyes to the tabletop and then looked up
at Chang. Chang stepped forward and placed the hat carefully on the
table, giving it a little nudge as if its position were not quite perfect.
Judge Fang regarded it for a few moments, then withdrew his hands
from the voluminous sleeves of his robe, picked it up, and flipped it
over. The words JOHN PERCIVAL HACKWORTH were written
in gold script on the hatband.
Judge Fang cast a significant look at Miss Pao, who shook her
head. They had not yet contacted the victim. Neither had the victim
contacted them, which was interesting; John Percival Hackworth
must have something to hide. The neo-Victorians were smart; why
did so many of them get mugged in the Leased Territories after an
evening of brothel-crawling?
“You have recovered the stolen items?” Judge Fang said.
Chang stepped to the table again and laid out a man’s pocket
watch. Then he stepped back, hands clasped behind him, bent his
neck again, and watched his feet, which could not contain
themselves from shuffling back and forth in tiny increments. Miss
Pao was glaring at him.
“There was another item? A book, perhaps?” Judge Fang said.
Chang cleared his throat nervously, suppressing the urge to
hawk and spit-an activity Judge Fang had barred in his courtroom.
He turned sideways and backed up one step, allowing Judge Fang to
view one of the spectators: a young girl, perhaps four years old,
sitting with her feet up on the chair so that her face was blocked by
her knees. Judge Fang heard the sound of a page turning and
realized that the girl was reading a book propped up on her thighs.
She cocked her head this way and that, talking to the book in a tiny
voice.
“I must humbly apologize to the Judge,” Chang said in
Shanghainese. “My resignation is hereby proffered.”
Judge Fang took this with due gravity. “Why?”
“I was unable to wrest the evidence from the young one’s
grasp,” Chang said.
“I have seen you kill adult men with your hands,” Judge Fang
reminded him. He had been raised speaking Cantonese, but could
make himself understood to Chang by speaking a kind of butchered
Mandarin.
“Age has not been kind,” Chang said. He was thirty-six.
“The hour of noon has passed,” said Judge Fang. “Let us go
and get some Kentucky Fried Chicken.”
“As you wish, Judge Fang,” said Chang.
“As you wish, Judge Fang,” said Miss Pao.
Judge Fang switched back to English. “Your case is very
serious,” he said to the boy. “We will go and consult the ancient
authorities. You will remain here until we return.”
“Yes, sir,” said the defendant, abjectly terrified. This was not
the abstract fear of a first-time delinquent; he was sweating and
shaking. He had been caned before.
The House of the Venerable and Inscrutable Colonel was what
they called it when they were speaking Chinese. Venerable because
of his goatee, white as the dogwood blossom, a badge of
unimpeachable credibility in Confucian eyes. Inscrutable because he
had gone to his grave without divulging the Secret of the Eleven
Herbs and Spices. It had been the first fast-food franchise
established on the Bund, many decades earlier. Judge Fang had
what amounted to a private table in the corner. He had once reduced
Chang to a state of catalepsis by describing an avenue in Brooklyn
that was lined with fried chicken establishments for miles, all of
them ripoffs of Kentucky Fried Chicken. Miss Pao, who had grown
up in Austin, Texas, was less easily impressed by these legends.
Word of their arrival preceded them; their bucket already rested
upon the table. The small plastic cups of gravy, coleslaw, potatoes,
and so on had been carefully arranged. As usual, the bucket was
placed squarely in front of Chang’s seat, for he would be
responsible for consumption of most of it. They ate in silence for a
few minutes, communicating through eye contact and other
subtleties, then spent several minutes exchanging polite formal
chatter.
“Something struck a chord in my memory,” Judge Fang said,
when the time was right to discuss business. “The name Tequila-
the mother of the suspect and of the little girl.”
“The name has come before our court twice before,” Miss Pao
said, and refreshed his memory of two previous cases: one, almost
five years ago, in which this woman’s lover had been executed, and
the second, only a few months ago, a case quite similar to this one.
“Ah, yes,” Judge Fang said, “I recall the second case. This boy
and his friends beat a man severely. But nothing was stolen. He
would not give a justification for his actions. I sentenced him to
three strokes of the cane and released him.”
“There is reason to suspect that the victim in that case had
molested the boy’s sister,” Chang put in, “as he has a previous
record of such accomplishments.”
Judge Fang fished a drumstick out of the bucket, arranged it on
his napkin, folded his hands, and sighed. “Does the boy have any
filial relationships whatsoever?”
“None,” said Miss Pao.
“Would anyone care to advise me?” Judge Fang frequently
asked this question; he considered it his duty to teach his
subordinates.
Miss Pao spoke, using just the right degree of cautiousness.
“The Master says, ‘The superior man bends his attention to what is
radical. That being established, all practical courses naturally grow
up. Filial piety and fraternal submission!-are they not the root of
all benevolent actions?’
“How do you apply the Master’s wisdom in this instance?”
“The boy has no father-his only possible filial relationship is
with the State. You, Judge Fang, are the only representative of the
State he is likely to encounter. It is your duty to punish the boy
firmly-say, with six strokes of the cane. This will help to establish
his filial piety.”
“But the Master also said, ‘If the people be led by laws, and
uniformity sought to be given them by punishments, they will try to
avoid the punishments, but have no sense of shame. Whereas, if
they be led by virtue, and uniformity sought to be given them by the
rules of propriety, they will have the sense of shame, and moreover
will become good.’”
“So you are advocating leniency in this case?” Miss Pao said,
somewhat skeptically.
Chang chimed in: “‘Mang Wu asked what filial piety was. The
Master said, “Parents are anxious lest their children should be
sick.”’ But the Master said nothing about caning.”
Miss Pao said, “The Master also said, ‘Rotten wood cannot be
carved.’ And, ‘There are only the wise of the highest class, and the
stupid of the lowest class, who cannot be changed.’”
“So the question before us is: Is the boy rotten wood? His
father certainly was. I am not certain about the boy, yet.”
“With utmost respect, I would direct your attention to the girl,”
said Chang, “who should be the true subject of our discussions. The
boy may be lost; the girl can be saved.”
“Who will save her?” Miss Pao said. “We have the power to
punish; we are not given the power to raise children.”
“This is the essential dilemma of my position,” Judge Fang
said. “The Mao Dynasty lacked a real judicial system. When the
Coastal Republic arose, a judicial system was built upon the only
model the Middle Kingdom had ever known, that being the
Confucian. But such a system cannot truly function in a larger
society that does not adhere to Confucian precepts. ‘From the Son
of Heaven down to the mass of the people, all must consider the
cultivation of the person the root of everything besides.’ Yet how
am I to cultivate the persons of the barbarians for whom I have
perversely been given responsibility?”
Chang was ready for this opening and exploited it quickly.
“The Master stated in his Great Learning that the extension of
knowledge was the root of all other virtues.”
“I cannot send the boy to school, Chang.”
“Think instead of the girl,” Chang said, “the girl and her book.”
Judge Fang contemplated this for a few moments, though he
could see that Miss Pao badly wanted to say something.
“‘The superior man is correctly firm, and not firm merely,’”
Judge Fang said. “Since the victim has not contacted the police
seeking return of his property, I will allow the girl to keep the book
for her own edification-as the Master said, ‘In teaching there
should be no distinction of classes’ I will sentence the boy to six
strokes of the cane. But I will suspend all but one of those strokes,
since he has displayed the beginnings of fraternal responsibility by
giving the book to his sister. This is correctly firm.”
“I have completed a phenomenoscopic survey of the book,”
Miss Pao said. “It is not an ordinary book.”
“I had already surmised that it was a ractive of some sort,”
Judge Fang said.
“It is considerably more sophisticated than that description
implies. I believe that it may embody hot I.P.,” Miss Pao said.
“You think that this book incorporates stolen technology?”
“The victim works in the Bespoke division of Machine-Phase
Systems. He is an artifex.”
“Interesting,” Judge Fang said.
“Is it worthy of further investigation?”
Judge Fang thought about it for a moment, carefully wiping his
fingertips on a fresh napkin.
“It is,” he said.
Hackworth presents the Primer
to Lord Finkle-McGraw.
“Is the binding and so on what you had in mind? Hackworth
said.
“Oh, yes,” said Lord Finkle-McGraw. If I found it in an
antiquarian bookshop, covered with dust, I shouldn’t give it a
second glance.”
“Because if you were not happy with any detail,” Hackworth
said, “I could recompile it.” He had come in hoping desperately that
FinkleMcGraw would object to something; this might give him an
opportunity to filch another copy for Fiona. But so far the Equity
Lord had been uncharacteristically complacent.
He kept flipping through the book, waiting for something to
happen.
“It is unlikely to do anything interesting just now,” Hackworth
said. “It won’t really activate itself until it bonds.”
“Bonds?”
“As we discussed, it sees and hears everything in its vicinity,”
Hackworth said. “At the moment, it’s looking for a small female. As
soon as a little girl picks it up and opens the front cover for the first
time, it will imprint that child’s face and voice into its memory-”
“Bonding with her. Yes, I see.”
“And thenceforth it will see all events and persons in relation to
that girl, using her as a datum from which to chart a psychological
terrain, as it were. Maintenance of that terrain is one of the book’s
primary processes. Whenever the child uses the book, then, it will
perform a sort of dynamic mapping from the database onto her
particular terrain.”
“You mean the database of folklore.”
Hackworth hesitated. “Pardon me, but not precisely, sir.
Folklore consists of certain universal ideas that have been mapped
onto local cultures. For example, many cultures have a Trickster
figure, so the Trickster may be deemed a universal; but he appears
in different guises, each appropriate to a particular culture’s
environment. The Indians of the American Southwest called him
Coyote, those of the Pacific Coast called him Raven. Europeans
called him Reynard the Fox. African-Americans called him Br’er
Rabbit. In twentieth-century literature he appears first as Bugs
Bunny and then as the Hacker.”
Finkle-McGraw chuckled. “When I was a lad, that word had a
double meaning. It could mean a trickster who broke into things-
but it could also mean an especially skilled coder.”
“The ambiguity is common in post-Neolithic cultures,”
Hackworth said. “As technology became more important, the
Trickster underwent a shift in character and became the god of
crafts-of technology, if you will-while retaining the underlying
roguish qualities. So we have the Sumerian Enki, the Greek
Prometheus and Hermes, Norse Loki, and so on.
“In any case,” Hackworth continued, “Trickster/Technologist is
just one of the universals. The database is full of them. It’s a
catalogue of the collective unconscious. In the old days, writers of
children’s books had to map these universals onto concrete symbols
familiar to their audience-like Beatrix Potter mapping the Trickster
onto Peter Rabbit. This is a reasonably effective way to do it,
especially if the society is homogeneous and static, so that all
children share similar experiences.
“What my team and I have done here is to abstract that process
and develop systems for mapping the universals onto the unique
psychological terrain of one child-even as that terrain changes
over time. Hence it is important that you not allow this book to fall
into the hands of any other little girl until Elizabeth has the
opportunity to open it up.”
“Understood,” said Lord Alexander Chung-Sik Finkle-
McGraw. “I’ll wrap it up myself, right now. Compiled some nice
wrapping paper this morning.” He opened a desk drawer and took
out a roll of thick, glossy mediatronic paper bearing animated
Christmas scenes: Santa sliding down the chimney, the ballistic
reindeer, the three Zoroastrian sovereigns dismounting from their
dromedaries in front of the stable. There was a lull while Hackworth
and Finkle-McGraw watched the little scenes; one of the hazards of
living in a world filled with mediatrons was that conversations were
always being interrupted in this way, and that explained why
Atlantans tried to keep mediatronic commodities to a minimum. Go
into a thete’s house, and every object had moving pictures on it,
everyone sat around slackjawed, eyes jumping from the bawdy
figures cavorting on the mediatronic toilet paper to the big-eyed
elves playing tag in the bathroom mirror to . .
“Oh, yes,” Finkle-McGraw said. “Can it be written on? I
should like to inscribe it to Elizabeth.”
“The paper is a subclass of both input-paper and output-paper,
so it possesses all the underlying functionality of the sort of paper
you would write on. For the most part these functions are not
used-beyond, of course, simply making marks where the nib of the
pen has moved across it.’
“You can write on it,” Finkle-McGraw translated with some
asperity, “but it doesn’t think about what you’re writing.”
“Well, my answer to that question must be ambiguous,”
Hackworth said. “The Illustrated Primer is an extremely general and
powerful system capable of more extensive self-reconfiguration
than most. Remember that a fundamental part of its job is to respond
to its environment. If the owner were to take up a pen and write on a
blank page, this input would be thrown into the hopper along with
everything else, so to speak.”
“Can I inscribe it to Elizabeth or not?” Finkle-McGraw
demanded.
“Certainly, sir.”
Finkle-McGraw extracted a heavy gold fountain pen from a
holder on his desk and wrote in the front of the book for a while.
“That being done, sir, there remains only for you to authorise a
standing purchase order for the ractors.”
“Ah, yes, thank you for reminding me,” said Finkle-McGraw,
not very sincerely. “I still would have thought that for all the money
that went into this project-”
“That we might have solved the voice-generation problem to
boot, yes sir,” Hackworth said. “As you know, we took some stabs
at it, but none of the results were up to the level of quality you
demand. After all of our technology, the pseudo-intelligence
algorithms, the vast exception matrices, the portent and content
monitors, and everything else, we still can’t come close to
generating a human voice that sounds as good as what a real, live
ractor can give us.”
“Can’t say I’m surprised, really,” said Finkle-McGraw. “I just
wish it were a completely self-contained system.”
“It might as well be, sir. At any given time there are tens of
millions of professional ractors in their stages all over the world, in
every time zone, ready to take on this kind of work at an instant’s
notice. We are planning to authorise payment at a relatively high
rate, which should bring in only the best talent. You won’t be
disappointed with the results.”
Nell’s second experience with the Primer; the story of
Princess Nell in a nutshell.
Once upon a time there was a little Princess named Nell who
was imprisoned in a tall dark castle on an island in the middle
of a great sea, with a little boy named Harv, who was her
friend and protector. She also had four special friends named
Dinosaur, Duck, Peter Rabbit, and Purple.
Princess Nell and Harv could not leave the Dark Castle,
but from time to time a Raven would come to visit them and
tell them of the wonderful things over the sea in the Land
Beyond. One day the Raven helped Princess Nell escape
from the castle, but alas, poor Harv was too big and had to
stay locked up behind the castle’s great iron door with twelve
locks.
Princess Nell loved Harv like a brother and refused to
abandon him, so she and her friends, Dinosaur, Duck, Peter,
and Purple, traveled over the sea in a little red boat, having
many adventures, until they came to the Land Beyond. This
was divided into twelve countries each ruled by a Faery King
or a Faery Queen. Each King or Queen had a wonderful
Castle, and each Castle was a Treasury containing gold and
jewels, and in each Treasury was a jeweled Key that would
open one of the twelve locks on the iron door of the Dark
Castle.
Princess Nell and her friends had many adventures as
they visited each of the twelve kingdoms and collected the
twelve keys. Some they got by persuasion, some by
cleverness, and some they took in battle. By the end of the
quest, some of Nell’s four friends had died, and some had
gone their separate ways. But Nell was not alone, for she had
become a great heroine during her adventures.
In a great ship, accompanied by many soldiers, servants,
and elders, Nell traveled back over the sea to the island of the
Dark Castle. As she approached the iron door, Harv saw her
from the top of a tower and gruffly told her to go away, for
Princess Nell had changed so much during her Quest that
Harv no longer recognized her. “I have come to set you free,”
Princess Nell said. Harv again told her to go away, saying that
he had all the freedom he wanted within the walls of the Dark
Castle.
Princess Nell put the twelve keys into the twelve locks
and began to open them one by one. When the rusty door of
the castle finally creaked open, she saw Harv standing with a
bow at the ready, and an arrow drawn, pointed straight at her
heart. He let fly the arrow, and it struck her in the chest and
would have killed her except that she was wearing a locket
Harv had given her many years ago, before she left the
castle. The arrow struck and shattered the locket. In the same
moment, Harv was cut down by an arrow from one of
Princess Nell’s soldiers. Nell rushed to her fallen brother to
comfort him and wept over his body for three days and three
nights. When finally she dried her eyes, she saw that the Dark
Castle had become glorious; for the river of tears that had
flowed from her eyes had watered the grounds, and beautiful
gardens and forests had sprung up overnight, and the Dark
Castle itself was no longer dark, but a shining beacon filled
with delightful things. Princess Nell lived in that castle and
ruled over that island for the rest of her days, and every
morning she would go for a walk in the garden where Harv
had fallen. She had many adventures and became a great
Queen, and in time she met and married a Prince, and had
many children, and lived happily ever after.
“What’s an adventure?” Nell said.
The word was written across the page. Then both pages filled
with moving pictures of glorious things: girls in armor fighting
dragons with swords, and girls riding white unicorns through the
forest, and girls swinging from vines, swimming in the blue ocean,
piloting rocket ships through space. Nell spent a long time looking
at all of the pictures, and after a while all of the girls began to look
like older versions of herself.
Judge Fang visits his district; Miss Pao arranges a
demonstration; the case of the stolen book
takes on unexpected depth.
As Judge Fang proceeded across the Causeway on his chevaline,
accompanied by his assistants, Chang and Miss Pao, he saw the
Leased Territories wreathed in a mephitic fog. The emerald
highlands of Atlantis! Shanghai floated above the squalor. A host of
mirrored aerostats surrounded that lofty territory, protecting it from
the larger and more obvious sorts of intruders; from here, miles
away, the individual pods were of course not visible, but they could
be seen in the aggregate as a subtle gleam in the air, a vast bubble,
perfectly transparent, enveloping the sacrosanct territory of the
Anglo-Americans, stretching this way and that in the shifting winds
but never tearing.
The view was spoiled as they drew closer to the Leased
Territories and entered into their eternal fogs. Several times as they
rode through the streets of the L.T., Judge Fang made a peculiar
gesture: He curled the fingers of his right hand into a cylinder, as
though grasping an invisible stalk of bamboo. He cupped his other
hand beneath, forming a dark enclosed cavity, and then peeked into
it with one eye. When he stared into the pocket of air thus formed,
he saw the darkness filled with coruscating light-something like
staring into a cavern filled with fireflies, except that these lights
came in all colors, and all of the colors were as pure and clear as
jewels.
People who lived in the L.T. and who performed this gesture
frequently developed a feel for what was going on in the
microscopic world. They could tell when something was up. If the
gesture was performed during a toner war, the result was
spectacular.
Today it was nowhere near toner war levels, but it was fairly
intense. Judge Fang suspected that this had something to do with the
purpose of this errand, which Miss Pao had declined to explain.
They ended up in a restaurant. Miss Pao insisted on a table out
on the terrace, even though it looked like rain. They ended up
overlooking the street three stories below. Even at that distance it
was difficult to make out faces through the fog.
Miss Pao drew a rectangular package from her bag, wrapped up
in Nanobar. She unwrapped it and drew out two objects of roughly
the same size and shape: a book and a block of wood. She placed
them side by side on the table. Then she ignored them, turning her
attention to the menu. She continued to ignore them for several
minutes more, as she and Chang and Judge Fang sipped tea,
exchanged polite chatter, and began to eat their meals.
“At Your Honor’s convenience,” Miss Pao said, “I would
invite you to examine the two objects I laid on the table.”
Judge Fang was startled to notice that, while the block’s
appearance had not changed, the book had become covered in a
layer of thick gray dust, as if it had been growing mildew for several
decades.
“Oooh,” Chang blurted, sucking a lengthy skein of noodles into
his maw and bulging his eyes in the direction of this peculiar
exhibit.
Judge Fang rose, walked around the table, and bent down for a
closer look. The gray dust was not uniformly distributed; it was
much thicker toward the edges of the book cover. He opened the
book and was startled to notice that the dust had infiltrated deep
between the pages.
“This is dust with a purpose in life,” Judge Fang observed.
Miss Pao glanced significantly at the block of wood. Judge
Fang picked it up and examined it on all sides; it was clean.
“This stuff is discriminating too!” Judge Fang said.
“It is Confucian toner,” Chang said, finally choking down his
noodles. “It has a passion for books.”
The Judge smiled tolerantly and looked to Miss Pao for an
explanation. “You have examined this new species of mite, I take
it?”
“It is more interesting than that,” Miss Pao said. “Within the
last week, not one but two new species of mite have appeared in the
Leased Territories-both programmed to seek out anything that
looks like a book.” She reached into her bag again and handed her
master a rolled-up piece of mediatronic paper.
A waitress scurried up and helped move the dishes and teacups
aside. Judge Fang unrolled the page and anchored it with various
small items of faience. The paper was divided into two panes, each
containing a magnified view of a microscopic device. Judge Fang
could see that both were made to navigate through the air, but
beyond that, they could hardly have been more different. One of
them looked like a work of nature; it had several bizarre and
elaborate arms and sported four enormous, wildly involuted,
scooplike devices, arranged ninety degrees apart.
“The eats of a bat!” Chang exclaimed, tracing their impossibly
complex whorls with the tip of a chopstick. Judge Fang said nothing
but reminded himself that this sort of quick insight was just the sort
of thing Chang excelled at.
“It appears to use echolocation, like a bat,” Miss Pao admitted.
“The other one, as you can see, is of a radically different design.”
The other mite looked like a spacecraft as envisioned by Jules
Verne. It had a streamlined, teardrop shape, a pair of manipulator
arms folded neatly against its fuselage, and a deep cylindrical cavity
in the nose that Eudge Fang took to be its eye. “This one sees light
in the ultraviolet range,” Miss Pao said. “Despite their differences,
each does the same thing: searches for books. When it finds a book,
it lands on the cover and :rawls to the edge, then creeps between the
pages and examines the internal structure of the paper.”
“What is it looking for?”
“There is no way to tell, short of disassembling its internal
computer system and decompiling its program-which is difficult,”
Miss Pao said, with characteristic understatement. “When it finds
that it has been investigating a normal book made of old-fashioned
paper, it deactivates and becomes dust.”
“So there are many dirty books in the Leased Territories now,”
Chang ;aid.
“There aren’t that many books to begin with,” Judge Fang said.
Miss Pao and Chang chuckled, but the Judge showed no sign that he
had been making a joke; it was just an observation.
“What conclusions do you draw, Miss Pao?” the Judge said.
“Two different parties are searching the Leased Territories for
the same book,” Miss Pao said.
She did not have to state that the target of this search was
probably the book stolen from the gentleman named Hackworth.
“Can you speculate as to the identity of these parties?”
Miss Pao said, “Of course, neither device carries a maker’s
mark. The bat-eared one has Dr. X written all over it; most of its
features appear to be evolved, not engineered, and the Doctor’s Flea
Circus is nothing more than an effort to collect evolved mites with
useful features. At a first glance, the other device could have come
from any of the engineering works associated with major phyles-
Nippon, New Atlantis, Hindustan, the First Distributed Republic
being prime suspects. But on deeper examination I find a level of
elegance-”
“Elegance?”
“Pardon me, Your Honor, the concept is not easy to explain-
there b an ineffable quality to some technology, described by its
creators as concinnitous, or technically sweet, or a nice hack-signs
that it was math with great care by one who was not merely
motivated but inspired. It is the difference between an engineer and
a hacker.”
“Or an engineer and an artifex?” Judge Fang said.
A trace of a smile came across Miss Pao’s face.
“I fear that I have enmeshed that little girl in a much deeper
business than I ever imagined,” Judge Fang said. He rolled up the
paper anc handed it back to Miss Pao. Chang set the Judge’s teacup
back in front oi him and poured more tea. Without thinking about it,
the Judge put his thumb and fingertips together and tapped them
lightly against the tabletop several times.
This was an ancient gesture in China. The story was that one of
the early Emperors liked to dress as a commoner and travel about
the Middk Kingdom to see how the peasants were getting along.
Frequently, as hi and his staff were sitting about the table in some
inn, he would pour tea for everyone. They could not kowtow to their
lord without giving away his identity, so they would make this
gesture, using their hand to imitate the act of kneeling. Now Chinese
people used it to thank each other ai the dinner table. From time to
time, Judge Fang caught himself doing it:
and thought about what a peculiar thing it was to be Chinese in a
work without an Emperor.
He sat, hands folded into sleeves, and thought about this and
other issues for several minutes, watching the vapor rise from his
tea and forn into a fog as it condensed round the bodies of microaerostats.
“Soon we will obtrude upon Mr. Hackworth and Dr. X and
learn more by observing their reactions. I will consider the right
way to sei about this. In the meantime, let us concern ourselves with
the girl. Chang, visit her apartment building and see whether there
has been any trouble there-suspicious characters hanging about.”
“Sir, with all respect, everyone who lives in the girl’s building
is suspicious character.”
“You know what I mean,” said the Judge with some asperity.
“The building should have a system for filtering nanosites from the
air. If this system is working properly, and if the girl does not take
the book out of her building, then she should go unnoticed by
these.” The Judge drew a streak through the dust on the book’s
cover and smeared the toner between his fingers. “Speak with the
landlord of her building, and let him know that his air-filtering
system is due for an inspection, and that this is genuine, not just a
solicitation for a bribe.”
“Yes, sir,” Chang said. He pushed his chair back, rose, bowed,
and strode out of the restaurant, pausing only to extract a toothpick
from the dispenser by the exit. It would have been acceptable for
him to finish his lunch, but Chang had, in the past, evinced concern
for the girl’s welfare, and apparently wanted to waste no time.
“Miss Pao, plant recording surveillance devices in the girl’s
flat. At first we will change and review the tapes every day. If the
book is not detected soon, we will begin changing them every
week.”
“Yes, sir,” Miss Pao said. She slipped on her phenomenoscopic
spectacles. Colored light reflected from the surfaces of her eyes as
she lost herself in some kind of interface. Judge Fang refilled his
tea, cupped it in the palm of his hand, and went for a stroll round the
edge of the terrace. He had much more important things to think
about than this girl and her book; but he suspected that from now on
he would be thinking about little else.
Description of Old Shanghai; situation of the Theatre
Parnasse; Miranda’s occupation.
Before the Europeans got their hooks into it, Shanghai had been a
walled village on the Huang Pu River, a few miles south of its
confluence with the estuary of the Yangtze. Much of the
architecture was very sophisticated Ming Dynasty stuff, private
gardens for rich families, a shopping street here and there
concealing interior slums, a rickety, vertiginous teahouse rising
from an island in the center of a pond. More recently the wall had
been torn down and a sort of beltway built on its foundations. The
old French concession wrapped around the north side, and in that
neighborhood, on a corner looking across the ring road into the old
city, the Theatre Parnasse had been constructed during the late
1800s. Miranda had been working there for five years, but the
experience had been so intense that it often seemed more like five
days.
The Parnasse had been built by Europeans back when they
were serious and unapologetic about their Europeanness. The facade
was classical: a three-quarter-round portico on the streetcorner,
supported by Corinthian columns, all done in white limestone. The
portico was belted by a white marquee, circa 1990, outlined by
tubes of purple and pink neon. It would have been easy enough to
tear it off and replace it with something mediatronic, but they
enjoyed hauling the bamboo ladders out from the set shop and
snapping the black plastic letters into place, advertising whatever
they were doing tonight. Sometimes they would lower the big
mediatronic screen and show movies, and Westerners would come
from all over Greater Shanghai, dressed up in their tuxedos and
evening gowns, and sit in the dark watching Casablanca or Dances
With Wolves. And at least twice a month, the Parnasse Company
would actually get out on stage and do it: become actors rather than
ractors for a night, lights and greasepaint and costumes. The hard
part was indoctrinating the audience; unless they were theatre buffs,
they always wanted to run up on stage and interact, which upset the
whole thing. Live theatre was an ancient and peculiar taste, roughly
on par with listening to Gregorian chants, and it didn’t pay the bills.
They paid the bills with ractives.
The building was tall and narrow, making the most of precious
Shanghai real estate, so the proscenium had a nearly square aspect
ratio, like an old-fashioned television. Above it was the bust of
some forgotten French actress, supported on gilt wings, flanked by
angels brandishing trumpets and laurel wreaths. The ceiling was a
circular fresco depicting Muses disporting themselves in flimsy
robes. A chandelier hung from the center; its incandescent bulbs had
been replaced by new things that didn’t burn out, and now it cast
light evenly onto the rows of tiny, creaking seats closely packed
together on the main floor. There were three balconies and three
stories of private boxes, two on the left side and two on the right
side of each level. The fronts of the boxes and balconies were all
painted with tableaux from classical mythology, the predominant
color there as elsewhere being a highly French robin’s-egg blue.
The theatre was crammed with plasterwork, so that the faces of
cherubs, overwrought Roman gods, impassioned Trojans, and such
were always poking out of columns and soffits and cornices,
catching you by surprise. Much of this work was spalled from
bullets fired by high-spirited Red Guards during Cultural
Revolution times. Other than the bullet holes, the Parnasse was in
decent shape, though sometime in the twentieth century great
blackiron pipes had been anchored vertically alongside the boxes
and horizontally before the balconies so that spotlights could be
bolted on. Nowadays the spotlights were coin-size disks-phasedarray
devices that carried their own batteries-and could be stuck up
anywhere and controlled by radio. But the pipes were still there and
always required a lot of explaining when tourists came through.
Each of the twelve boxes had its own door, and a curtain rail
curving around the front so that the occupants could get some
privacy between acts. They’d mothballed the curtains and replaced
them with removable soundproof screens, unbolted the seats, and
stored them in the basement. Now each box was a private eggshaped
room just the right size to serve as a body stage. These
twelve stages generated seventy-five percent of the cash flow of the
Theatre Parnasse.
Miranda always checked into her stage half an hour early to run
a diagnostic on her tat grid. The ‘sites didn’t last forever-static
electricity or cosmic rays could knock them out, and if you let your
instrument go to pot out of sheer laziness, you didn’t deserve to call
yourself a ractor.
Miranda had decorated the dead walls of her own stage with
posters and photos of role models, largely actresses from twentiethcentury
passives. She had a chair in ‘the corner for roles that
involved sitting down. There was also a tiny coffee table where she
set down her triple latte, a two-liter bottle of mineral water, and a
box of throat lozenges. Then she peeled down to a black leotard and
tights, hanging her street clothes on a tree by the door. Another
ractor might have gone nude, worn street clothes, or tried to match
her costume to the role she’d be playing, if she were lucky enough
to know in advance. At the moment, though, Miranda never knew.
She had standing bids on Kate in the ractive version of Taming of
the Shrew (which was a butcherous kiudge, but popular among a
certain sort of male user); Scarlett O’Hara in the ractive Gone With
the Wind a double agent named Ilse in an espionage thriller set on a
train passing through Nazi Germany; and Rhea, a neo-Victorian
damsel in distress in Silk Road, an adventure-comedy-romance
ractive set on the wrong side of contemporary Shanghai. She’d
created that role. After the good review had come in (“a remarkably
Rhea-listic portrayal by newcomer Miranda Redpath!”) she had
played little else for a couple of months, even though her bid was so
steep that most users opted for one of the understudies or contented
themselves with watching passively for one-tenth the price. But the
distributor had botched the PR targeting when they tried to take it
beyond the Shanghai market, and so now Silk Road was in limbo
while various heads rolled.
Four leading roles was about as many as she could keep in her
head at once. The prompter made it possible to play any role
without having seen it before, if you didn’t mind making an ass of
yourself. But Miranda had a reputation now and couldn’t get away
with shoddy work. To fill in the blanks when things got slow, she
also had standing bids, under another name, for easier work: mostly
narration jobs, plus anything having to do with children’s media.
She didn’t have any kids of her own, but she still corresponded with
the ones she’d taken care of during her governess days. She loved
racting with children, and besides it was good exercise for the voice,
saying those silly little rhymes just right.
“Practice Kate from Shrew,” she said, and the Miranda-shaped
constellation was replaced by a dark-haired woman with green,
feline eyes, dressed in some costume designer’s concept of what a
rich woman in the Italian Renaissance would be likely to wear.
Miranda had large bunny eyes while Kate had cat eyes, and cat eyes
were used differently from bunny eyes, especially when delivering a
slashing witticism. Carl Hollywood, the company’s founder and
dramaturge, who’d been sitting in passively on her Shrews, had
suggested that she needed more work in this area. Not many payers
enjoyed Shakespeare or even knew who he was, but the ones who
did tended to be very high on the income scale and worth catering
to. Usually this kind of argument had no effect on Miranda, but
she’d been finding that some of these (rich sexist snob asshole)
gentlemen were remarkably good ractors. And any professional
could tell you that it was a rare pleasure to ract with a payer who
knew what he was doing.
. . .
The Shift comprised the Prime Times for London, the East Coast,
and the West Coast. In Greenwich Time, it started around nine P.M.,
when Londoners were finishing dinner and looking for
entertainment, and wound up about seven A.M., when Californians
were going to bed. No matter what time zones they actually lived in,
all ractors tried to work during those hours. In Shanghai’s time
zone, The Shift ran from about five A.M. to midafternoon, and
Miranda didn’t mind doing overtime if some well-heeled
Californian wanted to stretch a ractive late into the night. Some of
the ractors in her company didn’t come in until later in the day, but
Miranda still had dreams of living in London and craved attention
from that city’s sophisticated payers. So she always came to work
early.
When she finished her warmups and went on. she found a bid
already waiting for her. The casting agent, which was a
semiautonomous piece of software, had assembled a company of
nine payers, enough to ract all the guest roles in First Class to
Geneva, which was about intrigue among rich people on a train in
Nazi-occupied France, and which was to ractives what The
Mousetrap was to passive theatre. It was an ensemble piece: nine
guest roles to be assumed by payers, three somewhat larger and
more glamorous host roles to be assumed by payees like Miranda.
One of the characters was, unbeknownst to the others, an Allied spy.
Another was a secret colonel in the SS, another was secretly Jewish,
another was a Cheka agent. Sometimes there was a German trying
to defect to the Allied side. But you never knew which was which
when the ractive started up; the computer switched all the roles
around at random.
It paid well because of the high payer/payee ratio. Miranda
provisionally accepted the bid. One of the other host roles hadn’t
been filled yet, so while she waited, she bid and won a filler job.
The computer morphed her into the face of an adorable young
woman whose face and hair looked typical of what was current in
London at the moment; she wore the uniform of a British Airways
ticket agent. “Good evening, Mr. Oremland,” she gushed, reading
the prompter. The computer disped it into an even perkier voice and
made subtle corrections in her accent.
“Good evening, er, Margaret,” said the jowly Brit staring out of
a pane on her mediatron. He was wearing half-glasses, had to squint
to make out her nametag. His tie was loose on his chest, a gin and
tonic in one hairy fist, and he liked the looks of this Margaret.
Which was almost guaranteed, since Margaret had been morphed up
by a marketing computer in London that knew more about this
gentleman’s taste in girlflesh than he would like to think.
“Six months without a vacation!? How boring,”
Miranda/Margaret said. “You must be doing something terribly
important,” she continued, facetious without being mean, the two of
them sharing a little joke.
“Yes, I suppose even making lots of money does become
boring after a while,” the man returned, in much the same tone.
Miranda glanced over at the casting sheet for First Class to
Geneva. She’d be pissed if this Mr. Oremland got overly talkative
and forced her to pass on the bigger role. Though he did seem a
reasonably clever sort. “You know, it’s a fine time to visit Atlantan
West Africa, and the airship Gold Coast is scheduled to depart in
two weeks-shall I book a stateroom for you? And a companion
perhaps?”
Mr. Oremland seemed iffy. “Call me old-fashioned,” he said,
“but when you say Africa, I think AIDS and parasites.”
“Oh, not in West Africa, sir, not in the new colonies. Would
you like a quick tour?”
Mr. Oremland gave Miranda/Margaret one long, searching,
horny look, sighed, checked his watch, and seemed to remember
that she was an imaginary being. “Thank you just the same,” he
said, and cut her off.
Just in time too; the playbill for Geneva had just filled up.
Miranda only had a few seconds to switch contexts and get herself
into the character of Ilse before she found herself sitting in a firstclass
coach of a midtwentieth-century passenger train, staring into
the mirror at a blond, blue-eyed, high-cheekboned ice queen.
Unfolded on her dressing-table was a letter written in Yiddish.
So tonight she was the secret Jew. She tore the letter into tiny
pieces and fed them out her window, then did the same with a
couple of Stars of David that she rooted out of her jewelry case.
This thing was fully ractive, and there was nothing to prevent other
characters from breaking into her coach and going through her
possessions. Then she finished putting on her makeup and choosing
her outfit, and went to the dining car for dinner. Most of the other
characters were already in here. The nine amateurs were stiff and
stilted as usual, the two other professionals were circulating among
them, trying to loosen them up, break through that selfconsciousness
and get them into their characters.
Geneva ended up dragging on for a good three hours. It was
nearly ruined by one of the payers, who had clearly signed up
exclusively for the purpose of maneuvering Ilse into bed. He turned
out to be the secret SS colonel too; but he was so hell-bent on
fucking Ilse that he spent the whole evening out of character.
Finally Miranda lured him into the kitchen in the back of the dining
car, shoved a foot-long butcher knife into his chest, and left him in
the fridge. She had played this role a couple of hundred times and
knew the location of every potentially lethal object on the train.
After a ractive it was considered good form to go to the Green
Room, a virtual pub where you could chat out-of-character with the
other ractors. Miranda skipped it because she knew that the creep
would be waiting for her there.
Next was a lull of an hour or so. Primetime in London was
over, and New Yorkers were still eating dinner. Miranda went to the
bathroom, ate a little snack, and picked up a few kiddy jobs.
Kids on the West Coast were getting back from school and
jumping right ‘into the high-priced educational ractives that their
parents made available to them. These things created a plethora of
extremely short but fun roles; in quick succession, Miranda’s face
was morphed into a duck, a bunny, a talking tree, the eternally
elusive Carmen Sandiego, and the repulsively cloying Doogie the
Dinosaur. Each of them got a couple of lines at most:
“That’s right! B stands for balloon! I like to play with balloons,
don’t you, Matthew?”
“Sound it out, Victoria! You can do it!”
“Soldier ants have larger and stronger jaws than their worker
counterparts and play a key role in defending the nest from
predators.”
“Please don’t throw me into that briar patch, Br’er Fox!”
“Hello, Roberta! I’ve been missing you all day. How was your
field trip to Disneyland?”
“Twentieth-century airships were filled with flammable
hydrogen, expensive helium, or inefficient hot air, but our modern
versions are filled literally with nothing at all. High-strength
nanostructures make it possible to pump all the air from an airship’s
envelope and fill it with a vacuum. Have you ever been on an
airship, Thomas?”
Nell’s further experiences with the Primer;
the origin of Princess Nell.
“Once upon a time there was a little Princess named Nell who was
imprisoned in a tall dark castle on an island-”
“Why?”
“Nell and Harv had been locked up in the Dark Castle by their
evil stepmother.”
“Why didn’t their father let them out of the Dark Castle?”
“Their father, who had protected them from the whims of the
wicked stepmother, had gone sailing over the sea and never come
back.”
“Why did he never come back?”
“Their father was a fisherman. He went out on his boat every
day. The sea is a vast and dangerous place, filled with monsters,
storms, and other dangers. No one knows what fate befell him.
Perhaps it was foolish of him to sail into such danger, but Nell knew
better than to fret over things she could not change.”
“Why did she have a wicked stepmother?”
“Nell’s mother died one night when a monster came out of the
sea and entered their cottage to snatch Nell and Harv, who were just
babies. She fought with the monster and slew it, but in so doing
suffered grievous wounds and died the next day with her adopted
children still nestled in her bosom.”
“Why did the monster come from the sea?”
“For many years, Nell’s father and mother badly wanted
children but were not so blessed until one day, when the father
caught a mermaid in his net. The mermaid said that if he let her go,
she would grant him a wish, so he wished for two children, a boy
and a girl.
“The next day, while he was out fishing, he was approached by
a mermaid carrying a basket. In the basket were the two little babies,
just as he had requested, wrapped up in cloth of gold. The mermaid
cautioned him that he and his wife should not allow the babies to
cry at night.”
“Why were they in gold cloth?”
“They were actually a Princess and a Prince who had been in a
shipwreck The ship sank, but the basket containing the two babies
bobbed like a cork on the ocean until the mermaids came and found
them. They took care of those two babies until they found a good
parent for them.
“He took the babies back to the cottage and presented them to
his wife, who swooned for joy. They lived happily together for
some time, and whenever one of the babies cried, one of the parents
would get up and comfort it. But one night father did not come
home, because a storm had pushed his little red fishing boat far out
to sea. One of the babies began to cry, and the mother got up to
comfort it. But when the other began to cry as well, there was
nothing she could do, and shortly the monster came calling.
“When the fisherman returned home the next day, he found his
wife’s body lying beside that of the monster, and both of the babies
unharmed. His grief was very great, and he began the difficult task
of raising both the children.
“One day, a stranger came to his door. She said that she had
been cast out by the cruel Kings and Queens of the Land Beyond
and that she needed a place to sleep and would do any kind of work
in exchange. At first she slept on the floor and cooked and cleaned
for the fisherman all day long, but as Nell and Harv got bigger, she
began to give them more and more chores, until by the time their
father disappeared, they toiled from dawn until long after nightfall,
while their stepmother never lifted a finger.”
“Why didn’t the fisherman and his babies live in the castle to
protect them from the monster?”
“The castle was a dark forbidding place on the top of a
mountain. The fisherman had been told by his father that it had been
built many ages ago by trolls, who were still said to live there. And
he did not have the twelve keys.”
“Did the wicked stepmother have the twelve keys?”
“She kept them buried in a secret place as long as the
fisherman was around, but after he sailed away and did not come
back, she had Nell and Harv dig them up again, along with a
quantity of jewels and gold that she had brought with her from the
Land Beyond. She bedecked herself with the gold and jewels, then
opened up the iron gates of the Dark Castle and tricked Nell and
Harv into going inside. As soon as they were in, she slammed the
gates shut behind them and locked the twelve locks. ‘When the sun
goes down, the trolls will have you for a snack!’ she cackled.” –
“What’s a troll?”
“A scary monster that lives in holes in the ground and comes
out after dark.”
Nell started to cry. She slammed the book closed, ran to her
bed, gathered her stuffed animals up in her arms, started chewing on
her blanket, and cried for a while, considering the question of trolls.
The book made a fluttering sound. Nell saw it opening in the
corner of her eye and looked over cautiously, afraid she might see a
picture of a troll. But instead, she saw two pictures. One was of
Princess Nell, sitting on the grass with four dolls gathered in her
arms. Facing it was a picture of Nell surrounded by four creatures: a
big dinosaur, a rabbit, a duck, and a woman in a purple dress with
purple hair.
The book said, “Would you like to hear the story of how
Princess Nell made some friends in the Dark Castle, where she least
expected it, and how they killed all of the trolls and made it a safe
place to live?”
“Yes!” Nell said, and scooted across the floor until she was
poised above the book.
Judge Fang pays a visit to the Celestial Kingdom;
tea served in an ancient setting; a “chance” encounter
with Dr. X
Judge Fang was not afflicted with the Westerner’s inability to
pronounce the name of the man known as Dr. X, unless a combined
Cantonese! New York accent counted as a speech impediment. In
his discussions with his trusted subordinates he had fallen into the
habit of calling him Dr. X anyway.
He had never had cause to pronounce the name at all, until
recently. Judge Fang was district magistrate for the Leased
Territories, which in turn were part of the Chinese Coastal Republic.
Dr. X almost never left the boundaries of Old Shanghai, which was
part of a separate district; more to the point, he stuck to a small but
anfractuous subregion whose tendrils were seemingly ramified
through every block and building of the ancient city. On the map,
this region looked like the root system of a thousand-year-old dwarf
tree; its border must have been a hundred kilometers long, even
though it was contained within a couple of square kilometers. This
region was not part of the Coastal Republic; it styled itself as the
Middle Kingdom, a living vestige of Imperial China, prohibitively
the oldest and greatest nation of the world.
The tendrils went even farther than that; Judge Fang had
known this for a long time. Many of the gang members running
around the Leased Territories with Judge Fang’s cane marks across
their asses had connections on the mainland that could ultimately be
traced back to Dr. X. It was rarely useful to dwell upon this fact; if it
hadn’t been Dr. X, it would have been someone else. Dr. X was
unusually clever at taking advantage of the principle of grith, or
right of refuge, which in the modern usage simply meant that
Coastal Republic officials like Judge Fang could not enter the
Celestial Kingdom and arrest someone like Dr. X. So usually when
they bothered to trace a criminal’s higher connections at all, they
simply drew an arrow up the page to a single character, consisting
of a box with a vertical slash drawn down through the middle. The
character meant Middle, as in Middle Kingdom, though for Judge
Fang it had come to mean, simply, trouble.
At the House of the Venerable and Inscrutable Colonel and
other Judge Fang hangouts, the name of Dr. X had been pronounced
more frequently in recent weeks. Dr. X had tried to bribe everyone
on Judge Fang’s hierarchy except for the Judge himself. Of course,
the overtures had been made by people whose connection with Dr.
X was tenuous in the extreme, and had been so subtle that most of
those approached had not even realized what was happening until,
days or weeks later, they had suddenly sat up in bed exclaiming,
“He was trying to bribe me! I must tell Judge Fang!”
If not for grith, this might have made for a merry and
stimulating couple of decades, as Judge Fang matched his wits
against those of the Doctor, a worthy adversary at last and a
welcome break from smelly, larcenous barbarian whelps. As it was,
Dr. X’s machinations were of purely abstract interest. But they were
no less interesting for that, and many days, as Miss Pao proceeded
through the familiar line of patter about sky-eyes, heuristic mugging
detection, and tagger aerostats, Judge Fang found his attention
wandering across town to the ancient city, to the hong of Dr. X.
It was said that the Doctor frequently took tea in the morning at
an old teahouse there, and so it was that one morning Judge Fang
happened to drop in on the place. It had been built, centuries ago, in
the center of a pond. Swarms of fire-colored fish hung just beneath
the surface of the khaki water, glowing like latent coals, as Judge
Fang and his assistants, Miss Pao and Chang, crossed the bridge.
There was a Chinese belief that demons liked to travel only in
straight lines. Hence the bridge zigzagged no fewer than nine times
as it made its way to the center of the pond. The bridge was a
demon filter, in other words, and the teahouse demon-free, which
seemed of only limited usefulness if it still hosted people like Dr. X.
But for Judge Fang, raised in a city of long straight avenues, full of
straight talkers, it was useful to be reminded that from the point of
view of some people, including Dr. X, all of that straightness was
suggestive of demonism; more natural and human was the everturning
way, where you could never see round the next corner, and
the overall plan could be understood only after lengthy meditation.
The teahouse itself was constructed of unfinished wood, aged
to a nice gray. It looked rickety but evidently wasn’t. It was narrow
and tall, two stories high with a proud winglike roof. One entered
through a low narrow door, built by and for the chronically
undernourished. The interior had the ambience of a rustic cabin on a
lake. Judge Fang had been here before, in mufti, but today he had
thrown a robe over his charcoal-gray pinstripe suit-a reasonably
subtle brocade, funereal by comparison with what people used to
wear in China. He also wore a black cap embroidered with a
unicorn, which in most company would probably be lumped in with
rainbows and elves but here would be understood for what it was, an
ancient symbol of acuity. Dr. X could be relied upon to get the
message.
The teahouse staff had had plenty of time to realize he was
coming as he negotiated the endless turns in the causeway. A
manager of sorts and a couple of waitresses were arrayed before the
door, bowing deeply as he approached.
Judge Fang had been raised on Cheerios, burgers, and jumbo
burritos bulging with beans and meat. He was just a bit less than
two meters in height. His beard was unusually thick, and he had
been letting it grow out for a couple of years now, and his hair fell
down past the tips of his shoulder blades. These elements, plus the
hat and robe, and in combination with the power reposed in him by
the state, gave him a certain presence of which he was well aware.
He tried not to be overly satisfied with himself, as this would have
gone against all Confucian precepts. On the other hand,
Confucianism was all about hierarchy, and those who were in high
positions were supposed to comport themselves with a certain
dignity. Judge Fang could turn it on when he needed to. He used it
now to get himself situated at the best table on the first floor, off in
the corner with a nice view out the tiny old windows into the
neighboring Ming-era garden. He was still in the Coastal Republic,
in the middle of the twenty-first century. But he could have been in
the Middle Kingdom of yore, and for all intents and purposes, he
was.
Chang and Miss Pao separated themselves from their master
and requested a table on the second floor, up a narrow and alarming
stairway, leaving Judge Fang in peace whilst also making their
presence forcibly known to Dr. X, who happened to be up there
right now, as he always was at this time in the morning, sipping tea
and chatting with his venerable homeboys.
When Dr. X made his way down half an hour later, he was
nonetheless delighted and surprised to see the moderately famous
and widely respected Judge Fang sitting all by his lonesome staring
out at the pond, its schools of fish flickering lambently. When he
approached the table to tender his respects, Judge Fang invited him
to take a seat, and after several minutes of sensitive negotiations
over whether this would or would not be an unforgivable intrusion
on the magistrate’s privacy, Dr. X finally, gratefully, reluctantly,
respectfully took a seat.
There was lengthy discourse between the two men on which of
them was more honored to be in the company of the other, followed
by exhaustive discussion of the relative merits of the different teas
offered by the proprietors, whether the leaves were best picked in
early or late April, whether the brewing water should be violently
boiling as the pathetic gwailos always did it, or limited to eighty
degrees Celsius.
Eventually, Dr. X got around to complimenting Judge Fang on
his cap, especially on the embroidery work. This meant that he had
noticed the unicorn and understood its message, which was that
Judge Fang had seen through all of his efforts at bribery.
Not long afterward, Miss Pao came down and regretfully
informed the Judge that his presence was urgently required at a
crime scene in the Leased Territories. To spare Judge Fang the
embarrassment of having to cut short the conversation, Dr. X was
approached, moments later, by one of his staff, who whispered
something into his ear. The Doctor apologized for having to take his
leave, and the two men then got into a very genteel argument over
which one of them was being more inexcusably rude, and then over
which would precede the other across the bridge. Judge Fang ended
up going first, because his duties were deemed more pressing, and
thus ended the first meeting between the Judge and Dr. X. The
Judge was quite happy; it had all gone just as planned.
Hackworth receives an unexpected visit
from Inspector Chang.
Mrs. Hull had to shake the flour out of her apron to answer the door.
Hackworth, working in his study, assumed it was a mere delivery
until she appeared in his doorway, harrumphing lightly, holding a
salver with a single card centered on it: Lieutenant Chang. His
organization was called, in traditional Chinese general-to-specific
order, China Coastal Republic Shanghai New Chusan Leased
Territories District Magistrate Office.
“What does he want?”
“To give you your hat back.”
“Send him in,” Hackworth said, startled.
Mrs. Hull dawdled significantly. Hackworth glanced into a
mirror and saw himself reaching for his throat, checking the knot on
his necktie. His smoking jacket was hanging loose, and he wrapped
it tight and retied the sash. Then he went to the parlor.
Mrs. Hull led Lieutenant Chang into the parlor. He was a burly,
ungainly fellow with a short buzz cut. Hackworth’s top hat, looking
rather ill-used, could be seen indistinctly through a large plastic bag
clenched in his hand. “Lieutenant Chang,” Mrs. Hull announced,
and Chang bowed at Hackworth, smiling a bit more than seemed
warranted. Hackworth bowed back. “Lieutenant Chang.”
“I will not disturb you for long, I promise,” Chang said in clear
but unrefined English. “During an investigation-details not
relevant here-we got this from a suspect. It is marked your
property. Much the worse for wear-please accept it.”
“Well done, Lieutenant,” said Hackworth, receiving the bag
and holding it up to the light. “I did not expect to see it again, even
in such a battered condition.”
“Well, these boys do not have respect for a good hat, I am
afraid,” said Lieutenant Chang.
Hackworth paused, not knowing what one was supposed to say
at this point. Chang just stood there, seeming more at ease in
Hackworth’s parlor than Hackworth was. The first exchange had
been simple, but now the East/West curtain fell between them like a
rusty cleaver.
Was this part of some official procedure? Was it a solicitation
for a tip? Or just Mr. Chang being a nice guy?
When in doubt, end the visit sooner rather than later. “Well,”
said Hackworth, “I don’t know and don’t care what you arrested
him for, but I commend you for having done so.”
Lieutenant Chang did not get the hint and realize it was time to
leave. On the contrary, he seemed just a bit perplexed now, where
before everything had been so simple.
“I cannot help being curious,” Chang said, “what gave you the
idea that anyone had been arrested?”
Hackworth felt a spear pass through his heart.
“You’re a police lieutenant holding what appears to be an
evidence bag,” he said. “The implication is clear.”
Lieutenant Chang looked at the bag, laboriously perplexed.
“Evidence? It is just a shopping bag-to protect your hat from the
rain. And I am not here in my official capacity.”
Another spear, at right angles to the first one.
“Though,” Chang continued, “if some criminal activity has
taken place of which I was not made aware, perhaps I should
recharacterize this visit.
Spear number three; now Hackworth’s pounding heart sat at
the origin of a bloody coordinate system plotted by Lieutenant
Chang, conveniently pinned and exposed for thorough examination.
Chang’s English was getting better all the time, and Hackworth was
beginning to think that he was one of those Shanghainese who had
spent much of his life in Vancouver, New York, or London.
“I had assumed that the gentleman’s hat had simply been
misplaced or perhaps blown off by a gust of wind. Now you say
criminals were involved!” Chang looked as though he had never, to
this day, suspected the existence of criminals in the Leased
Territories. Then shock was transcended by wonder as he segued,
none too subtly, into the next phase of the trap.
“It was not important,” Hackworth said, trying to derail
Chang’s relentless train of thought, sensing that he and his family
were tied to the tracks. Chang ignored him, as if so exhilarated by
the workings of his mind that he could not be distracted.
“Mr.’ Hackworth, you have given me an idea. I have been
trying to solve a difficult case-a mugging that took place a few
days ago. The victim was an unidentified Atlantan gentleman.”
“Don’t you have tag mites for that kind of thing?”
“Oh,” Lieutenant Chang said, sounding rather downhearted,
“tag mites are not very reliable. The perpetrators took certain
precautions to prevent the mites from attaching. Of course, several
mites attached themselves to the victim. But before we could track
him, he made his way to New Atlantis Clave, where your superb
immune system destroyed those mites. So his identity has remained
a mystery.” Chang reached into his breast pocket and pulled out a
folded sheet of paper. “Mr. Hackworth, please tell me whether you
recognize any of the figures in this clip.”
“I’m actually rather busy-” Hackworth said, but Chang
unfolded the paper in front of him and gave it a command in
Shanghainese. Initially the page was covered with static Chinese
characters. Then a large panel in the middle opened up and began to
play back a cine feed.
Watching himself getting mugged was one of the most
astonishing things Hackworth had ever seen. He could not stop
watching it. The feed went to slow motion, and then out came the
book. Tears came to Hackworth’s eyes, and he made an effort not to
blink lest he dislodge them. Not that it really mattered, since
Lieutenant Chang was standing rather close to him and could no
doubt see everything.
Chang was shaking his head in wonderment. “So it was you,
Mr. Hackworth. I had not made the connection. So many nice
things, and such a vicious beating. You have been the victim of a
very serious crime!”
Hackworth could not speak and had nothing to say anyway.
“It is striking to me,” Chang continued, “that you did not
bother to report this serious crime to the magistrate! For some time
now we have been reviewing this tape, wondering why the victim-
a respectable gentleman-did not step forward to assist us with our
inquiries. So much effort wasted,” Chang fretted. Then he
brightened up. “But it’s all water under the bridge, I suppose. We
have one or two of the gang in custody, on an unrelated crime, and
now I can charge them with your mugging as well. Of course, we
will require your testimony.”
“Of course.”
“The items that were taken from you?”
“You saw it.”
“Yes. A watch chain with various items, a fountain pen, and-”
“That’s it.”
Chang seemed just a bit nonplussed, but more than that he
seemed deeply satisfied, suffused by a newly generous spirit. “The
book does not even bear mentioning?”
“Not really.”
“It looked like an antique of some sort. Quite valuable, no?”
“A fake. That sort of thing is popular with us. A way to build
an impressive-seeming library without going broke.”
“Ah, that explains it,” said Mr. Chang, growing more satisfied
by the minute. If Hackworth provided him any more reassurance on
the matter of the book, he would no doubt curl up on the sofa and
fall asleep. “Still, I should mention the book in my official report-
which will be shared with New Atlantis authorities, as the victim in
this case belonged to that phyle.”
“Don’t,” said Hackworth, finally turning to look Chang in the
eye for the first time. “Don’t mention it.”
“Ah, I cannot imagine your motive for saying this,” Chang
said, “but I have little leeway in the matter. We are closely
monitored by our supervisors.”
“Perhaps you could simply explain my feelings to your
supervisor.”
Lieutenant Chang received this suggestion with a look of wild
surmise. “Mr. Hackworth, you are a very clever fellow-as I
already gathered from your demanding and very responsible
position-but I am ashamed to tell you that your excellently devious
plan may not work. My supervisor is a cruel taskmaster with no
regard for human feelings. To be quite frank-and I tell you this in
all confidence-he is not entirely without ethical blemishes.”
“Ah,” Hackworth said, “so if I am following you-”
“Oh, no, Mr. Hackworth, it is I who am following you.”
“-the appeal to sympathy won’t work, and we will have to
sway him using another strategy, perhaps related to this ethical blind
spot.”
“That is an approach that had not occurred to me.”
“Perhaps you should do some thinking, or even some research,
as to what level and type of inducement might be required,”
Hackworth said, suddenly walking toward the exit. Lieutenant
Chang followed him.
Hackworth hauled his front door open and allowed Chang to
retrieve his own hat and umbrella from the rack. “Then simply get
back to me and spell it out as plainly and simply as you can manage.
Good night, Lieutenant Chang.”
As he rode his bicycle toward the gate on his way back to the
Leased Territories, Chang was exultant over the success of tonight’s
research. Of course, neither he nor Judge Fang was interested in
extracting bribes from this Hackworth; but Hackworth’s willingness
to pay served as proof that the book did, in fact, embody stolen
intellectual property.
But then he bridled his emotions, remembering the words of
the philosopher Tsang to Yang Fu upon the latter’s appointment to
chief criminal judge: “The rulers have failed in their duties, and the
people consequently have been disorganized for a long time. When
you have found out the truth of any accusation, be grieved for and
pity them, and do not feel joy at your own ability.”
Not that Chang’s abilities had even been tested this evening;
nothing could be easier than getting the New Atlantans to believe
that Chinese police were corrupt.
Miranda takes an interest in an anonymous client.
Miranda scanned her balance sheet at the end of one month and
discovered that her leading source of income was no longer Silk
Road or Taming of the Shrew-it was that storybook about Princess
Nell. In a way that was surprising, because kid stuff usually didn’t
pay well, but in another way it wasn’t-because she had been
spending an incredible amount of time in that ractive lately.
It had started small: a story, just a few minutes long, involving
a dark castle, a wicked stepmother, and a gate with twelve locks. It
would have been forgettable, except for two things: It paid much
better than most kid work, because they were specifically looking
for highly rated actresses, and it was rather dark and weird by the
standards of contemporary children’s literature. Not many people
were into that whole Grimm Brothers scene anymore.
She collected a few ucus for her trouble and forgot about it. But
the next day, the same contract number came up on her mediatron
again. She accepted the job and found herself reading the same
story, except that it was longer and more involved, and it kept
backtracking and focusing in on tiny little bits of itself, which then
expanded into stories in their own right.
Because of the way that the ractive was hooked up, she didn’t
get direct feedback from her counterpart on the other end. She
assumed it was a little girl. But she couldn’t hear the girl’s voice.
Miranda was presented with screens of text to be read, and she read
them. But she could tell that this process of probing and focusing
was being directed by the girl. She had seen this during her
governess days. She knew that on the other end of this connection
was a little girl insatiably asking why. So she put a little gush of
enthusiasm into her voice at the beginning of each line, as if she
were delighted that the question had been asked.
When the session was over, the usual screen came up telling
her how much she’d made, the contract number, and so on. Before
she signed off on it, she checked the little box labelled MARK
HERE IF YOU WOULD LIKE A CONTINUING
RELATIONSHIP WITH THIS CONTRACT.
The relationship box, they called it, and it only came up with
higherquality ractives, where continuity was important. The disping
process worked so well that any ractor, male or female, bass or
soprano, would sound the same to the end user. But discriminating
customers could of course tell ractors apart anyway because of
subtle differences in style, and once they had a relationship with one
performer, they liked to keep it. Once Miranda checked the box and
signed off, she’d get first crack at any more Princess Nell jobs.
Within a week she was teaching this girl how to read. They’d
work on letters for a while and then wander off into more stories
about Princess Nell, stop in the middle for a quick practical
demonstration of basic math, return to the story, and then get
sidetracked with an endless chain of “why this?” and “why that?”
Miranda had spent a lot of time with kiddie ractives, both as a child
and as a governess, and the superiority of this thing was palpable-
like hefting an antique silver fork when you’d been eating with
plastic utensils for twenty years, or slithering into a tailor-made
evening gown when you were used to jeans.
These and other associations came into Miranda’s mind on any
of the rare moments when she came into contact with something of
Quality, and if she didn’t make a conscious effort to stop the
process, she would end up remembering just about everything that
had happened to her during the first years of her life-the Mercedes
taking her to private school, the crystal chandelier that would ring
like fairy bells when she climbed up on the huge mahogany dinner
table to tickle it, her paneled bedroom with the four-poster bed with
the silk-and-goosedown duvet. For reasons still unspecified, Mother
had moved them far away from all of that, into what passed for
poverty these days. Miranda only remembered that, when she had
been physically close to Father, Mother had watched them with
more vigilance than seemed warranted.
A month or two into the relationship, Miranda groggily signed
off from a long Princess Nell session and was astounded to notice
that she’d been going for eight hours without a break. Her throat
was raw, and she hadn’t been to the loo in hours. She had made a lot
of money. And the time in New York was something like six in the
morning, which made it seem unlikely that the little girl lived there.
She must be in a time zone not many hours different from
Miranda’s, and she must sit there playing with that ractive
storybook all day long instead of going to school like a little rich
girl should. It was slim evidence to go on, but Miranda never
needed much evidence to confirm her belief that rich parents were
just as capable of fucking with their children’s minds as anyone.
Further experiences with the Primer; Princess Nell and
Harv in the Dark Castle.
Harv was a clever boy who knew about trolls, and so as soon
as he knew that they had been locked up inside the Dark
Castle by their wicked stepmother, he told Nell that they must
go out and gather all the firewood they could find.
Rummaging in the Great Hall of the castle, he found a suit of
armor holding a battle-axe. “I will chop down some trees with
this,” he said, “and you must go out and gather kindling.”
“What’s kindling?” Nell asked.
An illustration of the castle appeared. In the center was a tall
building with many towers that rose up into the clouds. Around it
was an open space where trees and plants grew, and around that was
the high wall that held them prisoner.
The illustration zoomed in on an open grassy area and became
very detailed. Harv and Nell were trying to build a fire. There was a
pile of wet logs Harv had chopped up. Harv also had a rock, which
he was striking against the butt of a knife. Sparks flew out and were
swallowed up by the wet logs.
“You start the fire, Nell,” Harv said, and left her alone.
Then the picture stopped moving, and Nell realized, after a few
minutes, that it was fully ractive now.
She picked up the rock and the knife and began to whack them
together (actually she was just moving her empty hands in space,
but in the illustration Princess Nell’s hands did the same thing).
Sparks flew, but there was no fire.
She kept at it for a while, getting more and more frustrated,
until tears came to her eyes. But then one of the sparks went awry
and landed in some dry grass. A little curl of smoke rose up and
died out.
She experimented a bit and learned that dry yellow grass
worked better than green grass. Still, the fire never lasted for more
than a few seconds.
A gust of wind came up and blew a few dry leaves in her
direction. She learned that the fire could spread from dry grass to
leaves. The stem of a leaf was basically a small dry twig, so that
gave her the idea to explore a little grove of trees and look for some
twigs. The grove was densely overgrown, but she found what she
was looking for beneath an old dead bush.
“Good!” Harv said, when he came back and found her
approaching with an armload of small dry sticks. “You found some
kindling. You’re a smart girl and a good worker.”
Soon they had built up a roaring bonfire. Harv chopped down
enough trees to make sure that they could keep it going until
sunrise, and then he and Nell fell asleep, knowing that trolls
would not dare approach the fire. Still, Nell did not sleep very
well, for she could hear the mutterings of the trolls off in the
darkness and see the red sparks of their eyes. She thought
she heard another sound too: muffled voices crying for help.
When the sun came up, Nell explored the Dark Castle,
looking for the source of the voices, but found nothing. Harv
spent the whole day chopping wood. The day before, he had
cut down a third of the trees, and this day he cut down
another third.
That night, Nell again heard the voices, but this time they
seemed to be shouting, “Look in the trees! Look in the trees!”
The next morning, she went into the remaining grove of trees
and explored it even as Harv was cutting the last of them
down. Again she found nothing.
Neither one of them slept well that night, for they knew
that they were burning the last of their wood, and that the next
night they would have no protection from the trolls. Nell heard
the voices again, and this time they seemed to be shouting,
“Look under the ground! Look under the ground!”
Later, after the sun came up, she went exploring again
and found a cave whose entrance had been shut up by trolls.
When she opened the cave, she found four dolls: a dinosaur,
a duck, a rabbit, and a woman with long purple hair. But she
did not see anything living that could have made the voices.
Nell and Harv went into the Dark Castle itself that night
and shut themselves up in a room high in one tower and
pushed heavy furniture against the door, hoping that it would
keep the trolls at bay. The room had one tiny window, and
Nell stood next to it watching the sun go down, wondering if
she would see it rise again. Just as the last glimmer of red
light disappeared beneath the horizon, she felt a puff of air at
her back and turned around to see an astonishing sight: The
stuffed animals had turned into real creatures!
There was a great scary dinosaur, a duck, a clever little
bunny rabbit, and a woman in a purple gown with purple hair.
They explained to Princess Nell that her wicked stepmother
was an evil sorceress in the Land Beyond, and that the four of
them had long ago sworn to defeat her evil plans. She had
placed an enchantment on them, so that they were dolls in
the daytime but returned to their normal selves at night. Then
she had imprisoned them in this castle, where the trolls had
shut them up inside a cave. They thanked Nell for releasing
them.
Then Nell told them her own story. When she mentioned
how she and Harv had been plucked from the ocean wrapped
in cloth of gold, the woman named Purple said, “This means
that you are a true Princess, and so we pledge our undying
loyalty to you.” And all four of them bent down on one knee
and swore an oath to defend Princess Nell to the death.
Dinosaur, who was the fiercest of them all, mounted a
campaign to stamp out the trolls, and within a few days they
had all been driven away. Thereafter Nell was no longer
troubled in her sleep, for she knew that the scary trolls, who
had once given her bad dreams, had been replaced by her
four night friends.
The torture chamber of Judge Fang; a barbarian is
interrogated; dark events in the interior of China;
an unignorable summons from Dr. X
Judge Fang didn’t torture people frequently. This was for several
reasons. Under the new system of Confucian justice, it was no
longer necessary for every criminal to sign a confession before a
sentence was carried out; all that was needed was for the magistrate
to find him guilty on the strength of the evidence. This alone
relieved the Judge of having to torture many of the people who
came before his bench, though he was often tempted to force
confessions from insolent Western thetes who refused to take
responsibility for their own actions. Furthermore, modern
surveillance equipment made it possible to gather information
without having to rely on (sometimes reticent) human witnesses as
the magistrates of yore had done.
But the man with the red dreadlocks was a very reluctant
witness indeed, and unfortunately the information locked up in his
brain was unique. No airborne cine aerostat or microscopic
surveillance mite had recorded the data Judge Fang sought. And so
the magistrate had decided to revert to the time-honored methods of
his venerable predecessors.
Chang strapped the prisoner (who would only identify himself
as a Mr. PhyrePhox) to a heavy X-shaped rack that was normally
used for canings. This was purely a humanitarian gesture; it would
prevent PhyrePhox from thrashing wildly around the room and
injuring himself. Chang also stripped the prisoner from the waist
down and situated a bucket under his organs of elimination. In so
doing he happened to expose the only actual injury that the prisoner
would suffer during this entire procedure: a tiny, neat scab in the
base of the spine, where the court physician had thrust in the spinal
tap the previous afternoon, and introduced a set of nanosites-
nanotechnological parasites-under the supervision of Miss Pao. In
the ensuing twelve hours, the ‘sites had migrated up and down the
prisoner’s spinal column, drifting lazily through the cerebrospinal
fluid, and situated themselves on whatever afferent nerves they
happened to bump up against. These nerves, used by the body to
transmit information such as (to name only one example)
excruciating pain to the brain, had a distinctive texture and
appearance that the ‘sites were clever enough to recognize. It is
probably superfluous to mention that these ‘sites had one other key
feature, namely the ability to transmit bogus information along
those nerves.
That tiny scab, just above the buttocks, always drew Judge
Fang’s attention when he presided over one of these affairs, which
fortunately was not more than a few times a year. PhyrePhox, being
a natural redhead, had deathly pale skin.
“Cool!” the prisoner suddenly exclaimed, swiveling his head
around in a spray of dreadlocks, trying as best he could to look
down and back over his freckled shoulder. “I got this feeling of,
like, stroking some, like, really soft fur or something against my left
inner thigh. That is so bitching! Do it again, man! Whoa, wait a
minute! Now it’s the same feeling, but it’s like on the sole of my
right foot!”
“The attachment of the nanosites to the nerves is an aleatory
process-we never know which nanosite will end up where. The
sensations you are experiencing now are a way for us to take
inventory, as it were. Of course, nothing is actually happening in
your thigh or foot; it all takes place within the spinal column, and
you would feel it even if your legs had been amputated.”
“That’s really weird,” PhyrePhox exclaimed, his pale green
eyes going wide with amazement. “So you could even, like, torture
a basket case.” His eye and cheek twitched on one side. “Damn!
Feels like someone’s tickling my face now. Hey, cut it out!” A grin
came over his face. “Oh, no! I’ll tell you everything! Just don’t
tickle me! Please!”
Chang was first stunned and then furious at the prisoner’s
breach of decorum and made a move toward a rack of canes
mounted to the wall. Judge Fang steadied his assistant with a firm
hand on the shoulder; Chang swallowed his anger and took a deep
breath, then bowed apologetically.
“You know, PhyrePhox,” Judge Fang said, “I really appreciate
the moments of levity and even childlike wonder that you are
injecting into this process. So often when we strap people to the
torture rack, they are unpleasantly tense and hardly any fun at all to
be around.”
“Hey, man, I’m into new experiences. I get lots of experience
points for this, huh?”
“Experience points?”
“It’s a joke. From swords-and-sorcery ractives. See, the more
experience points your character earns, the more power he gets.”
Judge Fang straightened one hand and snapped it backward
past his head, making a whooshing sound like a low-flying fighter
plane. “The reference escaped me,” he explained for the benefit of
Chang and Miss Pao, who did not recognize the gesture.
“Feels like there’s something tickling my right eardrum now,”
the prisoner said, snapping his head back and forth.
“Good! That means a nanosite happened to attach itself to the
nerve running from your eardrum into your brain. We always
consider it an omen of good fortune when this happens,” Judge
Fang said, “as pain impulses delivered into this nerve make a
particularly deep impression on the subject. Now, I will ask Miss
Pao to suspend this process for a few minutes so that I can have
your full attention.”
“Cool,” said the prisoner.
“Let’s review what we have so far. You are thirty-seven years
old. Almost twenty years ago, you co-founded a CryptNet node in
Oakland, California. It was a very early node-number 178. Now,
of course, there are tens of thousands of nodes.”
A hint of a smile from the prisoner. “You almost got me there,”
he said. “No way am I going to tell you how many nodes there are.
Of course, no one really knows anyway.”
“Very well,” Judge Fang said. He nodded to Chang, who made
a mark on a sheet of paper. “We will save that inquiry for the latter
phase of the investigation, which will commence in a few minutes.
“Like all other CryptNet members,” Judge Fang continued,
“you started out at the first level and made your way up from there,
as the years went by, to your current level of-what?”
PhyrePhox smirked and shook his head knowingly. “I’m sorry,
Judge Fang, but we’ve been through this. I can’t deny I started out
at level one-I mean, that’s, like, obvious-but anything beyond
that point is speculation.”
“It’s only speculation if you don’t tell us,” Judge Fang said,
controlling a momentary spark of annoyance. “I suspect you of
being at least a twenty-fifth-level member.”
PhyrePhox got a serious look on his face and shook his head,
jangling the shiny, colorful fragments of glass and metal worked
into his dreadlocks. “That is so bogus. You should know that the
highest level is ten. Anything beyond that is, like, a myth. Only
conspiracy theorists believe in levels beyond ten. CryptNet is just a
simple, innocuous tupleprocessing collective, man.”
“That is, of course, the party line, which is only believed by
complete idiots,” Judge Fang said. “In any case, returning to your
previous statement, we have established that over the next eight
years, Node 178 did a prosperous business-as you said, processing
tuples. During this time you worked your way up the hierarchy to
the tenth level. Then you claim to have severed your connection
with CryptNet and gone into business for yourself, as a
mediagrapher. Since then, you have specialized in war zones. Your
photo, cine, and sound collages from the battlegrounds of China
have won prizes and been accessed by hundreds of thousands of
media consumers, though your work is so graphic and disturbing
that mainstream acceptance has eluded you.”
“That’s your opinion, man.”
Chang stepped forward, visibly clenching the many stout
muscles that enwreathed his big, bony, close-cropped head. “You
will address the magistrate as Your Honor!” he hissed.
“Chill out, man,” PhyrePhox said. “Jeez, who’s torturing whom
here?”
Judge Fang exchanged a look with Chang. Chang, out of sight
of the prisoner, licked one index finger and made an imaginary mark
in the air:
Score one for PhyrePhox.
“Many of us who are not part of CryptNet find it hard to
understand how that organization can survive its extremely high
attrition rate. Over and over again, first-level CryptNet novices
work their way up the hierarchy to the tenth and supposedly highest
level, then drop out and seek other work or simply fade back into
the phyles from which they originated.”
PhyrePhox tried to shrug insouciantly but was too effectively
restrained to complete the maneuver.
Judge Fang continued, “This pattern has been widely noted and
has led to speculation that CryptNet contains many levels beyond
the tenth, and that all of the people pretending to be ex-CryptNet
members are, in fact, secretly connected to the old network; secretly
in communication with all of the other nodes; secretly working their
way up to higher and higher levels within CryptNet even while
infiltrating the power structures of other phyles and organizations.
That CryptNet is a powerful secret society that has spread its
tendrils high into every phyle and corporation in the world.”
“That is so paranoid.”
“Normally we do not concern ourselves with these matters,
which may be mere paranoid ravings as you aver. There are those
who would claim that the Chinese Coastal Republic, of which I am
a servant, is riddled with secret CryptNet members. I myself am
skeptical of this. Even if it were true, it would only matter to me if
they committed crimes within my jurisdiction.”
And it could scarcely make any difference anyway, Judge Fang
added to himself, given that the Coastal Republic is completely
riddled with corruption and intrigue under the best of circumstances.
The darkest and most powerful conspiracy in the world would be
chewed up and spat out by the scheming corporate warlords of the
Coastal Republic.
Judge Fang realized that everyone was looking at him, waiting
for him to continue.
“You were spacing out, Your Honor,” PhyrePhox said.
Judge Fang had been spacing out quite a bit lately, usually
while pondering this very subject. Corrupt and incompetent
government was hardly a new development in China, and the
Master himself had devoted many parts of the Analects to advising
his followers in how they should comport themselves while working
in the service of corrupt lords. “A superior man indeed is Chu Poyu!
When good government prevails in his state, he is to be found in
office. When bad government prevails, he can roll his principles up
and keep them in his breast.” One of the great virtues of
Confucianism was its suppleness. Western political thought tended
to be rather brittle; as soon as the state became corrupt, everything
ceased to make sense. Confucianism always retained its
equilibrium, like a cork that could float as well in spring water or
raw sewage.
Nevertheless, Judge Fang had recently been plagued with
doubts as to whether his life made any sense at all in the context of
the Coastal Republic, a nation almost completely devoid of virtue.
If the Coastal Republic had believed in the existence of virtue,
it could at least have aspired to hypocrisy.
He was getting off the track here. The issue was not whether
the Coastal Republic was well-governed. The issue was trafficking
in babies.
“Three months ago,” Judge Fang said, “you arrived in
Shanghai via airship and, after a short stay, proceeded into the
interior via a hovercraft on the Yangtze. Your stated mission was to
gather material for a mediagraphic documentary concerning a new
criminal gang”-here Judge Fang referred to his notes-”called the
Fists of Righteous Harmony.”
“It ain’t no small-time triad,” PhyrePhox said, smiling
exultantly. “It’s the seeds of a dynastic rebellion, man.”
“I’ve reviewed the media you transmitted back to the outside
world on this subject,” Judge Fang said, “and will make my own
judgment. The prospects of the Fists are not at issue here.”
PhyrePhox was not at all convinced; he raised his head and
opened his mouth to explain to Judge Fang how wrong he was, then
thought better of it, shook his head regretfully, and acquiesced.
“Two days ago,” Judge Fang continued, “you returned to
Shanghai in a riverboat badly overloaded with several dozen
passengers, most of them peasants fleeing from famine and strife in
the interior.” He was now reading from a Shanghai Harbormaster
document detailing the inspection of the boat in question. “I note
that several of the passengers were women carrying female infants
under three months of age. The vessel was searched for contraband
and admitted into the harbor.” Judge Fang did not need to point out
that this meant practically nothing; such inspectors were notoriously
unobservant, especially when in the presence of distractions such as
envelopes full of money, fresh cartons of cigarettes, or
conspicuously amorous young passengers. But the more corrupt a
society was, the more apt its officials were to brandish pathetic
internal documents such as this one as if they were holy writ, and
Judge Fang was no exception to this rule when it served a higher
purpose. “All of the passengers, including the infants, were
processed in the usual way, records taken of retinal patterns,
fingerprints, etc. I regret to say that my esteemed colleagues in the
Harbormaster’s Office did not examine these records with their
wonted diligence, for if they had, they might have noticed large
discrepancies between the biological characteristics of the young
women and their alleged daughters, suggesting that none of them
were actually related to each other. But perhaps more pressing
matters prevented them from noticing this.” Judge Fang let the
unspoken accusation hang in the air: that the Shanghai authorities
were themselves not out of reach of CryptNet influence. PhyrePhox
visibly tried to look ingenuous.
“A day later, during a routine investigation of organized crime
activity in the Leased Territories, we placed a surveillance device in
an allegedly vacant apartment thought to be used for illegal
activities and were startled to hear the sound of many small infants.
Constables raided the place immediately and found twenty-four
female infants, belonging to the Han racial group, being cared for by
eight young peasant women, recently arrived from the countryside.
Upon interrogation these women said that they had been recruited
for this work by a Han gentleman whose identity has not been
established, and who has not been found. The infants were
examined. Five of them were on your boat, Mr. PhyrePhox-the
biological records match perfectly.”
“If there was a baby-smuggling operation associated with that
boat,” PhyrePhox said, “I had nothing to do with it.”
“We have interrogated the boat’s owner and captain,” Judge
Fang said, “and he asserts that this voyage was planned and paid for
by you, from beginning to end.”
“I had to get back to Shanghai somehow, so I hired the boat.
These women wanted to go to Shanghai, so I was cool about letting
them come along.”
“Mr. PhyrePhox, before we start torturing you, let me explain
to you my state of mind,” Judge Fang said, coming close to the
prisoner so that they could look each other in the eye. “We have
examined these babies closely. It appears that they were well cared
for-no malnourishment or signs of abuse. Why, then, should I take
such an interest in this case?
“The answer has nothing to do, really, with my duties as a
district magistrate. It doesn’t even relate to Confucian philosophy
per se. It is a racial thing, Mr. PhyrePhox. That a European man is
smuggling Han babies to the Leased Territories-and thence, I
would assume, out to the world beyond-triggers profound, I might
even say primal emotions within me and many other Chinese
persons.
“During the Boxer Rebellion, the rumor was spread that the
orphanages run by European missionaries were in fact abattoirs
where white doctors scooped the eyes out of the heads of Han
babies to make medicine for European consumption. That many
Han believed these rumors accounts for the extiEeme violence to
which the Europeans were subjected during that rebellion. But it
also reflects a regrettable predisposition to racial fear and hatred that
is latent within the breasts of all human beings of all tribes.
“With your baby-smuggling operation you have stumbled into
the same extremely dangerous territory. Perhaps these little girls are
destined for comfortable and loving homes in non-Han phyles. That
is the best possible outcome for you-you will be punished but you
will live. But for all I know, they are being used for organ
transplants-in other words, the baseless rumors that incited
peasants to storm the orphanages during the Boxer Rebellion may in
fact be literally true in your case. Does this help to clarify the
purpose of this evening’s little get-together?”
At the beginning of this oration, PhyrePhox had been wearing
his baseline facial expression-an infuriatingly vacant half-grin,
which Judge Fang had decided was not really a smirk, more a
posture of detached bemusement. As soon as Judge Fang had
mentioned the eyeballs, the prisoner had broken eye contact, lost the
smile, and become more and more pensive until, by the end, he was
actually nodding in agreement.
He kept on nodding for a minute longer, staring fixedly at the
floor. Then he brightened and looked up at the Judge. “Before I give
you my answer,” he said, “torture me.”
Judge Fang, by a conscious effort, remained poker-faced So
PhyrePhox twisted his head around until Miss Pao was within his
peripheral vision. “Go ahead,” the prisoner said encouragingly,
“give me a jolt.”
Judge Fang shrugged and nodded to Miss Pao, who picked up
her brush and swept a few quick characters across the mediatronic
paper spread out on the writing table before her. As she neared the
end of this inscription, she slowed and finally looked up at the
Judge, then at PhyrePhox as she drew out the final stroke.
At this point PhyrePhox should have erupted with a scream
from deep down in his viscera, convulsed against the restraints,
voided himself at both ends, then gone into shock (if he had a weak
constitution) or begged for mercy (if strong). Instead he closed his
eyes, as if thinking hard about something, tensed every muscle in
his body for a few moments, then gradually relaxed, breathing
deeply and deliberately. He opened his eyes and looked at Judge
Fang. “How’s that?” the prisoner said. “Would you like another
demonstration?”
“I think I have the general idea,” Judge Fang said. “One of
your highlevel CryptNet tricks, I suppose. Nanosites embedded in
your brain, mediating its interchanges with the peripheral nervous
system. It would make sense for you to have advanced telæsthetic
systems permanently installed. And a system that could trick your
nerves into thinking that they were somewhere else could also trick
them into thinking that they were not experiencing pain.”
“What can be installed can be removed,” Miss Pao observed.
“That won’t be necessary,” Judge Fang said, and nodded to
Chang. Chang stepped toward the prisoner, drawing a short sword.
“We’ll start with fingers and proceed from there.”
“You’re forgetting something,” the prisoner said. “I have
already agreed to give you my answer.”
“I’m standing here,” the Judge said, “I’m not hearing an
answer. Is there a reason for this delay?”
“The babies aren’t being smuggled anywhere,” PhyrePhox
said. “They stay right here. The purpose of the operation is to save
their lives.”
“What is it, precisely, that endangers their lives?”
“Their own parents,” PhyrePhox said. “Things are bad in the
interior, Your Honor. The water table is gone. The practice of
infanticide is at an all-time high.”
“Your next goal in life,” Judge Fang said, “will be to prove all
of this to my satisfaction.”
The door opened. One of Judge Fang’s constables entered the
room and bowed deeply to apologize for the interruption, then
stepped forward and handed the magistrate a scroll. The Judge
examined the seal; it bore the chop of Dr. X.
He carried it to his office and unrolled it on his desk. It was the
real thing, written on rice paper in real ink, not the mediatronic
stuff.
It occurred to the Judge, before he even read this document,
that he could take it to an art dealer on Nanjing Road and sell it for a
year’s wages. Dr. X, assuming it was really he who had brushed
these characters, was the most impressive living calligrapher whose
work Judge Fang had ever seen. His hand betrayed a rigorous
Confucian grounding-many decades more study than Judge Fang
could ever aspire to-but upon this foundation the Doctor had
developed a distinctive style, highly expressive without being
sloppy. It was the hand of an elder who understood the importance
of gravity above all else, and who, having first established his
dignity, conveyed most of his message through nuances. Beyond
that, the structure of the inscription was exactly right, a perfect
balance of large characters and small, hung on the page just so, as if
inviting analysis by legions of future graduate students.
Judge Fang knew that Dr. X controlled legions of criminals
ranging from spankable delinquents up to international crime lords;
that half of the Coastal Republic officials in Shanghai were in his
pocket; that within the limited boundaries of the Celestial Kingdom,
he was a figure of considerable importance, probably a blue-button
Mandarin of the third or fourth rank; that his business connections
ran to most of the continents and phyles of the wide world and that
he had accumulated tremendous wealth. All of these things paled in
comparison with the demonstration of power represented by this
scroll. I can pick up a brush at any time, Dr. X was saying, and toss
off a work of art that can hang on the wall beside the finest
calligraphy of the Ming Dynasty.
By sending the Judge this scroll, Dr. X was laying claim to all
of the heritage that Judge Fang most revered. It was like getting a
letter from the Master himself. The Doctor was, in effect, pulling
rank. And even though Dr. X nominally belonged to a different
phyle-the Celestial Kingdom-and, here in the Coastal Republic,
was nothing more than a criminal, Judge Fang could not disregard
this message from him, written in this way, without abjuring
everything he most respected-those principles on which he had
rebuilt his own life after his career as a hoodlum in Lower
Manhattan had brought him to a dead end. It was like a summons
sent down through the ages from his own ancestors.
He spent a few minutes further admiring the calligraphy. Then
he rolled the scroll up with great care, locked it in a drawer, and
returned to the interrogation room.
“I have received an invitation to dine on Dr. X’s boat,” he said.
“Take the prisoner back to the holding cell. We are finished for
today.”
A domestic scene; Nell’s visit to the playroom;
misbehavior of the other children; the Primer displays
new capabilities; Dinosaur tells a story.
In the morning Mom would put on her maid uniform and go to
work, and Tad would wake up sometime later and colonize the sofa
in front of the big living-room mediatron. Harv would creep around
the edges of the apartment, foraging for breakfast, some of which
he’d bring back to Nell. Then Harv would usually leave the
apartment and not come back until after Tad had departed, typically
in late afternoon, to chill with his homeboys. Mom would come
home with a little plastic bag of salad that she’d taken from work
and a tiny injector; after picking at the salad, she’d put the injector
against her arm for a moment and then spend the rest of the evening
watching old passives on the mediatron. Harv would drift in and out
with some of his friends. Usually he wasn’t there when Nell decided
to go to sleep, but he was there when she woke up. Tad might come
home at any time of the night, and he’d be angry if Mom wasn’t
awake.
One Saturday, Mom and Tad were both home at the same time
and they were on the couch together with their arms around each
other and Tad was playing a silly game with Mom that made Mom
squeal and wiggle. Nell kept asking Mom to read her a story from
her magic book, and Tad kept shoving her away and threatening to
give her a whipping, and finally Mom said, “Get out of my fucking
hair, Nell!” and shoved Nell out the door, telling her to go to the
playroom for a couple of hours.
Nell got lost in the hallways and started crying; but her book
told her a story about Princess Nell getting lost in the endless
corridors of the Dark Castle, and how she found her way out by
using her wits, and this made Nell feel safe-as though she could
never be really lost when she had her book with her. Eventually Nell
found the playroom. It was on the first floor of the building. As
usual, there were lots of kids there and no parents. There was a
special space off to the side of the playroom where babies could sit
in strollers and crawl around on the floor. Some mommies were in
there, but they told her she was too big to play in that room. Nell
went back to the big playroom, which was full of kids who were
much bigger than Nell.
She knew these kids; they knew how to push and hit and
scratch. She went to one corner of the room and sat with her magic
book on her lap, waiting for one kid to get off the swing. When he
did, she put her book in the corner and climbed onto the swing and
started trying to pump her legs like the big kids did, but she couldn’t
get the swing to go. Then a big kid came and told her that she was
not allowed to use the swing because she was too little. ‘When Nell
didn’t get off right away, the kid shoved her off. Nell tumbled into
the sand, scratching her hands and knees, and ran back toward the
corner crying.
But a couple of other kids had found her magic book and
started kicking it around, making it slide back and forth across the
floor like a hockey puck.. Nell ran up and tried to pick the book off
the floor, but it slid too fast for her to catch it. The two kids began
kicking it back and forth between them and finally tossing it through
the air. Nell ran back and forth trying to keep up with the book Soon
there were four kids playing keep-away and six others standing
around watching and laughing at Nell. Nell couldn’t see things
though because her eyes were full of tears, snot was running out of
her nose, and her ribcage only quivered when she tried to breathe.
Then one of the kids screamed and dropped the book. Quickly
another darted in to grab it, and he screamed too. Then a third.
Suddenly all the kids were silent and afraid. Nell rubbed the tears
out of her eyes and ran over toward the book again, and this time the
kids didn’t throw it away from her; she picked it up and cradled it
against her chest. The kids who’d been playing keep-away were all
in the same pose: arms crossed over chests, hands wedged into
armpits, jumping up and down like pogo sticks and screaming for
their mothers.
Nell sat in the corner, opened the book, and started to read. She
did not know all of the words, but she knew a lot of them, and when
she got tired, the book would help her sound out the words or even
read the whole story to her, or tell it to her with moving pictures just
like a cine.
After the trolls had all been driven away, the castle yard was
not a pretty sight to see. It had been unkempt and overgrown
to begin with. Harv had had no choice except to chop down all
the trees, and during Dinosaur’s great battle against the trolls,
many of the remaining plants had been torn up.
Dinosaur stood and surveyed it in the moonlight. “This
place reminds me of the Extinction, when we had to wander
for days just to find something to eat,” he said.
D I N O S A U R ’ S T A L E
There were four of us traveling through a landscape much like
this one, except that instead of stumps, all the trees were
burned. The particular part of the world had become dark and
cold for a while after the comet struck, so that many of the
plants and trees died; and after they died, they dried out, and
then it was just a matter of time before lightning caused a
great forest fire. The four of us were traveling across this
great burned-out country looking for food, and you can guess
we were very hungry. Never mind why we were doing it; back
then, if things got bad where you were, you just got up and
went until things got better.
Besides me there was Utahraptor, who was smaller than
me, but very quick, with great curving claws on his feet; with
one kick he could cut another dinosaur open like ripe fruit.
Then there was Ankylosaurus, who was a slow plant-eater,
but dangerous; he was protected all around by a bony shell
like a turtle’s, and on the end of his tail was a big lump of
bone that could dash out the brains of any meat-eating
dinosaur that came too close. Finally there was Pteranodon,
who could fly. All of us traveled together in a little pack. To be
perfectly honest, our band had formerly consisted of a couple
of hundred dinosaurs, most of them duck-billed plant-eaters,
but Utahraptor and I had been forced to eat most of these-
just a few a day, of course, so that they didn’t notice at first,
as they were not very intelligent.
Finally their number had dwindled to one, a gaunt and
gamy fellow named Everett, whom we tried to stretch out for
as long as we could. During those last few days, Everett was
constantly looking around for his companions. Like all planteaters,
he had eyes in the side of his head and could see in
almost all directions. Everett seemed to think that if he could
just swivel his head around in the right direction, a big healthy
pack of duck-bills would suddenly rotate into view. At the very
end, I think that Everett may have put two and two together; I
saw him blink in surprise once, as if the light had finally gone
on in his head, and the rest of that day he was very quiet, as if
all of his half-dozen or so neurons were busy working out the
implications. After that, as we continued across this burned
country where Everett had nothing to eat, he became more
and more listless and whiny until finally Utahraptor lost his
temper, lashed out with one leg, and there was Everett’s
viscera sitting there on the ground like a sack of groceries.
Then there was simply nothing to do except eat him.
I got most of him as usual, though Utahraptor kept darting
in around my ankles and snatching up choice bits, and from
time to time Pteranodon would swoop in and grab a whorl of
intestine. Ankylosaurus stood off to the side and watched. For
a long time we’d taken him for an idiot, because he would
always just squat there watching us divide up those duck-bills,
munching stupidly on the erratic horsetail, never saying much.
In retrospect, maybe he was just a taciturn sort. He must have
worked out that we would very much like to eat him, if only we
could locate some chink in his armor.
If only we had! For many days after Everett had become
just another scat on our tracks, Utahraptor and Pteranodon
and I trudged across that dead landscape eyeing
Ankylosaurus, drooling down our chins as we imagined the
unspeakably tender morsels that must lie nestled inside that
armored shell. He must have been hungry too, and no doubt
his morsels were getting less fat and tender by the day. From
time to time we would encounter some sheltered hollow
where unfamiliar green plants were poking their shoots
through the black and gray debris, and we would encourage
Ankylosaurus to stop, take his time, and eat all he wanted.
“No, really! We don’t mind waiting for you!” He would always
fix his tiny little side-mounted eyes on us and look at us
balefully as he grazed. “How was your dinner, Anky?” we’d
say, and he’d grumble something like, “Tastes like iridium as
usual,” and then we’d go another couple of days without
exchanging a word.
One day we reached the edge of the sea. The salt water
lapped up onto a lifeless beach strewn with the bones of
extinct sea creatures, from tiny trilobites all the way up to
plesiosaurs. Behind us was the desert we’d just crossed. To
the south was a range of mountains that would have been
impassable even if half of them hadn’t been erupting
volcanoes. And north of us we could see snow dusting the
tops of the hills, and we all knew what that meant: If we went
in that direction, we’d soon freeze to death.
So we were stuck there, the four of us, and though we
didn’t have mediatrons and cine aerostats in those days, we
all pretty much knew what was up: We were the last four
dinosaurs on earth. Pretty soon we would be three, and then
two, and then one, and then none at all, and the only question
left to settle was in what order we’d go. You might think this
would be awful and depressing, but it wasn’t really that bad;
being dinosaurs, we didn’t spend a lot of time pondering the
imponderables, if you know what I mean, and in a way it was
kind of fun waiting to see how it would all work out. There was
a general assumption on all hands, I think, that Ankylosaurus
would be the first to go, but Utah and I would have killed each
other in an instant.
So we all kind of faced off on the beach there, Utahraptor
and Ankylosaurus and I in a neat triangle with Pteranodon
hovering overhead.
After we had been facing off there for some hours, I
noticed out of the corner of my eye that the banks to the north
and south seemed to be moving, as if they were alive.
Suddenly there was a thundering and rushing sound in
the air all around us, and I couldn’t help looking up, though I
kept one sharp eye on Utahraptor. The world had been such
a quiet and dead place for so long that we were startled by
any noise or movement, and now it seemed that the air and
ground had come alive once more, just as in the old days
before the comet.
The noise in the air was caused by a great flock of
teensy-tiny Pteranodons, though instead of smooth reptilian
skin their wings were covered with oversize scales, and they
had toothless, bony beaks instead of proper mouths. These
miserable things-these airborne crumbs-were swarming all
around Pteranodon, getting in his eyes, pecking at his wings,
and it was all he could do to keep airborne.
As I mentioned, I was keeping one eye on Utahraptor as
always, and to my surprise he suddenly turned away and ran
up onto the north slope, with an eagerness that could be
explained only by the availability of food. I followed him,
naturally, but pulled up short. Something was wrong. The
ground on the north slope was covered with a moving carpet
that swarmed around Utahraptor’s feet. Focusing my eyes,
which frankly were not very good, I saw that this carpet
actually consisted of thousands of tiny dinosaurs whose
scales had grown very long and slender and numerous-in
short, they were furry. I had been seeing these quadrupedal
hors d’oeuvres dodging around under logs and rocks for the
last few million years and always taken them for an especially
ill-conceived mutation. But suddenly there were thousands of
them, and this at a time when there were only four dinosaurs
left in the whole world. And they seemed to be working
together. They were so tiny that Utahraptor had no way to get
them into his mouth, and whenever he stopped moving for an
instant, they swarmed onto his legs and tail and nipped at his
flesh. A plague of shrews. I was so confounded that I stopped
in my tracks.
That was a mistake, for soon I felt a sensation in my legs
and tail like millions of pinpricks. Turning around, I saw that
the south slope was covered with ants, millions of them, and
they had apparently decided to eat me. Meanwhile
Ankylosaurus was bellowing and swinging his bony ball
around without effect, for the ants were swarming on his body
as well.
Well, before long the shrews and the ants and the birds
started to run into each other and have skirmishes of their
own, and so at that point they called a truce. The King of the
Birds, the King of the Shrews, and the Queen of the Ants all
got together on top of a rock to parley. In the meantime they
left us dinosaurs alone, seeing that we were trapped in any
case.
The situation struck me as unfair, so I approached the
rock where these despicable micro-monarchs were chattering
away, a mile a minute, and spoke: “Yo! Aren’t you going to
invite the King of the Reptiles?”
They looked at me like I was crazy.
“Reptiles are obsolete,” said the King of the Shrews.
“Reptiles are just retarded birds,” said the King of the
Birds, “and so I am your King, thank you very much.”
“There’s only zero of you,” said the Queen of the Ants. In
ant arithmetic, there are only two numbers: Zero, which
means anything less than a million, and Some. “You can’t
cooperate, so even if you were King, the title would be
meaningless.”
“Besides,” said the King of the Shrews, “the purpose of
this summit conference is to decide which of our kingdoms
shall eat which dinosaur, and we do not suppose that the King
of the Dinosaurs, even if there were such a thing, would be
able to participate constructively.” Mammals always talked
this way to show off their oversize brains-which were
basically the same as ours, but burdened with a lot of useless
extra business on top-useless, I should say, but darn tasty.
“But there are three kingdoms and four dinosaurs,” I
pointed out. Of course this was not true in ant arithmetic, so
the Queen of the Ants immediately began to make a fuss. In
the end I had to go over among the ants and crush them with
my tail until I had killed a few million, which is the only way
that you can get an ant to take you seriously.
“Surely three dinosaurs would be enough to give all of
your subjects a square meal,” I said. “May I suggest that the
birds peck Pteranodon to the bone, the shrews tear
Utahraptor limb from limb, and the ants feast on the corpse of
Ankylosaurus?”
The three monarchs appeared to be considering this
suggestion when Utahraptor sped up in a huff. “Excuse me,
Your Royal Highnesses, but who appointed this fellow king? I
am just as qualified to be king as he.” In short order,
Pteranodon and Ankylosaurus also laid claim to the throne.
The King of the Shrews, the King of the Birds, and the
Queen of the Ants told us all to shut up, and then conferred
amongst themselves for a few minutes. Finally the King of the
Shrews stepped forward. “We have reached a decision,” he
said. “Three dinosaurs will be eaten, and one, the King of the
Reptiles, will be spared; all that remains is for one of you to
demonstrate that you are superior to the other three and
deserve to wear the crown.”
“Very well!” I said, and turned on Utahraptor, who began
backing away from me, hissing and swiping the air with his
giant claws. If I could dispatch Utahraptor with a frontal
assault, Pteranodon would swoop down to steal some of the
carrion, and I could ambush her then; having fortified myself
by eating the other two, I might be strong enough to
overcome Ankylosaurus.
“No, no, no!” screamed the King of the Shrews. “This is
just the kind of thing I was talking about when I said you
reptiles were obsolete. It’s not about who is the biggest and
baddest anymore.”
“It’s about cooperation, organization, regimentation,” said
the Queen of the Ants.
“It’s about brains,” said the King of the Shrews.
“It’s about beauty, glory, dazzling flights of inspiration!”
said the King of the Birds.
This precipitated another stridulent dispute among the
two Kings and the Queen. Everyone got very short-tempered,
and there probably would have been serious trouble if the tide
had not come in and washed a few whale carcasses and
dead elasmosaurs onto the beach. As you can imagine, we
fell upon these gifts with abandon, and while I was eating my
fill, I also managed to swallow innumerable birds, shrews, and
ants who were feasting on the same pieces of meat as I.
After everyone had filled their bellies and calmed down
somewhat, the Kings and the Queen resumed their
discussions. Finally the King of the Shrews, who seemed to
be the designated spokesmonarch, stepped forward again.
“We cannot come to an agreement as to which of you should
be the King of the Reptiles, so each of our nations, Birds,
Mammals, and Ants, will put each of you to a trial, and then
we will gather again and put it to a vote. If the vote results in a
tie, we will eat all four of you and bring the Kingdom of
Reptiles to an end.”
We drew lots, and I was chosen to go among the ants for
the first round of trials. I followed the Queen into the midst of
her army, picking my way slowly until the Queen said, “Step
lively, lung-breather! Time is food! Don’t worry about those
ants beneath your feet-you can’t possibly kill more than
zero!” So from then on, I just walked normally, though my
claws became slick with crushed ants.
We traveled south for a day or two and then stopped on a
stream bank. “South of here is the territory of the King of the
Cockroaches. Your first task is to bring me the head of the
King.”
Looking across the river, I could see that the entire
countryside was swarming with an infinite number of
cockroaches, more than I could ever stomp; and even if I
could stomp them all, there must be more below the ground,
which was doubtless where the King lived.
I waded across the river and traveled through the
Kingdom of the Cockroaches for three days until I crossed
another river and entered into the Kingdom of the Bees. This
place was greener than any I’d seen for a while, with many
wildflowers, and bees swarmed everywhere taking nectar
back to their nests, which were as big as houses.
This gave me an idea. I toppled several hollow trees filled
with honey, dragged them back to the Kingdom of the
Cockroaches, split them open, and made sticky honey trails
leading down toward the ocean. The cockroaches followed
the trails down to the water’s edge, where the waves broke
over their heads and drowned them. For three days I kept
watch over the beach as the number of cockroaches
dwindled, and finally on the third day the King of the Roaches
emerged from his throne room to see where everyone had
gone. I coaxed him onto a leaf and carried him back north
across the river and into the Kingdom of the Ants, much to the
amazement of the Queen.
Next I was put into the care of the King of the Birds. He
and his chirping, chattering army led me up into the
mountains, up above the snowline, and I was sure that I
would freeze to death. But as we continued up, it suddenly
became warmer, which I did not understand until I realized
that we were approaching a live volcano. We finally stopped
at the edge of a red-hot lava flow half a mile wide. In the
center of the flow, a tall black rock stood out like an island in
the middle of a river.
The King of the Birds plucked one golden feather from his
tail and gave it to a soldier, who took it in his beak, flew over
the lava, and left that feather on the very top of the black rock.
By the time that soldier flew back, he was half roasted from
the heat radiating from the lava-and don’t think my mouth
didn’t water! “Your job,” said the King, “is to bring me that
feather.”
Now, this was clearly unfair, and I protested that the birds
were obviously trying to favor Pteranodon. This kind of
argument might have worked with ants or even shrews; but
the King of the Birds would hear none of it. For them, virtue
consisted in being birdlike, and fairness didn’t enter into it.
Well, I stood on the edge of that lava flow until my skin
smoked, but I couldn’t see how to reach that feather. Finally I
decided to give up. I was walking away, cutting my feet on the
sharp rock, when suddenly it hit me: The rock I’d been
standing on, this whole time, was nothing other than lava that
had gotten cold and solidified.
This was high in the mountains, where glaciers and
snowfields soared above me like palace walls. I climbed up
onto a particularly steep slope and began pounding the snow
with my tail until I started an avalanche. Millions of tons of ice
and snow thundered down onto the lava flow, throwing up a
tremendous blast of steam. For three days and nights I could
not see the claws in front of my face for all of the steam, but
on the third day it finally cleared away, and I saw a bridge of
hardened lava running straight to that black rock. I scampered
across (to the extent that a dinosaur can scamper), snatched
that golden feather, ran back, and stood in the snow for a
while cooling my feet off. Then I marched back to the King of
the Birds, who was, of course, astonished.
Next I found myself in the care of the mammals, who
were almost all shrews. They led me up into the foothills, to
the mouth of a great cave. “Your job,” said the King of the
Shrews, “is to wait here for Dojo and then defeat him in single
combat.” Then all the shrews went away and left me there
alone.
I waited in front of that cave for three days and three
nights, which gave me plenty of time to scope the place out.
At first I was rather cocky about this challenge, for it seemed
the easiest of the three; while I had no idea who or what Dojo
was, I knew that in all the world I had never met my equal
when it came to single combat. But on the first day, sitting
there on my tail waiting for Dojo, I noticed a sprinkling of small
glittering objects on the ground, and examining them carefully
I realized that they were, in fact, scales. To be precise, they
were dinosaur scales, which I recognized as belonging to
Pteranodon, Ankylosaurus, and Utahraptor, and they
appeared to have been jarred loose from their bodies by
powerful impacts.
On the second day I prowled around the vicinity and
found tremendous gashes in tree trunks, which had
undoubtedly been made by Utahraptor as he slashed wildly at
Dojo; other trees that had been snapped off entirely by the
club at the end of the tail of Ankylosaurus; and long scratches
in the earth made by the talons of Pteranodon as she dove
again and again at some elusive opponent. At this point, I
became concerned. It was clear that all three of my
opponents had fought Dojo and lost, so if I lost also (which
was inconceivable), I would be even with the others; but the
rules of the contest stated that in the event of a tie, all four
dinosaurs would be eaten, and the Kingdom of Reptiles would
be no more. I spent the night fretting about who or what the
terrible Dojo was.
On the third day nothing happened, and I began
wondering whether I should go into the cave and look for
Dojo. So far the only living thing I had seen around here was
a black mouse that occasionally darted out from the rocks at
the cave’s entrance, foraging for a bit of food. The next time I
saw that mouse, I said (speaking softly so as not to scare it),
“Say, mouse! Is there anything back inside that cave?”
The black mouse sat up on its haunches, holding a
huckleberry between its little hands and nibbling on it.
“Nothing special,” he said, “just my little dwelling. A fireplace,
some tiny pots and pans, a few dried berries, and the rest is
full of skeletons.”
“Skeletons?” I said. “Of other mice?”
“There are a few mouse skeletons, but mostly they are
dinosaurs of one kind or another, primarily meat-eaters.”
“Who have become extinct because of the comet,” I
suggested.
“Oh, pardon me, sir, but I must respectfully inform you
that the deaths of these dinosaurs are unrelated to the
comet.”
“How did they die, then?” I asked.
“I regret to say that I killed them all in self-defense.”
“Ah,” I said, not quite believing it, “then you must be . .
“Dojo the Mouse,” he said, “at your service.”
“I am terribly sorry to have bothered you, sir,” I said,
using my best manners, for I could see that this Dojo was an
unusually polite sort, “but your fame as a warrior has spread
far and wide, and I have come here humbly to seek your
advice on how I may become a better warrior myself; for it
has not escaped my notice that in the postcomet
environment, teeth like carving knives and six tons of muscle
may be in some sense outmoded.”
What follows is a rather long story, for Dojo had much to
teach me and he taught it slowly. Sometime, Nell, I will teach
you everything I learned from Dojo; all you need do is ask.
But on the third day of my apprenticeship, when I still had not
learned anythingexcept humility, good manners, and how to
sweep out the cave, I asked Dojo if he would be interested in
playing a game of tic-tac-toe. This was a common sport
among dinosaurs. We would scratch it out in the mud. (Many
paleontologists have been baffled to find tic-tac-toe games
littering prehistoric excavations and have chalked it up to the
local workers they hire to do their digging and hauling.)
In any case, I explained the rules of the game to Dojo,
and he agreed to give it a try. We went down to the nearest
mud flat, and there, in plain view of many shrews, I played a
game of tic-tac-toe with Dojo and vanquished him, although I
will confess it was touch-and-go for a while. It was done; I had
defeated Dojo in single combat.
The next morning I excused myself from Dojo’s cave and
went back down to the beach, where the other three
dinosaurs had already gathered, looking much the worse for
wear as you can imagine. The King of the Shrews, the King of
the Birds, and the Queen of the Ants converged on us with all
their armies and crowned me King of the Reptiles, or
Tyrannosaurus Rex as we used to say. Then they ate the
other three dinosaurs as agreed. Besides me, the only
reptiles left were a few snakes, lizards, and turtles, who
continue to be my obedient subjects.
I could have lived a luxurious life as King, but by now,
Dojo had taught me humility, and so I went back to his cave
immediately and spent the next few million years studying his
ways. All you need do is ask, Nell, and I will pass his
knowledge on to you.
Judge Fang goes for a dinner cruise with a Mandarin;
they visit a mysterious ship; a startling discovery;
a trap is sprung.
Dr. X’s boat was not the traditional sort of wallowing pleasure
barge that was fit only for the canals and shallow lakes of the
Yangtze’s sodden delta; it was a real ocean-going yacht built on
Western lines. Judging from the delicacies that began to make their
way up to the foredeck shortly after Judge Fang came aboard, the
vessel’s galley had been retrofitted with all the accoutrements of a
professional Chinese kitchen: umbrella-size woks, gas burners like
howling turbojets, and extensive storage lockers for innumerable
species of fungi as well as bird nests, shark fins, chicken feet, fcetal
rats, and odds and ends of many other species both rare and
ubiquitous. The courses of the meal were small, numerous, and
carefully timed, served up in an array of fine porcelain that could
have filled several rooms of the Victoria and Albert Museum,
delivered with the precision of surgical air strikes by a team of
waiters.
Judge Fang got to eat this way only when someone really
important was trying to taint him, and though he had never
knowingly allowed his judicial judgment to be swayed, he did enjoy
the chow.
They began with tea and some preliminary courses on the
foredeck of the yacht, as it made its way down the Huang Pu, with
the old European buildings of the Bund on the left, lit up eerily by
the wash of colored light radiating from the developments of
Pudong, which rose precipitously from the bank on the right. At one
point, Dr. X had to excuse himself belowdecks for a few moments.
Judge Fang strolled to the very bow of the yacht, nestled himself
into the acute angle formed by the converging rails, let the wind tug
at his beard, and enjoyed the view. The tallest buildings in Pudong
were held up by huge aerostats-vacuumfilled ellipsoids hundreds
of stories above street level, much wider than the buildings they
supported, and usually covered with lights. Some of these extended
out over the river itself. Judge Fang rested his elbows carefully on
the rail to maintain his balance, then tilted his head back so that he
was staring straight up at the underside of one such, pulsing with
oversaturated colored light. The trompe l’oeil was enough to make
him dizzy, and so he quickly looked down. Something thumped
against the hull of the yacht, and he looked into the water to see a
human corpse wrapped up in a white sheet, blundering along a foot
or two beneath the surface, dimly luminescent in the light from the
building overhead.
In time the yacht made its way out into the estuary of the
Yangtze, only a few miles from the East China Sea at this point,
miles wide, and much colder and rougher. Judge Fang and Dr. X
repaired to a dining cabin belowdecks with panoramic windows that
mostly just reflected back the light of the candles and lanterns
around the table. Not long after they had taken their seats, the yacht
accelerated powerfully, first shooting forward and then leaping up
out of the water before resuming its steady, level motion. Judge
Fang realized that the yacht was actually a hydrofoil, which had
been merely idling along on her hull while they had enjoyed the city
view but which had now climbed up out of the water.
The conversation so far had consisted almost entirely of formal
courtesies. This had eventually led them into a discussion of
Confucian philosophy and traditional culture, clearly a subject of
interest to both of them. Judge Fang had complimented the Doctor
on his sublime calligraphy, and they talked about that art for a
while. Then, obligatorily returning the compliment, Dr. X told the
Judge how superbly he was executing his duties as magistrate,
particularly given the added difficulty of having to deal with
barbarians.
“Your handling of the affair of the girl and the book was, in
particular, a credit to your abilities,” Dr. X said gravely.
Judge Fang found it interesting that the boy who had actually
stolen the book was not mentioned. He supposed that Dr. X was
referring not so much to the criminal case as to Judge Fang’s
subsequent efforts to protect the girl.
“This person is grateful, but all credit should go to the Master,”
Judge Fang said. “The prosecution of this case was founded entirely
upon his principles, as you might have seen, had you been able to do
us the honor of joining our discussion of the matter at the House of
the Venerable and Inscrutable Colonel.”
“Ah, it is indeed a misfortune that I could not attend,” the
Doctor said, “as it would, no doubt, have helped to improve my
own, so imperfect understanding of the Master’s principles.”
“I meant no such insinuation-rather, that the Doctor might
have guided me and my staff to a more nearly adequate resolution of
the affair than we were, in fact, able to devise.”
“Perhaps it would have been good fortune for both of us for me
to have been present in the Colonel’s house on that day,” Dr. X said,
returning neatly to equilibrium. There was silence for a few minutes
as a new course was brought out, plum wine poured by the waiter.
Then Dr. X continued, “One aspect of the case on which I would
have been particularly eager to consult your wisdom would have
been the disposition of the book.”
So he was still stuck on that book. Though it had been weeks
since Dr. X had released any more of those book-hunting mites into
the airspace of the Leased Territories, Judge Fang knew that he was
still offering a nice bounty to anyone who could tell him the
whereabouts of the book in question. Judge Fang was beginning to
wonder whether this obsession with the book might be a symptom
of a general decline in the Doctor’s mental powers.
“Your advice on the subject would have been of inestimable
value to me,” Judge Fang said, “as this aspect of the case was
particularly troublesome for a Confucian judge. If the item of stolen
property had been anything other than a book, it would have been
confiscated. But a book is different-it is not just a material
possession but the pathway to an enlightened mind, and thence to a
well-ordered society, as the Master stated many times.”
“I see,” said Dr. X, slightly taken aback. He seemed genuinely
thoughtful as he stroked his beard and stared into the flame of a
candle, which had suddenly begun to flicker and gyrate chaotically.
It seemed as though the Judge had raised a novel point here, which
deserved careful consideration. “Better to leave the book in the
hands of one who could benefit from its wisdom, than to let it
remain, inert, in a police warehouse.”
“That was my no doubt less than perfect conclusion, hastily
arrived at,” Judge Fang said.
Dr. X continued to ponder the matter for a minute or so. “It
does credit to your professional integrity that you are able to focus
so clearly upon the case of one small person.”
“As you will no doubt appreciate, being a far more
accomplished scholar than I, the interests of the society come first.
Beside that, the fate of one little girl is nothing. But other things
being equal, it is better for society that the girl is educated than that
she remain ignorant.”
Dr. X raised his eyebrows and nodded significantly at this. The
subject did not come up again during the rest of the meal. He
assumed that the hydrofoil was swinging around in a lazy circle that
would eventually take them back to the mouth of the Huang Pu.
But when the engines were throttled back and the craft settled
back onto its hull and began to rock with the waves again, Judge
Fang could not see any lights outside the windows. They were
nowhere near Pudong, nor any other inhabited land as far as he
could tell.
Dr. X gestured out the window at nothing and said, “I have
taken the liberty of arranging this visit for you. It touches upon a
case that has recently come under your purview and also has to do
with a subject that seems of particular interest to you and which we
have already discussed this evening.”
When Judge Fang followed his host out onto the deck, he was
finally able to make out their surroundings. They were on the open
ocean, with no land in sight, though the urban glow of Greater
Shanghai could clearly be seen to the west. It was a clear night with
a nearly full moon that was illuminating the hull of an enormous
ship nearby. Even without the moonlight this vessel would have
been noticeable for the fact that it blocked out all of the stars in one
quadrant of the sky.
Judge Fang knew next to nothing about ships. He had toured an
aircraft carrier in his youth, when it docked for a few days at
Manhattan. He suspected that this ship was even larger. It was
almost entirely dark except for pinpricks of red light here and there,
suggesting its size and general shape, and a few horizontal lines of
yellow light shining out the windows of its superstructure, many
stories above their heads.
Dr. X and Judge Fang were conveyed on board this vessel by a
small crew who came out to meet them in a launch. As it drew
alongside the Doctor’s yacht, the Judge was startled to realize that
its crew consisted entirely of young women. Their accents marked
them as belonging to an ethnic subgroup, common in the Southeast,
that lived almost entirely on the water; but even if they had not
spoken, Judge Fang would have inferred this from their nimble
handling of the boat.
Within a few minutes, Dr. X and Judge Fang had been
conveyed aboard the giant vessel through a hatch set into the hull
near the waterline. Judge Fang noted that this was not an oldfashioned
steel vessel; it was made of nanotechnological substances,
infinitely lighter and stronger. No matter compiler in the world was
large enough to compile a ship, so the shipyards in Hong Kong had
compiled the pieces one by one, bonded them together, and slid
them down the ways into the sea, much as their pre-Diamond Age
predecessors had done.
Judge Fang had been expecting that the ship would be some
kind of bulk carrier, consisting almost entirely of huge
compartments, but the first thing he saw was a long corridor running
parallel to the keel, seemingly the length of the entire ship. Young
women in white, pink, or occasionally blue dresses and sensible
shoes bustled back and forth along this corridor entering into and
emerging from its innumerable doors.
There was no formal welcome, no captain or other officers. As
soon as the boat girls had assisted them on board, they bowed and
took their leave. Dr. X began to amble down the corridor, and Judge
Fang followed him. The young women in the white dresses bowed
as they approached, then continued on their way, having no time to
waste on advanced formalities. Judge Fang had the general sense
that they were peasant women, though none of them had the deep
tans that were normally a mark of low social status in China. The
boat girls had worn blue, so he gathered that this color identified
people with nautical or engineering duties. In general, the ones in
the pink dresses were younger and slenderer than the ones in the
white dresses. The tailoring was different too; the pink dresses
closed up the middle of the back, the white ones had two zippers
symmetrically placed in the front.
Dr. X chose a door, apparently at random, swung it open, and
held it for Judge Fang. Judge Fang bowed slightly and stepped
through it into a room about the dimensions of a basketball court,
though with a lower ceiling. It was quite warm and humid, and
dimly lit. The first thing he saw was more girls in white dresses,
bowing to him. Then he realized that the room was otherwise filled
with cribs, hundreds of cribs, and that each crib had a perfect little
girl baby in it. Young women in pink bustled back and forth with
diapers. From place to place, a woman sat beside a crib, the front of
her white dress unzipped, breast-feeding a baby.
Judge Fang felt dizzy. He was not willing to acknowledge the
reality of what he saw. He had mentally prepared himself for
tonight’s meeting with Dr. X by reminding himself, over and over,
that the Doctor was capable of any trickery, that he could not take
anything he saw at face value. But as many first-time fathers had
realized in the delivery room, there was something about the sight
of an actual baby that focused the mind. In a world of abstractions,
nothing was more concrete than a baby.
Judge Fang whirled on his heel and stormed out of the room,
brushing rudely past Dr. X. He picked a direction at random and
walked, strode, ran down the corridor, past five doors, ten, fifty,
then stopped for no particular reason and burst through another
door.
It might as well have been the same room.
He felt almost nauseous and had to take stern measures to keep
tears from his eyes. He ran out of the room and stormed through the
ship for some distance, going up several stairways, past several
decks. He stepped into another room, chosen at random, and found
the floor covered with cribs, evenly spaced in rows and columns,
each one containing a sleeping one-year-old, dressed in fuzzy pink
jammies with a hood and a set of mouse ears, each one clutching an
identical white security blanket and nestled up with a stuffed
animal. Here and there, a young woman in a pink dress sat on the
floor on a bamboo mat, reading a book or doing needlework.
One of these women, close to Judge Fang, set her needlework
down, rearranged herself into a kneeling position, and bowed to
him. Judge Fang gave her a perfunctory bow in return, then padded
over to the nearest crib. A little girl with astonishingly thick
eyelashes lay there, deeply asleep, breathing regularly, her mouse
ears sticking out through the bars of the crib, and as Judge Fang
stood and stared at her, he imagined that he could hear the breathing
of all the children on this ship at once, combined into a gentle sigh
that calmed his heart. All of these children, sleeping so peacefully;
everything must be okay. It was going to be fine.
He turned away and saw that the young woman was smiling at
him. It was not a flirting smile or a silly girlish smile but a calm and
confident smile. Judge Fang supposed that wherever Dr. X was on
this ship, he must be smiling in much the same way at this moment.
. . .
When Dr. X started the cine, Judge Fang recognized it right away:
This was the work of the mediagrapher PhyrePhox, who was still, as
far as he knew, languishing in a holding cell in downtown Shanghai.
The setting was an outcropping of stones amid a dun, dust-scoured
vastitude, somewhere in the interior of China. The camera panned
across the surrounding waste, and Judge Fang did not have to be
told that these had once been fertile fields, before the water table
had been drained out from under them.
A couple of people approached, kicking up a plume of dust as
they walked, carrying a small bundle. As they drew closer, Judge
Fang could see that they were horrifyingly gaunt, dressed in dirty
rags. They came to the center of the rocky outcropping and laid the
bundle on the ground, then turned and walked away. Judge Fang
turned away from the mediatron and dismissed it with a wave of the
hand; he did not have to see it to know that the bundle was a baby,
probably female.
“This scene could have happened anytime in the history of
China,” Dr. X said. They were sitting in a rather spartan wardroom
in the vessel’s superstructure. “It has always been done with us. The
great rebellions of the 1800’s were fueled by throngs of angry
young men who could not find wives. In the darkest days of the
Mao Dynasty’s birth control policy, two hundred thousand little
ones were exposed in this fashion”-he gestured toward the frozen
image on the mediatron-”each year. Recently, with the coming of
civil war and the draining of the Celestial Kingdom’s aquifers, it has
once again become common. The difference is that now the babies
are collected. We have been doing it for three years.”
“How many?” Judge Fang said.
“A quarter of a million to date,” Dr. X said. “Fifty thousand on
this ship alone.”
Judge Fang had to set his teacup down for a few moments
while he grappled with this notion. Fifty thousand lives on this ship
alone.
“It won’t work,” Judge Fang said finally. “You can raise them
this way until they are toddlers, perhaps-but what happens when
they are older and bigger, and must be educated and given space to
run around and play?”
“It is indeed a formidable challenge,” Dr. X said gravely, “but I
trust you will take to heart the words of the Master: ‘Let every man
consider virtue as what devolves on himself. He may not yield the
performance of it even to his teacher.’ I wish you good fortune,
Magistrate.”
This statement had much the same effect as if Dr. X had hit the
Judge over the head with a board: startling, yes, but the full impact
was somehow delayed.
“I’m not sure if I follow you, Doctor.”
Dr. X crossed his wrists and held them up in the air. “I
surrender. You may take me into custody. Torture will not be
necessary; I have already prepared a signed confession.”
Judge Fang had not hitherto realized that Dr. X had such a
welldeveloped sense of humor. He decided to play along. “As much
as I would like to bring you to justice, Doctor, I am afraid that I
cannot accept your surrender, as we are out of my jurisdiction.”
The Doctor nodded to a waiter, who swung the cabin door open
to let in a cool breeze-and a view of the gaudy waterfront of the
Leased Territories, suddenly no more than a mile away from them.
“As you can see, I have ordered the ships to come into your
jurisdiction, Your Honor,” Dr. X said. He gestured invitingly out the
door.
Judge Fang stepped out onto an open gangway and looked over
the rail to see four other giant ships following in this one’s wake.
Dr. X’s reedy voice came out through the open door. “You may
now take me, and the crew of these ships, to prison for the crime of
baby-smuggling. You may also take into custody these ships-and
all quarter-million of the little mice on board. I trust you can find
qualified caregivers somewhere within your jurisdiction.”
Judge Fang gripped the rail with both hands and bowed his
head. He was very close to clinical shock. It would be perfectly
suicidal to call the Doctor’s bluff. The concept of having personal
responsibility for so many lives was terrifying enough in and of
itself. But to think of what would eventually become of all of these
little girls in the hands of the corrupt officialdom of the Coastal
Republic.
Dr. X continued, “I have no doubt that you will find some way
to care for them. As you have demonstrated in the case of the book
and the girl, you are too wise a magistrate not to understand the
importance of proper upbringing of small children. No doubt you
will exhibit the same concern for each one of these quarter of a
million infants as you did for one little barbarian girl.”
Judge Fang stood up straight, whirled, and strode back through
the door. “Shut the door and leave the room,” he said to the waiter.
When he and the Doctor were alone together, Judge Fang faced
Dr. X, descended to his knees, bent forward, and knocked his
forehead against the deck three times.
“Please, Your Honor!” Dr. X exclaimed, “it is I who should be
doing honor to you in this way.”
“For some time I have been contemplating a change of career,”
Judge Fang said, rising to an upright kneeling position. He stopped
before continuing and thought it through once more. But Dr. X had
left him no way out. It would have been uncharacteristic of the
Doctor to spring a trap that could be escaped.
As the Master had said, The mechanic, who wishes to do his
work well, must first sharpen his tools. When you are living in any
state, take service with the most worthy among its great officers,
and make friends of the most virtuous among its scholars.
“Actually, I am satisfied with my career, but dissatisfied with
my tribal affiliation. I have grown disgusted with the Coastal
Republic and have concluded that my true home lies in the Celestial
Kingdom. I have often wondered whether the Celestial Kingdom is
in need of magistrates, even those as poorly qualified as I.”
“This is a question I will have to take up with my superiors,”
Dr. X said. “However, given that the Celestial Kingdom currently
has no magistrates whatsoever and therefore no real judicial system,
I deem it likely that some role can be found for one with your
superb qualifications.”
“I see now why you desired the little girl’s book so strongly,”
Judge Fang said. “These young ones must all be educated.”
“I do not desire the book itself so much as I desire its
designer-the artifex Hackworth,” Dr. X said. “As long as the book
was somewhere in the Leased Territories, there was some hope that
Hackworth could find it-it is the one thing he desires most. If I
could have found the book, I could have extinguished that hope, and
Hackworth would then have had to approach me, either to get the
book back or to compile another copy.”
“You desire some service from Hackworth?”
“He is worth a thousand lesser engineers. And because of
various hardships over the last few decades, the Celestial Kingdom
does not have even that many lesser engineers; they have all been
lured away by the promise of riches in the Coastal Republic.”
“I will approach Hackworth tomorrow,” Judge Fang said. “I
will inform him that the man known to the barbarians as Dr. X has
found the lost copy of the book.”
“Good,” Dr. X said, “I shall expect to hear from him.”
Hackworth’s dilemma; an unanticipated return to the
hong of Dr. X, hitherto unseen ramifications of Dr. X’s
premises; a criminal is brought to justice.
Hackworth had some time to run through the logic of the thing one
more time as he waited in the front room of Dr. X’s hong, waiting
for the old man to free himself up from what sounded like a twelveway
cine conference. On his first visit here he’d been too nervous to
see anything, but today he was settled cozily in the cracked leather
armchair in the corner, demanding tea from the help and thumbing
through Dr. X’s books. It was such a relief to have nothing to lose.
Since that deeply alarming visit from Chang, Hackworth had
been at his wits’ end. He had made an immense cock-up of the
whole thing. Sooner or later his crime would come out and his
family would be disgraced, whether or not he gave money to Chang.
Even if he somehow managed to get the Primer back, his life was
ruined.
When he had received word that Dr. X had won the race to
recover the lost copy of the Primer, the thing had turned from bad to
farcical. He had cut a day at work and gone for a long hike in the
Royal Ecological Conservatory. By the time he had returned home,
sunburned and pleasantly exhausted, he had been in a much better
mood. That Dr. X had the Primer actually improved his situation.
In exchange for the Primer, the Doctor would presumably want
something from Hackworth. In this case, it was not likely to be a
mere bribe, as Chang had hinted; all of the money Hackworth had,
or was ever likely to make, could not be of interest to Dr. X. It was
much more likely that the Doctor would want some sort of a
favor-he might ask Hackworth to design something, to do a little
bit of consulting work, as it were. Hackworth wanted so badly to
believe this that he had bolstered the hypothesis with much
evidence, real and phantasmal, during the latter part of his hike. It
was well-known that the Celestial Kingdom was desperately far
behind in the nanotechnological arms race; that Dr. X himself
devoted his valuable time to rooting through the debris of the New
Atlantan immune system proved this. Hackworth’s skills could be
of measureless value to them.
If this were true, then Hackworth had a way out. He would do
some job for the Doctor. In exchange, he would get the Primer back,
which was what he wanted more than anything. As part of the deal,
Dr. X could no doubt find some way to eliminate Chang from
Hackworth’s list of things to worry about; Hackworth’s crime
would never be known to his phyle.
. . .
Victorians and Confucians alike had learned new uses for the foyer,
anteroom, or whatever it was called, and for the old etiquette of
visiting cards. For that matter, all tribes with sophistication in
nanotech understood that visitors had to be carefully examined
before they could be admitted into one’s inner sanctum, and that
such examination, carried out by thousands of assiduous
reconnaissance mites, took time. So elaborate waiting-room
etiquette had flourished, and sophisticated people all over the world
understood that when they called upon someone, even a close
friend, they could expect to spend some time sipping tea and
perusing magazines in a front room infested with unobtrusive
surveillance equipment.
One entire wall of Dr. X’s front room was a mediatron. Cine
feeds, or simple stationary graphics, could be digitally posted on
such a wall just as posters and handbills had been in olden times.
Over time, if not removed, they tended to overlap each other and
build up into an animated collage.
Centered on Dr. X’s media wall, partly concealed by newer
clips, was a cine clip as ubiquitous in northern China as the face of
Mao-Buddha’s evil twin-had been in the previous century.
Hackworth had never sat and watched it all the way through, but
he’d glimpsed it so many times, in Pudong taxicabs and on walls in
the Leased Territories, that he knew it by heart. Westerners called it
Zhang at the Shang.
The setting was the front of a luxury hotel, one of the
archipelago of Shangri-Las strung up the Kowloon-Guangzhou
superhighway. The horseshoe drive was paved with interlocking
blocks, brass door handles gleamed, thickets of tropical flowers
sprouted from boat-size planters in the lobby. Men in business suits
spoke into cellphones and checked their watches, white-gloved
bellhops sprinted into the drive, pulled suitcases from the trunks of
red taxicabs, wiped them down with clean moist cloths.
The horseshoe drive was plugged into an eight-lane
thoroughfare-not the highway, but a mere frontage road-with a
spiked iron fence running down the center to keep pedestrians from
crossing in midblock. The pavement, new but already crumbling,
was streaked with red dust washed down out of the devastated hills
of Guangdong by the latest typhoon.-
———————————————————————————————–
Traffic suddenly became thin, and the camera panned
upstream: Several lanes had been blocked by a swarm of bicycles.
Occasionally a red taxi or Mercedes-Benz would squeeze by along
the iron fence and burst free, the driver holding down the horn
button so furiously that he might detonate the air bag. Hackworth
could not hear the sound of the horn, but as the camera zoomed in
on the action, it became possible to see one driver take his hand off
the horn and turn back to shake his finger at the mob of bicyclists.
When he saw who was pedaling the lead bicycle, he turned
away nauseous with fear, and his hand collapsed into his lap like a
dead quail.
The leader was a stocky man with white hair, sixtyish but
pumping away vigorously on an unexceptional black bicycle,
wearing drab worker’s clothes. He moved it down the street with
deceptive speed and pulled into the horseshoe drive. An embolism
of bicycles formed on the street as hundreds tried to crowd in the
narrow entrance. And here came another classic moment: The head
bellhop skirted his stand-up desk and ran toward the bicyclist,
waving him off and hurling abuse in Cantonese-until he got about
six feet away and realized he was looking at Zhang Han Hua.
At this point Zhang had no job title, being nominally retired-
an ironical conceit that the Chinese premiers of the late twentieth
century and early twenty-first had perhaps borrowed from American
Mafia bosses. Perhaps they recognized that job titles were beneath
the dignity of the most powerful man on earth. People who had
gotten this close to Zhang claimed that they never thought about his
temporal power-the armies, the nuclear weapons, the secret police.
All they could think about was the fact that, during the Great
Cultural Revolution, at the age of eighteen, Zhang Han Hua had led
his cell of Red Guards into hand-tohand combat with another cell
that they deemed insufficiently fervid, and that, at the conctusion of
the battle, Zhang had feasted on the raw flesh of his late adversaries.
No one could stand face-to-face with Zhang without imagining the
blood streaming down his chin.
The bellhop collapses to his knees and begins literally
kowtowing. Zhang looks disgusted, hooks one of his sandaled feet
under the bellhop’s collarbone, and prods him back upright, then
speaks a few words to him in the hillbilly accent of his native
Fujien. The bellhop can hardly bow enough on his way back into the
hotel; displeasure registers on Zhang’s face-all he wants is some
fast service. During the next minute or so, progressively higherranking
hotel officials cringe out the door and abase themselves in
front of Zhang, who simply ignores them, looking bored now. No
one really knows whether Zhang is a Confucianist or a Maoist at
this point in his life, but at this moment it makes no difference: for
in the Confucian view of society, as in the Communist, peasants are
the highest class and merchants the lowest. This hotel is not for
peasants.
Finally a man in a black business suit emerges, preceded and
pursued by bodyguards. He looks angrier than Zhang, thinking that
he must be the victim of some unforgivable practical joke. This is a
merchant among merchants: the fourteenth richest man in the world,
the third richest in China. He owns most of the real estate within
half an hour’s drive of this hotel. He does not break his stride as he
steps into the drive and recognizes Zhang; he walks straight up to
him and asks him what he wants, why the old man has bothered to
come down from Beijing and interfere with his business on his
foolish bicycle ride.
Zhang simply steps forward and speaks a few words into the
rich man’s ear.
The rich man takes a step back, as if Zhang has punched him in
the chest. His mouth is open, revealing flawless white teeth, his eyes
are not focused. After a few moments, he takes another two steps
back, which gives him enough room for his next maneuver: He
stoops, puts one knee down, then the other, bends forward at the
waist until he is on all fours, then settles himself down full-length
on the nicely interlocked pavingstones. He puts his face on the
pavement. He kowtows to Zhang Han Hua.
. . .
One by one the Dolbyized voices in the next room signed off until
only Dr. X and another gentleman were left, haggling about
something desultorily, taking long breaks between volleys of
tweeter-busting oratory to stoke pipes, pour tea, or whatever these
people did when they were pretending to ignore each other. The
discussion petered out rather than building to a violent climax as
Hackworth had secretly, mischievously been hoping, and then a
young fellow pulled the curtain aside and said, “Dr. X will see you
now.”
Dr. X was in a lovely, generous mood probably calculated to
convey the impression that he’d always known Hackworth would be
back. He rustled to his feet, shook Hackworth’s hand warmly, and
invited him out to dinner “at a place nearby,” he said portentously,
“of utmost discretion.’,
It was discreet because one of its cozy private dining rooms
was connected directly to one of the back rooms of Dr. X’s
establishment, so that one could reach it by walking down a sinous
inflated Nanobar tube that would have stretched to half a kilometer
long if you extricated it from Shanghai, took it to Kansas, and
pulled on both ends. Squinting through the translucent walls of the
tube as he assisted Dr. X to dinner, Hackworth cloudily glimpsed
several dozen people pursuing a range of activities in some halfdozen
different buildings, through which Dr. X had apparently
procured some kind of right-of-way. Finally it spat them out into a
nicely furnished and carpeted dining room, which had been
retrofitted with a powered sliding door. The door opened just as
they were sitting down, and Hackworth was almost knocked off
balance as the tube sneezed nanofiltered wind; a beaming four-foottall
waitress stood in the doorway, closing her eyes and leaning
forward against the anticipated wind-blast. In perfect San Fernando
Valley English she said, “Would you like to hear about our
specials?”
Dr. X was at pains to reassure Hackworth that he understood
and sympathized with his situation; so much so that Hackworth
spent much of the time wondering whether Dr. X had already
known about it. “Say no more, it is taken care of,” Dr. X finally
said, cutting Hackworth off in midexplanation, and after that
Hackworth was unable to interest Dr. X in the topic anymore. This
was reassuring but unsettling, as he could not avoid the impression
that he had just somehow agreed to a deal whose terms had not been
negotiated or even thought about. But Dr. X’s whole affect seemed
to deliver the message that if you were going to sign a Faustian
bargain with an ancient and inscrutable Shanghainese organizedcrime
figure, you could hardly do better than the avuncular Dr. X,
who was so generous that he would probably forget about it
altogether, or perhaps just stow the favor away in a yellowed box in
one of his warrens. By the end of the lengthy meal, Hackworth was
so reassured that he had almost forgotten about Lieutenant Chang
and the Primer altogether.
Until, that is, the door slid open again to reveal Lieutenant
Chang himself.
Hackworth hardly recognized him at first, because he was
dressed in a much more traditional outfit than usual: baggy indigo
pajamas, sandals, and a black leather skullcap that concealed about
seventy-five percent of his knotlike skull. Also, he had begun to
grow his whiskers out. Most alarmingly, he had a scabbard affixed
to his belt, and the scabbard had a sword in it.
He stepped into the room and bowed perfunctorily to Dr. X,
then turned to face Hackworth.
“Lieutenant Chang?” Hackworth said wealdy.
“Constable Chang,” said the interloper, “of the district tribunal
of Shanghai.” And then he said the Chinese words that meant
Middle Kingdom.
“I thought you were Coastal Republic.”
“I have followed my master to a new country,” Constable
Chang said. “I must regretfully place you under arrest now, John
Percival Hackworth.”
“On what charge?” Hackworth said, forcing himself to chuckle
as if this were all a big practical joke among close friends.
“That on the – day of -, 21-, you did bring stolen
intellectual property into the Celestial Kingdom-specifically, into
the hong of Dr. X-and did use that property to compile an illegal
copy of a certain device known as the Young Lady’s Illustrated
Primer.”
There was no point in claiming that this was not true. “But I
have come here this evening specifically to regain possession of that
same device,” Hackworth said, “which is in the hands of my
distinguished host here. Certainly you are not intending to arrest the
distinguished Dr. X for trafficking in stolen property.”
Constable Chang looked expectantly toward Dr. X. The Doctor
adjusted his robes and adopted a radiant, grandfatherly smile. “I am
sorry to tell you that some reprehensible person has apparently
provided you with wrong information,” he said. “In fact, I have no
idea where the Primer is located.”
The dimensions of this trap were so vast that Hackworth’s
mind was still reeling through it, bouncing haplessly from one wall
to another, when he was hauled before the district magistrate twenty
minutes later. They had set up a courtroom in a large, ancient garden
in the interior of Old Shanghai. It was an open square paved with
flat gray stones. At one end was a raised building open to the square
on one side, covered with a sweeping tile roof whose corners curved
high into the air and whose ridgeline was adorned with a clay frieze
portraying a couple of dragons facing off with a large pearl between
them. Hackworth realized, dimly, that this was actually the stage of
an open-air theatre, which enhanced the impression that he was the
sole spectator at an elaborate play written and staged for his benefit.
A judge sat before a low, brocadecovered table in the center of the
stage, dressed in magnificent robes and an imposing winged hat
decorated with a unicorn emblem. Behind him and off to one side
stood a small woman wearing what Hackworth assumed were
phenomenoscopic spectacles. When Constable Chang had pointed
to a spot on the gray flagstones where Hackworth was expected to
kneel, he ascended to the stage and took up a position flanking the
Judge on the other side. A few other functionaries were arranged on
the square, mostly consisting of Dr. X and members of his retinue,
arranged in two parallel lines forming a tunnel between Hackworth
and the Judge.
Hackworth’s initial surge of terror had worn off. He had now
entered into morbid fascination with the incredible dreadfulness of
his situation and the magnificent performance staged by Dr. X to
celebrate it. He knelt silently and waited in a stunned, hyper-relaxed
state, like a pithed frog on the dissection table.
Formalities were gone through. The Judge was named Fang
and evidently came from New York. The charge was repeated,
somewhat more elaborately. The woman stepped forward and
introduced evidence: a cine record that was played on a large
mediatron covering the back wall of the stage. It was a film of the
suspect, John Percival Hackworth, slicing a bit of skin from his
hand and giving it to (the innocent) Dr. X, who (not knowing that he
was being gulled into committing a theft) extracted a terabyte of hot
data from a cocklebur-shaped mite, and so on, and so on.
“The only thing that remains is to prove that this information
was, indeed, stolen-though this is strongly implied by the suspect’s
behavior,” Judge Fang said. In support of this assertion, Constable
Chang stepped forward and told the story of his visit to Hackworth’s
flat.
“Mr. Hackworth,” said Judge Fang, “would you like to dispute
that this property was stolen? If so, we will hold you here while a
copy of the information is supplied to Her Majesty’s Police; they
can confer with your employer to determine whether you did
anything dishonest. Would you like us to do that?”
“No, Your Honour,” Hackworth said.
“So you are not disputing that the property was stolen, and that
you deceived a subject of the Celestial Kingdom into colluding with
your criminal behavior?”
“I am guilty as charged, Your Honour,” Hackworth said, “and I
throw myself on the mercy of the court.”
“Very well,” Judge Fang said, “the defendant is guilty. The
sentence is sixteen strokes of the cane and ten years’
imprisonment.”
“Goodness gracious!” Hackworth murmured. Inadequate as
this was, it was the only thing that came to him.
“Insofar as the strokes of the cane are concerned, since the
defendant was motivated by his filial responsibility to his daughter,
I will suspend all but one, on one condition.”
“Your Honour, I shall endeavour to comply with whatever
condition you may choose to impose.”
“That you supply Dr. X with the decryption key to the data in
question, so that additional copies of the book may be made
available to the small children crowding our orphanages.”
“This I will gladly do,” Hackworth said, “but there are
complications.,,
“I’m waiting,” Judge Fang said, not sounding very pleased.
Hackworth got the impression that this business about the caning
and the Primer was a mere prelude to something bigger, and that the
Judge just wanted to get through it.
“In order for me to weigh the seriousness of these
complications,” Hackworth said, “I will need to know how many
copies, approximately, Your Honour intends to make.”
“In the range of hundreds of thousands.”
Hundreds of thousands! “Please excuse me, but does Your
Honour understand that the book is engineered for girls starting
around the age of four?”
“Yes.”
Hackworth was taken aback. Hundreds of thousands of
children of both sexes and all ages would not have been difficult to
believe. Hundreds of thousands of four-year-old girls was hard for
the mind to grasp. Just one of them was quite a handful. But it was,
after all, China.
“The magistrate is waiting,” Constable Chang said.
“I must make it clear to Your Honour that the Primer is, in
large part, a ractive-that is, it requires the participation of adult
ractors. While one or two extra copies might go unnoticed, a large
number of them would overwhelm the built-in system provided for
paying for such services.”
“Then part of your responsibility will be to make alterations in
the Primer so that it is suitable for our requirements-we can make
do without those parts of the book that depend heavily on outside
ractors, and supply our own ractors in some cases,” Judge Fang
said.
“This should be feasible. I can build in automatic voicegeneration
capabilities-not as good, but serviceable.” At this point,
John Percival Hackworth, almost without thinking about it and
without appreciating the ramifications of what he was doing,
devised a trick and slipped it in under the radar of the Judge and Dr.
X and all of the other people in the theatre, who were better at
noticing tricks than most other people in the world. “While I’m at it,
if it pleases the court, I can also,” Hackworth said, most
obsequiously, “make changes in the content so that it will be more
suitable for the unique cultural requirements of the Han readership.
But it will take some time.”
“Very well,” said Judge Fang, “all but one stroke of the cane
are suspended, pending the completion of these alterations. As for
the ten years of imprisonment, I am embarrassed to relate that this
district, being very small, does not have a prison, and so the suspect
will have to be released this evening after the business with the cane
is finished. But rest assured, Mr. Hackworth, that your sentence will
be served, one way or another.”
The revelation that he would be released to his family this very
evening hit Hackworth like a deep lungful of opium smoke. The
caning went by quickly and efficiently; he did not have time to
worry about it, which helped a little. The pain sent him straight into
shock. Chang pulled his flaccid body off the rack and bore him over
to a hard cot, where he lay semiconscious for a few minutes. They
brought him tea-a nice Keemun with distinct lavender notes.
Without further ado he was escorted straight out of the Middle
Kingdom and into the streets of the Coastal Republic, which had
never been more than a stone’s throw away from him during all of
these proceedings, but which might as well have been a thousand
miles and a thousand years distant. He made his way straight to a
public matter compiler, moving in a broad-based gait, with tiny
steps, bent over somewhat, and compiled some first-aid supplies-
painkillers and some hæmocules that supposedly helped to knit
wounds together.
Thoughts about the second part of the sentence, and how he
might end up serving it, did not come back to him until he was
halfway back across the Causeway, borne swiftly on autoskates, the
wind keening through the fabric of his trousers and inflaming the
laceration placed neatly across his buttocks, like the track of a
router. This time, he was surrounded by a flock of hornet-size
aerostats flying in an ellipsoidal formation all around him, hissing
gently and invisibly through the night and waiting for an excuse to
swarm.
This defensive system, which had seemed formidable to him
when he compiled it, now seemed like a pathetic gesture. It might
stop a youth gang. But he had insensibly transcended the plane of
petty delinquents and moved into a new realm, ruled by powers
almost entirely hidden from his ken, and knowable to the likes of
John Percival Hackworth only insofar as they perturbed the
trajectories of the insignificant persons and powers who happened to
be in his vicinity. He could do naught but continue falling through
the orbit that had been ordained for him. This knowledge relaxed
him more than anything he had learned in many years, and when he
returned home, he kissed the sleeping Fiona, treated his wounds
with more therapeutic technology from the M.C., covered them with
pajamas, and slid beneath the covers. Drawn inward by
Gwendolyn’s dark radiant warmth, he fell asleep before he had even
had time to pray.
More tales from the Primer; the story of Dinosaur
and Dojo; Nell learns a thing or two about the art of self-
defense; Nell’s mother gets, and loses, a worthy suitor;
Nell asserts her position against a young bully.
She loved all of her four companions, but her favorite had come to
be Dinosaur. At first she’d found him a little scary, but then she’d
come to understand that though he could be a terrible warrior, he
was on her side and he loved her. She loved to ask him for stories
about the old days before the Extinction, and about the time he had
spent studying with the mouse Dojo.
There were other students too . . .
said the book, speaking in Dinosaur’s voice, as Nell sat by herself in
the corner of the playroom.
. . . In those days we had no humans, but we did have
monkeys, and one day a little girl monkey came to the
entrance of our cave looking quite lonely. Dojo welcomed her
inside, which surprised me because I thought Dojo only liked
warriors. When the little monkey saw me, she froze in terror,
but then Dojo flipped me over his shoulder and bounced me
off the walls of the cave a few times to demonstrate that I was
fully under control. He made her a bowl of soup and asked
her why she was wandering around the forest all by herself.
The monkey, whose name was Belle, explained that her
mother and her mother’s boyfriend had kicked her out of the
family tree and told her to go swing on the vines for a couple
of hours. But the bigger monkeys hogged all the vines and
wouldn’t let Belle swing, so Belle wandered off into the forest
looking for companionship and got lost, finally stumbling upon
the entrance to Dojo’s cave.
“You may stay with us for as long as you like,” Dojo said.
“All we do here is play games, and you are invited to join our
games if it pleases you.”
“But I am supposed to be home soon,” Belle complained.
“My mother’s boyfriend will give me a whipping otherwise.”
“Then I will show you the way from your family tree to my
cave and back,” Dojo said, “so that you can come here and
play with us whenever your mother sends you out.”
Dojo and I helped Belle find her way back through the
forest to her family tree. On our way back to the cave, I said,
“Master, I do not understand.”
“What seems to be the trouble?” Dojo said.
“You are a great warrior, and I am studying to become a
great warrior myself. Is there a place in your cave for a little
girl who just wants to play?”
“I’ll be the judge of who does and doesn’t make a
warrior,” Dojo said.
“But we are so busy with our drills and exercises,” I said.
“Do we have time to play games with the child, as you
promised?”
“What is a game but a drill that’s dressed up in colorful
clothing?” Dojo said. “Besides, given that, even without my
instruction, you weigh ten tons and have a cavernous mouth
filled with teeth like butcher knives, and that all creatures
except me flee in abject terror at the mere sound of your
footsteps, I do not think that you should begrudge a lonely
little girl some play-time.”
At this I felt deeply ashamed, and when we got home, I
swept out the cave seven times without even being asked. A
couple of days later, when Belle came back to our cave
looking lonely and forlorn, we both did our best to make her
feel welcome. Dojo began playing some special games with
her, which Belle enjoyed so much that she kept coming back,
and believe it or not, after a couple of years of this had gone
by, Belle was able to flip me over her shoulder just as well as
Dojo.
Nell laughed to think of a little girl monkey flipping a great
dinosaur oven her shoulder. She went back one page and
reread the last pant more carefully:
A couple of days later, when Belle came back to our cave
looking lonely and forlorn, we both did our best to make her
feel welcome. Dojo made a special meal in his kitchen out of
rice, fish, and vegetables and made sure that she ate every
scrap. Then he began playing a special game with her called
somersaults.
An illustration materialized on the facing page. Nell recognized
the open space in front of the entrance to Dojo’s cave. Dojo was
sitting up on a high rock giving instructions to Dinosaur and Belle.
Dinosaur tried to do a somersault, but his tiny front arms could not
support the weight of his massive head, and he fell flat on his face.
Then Belle gave it a try and did a perfect somersault.
Nell tried it too. It was confusing at first, because the world
kept spinning around her while she did it. She looked at the
illustration in the book and saw Belle doing exactly what Nell had
done, making all of the same mistakes. Dojo scampered down from
his rock and explained how Belle could keep her head and body
straight. Nell followed the advice as she gave it another try, and this
time it felt better. Before her time was up, she was doing perfect
somersaults all over the playground. When she went back to the
apartment, Mom wouldn’t let her in at first, so she did somersaults
up and down the hall for a while. Finally Mom let her in, and when
she saw that Nell had gotten sand in her hair and shoes down at the
playground, she gave her a spanking and sent her to bed without any
food.
But the next morning she went to the M.C. and asked it for the
special meal Dojo made for Belle. The M.C. said it couldn’t really
make fish, but it could make nanosurimi, which was kind of like
fish. It could make rice too. Vegetables were a problem. Instead it
gave her some green paste she could eat with a spoon. Nell told the
M.C. that this was her Belle food and that she was going to have it
all the time from now on, and after that the M.C. always knew what
she wanted.
Nell didn’t call it her magic book anymore, she called it by the
name printed plain as day on the title page, which she’d only been
able to read recently:
YOUNG LADY’S ILLUSTRATED PRIMER
a Propædeutic Enchiridion
in which is told the tale of
Princess Nell
and her various friends, kin, associates, &c.
The Primer didn’t speak to her as often as it used to. She had
found that she could often read the words more quickly than the
book spoke them, and so she usually ordered it to be silent. She
often put it under her pillow and had it read her bedtime stories,
though, and sometimes she even woke up in the middle of the night
and heard it whispering things to her that she had just been
dreaming about.
Tad had long since vanished from their home, though not
before giving Mom a broken nose. He’d been replaced by Shemp,
who had been replaced by Todd, who had given way to Tony. One
day the Shanghai Police had come to arrest Tony, and he had
plugged one of them right in the living room with his skull gun,
blowing a hole in the guy’s stomach so that intestines fell out and
trailed down between his legs. The other policemen nailed Tony
with a Seven Minute Special and then dragged their wounded
comrade out into the hallway, while Tony, bellowing like a
cornered, rabid animal, ran into the kitchen and grabbed a knife and
began hacking at his chest where he thought the Seven Minute
Special had gone into his body. By the time the seven minutes had
gone by and the policemen burst back into the apartment, he had
dug a hole in his pectoral muscle all the way down to his ribs. He
menaced the cops with his bloody knife, and the cop in charge
punched in some numbers on a little black box in his hand, and
Tony buckled and screamed as a single cookie-cutter detonated
inside his thigh. He dropped the knife. The cops rushed in and
shrink-wrapped him, then stood around his body, mummified in
glistening plastic, and kicked him and stomped him for a minute or
two, then finally cut a hole in the plastic so Tony could breathe.
They bonded four handles onto the shrink-wrap and then carried
him out between them, leaving Nell to clean up the blood in the
kitchen and the living room. She wasn’t very good at cleaning
things up yet and ended up smearing it around. When Mom got
home, she screamed and cried for a while and then spanked Nell for
making a mess. This made Nell sad, and so she went to her room
and picked up the Primer and made up a story of her own, about
how the wicked stepmother had made Princess Nell clean up the
house and had spanked her for doing it wrong. The Primer made up
pictures as she went along. By the time she was finished, she had
forgotten about the real things that had happened and remembered
only the story she had made up.
After that, Mom swore off men for a while, but after a couple
of months she met a guy named Brad who was actually nice. He had
a real job as a blacksmith in the New Atlantis Clave, and one day he
took Nell to work with him and showed her how he nailed iron
shoes onto the hooves of the horses. This was the first time Nell had
actually seen a horse, and so she did not pay much attention to Brad
and his hammers and nails. Brad’s employers had a giant house with
vast green fields, and they had four kids, all bigger than Nell, who
would come out in fancy clothes and ride those horses.
But Mom broke up with Brad; she didn’t like craftsmen, she
said, because they were too much like actual Victorians, always
spouting all kinds of crap about how one thing was better than
another thing, which eventually led, she explained, to the belief that
some people were better than others. She took up with a guy named
Burt who eventually moved in with them. Burt explained to Nell
and Harv that the house needed discipline and that he intended to
provide it, and after that he spanked them all the time, sometimes on
the butt and sometimes on the face. He spanked Mom a lot too.
Nell was spending much more time at the playground, where it
was easier for her to do all of the exercises that Dojo was teaching
to Belle. She also played games with the other kids sometimes. One
day she was playing tetherball with a friend of hers and kept beating
her every time. Then a boy came up, a boy bigger than either Nell or
her friend, and insisted that he be allowed to play. Nell’s friend gave
up her place, and then Nell played against the boy, whose name was
Kevin. Kevin was a big solid boy who was proud of his bulk and his
strength, and his philosophy of tetherball was winning through
intimidation. He would grab the ball, wind up melodramatically,
baring his teeth and getting his face bright red, then smash the ball
with a windmill punch, complete with sound effects that always
showered the ball with spit. The performance was so impressive that
many children just stood and watched it in awe, afraid to get in the
way of the tetherball, and after that Kevin would just keep smashing
the ball faster and faster on each revolution while vomiting
profanity at his opponent. Nell knew that Kevin’s mom had lived
with a lot of the same guys that Nell’s mom had lived with; he
frequently sported black eyes that he certainly hadn’t gotten on the
playground.
Nell had always been afraid of Kevin. But today when he
wound up for his big serve, he just looked silly; kind of like
Dinosaur did sometimes when sparring with Belle. The ball swung
toward her, dewy with spit and not really going all that fast. Kevin
was shouting things at her, calling her a cunt and other words, but
for some reason Nell didn’t hear it and didn’tcare, she just lunged
toward the ball and punched it hard, putting her whole body behind
her knuckles in a straight line, just as Dojo taught. She hit the ball
so hard, she didn’t even feel it; it shot up in a wide arc that took it
behind and above Kevin’s head, and after that all she had to do was
give it a few more slaps as it whizzed by, and she’d won the game.
“Two out of three,” Kevin said, and they played again, with the
same result. Now all the kids were laughing at Kevin, and he lost his
temper, turned bright red, and charged at Nell.
But Nell had watched Kevin use this tactic on other kids, and
she knew that it only worked because usually the kids were too
scared to move. Dojo had explained to Belle that the best way to
fight Dinosaur was simply to get out of his way and let his own
strength defeat him, so that’s what Nell did with Kevin: stepped
aside at the last minute, made one foot into a hook, and tripped him.
Kevin smashed tremendously into a swingset, gathered himself up,
and charged a second time. Nell dodged him and tripped him again.
“Okay,” Kevin said, “you win.” He approached Nell holding
out his right hand to shake. But Nell had seen this one too, and she
knew it was a trick. She reached out with her right hand as if she
were going to shake. But as Kevin was groping at this bait, every
muscle in his arm tense, Nell turned her palm toward the floor and
drew her hand down, then back across the middle of her body. She
was watching Kevin as she did this and saw that his eyes were
tracking her hand, mesmerized. She continued to move her hand
around in a long ellipse, turning her palm upward, thrusting it
forward, poking her fingers into Kevin’s staring eyes.
He put his hands to his face. She kicked him between the legs
as hard as she could, taking her time and striking the target
precisely. As he bent over, she grabbed his hair and kneed him in
the face, then shoved him down on his butt and left him there, too
surprised, for the moment, to start bawling.
Hackworth lunches in distinguished company; a
disquisition on hypocrisy; Hackworth ‘i situation
develops new complications.
Hackworth arrived at the pub first. He got a pint of porter at the bar,
cask-conditioned stuff from the nearby Dovetail community, and
strolled around the place for a few minutes while he waited. He had
been fidgeting at his desk all morning and enjoyed the opportunity
to stretch his legs. The place was done up like an ancient London
publican house circa World War II, complete with fake bomb
damage to one corner of the structure and taped X’s over each
windowpane-which only made Hackworth think of Dr. X.
Autographed photos of British and American airmen were stuck up
on the walls here and there, along with other miscellany recalling
the heyday of Anglo-American cooperation:
SEND
a gun
TO DEFEND
A BRITISH HOME
British civilians, faced with threat of invasion, desperately
need arms for the defense of their homes.
YOU CAN AID
American Committee for Defense of British Homes
Bowler hats hung in clusters from poles and wall hooks all over
the room, like great bunches of black grapes. A lot of engineers and
artifexes seemed to come to this place. They hunched over pints of
beer at the bar and delved into steak-and-kidney pies at the little
tables, chatting and chuckling. There was nothing prepossessing
about the place or its patrons, but Hackworth knew that the odds and
ends of nanotechnological lore collected in the heads of these
middle-class artisans was what ultimately kept New Atlantis
wealthy and secure. He had to ask himself why he hadn’t been
satisfied with simply being one of them. John Percival Hackworth
projected his thoughts into matter and did it better than anyone else
in this place. But he had felt the need to go beyond that-he had
wanted to reach beyond mere matter and into someone’s soul.
Now, whether he wanted to or not, he was going to reach
hundreds of thousands of souls.
The men at the tables watched him curiously, then nodded
politely and looked away when he caught their eye. Hackworth had
noticed a full-lane Rolls-Royce parked in front of the place on his
way in. Someone important was here, evidently in a back room.
Hackworth and everyone else in the place knew it, and they were all
in a heightened state of alertness, wondering what was up.
Major Napier rode up on a standard-issue cavalry chevaline
and came in at noon on the dot, pulling off his officer’s hat and
exchanging a hilarious greeting with the barkeep. Hackworth
recognized him because he was a hero, and Napier recognized
Hackworth for reasons left provocatively unspecified. –
Hackworth translated his pint to the left and exchanged a
vigorous handshake with Major Napier in front of the bar. They
strolled toward the back of the place, exchanging some hearty,
forgettable, balderdashladen banter. Napier stepped nimbly in front
of him and pulled open a small door in the back wall. Three steps
led down into a little snuggery with mullioned windows on three
sides and a single copper-covered table in the middle. A man was
sitting by himself at the table, and as Hackworth descended the
steps, he realized, that it was Lord Alexander Chung-Sik Finkle-
McGraw, who stood up, returned his bow, and greeted him with a
warm and hearty handshake, taking such evident measures to put
Hackworth at ease that, in some respects, the opposite result was
achieved.
More banter, a bit more restrained. A waiter came in;
Hackworth ordered a steak sandwich, today’s special, and Napier
simply nodded to the waiter to indicate his complete agreement,
which Hackworth took as a friendly gesture. Finkle-McGraw
declined to eat anything.
Hackworth was not really hungry anymore. It was clear that
Royal Joint Forces Command had figured out at least some of what
had happened, and that Pinkie-McGraw knew about it too. They had
decided to approach him privately instead of simply lowering the
boom on him and drumming him out of the phyle. This should have
filled him with boundless relief, but it didn’t. Things had seemed so
simple after his prosecution in the Celestial Kingdom. Now he
suspected they were about to get infinitely more complicated.
“Mr. Hackworth,” Finkle-McGraw said after the pleasantries
had petered out, speaking in a new tone of voice, a the-meetingwill-
come-to-order sort of voice, “please favour me with your
opinion of hypocrisy.
“Excuse me. Hypocrisy, Your Grace?”
“Yes. You know.”
“It’s a vice, I suppose.”
“A little one or a big one? Think carefully-much hinges upon
the answer.”
“I suppose that depends upon the particular circumstances.”
“That will never fail to be a safe answer, Mr. Hackworth,” the
Equity Lord said reproachfully. Major Napier laughed, somewhat
artificially, not knowing what to make of this line of inquiry.
“Recent events in my life have renewed my appreciation for
the virtues of doing things safely,” Hackworth said. Both of the
others chuckled knowingly.
“You know, when I was a young man, hypocrisy was deemed
the worst of vices,” Finkle-McGraw said. “It was all because of
moral relativism. You see, in that sort of a climate, you are not
allowed to criticise others-after all, if there is no absolute right and
wrong, then what grounds is there for criticism?”
Finkle-McGraw paused, knowing that he had the full attention
of his audience, and began to withdraw a calabash pipe and various
related supplies and implements from his pockets. As he continued,
he charged the calabash with a blend of leather-brown tobacco so
redolent that it made Hackworth’s mouth water. He was tempted to
spoon some of it into his mouth.
“Now, this led to a good deal of general frustration, for people
are naturally censorious and love nothing better than to criticise
others’ shortcomings. And so it was that they seized on hypocrisy
and elevated it from a ubiquitous peccadillo into the monarch of all
vices. For, you see, even if there is no right and wrong, you can find
grounds to criticise another person by contrasting what he has
espoused with what he has actually done. In this case, you are not
making any judgment whatsoever as to the correctness of his views
or the morality of his behaviour-you are merely pointing out that
he has said one thing and done another. Virtually all political
discourse in the days of my youth was devoted to the ferreting out
of hypocrisy.
“You wouldn’t believe the things they said about the original
Victorians. Calling someone a Victorian in those days was almost
like calling them a fascist or a Nazi.”
Both Hackworth and Major Napier were dumbfounded. “Your
Grace!” Napier exdaimed. “I was naturally aware that their moral
stance was radically different from ours-but I am astonished to be
informed that they actually condemned the first Victorians.”
“Of course they did,” Finkle-McGraw said.
“Because the first Victorians were hypocrites,” Hackworth
said, getting it.
Finkle-McGraw beamed upon Hackworth like a master upon
his favored pupil. “As you can see, Major Napier, my estimate of
Mr. Hackworth’s mental acuity was not ill-founded.”
“While I would never have supposed otherwise, Your Grace,”
Major Napier said, “it is nonetheless gratifying to have seen a
demonstration.” Napier raised his glass in Hackworth’s direction.
“Because they were hypocrites,” Finkle-McGraw said, after
igniting his calabash and shooting a few tremendous fountains of
smoke into the air, “the Victorians were despised in the late
twentieth century. Many of the persons who held such opinions
were, of course, guilty of the most nefandous conduct themselves,
and yet saw no paradox in holding such views because they were
not hypocrites themselves-they took no moral stances and lived by
none.”
“So they were morally superior to the Victorians-” Major
Napier said, still a bit snowed under.
“-even though-in fact, because-they had no morals at all.”
There was a moment of silent, bewildered head-shaking around
the copper table.
“We take a somewhat different view of hypocrisy,” Finkle-
McGraw continued. “In the late-twentieth-century Weltanschauung,
a hypocrite was someone who espoused high moral views as part of
a planned campaign of deception-he never held these beliefs
sincerely and routinely violated them in privacy. Of course, most
hypocrites are not like that. Most of the time it’s a spirit-is-willing,
flesh-is-weak sort of thing.”
“That we occasionally violate our own stated moral code,”
Major Napier said, working it through, “does not imply that we are
insincere in espousing that code.”
“Of course not,” Finkle-McGraw said. “It’s perfectly obvious,
really. No one ever said that it was easy to hew to a strict code of
conduct. Really, the difficulties involved-the missteps we make
along the way-are what make it interesting. The internal, and
eternal, struggle, between our base impulses and the rigorous
demands of our own moral system is quintessentially human. It is
how we conduct ourselves in that struggle that determines how we
may in time be judged by a higher power.”
All three men were quiet for a few moments, chewing
mouthfuls of beer or smoke, pondering the matter.
“I cannot help but infer,” Hackworth finally said, “that the
present lesson in comparative ethics-which I thought was nicely
articulated and for which I am grateful-must be thought to pertain,
in some way, to my situation.”
The other men raised their eyebrows in a not very convincing
display of mild astonishment. The Equity Lord turned toward Major
Napier, who took the floor briskly and cheerfully.
“We do not know all the particulars of your situation-as you
know, Atlantan subjects are entitled to polite treatment from all
branches of H.M.’s Joint Forces unless they violate the tribal norms,
and that means, in part, that we don’t go round putting people under
high-res surveillance just because we are curious about their, er,
avocations. In an era when everything can be surveiled, all we have
left is politeness. However, we do quite naturally monitor comings
and goings through the border. And not long ago, our curiosity was
piqued by the arrival of one Lieutenant Chang of the District
Magistrate’s Office. He was also clutching a plastic bag containing
a rather battered top hat. Lieutenant Chang proceeded directly to
your flat, spent half an hour there, and departed, minus the hat.”
The steak sandwiches arrived at the beginning of this bit of
exposition. Hackworth began messing about with condiments, as if
he could belittle the importance of this conversation by paying equal
attention to having just the right goodies on his sandwich. He fussed
with his pickle for a while, then began examining the bottles of
obscure sauces arrayed in the center of the table, like a sommelier
appraising a wine cellar.
“I had been mugged in the Leased Territories,” Hackworth said
absently, “and Lieutenant Chang recovered my hat, somewhat later,
from a ruffian.” He had fixed his gaze, for no special reason, on a
tall bottle with a paper label printed in an ancient crabbed typeface.
“MCWHORTER’S ORIGINAL CONDIMENT” was written large, and
everything else was too small to read. The neck of the bottle was
also festooned with black-and-white reproductions of ancient
medals awarded by pre-Enlightenment European monarchs at
exhibitions in places like Riga. Just a bit of violent shaking and
thwacking ejected a few spurts of the ochre slurry from the poresize
orifice at the top of the bottle, which was guarded by a quarter-
inch encrustation. Most of it hit his plate, and some impacted on his
sandwich.
“Yes,” Major Napier said, reaching into his breast pocket and
taking out a folded sheet of smart foolscap. He told it to uncrease
itself on the table and prodded it with the nib of a silver fountain
pen the size of an artillery shell. “Gatehouse records indicate that
you do not venture into the L.T. often, Mr. Hackworth, which is
certainly understandable and speaks well of your judgment. There
have been two forays in recent months. On the first of these, you left
in midafternoon and returned late at night bleeding from lacerations
that seemed to have been recently incurred, according to the”-
Major Napier could not repress a tiny smile-“evocative description
logged by the border patrol officer on duty that night. On the second
occasion, you again left in the afternoon and returned late, this time
with a single deep laceration across the buttocks-not visible, of
course, but picked up by surveillance.”
Hackworth took a bite of his sandwich, correctly anticipating
that the meat would be gristly and that he would have plenty of time
to think about his situation while his molars subdued it. He did have
plenty of time, as it turned out; but as frequently happened to him in
these situations, he could not bring his mind to bear on the subject at
hand. All he could think about was the taste of the sauce. If the
manifest of ingredients on the bottle had been legible, it would have
read something like this:
Water, blackstrap molasses, imported habanero peppers, salt,
garlic, ginger, tomato puree, axle grease, real hickory smoke, snuff,
butts of clove cigarettes, Guinness Stout fermentation dregs,
uranium mill tailings, muffler cores, monosodium glutamate,
nitrates, nitrites, nitrotes and nitrutes, nutrites, natrotes, powdered
pork nose hairs, dynamite, activated charcoal, match-heads, used
pipe cleaners, tar, nicotine, singlemalt whiskey, smoked beef lymph
nodes, autumn leaves, red fuming nitric acid, bituminous coal,
fallout, printer’s ink, laundry starch, drain deaner, blue chrysotile
asbestos, carrageenan, BHA, BHT, and natural flavorings.
He could not help smiling at his own complete haplessness,
both now and on the night in question. “I will concede that my
recent trips to the Leased Territories have not left me disposed to
make any more.” This comment produced just the right sort of
clubby, knowing smiles from his interlocutors. Hackworth
continued, “I saw no reason to report the mugging to Atlantan
authorities-”
“There was no reason,” Major Napier said. “Shanghai Police
might have been interested, though.”
“Ah. Well, I did not report it to them either, simply because of
their reputation.”
This bit of routine wog-bashing would have elicited naughty
laughter from most. Hackworth was struck by the fact that neither
Finkle-McGraw nor Napier rose to the bait.
“And yet,” Napier said, “Lieutenant Chang belied that
reputation, did he not, when he went to the trouble of bringing your
hat-now worthless-to you in person, when he was off-duty,
rather than simply mailing it or for that matter throwing it away.”
“Yes,” Hackworth said, “I suppose he did.”
“We found it rather singular. While we would not dream of
enquiring into the particulars of your conversation with Lieutenant
Chang, or of prying into your affairs in any other way, it did occur
to some suspicious minds here-ones that have perhaps been
exposed to the Oriental milieu for too long-that Lieutenant
Chang’s intentions might not be entirely honourable, and that he
might bear watching. At the same time, for your own protection, we
decided to keep a motherly eye on you during any later sojourns
beyond the dog pod grid.” Napier did some more scrawling on his
paper. Hackworth watched his pale blue eyes jumping back and
forth as various records materialized on its surface.
“You took one more trip to the Leased Territories-actually,
across the Causeway, across Pudong, into the old city of Shanghai,”
Napier said, “where our surveillance machinery either
malfunctioned or was destroyed by countermeasures. You returned
several hours later with a chunk taken out of your arse.” Napier
suddenly slapped the paper down on his desk, looked up at
Hackworth for the first time in quite a while, blinking his eyes a
couple of times as he refocused, and relaxed against the sadistically
designed wooden back of his chair. “Hardly the first time that one of
H.M. subjects has gone for a nocturnal prowl on the wild side and
come back having suffered a beating-but normally the beatings are
much less severe, and normally they are bought and paid for by the
victim. My assessment of you, Mr. Hackworth, is that you are not
interested in that particular vice.”
“Your assessment is correct, sir,” Hackworth said, a bit hotly.
This self-vindication left him in the position of having to provide
some better explanation of the puckered cicatrice running across his
buttocks. Actually, he didn’t have to explain anything-this was an
informal luncheon, not a police interrogation-but it would not do
much for his already tatterdemalion credibility if he let it pass
without comment. As if to emphasize this fact, both of the other
men were now silent for some time.
“Do you have any more recent intelligence about the man
named Chang?” Hackworth asked.
“It is singular that you should ask. As it happens, the whilom
Lieutenant; his colleague, a woman named Pao; and their superior, a
magistrate named Fang, all resigned on the same day, about a month
ago. They have resurfaced in the Middle Kingdom.”
“You must have been struck by the coincidence-that a judge
who is in the habit of caning people enters the service of the Middle
Kingdom, and shortly thereafter, a New Atlantan engineer returns
from a visit to said clave bearing marks of having been caned.”
“Now that you mention it, it is quite striking,” Major Napier
said.
The Equity Lord said, “It might lead one to conclude that the
engineer in question owed some debt to a powerful figure within
that clave, and that the judicial system was being used as a sort of
collection agency.”
Napier was ready for his leg of the relay. “Such an engineer, if
one existed, might be surprised to know that John Zaibatsu is
intensely curious about the Shanghainese gentleman in question-
an honest-to-god Mandarin of the Celestial Kingdom, if he is who
we think he is-and that we have been trying for some time, with
little success, to obtain more information about his activities. So, if
the Shanghainese gentleman were to request that our engineer
partake in activities that we would normally consider unethical or
even treasonous, we might take an uncharacteristically forgiving
stance. Provided, that is, that the engineer kept us well-informed.”
“I see. Would that be something like being a double agent,
then?” Hackworth said.
Napier winced, as if he were being caned himself. “It is a
crashingly unsubtle phrase. But I can forgive your using it in this
context.”
“Would John Zaibatsu then make some kind of formal
commitment to this arrangement?”
“It is not done that way,” Major Napier said.
“I was afraid of that,” Hackworth said.
“Typically such commitments are superfluous, as in most cases
the party has very little choice in the matter.”
“Yes,” Hackworth said, “I see what you mean.”
“The commitment is a moral one, a question of honour,”
Finkle-McGraw said. “That such an engineer falls into trouble is
evidence of mere hypocrisy on his part. We are inclined to overlook
this sort of routine caducity. If he goes on to behave treasonously,
then that of course is a different matter; but if he plays his role well
and provides information of value to Her Majesty’s Joint Forces,
then he has rather deftly parlayed a small error into a grand act of
heroism. You may be aware that it is not unusual for heroes to
receive knighthoods, among other more tangible rewards.”
For a few moments, Hackworth was too startled to speak. He
had expected exile and perhaps deserved it. Mere forgiveness was
more than he could have hoped for. But Finkle-McGraw was giving
him the opportunity for something much greater: a chance to enter
the lower ranks of the nobility. An equity stake in the tribal
enterprise. There was only one answer he could make, and he
blurted it out before he had time to lose his nerve.
“I thank you for your forbearance,” he said, “and I accept your
commission. Please consider me to be at Her Majesty’s service from
this moment forward.”
“Waiter! Bring some champagne, please,” Major Napier called.
“I believe we have something to celebrate.”
From the Primer, the arrival of a sinister Baron;
Burt’s disciplinary practices; the plot against
the Baron,’ practical application of ideas gleaned
from the Primer; flight.
Outside the Dark Castle, Nell’s wicked stepmother continued
to live as she pleased and to entertain visitors. Every few
weeks a ship would sail over the horizon and anchor in the
little bay where Nell’s father had once kept his fishing boat.
An important fellow would be rowed ashore by his servants
and would live in the house with Nell’s stepmother for a few
days, weeks, or months. In the end, she always got into
shouting arguments with her visitors, which Nell and Harv
could hear even through the thick walls of the Dark Castle,
and when the visitor had gotten sick of it, he would row back
out to his ship and sail away, leaving the wicked Queen
heartbroken and sobbing on the shore. Princess Nell, who
had hated her stepmother at first, came to feel sorry for her in
a way and to realize that the Queen was locked into a prison
of her own making, even darker and colder than the Dark
Castle itself.
One day a barkentine with red sails appeared in the bay,
and a red-headed man with a red beard came to shore. Like
the other visitors, he moved in with the Queen and lived with
her for a time. Unlike the others, he was curious about the
Dark Castle and would ride up to its gates every day or two,
rattle the door handles, and walk all around it, staring at its
high walls and towers.
In the third week of the man’s visit, Nell and Harv were
astonished to hear the twelve locks on the gate being opened,
one by one. In walked the red-headed man. When he saw
Nell and Harv, he was just as astonished as they were. “Who
are you?” he demanded in a low, gruff voice.
Princess Nell was about to answer, but Harv stopped her.
“You are the visitor here,” he said. “Identify yourself.”
At this, the man’s face turned almost as red as his hair,
and he strode forward and struck Harv across the face with
his mailed fist. “I am Baron Jack,” he said, “and you may
consider that my calling card.” Then, just for spite, he aimed a
kick at Princess Nell; but his foot in its heavy metal armor was
too slow, and Princess Nell, remembering the lessons
Dinosaur had taught her, dodged it easily. “You must be the
two brats the Queen told me about,” he said. “You were
supposed to be dead by now-eaten up by trolls. Well, tonight
you shall be, and tomorrow the castle will be mine!” He seized
Harv and began to bind his arms with a stout rope. Princess
Nell, forgetting her lessons, tried to stop him, and in a flash he
had grabbed her by the hair and tied her up as well. Soon
both of them were lying helpless on the ground. “We’ll see
how well you can fight off the trolls tonight!” Baron Jack said,
and giving each of them a slap and a kick just for spite, he
strode off through the gate and locked the twelve locks again.
Princess Nell and Harv had a long wait until the sun went
down and her Night Friends came to life and untied her and
Harv. Princess Nell explained that the evil Queen had a new
lover who intended to take the Dark Castle for himself.
“We must fight him,” Purple said.
Princess Nell and all the other friends were startled to
hear these words, for usually Purple was patient and wise and
counseled against fighting. “There are many shades of gray in
the world,” she explained, “and many times when the hidden
way is best; but some things are purely evil and must be
fought to the death.”
“If he were but a man, I could crush him with one foot,”
Dinosaur said, “but not during the daytime; and even at night,
the Queen is a sorceress, and her friends have mickle
powers. We will need a plan.”
That night there was hell to pay. Kevin, the boy whom Nell had
defeated over tetherball, had learned everything he knew about
being a bully from none other than Burt, because Burt had lived
with Kevin’s mom for a while and might even have been Kevin’s
dad, so Kevin went to Burt and told him that he’d been beaten up by
Harv and Nell acting together. That night, both Harv and Nell got
the worst spanking of their lives. It went on so long that finally
Mom tried to step in and get Burt to calm down. But Burt slapped
Mom across the face and shoved her down on the floor. Finally,
Harv and Nell ended up in their room together. Burt was in the
living room having a few beers and getting into a Burly Scudd
ractive. Mom had run out of the apartment, and they had no idea
where she was.
One of Harv’s eyes was swollen shut, and one hand was not
working. Nell was terribly thirsty, and when she went to pee, it
came out red. Also she had burns on her arms from Burt’s
cigarettes, and the pain just kept getting worse.
They could sense Burt’s movements through the wall, and they
could hear the Burly Scudd ractive. Harv could tell when Burt had
gone to sleep because a single-user ractive eventually went into
pause mode if the user stopped racting. When they were sure Burt
was sleeping, they stole into the, kitchen to get some medicine from
the M.C.
Harv got a bandage for his wrist and a cold-pack for his eye,
and he asked the M.C. for something to put on their cuts and burns
so they wouldn’t get infected. The M.C. displayed a whole menu of
mediaglyphs for different kinds of remedies. Some of them were
premiums, which you had to pay money for, and there were a few
freebies. One of the freebies was a cream that came in a tube, like
toothpaste. They took it back to their room and took turns spreading
it on each other’s cuts and burns.
Nell lay quietly in bed until she could tell that Harv had gone to
sleep. Then she got out the Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer.
When Baron Jack came back to the castle the following day,
he was angry to find the ropes piled on the ground, and no
bones cracked and gnawed by trolls. He stormed into the
castle with drawn sword, bellowing that he would kill Harv and
Princess Nell himself; but entering into the dining room, he
stopped in wonderment as he saw a great feast that had been
laid out on the table for him: loaves of brown bread, pots of
fresh butter, roasted fowl, a suckling pig, grapes, apples,
cheese, broth, and wine. Standing next to the table were Harv
and Princess Nell, dressed in servants’ uniforms.
“Welcome to your castle, Baron Jack,” Princess Nell said.
“As you can see, we your new servants have prepared a
small snack that we hope will be to your liking.” Actually, Duck
had prepared all of the food, but as this was the daytime, she
had turned back into a little toy along with all the other Night
Friends.
Baron Jack’s anger subsided as his greedy eyes traveled
over the feast. “I will try a few bites,” he said, “but if any of the
food is not perfect, or if you do not serve me to my liking, I’ll
have your heads spiked on the gates of the castle like that!”
and he snapped his fingers in Harv’s face.
Harv looked angry and was about to blurt out something
terrible, but Princess Nell remembered the words of Purple,
who said that the hidden way was best, and she said in a
sweet voice, “For imperfect service we would deserve nothing
better.”
Baron Jack began to eat, and such was the excellence of
Duck’s cooking that once he started, he could barely stop
himself. He sent Harv and Nell scurrying back to the kitchen
again and again to bring him more food, and though he
constantly found fault with them and rose from his chair to
give them beatings, he had apparently decided that they were
worth more to him alive than dead.
“Sometimes he would burn their skin with cigarettes too,” Nell
whispered.
The letters changed on the page of the Primer.
“Princess Nell’s pee-pee turned red too,” Nell said, “because
the Baron was a very bad man. And his real name wasn’t Baron
Jack. His real name was Burt.”
As Nell spoke the words, the story changed in the Primer.
“And Harv couldn’t use his arm because of the wrist, so he had
to carry everything with one hand, and that’s because Burt was a
bad man and he hurt it really bad,” Nell said.
After a long silence, the Primer began to speak again, but the
lovely voice of the Vicky woman who told the story sounded thick
and hoarse all of a sudden and would stumble in the middle of
sentences.
Baron Burt ate all day, until finally the sun went down.
“Bar the doors,” said a high squeaking voice, “or the trolls
will be after us!”
These words came from a little man in a suit and top hat
who had just scurried through the doors and was now eyeing
the sunset nervously.
“Who is that pipsqueak interrupting my dinner!?” roared
Baron Burt.
“This is our neighbor,” Princess Nell said. “He comes to
visit us in the evening. Please let him sit by the fire.”
Baron Burt looked a bit suspicious, but at this moment
Harv set a delicious strawberry cheesecake in front of him,
and he forgot about the little man entirely, until a few minutes
later, when the high squeaking voice piped up again:
There once was a Baron named Burt
Who was so tough he couldn’t be hurt
And could wrestle a bear; but I think
After two or three drinks
Like a child he’d throw up on his shirt.
“Who dares mock the Baron!?” bellowed Baron Burt, and
looked down to see the new visitor leaning insouciantly on his
walking stick and raising a glass as if to toast his health.
Your Majesty, don’t be upset
And please feel free now to get
Into bed; for it’s been a long day
And you’re in a bad way
And your trousers you’re soon going to wet.
“Bring me a cask of ale!” shouted Baron Burt. “And bring
another for this upstart, and we’ll see who can hold his drink.”
Harv rolled two casks of strong ale into the room. Baron
Burt raised one to his lips and drained it in single pull. The
little man on the floor then did the same.
Two skins of wine were then brought, and once again
both Baron Burt and the little man easily finished them.
Finally, two bottles of strong liquor were brought, and the
Baron and the little man took turns drinking one swallow at a
time until the bottles were empty. The Baron was confounded
by the small man’s ability to drink; but there he stood, upright
and sober, while Baron Burt was becoming very drunk.
Finally the little man pulled a small bottle from his pocket
and said,
For a young man, ale is fine
While grown-ups much prefer wine
Liquor’s a thing
That’s fit for a king
But it’s kid stuff compared to moonshine.
The little man uncorked the bottle and took a drink, then
handed it to Baron Burt. The Baron took one swallow and fell
asleep instantly in his chair.
“Mission accomplished,” said the little man, sweeping off
his top hat with a deep bow, revealing a set of long furry
ears-for he was none other than Peter in disguise.
Princess Nell ran back to the kitchen to tell Dinosaur, who
was sitting by the fire with a long wooden pole, poking it in the
coals and turning it round and round to make the point very
sharp. “He’s asleep!” she whispered.
Miranda, sitting in her stage at the Parnasse, felt an
overwhelming sense of relief as her next line appeared on the
prompter. She took a deep breath before she delivered it, closed her
eyes, settled her mind, tried to put herself there in the Dark Castle.
She looked deep into Princess Nell’s eyes and sold the line with
every scrap of talent and technique she had.
“Good!” said Dinosaur. “Then the time has come for you
and Harv to flee from the Dark Castle! You must be as
stealthy as you can. I will come out later and join you.”
Please get out of there. Please run away. Get out of that
chamber of horrors where you’ve been living, Nell, and get to an
orphanage or a police station or something, and I will find you. No
matter where you are, I’ll find you.
Miranda had it worked out already: she could compile an extra
mattress, put Nell on the floor of her bedroom and Harv in the living
room of her flat. If only she could figure out who the hell they were.
Princess Nell hadn’t responded. She was thinking, which was
the wrong thing to do right now. Get out. Get out.
“Why are you putting that stick in the fire?”
“It is my duty to see that the evil Baron never troubles you
again,” Miranda said, reading from the prompter.
“But what are you going to do with that stick?”
Please don’t do this. It’s not the time to ask why. “You must
make haste!” Miranda read, trying once again to sell the line as best
she could. But Princess Nell had been playing with the Primer for a
couple of years now and had gotten in the habit of asking endless
questions.
“Why are you making the stick sharper?”
“This is how Odysseus and I took care of the Cyclops,”
Dinosaur said. Shit. It’s going all wrong.
“What’s Cyclops?” Nell said.
A new illustration grew on the next page, facing the illustration
of Dinosaur by the fire. It was a picture of a one-eyed giant herding
some sheep.
Dinosaur told the story of how Odysseus killed the Cyclops
with a pointed stick, just as he was about to do to Baron Burt. Nell
insisted on hearing what happened after that. One story led to
another. Miranda tried to tell the stories as fast as she could, tried to
put a tone of boredom and impatience into her voice, which wasn’t
easy because she was actually on the verge of panic. She had to get
Nell out of that apartment before Burt woke up from his drunk.
The eastern sky was beginning to glow . . .
Shit. Get out of there, Nell!
. . .
Dinosaur was just in the middle of telling Princess Nell about a
witch who turned men into swine when suddenly, poof, he turned
back into a stuffed animal. The sun had come up.
Nell was a bit startled by this turn of events, and closed the
Primer for a while, and sat in the dark listening to Harv wheeze and
Burt snore in the next room. She’d been looking forward to the
moment when Dinosaur would kill Baron Burt, just as Odysseus had
done to the Cyclops. But now it wasn’t going to happen. Baron Burt
would wake up, realize he’d been tricked, and hurt them worse.
They’d be stuck in the Dark Castle forever.
Nell was tired of being in the Dark Castle. She knew it was
time to get out.
She opened the Primer.
“Princess Nell knew what she had to do,” Nell said. Then she
closed the Primer and left it on her pillow.
Even if she hadn’t learned how to read pretty well, she would
have had no trouble finding what she wanted just by using the
M.C.’s mediaglyphics. It was a thing she’d seen people use in the
old passives, a thing she’d seen when Mom’s old boyfriend Brad
had taken her to visit the horse barn in Dovetail. It was called a
screwdriver, and you could have the M.C. make them in all different
shapes: long, short, fat, skinny.
She had it make one that was very long and very skinny. When
it was finished, it made the hissing sound that it always made, and
she thought she heard Burt stirring on the sofa.
She peeked into the living room. He was still lying there, his
eyes closed, but his arms were moving around. His head turned
from side to side once, and she could see a glimmer between his
half-opened eyelids.
He was about to wake up and hurt her some more.
She held the screwdriver out in front of her like a lance and ran
straight toward him.
At the last instant she faltered. The tool went astray and
skidded across his forehead, leaving a trail of red stitches. Nell was
so horrified that she dropped it and jumped back Burt was shaking
his head violently back and forth.
He opened his eyes and looked right at Nell. Then he put his
hand to his forehead and brought it back all bloody. He sat up on the
sofa, still uncomprehending. The screwdriver rolled off and
bounced on the floor. He picked it up and found the tip bloody, then
fixed his eyes on Nell, who had shrunk into the corner of the room.
Nell knew that she had done the wrong thing. Dinosaur had
told her to run away, and she had pestered him with questions
instead.
“Harv!” she said. But her voice came out all dry and squeaky,
like a mouse’s. “We must fly!”
“Yeah, you’re gonna fly all right,” Burt said swinging his feet
around to the floor. “Right out the fucking window you’re gonna
fly.”
Harv came out. He was carrying his nunchuks under his injured
arm and the Primer in his good hand. The book hung open to an
illustration of Princess Nell and Harv running away from the Dark
Castle with Baron Burt in pursuit. “Nell, your book talked to me,”
he said. “It said we should run away.” Then he saw Burt rising from
the sofa with the bloody screwdriver in his hand.
Harv didn’t bother with the nunchuks. He bolted across the
room and dropped the Primer, freeing his good hand to fling the
front door open. Nell, who had been frozen in a nearby corner for
some time, shot toward the door like a bolt finally loosed from a
crossbow, snatching up the Primer as she ran past it. They ran into
the hallway with Burt only a few paces behind.
The lobby with the elevators was some distance away from
them. On impulse, Nell stopped and dropped to a crouch in Burt’s
path. Harv turned toward her, terrified. “Nell!” he cried.
Burt’s pumping legs struck Nell in the side. He spun forward
and landed hard on the hallway floor, skidding for a short distance.
This brought him to the feet of Harv, who had turned to face him
and deployed his nunchuks. Harv went upside Burt’s head a few
times, but he was panicked and didn’t do a very good job of it. Burt
groped with one hand and managed to catch the chain that joined the
halves of the weapon. Nell had gotten to her feet by this point and
ran up Burt’s back; she lunged forward and sank her teeth into the
fleshy base of Burt’s thumb. Something fast and confusing
happened, Nell was rolling on the floor, Harv was dragging her back
to her feet, she reached back to snatch up the Primer, which she had
dropped again. They made it into the emergency stairs and began to
skitter down the tunnel of urine, graffiti, and refuse, jumping over
the odd slumbering body. Burt entered the stairwell in pursuit, a
couple of flights behind them. He tried to make a shortcut by
vaulting over the banister as he had seen and done in ractives, but
his drunk body didn’t do it as well as a media hero, and he tumbled
down one flight, cursing and screaming, now rabid with pain and
anger. Nell and Harv kept running.
Burt’s pratfall gave them enough of a lead to make it to the
ground floor. They ran straight across the lobby and into the street.
It was the wee hours of the morning, and there was almost no one
out here, which was slightly unusual; normally there would have
been decoys and lookouts for drug sellers. But tonight there was
only one person on the whole block: a bulky Chinese man with a
short beard and close-cropped hair, wearing traditional indigo
pajamas and a black leather skullcap, standing in the middle of the
street with his hands stuck in his sleeves. He gave Nell and Harv an
appraising look as they ran past. Nell did not pay him much
attention. She just ran as fast as she could.
“Nell!” Harv was saying. “Nell! Look”
She was afraid to look. She kept running.
“Nell, stop and look.” Harv cried. He sounded exultant.
Finally Nell ran around the corner of a building, stopped,
turned, and peeked back cautiously.
She was looking down the empty street past the building where
she had lived her whole life. At the end of the street was a big
mediatronic advertising display currently running a big Coca-Cola
ad, in the ancient and traditional red used by that company.
Silhouetted against it were two men: Burt and the big roundheaded
Chinese man.
They were dancing together.
No, the Chinese man was dancing. Burt was just staggering
around like a drunk.
No, the Chinese man was not dancing, but doing some of the
exercises that Dojo had taught Nell about. He moved slowly and
beautifully except for some moments when every muscle in his
body would join into one explosive movement. Usually these
explosions were directed toward Burt.
Burt fell down, then struggled up to his knees.
The Chinese man gathered himself together into a black seed,
rose into the air, spun around, and unfolded like a blooming flower.
One of his feet struck Burt on the point of his chin and seemed to
accelerate all the way through Burt’s head. Burt’s body fell back to
the pavement like a few gallons of water sloshed out of a bucket.
The Chinese man became very still, settled his breathing, adjusted
his skullcap and the sash on his robe. Then he turned his back to
Nell and Harv and walked away down the middle of the street.
Nell opened her Primer. It was showing a picture of Dinosaur,
seen in silhouette through a window in the Dark Castle, standing
over the corpse of Baron Burt with a smoking stake in his claws.
Nell said, “The little boy and the little girl were running away
to the Land Beyond.”
Hackworth departs from Shanghai; his speculations as
to the possible motives of Dr. X.
Would-be passengers skidded to a halt on the saliva-slickened floor
of the Shanghai Aerodrome as the announcer brayed the names of
great and ancient Chinese cities into his microphone. They set bags
down, shushed children, furrowed brows, cupped hands around ears,
and pursed lips in utter bewilderment. None of this was made any
easier by the extended family of some two dozen just-arrived Boers,
women in bonnets and boys in heavy coarse farmer’s pants, who
had convened by one of the gates and begun to sing a hymn of
thanksgiving in thick hoarse voices.
When the announcer called out Hackworth’s flight (San Diego
with stops in Seoul, Vladivostok, Magadan, Anchorage, Juneau,
Prince Rupert, Vancouver, Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Santa
Barbara, and Los Angeles), he apparently decided that it was
beneath his dignity, above his abilities, or both to speak Korean,
Russian, English, French, Coast Salish, and Spanish in the same
sentence, and so he just hummed into the microphone for a while as
if, far from being a professional announcer, he were a shy,
indifferent vocalist hidden within in a vast choir.
Hackworth knew perfectly well that hours would pass before
he actually found himself on an airship, and that having achieved
that milestone, he might have to wait hours more for its actual
departure. Nonetheless, he had to say good-bye to his family at
some point, and this seemed no worse a time than any other.
Holding Fiona (so big and solid now!) in the crook of one arm, and
holding hands with Gwen, he pushed insistently across a rip tide of
travelers, beggars, pickpockets, and entrepreneurs trading in
everything from bolts of real silk to stolen intellectual property.
Finally they reached a corner where a languid eddy had separated
itself from the flow of people, and where Fiona could safely be set
down.
He turned first to Gwen. She still looked as stunned and vacant
as she had, more or less consistently, since he told her that he had
received a new assignment “whose nature I am not at liberty to
disclose, save to say that it concerns the future, not merely of my
department, nor of John Zaibatsu, but of that phyle into which you
had the good fortune to have been born and to which I have sworn
undying loyalty,” and that he was making a trip “of indefinite
duration” to North America. It had been increasingly clear of late
that Gwen simply didn’t get it. At first, Hackworth had been
annoyed by this, viewing it as a symptom of hitherto unevidenced
intellectual shortcomings. More recently, he had come to understand
that it had more to do with emotional stance. Hackworth was
embarking on a quest of sorts here, real Boy’s Own Paper stuff,
highly romantic. Gwen hadn’t been raised on the proper diet of
specious adventure yarns and simply found the whole concept
unfathomable. She did a bit of rote sniffling and tear-wiping, gave
him a quick kiss and a hug, and stepped back, having completed her
role in the ceremony with nothing close to enough histrionics.
Hackworth, feeling somewhat disgruntled, squatted down to face
Fiona.
His daughter seemed to have a better intuitive grasp of the
situation; she had been up several times a night recently,
complaining of bad dreams, and on the way to the Aerodrome she
had been perfectly quiet. She stared at her father with large red eyes.
Tears came to Hackworth’s eyes, and his nose began to run. He
blew his nose plangently, held the handkerchief over his face for a
moment, and composed himself.
Then he reached into the breast pocket of his overcoat and
drew out a flat package, wrapped up in mediatronic paper of spring
wildflowers bending in a gentle breeze. Fiona brightened up
immediately, and Hackworth could not help chudding, not for the
first time, at the charming susceptibility of small people to frank
bribery. “You will forgive me for ruining the surprise,” he said, “by
telling you that this is a book, my darling. A magic book. I made it
for you, because I love you and could not think of a better way to
express that love. And whenever you open its pages, no matter how
far away I might be, you will find me here.”
“Thank you ever so much, Father,” she said, taking it with both
hands, and he could not help himself from sweeping her up in both
arms and giving her a great hug and a kiss. “Good-bye, my best
beloved, you will see me in your dreams,” he whispered into her
tiny, flawless ear, and then he set her free, spun around, and walked
away before she could see the tears that had begun to run down his
face.
Hackworth was a free man now, wandering through the
Aerodrome in an emotional stupor, and only reached his flight by
participating in the same flock instinct that all the natives used to
reach theirs. ‘Whenever he saw more than one gwailo heading
purposefully in one direction, he followed them, and then others
started following him, and thus did a mob of foreign devils coalesce
among a hundred times as many natives, and finally, two hours after
their ffight was supposed to leave, they mobbed a gate and climbed
aboard the airship Hanjin Takhoma-which might or might not
have been their assigned vessel, but the passengers now had a
sufficient numerical majority to hijack it to America, which was the
only thing that really counted in China.
He had received a summons from the Celestial Kingdom. Now
he was on his way to the territory still known vaguely as America.
His eyes were red from crying over Gwen and Fiona, and his blood
was swarming with nanosites whose functions were known only to
Dr. X; Hackworth had lain back, closed his eyes, rolled up his
sleeve, and hummed “Rule, Atlantis” while Dr. X’s physicians (at
least he hoped they were physicians) shoved a fat needle into his
arm. The needle was fed by a tube that ran directly into a special
fitting on the matter compiler; Hackworth was plugged directly into
the Feed, not the regulation Atlantan kind but Dr. X’s black-market
kiudge. He could only hope that they’d given it the right
instructions, as it would be a shame to have a washing machine, a
mediatronic chopstick, or a kilo of China ‘White materialize in his
arm. Since then, he’d had a few attacks of the shivers, suggesting
that his immune system was reacting to something Dr. X had put in
there. His body would either get used to it or (preferably) destroy
the offending nanosites.
The airship was a dromond, the largest class of noncargo
vessel. It was divided into four classes. Hackworth was second from
the bottom, in third. Below that was steerage, which was for
migrating thetes, and for sky-girls, prostitutes of the air. Even now,
these were bribing their way past the conductors and into the thirdclass
lounge, making eyes at Hackworth and at the white-shirted
sararimen who tended to travel this way. Those gentlemen had
grown up in one crowded Dragon or another, where they knew how
to generate a sort of artificial privacy field by determinedly ignoring
each other. Hackworth had arrived at the point where he frankly
didn’t care, and so he stared directly at these men, front-line soldiers
of their various microstates, as each one primly folded his navy blue
suit jacket and elbow-crawled into a coffinlike microcabin like a GI
squirming under a roll of concertina wire, accompanied or not by a
camp follower.
Hackworth pointlessly wondered whether he was the only one
of this ship’s some two thousand passengers who believed that
prostitution (or anything) was immoral. He did not consider this
question in a selfrighteous way, more out of rueful curiosity; some
of the sky-girls were quite fetching. But as he dragged his body into
his microberth, he suffered another attack of the shivers, reminding
him that even if his soul had been willing, his flesh was simply too
weak.
Another possible explanation for the chills was that Dr. X’s
nanosites were seeking out and destroying the ones that H.M. Joint
Forces had put in there, waging a turf war inside his body, and his
immune system was doing overtime trying to pick up the carnage.
Hackworth unexpectedly fell asleep before the dromond had even
pulled away from her mooring mast, and had dreams about the
murderous implements he had seen magnified on Dr. X’s mediatron
during his first visit. In the abstract they were frightening enough.
Having a few million of them in his veins didn’t do much for his
peace of mind. In the end it wasn’t as bad as knowing your blood
was full of spirochetes, which people used to live with for decades.
Amazing what a person could get used to.
When he settled into bed, he heard a small chime, like faery
bells. It was coming from the little pen dangling from his watch
chain, and it meant that he had mail. Perhaps a thank-you note from
Fiona. He couldn’t sleep anyway, and so he took out a sheet of
mediatronic paper and spoke the commands that transferred the mail
from the pen charm onto the page.
He was disappointed to note that it was printed, not
handwritten; some kind of official correspondence, and not,
unfortunately, a note from Fiona. When he began to read it, he
understood that it wasn’t even official. It wasn’t even from a human.
It was a notification sent back to him automatically by a piece of
machinery he had set into motion two years ago. The central
message was wreathed in pages of technical gibberish, maps,
graphs, and diagrams. The message was:
T H E YOUNG L ADY’ S I L L U S T R A T E D PR I M E R
HAS BEEN FOUND.
It was accompanied by an animated, three-dimensional map of
New Chusan with a red line drawn across it, starting in front of a
rather seedylooking high-rise apartment building in the Leased
Territory called Enchantment and making its way erratically around
the island from there.
Hackworth laughed until his neighbors pounded on the
adjoining walls and asked him to shut up.
Nell and Harv at large in the Leased Territories;
encounter with an inhospitable security pod:
a revelation about the Primer.
The Leased Territories were too valuable to leave much room for
Nature, but the geotects of Imperial Tectonics Limited had heard
that trees were useful for cleaning and cooling the air, and so they
had built in green belts along the borders between sectors. In the
first hour that they lived free in the streets, Nell glimpsed one of
those green belts, though it looked black at the time. She broke
away from Harv and ran toward it down a street that had developed
into a luminescent tunnel of mediatronic billboards. Harv chased
her, just barely matching her speed because he had gotten a worse
spanking than she had. They were almost the only people on the
street, certainly the only ones moving purposefully, and so, as they
ran, the messages on the billboards pursued them like starving
wolves, making sure they understood that if they used cerrain
ractives or took certain drugs, they could rely on being able to have
sex with certain unrealistically perfect young persons. Some of the
billboards made an even more elemental pitch, selling the sex
directly. The mediatrons on this street were exceptionally large
because they were made to be seen clearly from the heaths, bluffs,
terraces, and courts of the New Atlantis Clave, miles up the
mountain.
Unremitting exposure to this kind of thing produced mediatron
burnout among the target audience. Instead of turning them off and
giving people a break for once, the proprietors had joined in an arms
race of sorts, trying to find the magic image that would make people
ignore all the other adverts and fix raptly on theirs. The obvious step
of making their mediatrons bigger than the others had been taken
about as far as it could go. Quite some time ago the content issue
had been settled: tits, tires, and explosions were the only things that
seemed to draw the notice of their supremely jaded focus groups,
though from time to time they would play the juxtaposition card and
throw in something incongruous, like a nature scene or a man in a
black turtleneck reading poetry. Once all the mediatrons were a
hundred feet high and filled with tits, the only competitive strategy
that hadn’t already been pushed to the redline was technical tricks:
painfully bright flashes, jump-cuts, and simulated 3-D phantoms
that made bluff charges toward specific viewers who didn’t seem to
be paying enough attention.
It was down a mile-long gallery of these stimuli that Nell made
her unexpected breakaway, looking from Harv’s increasingly distant
point of view like an ant scuttling across a television screen with the
intensity and saturation turned all the way up, violently changing
course from time to time as she was menaced by a virtual pitchdaemon
lunging at her from the false parallax of a moving z-buffer,
flaring like a comet against a bogus firmament of video black She
knew that they were fake and in most cases didn’t even recognize
the products they were pitching, but her life had taught her
everything about dodging. She couldn’t not dodge.
They hadn’t figured out a way to make the adverts come at you
headon, and so she maintained a roughly consistent direction down
the middle of the street until she vaulted an energy-absorbing barrier
at its end and vanished into the forest. Harv followed her a few
seconds later, though his arm didn’t support vaulting and so he
ended up hurtling ignominiously over the top, like a hyped
autoskater who hadn’t seen the barrier at all, just body-kissed it full
tilt. “Nell!” he was already hollering, as he came to rest in a nest of
colorful discarded packaging materials. “You can’t stay in here!
You can’t stay in the trees, Nell!”
Nell had already worked her way deep into the woods, or as
deep as you could get in a narrow green belt made to separate one
Leased Territory from another. She fell down a couple of times and
banged her head on a tree until, with childish adaptivity, she
realized that she was on one of those surfaces that wasn’t flat like a
floor, street, or sidewalk. The ankles would actually have to show
some versatility here. It was like one of those places she had read
about in the Illustrated Primer, a magical zone where the fractal
dimension of the terrain had been allowed to struggle off the pin,
bumps supporting smaller copies of themselves, repeat until
microscopic, throw dirt over it, and plant some of those creepy new
Douglas firs that grow as fast as bamboo. Nell soon encountered a
big Doug that had blown down in a recent typhoon, popping its own
rootball out of the ground and thereby excavating a handy
depression that invited nestling. Nell jumped in.
For a few minutes she found it strangely hilarious that Harv
could not find her. Their flat had only two hiding places, both
closets, and so their traditional exploits in the hide-and-go-seek field
had provided them with minimal entertainment value and left them
wondering what the big deal was anyway about that stupid game.
But now, here in the dark woods, Nell was beginning to get it.
“Do you give up?” she finally said, and then Harv found her.
He stood at the edge of the rootball pit and demanded that she come
out. She refused. Finally he clambered down, though to an eye more
critical than Nell’s it might have looked as if he were falling. Nell
jumped into his lap before he could get up. “We gotta go,” he said.
“I want to stay here. It’s nice,” Nell said.
“You ain’t the only one who thinks so,” Harv said. “That’s why
they got pods here.”
“Pods?”
“Aerostats. For security.”
Nell was delighted to hear it and could not fathom why her
brother spoke of security with such dread in his voice.
A soprano turbojet seemed to bear down on them, fading in and
out as it tacked through the flora. The creepy afflatus Dopplered
down a couple of notes as it came to a stop directly above them.
They couldn’t see more than the odd glint of colored light, picked
up by whatever-itwas from the distant mediatrons. A voice,
flawlessly reproduced and just a hair too loud, came out of it:
“Visitors are welcome to stroll through this park at any time. We
hope you have enjoyed your stay. Please inquire if you need
directions, and this unit will assist you.”
“It’s nice,” Nell said.
“Not for long,” Harv said. “Let’s get out of here before it gets
pissed.”
“I like it here.”
Bluish light exploded out of the aerostat. They both hollered as
their irises convulsed. It was hollering right back at them: “Allow
me to light your way to the nearest exit!”
“We’re running away from home,” Nell explained. But Harv
was scrambling up out of the hole, yanking Nell behind him with his
good hand.
The thing’s turbines screeched briefly as it made a bluff charge.
In this fashion it herded them briskly toward the nearest street.
When they had finally climbed over a barrier and gotten their feet
back on concreta firma, it snapped off its light and zoomed off
without so much as a farethee-well.
“It’s okay, Nell, they always do that.”
“Why?”
“So this place don’t fill up with transients.”
“What’s that?”
“That’s what we are, now,” Harv explained.
“Let’s go stay with your buds!” Nell said. Harv had never
introduced Nell to any of his buds before, she knew them only as
children of earlier epochs knew Gilgamesh, Roland, or Superman.
She was under the impression that the streets of the Leased
Territories were rife with Harv’s buds and that they were more or
less all-powerful.
Harv’s face squirmed for a while, and then he said, “We gotta
talk about your magic book.”
“The Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer?”
“Yeah, whatever it’s called.”
“Why must we talk about it?”
“Huh?” Harv said in the dopey voice he affected whenever
Nell talked fancy.
“Why do we gotta talk about it?” Nell said patiently.
“There’s something I never told you about that book, but I
gotta tell you now,” Harv said. “Come on, let’s keep moving, or
some creep’s gonna come hassle us.” They headed toward the main
street of Lazy Bay Towne, which was the Leased Territory into
which the pod had ejected them. The main street curved along the
waterfront, separating a beach from a very large number of drinking
establishments fronted with lurid, bawdy mediatrons. “I don’t want
to go that way,” Nell said, remembering that last gauntlet of
electromagnetic pimps. But Harv grabbed her wrist and hobbled
downhill, pulling her behind. “It’s safer than being in the back
streets. Now let me tell you about that book My buds and I pinched
it and some other stuff from a Vicky we rolled. Doc told us to roll
him.”
“Doc?”
“This Chinese guy who runs the Flea Circus. He said we
should roll him, and make sure we made it good so it’d get picked
up on the monitors.”
“What does that mean?”
“Never mind. He also said he wanted us to lift something from
this Vicky-a certain package about yay big.” Harv formed right
angles with his thumbs and index fingers and defined the vertices of
a rectangle, book-size. “Gave us to understand it was valuable.
Well, we didn’t find any such package. We did find a shitty old
book on him, though. I mean, it looked old and fine, but no one
reckoned it could be the thing Doc was looking for, since he’s got
lots of books. So I took it for you.
“Well, a week or two later, Doc wants to know where is the
package, and we told him this story. When he heard about that book,
he flipped and told us that the book and the package were one and
the same.. By that time, you were already playing with that book all
night and all day, Nell, and I couldn’t bear to take it away from you,
so I lied. I told him I threw the book down on the sidewalk when I
saw it was junk, and if it wasn’t still there, then someone else must
have come along and picked it up. Doc was pissed, but he fell for it.
“That’s why I never brought my buds to the flat. If anyone
finds out you still have that book, Doc’ll kill me.”
“What should we do?”
Harv got a look on his face like he’d rather not talk about it.
“For starters, let’s get some free stuff.”
They took a sneaky and indirect route to the waterfront, staying
as far as possible from the clusters of drunks winding through the
constellation of incandescent bordellos like cold dark clumps of
rock wending their way through a bright nebula of young stars.
They made their way to a public M.C. on a streetcorner and picked
out items from the free menu:
boxes of water and nutri-broth, envelopes of sushi made from
nanosurimi and rice, candy bars, and packages about the size of
Harv’s hand, festooned with implausible block letter promises
(“REFLECTS 99% OF INFRARED!”) that folded out into huge
crinkly metallized blankets. Nell had been noticing a lot of rough
shapes strewn around on the beach like giant chrome-plated larva.
Must be fellow transients wrapped up in these selfsame. As soon as
they had scored the goodies, they ran down to the beach and picked
out their own spot. Nell wanted one closer to the surf, but Harv
made some very well-considered observations about the
inadvisability of sleeping below high tide. They trudged along the
seawall for a good mile or so before finding a relatively abandoned
bit of beach and wrapped themselves up in their blankets there. Harv
insisted that one of them had to stay awake at all times to act as a
sentry. Nell had learned all about this kind of thing from her virtual
adventures in the Primer, and so she volunteered to stay up first.
Harv went to sleep pretty soon, and Nell opened up her book. At
times like this, the paper glowed softly and the letters stood out
crisp and black, like tree branches silhouetted against a full moon.
Miranda ’s reactions to the evening’s events; solace from
an unexpected quarter; from the Primer, the demise of
a hero, flight to the Land Beyond, and the lands
of King Magpie.
The Theatre Parnasse had a rather nice bar, nothing spectacular, just
a sort of living room off the main floor, with the bar itself recessed
into one wall. The old furniture and pictures had been looted by the
Red Guards and later replaced with post-Mao stuff that was not as
fine. The management kept the booze locked up when the ractors
were working, not sharing any romantic notions about substanceabusing
creative geniuses. Miranda stumbled down from her box,
fixed herself a club soda, and settled into a plastic chair. She put her
shaking hands together like the covers of a book and then buried her
face in them. After a few deep breaths she got tears to come, though
they came silently, a temporary letting-off-steam cry, not the
catharsis she was hoping for. She hadn’t earned the catharsis yet,
she knew, because what had happened was just the first act. Just the
initial incident, or whatever they called it in the books.
“Rough session?” said a voice. Miranda recognized it, but just
barely: It was Carl Hollywood, the dramaturge, in effect her boss.
But he didn’t sound like a gruff son of a bitch tonight, which was a
switch.
Carl was in his forties, six and a half feet tall, massively built
and given to wearing long black coats that almost swept the floor.
He had long wavy blond hair drawn back from his forehead and
affected a sort of King Tut beard. Either he was celibate, or else he
believed that the particulars of his sexual orientation and needs were
infinitely too complex to be shared with those he worked with.
Everyone was scared shitless of him, and he liked it that way; he
couldn’t do his job if he was buddies with all of the ractors.
She heard his cowboy boots approaching across the bare,
stained Chinese rug. He confiscated her club soda. “Don’t want to
drink this fizzy stuff when you’re having a cry. It’ll come out your
nose. You need something like tomato juice-replace those lost
electrolytes. I tell you what,” he said, rattling his tremendous
keychain, “I’ll break the rules and fix you an honest-to-god bloody
mary. Usually I make ‘em with tabasco, which is how we do it
where I’m from. But since your mucus membranes are already
irritated enough, I’ll just make a boring one.”
By the time he was finished with this oration, Miranda had
gotten her hands away from her face at least. She turned away from
him.
“Kind of funny racting in that little box, ain’t it,” Carl said,
“kind of isolating. Theatre didn’t used to be that way.”
“Isolating? Sort of,” Miranda said. “I could use a little more
isolation tonight.”
“You telling me to leave you alone, or-”
“No!” Miranda said, sounding desperate to herself. She brought
her voice to heel before continuing. “No, that’s not how I meant it.
It’s just that you never know what role you’re going to play. And
some of the roles can cut pretty deep. If someone handed me a script
for what I just did and asked me if I were interested in the part, I’d
refuse it.”
“Was it a porn thing?” Carl Hollywood said. His voice sounded
a bit strangled. He was angry all of a sudden. He had stopped in the
middle of the room, clenching her bloody mary as if he might pop
the glass in his fist.
“No. It wasn’t like that,” Miranda said. “At least, it wasn’t porn
in the sense you’re talking about,” Miranda said, “though you never
know what turns people on.”
“Was the payer looking to get turned on?”
“No. Absolutely not,” Miranda said.
Then, after a long time, she said, “It was a kid. A little girl.”
Carl gave her a searching look, then remembered his manners
and glanced away, pretending to appraise the carving on the front of
the bar.
“So the next question is,” Miranda said after she’d steadied
herself with a few gulps of the drink, “why I should get so upset
over a kiddie ractive.”
Carl shook his head. “I wasn’t going to ask it.”
“But you’re wondering.”
“What I’m wondering about is my problem,” Carl said. “Let’s
concentrate on your problems for now.” He frowned, sat down
across from her and ran his hand back through his hair absentmindedly.
“Is this that big account?” He had access to her
spreadsheets; he knew how she’d been spending her time.
“Yeah.”
“I’ve sat in on a few of those sessions.”
“I know you have.”
“Seems different from normal kiddie stuff. The education is
there, but it’s darker. Lots of unreconstructed Grimm Brothers
content. Powerful.”
“Yeah.”
“It’s amazing to me that one kid can spend that much time-”
“Me too.” Miranda took another swallow, then bit off the end
of the celery stick and chewed awhile, stalling. “What it comes
down to,” she said, “is that I’m raising someone’s kid for them.”
Carl looked her straight in the eye for the first time in a while.
“And some heavy shit just went down,” he said.
“Some very heavy shit, yes.”
Carl nodded.
“It’s so heavy,” Miranda said, “that I don’t even know if this
girl is alive or dead.”
Carl glanced up at the fancy old clock on the wall, its face
yellowed from a century and a half’s accumulation of tar and
nicotine. “If she’s alive,” he said, “then she probably needs you.”
“Right,” Miranda said. She stood up and headed for the exit.
Then, before Carl could react, she spun on the ball of her foot, bent
down, and kissed him on the cheek.
“Aw, stop it,” he said.
“See you later, Carl Thanks She ran up the narrow staircase
heading for her box.
Baron Burt lay dead upon the floor of the Dark Castle.
Princess Nell was terrified of the blood that gushed from his
wound, but she approached him bravely and plucked the
keychain with the twelve keys from his belt. Then she
gathered up her Night Friends, tucking them into a little
knapsack, and hurriedly packed a picnic lunch while Harv
gathered up blankets and ropes and tools for their journey.
They were walking across the courtyard of the Dark
Castle, heading for the great gate with its twelve locks, when
suddenly the evil Queen appeared before them, as tall as a
giant, wreathed in lightning and thunder-clouds! Tears gushed
from her eyes and turned to blood as they rolled down her
cheeks. “You have taken him away from me!” she cried. And
Nell understood that this was a terrible thing for her wicked
stepmother, because she was weak and helpless without a
man. “For this,” the Queen continued, “I shall curse you to
remain locked up in this Dark Castle forever!” And she
reached down with one hand like talons and snatched the
keychain from Princess Nell’s hand. Then she turned into a
great vulture and flew away across the ocean toward the
Land Beyond.
“We are lost!” Harv cried. “Now we shall never escape
from this place!” But Princess Nell did not lose hope.
Not long after the Queen had vanished over the horizon,
another bird came flying toward them. It was the Raven, their
friend from the Land Beyond, who frequently came to visit
them and to entertain them with stories of far-off countries
and famous heroes. “Now is your chance to escape,” said the
Raven. “The evil Queen is engaged in a great battle of
sorcery with the Faery Kings and Queens who rule the Land
Beyond. Throw a rope out of yon arrow-slit, and climb down to
freedom.”
Princess Nell and Harv climbed the stairway into one of
the bastions flanking the Dark Castle’s main gate. These had
narrow windows where in olden times soldiers should shoot
arrows down at invaders. Harv tied one end of a rope to a
hook in the wall and threw it out one of these slits. Princess
Nell threw her Night Friends out, knowing that they would land
harmlessly below. Then she climbed out through the slit and
down the rope to freedom.
“Follow me, Harv!” she cried. “All is well down here, and it
is a much brighter place than you can possibly imagine!”
“I cannot,” he said. “I am too big to pass through the slit.”
And he began to throw out the loaves of bread, pieces of
cheese, wineskins, and pickles that they had packed for their
lunch.
“Then I will come back up the rope and stay with you,”
Princess Nell said generously.
“No!” Harv said, and reeled in the rope, trapping Nell on
the outside.
“But I will be lost without you!” Princess Nell cried.
“That’s your stepmother talking,” Harv said. “You are a
strong, smart, and brave girl and can do fine without me.”
“Harv is right,” said the Raven, flying overhead. “Your
destiny is in the Land Beyond. Hurry, lest your stepmother
return and trap you here.”
“Then I will go to the Land Beyond with my Night
Friends,” said Princess Nell, “and I will find the twelve keys,
and I will come back here one day and free you from this Dark
Castle.”
“I’m not holding my breath,” Harv said, “but thanks
anyway.”
Down on the shore was a little boat that Nell’s father had
once used to row around the island. Nell climbed in with her
Night Friends and began to row.
Nell rowed for many hours until her back and shoulders
ached. The sun set in the west, the sky became dark, and it
became harder to make out the Raven against the darkling
sky. Then, much to her relief, her Night Friends came alive as
they always did. There was plenty of room in the boat for
Princess Nell, Purple, Peter, and Duck, but Dinosaur was so
big that he nearly swamped it; he had to sit in the bow and
row while the others sat in the stern trying to balance his
weight.
They moved much faster with Dinosaur’s strong rowing;
but early in the morning a storm blew up, and soon the waves
were above their heads, above even Dinosaur’s head, and
rain was coming down so fast that Purple and Princess Nell
had to bail using Dinosaur’s shiny helmet as a bucket.
Dinosaur threw out all of his armor to lighten the load, but it
soon became evident that this was not enough.
“Then I shall do my duty as a warrior,” Dinosaur said. “My
usefulness to you is finished, Princess Nell; from now, you
must listen to the wisdom of your other Night Friends and use
what you have learned from me only when nothing else will
work.” And he dove into the water and disappeared beneath
the waves. The boat bobbed up like a cork. An hour later, the
storm began to diminish, and as dawn approached, the ocean
was smooth as glass, and filling the western horizon was a
green country vaster than anything Princess Nell had ever
imagined: the Land Beyond.
Princess Nell wept bitterly for lost Dinosaur and wanted
to wait on the shore in case he had clung to a piece of flotsam
or jetsam and drifted to safety.
“We must not dawdle here,” Purple said, “lest we be seen
by one of King Magpie’s sentries.”
“King Magpie?” said Princess Nell.
“One of the twelve Faery Kings and Queens. This shore
is part of his domain,” Purple said. “He has a flock of starlings
who watch his borders.”
“Too late!” cried sharp-eyed Peter. “We are discovered!”
At that moment, the sun rose, and the Night Friends
turned back into stuffed animals.
A solitary bird was diving toward them out of the morning
sky. When it drew closer, Princess Nell saw that it was not
one of King Magpie’s starlings after all; it was their friend the
Raven. He landed on a branch above her head and cried,
“Good news! Bad news! Where shall I start?”
“With the good news,” Princess Nell said.
“The wicked Queen lost the battle. Her power has been
broken by the other twelve.”
“What is the bad news?”
“Each of them took one of the twelve keys as spoil and
locked it up in his or her royal treasury. You will never be able
to collect all twelve.”
“But I am sworn to get them,” said Princess Nell, “and
Dinosaur showed me last night that a warrior must hold to her
duty even if it leads her into destruction. Show me the way to
the castle of King Magpie; we will get his key first.”
She plunged into the forest and, before long, found a dirt
road that the Raven said would lead her toward King
Magpie’s castle. After a break for lunch she started down this
road, keeping one sharp eye on the sky.
There followed a funny little chapter in which Nell encountered
the footprints of another traveler on the road, who was soon joined
by another traveler, and another. This continued until nightfall,
when Purple examined the footprints and informed Princess Nell
that she had been walking in circles all day.
“But I have followed the road carefully,” Nell said.
“The road is one of King Magpie’s tricks,” Purple said. “It
is a circular road. In order to find his castle, we must put on
our thinking-caps and use our own brains, for everything in
this country is a trick of one kind or another.”
“But how can we find his castle if all of the roads are
made to deceive us?” Peter Rabbit said.
“Nell, do you have your sewing-needle?” Purple said.
“Yes,” said Nell, reaching into her pocket and taking out
her mending kit.
“Peter, do you have your magic stone?” Purple
continued.
“Yes,” Peter said, taking it out of his pocket. It did not look
magic, being just a gray lump, but it had the magic property of
attracting small bits of metal.
“And Duck, can you spare a cork from one of the
lemonade bottles?”
“This one’s almost empty,” Duck said.
“Very well. I will also need a bowl of water,” Purple said,
and collected the three items from her three friends.
Nell read on into the Primer, learning about how Purple made a
compass by magnetizing the needle, thrusting it through the cork,
and floating it in the bowl of water. She read about their three-day
journey through the land of King Magpie, and of all the tricks it
contained-animals that stole their food, quicksand, sudden
rainstorms, appetizing but poisonous berries, snares, and pitfalls set
to catch uninvited guests. Nell knew that if she wanted, she could go
back and ask questions about these things later and spend many
hours reading about this part of the adventure. But the important
part seemed to be the discussions with Peter that ended each day’s
journey.
Peter Rabbit was their guide through all of these perils. His
eyes were sharp from eating carrots, and his giant ears could
hear trouble coming from miles away. His quivering nose
sniffed out danger, and his mind was too sharp for most of
King Magpie’s tricks. Before long they had reached the
outskirts of King Magpie’s city, which did not even have a wall
around it, so confident was King Magpie that no invader could
possibly pass through all of the traps and pitfalls in the forest.
Princess Nell in the city of King Magpie; hyena trouble;
the story of Peter; Nell deals with a stranger.
The city of King Magpie was more frightening to Princess Nell
than any wilderness, and she would have sooner trusted her
life to the wild beasts of the forest than to many of its people.
They tried to sleep in a nice glade of trees in the middle of the
city, which reminded Princess Nell of the glades on the
Enchanted Isle. But before they could even make themselves
comfortable, a hissing hyena with red eyes and dripping fangs
came and chased them all away.
“Perhaps we can sneak back into the glade after it gets
dark, when the hyena will not see us,” Nell suggested.
“The hyena will always see us, even in the dark, because
it can see the infrared light that comes out of our bodies,”
Purple said.
Eventually, Nell, Peter, Duck, and Purple found a place to
camp in a field where other poor people lived. Duck set up a
little camp and lit a fire, and they had some soup before going
to bed. But try as she might, Princess Nell could not sleep.
She saw that Peter Rabbit could not sleep either; he only sat
with his back to the fire looking off into the darkness.
“Why are you looking into the darkness and not into the
fire as we do?” Nell asked.
“Because the darkness is where danger comes from,”
Peter said, “and from the fire comes only illusion. When I was
a little bunny running away from home, that is one of the first
lessons I learned.”
Peter went on to tell his own story, just as Dinosaur had earlier
in the Primer. It was a story about how he and his brothers had run
away from home and fallen afoul of various cats, vultures, weasels,
dogs, and humans who tended to see them, not as intrepid little
adventurers but as lunch. Peter was the only one of them who had
survived, because he was the cleverest of them all.
I made up my mind that one day I would avenge my brothers,”
Peter said.
“Did you?”
“Well, that’s a long story in itself.”
“Tell it to me!” Princess Nell said.
But before Pete! could launch into the next part of his
story, they became aware of a stranger who was approaching
them. “We should wake up Duck and Purple,” Peter said.
“Oh, let them sleep,” Princess Nell said. “They can use
the rest, and this stranger doesn’t look so bad.”
“What does a bad stranger look like exactly?” Peter said.
“You know, like a weasel or a vulture,” Princess Nell said.
“Hello, young lady,” said the stranger, who was dressed
in expensive clothes and jewelry. “I couldn’t help noticing that
you are new to beautiful Magpie City and down on your luck. I
can’t sit in my comfortable, warm house eating my big, tasty
meals without feeling guilty, knowing that you are out here
suffering. Won’t you come with me and let me take care of
you?”
“I won’t leave my friends behind,” said Princess Nell.
“Of course not-I wasn’t suggesting that,” the stranger
said. “Too bad they’re asleep. Say, I have an idea! You come
with me, your rabbit friend stays awake here to keep an eye
on your sleeping friends, and I’ll show you my place-y’know,
prove to you that I’m not some kind of creepy stranger who’s
trying to take advantage of you, like you see in all those dumb
kids’ stories that only little babies read. You’re not a little
baby, are you?”
“No, I don’t think so,” Princess Nell said.
“Then come with me, give me a fair hearing, check me
out, and if I turn out to be an okay guy, we’ll come back and
pick up the rest of your little group. Come on, time’s a
wasting!”
Princess Nell found it very hard to say no to the stranger.
“Don’t go with him, Nell!” Peter said. But in the end, Nell went
with him anyway. In her heart she knew it was wrong, but her
head was foolish, and because she was still just a little girl,
she did not feel she could say no to a grownup man.
At this point the story became very ractive. Nell stayed up for a
while in the ractive, trying different things. Sometimes the man
gave her a drink, and she fell asleep. But if she refused to take the
drink, he would grab her and tie her up. Either way, the man always
turned out to be a pirate, or else he would sell Princess Nell to some
other pirates who would keep her and not let her go. Nell tried every
trick she could think of, but it seemed as though the ractive were
made in such a way that, once she’d made the decision to go away
with the stranger, nothing she could do would prevent her from
becoming a slave to the pirates.
After the tenth or twelfth iteration she dropped the book into
the sand and hunched over it, crying. She cried silently so Harv
wouldn’t wake up. She cried for a long time, seeing no reason to
stop, because she felt that she was trapped now, just like Princess
Nell in the book.
“Hey,” said a man’s voice, very soft. At first Nell thought it
was coming out of the Primer, and she ignored it because she was
angry at the Primer.
“What’s wrong, little girl?” said the voice. Nell tried to look up
toward the source, but all she saw was fat colored light from the
mediatrons filtered through tears. She rubbed her eyes, but her
hands had sand on them. She got panicky for a moment, because she
had realized there was definitely someone there, a grownup man,
and she felt blind and helpless.
Finally she got a look at him. He was squatting about six feet
away from her, a safe enough distance, watching her with his
forehead all wrinkled up, looking terribly concerned.
“There’s no reason to be crying,” he said. “It can’t be that bad.”
“Who are you?” Nell said.
“I’m just a friend who wants to help you. C’mon,” he said,
cocking his head down the beach. “I need to talk to you for a
second, and I don’t want to wake up your friend there.”
“Talk to me about what?”
“How I can help you out. Now, come on, do you want help or
not?”
“Sure,” Nell said.
“Okay. C’mon then,” the stranger said, rising to his feet. He
took a step toward Nell, bent down, and held out one hand.
Nell reached for him with her left and at the last minute flung a
handful of sand into his face with her right. “Fuck!” the stranger
said. “You little bitch, I’m gonna get you for that.”
The nunchuks were, as always, under Harv’s head. Nell yanked
them out and turned back toward the stranger, spinning her whole
body around and snapping her wrist at the last moment just as Dojo
had taught her. The end of the nunchuk struck the stranger’s left
kneecap like a steel cobra, and she heard something crack. The
stranger screamed, astonishingly loud, and toppled into the sand.
Nell spun the nunchuks around, working them up to a hum, and
drew a bead on his temporal bone. But before she could strike, Harv
grabbed her wrist. The free end of the weapon spun around out of
control and bonked her on the eyebrow, splitting it open and giving
her a total-body ice-cream headache. She wanted to throw up.
“Good one, Nell,” he said, “but now’s the time to get the hell
out of here.”
She snatched up the Primer. The two of them ran off down the
beach, jumping over the silver larvae that glittered noisily in the
mediatronic light. “The cops are probably gonna be after us now,”
Harv said. “We gotta go somewhere.”
“Grab one of those blankets,” Nell said. “I have an idea.”
They had left their own silvery blanket behind. A discarded one
was overflowing from a wastebasket by the seawall, so Harv
snatched it as they ran by and crumpled it into a wad.
Nell led Harv back to the little patch of forest. They found their
way to the little cavity where they had stopped earlier. This time,
Nell spread the blanket over both of them, and they tucked it in all
around themselves to make a bubble. They waited quietly for a
minute, then five, then ten. From time to time they heard the thin
whine of a pod going by, but they always kept on going, and before
they knew it they were asleep.
Mysterious souvenir from Dr. X; Hackworth ‘s arrival in
Vancouver; the Atlantan quarter of that city;
he acquires a new mode of conveyance.
Dr. X had dispatched a messenger to the Shanghai Aerodrome with
instructions to seek out Hackworth. The messenger had sidled up
next to him while he was addressing a piss-trough, greeted him
cheerfully, and taken a piss himself. Then the two men had
exchanged business cards, accepting them with both hands and a
slight bow.
Hackworth’s card was about as flashy as he was. It was white,
with his name stamped out in rather severe capitals. Like most
cards, it was made of smart paper and had lots of memory space left
over to store digitized information. This particular copy contained a
matter compiler program descended from the one that had created
the original Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer. This revision used
automatic voice generation algorithms instead of relying on
professional ractors, and it contained all of the hooks that Dr. X’s
coders would need to translate the text into Chinese.
The Doctor’s card was more picturesque. It had a few Hanzi
characters scrawled across it and also bore Dr. X’s chop. Now that
paper was smart, chops were dynamic. The stamp infused the paper
with a program that caused it to run a little graphics program
forever. Dr. X’s chop depicted a poxy-looking gaffer with a conical
hat slung on his back, squatting on a rock in a river with a bamboo
pole, hauling a fish out of the water-no wait, it wasn’t a fish, it was
a dragon squirming on the end of the line, and just as you realized it,
the gaffer turned and smiled at you insolently. This kitschy tableau
then freeze-framed and morphed cleverly into the characters
representing Dr. X’s name. Then it looped back to the beginning.
On the back of the card were a few mediaglyphs indicating that it
was, in fact, a chit: that is to say, a totipotent program for a matter
compiler, combined with sufficient ucus to run it. The mediaglyphs
indicated that it would run only on a matter compiler of eight cubic
meters or larger, which was enormous, and which made it obvious
he was not to use it until he reached America.
He debarked from the Hanjin Takhoma at Vancouver, which
besides having the most scenic airship moorage in the world,
boasted a sizable Adantan clave. Dr. X hadn’t given him a specific
destination-just the chit and a flight number-so there didn’t seem
any point in staying aboard all the way to the end of the line. From
here he could always bullet-train down the coast if necessary.
The city itself was a sprawling bazaar of claves. Consequently
it was generously supplied with agoras, owned and managed by
Protocol, where citizens and subjects of different phyles could
convene on neutral ground and trade, negotiate, fornicate, or
whatever. Some of the agoras were simply open plazas in the
classical tradition, others looked more like convention centers or
office buildings. Many of Old Vancouver’s pricier and more viewendowed
precincts had been acquired by the Hong Kong Mutual
Benevolent Society or the Nipponese, and the Confucians owned
the tallest office building in the downtown area. East of town in the
fertile delta of the Fraser River, the Slays and the Germans were
both supposed to have large patches of Lebensraum staked out,
surrounded by grids of somewhat nastier than usual security pods.
Hindustan had a spray of tiny claves all over the metropolitan area.
The Atlantis clave climbed out of the water half a mile west of
the university, to which it was joined by a causeway. Imperial
Tectonics had made it look like just another island, as if it had been
sitting there for a million years. As Hackworth’s rented velocipede
took him over the causeway, cool salt air flowing through his
stubble, he began to relax, finding himself once again on home
territory. On an emerald green playing field above the breakwater,
young boys in short pants were knotted into a scrum, playing at
fieldball.
On the opposite side of the road was the girls’ school, which
had its own playing field of equal size, except that this one was
surrounded by a dense twelve-foot hedge so that the girls could run
around in very little or skin-tight clothing without giving rise to
etiquette problems. He hadn’t slept well in his microberth and
wouldn’t have minded checking into the guest hostel and taking a
nap, but it was only eleven in the morning and he couldn’t see
wasting the day. So he rode his velocipede to the center of town,
stopped in at the first pub he saw, and had lunch. The bartender
gave him directions to the Royal Post Office, which was just a few
blocks away.
The post office was a big one, sporting a variety of matter
compilers, including a ten-cubic-meter model directly adjacent to
the loading dock. Hackworth shoved Dr. X’s chit into its reader and
held his breath. But nothing dramatic happened; the display on the
control panel said that this job was going to take a couple of hours.
Hackworth killed most of the time wandering around the clave.
The middle of town was smallish and quickly gave way to leafy
neighborhoods filled with magnificent Georgian, Victorian, and
Romanesque homes, with the occasional rugged Tudor perched on a
rise or nestled into a verdant hollow. Beyond the homes was a belt
of gentrified farms mingled with golf courses and parks. He sat
down on a bench in one flowery public garden and unfolded the
sheet of mediatronic paper that was keeping track of the movements
of the original copy of the Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer.
It seemed to have spent some time in a green belt and then
made its way up the hill in the general direction of the New Atlantis
Clave.
Hackworth took out his fountain pen and wrote a short letter
addressed to Lord Finkle-McGraw.
Your Grace,
Since accepting the trust you have reposed in me, I have
endeavoured to be perfectly frank, serving as an open conduit
for all information pertaining to the task at hand. In that spirit, I
must inform you that two years ago, in my desperate search for
the lost copy of the Primer, I initiated a search of the Leased
Territories . . . (&c., &c.)
Please find enclosed a map and other data regarding the
recent movements of this book, whose whereabouts were
unknown to me until yesterday. I have no way of knowing who
possesses it, but given the book’s programming, I suspect it to
be a young thete girl, probably between the ages of five and
seven. The book must have remained indoors for the last two
years, or else my systems would have detected it. If these
suppositions are correct, and if my invention has not fallen
desperately short of intentions, then it is safe to assume that the
book has become an important part of the girl’s life . . .
He went on to write that the book should not be taken from the
girl if this were the case; but thinking about it a bit more carefully,
he scribbled out that part of the letter and it vanished from the page.
It was not Hackworth’s role to tell Finkle-McGraw how to manage
affairs. He signed the letter and dispatched it.
Half an hour letter, his pen chimed again and he checked his
mail.
Hackworth,
Message received. Better late than never. Can’t wait to meet
the girl.
Yours &c.
Finkle-McGraw
When Hackworth got back to the post office and looked
through the window of the big matter compiler, he saw a large
machine taking shape in the dim red light. Its body had already been
finished and was now rising slowly as its four legs were compiled
underneath. Dr. X had provided Hackworth with a chevaline.
Hackworth noted, not without approval, that this one’s
engineers had put a high priority on the virtues of simplicity and
strength and a low priority on comfort and style. Very Chinese. No
effort was made to disguise it as a real animal. Much of the
mechanical business in the legs was exposed so that you could see
how the joints and pushrods worked, a little like staring at the
wheels of an old steam locomotive. The body looked gaunt and
skeletal. It was made of star-shaped connectors where five or six
cigarette-size rods would come together, the rods and connectors
forming into an irregular web that wrapped around into a geodesic
space frame. The rods could change their length. Hackworth knew
from seeing the same construction elsewhere that the web could
change its size and shape to an amazing degree while providing
whatever combination of stiffness and flexibility the controlling
system needed at the moment. Inside the space frame Hackworth
could see aluminum-plated spheres and ellipsoids, no doubt
vacuum-filled, containing the mount’s machinephase guts: basically
some rod logic and an energy source.
The legs compiled quickly, the complicated feet took a little
longer. When it was finished, Hackworth released the vacuum and
opened the door. “Fold,” he said. The chevaline’s legs buckled, and
it lay down on the floor of the M.C. Its space frame contracted as
much as it could, and its neck shortened. Hackworth bent down,
laced his fingers through the space frame, and lifted the chevaline
with one hand. He carried it through the lobby of the post office,
past bemused customers, and out the door onto the street.
“Mount,” he said. The chevaline rose into a crouch. Hackworth
threw one leg over its saddle, which was padded with some kind of
elastomeric stuff, and immediately felt it shoving him into the air.
His feet left the ground and flailed around until they found the
stirrups. A lumbar support pressed thoughtfully on his kidneys, and
then the chevaline trotted into the street and began heading back
toward the causeway.
It wasn’t supposed to do that. Hackworth was about to tell it to
stop. Then he figured out why he’d gotten the chit at the last minute:
Dr. X’s engineers had been programming something into this
mount’s brain, telling it where to take him.
“Name?” Hackworth said.
“Unnamed,” the chevaline said.
“Rename Kidnapper,” Hackworth said.
“Name Kidnapper,” said Kidnapper; and sensing that it was
reaching the edge of the business district, it started to canter. Within
a few minutes they were blasting across the causeway at a tantivy.
Hackworth turned back toward Atlantis and looked for pursuing
aerostats; but if Napier was tracking him, he was doing so with
some subtlety.
A morning stroll through the Leased Territories;
Dovetail; a congenial Constable.
High up the mountain before them, they could see St. Mark’s
Cathedral and hear its bells ringing changes, mostly just tuneless
sequences of notes, but sometimes a pretty melody would tumble
out, like an unexpected gem from the permutations of the I Ching.
The Diamond Palace of Source Victoria glittered peach and amber
as it caught the sunrise, which was still hidden behind the mountain.
Nell and Harv had slept surprisingly well under the silver blanket,
but they had not by any means slept late. The martial reveille from
the Sendero Clave had woken them, and by the time they hit the
streets again, Sendero’s burly Korean and Incan evangelists were
already pouring out of their gate into the common byways of the
Leased Territories, humping their folding mediatrons and heavy
crates of little red books. “We could go in there, Nell,” Harv said,
and Nell thought he must be joking. “Always plenty to eat and a
warm cot in Sendero.”
“They wouldn’t let me keep my book,” Nell said.
Harv looked at her, mildly startled. “How do you know? Oh,
don’t tell me, you learned it from the Primer.”
“They only have one book in Sendero, and it tells them to burn
all the other books.”
As they climbed toward the green belt, the way got steeper and
Harv started wheezing. From time to time he would stop with his
hands on his knees and cough in high hoarse bursts like the bark of
a seal. But the air was cleaner up here, they could tell by the way it
felt going down their throats, and it was colder too, which helped.
A band of forest surrounded the high central plateau of New
Chusan. The clave called Dovetail backed right up against this green
belt and was no less densely wooded, though from a distance it had
a finer texture-more and smaller trees, and many flowers.
Dovetail was surrounded by a fence made of iron bars and
painted black. Harv took one look at it and said it was a joke if that
was all the security they had. Then he got to noticing that the fence
was lined with a greensward about a stone’s throw in width, smooth
enough for championship croquet. He raised his eyebrows
significantly at Nell, implying that any unauthorized personnel who
tried to walk across it would be impaled on hydraulic stainless-steel
spikes or shot through with cookiecutters or rent by robot dogs.
The gates to Dovetail stood wide open, which deeply alarmed
Harv. He got in front of Nell lest she try to run through them. At the
boundary line, the pavement changed from the usual hard-butflexible,
smoothbut-high-traction nanostuff to an irregular mosaic of
granite blocks.
The only human in evidence was a white-haired Constable
whose belly had created a visible divergence between his two rows
of brass buttons. He was bent over using a trowel to extract a
steaming turd from the emerald grass. Circumstances suggested that
it had come from one of two corgis who were even now slamming
their preposterous bodies into each other not far away, trying to roll
each other over, which runs contrary to the laws of mechanics even
in the case of corgis that are lean and trim, which these were not.
This struggle, which appeared to be only one skirmish in a conflict
of epochal standing, had driven all lesser considerations, such as
guarding the gate, from the combatants’ sphere of attention, and so
it was the Constable who first noticed Nell and Harv. “Away with
you!” he hollered cheerfully enough, waving his redolent trowel
down the hill. “We’ve no work for such as you today! And the free
matter compilers are all down by the waterfront.”
The effect of this news on Harv was contrary to what the
Constable had intended, for it implied that sometimes there was
work for such as him. He stepped forward alertly. Nell took
advantage of this to run out from behind him. “Pardon me, sir,” she
called, “we’re not here for work or to get free things, but to find
someone who belongs to this phyle.”
The Constable straightened his tunic and squared his shoulders
at the appearance of this little girl, who looked like a thete but talked
like a Vicky. Suspicion gave way to benevolence, and he ambled
toward them after shouting a few imprecations at his dogs, who
evidently suffered from advanced hearing loss. “Very well,” he said.
“Who is it that you’re looking for?”
“A man by the name of Brad. A blacksmith. He works at a
stable in the New Atlantis Clave, taking care of horses.”
“I know him well,” the Constable said. “I’d be glad to ring him
for you. You’re a . . . friend of his, then?”
“We should like to think that he remembers us favorably,” Nell
said. Harv turned around and made a face at her for talking this way,
but the Constable was eating it up.
“It’s a brisk morning,” the Constable said. “Why don’t you join
me inside the gatehouse, where it’s nice and cozy, and I’ll get you
some tea.”
On either side of the main gate, the fence terminated in a small
stone tower with narrow diamond-paned windows set deeply into its
walls. The Constable entered one of these from his side of the fence
and then opened a heavy wooden door with huge wrpught-iron
hinges, letting Nell and Harv in from their side. The tiny octagonal
room was cluttered with fine furniture made of dark wood, a shelf of
old books, and a small cast-iron stove with a red enamel kettle on
top, pocked like an asteroid from ancient impacts, piping out a
tenuous column of steam. The Constable directed them into a pair of
wooden chairs. Trying to scoot them back from the table, they
discovered that each was ten times the weight of any other chair
they’d seen, being made of actual wood, and thick pieces of it too.
They were not especially comfortable, but Nell liked sitting in hers
nevertheless, as something about its size and weight gave her a
feeling of security. The windows on the Dovetail side of the
gatehouse were larger, and she could see the two corgi dogs outside,
peering in through the lead latticework, flabbergasted that they had,
through some enormous lacuna in procedure, been left on the
outside, wagging their tails somewhat uncertainly, as if, in a world
that allowed such mistakes, nothing could be counted on.
The Constable found a wooden tray and carried it about the
room, cautiously assembling a collection of cups, saucers, spoons,
tongs, and other tea-related armaments. When all the necessary tools
were properly laid out, he manufactured the beverage, hewing
closely to the ancient procedure, and set it before them.
Resting on a counter by the window was an outlandishly
shaped black object that Nell recognized as a telephone, only
because she had seen them on the old passives that her mother liked
to watch-where they seemed to take on a talismanic significance
out of proportion to what they actually did. The Constable picked up
a piece of paper on which many names and strings and digits had
been hand-written. He turned his back to the nearest window, then
leaned backward over the counter so as to bring most of him closer
to its illumination. He tilted the paper into the light and then
adjusted the elevation of his own chin through a rather sweeping
arc, converging on a position that placed the lenses of his reading
spectacles between pupil and page. Having maneuvered all of these
elements into the optimal geometry, he let out a little sigh, as though
the arrangement suited him, and peered up over his glasses at Nell
and Harv for a moment, as if to suggest that they could learn some
valuable tricks by keeping a sharp eye on him. Nell watched him,
fascinated not least because she rarely saw people in spectacles.
The Constable returned his attention to the piece of paper and
scanned it with a furrowed brow for a few minutes before suddenly
calling out a series of several numbers, which sounded random to
his visitors but seemed both deeply significant and perfectly obvious
to the Constable.
The black telephone sported a metal disk with finger-size holes
bored around its edge. The Constable hooked the phone’s handset
over his epaulet and then began to insert his finger into various of
these holes, using them to torque the disk around against the
countervailing force of a spring. A brief but exceedingly cheerful
conversation ensued. Then he hung up the telephone and clasped his
hands over his belly, as if he had accomplished his assigned tasks so
completely that said extremities were now superfluous decorations.
“It’ll be a minute,” he said. “Please take your time, and don’t scald
yourselves on that tea. Care for some shortbread?”
Nell was not familiar with this delight. “No thank you, sir,” she
said, but Harv, ever pragmatic, allowed as he might enjoy some.
Suddenly the Constable’s hands found a new reason for existence
and began to busy themselves exploring the darker corners of old
wooden cupboards here and there around the little room. “By the
way,” he said absent-mindedly, as he pursued this quest, “if you had
in mind actually passing through the gate, that is to say, if you
wanted to visit Dovetail, as you would be abundantly welcome to
do, then you should know a few things about our rules.
He stood up and turned toward them, displaying a tin box
labeled SHORTBREAD.
“To be specific, the young gentleman’s chocky sticks and
switchblade will have to come out of his trousers and lodge here, in
the loving care of me and my colleagues, and I will have to have a
good long look at that monstrous chunk of rod logic, batteries,
sensor arrays, and what-haveyou that the young lady is carrying in
her little knapsack, concealed, unless I am mistaken, in the guise of
a book. Hmmm?” And the Constable turned toward them with his
eyebrows raised very high on his forehead, shaking the plaid box.
Constable Moore, as he introduced himself, examined Harv’s
weapons with more care than really seemed warranted, as if they
were relics freshly exhumed from a pyramid. He took care to
compliment Harv on their presumed effectiveness, and to meditate
aloud on the grave foolishness of anyone’s messing about with a
young fellow like Harv. The weapons went into one of the
cupboards, which Constable Moore locked by talking to it. “And
now the book, young lady,” he said to Nell, pleasantly enough.
She didn’t want to let the Primer out of her hands, but she
remembered the kids at the playroom who had tried to take it from
her and been shocked, or something, for their trouble. So she
handed it over. Constable Moore took it very carefully in both
hands, and a tiny little moan of appreciation escaped his lips. “I
should inform you that sometimes it does rather nasty things to
people who, as it supposes, are trying to steal it from me,” Nell said,
then bit her lip, hoping she hadn’t implied that Constable Moore
was a thief.
“Young lady, I should be crestfallen if it didn’t.”
After Constable Moore had turned the book over in his hands a
few times, complimenting Nell on the binding, the gold script, the
feel of the paper, be set it down gingerly on the table, first rubbing
his hand over the wood to ensure no tea or sugar had earlier been
spilled there. He wandered away from the table and seemed to
stumble at random upon an oak-and-brass copier that sat in one of
the obtuse corners of the octagonal room. He happened upon a few
pages in its output tray and went through them for a bit, from time
to time chuckling ruefully. At one point he looked up at Nell and
shook his head wordlessly before finally saying, “Do you have any
idea . . .“ but then he just chuckled again, shook his head, and went
back to the papers.
“Right,” he finally said, “right.” He fed the papers back into the
copier and told it to destroy them. He thrust his fists into his trouser
pockets and walked up and down the length of the room twice, then
sat down again, looking not at Nell and Harv and not at the book,
but somewhere off into the distance. “Right,” he said. “I will not
confiscate the book during your stay in Dovetail, if you follow
certain conditions. First of all, you will not under any circumstances
make use of a matter compiler. Secondly, the book is for your use,
and your use only. Third, you will not copy or reproduce any of the
information contained in the book. Fourth, you will not show the
book to anyone here or make anyone aware of its existence.
Violation of any of these conditions will lead to your immediate
expulsion from Dovetail and the confiscation and probable
destruction of the book. Do I make myself clear?”
“Perfectly clear, sir,” Nell said. Outside, they heard the
thrudalump thrudalump of an approaching horse.
A new friend; Nell sees a real horse; a ride through
Dovetail; Nell and Harv are separated.
The person on the horse was not Brad, it was a woman Nell and
Harv didn’t know. She had straight reddish-blond hair, pale skin
with thousands of freckles, and carrot-colored eyebrows and
eyelashes that were almost invisible except when the sun grazed her
face. “I’m a friend of Brad’s,” she said. “He’s at work. Does he
know you?”
Nell was about to pipe up, but Harv shushed her with a hand on
her arm and gave the woman a somewhat more abridged version
than Nell might have provided. He mentioned that Brad had been “a
friend of” their mother’s for a while, that he had always treated
them kindly and had actually taken them to the NAC to see the
horses. Not far into the story, the blank expression on the woman’s
face was replaced by one that was somewhat more guarded, and she
stopped listening. “I think Brad told me about you once,” she finally
said when Harv had wandered into a blind alley. “I know he
remembers you. So what is it that you would like to happen now?”
This was a poser. Nell and Harv had settled into a habit of
concentrating very strongly on what they would like not to happen.
They were baffled by options, which to them seemed like dilemmas.
Harv left off clutching Nell’s arm and took her hand instead. Neither
of them said anything.
“Perhaps,” Constable Moore finally said, after the woman had
turned to him for a cue, “it would be useful for the two of you to set
awhile in some safe, quiet place and gather your thoughts.”
“That would do nicely, thank you,” Nell said.
“Dovetail contains many public parks and gardens . .
“Forget it,” the woman said, knowing her cue when she heard
it. “I’ll take them back to the Milihouse until Brad gets home.
Then,” she said significantly to the Constable, “we’ll figure
something out.”
The woman stepped out of the gatehouse briskly, not looking
back at Nell and Harv. She was tall and wore a pair of loose khaki
trousers, much worn at the knees but hardly at all in the seat, and
splotched here and there with old unidentifiable stains. Above that
she wore a very loose Irish fisherman’s sweater, sleeves rolled up
and safety-pinned to form a dense woolen torus orbiting each of her
freckled forearms, the motif echoed by a whorl of cheap silver
bangles on each wrist. She was muttering something in the direction
of her horse, an Appaloosa mare who had already swung her neck
down and begun to nuzzle at the disappointingly close-cropped
grass inside the fence, looking for a blade or two that had not been
marked by the assiduous corgis. When she stopped to stroke the
mare’s neck, Nell and Harv caught up with her and learned that she
was simply giving a simplified account of what had just happened in
the gatehouse, and what was going to happen now, all delivered
rather absent-mindedly, just in case the mare might want to know.
For a moment Nell thought that the mare might actually be a
chevaline dressed up in a fake horse skin, but then it ejected a
stream of urine the dimensions of a fencepost, glittering like a light
saber in the morning sun and clad in a torn cloak of steam, and Nell
smelled it and knew the horse was real. The woman did not mount
the horse, which she had apparently ridden bareback, but took its
reins as gently as if they were cobwebs and led the horse on. Nell
and Harv followed, a few paces behind, and the woman walked
across the green for some time, apparently organizing things in her
mind, before finally tucking her hair behind her ear on one side and
turning toward them. “Did Constable Moore talk to you about rules
at all?”
“What rules?” Harv blurted before Nell could get into it in a
level of detail that might have cast a negative light on them. Nell
marveled for the hundredth time at her brother’s multifarious
trickiness, which would have done Peter himself proud.
“We make things,” the woman said, as if this provided a nearly
perfect and sufficient explanation of the phyle called Dovetail.
“Brad makes horseshoes. But Brad’s the exception because mostly
he provides services relating to horses. Doesn’t he, Eggshell?” the
woman added for the mare’s benefit. “That’s why he had to live
down in the L.T. for a while, because there was disagreement as to
whether grooms, butlers, and other service providers fit in with
Dovetail’s charter. But we had a vote and decided to let them in.
This is boring you, isn’t it? My name’s Rita, and I make paper.”
“You mean, in the M.C.?”
This seemed like an obvious question to Nell, but Rita was
surprised to hear it and eventually laughed it off. “I’ll show you
later. But what I was getting at is that, unlike where you’ve been
living, everything here at Dovetail was made by hand. We have a
few matter compilers here. But if we want a chair, say, one of our
craftsmen will put it together out of wood, just like in ancient
times.”
“Why don’t you just compile it?” Harv said. “The M.C. can
make wood.”
“It can make fake wood,” Rita said, “but some people don’t
like fake things.”
“Why don’t you like fake things?” Nell asked.
Rita smiled at her. “It’s not just us. It’s them,” she said,
pointing up the mountain toward the belt of high trees that separated
Dovetail from New Atlantis territory.
Light dawned on Harv’s face. “The Vickys buy stuff from
you!” he said.
Rita looked a little surprised, as if she’d never heard them
called Vickys before. “Anyway, what was I getting at? Oh, yeah, the
point is that everything here is unique, so you have to be careful
with it.”
Nell had a rough idea of what unique was, but Harv didn’t, and
so Rita explained it for a while as they walked through Dovetail. At
some length it dawned on both Nell and Harv that Rita was actually
trying to tell them, in the most bewilderingly circumspect way
imaginable, that she didn’t want them -to run around and break
stuff. This approach to child behavior modification was so at odds
with everything they knew that, in spite of Rita’s efforts to be
pleasant, the conversation was blighted by confusion on the
children’s part and frustration on hers. From time to time her
freckles vanished as her face turned red.
Where Dovetail had streets, they were paved with little blocks
of stone laid close together. The vehicles were horses, chevalines,
and velocipedes with fat knobby tires. Except for one spot where a
number of buildings clustered together around a central green,
houses were widely spaced and tended to be very small or very
large. All of them seemed to have nice gardens though, and from
time to time Nell would dart off the road to smell a flower. At first
Rita would watch her nervously, telling her not to pick any of the
flowers as they belonged to other people.
At the end of a road was a wooden gate with a laughably
primitive latch consisting of a sliding plank, glossy with use. Past
the gate, the road became a very rough mosaic of flagstones with
grass growing between them. It wound between undulating pastures
where horses and the occasional dairy cow grazed and eventually
terminated at a great three-story stone building perched on the bank
of a river that ran down the mountain from the New Atlantis Clave.
A giant wheel grew out of the side of the building and spun slowly
as the river pushed on it. A man stood outside before a large
chopping-block, using a hatchet with an exceptionally wide blade to
split thin wedges of red wood from a log. These were piled into a
wicker basket that was hauled up on a rope by a man who stood on
the roof, replacing some of the old gray shingles with these new red
ones.
Harv was paralyzed with wonder at this exhibition and stopped
walking. Nell had seen much the same sort of process at work in the
pages of her Primer. She followed Rita over to a long low building
where the horses lived.
Most of the people did not live in the Millhouse proper but in a
couple of long outbuildings, two stories each, with workshops
below and living quarters above. Nell was a little surprised to see
that Rita did not actually live with Brad. Her apartment and her shop
were each twice the size of Nell’s old flat and filled with fine things
of heavy wood, metal, cotton, linen, and porcelain that, as Nell was
beginning to understand, had all been made by human hands,
probably right here in Dovetail.
Rita’s shop had great kettles where she would brew thick
fibrous stew. She spread the stew thinly over screens to draw out the
water and flattened it with a great hand-cranked press to make
paper, thick and roughedged and subtly colored from the thousands
of tiny fibers wending through it. When she had a stack of paper
made, she would take it next door to a shop with a sharp oily smell,
where a bearded man with a smudged apron would run it through
another big hand-cranked machine. When it came out of this
machine, it had letters on the top, giving the name and address of a
lady in New Atlantis.
Since Nell had been decorous so far and not tried to stick her
fingers into the machinery and not driven anyone to distraction with
her questions, Rita gave her leave to visit some of the other shops,
as long as she asked permission at each one. Nell spent most of the
day making friends with various shopowners: a glassblower, a
jeweler, a cabinetmaker, a weaver, even a. toymaker who gave her a
tiny wooden doll in a calico dress.
Harv spent a while bothering the men who were putting
shingles on the roof, then wandered about in the fields for most of
the day, kicking small rocks from place to place, generally scoping
out the boundaries and general condition of the community centered
on the Millhouse. Nell checked in on him from time to time. At first
he looked tense and skeptical, then he relaxed and enjoyed it, and
finally, late in the afternoon, he became surly and perched himself
on a boulder above the running stream, tossing pebbles into it,
chewing his thumbnail, and thinking.
Brad came home early, riding a bay stallion straight down the
mountain from the New Atlantis Clave, angling through the green
belt and piercing the dog pod grid with scant consequences as the
authorities knew him. Harv approached him with a formal mien,
harrumphing phlegm out of the way as he prepared to offer up an
explanation and a plea. But Brad’s eyes merely glanced over Harv,
settled on Nell, appraised her for a moment, then looked away
shyly. The verdict was that they could stay the night, but all else
depended on legal niceties that were beyond his powers.
“Have you done anything the Shanghai Police might find
interesting?” Brad asked Harv gravely. Harv said no, a simple no
without the usual technicalities, provisos, and subclauses.
Nell wanted to tell Brad everything. But she had been noticing
how, in the Primer, whenever someone asked Peter Rabbit a direct
question of any kind, he always lied.
“To look at our green fields and big houses, you might think
we’re on Atlantis turf here,” Brad said, “but we’re under Shanghai
jurisdiction just like the rest of the Leased Territories. Now usually
the Shanghai Police don’t come around, because we are peaceable
folk and because we have made certain arrangements with them.
But if it were known that we were harboring runaway gang
members-”
“‘Nuff said,” Harv blurted. It was clear that he had already
worked all of this out in his head as he sat on the riverbank and was
only waiting for the adults to catch up with his logic. Before Nell
understood what was going on, he came up to her and gave her a
hug and a kiss on the lips. Then he turned away from her and began
running across a green field, down toward the ocean. Nell ran after
him, but she could not keep up, and finally she fell down in a stand
of bluebells and watched Harv dissolve into a curtain of tears. When
she could no longer see him, she curled up sobbing, and in time Rita
came and gathered her up in her strong arms and carried her slowly
back across the field to the Millhouse where the steady wheel rolled.
Orphans of the Han are exposed to the benefits of
modern educational technology; Judge Fang reflects
on the fundamental precepts of Confucianism.
The orphanage ships had built-in matter compilers, but they could
not, of course, be hooked up to Sources. Instead they drew their
supplies of matter from cubical containers, rather like tanks of
atoms arranged very precisely. These containers could be loaded on
board with cranes and hooked up to the matter compilers in the
same way that Feed lines would be if they resided on shore. The
ships put in to Shanghai frequently, offloaded empty containers, and
took new ones on board-their hungry populations were fed almost
exclusively on synthetic rice produced by the matter compilers.
There were seven ships now. The first five had been named
after the Master’s Five Virtues, and after that they had taken to
naming them after major Confucian philosophers. Judge Fang flew
out to the one named (as best it could be translated into English)
Generosity of Soul, personally carrying the M.C. program in the
sleeve of his garment. This was the very ship he had visited on the
eventful night of his boat ride with Dr. X, and ever since then he
had somehow felt closer to these fifty thousand little mice than any
of the other quarter-million in the other vessels.
The program was written to work in a bulk compiler, extruding
dozens of Primers each cycle. When the first batch was finished,
Judge Fang plucked out one of the new volumes, inspected its
cover, which had the appearance of marbled jade, flipped through
the pages admiring the illustrations, and cast a critical eye over the
calligraphy.
Then he carried it down a corridor and into a playroom where a
few hundred little mice were running around, blowing off steam. He
caught the eye of one girl and beckoned her over. She came,
reluctantly, chivvied along by an energetic teacher who alternated
between smiling to the girl and bowing to Judge Fang.
He squatted so that he could look her in the eye and handed her
the book. She was much more interested in the book than in Judge
Fang, but she had been taught the proper formalities and bowed and
thanked him. Then she opened it up. Her eyes got wide. The book
began to talk to her. To Judge Fang the voice sounded a bit dull, the
rhythm of the speech not exactly right. But the girl didn’t care. The
girl was hooked.
Judge Fang stood up to find himself surrounded by a hundred
little girls, all facing toward the little jade book, standing on tiptoes,
mouths open.
Finally he had been able to do something unambiguously good
with his position. In the Coastal Republic it wouldn’t have been
possible; in the Middle Kingdom, which hewed to the words and
spirit of the Master, it was simply part of his duties.
He turned and left the room; none of the girls noticed, which
was just as well, as they might have seen a quiver in his lip and a
tear in his eye. As he made his way through the corridors toward the
upper deck where his airship awaited him, he reviewed for the
thousandth time the Great Learning, the kernel of the Master’s
thought: The ancients who wished to demonstrate illustrious virtue
throughout the kingdom, first ordered well their own states. Wishing
to order well their states, they first regulated their families. Wishing
to regulate their families, they first cultivated their persons. Wishing
to cultivate their persons, they first rectified their hearts. Wishing to
rectij9 their hearts, they first sought to be sincere in their thoughts.
Wishing to be sincere in their thoughts, they first extended to the
utmost their knowledge. Such extention of knowledge lay in the
investigation of things. . . . From the Son of Heaven down to the
mass of the people, all must consider the cultivation of the person
the root of everything besides.
Hackworth receives an ambiguous message; a ride
through Vancouver; tattooed woman and totem poles;
he enters the hidden world of the Drummers.
Kidnapper had a glove compartment of sorts hollowed into the back
of its neck. As he was riding across the causeway, Hackworth
opened it up because he wanted to see whether it was large enough
to contain his bowler without folding, bending, spindling, or
mutilating the exquisite hyperboloid of its brim. The answer was
that it was just a wee bit too small. But Dr. X had been thoughtful
enough to toss in some snacks: a handful of fortune cookies, three of
them to be exact. They looked good. Hackworth picked one and
snapped it open. The strip of paper bore some kind of gaudily
animated geometric pattern, long strands of something tumbling end
over end and bouncing against one another. It looked vaguely
familiar: These were supposed to be yarrow stalks, which Taoists
used for divination. But instead of forming a hexagram of the I
Ching, they began falling into place, one after another, in such a
way as to form letters in the pseudo-Chinese typeface used in the
logos of onestar Chinese restaurants. When the last one had bounced
into place, the fortune read:
S E E K T H E A L C H E M I S T .
“Thanks ever so much, Dr. X,” Hackworth snapped. He
continued to watch the fortune for a while, hoping that it would turn
into something a little more informative, but it was dead, just a
piece of litter now and forever.
Kidnapper slowed to a canter and cruised purposefully through
the university, then turned north and crossed a bridge into the
peninsula that contained most of Vancouver proper. The chevaline
did a perfectly good job of nOt stepping on anyone, and Hackworth
soon learned to stop worrying and trust its instincts. This left his
eyes free to wander through the sights of Vancouver, which had not
been advisable when he’d come this way on the velocipede. He had
not noticed, before, the sheer maddening profusion of the place,
each person seemingly an ethnic group of one, each with his or her
own costume, dialect, sect, and pedigree. It was as if, sooner or
later, every part of the world became India and thus ceased to
function in any sense meaningful to straight-arrow Cartesian
rationalists like John Percival Hackworth, his family and friends.
Shortly after passing the Aerodrome they reached Stanley Park,
an unruined peninsula several miles around, which had, thank God,
been forked over to Protocol and kept much as it had always been,
with the same Douglas firs and mossy red cedars that had been
growing there forever. Hackworth had been here a few times and
had a vague idea of how it was laid out: restaurants here and there,
paths along the beach, a zoo and aquarium, public playing fields.
Kidnapper took him for a nice lope along a pebbly beach and
then somewhat abruptly bounded up a slope, for that purpose
switching into a gait never used by any real horse. Its legs
shortened, and it clawed its way surefootedly up the forty-fivedegree
surface like a mountain lion. An alarmingly quick zigzag
through a stand of firs brought them into an open grassy area. Then
Kidnapper slowed to a mere walk, as if it were a real horse that had
to be cooled down gradually, and took Hackworth into a semicircle
of old totem poles.
A young woman was here, standing before one of the poles
with her hands clasped behind her back, which would have given
her an endearingly prim appearance if she had not been stark naked
and covered with constantly shifting mediatronic tattoos. Even her
hair, which fell loosely to her waist, had been infiltrated with some
kind of nanosite so that each strand’s color fluctuated from place to
place according to a scheme not just now apparent to Hackworth.
She was looking intently at the carving of a totem pole and
apparently not for the first time, for her tattoos were done in much
the same style.
The woman was looking at a totem pole dominated by a
representation of an orca, head down and tail up, dorsal fin
projecting horizontally out of the pole and evidently carved from a
separate piece of wood. The orca’s blowhole had a human face
carved around it. The face’s mouth and the orca’s blowhole were the
same thing. This promiscuous denial of boundaries was everywhere
on the totem poles and on the woman’s tattoo: The staring eyes of a
bear were also the faces of some other sort of creature. The
woman’s navel was also the mouth of a human face, much like the
orca’s blowhole, and sometimes that face became the mouth of a
larger face whose eyes were her nipples and whose goatee was her
pubic hair. But as soon as he’d made out one pattern, it would
change into something else, because unlike the totem poles the
tattoo was dynamic and played with images in time the same way
that the totem poles did in space.
“Hello, John,” she said. “It’s too bad I loved you because you
had to leave.”
Hackworth tried to find her face, which should have been easy,
it being the thing in the front of her head; but his eyes kept snagging
on all the other little faces that came and went and flowed into one
another, time-sharing her eyes, her mouth, even her nostrils. And he
was starting to recognize patterns in her hair too, which was more
than he could handle. He was pretty sure he had just caught a
glimpse of Fiona in there.
She turned her back on him, her hair spinning out momentarily
like a twirling skirt, and for that instant he could see through it and
begin to make sense of the image. He was positive that somewhere
in there he’d seen Gwen and Fiona walking along a beach.
He dismounted from Kidnapper and followed her on foot.
Kidnapper followed him silently. They walked across the park for
half a mile or so, and Hackworth kept his distance because when he
got too close to her, the images in her hair bewildered his eyes. She
took him to a wild stretch of beach where immense Douglas fir logs
lay scattered around. As Hackworth clambered over the logs trying
to keep up with the woman, he occasionally caught a handhold that
appeared to have been carved by someone long ago.
The logs were palimpsests. Two of them rose from the water’s
edge, not quite vertical, stuck like darts into the impermanent sand.
Hackworth walked between them, the surf crashing around his
knees. He saw weathered intimations of faces and wild beasts living
in the wood, ravens, eagles, and wolves tangled into organic skeins.
The water was bitterly cold on his legs, and he whooped in a couple
of breaths, but the woman kept walking; the water was up past her
waist now, and her hair was floating around her so that the
translucent images once again became readable. Then she vanished
beneath a collapsing wave two meters high.
The wave knocked Hackworth on his backside and washed him
along for a short distance, flailing his arms and legs. When he got
his balance back, he sat there for a few moments, letting smaller
waves embrace his waist and chest, waiting for the woman to come
up for a breath. But she didn’t.
There was something down there. He rolled up onto his feet
and tramped straight into the ocean. Just as the waves were coming
up into his face, his feet contacted something hard and smooth that
gave way beneath him. He was sucked downward as the water
plunged into a subterranean void. A hatch slammed shut above his
head, and suddenly he was breathing air again. The light was silver.
He was sitting in water up to his chest, but it rapidly drained away,
drawn off by some kind of a pumping system, and then he found
himself looking down a long silvery tunnel. The woman was
descending it, a stone’s throw ahead of him.
Hackworth had been in a few of these, normally in more
industrial settings. The .entrance was dug into the beach, but the rest
of it was a floating tunnel, a tube full of air, moored to the bottom. It
was a cheap way to make space; the Nipponese used these things as
sleeping quarters for foreign guest workers. The walls were made of
membranes that drew oxygen from the surrounding seawater and
ejected carbon dioxide, so that seen from a fish’s point of view, the
tunnels steamed like hot pasta on a cold steel plate as they excreted
countless microbubbles of polluted CO2. These things extruded
themselves into the water like the roots that grew out of improperly
stored potatoes, forking from time to time, carrying their own Feeds
forward so that they could be extended on command. They were
empty and collapsed to begin with, and when they knew they were
finished, they inflated themselves with scavenged oxygen and grew
rigid.
Now that the cold water had drained out of Hackworth’s ears,
he could hear a deep drumming that he’d mistaken at first for the
crash of the surf overhead; but this had a steadier beat that invited
him forward.
Down the tunnel Hackworth walked, following the woman, and
as he went the light grew dimmer and the tunnel narrower. He
suspected that the walls of the tunnel had mediatronic properties
because he kept seeing things from the corners of his eyes that were
no longer there when he snapped his head around. He’d assumed
that he would soon reach a chamber, a swelling in the tunnel where
this woman’s friends would sit pounding on enormous kettledrums,
but before reaching any such thing, he came to a place where the
tunnel had gone completely dark, and he had to crouch to his knees
and feel his way along. When he touched the taut but yielding wall
of the tunnel with his knees and his hands, he felt the drumming in
his bones and realized that audio was built into the stuff; the
drumming could be anywhere, or it could be recorded. Or maybe it
was a lot simpler than that, maybe the tubes happened to transmit
sound well, and somewhere else in the tunnel system, people were
just pounding on the walls.
His head contacted the tunnel. He dropped to his belly and
began to crawl along. Swarms of tiny sparkling lights kept lunging
past his face, and he realized that they were his hands; light-emitting
nanosites had become embedded in his flesh. They must have been
put there by Dr. X’s physician; but they had not come alight until he
entered these tunnels.
If the woman hadn’t already come through here, he would have
given up at this point, thinking it a dead end, a busted tunnel that
had failed to expand. The drumming was now coming into his ears
and bones from all sides. He could not see a thing, though from time
to time he thought he caught a glimmer of flickering yellow light.
The tunnel undulated slightly in the deep currents, rivers of bitterly
cold water swirling along the floor of the straits. Whenever he
allowed his mind to wander, reminding himself that he was deep
below the surface of the ocean here, he had to stop and force himself
not to panic. Concentrate on the nice airfilled tunnel, not what
surrounds it.
There was definitely light ahead. He found himself in a
swelling in the tube, just wide enough to sit up in, and rolled over
on his back for a moment to rest. A lamp was burning in here, a
bowl filled with some kind of melting hydrocarbon that left no ash
or smoke. The mediatronic walls had animated scenes on them,
barely visible in the flickering light:
animals dancing in the forest.
He followed the tubes for some period of time that was quite
long but difficult to estimate. From time to time he would come to a
chamber with a lamp and more paintings. As he crawled through the
long perfectly black tunnels, he began to experience visual and
auditory hallucinations, vague at first, just random noise knocking
around in his neural net, but increasingly well-resolved and realistic.
The hallucinations had a dreamlike quality in which things he’d
actually seen recently, such as Gwen and Fiona, Dr. X, the airship,
the boys playing fieldball, were mingled with images so alien he
scarcely recognized them. It troubled him that his mind was taking
something as dear to him as Fiona and blending her into a farrago of
alien sights and ideas.
He could see the nanosites in his skin. But for all he knew, he
might have a million more living in his brain now, piggybacking on
axons and dendrites, sending data to one another in flashes of light.
A second brain intermingled with his own.
There was no reason that information could not be relayed
from one such nanosite to another, through his body and outward to
the nanosites in his skin, and from there across the darkness to
others. What would happen when he came close to other people
with similar infestations?
When he finally reached the grand chamber, he could not really
tell whether it was realfty or another machine-made hallucination. It
was shaped like a flattened ice-cream cone, a domed ceiling above a
gently sloping conical floor. The ceiling was a vast mediatron, and
the floor served as an amphitheatre. Hackworth spilled into the
room abruptly as the drumming reached a crescendo. The floor was
slick, and he slid down helplessly until he reached the central pit.
He rolled onto his back and saw a fiery scene sprawling across the
dome above, and in his peripheral vision, covering the floor of the
theatre, a thousand living constellations pounding on the floor with
their hands.
Bred and born in the Foreign regions beyond, there is much in the
administration of the Celestial Dynasty that is not perfectly comprehensible
to the Barbarians, and they are continually putting forced constructions
on things of which it is difficult to explain to them the real
nature.
-Qiying
Hackworth has a singular experience;
the rite of the Drummers.
In a cavernous dark space lit by many small fires, a young
woman, probably not much more than a girl, stands on a pedestal
naked except for an elaborate paint job, or maybe it is a total-body
mediatronic tattoo. A crown of leafy branches is twined around her
head, and she has thick voluminous hair spreading to her knees. She
is clutching a bouquet of roses to her breast, the thorns indenting her
flesh. Many people, perhaps thousands, surround her, drumming
madly, sometimes chanting and singing.
Into the space between the girl and the watchers, a couple of
dozen men are introduced. Some come running out of their own
accord, some look as if they’ve been pushed, some wander in as if
they’ve been walking down the street (stark naked) and gone in the
wrong door. Some are Asian, some European, some African. Some
have to be prodded by frenzied celebrants who charge out of the
crowd and shove them here and there. Eventually they form a circle
around the girl, and then the drumming builds to a deafening
crescendo, speeds up until it devolves into a rhythmless hailstorm,
and then suddenly, instantly, stops.
Someone wails something in a high, purposeful, ululating
voice. Hackworth can’t understand what this person is saying. Then
there is a single massive drumbeat. More wailing. Another
drumbeat. Again. The third drumbeat establishes a ponderous
rhythm. This goes on for a while, the beat slowly speeding up. After
a certain point the wailer no longer stops between beats, he begins
to weave his rap through the bars in a sort of counterpoint. The ring
of men standing around the girl begin to dance in a very simple
shuffling motion, one way and then the other way around the girl.
Hackworth notes that all of them have erections, sheathed in
brightly colored mediatronic condoms-rubbers that actually make
their own light so that the bobbing boners look like so many
cyalume wands dancing through the air.
The drumbeats and the dancing speed up very slowly. The
erections tell Hackworth why this is taking so long: He’s watching
foreplay here. After half an hour or so, the excitement, phallic and
otherwise, is unbearable. The beat is now a notch faster than your
basic pulse rate, lots of other beats and counterrhythms woven
through it, and the chanting of the individual singer has become a
wild semi-organized choral phenomenon. At some point, after
seemingly nothing has happened for half an hour, everything
happens at once: The drumming and chanting explode to a new,
impossible level of intensity. The dancers reach down, grip the
flaccid reservoir tips of their radioactive condoms, stretch them out.
Someone runs out with a knife and cuts off the tips of the condoms
in a freakish parody of circumcision, exposing the glans of each
man’s penis. The girl moves for the first time, tossing her bouquet
up in the air like a bride making her move toward the limo; the roses
fountain, spinning end over end, and come down individually
among the dancers, who snatch them out of the air, scrabble for
them on the floor, whatever. The girl faints, or something, falling
backward, arms out, and is caught by several of the dancers, who
hoist her body up over their heads and parade her around the circle
for a while, like a crucified body just crowbarred off the tree. She
ends up flat on her back on the ground, and one of the dancers is
between her legs, and in a very few thrusts he has finished. A couple
of others grab his arms and yank him out of there before he’s even
had a chance to tell her he’ll still love her in the morning, and
another one is in there, and he doesn’t take very long either-all this
foreplay has got these guys in hair-trigger mode. The dancers
manage to rotate through in a few minutes. Hackworth can’t see the
girl, who’s completely hidden, but she’s not struggling, as far as he
can tell, and they don’t seem to be holding her down. Toward the
end, smoke or steam or something begins to spiral up from the
middle of the orgy. The last participant grimaces even more than the
average person who’s having an orgasm, and yanks himself back
from the woman, grabbing his dick and hopping up and down and
hollering in what looks like pain. That’s the signal for all of the
dancers to jump back away from the woman, who is now kind of
hard to make out, just a fuzzy motionless package wrapped in
steam.
Flames erupt from several locations, all over her body, at once,
seams of lava splitting open along her veins and the heart itself
erupting from her chest like ball lightning. Her body becomes a
burning cross spread out on the floor, the bright apex of an inverted
cone of turbulent steam and smoke. Hackworth notices that the
drumming and chanting have completely stopped. The crowd
observes a long moment of silence while the body burns. Then,
when the last of the flames have died out, an honor guard of sorts
descends from the crowd: four men in black body paint with white
skeletons painted on top of that. He notes that the woman was lying
on a square sheet of some kind when she burned. Each of the guys
grabs a corner of the sheet. Her remains tumble into the center,
powdery ash flies, flecks of red-hot coals spark. The skeleton men
carry the remains over to a fifty-five-gallon steel drum and dump it
in. There is a burst of steam and lots of sizzling noises as the hot
coals contact some kind of liquid that was in the drum. One of the
skeleton men picks up a long spoon and gives the mix a stir, then
dips a cracked and spalled University of Michigan coffee mug into
it and takes a long drink.
The other three skeleton men each drink in their turn. By now,
the spectators have formed a long queue. One by one they step
forward. The leader of the skeleton men holds the mug for them,
gives each one a sip. Then they all wander off, individually or in
small, conversing groups. Show’s over.
Nell’s life at Dovetail; developments in the Primer; a
trip to the New Atlantis Clave; she is presented to Miss
Matheson; new lodgings with an “old” acquaintance.
Nell lived in the Millhouse for several days. They gave her a
little bed under the eaves on the top floor, in a cozy place only she
was tiny enough to reach. She had her meals with Rita or Brad or
one of the other nice people she knew there. During the days she
would wander in the meadow or dangle her feet in the river or
explore the woods, sometimes going as far as the dog pod grid. She
always took the Primer with her. Lately, it had been filled with the
doings of Princess Nell and her friends in the city of King Magpie.
It kept getting more like a ractive and less like a story, and by the
end of each chapter she was exhausted from all the cleverness she
had expended just to get herself and her friends through another day
without falling into the clutches of pirates or of King Magpie
himself.
In time, she and Peter came up with a very tricky plan to sneak
into the castle, create a diversion, and seize the magic books that
were the source of King Magpie’s power. This plan failed the first
time, but the next day, Nell turned the page back and tried it again,
this time with a few changes. It failed again, but not before Princess
Nell and her friends had gotten a little farther into the castle. The
sixth or seventh time, the plan worked perfectly-while King
Magpie was locked in a battle of riddles with Peter Rabbit (which
Peter won), Purple used a magic spell to smash open the door to his
secret library, which was filled with books even more magical than
the Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer. Hidden inside one of those
books was a jeweled key. Princess Nell took the key, and Purple
made off with several of King Magpie’s magic books while she was
at it.
They made a breathtaking escape across a river into the next
country, where King Magpie could not chase them, and camped in a
nice meadow for a few days, resting. During the daytime, when the
others were just stuffed animals, Princess Nell would peruse some
of the new magic books that Purple had stolen. When she did, its
image in the illustration would zoom toward her until it filled the
page, and then the Primer itself would become that magical book
until she decided to put it away.
Nell’s favorite book was a magical Atlas which she could use
to explore any land, real or imaginary. During the nighttime, Purple
spent most of her time reading a very large, crusty, worn, stained,
burnt tome entitled PANTECHNICON. This book had a built-in
hasp with a padlock. Whenever Purple wasn’t using it, she locked it
shut. Nell asked to see it a few times, but Purple told her she was
too young to know such things as were written in this Book.
During this time, Duck as usual made herself busy around the
camp, tidying up and fixing their meals, doing laundry on the rocks
by the river, and mending their clothes that had become ragged
during their wanderings. Peter became restless. He was quick with
words, but he had not learned the trick of reading, and so the books
from King Magpie’s library were of no use to him save as nestlining
material. He got into the habit of exploring the surrounding
forests, particularly the ones to the north. At first he would be gone
for a few hours at a time, but once he stayed away all night and did
not come back until the following noon. Then he began to go on
trips for several days at a time.
Peter vanished into the north woods one day, staggering under
a heavy pack, and didn’t come back at all.
. . .
Nell was in the meadow one day, gathering flowers, when a
fine lady-a Vicky-came riding toward her on a horse. When she
drew closer, Nell was surprised to see that the horse was Eggshell
and the lady was Rita, all dressed up in a long dress like the Vicky
ladies wore, with a riding hat on her head, and riding sidesaddle of
all things.
“You look pretty,” Nell said.
“Thank you, Nell,” Rita said. “Would you like to look like this
too, for a little while? I have a surprise for you.”
One of the ladies who lived in the Millhouse was a milliner,
and she had made Nell a dress, sewing it all together by hand. Rita
had brought this dress with her, and she helped Nell change into it,
right there in the middle of the meadow. Then she braided Nell’s
hair and even tucked some tiny wildflowers into it. Finally she
helped Nell climb up on top of Eggshell with her and began riding
back toward the Millhouse.
“You will have to leave your book here today,” Rita said.
“Why?”
“I’m taking you through the grid, into New Atlantis Clave,”
Rita said. “Constable Moore told me that I should not on any
account allow you to carry your book through the grid. He said it
would only stir things up. I know you’re about to ask me why, Nell,
but I don’t have an answer.”
Nell ran upstairs, tripping over her long skirts a couple of
times, and left the Primer in her little nook. Then she climbed back
on Eggshell with Rita. They rode over a little stone bridge above the
water-wheel and through the woods, until Nell could hear the faint
afflatus of the security aerostats. Eggshell slowed to a walk and
pushed gingerly through the field of shiny hovering teardrops. Nell
even reached out and touched one, then snapped her hand back,
even though it hadn’t done anything except push back. The
reflection of her face slithered backward across the surface of this
pod as they went by.
They rode across the territory of New Atlantis for some time
without seeing anything other than trees, wildflowers, brooks, the
occasional squirrel, or deer.
“Why do the Vickys have such a big clave?” Nell asked.
“Don’t ever call them Vickys,” Rita said.
“Why?”
“It’s a word that people who don’t like them use to describe
them in kind of a bad, unfriendly way,” Rita said.
“Like a pejorative term?” Nell said.
Rita laughed, more nervous than amused. “Exactly.”
“Why do the Atlantans have such a big clave?”
“Well, each phyle has a different way, and some ways are
better suited to making money than others, so some have a lot of
territory and others don’t.”
“What do you mean, a different way?”
“To make money you have to work hard-to live your life in a
certain way. The Atlantans all live that way, it’s part of their culture.
The Nipponese too. So the Nipponese and the Atlantans have as
much money as all the other phyles put together.”
“Why aren’t you an Atlantan?”
“Because I don’t want to live that way. All the people in
Dovetail like to make beautiful things. To us, the things that the
Atlantans do- dressing up in these kinds of clothes, spending years
and years in school-are irrelevant. Those pursuits wouldn’t help us
make beautiful things, you see. I’d rather just wear my blue jeans
and make paper.”
“But the M.C. can make paper,” Nell said.
“Not the kind that the Atlantans like.”
“But you make money from your paper only because the
Atlantans make money from working hard,” Nell said.
Rita’s face turned red and she said nothing for a little while.
Then, in a tight voice, she said, “Nell, you should ask your book the
meaning of the word discretion.”
They came across a riding-trail dotted with great mounds of
horse manure, and began following it uphill. Soon the trail was
hemmed in between dry stone walls, which Rita said that one of her
friends in Dovetail had made. Forest gave way to pastures, then
lawns like jade glaciers, and great houses on hilltops, surrounded by
geometric hedges and ramparts of flowers. The trail became a
cobblestone road that adopted new lanes from time to time as they
rode into town. The mountain kept rising up above them for some
distance, and on its green summit, half veiled behind a thin cloud
layer, Nell could see Source Victoria.
From down in the Leased Territories, the New Atlantis Clave
had always looked clean and beautiful, and it was certainly those
things. But Nell was surprised at how cool the weather was here
compared to the L.T. Rita explained that the Atlantans came from
northern countries and didn’t care for hot weather, so they put their
city high up in the air to make it cooler.
Rita turned down a boulevard with a great flowery park
running down the middle. It was lined with red stone row-houses
with turrets and gargoyles and beveled glass everywhere. Men in
top hats and women in long dresses strolled, pushed perambulators,
rode horses or chevalines. Shiny dark green robots, like refrigerators
tipped over on their sides, hummed down the streets at a toddler’s
walking pace, squatting over piles of manure and inhaling them.
From place to place there was a messenger on a bicycle or an
especially fancy personage in a black, fulllane car.
Rita stopped Eggshell in front of a house and paid a little boy
to hold the reins. From the saddlebags she took a sheaf of new
paper, all wrapped up in special wrapping-paper that she’d also
made. She carried it up the steps and rang the bell. The house had a
round tower on the front, lined with bow windows with stainedglass
inserts above them, and through the windows and the lace
curtains Nell could see, on different stories, crystal chandeliers and
fine plates and dark brown wooden bookcases lined with thousands
and thousands of books.
A parlormaid let Rita in the door. Through the window, Nell
could see Rita putting a calling-card on a silver tray held out by the
maid-a salver, they called it. The maid carried it back, then
emerged a couple of minutes later and directed Rita into the back of
the house.
Rita didn’t come back for half an hour. Nell wished she had the
Primer to keep her company. She talked to the little boy for a bit; his
name was Sam, he lived in the Leased Territories, and he put on a
suit and took the bus here every morning so that he could hang
around on the street holding people’s horses and doing other small
errands.
Nell wondered whether Tequila worked in any of these houses,
and whether they might run into her by accident. Her chest always
got a tight feeling when she thought of her mother.
Rita came out of the house. “Sorry,” she said, “I got out as fast
as I could, but I had to stay and socialize. Protocol, you know.”
“Explain protocol,” Nell said. This was how she always talked
to the Primer.
“At the place we’re going, you need to watch your manners.
Don’t say ‘explain this’ or ‘explain that.’
“Would it impose on your time unduly to provide me with a
concise explanation of the term protocol?” Nell said.
Again Rita made that nervous laugh and looked at Nell with an
expression that looked like poorly concealed alarm. As they rode
down the street, Rita talked about protocol for a little bit, but Nell
wasn’t really listening because she was trying to figure out why it
was that, all of a sudden, she was capable of scaring grownups like
Rita.
They rode through the most built-up part of town, where the
buildings and gardens and statues were all magnificent, and none of
the streets were the same: Some were crescents, some were courts,
or circles or ovals, or squares surrounding patches of greenery, and
even the long streets turned this way and that. They passed from
there into a less built-up area with many parks and playing fields
and finally pulled up in front of a fancy building with ornate towers,
surrounded by a wrought-iron fence and a hedge. Over the door it
said MISS MATHESON’S ACADEMY OF THE THREE
GRACES.
Miss Matheson received them in a cozy little room. She was
between eight hundred and nine hundred years of age, Nell
estimated, and drank tea from fancy thimble-size cups with pictures
painted on them. Nell tried to sit up straight and be attentive,
emulating certain proper young girls she had read about in the
Primer, but her eye kept wandering to the contents of the
bookshelves, the pictures painted on the tea service and the painting
on the wall above Miss Matheson’s head, which depicted three
ladies prancing about in a grove in diaphanous attire.
“Our rolls are filled, the term has already begun, and you have
none of the prerequisites. But you come with compelling
recommendations,” Miss Matheson said after she had peered
lengthily at her small visitor.
“Pardon me, madam, but I do not understand,” Nell said.
Miss Matheson smiled, her face blooming into a sunburst of
radiating wrinkles. “It is not important. Let us only say that we have
made room for you. This institution makes it a practice to accept a
small number of students who are not New Atlantan subjects. The
propagation of Atlantan memes is central to our mission, as a school
and as a society. Unlike some phyles, which propagate through
conversion or through indiscriminate exploitation of the natural
biological capacity that is shared, for better or worse, by all persons,
we appeal to the rational faculties. All children are born with
rational faculties, which want only development. Our academy has
recently welcomed several young ladies of extra-Atlantan
extraction, and it is our expectation that all will go on to take the
Oath in due time.”
“Pardon me, madam, but which one is Aglaia?” Nell said,
looking over Miss Matheson’s shoulder at the painting.
“I beg your pardon?” Miss Matheson said, and initiated the
procedure of turning her head around to look, which at her age was
a civil-engineering challenge of daunting complexity and duration.
“As the name of your school is the Three Graces, I have
ventured to assume that yonder painting depicts the same subject,”
Nell said, “since they look more like Graces than Furies or Fates. I
wonder if you would be so kind as to inform me which of the ladies
represents Aglaia, or brilliance.”
“And the other two are?” Miss Matheson said, speaking out of
the side of her mouth as she had almost got herself turned around by
this point.
“Euphrosyne, or joy, and Thalia, or bloom,” Nell said.
“Would you care to venture an opinion?” Miss Matheson said.
“The one on the right is carrying flowers, so perhaps she is
Thalia.”
“I would call that a sound assumption.”
“The one in the middle looks so happy that she must be
Euphrosyne, and the one on the left is lit up with rays of sunlight, so
perhaps she is Aglaia.”
“Well, as you can see, none of them is wearing a nametag, and
so we must satisfy ourselves with conjecture,” Miss Matheson said.
“But I fail to see any gaps in your reasoning. And no, I don’t
suppose they are Fates or Furies.”
. . .
“It’s a boarding school, which means many of the pupils live
there. But you won’t live there,” Rita said, “because it isn’t proper.”
They were riding Eggshell home through the woods.
“Why isn’t it proper?”
“Because you ran away from home, which raises legal
problems.”
“Was it illegal for me to run away?”
“In some tribes, children are regarded as an economic asset of
their parents. So if one phyle shelters runaways from another phyle,
it has a possible economic impact which is covered under the CEP.”
Rita looked back at Nell, appraising her coolly. “You have a
sponsor of sorts in New Atlantis. I don’t know who. I don’t know
why. But it seems that this person cannot take the risk of being the
target of CEP legal action. Hence arrangements have been made for
you to stay in Dovetail for now.
“Now, we know that some of your mother’s boyfriends treated
you badly, and so there is sentiment in Dovetail to take you in. But
we can’t keep you at the Millstone community, because if we got
into a fracas with Protocol, it could sour our relations with our New
Atlantis clients. So it’s been decided that you will stay with the one
person in Dovetail who doesn’t have any clients here.”
“Who’s that?”
“You’ve met him,” Rita said.
Constable Moore’s house was dimly lit and so full of old stuff
that even Nell had to walk sideways in some places. Long strips of
yellowed rice paper, splashed with large Chinese characters and
pimpled with red chop marks, hung from a molding that ran around
the living room a foot or two beneath the ceiling. Nell followed Rita
around a corner into an even smaller, darker, and more crowded
room, whose main decoration was a large painting of a furious chap
with a Fu Manchu mustache, goatee, and tufts of whiskers sprouting
in front of his ears and trailing down below his armpits, wearing
elaborate armor and chain mail decorated with lion’s faces. Nell
stepped away from this fierce picture despite herself, tripped over
the drone of a large bagpipe splayed across the floor, and crashed
into a large beaten-copper bucket of sorts, which made tremendous
smashing noises. Blood welled quietly from a smooth cut on the ball
of her thumb, and she realized that the bucket was being used as a
repository for a collection of old rusty swords of various
descriptions.
“You all right?” Rita said. She was backlit with blue light
coming in through a pair of glass doors. Nell put her thumb in her
mouth and picked herself up.
The glass doors looked out on Constable Moore’s garden, a riot
of geraniums, foxtails, wisteria, and corgi droppings. On the other
side of a small khaki-colored pool rose a small garden house. Like
this one, it was built from blocks of reddish-brown stone and roofed
with rough-edged slabs of green-gray slate. Constable Moore
himself could be descried behind a screen of somewhat leggy
rhododendrons, hard at work with a shovel, continually harassed by
the ankle-biting corgis.
He was not wearing a shirt, but he was wearing a skirt: a red
plaid number. Nell hardly noticed this incongruity because the
corgis heard Rita turning the latch on the glass doors and rushed
toward them yapping, and this drew out the Constable himself, who
approached them squinting through the dark glass, and once he was
out from behind the rhodies, Nell could see that there was
something amiss with the flesh of his body. Overall he was well
proportioned, muscular, rather thick around the middle, and
evidently in decent health. But his skin came in two colors, which
gave him something of a marbled look. It was as though worms had
eaten through his torso, carving out a network of internal
passageways that had later been backfilled with something that
didn’t quite match.
Before she could get a better look, he plucked a shirt from the
back of a lawn chair and shrugged it on. Then he subjected the
corgis to a minute or so of close-order drill, using a patch of mosscovered
flagstones as parade ground, and stringently criticizing their
performance in tones loud enough to penetrate through the glass
doors. The corgis pretended to listen attentively. At the end of the
performance, Constable Moore burst in through the glass doors. “I
shall be with you momentarily,” he said, and disappeared into a
back room for a quarter of an hour. When he returned, he was
dressed in a tweed suit and a rough-hewn sweater over a very finelooking
white shirt. The last article looked too thin to prevent the
others from being intolerably scratchy, but Constable Moore had
reached the age when men can subject their bodies to the worst
irritations-whiskey, cigars, woolen clothes, bagpipes-without
feeling a thing or, at least, without letting on.
“Sorry to have burst in on you,” Rita said, “but there was no
answer when we rang the bell.”
“I don’t care,” said Constable Moore, not entirely
convincingly. “There’s a reason why I don’t live up there.” He
pointed upward, vaguely in the direction of the New Atlantis Clave.
“Just trying to trace the root system of some infernal vine back to its
source. I’m afraid it might be kudzu.” The Constable narrowed his
eyes as he spoke this word, and Nell, not knowing what kudzu was,
supposed that if kudzu were something that could be attacked with a
sword, burned, throttled, bludgeoned, or blown up, it would not
stand a chance for long in Constable Moore’s garden-once, that is,
he got round to it.
“Can I interest you in tea? Or”-this was directed to Nell-
”some hot chocolate?”
“Sounds lovely, but I can’t stay,” Rita said.
“Then let me see you to the door,” Constable Moore said,
standing up. Rita looked a little startled by this abruptness, but in
another moment she was gone, riding Eggshell back toward the
Millhouse.
“Nice lady,” Constable Moore muttered out in the kitchen.
“Fine of her to do what she did for you. Really a very decent lady.
Perhaps not the sort who deals very well with children. Especially
peculiar children.”
“Am I to live here now, sir?” Nell said.
“Out in the garden house,” he said, coming into the room with
a steaming tray and nodding through the glass windows and across
the garden. “Vacant for some time. Cramped for an adult, perfect for
a child. The decor of this house,” he said, glancing around the room,
“is not really suitable for a young one.”
“Who is the scary man?” Nell said, pointing to the big painting.
“Guan Di. Emperor Guan. Formerly a soldier named Guan Yu.
He was never really an emperor, but later on he became the Chinese
god of war, and they gave him the title just to be respectful. Terribly
respectful, the Chinese-it’s their best and worst feature.”
“How could a man become a god?” Nell asked.
“By living in an extremely pragmatic society,” said Constable
Moore after some thought, and provided no further explanation. “Do
you have the book, by the way?”
“Yes, sir.”
“You didn’t take it through the border?”
“No, sir, as per your instructions.”
“That’s good. The ability to follow orders is a useful thing,
especially if you’re living with a chap who’s used to giving them.”
Seeing that Nell had gotten a terribly serious look on her face, the
Constable huffed and looked exasperated. “It doesn’t really matter,
mind you! You have friends in high places. It’s just that we are
trying to be discreet.” Constable Moore brought Nell her cup of
cocoa. She needed one hand for the saucer and another for the cup,
so she took her hand out of her mouth.
“What did you do to your hand?”
“Cut it, sir.”
“Let me see that.” The Constable took her hand in his and
peeled the thumb away from the palm. “Quite a nice little slash.
Looks recent.”
“I got it from your swords.”
“Ah, yes. Swords are that way,” the Constable said absently,
then screwed up his brow and turned back to Nell. “You did not
cry,” he said, “and you did not complain.”
“Did you take all of those swords away from burglars?” Nell
said.
“No-that would have been relatively easy,” Constable Moore
said. He looked at her for a while, pondering. “Nell, you and I will
do just fine together,” he said. “Let me get my first-aid kit.”
Carl Hollywood’s activities at the Parnasse; conversation
over a milk shake; explanation of the media system;
Miranda perceives the futility of her quest.
Miranda found Carl Hollywood sitting fifth row center in the
Parnasse, holding a big sheet of smart foolscap on which he had
scrawled blocking diagrams for their next live production. He
apparently had it crosslinked to a copy of the script, because as she
sidestepped her way down the narrow aisle, she could hear voices
rather mechanically reading lines, and as she came closer she could
see the little X’s and 0’s representing the actors moving around on
the diagram of the stage that Carl had sketched out.
The diagram also included some little arrows along the
periphery, all aimed inward. Miranda realized that the arrows must
be the little spotlights mounted to the fronts of the balconies, and
that Carl Hollywood was programming them.
She rolled her head back and forth, trying to loosen up her
neck, and looked up at the ceiling. The angels or Muses or whatever
they were, were all parading around up there, accompanied by a few
cherubs. Miranda thought of Nell. She always thought of Nell.
The script came to the end of its scene, and Carl paused it.
“You had a question?” he asked, a bit absently.
“I’ve been watching you work from my box.”
“Naughty girl. Should be making money for us.”
“Where’d you learn to do that stuff?”
“What-directing plays?”
“No. The technical stuff-programming the lights and so on.”
Carl turned around to look at her. “This may be at odds with
your notion of how people learn things,” he said, “but I had to teach
myself everything. Hardly anyone does live theatre ar;Tmore, so we
have to develop our own technology. I invented all of the software I
was just using.”
“Did you invent the little spotlights?”
“No. I’m not as good at the nanostuff. A friend of mine in
London came up with those. We swap stuff all the time-my
mediaware for his matterware.”
“Well, I want to buy you dinner somewhere,” Miranda said,
“and I want you to explain to me how it all works.”
“That’s a rather tall order,” Carl said calmly, “but I accept the
invitation.
. . .
“Okay, do you want a complete grounding in the whole thing,
starting with Turing machines, or what?” Carl said pleasantly-
humoring her. Miranda decided not to become indignant. They were
in a red vinyl booth at a restaurant near the Bund that supposedly
simulated an American diner on the eve of the Kennedy
assassination. Chinese hipsters-classic Coastal Republic types in
their expensive haircuts and sharp suits-were lined up on the
rotating stools along the lunch counter, sucking on their root beer
floats and flashing wicked grins at any young women who came in.
“I guess so,” Miranda said.
Carl Hollywood laughed and shook his head. “I was being
facetious. You need to tell me exactly what you want to know. Why
are you suddenly taking up an interest in this stuff? Aren’t you
happy just making a good living from it?”
Miranda sat very still for a moment, hypnotized by the colorful
flashing lights on a vintage jukebox.
“This is related to Princess Nell, isn’t it?” Carl said.
“Is it that obvious?”
“Yeah. Now, what do you want?”
“I want to know who she is,” Miranda said. This was the most
guarded way she could put it. She didn’t suppose that it would help
matters to drag Carl down through the full depth of her emotions.
“You want to backtrace a payer,” Carl said.
It sounded terrible when he translated it into that kind of
language.
Carl sucked powerfully on his milk shake for a bit, his eyes
looking over Miranda’s shoulder to the traffic on the Bund.
“Princess Nell’s a little kid, right?”
“Yes. I would estimate five to seven years old.”
His eyes swiveled to lock on hers. “You can tell that?”
“Yes,” she said, in tones that warned him not to question it.
“So she’s probably not paying the bill anyway. The payer is
someone else. You need to backtrace the payer and then, from there,
track down Nell.” Carl broke eye contact again, shook his head, and
tried unsuccessfully to whistle through frozen lips. “Even the first
step is impossible.”
Miranda was startled. “That seems pretty unequivocal. I
expected to hear ‘difficult’ or ‘expensive.’ But-”
“Nope. It’s impossible. Or maybe”-Carl thought about it for a
while-“maybe ‘astronomically improbable’ is a better way of
putting it.” Then he looked mildly alarmed as he watched Miranda’s
expression change. “You can’t just trace the connection backward.
That’s not how media works.”
“How does media work, then?”
“Look out the window. Not toward the Bund-check out
Yan’an Road.”
Miranda swiveled her head around to look out the big window,
which was partly painted over with colorful Coke ads and
descriptions of blue plate specials. Yan’an Road, like all of the
major thoroughfares in Shanghai, was filled, from the shop windows
on one side to the shop windows on the other, with people on
bicycles and powerskates. In many places the traffic was so dense
that greater speed could be attained on foot. A few half-lane
vehicles sat motionless, polished boulders in a sluggish brown
stream.
It was so familiar that Miranda didn’t really see anything.
“What am I looking for?”
“Notice how no one’s empty-handed? They’re all carrying
something.”
Carl was right. At a minimum, everyone had a small plastic bag
with something in it. Many people, such as the bicyclists, carried
heavier loads.
“Now just hold that image in your head for a moment, and
think about how to set up a global telecommunications network.”
Miranda laughed. “I don’t have any basis for thinking about
something like that.”
“Sure you do. Until now, you’ve been thinking in terms of the
telephone system in the old passives. In that system, each
transaction had two participants-the two people having the
conversation. And they were connected by a wire that ran through a
central switchboard. So what are the key features of this system?”
“I don’t know-I’m asking you,” said Miranda.
“Number one, only two people, or entities, can interact.
Number two, it uses a dedicated connection that is made and then
broken for the purposes of that one conversation. Number three, it is
inherently centralized-it can’t work unless there is a central
switchboard.”
“Okay, I think I’m following you so far.”
“Our media system today-the one that you and I make our
livings from-is a descendant of the phone system only insofar as
we use it for essentially the same purposes, plus many, many more.
But the key point to remember is that it is totally different from the
old phone system. The old phone system-and its technological
cousin, the cable TV system- tanked. It crashed and burned
decades ago, and we started virtually from scratch.”
“Why? It worked, didn’t it?”
“First of all, we needed to enable interactions between more
than one entity. What do I mean by entity? Well, think about the
ractives. Think about First Class to Geneva. You’re on this train-
so are a couple of dozen other people. Some of those people are
being racted, so in that case the entities happen to be human beings.
But others-like the waiters and porters-are just software robots.
Furthermore, the train is full of props:
jewelry, money, guns, bottles of wine. Each one of those is also
a separate piece of software-a separate entity. In the lingo, we call
them objects. The train itself is another object, and so is the
countryside through which it travels.
“The countryside is a good example. It happens to be a digital
map of France. Where did this map come from? Did the makers of
First Class to Geneva send out their own team of surveyors to make
a new map of France? No, of course they didn’t. They used existing
data-a digital map of the world that is available to any maker of
ractives who needs it, for a price of course. That digital map is a
separate object. It resides in the memory of a computer somewhere.
Where exactly? I don’t know. Neither does the ractive itself. It
doesn’t matter. The data might be in California, it might be in Paris,
it might be down at the corner-or it might be distributed among all
of those places and many more. It doesn’t matter. Because our
media system no longer works like the old system- dedicated
wires passing through a central switchboard. It works like that.”
Carl pointed to the traffic on the street again.
“So each person on the street is like an object?”
“Possibly. But a better analogy is that the objects are people
like us, sitting in various buildings that front on the street. Suppose
that we want to send a message to someone over in Pudong. We
write the message down on a piece of paper, and we go to the door
and hand it to the first person who goes by and say, ‘Take this to
Mr. Gu in Pudong.’ And he skates down the street for a while and
runs into someone on a bicycle who looks like he might be headed
for Pudong, and says, ‘Take this to Mr. Gu.’ A minute later, that
person gets stuck in traffic and hands it off to a pedestrian who can
negotiate the snarl a little better, and so on and so on, until
eventually it reaches Mr. Gu. When Mr. Gu wants to respond, he
sends us a message in the same way.”
“So there’s no way to trace the path taken by a message.”
“Right. And the real situation is even more complicated. The
media net was designed from the ground up to provide privacy and
security, so that people could use it to transfer money. That’s one
reason the nationstates collapsed-as soon as the media grid was up
and running, financial transactions could no longer be monitored by
governments, and the tax collection systems got fubared. So if the
old IRS, for example, wasn’t able to trace these messages, then
there’s no way that you’ll be able to track down Princess Nell.”
“Okay, I guess that answers my question,” Miranda said.
“Good!” Carl said brightly. He was obviously pleased that he’d
been able to help Miranda, and so she didn’t tell him how his words
had really made her feel. She treated it as an acting challenge: Could
she fool Carl Hollywood, who was sharper about acting than just
about anyone, into thinking that she was fine?
Apparently she did. He escorted her back to her flat, in a
hundredstory high-rise just across the river in Pudong, and she held
it together long enough to bid him good-bye, get out of her clothes,
and run a bath. Then she climbed into the hot water and dissolved in
awful, wretched, blubbery, self-pitying tears.
Eventually she got it under control. She had to keep this in
perspective. She could still interact with Nell and still did, every
day. And if she paid attention, sooner or later she would find some
way to penetrate the curtain. Barring that, she was beginning to
understand that Nell, whoever she was, had been marked out in
some way, and that in time she would become a very important
person. Within a few years, Miranda expected to be reading about
her in the newspaper. Feeling better, she got out of the bath and
climbed into bed, getting a good night’s sleep so she’d be ready for
her next day of taking care of Nell.
General description of life with the Constable; his
avocations and other peculiarities; a disturbing sight;
Nell learns about his past; a conversation over dinner.
The garden house had two rooms, one for sleeping and one for
playing. The playing room had a set of double doors, made of many
small windows, that opened onto Constable Moore’s garden. Nell
had been told to be careful with the little windows, because they
were made of real glass. The glass was bubbly and uneven, like the
surface of a pot of water just before it breaks into a boil, and Nell
liked to look at things through it because, even though she knew it
was not as strong as a common window, it made her feel safer, as
though she were hiding behind something.
The garden itself was forever trying to draw the little house
into it; many vast-growing vines of ivy, wisteria, and briar rose were
deeply engaged in the important project of climbing the walls, using
the turtleshell-colored copper drainpipes, and the rough surfaces of
the brick and mortar, as fingerholds. The slate roof of the cottage
was phosphorescent with moss. From time to time, Constable
Moore would charge into the breach with a pair of trimmers and cut
away some of the vines that so prettily framed the view through
Nell’s glass doors, lest they imprison her.
During Nell’s second year living in the cottage, she asked the
Constable if she might have a bit of garden space of her own, and
after an early phase of profound shock and misgivings, the
Constable eventually pulled up a few flagstones, exposing a small
plot, and caused one of the Dovetail artisans to manufacture some
copper window boxes and attach them to the cottage walls. In the
plot, Nell planted some carrots, thinking about her friend Peter who
had vanished so long ago, and in the window boxes she planted
some geraniums. The Primer taught her how to do it and also
reminded her to dig up a carrot sprout every few days and examine
it so that she could learn how they grew. Nell learned that if she
held the Primer above the carrot and stared at a certain page, it
would turn into a magic illustration that would grow larger and
larger until she could see the tiny little fibers that grew out of the
roots, and the one-celled organisms clinging to the fibers, and the
mitochondria inside them. The same trick worked on anything, and
she spent many days examining flies’ eyes, bread mold, and blood
cells that she got out of her own body by pricking her finger. She
could also go up on hilltops during cold clear nights and use the
Primer to see the rings of Saturn and the moons of Jupiter.
Constable Moore continued to work his daily shift at the
gatehouse. When he came home in the evening, he and Nell would
often dine together inside his house. At first they got food straight
from the M.C., or else the Constable would fry up something
simple, like sausage and eggs. During this period, Princess Nell and
the other characters in the Primer found themselves eating a lot of
sausage and eggs too, until Duck lodged a protest and taught the
Princess how to cook healthier food. Nell then got in the habit of
cooking a healthy meal with salad and vegetables, several
afternoons a week after she got home from school. There was some
grumbling from the Constable, but he always cleaned up his plate
and sometimes washed the dishes.
The Constable spent a lot of time reading books. Nell was
welcome to be in his house when he was doing this, as long as she
was quiet. Frequently he would shoo her out, and then he would get
in touch with some old friend of his over the big mediatron on the
wall of his library. Usually Nell would just go back to her little
cottage during these times, but sometimes, especially if the moon
was full, she would wander around in the garden. This seemed
larger than it really was by virtue of being divided into many small
compartments. On late full-moon nights, her favorite place was a
grove of tall green bamboo with some pretty rocks strewn around.
She would sit with her back against a rock, read her Primer, and
occasionally hear sound emanating from the inside of Constable
Moore’s house as he talked on the mediatron: mostly deep
bellowing laughter and explosions of good-natured profanity. For
quite some time she assumed that it was not the Constable who was
making these sounds, but rather whomever he was talking to;
because in her presence the Constable was always very polite and
reserved, albeit somewhat eccentric. But one night she heard loud
moaning noises coming from his house, and crept down out of the
bamboo grove to see what was happening.
From her vantage point through the glass doors, she couldn’t
see the mediatron, which was facing away from her. Its light
illuminated the whole room, painting the normally warm and cozy
space with lurid flashing colors, and throwing long jagged shadows.
Constable Moore had shoved all the furniture and other obstructions
to the walls and rolled up the Chinese carpet to expose the floor,
which Nell had always assumed was made of oak, like the floor in
her cottage; but the floor was, in fact, a large mediatron itself,
glowing rather dimly compared to the one on the wall, and
displaying a lot of rather high-resolution material: text documents
and detailed graphics with the occasional dine feed. The Constable
was down on his hands and knees amidst this, bawling like a child,
the tears collecting in the shallow saucers of his half-glasses and
spattering onto the mediatron, which illuminated them weirdly from
below.
Nell wanted badly to go in and comfort him, but she was too
scared. She stood and watched, frozen in indecision, and realized as
she did so that the flashes of light coming from the mediatrons
reminded her of explosions-or rather pictures of explosions. She
backed away and went back into her little house.
Half an hour later, she heard the unearthly noise of Constable
Moore’s bagpipes emanating from the bamboo grove. In the past he
had occasionally picked them up and made a few squealing noises,
but this was the first time she’d heard a formal recital. She was not
an expert on the pipes, but she thought he sounded not bad. He was
playing a slow number, a coronach, and it was so sad that it almost
tore Nell’s heart asunder; the sight of the Constable weeping
helplessly on his hands and knees was not half so sad as the music
he was playing now.
In time he moved on to a faster and happier pibroch. Nell
emerged from her cottage into the garden. The Constable was just a
silhouette slashed into a hundred ribbons by the vertical shafts of the
bamboo, but when she moved back and forth, some trick of her eye
reassembled the image. He was standing in a pool of moonlight. He
had changed clothes:
now he was wearing his kilt, and a shirt and beret that seemed
to belong to some sort of a uniform. When his lungs were empty, he
would draw in a great breath, his chest would heave, and an array of
silvery pins and insignia would glimmer in the moonlight.
He had left the doors open. She walked into the house, not
bothering to be stealthy because she knew that she could not
possibly be heard over the sound of the bagpipe.
The wall and the floor were both giant mediatrons, and both
had been covered with a profusion of media windows, hundreds and
hundreds of separate panes, like a wall on a busy city street where
posters and bills have been pasted up in such abundance that they
have completely covered the substrate. Some of the panes were only
as big as the palm of Nell’s hand, and some of them were the size of
wall posters. Most of the ones on the floor were windows into
written documents, grids of numbers, schematic diagrams (lots of
organizational trees), or wonderful maps, drawn with breathtaking
precision and clarity, with rivers, mountains, and villages labeled in
Chinese characters. As Nell surveyed this panorama, she flinched
once or twice from the impression that something small was
creeping along the floor; but there were no bugs in the room, it was
just an illusion created by small fluctuations in the maps and in the
rows and columns of numbers. These things were ractive, just like
the words in the Primer; but unlike the Primer, they were
responding not to what Nell did but, she supposed, to events far
away.
When she finally raised her gaze from the floor to view the
mediatrons lining the walls, she saw that most of the panes there
were much larger, and most of them carried dine feeds, and most of
these had been frozen. The images were very sharp and clear. Some
of them were landscapes: a stretch of rural road, a bridge across a
dried-up river, a dusty village with flames bubbling from some of
the houses. Some of them were pictures of people: talking-head
shots of Chinese men wearing dirty uniforms with dark mountains,
clouds of dust, or drab green vehicles as backdrops.
In one of the dine feeds, a man was lying on the ground, his
dusty uniform almost the same color as the dirt. Suddenly this
image moved; the feed had not been frozen like the others. Someone
was walking past the camera: a Chinese man in indigo pajamas,
decorated with scarlet ribbons tied round his head and his waist,
though these had gone brown with grime. When he had passed out
of the frame, Nell focused on the other man, the one who was lying
in the dust, and she realized for the first time that he did not have a
head.
Constable Moore must have heard Nell’s screaming over the
sound of his bagpipes, for he was in the room within a few
moments, shouting commands to the mediatrons, which all went
black and became mere walls and a floor. The only image remaining
in the room now was the big painting of Guan Di, the god of war,
who glowered down upon them as always. Constable Moore was
extremely ill at ease whenever Nell showed any kind of emotion,
but he seemed more comfortable with hysteria than he was with,
say, an invitation to play house or an attack of the giggles. He
picked Nell up, carried her across the room at arm’s length, and set
her down in a deep leather chair. He left the room for a moment and
came back with a large glass of water, then carefully molded her
hands around it. “You must breathe deeply and drink water,” he was
saying, almost sotto voce; he seemed to have been saying it for a
long time.
She was a little surprised to find that she did not cry forever,
though a few aftershocks came along and had to be managed in the
same way. She kept trying to say, “I can’t stop crying,” stabbing the
syllables one at a time.
The tenth or eleventh time she said this, Constable Moore said,
“You can’t stop drying because you’re all fucked up
psychologically.” He said it in a kind of bored professional tone that
might have sounded cruel; but to Nell it was, for some reason, most
reassuring.
“What do you mean?” she said finally, when she èould speak
without her throat going all funny.
“I mean you’re a veteran, girl, just like me, and you’ve got
scars”-he suddenly ripped his shirt open, buttons flying and
bouncing all over the room, to reveal his particolored torso-“like I
do. The difference is, I know I’m a veteran. You persist in thinking
you’re just a little girl, like those bloody Vickys you go to school
with.”
. . .
From time to time, perhaps once a year, he would turn down
the offer of dinner, put that uniform on, climb onto a horse, and ride
off in the direction of the New Atlantis Clave. The horse would
bring him back in the wee hours of the morning, so drunk he could
barely remain in the saddle. Sometimes Nell would help get him
into bed, and after he had lapsed into unconsciousness, she could
examine his pins and medals and ribbons by candlelight. The
ribbons in particular used a fairly elaborate color-coding system.
But the Primer had some pages in the back that were called the
Encyclopædia, and by consulting these, Nell was able to establish
that Constable Moore was, or at least had used to be, a brigadier
general in the Second Brigade of the Third Division of the First
Protocol Enforcement Expeditionary Force. One ribbon implied that
he had spent some time as an exchange officer in a Nipponese
division, but his home division was apparently the Third. According
to the Encyclopædia, the Third was often known as the Junkyard
Dogs or, simply, the Mongrels, because it tended to draw its
members from the White Diaspora: Uitlanders, Ulster Loyalists,
whites from Hong Kong, and rootless sorts from all of the Anglo-
American parts of the world.
One of the pins on the Constable’s uniform said that he had
graduate-level training in nanotechnological engineering. This was
consistent with his belonging to the Second Brigade, which
specialized in nanotech warfare. The Encyclopædia said that it had
been formed some thirty years ago to tackle some nasty fighting in
Eastern Europe where primitive nanotech weapons were being
employed.
A couple of years later, the division had been sent off to South
China in a panic. Trouble had been brewing there since Zhang Han
Hua had gone on his Long Ride and forced the merchants to
kowtow. Zhang had personally liberated several lao gai damps,
where slave laborers were hard at work making trinkets for export to
the West, smashing computer display screens with the massive
dragon’s-head grip of his cane, beating the overseers into bloody
heaps on the ground. Zhang’s “investigations” of various thriving
businesses, mostly in the south, had thrown millions of people out
of work. They had gone into the streets and raised hell and been
joined by sympathetic units of the People’s Liberation Army. The
rebellion was eventually put down by PLA units from the north, but
the leaders had vanished into the “concrete countryside” of the Pearl
Delta, and so Zhang had been forced to set up a permanent garrison
state in the south. The northern troops had kept order crudely but
effectively for a few years, until, one night, an entire division of
them, some 15,000 men, was wiped out by an infestation of
nanosites.
The leaders of the rebellion emerged from their hiding places,
proclaimed the Coastal Republic, and called for Protocol
Enforcement troops to come in and protect them. Colonel Arthur
Hornsby Moore, a veteran of the fighting in Eastern Europe, was
brought in to command. He had been born in Hong Kong, left as a
small child when the Chinese took it over, spent much of his youth
wandering around Asia with his parents, and eventually settled in
the British Isles. He was picked for the job because he was fluent in
Cantonese and not half bad in Mandarin. Looking at the old cine
clips in the Encyclopædia, Nell could see a younger Constable
Moore, the same man with more hair and fewer doubts.
The Chinese Civil War began in earnest three years later, when
the Northerns, who didn’t have access to nanotech, started lobbing
nukes. Not long afterward, the Muslim nations had finally gotten
their act together and overrun much of Xinjiang Province, killing
some of the Han Chinese population and driving the rest eastward
into the maw of the civil war. Colonel Moore suffered an extremely
dire infestation of primitive nanosites and was removed from the
action and put on extended convalescent leave. By that time, the
truce line between the Celestial Kingdom and the Coastal Republic
had been established.
Since then, as Nell knew from her studies at the Academy, Lau
Ge had succeeded Zhang as the northern leader-the leader of the
Celestial Kingdom. After a decent interval had passed, he had
thoroughly purged all remaining traces of Communist ideology,
denouncing it as a Western imperialist plot, and proclaimed himself
Chamberlain to the Throneless King. The Throneless King was
Confucius, and Lau Ge was now the highest-ranking of all the
mandarins.
The Encyclopædia did not say much more about Colonel
Arthur Hornsby Moore, except that he’d resurfaced as an adviser a
few years later during some outbreaks of nanotech terrorism in
Germany, and later retired and became a security consultant. In this
latter capacity he had helped to promulgate the concept of defense
in depth, around which all modern cities, including
Atlantis/Shanghai, were built.
. . .
Nell cooked the Constable an especially nice dinner one
Saturday, and when they were finished with dessert, she began to
tell him about Harv and Tequila, and Harv’s tales of the
incomparable Bud, their dear departed father. Suddenly it was about
three hours later, and Nell was still telling the Constable stories
about Mom’s boyfriends, and the Constable was continuing to
listen, reaching up occasionally to fiddle with his white beard but
otherwise displaying an extremely grave and thoughtful
countenance. Finally she got to the part about Burt, and how Nell
had tried to kill him with the screwdriver, and how he had chased
them down the stairs and apparently met his demise at the hands of
the mysterious round-headed Chinese gentleman. The Constable
found this extremely interesting and asked many questions, first
about the detailed tactical development of the screwdriver assault
and then about the style of dancing used by the Chinese gentleman,
and what he was wearing.
“I have been angry at my Primer ever since that night,” Nell
said.
“Why?” said the Constable, looking surprised, though he was
hardly more surprised than Nell herself. Nell had said a remarkable
number of things this evening without having ever, to her memory,
thought them first; or at least she didn’t believe she had ever thought
them before.
“I cannot help but feel that it misled me. It made me suppose
that killing Burt would be a simple matter, and that it would
improve my life; but when I tried to put these ideas into practice . .
.“ She could not think of what to say next.
“. . . the rest of your life happened,” the Constable said. “Girl,
you must admit that your life with Burt dead has been an
improvement on your life with Burt alive.”
“Yes.”
“So the Primer was correct on that point. Now, as to the fact
that killing people is a more complicated business in practice than in
theory, I will certainly concede your point. But I think it is not likely
to be the only instance in which real life turns out to be more
complicated than what you have seen in the book. This is the Lesson
of the Screwdriver, and you would do well to remember it. All it
amounts to is that you must be ready to learn from sources other
than your magic book.”
“But of what use is the book then?”
“I suspect it is very useful. You want only the knack of
translating its lessons into the real world. For example,” the
Constable said, plucking his napkin from his lap and crushing it into
the tabletop, “let us take something very concrete, such as beating
the bejesus out of people.” He stood up and tromped out into the
garden. Nell ran after him. “I have seen you doing your martial-arts
exercises,” he said, switching to a peremptory outdoor voice, an
addressing-the-troops voice. “Martial arts means beating the bejesus
out of people. Now, let us see you try your luck with me.”
Negotiations ensued as Nell endeavored to establish whether
the Constable was serious. This being accomplished, she sat down
on the flagstones and began getting her shoes off. The Constable
watched her with raised eyebrows.
“Oh, that’s very formidable,” he said. “All evildoers had best
be on the lookout for little Nell-unless she happens to be wearing
her bloody shoes.”
Nell did a couple of stretching exercises, ignoring more
derisive commentary from the Constable. She bowed to him, and he
waved his hand at her dismissively. She got set into the stance that
Dojo had taught her. In response, the Constable moved his feet
about an inch farther apart than they had been, and pooched his
belly out, which was apparently the chosen stance of some
mysterious Scottish fighting technique.
Nothing happened for a long time except for a lot of dancing
around. Nell danced, that is, and the Constable blundered around
desultorily. “What’s this?” he said. “All you know is defense?”
“Mostly, sir,” Nell said. “I do not suppose it was the Primer’s
intention to teach me how to assault people.”
“Oh, what good is that?” the Constable sneered, and suddenly
he reached out and grabbed Nell by the hair-not hard enough to
hurt. He held her for a few moments, and then let her go. “Thus
endeth the first lesson,” he said.
“You think that I should cut my hair off?”
The Constable looked terribly disappointed. “Oh, no,” he said,
“never, ever, ever cut your hair off. If I grabbed you by your
wrist”-and he did-”would you cut your arm off?”
“No, sir.”
“Did the Primer teach you that people would pull your hair?”
“No, sir.”
“Did it teach you that your mother’s boyfriends would beat you
up, and your mother not protect you?”
“No, sir, except insofar as it told me stories about people who
did evil.”
“People doing evil is a good lesson. What you saw in there a
few weeks ago”-and by this Nell knew he was referring to the
headless soldier on the mediatron-”is one application of that
lesson, but it’s too obvious to be of any good. Ah, but your mother
not protecting you from boyfriends-that has some subtlety, doesn’t
it?
“Nell,” the Constable continued, indicating through his tone of
voice that the lesson was concluding, “the difference between
ignorant and educated people is that the latter know more facts. But
that has nothing to do with whether they are stupid or intelligent.
The difference between stupid and intelligent people-and this is
true whether or not they are well-educated-is that intelligent
people can handle subtlety. They are not baffled by ambiguous or
even contradictory situations-in fact, they expect them and are apt
to become suspicious when things seem overly straightforward.
“In your Primer you have a resource that will make you highly
educated, but it will never make you intelligent. That comes from
life. Your life up to this point has given you all of the experience
you need to be intelligent, but you have to think about those
experiences. If you don’t think about them, you’ll be
psychologically unwell. If you do think about them, you will
become not merely educated but intelligent, and then, a few years
down the road, you will probably give me cause to wish I were
several decades younger.”
The Constable turned and walked back into his house, leaving
Nell alone in the garden, pondering the meaning of that last
statement. She supposed it was the sort of thing she might
understand later, when she had become intelligent.
Carl Hollywood returns from abroad; he and Miranda
discuss the status and future of her racting career.
Carl Hollywood came back from a month-long trip to London,
where he’d been visiting old friends, catching some live theatre, and
making face-to-face contacts with some of the big ractive
developers, hoping to swing some contracts in their direction. When
he got back, the whole company threw a party for him in the
theatre’s little bar. Miranda thought she handled it pretty well.
But the next day he cornered her backstage. “What’s up?” he
said. “And I don’t mean that in the usual offhanded way. I want to
know what’s going on with you. Why have you switched to the
evening shift during my absence? And why were you acting so
weird at the party?”
“Well, Nell and I have had an interesting few months.”
Carl looked startled, stepped back half a pace, then sighed and
rolled his eyes.
“Of course, her altercation with Burt was traumatic, but she
seems to have dealt with it well.”
“Who’s Burt?”
“I have no idea. Someone who was physically abusing her.
Apparently she managed to find some kind of new living situation
in short order, probably with the assistance of her brother Harv, who
has, however, not stayed with her-he’s stuck in the same old bad
situation, while Nell has moved on to something better.”
“She has? That’s good news,” said Carl, only half sarcastically.
Miranda smiled at him. “See? That’s exactly the kind of
feedback I need. I don’t talk about this stuff to anyone because I’m
afraid they’ll think I’m mad. Thank you. Keep it up.”
“What is Nell’s new situation?” Carl Hollywood asked
contritely.
“I think she’s in school somewhere. She appears to be learning
new material that isn’t explicitly covered in the Primer, and she’s
developing more sophisticated forms of social interaction,
suggesting that she’s spending more time around a higher class of
people.”
“Excellent.”
“She’s not as concerned with immediate issues of physical selfdefense,
so I gather that she’s in a safe living situation. However,
her new guardian must be an emotionally distant sort, because she
frequently seeks solace under the wings of Duck.”
Carl looked funny. “Duck?”
“One of four personages who accompanies and advises
Princess Nell. Duck embodies domestic, maternal virtues. Actually,
Peter and Dinosaur are now gone-both male figures who embodied
survival skills.”
“Who’s the fourth one?”
“Purple. I think she’ll become a lot more relevant to Nell’s life
around puberty.”
“Puberty? You said Nell was between five and seven.”
“So?”
“You think you’ll still be doing this-” Carl’s voice wound
down to a stop as he worked out the implications.
“-for at least six or eight years. Oh yes, I should certainly
think so. It’s a very serious commitment, raising a child.”
“Oh, god!” Carl Hollywood said, and collapsed into a big,
tatty, overstuffed chair they kept backstage for such purposes.
“That’s why I’ve switched to the evening shift. Ever since Nell
started going to school, she’s started using the Primer exclusively in
the evening. Apparently she’s in a time zone within one or two
hours of this one.”
“Good,” Carl muttered, “that narrows it down to about half of
the world’s population.”
“What’s the problem here?” Miranda said. “It’s not like I’m not
getting paid for this.”
Carl gave her a good, dispassionate, searching look. “Yes. It
brings in adequate revenue.”
Three girls go exploring; a conversation between
Lord Finkle-McGraw and Mrs. Hackworth;
afternoon at the estate.
Three girls moved across the billiard-table lawn of a great
manor house, circling and swarming about a common center of
gravity like gamboling sparrows. Sometimes they would stop, turn
inward to face one another, and engage in animated discussion.
Then they would suddenly take off running, seemingly free from the
constraints of inertia, like petals struck by a gust of spring wind.
They wore long heavy wool coats over their dresses to protect them
from the cool damp air of New Chusan’s high central plateau. They
seemed to be making their way toward an expanse of broken ground
some half-mile distant, separated from the great house’s formal
gardens by a gray stone wall splashed with bits of lime green and
lavender where moss and lichen had taken hold. The terrain beyond
the wall was a muted hazel color, like a bolt of Harris tweed that has
tumbled from the back of a wagon and come undone, though the
incipient blooming of the heather had flung a pale violet mist across
it, nearly transparent but startlingly vivid in those places where the
observer’s line of sight grazed the natural slope of the terrain-if the
word natural could properly be applied to any feature of this island.
Otherwise as light and free as birds, the girls were each weighed
down by a small burden that seemed incongruous in the present
setting, for the efforts of the adults to persuade them to leave their
books behind had, as ever, been unavailing.
One of the observers had eyes only for the little girl with long
flamecolored hair. Her connexion to that child was suggested by her
auburn hair and eyebrows. She was dressed in a hand-sewn frock of
woven cotton, whose crispness betrayed its recent provenance in a
milliner’s atelier in Dovetail. If the gathering had included more
veterans of that elongated state of low-intensity warfare known as
Society, this observation would have been keenly made by those
soi-disant sentries who stood upon the battlements, keeping vigil
against bounders who would struggle their way up the vast glacis
separating wage slaves from Equity Participants. It would have been
duly noted and set forth in the oral tradition that Gwendolyn
Hackworth, though attractive, hard-waisted, and poised, lacked the
confidence to visit Lord Finkle-McGraw’s house in anything other
than a new dress made for the occasion.
The gray light suffusing the drawing room through its high
windows was as gentle as mist. As Mrs. Hackworth stood enveloped
in that light, sipping beige tea from a cup of translucent bone china,
her face let down its guard and betrayed some evidence of her true
state of mind. Her host, Lord Finkle-McGraw, thought that she
looked drawn and troubled, though her vivacious comportment
during the first hour of their interview had led him to suppose
otherwise.
Sensing that his gaze had lingered on her face for longer than
was strictly proper, he looked to the three little girls ambling across
the garden. One of the girls had raven hair that betrayed her partly
Korean heritage; but having established her whereabouts as a sort of
reference point, he shifted his attention to the third girl, whose hair
was about halfway through a natural and gradual transition from
blond to brown. This girl was the tallest of the three, though all were
of about the same age; and though she participated freely in all of
their lighthearted games, she rarely initiated them and, when left to
her own devices, tended toward a grave mien that made her seem
years older than her playmates. As the Equity Lord watched the
trio’s progress, he sensed that even the style of her movement was
different from the others’; she was lithe and carefully balanced,
while they bounded unpredictably like rubber balls on rough-hewn
stone.
The difference was (as he realized, watching them more
keenly) that Nell always knew where she was going. Elizabeth and
Fiona never did. This was a question not of native intelligence (Miss
Matheson’s tests and observations proved that much) but of
emotional stance. Something in the girl’s past had taught her, most
forcefully, the importance of thinking things through.
“I ask you for a prediction, Mrs. Hackworth. Which one shall
reach the moor first?”
At the sound of his voice, Mrs. Hackworth recomposed her
face. “This sounds like a letter to the etiquette columnist of the
Times. If I try to flatter you by guessing that it will be your
granddaughter, am I implicitly accusing her of impulsiveness?”
The Equity Lord smiled tolerantly. “Let us set aside etiquette-
a social convention not relevant to this enquiry-and be scientific.”
“Ah. If only my John were here.”
He is here, Lord Finkle-McGraw thought, in each one of those
books. But he didn’t say it. “Very well, I will expose myself to the
risk of humiliation by predicting that Elizabeth reaches the wall
first; that Nell finds the secret way through; but that your daughter
is the first one to venture through it.”
“I’m sure you could never be humiliated in my presence, Your
Grace,” Mrs. Hackworth said. It was something she had to say, and
he did not really hear it.
They turned back to the windows. When the girls had reached
to within a stone’s throw of the wall, they began to move toward it
more purposefully. Elizabeth broke free from the group, ran
forward, and was the first to touch the cool stones, followed a few
paces later by Fiona. Nell was far behind, not having altered her
steady stride.
“Elizabeth is a Duke’s granddaughter, accustomed to having
her way, and has no natural reticence; she surges to the fore and
claims the goal as her birthright,” Finkle-McGraw explained. “But
she has not really thought about what she is doing.”
Elizabeth and Fiona both had their hands on the wall now, as if
it were Home in a game of tag. But Nell had stopped and was
turning her head from side to side, surveying the length of the wall
as it clambered and tumbled over the increasingly rough shape of
the land. After some time she held out one hand, pointing at a
section of the wall a short distance away, and began to move toward
it.
“Nell stands above the fray and thinks,” Finkle-McGraw said.
“To the other girls, the wall is a decorative feature, no? A pretty
thing to run to and explore. But not to Nell. Nell knows what a wall
is. It is a knowledge that went into her early, knowledge she doesn’t
have to think about. Nell is more interested in gates than in walls.
Secret hidden gates are particularly interesting.”
Fiona and Elizabeth moved uncertainly, trailing their tiny pink
hands across the damp stone, unable to see where Nell was leading
them. Nell strode across the grass until she had reached a small
declivity. She almost disappeared into it as she clambered down
toward the foundation of the wall.
“An opening for drainage,” Finkle-McGraw explained. “Please
do not be concerned. I happened to ride that way this morning. The
current is only ankle-deep, and the diameter of the culvert just right
for eight-yearold girls. The passage is several meters long-more
promising than threatening, I should hope.”
Fiona and Elizabeth moved cautiously, startled by Nell’s
discovery. All three of the girls disappeared into the cleft. A few
moments later, a blaze of fiery red could be descried bouncing
rapidly across the moor beyond the wall. Fiona clambered up a
small outcropping of rocks that marked the beginning of the moor,
and beckoned excitedly to her companions.
“The secret passage is found by Nell, but she is cautious and
patient. Elizabeth is taken aback by her early impulsiveness-she
feels foolish and perhaps even a bit sullen. Fiona-”
“Fiona sees a magical gateway to an enchanted kingdom, no
doubt,” Mrs. Hackworth said, “and even now is crestfallen to find
that you have not stocked the premises with unicorns and dragons.
She would not hesitate for a moment to fly down that tunnel. This
world is not where my Fiona wants to live, Your Grace. She wants
another world, where magic is everywhere, and stories come to life,
and . .
Her voice trailed away, and she cleared her throat
uncomfortably. Lord Finkle-McGraw glanced at her and saw pain in
her face, quickly masked. He understood the rest of her sentence
without hearing it: . . . and my husband is here with us.
A pair of riders, a man and a woman, trotted up a gravel path
that ran along the edge of the gardens, through a pair of wroughtiron
gates in the stone wall, which opened for them. The man was
Lord Finkle-McGraw’s son Colin, the woman was his wife, and
they had ridden out onto the moor to keep an eye on their daughter
and her two little friends. Seeing that their supervision was no
longer required, Lord Finkle-McGraw and Mrs. Hackworth turned
away from the window and drew instinctively closer to a fire
burning in a stone fireplace the size of a garage.
Mrs. Hackworth sat down in a small rocker, and the Equity
Lord chose an old and incongruously battered leather wing chair. A
servant poured more tea. Mrs. Hackworth set the saucer and cup in
her lap, guarding it with her hands, and collected herself.
“I have been desirous of making certain enquiries regarding my
husband’s whereabouts and activities, which have been a mystery to
me almost since the moment he departed,” she said, “and yet I was
led to believe, from the very general and guarded statements he
made to me, that the nature of those activities is secret, and that, if
Your Grace has any knowledge of them-and that you do, is of
course merely a convenient supposition on my part-you must treat
that knowledge with flawless discretion. It goes without saying, I
trust, that I would not use even my feeble powers of persuasion to
induce you to violate the trust reposed in you by a higher power.”
“Let us take it as a given that both of us will do what is
honourable,” Finkle-McGraw said with a reassuringly casual smile.
“Thank you. My husband continues to write me letters, every
week or so, but they are extremely general, nonspecific, and
perfunctory. But in recent months, these letters have become full of
strange images and emotions. They are-bizarre. I have begun to
fear for my husband’s mental stability, and for the prospects of any
undertaking that relies upon his good judgment. And while I would
not hesitate to tolerate his absence for as long as is necessary for
him to carry out his duties, the uncertainty has become most trying
for me.”
“I am not wholly ignorant of the matter, and I do not think I am
violating any trust when I say that you are not the only person who
has been surprised by the duration of his absence,” Lord Finkle-
McGraw said. “Unless I am very much mistaken, those who
conceived of his mission never imagined that it would last for so
long. It may ease your suffering in some small degree to know that
he is not thought to be in danger.”
Mrs. Hackworth smiled dutifully, and not for very long.
“Little Fiona seems to handle her father’s absence well.”
“Oh, but to Fiona, he has never been gone,” Mrs. Hackworth
said. “It is the book, you see, that ractive book. When John gave it
to her, just before he departed, he said that it was magic, and that he
would talk to her through it. I know it’s nonsense, of course, but she
really believes that whenever she opens that book, her father reads
her a story and even plays with her in an imaginary world, so that
she hasn’t really missed him at all. I haven’t the heart to tell her that
it’s nothing more than a computerized media programme.”
“I am inclined to believe that, in this case, keeping her in
ignorance is a very wise policy,” Finkle-McGraw said.
“It has served her well thus far. But as time goes on, she is
more and more flighty and less disposed to concentrate on her
schoolwork. She lives in a fantasy and is happy there. But when she
learns that the fantasy is just that, I fear it will not go well for her.”
“She is hardly the first young lady to display signs of a vivid
imagination,” the Equity Lord said. “Sooner or later they seem to
turn out all right.”
The three little explorers, and their two adult outriders, returned
to the great house shortly. Lord Finkle-McGraw’s desolate private
moor was as alienated from the tastes of little girls as single malt
whiskey, Gothic architecture, muted colors, and Bruckner
symphonies. Once they had reached it and found that it was not
equipped with pink unicorns, cotton candy vendors, teen idol bands,
or fluorescent green water slides, they lost interest and began to
gravitate toward the house-which in and of itself was far from
Disneyland, but in which a practiced and assertive user like
Elizabeth could find a few consolatory nuggets, such as a full-time
kitchen staff, trained in (among many other, completely useless
skills) the preparation of hot chocolate.
Having come as close to the subject of John Percival
Hackworth’s disappearance as they dared, and careened past it with
no damage except some hot faces and watery eyes, Lord Finkle-
McGraw and Mrs. Hackworth had withdrawn, by mutual consent, to
cooler subjects. The girls would come inside to drink some hot
chocolate, and then it would be time for the guests to repair to the
quarters assigned them for the day, where they could freshen up and
dress for the main event: dinner.
“I should be pleased to look after the other little girl-Nell–
until the dinner hour,” Mrs. Hackworth said. “I noticed that the
gentleman who brought her round this morning has not returned
from the hunt.”
The Equity Lord chuckled as he imagined General Moore
trying to help a little girl dress for dinner. He was graceful enough
to know his limits, and so he was spending the day shooting on the
remoter stretches of the estate. “Little Nell has a talent for looking
after herself and may not need or wish to accept your most generous
offer. But she might enjoy spending the interim with Fiona.”
“Forgive me, Your Grace, but I am startled that you would
consider leaving a child of her age unattended for most of the
afternoon.”
“She would not view it in that way, I assure you, for the same
reason that little Fiona does not think of her father as ever having
left your house.”
The expression that passed over Mrs. Hackworth’s face as she
heard this statement suggested less than perfect comprehension. But
before she could explain to her host the error of his ways, they were
interrupted by the sound of a shrill and bitter conflict making its
way down the hall toward them. The door swung open halfway, and
Colin Finkle-McGraw appeared. His face was still ruddy from the
wind on the moor, and it bore a forced grin that was not terribly
distant from a smirk; though his brow knit up periodically as
Elizabeth emitted an especially piercing shriek of anger. In one hand
he held a copy of the Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer. Behind him,
Mrs. Finkle-McGraw could be seen holding Elizabeth by the wrist
in a grip that recalled the blacksmith’s tongs holding a dangerously
hot ingot ready for smiting; and the radiant glow of the little girl’s
face perfected that analogy. She had bent down so that her face was
level with Elizabeth’s and was hissing something to her in a low and
reproaching tone.
“Sorry, Father,” the younger Finkle-McGraw said in a voice
slathered with not very convincing synthetic good humor. “Nap
time, obviously.” He nodded to the other. “Mrs. Hackworth.” Then
his eyes returned to his father’s face and followed the Equity Lord’s
gaze downward to the book. “She was rude to the servants, Father,
and so we have confiscated the book for the rest of the afternoon.
It’s the only punishment that seems to sink in-we employ it with
some frequency.”
“Then perhaps it is not sinking in as well as you suppose,”
Lord Finkle-McGraw said, looking sad and sounding bemused.
Colin Finkle-McGraw chose to interpret this remark as a
witticism targeted primarily at Elizabeth-but then, parents of small
children must perforce have an entirely different sense of irony than
unimpaired humankind.
“We can’t let her spend her life between the covers of your
magical book, Father, It is like a little interactive empire, with
Elizabeth the empress, issuing all sorts of perfectly bloodcurdling
decrees to her obedient subjects. It’s important to bring her back to
reality from time to time, so that she can get some perspective.”
“Perspective. Very well, I shall look forward to seeing you and
Elizabeth, with her new perspective, at dinner.”
“Good afternoon, Father. Mrs. Hackworth,” the younger man
said, and closed the door, a heavy masterpiece of the woodcarver’s
art and a fairly effective decibel absorbant.
Gwendolyn Hackworth now saw something in Lord Finkle-
McGraw’s face that made her want to leave the room. After
speeding through the obligatory pleasantries, she did. She collected
Fiona from the chimneycorner where she was cherishing the dregs
of her hot chocolate. Nell was there too, reading her copy of the
Primer, and Gwendolyn was startled to see that she had not touched
her drink at all.
“What is this?” she exclaimed in what she took to be an
appropriately sugary voice. “A little girl who doesn’t like hot
chocolate?”
Nell was deeply absorbed in her book, and for a moment
Gwendolyn thought that her words had gone unheard. But a few
beats later it became evident that the child was merely postponing
her response until she reached the end of a chapter. Then she raised
her eyes slowly from the page of the book. Nell was a reasonably
attractive girl in the way that almost all girls are before immoderate
tides of hormones start to make different parts of their faces grow
out of proportion to others; she had light brown eyes, glowing
orange in the light of the fire, with a kind of feral slant to them.
Gwendolyn found it difficult to break her gaze; she felt like a
captured butterfly staring up through a magnifying lens into the
calm, keen eye of the naturalist.
“Chocolate is fine,” Nell said. “The question is, do I need it.”
There was a rather long pause in the conversation as
Gwendolyn groped for something to say. Nell did not seem to be
awaiting a response; she had delivered her opinion and was done
with it.
“Well,” Gwendolyn finally said, “if you should decide that
there is anything you do need, please know that I would be happy to
assist you.”
“Your offer is most kind. I am in your debt, Mrs. Hackworth,”
Nell said. She said it perfectly, like a princess in a book.
“Very well. Good afternoon,” Gwendolyn said. She took
Fiona’s hand and led her upstairs. Fiona dawdled in a way that was
almost perfectly calculated to annoy, and responded to her mother’s
questions only with nods and shakes of the head, because, as
always, her mind was elsewhere. Once they had reached their
temporary quarters in the guest wing, Gwendolyn got Fiona settled
into bed for a nap, then sat down at an escritoire to work her way
through some pending correspondence. But now Mrs. Hackworth
found that her own mind was elsewhere, as she pondered these three
very strange girls-the three smartest little girls in Miss Matheson’s
Academy-each with her very strange relationship with her Primer.
Her gaze drifted away from the sheets of mediatronic paper
scattered about the escritoire, out the window, and across the moor,
where a gentle shower had begun to fall. She devoted the better part
of an hour to worrying about girls and Primers.
Then she remembered an assertion that her host had made that
afternoon, which she had not fully appreciated at the time: These
girls weren’t any stranger than any other girls, and to blame their
behavior on the Primers was to miss the point entirely.
Greatly reassured, she took out her silver pen and began to
write a letter to her missing husband, who had never seemed so far
away.
Miranda receives an unusual ractive message; a drive
through the streets of Shanghai; the Cathay Hotel;
a sophisticated soirée; Carl Hollywood introduces
her to two unusual characters.
It was a few minutes before midnight, and Miranda was about
to sign off from the evening shift and clear out of her body stage.
This was a Friday night. Nell had apparently decided not to pull an
all-nighter this time.
On school nights, Nell reliably went to bed between ten-thirty
and eleven, but Friday was her night to immerse herself in the
Primer the way she had as a small child, six or seven years ago,
when all of this had started. Right now, Nell was stuck in a part of
the story that must have been frustrating for her, namely, trying to
puzzle out the social rituals of a rather bizarre cult of faeries that
had thrown her into an underground labyrinth. She’d figure it out
eventually-she always did-but not tonight.
Miranda stayed onstage for an extra hour and a half, playing a
role in a samurai ractive fairly popular in Japan, in which she was a
platinum blond missionary’s daughter abducted from Nagasaki by
ronin. All she had to do was squeal a lot and eventually be rescued
by a good samurai. It was a pity she didn’t speak Nipponese and
(beyond that) wasn’t familiar with the theatrical style of that nation,
because supposedly they were doing some radical and interesting
things with karamaku-“empty screen” or “empty act.” Eight years
ago, she would have taken the onehour airship ride to Nippon and
learned the language. Four years ago, she at least would have been
disgusted with herself for playing this stupid role. But tonight she
spoke her lines on cue, squealed and wriggled at the right times, and
took her money, along with a hefty tip and the inevitable mash note
from the payer-a middle-management type in Osaka who wanted
to get to know her better. Of course, the same technology that made
it impossible for Miranda to find Nell, made it impossible for this
creep to find Miranda.
An urgent job offer flashed over her screen just as she was
putting her stuff together. She checked the ENQUIRY screen; the
job didn’t pay that much, but it was of very short duration. So she
accepted it. She wondered who was sending her urgent job offers;
six years ago it had happened frequently, but since she’d gone into
her habit of working the evening shift she had, in general, become
just another interchangeable Western bimbo with an
unpronounceable name.
It looked like some kind of weird bohemian art piece, some
ractors’workshop project from her distant past: a surreal landscape
of abstract colored geometric forms with faces occasionally rising
out of flat surfaces to speak lines. The faces were texture-mapped,
as if wearing elaborately painted makeup, or were sculpted to the
texture of orange peels, alligator hide, or durian fruit.
“We miss her,” said one of the faces, the voice a little familiar,
but disped into a weird ghostly echoing moan.
“Where is she?” said another face, rather familiar in its shape.
“Why has she abandoned us?” said a third face, and even
through the texture-mapping and the voice disping, Miranda
recognized Carl Hollywood.
“If only she would come to our party!” cried another one,
whom Miranda recognized as a member of the Parnasse Company
named Christine something-or-other.
The prompter gave her a line: Sorry, guys, but I’m working late
again tonight.
“Okay, okay,” Miranda said, “I’m going to ad lib. Where are
you?”
“The cast party, dummy!” said Carl. “There’s a cab waiting for
you outside-we sprung for a half-laner!”
Miranda pulled out of the ractive, finished tidying up the body
stage, and left it open so that some other member of the company
could come in a few hours later and work the gold shift. She ran
down the helical gauntlet of plaster cherubs, muses, and Trojans,
across the lobby where a couple of bleary-eyed apprentice ractors
were cleaning up the debris from this evening’s live performance,
and out the front doors. There in the street, illuminated by the
queasy pink-and-purple neon of the marquee, was a half-lane cab
with its lights on.
She was dully surprised when the driver headed toward the
Bund, not toward the midrise districts in Pudong, where tribeless,
lower-income Westerners typically had their flats. Cast parties
usually happened in someone’s living room.
Then she reminded herself that the Parnasse was a successful
theatre company nowadays, that they had a whole building
somewhere full of developers coming up with new ractives, that the
current production of Macbeth had cost a lot of money. Carl had
flown to Tokyo and Shenzhen and San Francisco seeking investors
and had not come back emptyhanded. The first month of
performances was sold out.
But tonight, there had been a lot of empty seats in the house,
because most of the opening-night crowd was non-Chinese, and
non-Chinese were nervous about going out on the streets because of
rumors about the Fists of Righteous Harmony.
Miranda was nervous too, though she wouldn’t admit it. The
taxi turned a corner, and its headlights swept across a knot of young
Chinese men gathered in a doorway, and as one of them lifted a
cigarette to his mouth, she caught a glimpse of a scarlet ribbon
knotted around his wrist. Her chest clenched up, her heart fluttered,
and she had to swallow hard a few times. But the young men could
not see into the silvered windows of the cab. They did not converge
on her, brandishing weapons and crying “Sha! Sha!”
The Cathay Hotel stood in the middle of the Bund, at the
intersection with Nanjing Road, the Rodeo Drive of the Far East. As
far as Miranda could see-all the way to Nanjing, maybe-it was
lined with Western and Nipponese boutiques and department stores,
and the airspace above the street was besprent with almond-size
aerostats, each with its own cine camera and pattern-recognition
ware to watch for suspicious-looking congregations of young men
who might be Fist cells.
Like all of the other big Western buildings on the waterfront,
the Cathay was outlined in white light, which was probably a good
thing because otherwise it wouldn’t have looked like much. The
exterior was bleak and dingy in the daytime.
She played a little game of chicken with the doorman. She
strode toward the entrance, confident that he’d haul the door open
for her, but he stood there with his hands clasped behind his back,
staring back at her sullenly. Finally he gave way and hauled the
door open, though she had to break her stride so as not to smash into
it.
George Bernard Shaw had stayed here; Noel Coward had
written a play here. The lobby was high and narrow, Beaux Arts
marble, glorious ironwork chandeliers, white light from the Bund
buildings filtering in through stained-glass arches. An ancient jazz
band was playing in the bar, slap bass over trashcan drums. Miranda
stood on tiptoe in the entrance, looking for the party, and saw
nothing except middle-aged Caucasian airship tourists slow-dancing
and the usual lineup of sharp young Chinese men along the bar,
hoping she’d come in.
Eventually she found her way up to the eighth floor, where all
the fancy restaurants were. The big banquet room had been rented
out by some kind of garishly wealthy organization and was full of
men wearing intimidatingly sophisticated suits, women wearing
even more intimidating dresses, and the odd sprinkling of Victorians
wearing far more conservative-but still dapper and expensive-
stuff. The music was fairly restrained, just one tuxedoed Chinese
man playing jazz on a grand piano, but on a stage at one end of the
room, a larger band was setting up its equipment.
She was just cringing away, wondering in what back room the
scruffy actors’ bash might be found, when she heard someone
calling her name from inside.
Carl Hollywood was approaching, striding across the middle of
the banquet hall like he owned the place, resplendent in hand-tooled
cowboy boots made of many supple and exotic bird and reptile
skins, wearing a vast raiment, sort of a cross between a cape and a
Western duster, that nearly brushed the floor, and that made him
look seven feet tall rather than a mere six and a half. His long blond
hair was brushed back away from his forehead, his King Tut beard
was sharp and straight as a hoe. He was gorgeous and he knew it,
and his blue eyes were piercing right through Miranda, holding her
there in front of the open elevator doors, through which she’d
almost escaped.
He gave her a big hug and whirled her around. She shrank
against him, shielded from the crowd in the banquet hall by his
enveloping cloak. “I look like shit,” she said. “Why didn’t you tell
me it was going to be this kind of a party?”
“Why didn’t you know?” Carl said. As a director, one of his
talents was to ask the most difficult imaginable questions.
“I would have worn something different. I look like-”
“You look like a young bohemian artiste,” Carl said, stepping
back to examine her typically form-fitting black bodysuit, “who
doesn’t give a shit about pretentious clothes, who makes everyone
else in the room feel overdressed, and who can get away with it
because she’s got that special something.”
“You silver-tongued dog,” she said, “you know that’s bullshit.”
“A few years ago you would have sailed into that room with
that lovely chin of yours held up like a battering ram, and everyone
would have stepped back to look at you. Why not now?”
“I don’t know,” Miranda said. “I think with this Nell thing, I’ve
incurred all the disadvantages of parenthood without actually
getting to have a child.”
Carl relaxed and softened, and Miranda knew she’d spoken the
words he was looking for. “C’mere,” he said. “I want you to meet
someone.”
“If you’re going to try to fix me up with some wealthy son of a
bitch-”
“Wouldn’t dream of it.”
“I’m not going to become a housewife who acts in her spare
time.”
“I realize that,” Carl said. “Now calm yourself for a minute.”
Miranda was forcibly ignoring the fact that they were walking
through the middle of the room now. Carl Hollywood was drawing
all of the attention, which suited her. She exchanged smiles with a
couple of ractors who had appeared in the interactive invitation that
had summoned her here; both of them were having what looked like
very enjoyable conversations with fine-looking people, probably
investors.
“Who are you taking me to meet?”
“A guy named Beck. An old acquaintance of mine.”
“But not a friend?”
Carl adopted an uncomfortable grin and shrugged. “We’ve
been friends sometimes. We’ve also been collaborators. Business
partners. This is how life works, Miranda: After a while, you build
up a network of people. You pass them bits of data they might be
interested in and vice versa. To me, he’s one of those guys.”
“I can’t help wondering why you want me to meet him.”
“I believe,” Carl said very quietly, but using some actor’s trick
so that she could hear every word, “that this gentleman can help you
find Nell. And that you can help him find something he wants.”
And he stepped aside with a swirl of cloak, pulling out a chair
for her. They were in the corner of the banquet hall. Sitting on the
opposite side of the table, his back to a large marble-silled window,
the illuminated Bund and the mediatronic cacophony of Pudong
spilling bloody light across the glossy shoulder-pads of his suit, was
a young African man in dreadlocks, wearing dark glasses with
minuscule circular lenses held in some kind of ostentatiously
complex metallic space grid. Sitting next to him, but hardly noticed
by Miranda, was a Nipponese businessman wearing a dark formal
kimono and smoking what smelled like an oldfashioned, fully
carcinogenic cigar.
“Miranda, this is Mr. Beck and Mr. Oda, both privateers.
Gentlemen, Ms. Miranda Redpath.”
Both men nodded in a pathetic vestige of a bow, but neither
made a move to shake hands, which was just as well-nowadays
some amazing things could be transferred through skin-to-skin
contact. Miranda didn’t even nod back to them; she just sat down
and let Carl scoot her in. She didn’t like people who described
themselves as privateers. It was just a pretentious word for a thete-
someone who didn’t have a tribe.
Either that, or they really did belong to tribes-from the looks
of them, probably some weird synthetic phyle she’d never heard
of-and, for some reason, were pretending not to.
Carl said, “I have explained to the gentlemen, without getting
into any details, that you would like to do the impossible. Can I get
you something to drink, Miranda?”
After Carl Hollywood left, there was a rather long silence
during which Mr. Beck presumably stared at Miranda, though she
could not tell because of the dark glasses. Mr. Oda’s primary
function appeared to be that of nervous spectator, as if he had
wagered half of his net worth on whether Miranda or Mr. Beck
would speak first.
A stratagem occurred to Mr. Oda. He pointed in the direction
of the bandstand and nodded significantly. “You like this band?”
Miranda looked over at the band, half a dozen men and women
in an assortment of races. Mr. Oda’s question was difficult to
answer because they had not yet made any music. She looked back
at Mr. Oda, who pointed significantly at himself.
“Oh. You’re the backer?” Miranda said.
Mr. Oda withdrew a small glittering object from his pocket and
slid it across the table toward Miranda. It was a cloisonné pin
shaped like a dragonfly. She had noticed similar ones adorning
several partygoers. She picked it up cautiously. Mr. Oda tapped
himself on the lapel and nodded, encouraging her to put it on.
She left it sitting there on the table for the time being.
“I’m not seeing anything,” Mr. Beck finally said, apparently
for Mr. Oda’s benefit. “To a first approximation, she is clean.”
Miranda realized that Mr. Beck had been checking her out using
some kind of display in his phenomenoscopic glasses.
Miranda was still trying to work out some kind of unpleasant
response when Mr. Oda leaned forward into his own cloud of cigar
smoke. “It is our understanding,” he said, “that you wish to make a
connection. Your wish is very strong.”
Privateers. The word also implied that these gentlemen, at least
in their own minds, had some kind of an angle, some way of making
money off of their own lack of tribal affiliation.
“I’ve been told that such things are impossible.”
“It’s more correct to speak in probabilistic terms,” said Mr.
Beck. His accent was more Oxford than anything else, with a
Jamaican lilt, and a crispness that owed something to India.
“Astronomically improbable, then,” Miranda said.
“There you go,” said Mr. Beck.
Now, somehow, the ball had found its way into Miranda’s
court. “If you guys think you’ve found a way to beat probability,
why don’t you go into the Vegas ractives and make a fortune?”
Misters Beck and Oda were actually more amused by that
crack than she had expected them to be. They were capable of irony.
That was one good sign in the almost overwhelming barrage of
negative signals she’d been getting from them so far.
The band started up, playing dance music with a good beat.
The lights came down, and the party began to glitter as light flashed
from the dragonfly pins.
“It wouldn’t work,” Mr. Beck said, “because Vegas is a game
of pure numbers with no human meaning to it. The mind doesn’t
interface to pure numbers.”
“But probability is probability,” Miranda said.
“What if you have a dream one night that your sister is in a
crash, and you contact her the next day and learn that she broke up
with her boyfriend?”
“It could be a coincidence.”
“Yes. But not a very probable one. You see, maybe it’s
possible to beat probability, when the heart as well as the mind is
involved.”
Miranda supposed that neither Mr. Beck nor Mr. Oda
understood the essential cruelty of what they were saying. It was
much better not to have any hope at all. “Are you guys involved in
some kind of religious thing?” she said.
Misters Beck and Oda looked at each other significantly. Mr.
Oda went into some peculiar routine of tooth-sucking and throatclearing
that would probably convey a torrent of information to
another Nipponese person but meant nothing to Miranda, other than
giving her a general hint that the situation was rather complicated.
Mr. Beck produced an antique silver snufibox, or a replica of one,
took out a pinch of nanosite dust, and hoovered it up into one of his
great circular nostrils, then nervously scratched the underside of his
nose. He slid his glasses way down, exposing his big brown eyes,
and stared distractedly over Miranda’s shoulder into the thick of the
party, watching the band and the dancers’ reaction to it. He was
wearing a dragonfly pin, which had begun to glow and to flash
gorgeous colored lights, like a fleet of police cars and firetrucks
gathered round a burning house.
The band segued into a peculiar, tuneless, beatless miasma of
noise, spawning lazy convection currents in the crowd.
“How do you guys know Carl?” Miranda said, hoping to break
the ice a bit.
Mr. Oda shook his head apologetically. “I have not had the
pleasure of making his acquaintance until recently.”
“Used to do thyuh-tuh with him in London.”
“You’re a ractor?”
Mr. Beck snorted ironically. A variegated silk hankie
flourished in his hand, and he blew his nose quickly and cleanly like
a practiced snufftaker. “I am a technical boy,” he said.
“You program ractives?”
“That is a subset of my activities.”
“You do lights and sets? Or digital stuff? Or nanotech?”
“Invidious distinctions do not interest me. I am interested in
one thing,” said Mr. Beck, holding up his index finger, topped with
a very large but perfectly manicured claw of a fingernail, “and that
is use of tech to convey meaning.”
“That covers a lot of areas nowadays.”
“Yes, but it shouldn’t. That is to say that the distinctions
between those areas are bogus.”
“What’s wrong with just programming ractives?”
“Nothing at all,” said Mr. Beck, “just as nothing is wrong with
traditional live theatre, or for that matter, sitting round a campfire
telling stories, like I used to enjoy on the beach when I was a lad.
But as long as there are new ways to be found, it is my job, as a
technical boy, to find them. Your art, lady, is racting. Searching for
the new tech is mine.”
The noise coming from the band had begun to pulse irregularly.
As they talked, the pulses gathered themselves into beats and
became steadier. Miranda turned around to look at the people on the
dance floor. They were all standing around with faraway looks on
their faces, concentrating on something. Their dragonfly pins were
flashing wildly now, joining in a coherent pulse of pure white on
each beat. Miranda realized that the pins were somehow patched
into the wearers’ nervous systems and that they were talking to each
other, creating the music collectively. A guitarist began to weave an
improvised melodic line through the gradually coalescing pattern of
sound, and the sound condensed around it as all of the dancers heard
the tune. They had a feedback loop going. A young woman began to
chant out some kind of tuneless rap that sounded improvised. As she
went on, she broke into melody. The music was still weird and
formless, but it was beginning to approach something you might
hear on a professional recording.
Miranda turned back to face Mr. Beck. “You think you’ve
invented a new way to convey meaning with technology-”
“Medium.”
“A new medium, and that it can help me get what I want.
Because when meaning is involved, the laws of probability can be
broken.”
“There are two misconceptions in your statement. One: I did
not invent the medium. Others did, perhaps for different purposes,
and I have stumbled across it, or actually just heard intimations.
“As far as the laws of probability, my lady, these cannot be
broken, any more than any other mathematical principle. But laws
of physics and mathematics are like a coordinate system that runs in
only one dimension. Perhaps there is another dimension
perpendicular to it, invisible to those laws of physics, describing the
same things with different rules, and those rules are written in our
hearts, in a deep place where we cannot go and read them except in
our dreams.”
Miranda looked to Mr. Oda, hoping he’d wink or something,
but he was staring into the dance floor with a terribly serious
expression, as though enfolded in deep thoughts himself, nodding
slightly. Miranda drew a deep breath and sighed.
When she looked up at Mr. Beck again, he was watching her,
noting her curiosity about Mr. Oda. He turned one hand palm up
and rubbed the ball of his thumb over his fingertips.
So Beck was the hacker and Oda was the backer. The oldest
and most troublesome relationship in the technological world.
“We require a third participant,” Mr. Beck said, dovetailing
into her thoughts.
“To do what?” Miranda said, evasive and defensive at the same
time.
“All technomedia ventures have the same structure,” said Mr.
Oda, bestirring himself for the first time in a while. By now a nice
synergy had developed between band and crowd, and a lot of
dancing was going on-some intimidatingly sophisticated stuff, and
also some primal moshing. “Three-legged tripod.” Oda held up a
fist and began to extend fingers as he enumerated the same. Miranda
noted that his fingers were gnarly and bent, as if they’d all been
broken frequently. Mr. Oda was, perhaps, a veteran practitioner of
certain martial arts now disdained by most Nipponese because of
their lower-class provenance. “Leg number one: new technological
idea. Mr. Beck. Leg number two: adequate financial backing. Mr.
Oda. Leg number three: the artist.”
Misters Beck and Oda looked significantly at Miranda. She
threw back her head and managed a nice solid laugh, hitting that
sweet spot down in her diaphragm. It felt good. She shook her head,
letting her hair swing back and forth across her shoulders. Then she
leaned forward across the table, shouting to be heard above the
band. “You guys must be desperate. I’m old hat, guys. There’s half
a dozen ractors in this room with better prospects than me. Didn’t
Carl fill you in? I’ve been holed up in a body stage for six years
doing kid stuff. I’m not a star.”
“Star means a master of conventional ractives, which are
precisely the technology we are trying to move beyond,” said Mr.
Beck, a bit scornful that she wasn’t getting it.
Mr. Oda pointed to the band. “None of these people were
professional musicians-some not even amateurs. Musician skills
are not relevant for this-these people were new kinds of artists
born too early.”
“Almost too early,” Mr. Beck said.
“Oh, my god,” Miranda said, starting to get it. For the first
time, she believed that what Beck and Oda were talking about-
whatever the hell it was-was a real possibility. Which meant that
she was ninety percent convinced-though only Beck and Oda
understood that.
It was too loud to talk. A mosher backed into Miranda’s chair
and nearly fell over her. Beck stood up, came round the table, and
extended one hand, asking her to dance. Miranda looked into the
Dionysian revel filling the floor and understood that the only way to
be safe was to join it. She plucked her dragonfly pin from the
tabletop and followed Beck into the midst of the dance. As she
pinned it on, it began to flash, and she thought she heard a new
strain woven into the song.
From the Primer, Princess Nell enters into the
lands of King Coyote.
All that hot afternoon Nell toiled up the numberless
switchbacks, occasionally reaching into the bag that dangled
at her waist, drawing out a handful of Purple’s ashes and
scattering them behind her like seeds. Whenever she stopped
to rest, she could look out across the burnt desert she had
just crossed: a tawny plain scabbed with reddish-brown
volcanic rock, patches of aromatic greenish-gray shrubs
clinging like bread mold to any parts that were sheltered from
the eternal wind. She had hoped that when she climbed the
face of this mountain, she would rise up above the dust, but it
had followed her, coating her lips and her toes. When she
drew a breath through her nose, it only stung her parched
nostrils, and so she had given up trying to smell anything. But
late in the afternoon a cool moist draft spilled down the
mountain and over her face. She drew in a breath of it, hoping
to catch some of the cold air before it trickled down into the
desert. It smelled of evergreens.
As she climbed the switchbacks, she forded those
delightful currents of air over and over, so that as she
rounded each hairpin turn in the trail, she had an incentive to
climb toward the next one. The little shrubs that clutched
rocks and cowered in cracks became bigger and more
numerous, and flowers began to appear, first tiny little white
ones like handfuls of salt strewn over the rocks, then larger
blossoms, blue and magenta and brilliant orange, brimming
with scented nectar that attracted bees all fuzzy and yellow
with stolen pollen. Gnarled oaks and short dense evergreens
cast tiny shadows across the path. The skyline grew closer,
and the turns in the path became wider as the mountain
became less steep. Nell rejoiced when the switchbacks ended
and the trail took off straight across an undulating
mountaintop meadow thick with purple-flowered heather and
marked with occasional stands of tall firs. For a moment she
was afraid that this meadow was nothing more than a ledge,
and that she had more mountains to ascend; but then the
path turned downhill, and treading heavily as new muscles
caught her descending weight, she half-ran across a vast
boulder, pocked with tiny pools of clear water and occasional
lozenges of wet snow, until she reached a point where it fell
away from under her and she skidded to a precarious stop,
looking down like a peregrine falcon over an immense country
of blue lakes and green mountains, shrouded in a whirling
storm of silver mist.
Nell turned the page and saw it, just as the book said. This was
a twopage illustration-a color painting, she reckoned. Any one part
of it looked just as real as a cine feed. But the geometry of the thing
was funny, borrowing some suprarealistic tricks from classical
Chinese landscape painting; the mountains were too steep, and they
marched away forever into the distance, and if Nell stared, she could
see tall castles clinging to their impossibly precipitous slopes,
colorful banners waving from their flagpoles bearing heraldic
devices that were dynamic: The gryphons crouched, the lions
roared, and she could see all of these details, even though the castles
should have been miles away; whenever she looked at something it
got bigger and turned into a different picture, and when her attention
wavered-when she blinked and shook her head-it snapped back
to the first view again.
She spent a long time doing that, because there were dozens of
castles at the very least, and she got the feeling that if she kept
looking and counting she might look forever. But it wasn’t all
castles: there were mountains, cities, rivers, lakes, birds and beasts,
caravans, and travelers of all kinds.
She spent a while staring at a group of travelers who had drawn
their wagons into a roadside meadow and set up a camp, clapping
hands round a bonfire while one of them played a reel on some
small bellowspowered bagpipes, barely audible these many miles
away. Then she realized that the book hadn’t said anything for a
long time. “What happened then?” she said.
The Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer said nothing.
“Nell looked for a safe way down,” Nell essayed.
Her vantage point began to move. A patch of snow swung into
view. “No, wait!” she said, “Nell stuffed some clean snow into her
water bottles.”
In the painting, Nell could see her bare pink hands scooping up
snow and packing it bit by bit into the neck of her bottle. When it
was full, she put the cork back in (Nell didn’t have to specifr that)
and began moving around on the rock, looking for a place that
wasn’t so steep. Nell didn’t have to explain that in detail either; in
the ractive, she searched the rock in a fairly rational way and in a
few minutes found a stairway chiseled into the rock, winding down
the mountain endlessly until it pierced a cloud layer far below.
Princess Nell began descending the steps, one at a time.
After a while, Nell tried an experiment: “Princess Nell
descended the stairs for many hours.”
This triggered a series of dissolves like she’d seen on old
passives: Her current view dissolved into a closeup of her feet,
trudging down a couple of steps, which dissolved into a view from
considerably farther down the mountain, followed by a closeup of
Princess Nell unscrewing her water bottle and drinking melted
snow; another view from farther down; Nell sitting down for a rest;
a soaring eagle; the approaching cloud layer; big trees; descending
through the mist; and finally, Nell tramping wearily down the last
ten steps, which left her in a clearing in a dark coniferous forest,
carpeted with rust-colored pine needles. It was twilight, and the
wolves were beginning to howl. Nell made the usual arrangements
for the night, lit a fire, and curled up to sleep.
Having reached a good stopping-place, Nell started to close the
book. She’d have to continue this later.
She had just entered the land of the oldest and most powerful
of all the Faery Kings. The many castles on the mountains belonged
to all of his Dukes and Earls, and she suspected she would have to
visit them all before she had gotten what she’d come for. It was not
a quick adventure for an early Saturday morning. But just as she
was clasping the book together, new words and an illustration
appeared on the page she’d been reading, and something about the
illustration made her open the book back up. It showed a crow
perched on a tree branch above Princess Nell, holding a necklace in
its beak. It was eleven jeweled keys strung on a golden chain.
Princess Nell had been wearing it around her neck; apparently the
next event in the story was that this bird stole it while she was
sleeping. Beneath the picture was a poem, spoken by the crow from
his perch:
Castles, gardens, gold, and jewels
Contentment signify, for fools
Like Princess Nell; but those
Who cultivate their wit
Like King Coyote and his crows
Compile their power bit by bit
And hide it places no one knows.
Nell closed up the book This was too upsetting to think about
just now. She had been collecting those keys for most of her life.
The first she’d taken from King Magpie just after she and Harv had
arrived at Dovetail. She had picked up the other ten one at a time
during the years since then. She had done this by traveling to the
lands of the Faery Kings and Queens who owned those keys and
using the tricks she had learned from her Night Friends. Each key
had come to her in a different way.
One of the hardest keys to get had belonged to an old Faery
Queen who had seen through every trick that Nell could think up
and fought off every assault. Finally, in desperation, Princess Nell
had thrown herself on the mercy of that Queen and told her the sad
story of Harv locked up in the Dark Castle. The Queen had fed Nell
a nice bowl of chicken soup and handed over the key with a smile.
Not much later, Duck had encountered a nice young mallard on
the road and flown away with him to start a family. Purple and
Princess Nell then traveled together for several years, and on many a
dark night, sitting around the campfire under a full moon, Purple
had taught Nell secret things from her magic books and from the
ancient lore she kept in her head.
Recently they had traveled for a thousand miles on camelback
across a great desert full of djinns, demons, sultans, and caliphs and
finally reached the great onion-domed palace of the local Faery
King-himself a djinn of great power-who ruled over all the
desert lands. Princess Nell had devised a complicated plan to trick
their way into the djinn’s treasury. To carry it out, she and Purple
had to live in the city around the palace for a couple of years and
make many treks into the desert in search of magic lanterns, rings,
secret caverns, and the like.
Finally, Princess Nell and Purple had penetrated to the djinn
king’s treasury and found the eleventh key. But they had been
surprised by the djinn himself, who attacked them in the guise of a
fire-breathing serpent. Purple had transformed herself into a giant
eagle with metallic wings and talons that could not be burned-
much to the surprise of Princess Nell, who had never imagined that
her companion possessed such power.
The battle between Purple and the djinn raged for a day and a
night, both combatants transforming themselves into any number of
fantastical creatures and hurling all manner of devastating spells at
each other, until finally the mighty castle lay in ruins, the desert was
scorched and blasted for many miles around, and Purple and the
djinn king both lay dead on the floor of what had been the treasury.
Nell had picked up the eleventh key from the floor, put it on
her chain, cremated Purple’s body, and scattered her ashes across
the desert as she walked, for many days, toward the mountains and
the green land, where the eleven keys had now been stolen away
from her.
Nell’s experiences at schooL a confrontation with Miss
Stricken; the rigors of Supplementary Curriculum;
Miss Matheson’s philosophy of education;
three friends go separate ways.
AGLAIA BRILLIANCE
EUPHROSYNE JOY
THALIA BLOOM
The names of the three graces, and diverse artists’ conceptions
of the ladies themselves, were chiseled, painted, and sculpted freely
about the interior and exterior of Miss Matheson’s Academy. Nell
could hardly look anywhere without seeing one of them prancing
across a field of wildflowers, distributing laurel wreaths to the
worthy, jointly thrusting a torch toward heaven, or shedding
lambent effulgence upon the receptive pupils.
Nell’s favorite part of the curriculum was Thalia, which was
scheduled for an hour in the morning and an hour in the afternoon.
When Miss Matheson hauled once on the old bellrope dangling
down from the belfry, belting a single dolorous clang across the
campus, Nell and the other girls in her section would arise, curtsy to
their teacher, walk in single file down the corridor to the
courtyard-then break into a chaotic run until they reached the Hall
of Physical Culture, where they would strip out of their heavy,
scratchy complicated uniforms and climb into lighter, looser,
scratchy complicated uniforms with more freedom of movement.
The Bloom curriculum was taught by Miss Ramanujan or one
of her assistants. Usually they did something vigorous in the
morning, like field hockey, and something graceful in the afternoon,
like ballroom dance, or peculiar, giggle-inducing exercises in how
to walk, stand, and sit like a Lady.
Brilliance was Miss Matheson’s department, though she mostly
left it to her assistants, occasionally wheeling in and out of various
classrooms in an old wood-and-wicker wheelchair. During the
Aglaia period, the girls would get together in groups of half a dozen
or so to answer questions or solve problems put to them by the
teachers: For example, they counted how many species of plants and
animals could be found in one square foot of the forest behind the
school. They put on a scene from a play in Greek. They used a
ractive simulation to model the domestic economy of a Lakota band
before and after the introduction of horses. They designed simple
machines with a nanopresence rig and tried to compile them in the
M.C. and make them work They wove brocades and made porcelain
as Chinese ladies used to do. And there was an ocean of history to
be learned: first biblical, Greek, and Roman, and then the history of
many other peoples around the world that essentially served as
backdrop for History of the English-Speaking Peoples.
The latter subject was, curiously, not part of the Brilliance
curriculum; it was left firmly in the hands of Miss Stricken, who
was mistress of Joy.
In addition to two one-hour periods each day, Miss Stricken
had the attention of the entire assembled student body once in the
morning, once at noon, and once in the evening. During these times
her basic function was to call the students to order; publicly upbraid
those sheep who had prominently strayed since the last such
assembly; disgorge any random meditations that had been
occupying her mind of late; and finally, in reverential tones,
introduce Father Cox, the local vicar, who would lead the students
in prayer. Miss Stricken also had the students all to herself for two
hours on Sunday morning and could optionally command their
attention for up to eight hours on Saturdays if she came round to the
opinion that they wanted supplementary guidance.
The first time Nell sat down in one of Miss Stricken’s
classrooms, she found that her desk had perversely been left directly
behind another girl’s, so that she was unable to see anything except
for the bow in that girl’s hair. She got up, tried to skooch the desk,
and found that it was fixed to the floor. All the desks, in fact, were
arranged in a perfectly regular grid, facing in the same direction-
which is to say, toward Miss Stricken or one of her two assistants,
Miss Bowlware and Mrs. Disher.
Miss Bowlware taught them History of the English-Speaking
Peoples, starting with the Romans at Londinium and careening
through the Norman Conquest, Magna Carta, Wars of the Roses,
Renaissance, and Civil War; but she didn’t really hit her stride until
she got to the Georgian period, at which point she worked herself up
into a froth explaining the shortcomings of that syphilitic monarch,
which had inspired the rightthinking Americans to break away in
disgust. They studied the most ghastly parts of Dickens, which Miss
Bowlware carefully explained was called Victorian literature
because it was written during the reign of Victoria I, but was
actually about pre-Victorian times, and that the mores of the
original Victorians-the ones who built the old British Empire-
were actually a reaction against the sort of bad behavior engaged in
by their parents and grandparents and so convincingly detailed by
Dickens, their most popular novelist.
The girls actually got to sit at their desks and play a few
ractives showing what it was like to live during this time: generally
not very nice, even if you selected the option that turned off all the
diseases. At this point, Mrs. Disher stepped in to say, if you thought
that was scary, look at how poor people lived in the late twentieth
century. Indeed, after ractives told them about the life of an innercity
Washington, D.C., child during the 1990s, most students had to
agree they’d take a workhouse in pre-Victorian England over that
any day.
All of the foregoing set the stage for a three-pronged, parallel
examination of the British Empire; pre-Vietnam America; and the
modern and ongoing history of New Atlantis. In general, Mrs.
Disher handled the more modern stuff and anything pertaining to
America.
Miss Stricken handled the big payoff at the end of each period
and at the end of each unit. She stormed in to explain what
conclusion they were being led to and to make sure that all of them
got it. She also had a way of lunging predatorily into the classroom
and rapping the knuckles of any girl who had been whispering,
making faces at the teachers, passing notes, doodling,
woolgathering, fidgeting, scratching, nose-picking, sighing, or
slumping.
Clearly, she was sitting in her closetlike office next door
watching them with cine monitors. Once, Nell was sitting in Joy
diligently absorbing a lecture about the Lend-Lease Program. When
she heard the squeaky door from Miss Stricken’s office swing open
behind her, like all the other girls she suppressed the panicky urge to
look around. She heard Miss Stricken’s heels popping up her aisle,
heard the whir of the ruler, and then suddenly felt her knuckles
explode.
“Hairdressing is a private not a public activity, Nell,” Miss
Stricken said. “The other girls know this; now you do too.”
Nell’s face burned, and she wrapped her good hand around her
damaged one like a bandage. She did not understand anything until
one of the other girls caught her eye and made a corkscrewing
motion with her index finger up near one temple: Apparently Nell
had been twisting her hair around her finger, which she often did
when she was reading the Primer or thinking hard about any one
thing.
The ruler was such a pissant form of discipline, compared to a
real beating, that she could not take it seriously at first and actually
found it funny the first few times. As the months went by, though, it
seemed to get more painful. Either Nell was becoming soft, or-
more likely-the full dimensions of the punishment were beginning
to sink in. She had been such an outsider at first that nothing
mattered. But as she began to excel in the other classes and to gain
the respect of teachers and students alike, she found herself with
pride to lose. Part of her wanted to rebel, to throw everything away
so that it could not be used against her. But she enjoyed the other
classes so much that she couldn’t bear to think further of the
possibility.
One day Miss Stricken decided to concentrate all her attentions
on Nell. There was nothing unusual about that-it was standard to
randomly single out particular scholars for intensive enforcement.
With twenty minutes left in the hour, Miss Stricken had already
gotten Nell on the right hand for hair-twisting and on the left for
nail-biting, when, to her horror, Nell realized that she was
scratching her nose and that Miss Stricken was standing in the aisle
glaring at her like a falcon. Both of Nell’s hands shot into her lap,
beneath the desk.
Miss Stricken walked up to her deliberately, pop pop pop.
“Your right hand, Nell,” she said, “just about here.” And she
indicated with the end of the ruler an altitude that would be a
convenient place for the assault- rather high above the desk, so
that everyone in the room could see it.
Nell hesitated for a moment, then held her hand up.
“A bit higher, Nell,” Miss Stricken said.
Nell moved her hand a bit higher.
“Another inch should do it, I think,” Miss Stricken said,
appraising the hand as if it were carved in marble and recently
excavated from a Greek temple.
Nell could not bring herself to raise the hand any higher.
“Raise it one more inch, Nell,” Miss Stricken said, “so that the
other girls can observe and learn along with you.”
Nell raised her hand just a bit.
“That was rather less than an inch, I should think,” Miss
Stricken said.
Other girls in the class began to titter-their faces were all
turned back toward Nell, and she could see their exultation, and
somehow Miss Stricken and the ruler became irrelevant compared
to the other girls. Nell raised her hand a whole inch, saw the windup
out of the corner of her eye, heard the whir. At the last moment, on
an impulse, she flipped her hand over, caught the ruler on her palm,
grabbed it, and twisted in a way that Dojo had taught her, bending it
against the grain of Miss Stricken’s fingers so that she was forced to
let go. Now Nell had the ruler, and Miss Stricken was disarmed.
Her opponent was a bulging sort of woman, taller than average,
rather topheavy on those heels, the sort of teacher whose very
fleshiness becomes the object of morbid awe among her gamine
pupils, whose personal toilet practices-the penchant for dandruff,
the habitually worn-out lipstick, the little wad of congealed saliva at
the corner of the mouth-loom larger in her students’ minds than
the Great Pyramids or the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Like all
other women, Miss Stricken benefited from a lack of external
genitalia that would make it more difficult for Nell to incapacitate
her, but nevertheless, Nell could think of half a dozen ways to leave
her a bloody knot on the floor and not waste more than a quarter of
a minute in the process. During her time with Constable Moore,
noting her benefactor’s interest in war and weapons, she had taken
up a renewed interest in martial arts, had paged back in the Primer
to the Dinosaur’s Tale and been pleased but hardly surprised to
discover that Dojo was still holding lessons there, picking up just
where he and Belle the Monkey had left off.
Thinking of her friend Dinosaur and her sensei, Dojo the
Mouse, she suddenly felt shame far deeper than anything Miss
Stricken or her sniggering classmates could inflict. Miss Stricken
was a stupid hag, and her classmates were snot-nosed clowns, but
Dojo was her friend and her teacher, he had always respected her
and given her his full attention, and he had carefully taught her the
ways of humility and self-discipline. Now she had perverted his
teachings by using her skill to take Miss Stricken’s ruler. She could
not have been more ashamed.
She handed the ruler back, raised her hand high in the air, and
heard but did not feel the impacts of the ruler, some ten in all. “I
shall expect you in my office after evening prayers, Nell,” Miss
Stricken said when she was finished.
“Yes, Miss Stricken,” Nell said.
“What are you girls looking at?” blurted Mrs. Disher, who was
running the class today. “Turn around and pay attention!” And with
that it was all over. Nell sat in her desk for the rest of the hour as if
carved from a solid block of gypsum.
Her interview with Miss Stricken at the end of the day was
short and businesslike, no violence or even histrionics. Nell was
informed that her performance in the Joy phase of the curriculum
was so deficient that it placed her in danger of failing and being
expelled from the school altogether, and that her only hope was to
come in each Saturday for eight hours of supplementary study.
Nell wished more than anything that she could refuse. Saturday
was the only day of the week when she did not have to attend school
at all. She always spent the day reading the Primer, exploring the
fields and forests around Dovetail, or visiting Harv down in the
Leased Territories.
She felt that, through her own mistakes, she had ruined her life
at Miss Matheson’s Academy. Until recently, Miss Stricken’s
classes had been nothing more than a routine annoyance-an ordeal
that she had to sit through in order to experience the fun parts of the
curriculum. She could look back on a time only a couple of months
ago when she would come home with her mind aglow from all the
things she had learned in Brilliance, and when the Joy part was just
an indistinct smudge around the edge. But in recent weeks, Miss
Stricken had, for some reason, loomed larger and larger in her view
of the place. And somehow, Miss Stricken had read Nell’s mind and
had chosen just the right moment to step up her campaign of
harassment. She had timed today’s events perfectly. She had
brought Nell’s most deeply hidden feelings out into the open, like a
master butcher exposing the innards with one or two deft strokes of
the knife. And now everything was ruined. Now Miss Matheson’s
Academy had vanished and become Miss Stricken’s House of Pain,
and there was no way for Nell to escape from that house without
giving up, which her friends in the Primer had taught her she must
never do.
Nell’s name went up on a board at the front of the classroom
labeled, in heavy brass letters, SUPPLEMENTARY CURRICULUM
STUDENTS. Within a few days, her name had been joined by two
others: Fiona Hackworth and Elizabeth Finkle-McGraw. Nell’s
disarming of the fearsome Miss Stricken had already become the
stuff of oral legend, and her two friends had been so inspired by the
act of defiance that they had gone to elaborate lengths to get
themselves in trouble too. Now, the three best students of Miss
Matheson’s Academy were all doomed to Supplementary
Curriculum.
Each Saturday, Nell, Fiona, and Elizabeth would arrive at the
school at seven o’clock, enter the room, and sit down in the front
row in adjacent desks. This was part of Miss Stricken’s fiendish
plan. A less subtle tormentor would have placed the girls as far apart
as possible to prevent them from talking to each other, but Miss
Stricken wanted them right next to each other so that they would be
more tempted to visit and pass notes.
There was no teacher in the room at any time. They assumed
that they were being monitored, but they never really knew. When
they entered, each one of them had a pile of books on her desk-old
books bound in chafed leather. Their job was to copy the books out
by hand and leave the pages neatly stacked on Miss Stricken’s desk
before they went home. Usually, the books were transcripts of
debates from the House of Lords, from the nineteenth century.
During their seventh Saturday in Supplementary Curriculum,
Elizabeth Finkle-McGraw suddenly dropped her pen, slammed her
book shut, and threw it against the wall.
Nell and Fiona could not keep themselves from laughing. But
Elizabeth did not convey the impression of being in a very
lighthearted mood. The old book had scarcely come to rest on the
floor before Elizabeth had run over to it and begun kicking at it.
With each blow a furious grunt escaped from her gorge. The book
absorbed this violence impassively, driving Elizabeth into a higher
rage; she dropped to her knees, flung the cover open, and began to
rip out pages by the fistful.
Nell and Fiona looked at each other, suddenly serious. The
kicking had been funny, but something about the tearing of pages
disturbed them both. “Elizabeth! Stop it!” Nell said, but Elizabeth
gave no signs of having heard her. Nell ran up to Elizabeth and
hugged her from behind. Fiona scurried in a moment later and
picked up the book.
“God damn it!” Elizabeth bellowed, “I don’t care about any of
the goddamn books, and I don’t care about the Primer either!”
The door banged open. Miss Stricken stomped in, dislodged
Nell with a simple body check, got both arms around Elizabeth’s
shoulders, and manhandled her out the door.
A few days later, Elizabeth left on a lengthy vacation with her
parents, jumping from one New Atlantis clave to another in the
family’s private airship, working their way across the Pacific and
North America and finally to London itself, where they settled in for
several months. In the first few days, Nell received one letter from
her, and Fiona received two. After that they received no response to
their letters and eventually stopped trying. Elizabeth’s name was
removed from the Supplementary Curriculum plaque.
Nell and Fiona soldiered on. Nell had reached the point where
she could transcribe the old books all day long without actually
absorbing a single word. During her first weeks in Supplementary
Curriculum she had been frightened; in fact, she had been surprised
at the level of her own fear and had come to realize that Authority,
even when it refrained from violence, could be as disturbing a
specter as anything she had seen in her earlier years. After the
incident with Elizabeth, she became bored for many months, then
furious for quite a while until she realized, in conversations with
Duck and Purple, that her anger was eating her up inside. So with a
conscious effort, she went back to being bored again.
The reason she’d been furious was that copying out those
books was such an unforgivably stupid waste of time. There was no
end to what she could have learned reading the Primer for those
eight hours. For that matter, the normal curriculum at Miss
Matheson’s Academy would have been perfectly fine as well. She
was tormented by the irrationality of this place.
One day, when she returned from a trip to the washroom, she
was startled to notice that Fiona had hardly copied out a single page,
though they had been there for hours.
After this, Nell made it a practice to look at Fiona from time to
time. She noticed that Fiona never stopped writing, but she was not
paying attention to the old books. As she finished each page, she
folded it up and placed it in her reticule. From time to time, she
would stop and stare dreamily out the window for a few minutes,
and then resume; or she might place both hands over her face and
rock back and forth silently in her chair for a while before giving
herself over to a long burst of ardent writing that might cover
several pages in as many minutes.
Miss Stricken cruised into the room late one afternoon, took the
stack of completed pages from Nell’s desk, flipped through them,
and allowed her chin to decline by a few minutes of arc. This nearly
imperceptible vestige of a nod was her way of saying that Nell was
dismissed for the day. Nell had come to understand that one way for
Miss Stricken to emphasize her power over the girls was for her to
make her wishes known through the subtlest possible signs, so that
her charges were forced to watch her anxiously at all times.
Nell took her leave; but after proceeding a few steps down the
corri dor, she turned and stole back to the door and peeked through
the window into the classroom.
Miss Stricken had gotten the folded-up pages out of Fiona’s
bag and was perusing them, strolling back and forth across the front
of the room like the slow swing of a pendulum, a devastatingly
ponderous motion. Fiona sat in her chair, her head bowed and her
shoulders drawn together protectively.
After reading the papers for an eternity or two, Miss Stricken
dropped them on her desk and made some kind of brief statement,
shaking her head in hopeless disbelief. Then she turned and walked
out of the room.
When Nell reached her, Fiona’s shoulders were still shaking
silently. Nell put her arms around Fiona, who finally began to draw
in sobbing breaths. During the next few minutes she gradually
moved on to that stage of crying where the body seems to swell up
and poach in its own fluids.
Nell suppressed the urge to be impatient. She well knew, as did
all of the other girls, that Fiona’s father had disappeared several
years ago and never come back. He was rumored to be on an
honorable and official mission; but as years went by this belief was
gradually supplanted by the suspicion that something disgraceful
had taken place. It would be easy enough for Nell to make the point
that she had been through much worse. But seeing the depth of
Fiona’s unhappiness, she had to consider the possibility that Fiona
was in a worse situation now.
When Fiona’s mother came by in a little half-lane car to pick
her up, and saw her daughter’s red and ruinous face, an expression
of black rage came over her own visage and she drove Fiona away
without so much as a glance at Nell. Fiona showed up for church the
next day as if nothing had happened and said nothing of it to Nell
during the next week at school. In fact, Fiona hardly said a word to
anyone, as she spent all of her time now daydreaming.
When Nell and Fiona showed up at seven o’clock the next
Saturday morning, they were astonished to find Miss Matheson
waiting for them at the front of the classroom, sitting in her woodand-
wicker wheelchair, wrapped up in a thermogenic comforter.
The stacks of books, paper, and fountain pens were not there, and
their names had been removed from the plaque at the front of the
room. “It’s a lovely spring day,” Miss Matheson said. “Let’s gather
some foxgloves.”
They went across the playing fields to the meadow where the
wildflowers grew, the two girls walking and Miss Matheson’s
wheelchair carrying her along on its many-spoked smart wheels.
“Chiselled Spam,” Miss Matheson said, sort of mumbling it to
herself.
“Pardon me, Miss Matheson?” Nell said.
“I was just watching the smart wheels and remembering an
advertisement from my youth,” Miss Matheson said. “I used to be a
thrasher, you know. I used to ride skateboards through the streets.
Now I’m still on wheels, but a different kind. Got a few too many
bumps and bruises during my earlier career, I’m afraid.”
. . .
“It’s a wonderful thing to be clever, and you should never think
otherwise, and you should never stop being that way. But what you
learn, as you get older, is that there are a few billion other people in
the world all trying to be clever at the same time, and whatever you
do with your life will certainly be lost-swallowed up in the
ocean-unless you are doing it along with like-minded people who
will remember your contributions and carry them forward. That is
why the world is divided into tribes. There are many Lesser phyles
and three Great ones. “What are the Great ones?”
“New Atlantis,” Nell began.
“Nippon,” said Fiona.
“Han,” they concluded together.
“That is correct,” Miss Matheson said. “We traditionally
include Han in the list because of its immense size and age-even
though it has lately been crippled by intestine discord. And some
would include Hindustan, while others would view it as a riotously
diverse collection of microtribes sintered together according to some
formula we don’t get.
“Now, there was a time when we believed that what a human
mind could accomplish was determined by genetic factors. Piffle, of
course, but it looked convincing for many years, because
distinctions between tribes were so evident. Now we understand that
it’s all cultural. That, after all, is what a culture is-a group of
people who share in common certain acquired traits.
“Information technology has freed cultures from the necessity
of owning particular bits of land in order to propagate; now we can
live anywhere. The Common Economic Protocol specifies how this
is to be arranged.
“Some cultures are prosperous; some are not. Some value
rational discourse and the scientific method; some do not. Some
encourage freedom of expression, and some discourage it. The only
thing they have in common is that if they do not propagate, they will
be swallowed up by others. All they have built up will be torn
down; all they have accomplished will be forgotten; all they have
learned and written will be scattered to the wind. In the old days it
was easy to remember this because of the constant necessity of
border defence. Nowadays, it is all too easily forgotten.
“New Atlantis, like many tribes, propagates itself largely
through education. That is the raison d’être of this Academy. Here
you develop your bodies through exercise and dance, and your
minds by doing projects. And then you go to Miss Stricken’s class.
‘What is the point of Miss Stricken’s class? Anyone? Please speak
up. You can’t get in trouble, no matter what you say.”
Nell said, after some dithering, “I’m not sure that it has any
point.” Fiona just watched her saying it and smiled sadly.
Miss Matheson smiled. “You are not far off the mark. Miss
Stricken’s phase of the curriculum comes perilously close to being
without any real substance. Why do we bother with it, then?”
“I can’t imagine,” Nell said.
“When I was a child, I took a karate class,” Miss Matheson
said, astonishingly. “Dropped out after a few weeks. Couldn’t stand
it. I thought that the sensei would teach me how to defend myself
when I was out on my skateboard. But the first thing he did was
have me sweep the floor. Then he told me that if I wanted to defend
myself, I should buy a gun. I came back the next week and he had
me sweep the floor again. All I ever did was sweep. Now, what was
the point of that?”
“To teach you humility and self-discipline,” Nell said. She had
learned this from Dojo long ago.
“Precisely. Which are moral qualities. It is upon moral qualities
that a society is ultimately founded. All the prosperity and
technological sophistication in the world is of no use without that
foundation-we learned this in the late twentieth century, when it
became unfashionable to teach these things.”
“But how can you say it’s moral?” said Fiona. “Miss Stricken
isn’t moral. She’s so cruel.”
“Miss Stricken is not someone I would invite to dinner at my
house. I would not hire her as a governess for my children. Her
methods are not my methods. But people like her are indispensable.
“It is the hardest thing in the world to make educated
Westerners pull together,” Miss Matheson went on. “That is the job
of people like Miss Stricken. We must forgive them their
imperfections. She is like an avatar-do you children know about
avatars? She is the physical embodiment of a principle. That
principle is that outside the comfortable and welldefended borders
of our phyle is a hard world that will come and hurt us if we are not
careful. It is not an easy job to have. We must all feel sorry for Miss
Stricken.”
They brought sheaves of foxgloves, violet and magenta, back
to the school and set them in vases in each classroom, leaving an
especially large bouquet in Miss Stricken’s office. Then they took
tea with Miss Matheson, and then they each went home.
Nell could not bring herself to agree with what Miss Matheson
had said; but she found that, after this conversation, everything
became easy. She had the neo-Victorians all figured out now. The
society had miraculously transmutated into an orderly system, like
the simple computers they programmed in the school. Now that Nell
knew all of the rules, she could make it do anything she wanted.
“Joy” returned to its former position as a minor annoyance on
the fringes of a wonderful schoolday. Miss Stricken got her with the
ruler from time to time, but not nearly so often, even when she was,
in fact, scratching or slumping.
Fiona Hackworth had a harder time of it, and within a couple of
months she was back on the Supplementary Curriculum list. A few
months after that, she stopped coming to school entirely. It was
announced that she and her mother had moved to Atlantis/Seattle,
and her address was posted in the hall for those who wished to write
her letters.
But Nell heard rumors about Fiona from the other girls, who
had picked up snatches from their parents. After Fiona had been
gone for a year or so, word got out that Fiona’s mother had obtained
a divorce-which, in their tribe, only happened in cases of adultery
or abuse. Nell wrote Fiona a long letter saying she was terribly sorry
if her father had been abusive, and offering her support in that case.
A few days later she got back a curt note in which Fiona defended
her father from all charges. Nell wrote back a letter of apology but
didn’t hear from Fiona Hackworth again.
It was about two years later that the news feeds filled up with
astonishing tales of the young heiress Elizabeth Finkle-McGraw,
who had vanished from her family’s estate outside of London and
was rumored to have been sighted in London, Los Angeles, Hong
Kong, Miami, and many other places, in the presence of people
suspected of being highranking members of CryptNet.
Hackworth awakes from a dream; retreat from the
world of the Drummers; chronological discrepancies.
Hackworth woke from a dream of unsustainable pleasure and
realized it wasn’t a dream; his penis was inside someone else, and
he was steaming like a runaway locomotive toward ejaculation. He
had no idea what was going on; but couldn’t he be forgiven for
doing the wrong thing? With a wiggle here and a thrust there, he
finally nudged himself over the threshold, the smooth muscles of the
tract in question executing their spinal algorithm.
Just a few deep breaths into the refractory period, and he had
already disengaged, yelping a little from the electric spark of
withdrawal, and levered himself up on one arm to see whom he’d
just violated. The firelight was enough to tell him what he already
knew: Whoever this woman was, it wasn’t Gwen. Hackworth had
violated the most important promise he’d ever made, and he didn’t
even know the other party.
But he knew it wasn’t the first time. Far from it. He’d had sex
with a lot of people in the past few years-he’d even been
buggered.
There was, for example, the woman-
Never mind, there was the man who-
Strange to say, he could not think of any specific examples. But
he knew he was guilty. It was precisely like waking up from a
dream and having a clear train of thought in your mind, something
you were working on just a few seconds ago, but being unable to
remember it, consciousness peeled away from cognition. Like a
three-year-old who has a talent for vanishing into crowds whenever
you turn your back, Hackworth’s memories had fled to the same
place as words that are on the tip of your tongue, precedents for déjà
vu, last night’s dreams.
He knew he was in big trouble with Gwen, but that Fiona still
loved him-Fiona, taller than Gwen now, so self-conscious about
her still linear figure, still devoid of the second derivatives that add
spice to life.
Taller than Gwen? How’s that?
Better get out of this place before he had sex with someone else
he didn’t know.
He wasn’t in the central chamber anymore, rather in one of the
tunnel’s aneurysms with some twenty other people, all just as naked
as he was. He knew which tunnel led to the exit (why?) and began
to crawl down it, rather stiffly as it seemed that he was stiff and
laden with cricks and cramps. Must not have been very athletic
sex-more in the Tantric mode.
Sometimes they had sex for days.
How did he know that?
The hallucinations were gone, which was fine with him. He
crawled through the tunnels for a long time. If he tried to think
about where he was going, he got lost and eventually circled back to
where he started. Only when his mind began to wander did he make
his way on some kind of autopilot to a long chamber filled with
silvery light, sloping upward. This was beginning to look familiar,
he had seen this when he was still a young man. He followed it
upward until he reached the end, where something unusually stony
was under his feet. A hatch opened above him, and several tons of
cold seawater landed on his head.
He staggered up onto dry land and found himself in Stanley
Park again, gray floor aft, green wall fore. The ferns rustled, and out
stepped Kidnapper, who looked fuzzy and green. He also looked
unusually dapper for a robotic horse, as Hackworth’s bowler hat
was perched on top of his head.
Hackworth reached up to feel himself and was astounded to
feel his face covered with hair. Several months’ growth of beard
was there. But even stranger, his chest was much hairier than it had
been before. Some of the chest hair was gray, the only gray hairs he
had ever seen coming out of his own follicles.
Kidnapper was fuzzy and green because moss had been
growing on him. The bowler looked terrible and had moss on it too.
Hackworth reached out instinctively and put it on his head. His arm
was thicker and hairier than it used to be, a not altogether
unpleasing change, and even the hat felt a little tight.
From the Primer, Princess Nell crosses the trail of the
enigmatic Mouse Army; a visit to an invalid.
The clearing dimly visible through the trees ahead was a
welcome sight, for the forests of King Coyote were
surpassingly deep and forever shrouded in cool mists.
Fingers of sunlight had begun to thrust between the clouds,
and so Princess Nell decided to rest in the open space and,
with any luck, bask in the sunlight. But when she reached the
clearing, she found that it was not the flowerstrewn
greensward she had expected; it was rather a swath that had
been carved through the forest by the passage of some titanic
force, which had flattened trees and churned up the soil as it
progressed. When Princess Nell had recovered from her
astonishment and mastered her fear, she resolved to make
use of the tracking skills she had learned during her many
adventures, so as to learn something about the nature of this
unknown creature.
As she soon discovered, the skills of an advanced tracker
were not necessary in this case. The merest glance at the
trampled soil revealed not (as she had anticipated) a few
enormous footprints, but millions of tiny ones, superimposed
upon one another in such numbers that no scrap of ground
was unmarked by the impressions of tiny claws and footpads.
A torrent of cats had passed this way; even had Princess Nell
not recognized the footprints, the balls of loose hair and tiny
scats, strewn everywhere, would have told the story.
Cats moving in a herd! It was most unfeline behavior. Nell
followed their track for some time, hoping to divine the cause
of this prodigy. After a few miles the road widened into an
abandoned camp freckled with the remains of innumerable
small campfires. Nell combed this area for more clues, not
without success: she found many mouse droppings here, and
mouse footprints around the fires. The pattern of footprints
made it clear that the cats had been concentrated in a few
small areas, while the mice had apparently had the run of the
place.
The final piece of the puzzle was a tiny scrap of twisted
rawhide that Nell found abandoned near one of the little
campfires. Turning it around in her fingers, Nell realized that it
was much like a horse’s bridle-except sized to fit around the
head of a cat.
She was standing on the trail of a vast army of mice, who
rode on the backs of cats in the way that knights ride on
horses.
She had heard tales of the Mouse Army in other parts of
the Land Beyond and dismissed them as ancient
superstitions.
But once, several years ago, in an inn high in the
mountains, where Princess Nell had stayed for the night, she
had been awakened early in the morning by the sound of a
mouse rooting through her pack. .
Princess Nell uttered a light-making spell that Purple had
taught her, kindling a ball of luminance that hung in the air in
the center of the room. The words of the spell had been
concealed in the howl of the mountain winds through the
rickety structure of the old inn, and so the mouse was caught
entirely by surprise, blinded by the sudden light. Nell was
startled to see that the mouse was not gnawing its way into
her supply of food, as any mouse should have done, but
rather was going through some of her papers. And this was
not the usual destructive search for nesting material-this
mouse knew how to read and was looking for information.
Princess Nell trapped the mouse spy under her hands.
“What are you looking for? Tell me, and I shall let you
escape!” she said. Her adventures had taught her to be on
the lookout for tricks of all kinds, and it was important that she
learn who had dispatched this tiny, but effective, spy.
I am but a harmless mouse!” the spy squealed. “I do not
even desire your food-information only!”
“I will give you a big piece of cheese, all to yourself, if you
give me some information,” Princess Nell said. She caught
the mouse’s tail and lifted him up into the air so that they
could talk face-to-face. Meanwhile, with her other hand, she
loosened the drawstring of her bag and drew out a nice piece
of blue-veined Stilton.
“We are seeking our lost Queen,” the mouse said.
“I can assure you that none of my papers have any
information about a missing mouse monarch,” Princess Nell
said.
“What is your name?” the mouse said.
“That is none of your business, spy!” Princess Nell said. “I
will ask the questions.”
“But it is very important that I know your name,” the
mouse said.
“Why? I am not a mouse. I have not seen any little mice
with crowns on their heads.”
The mouse spy said nothing. He was staring carefully at
Princess Nell with his little beady eyes. “Did you, by any
chance, come from an enchanted island?”
“You have been listening to too many fairy tales,”
Princess Nell said, barely concealing her astonishment. “You
have been most uncooperative and so do not deserve any
cheese-but I admire your pluck and so will give you some
anyway. Enjoy yourself!” She set the mouse down on the floor
and took out her knife to cut off a bit of the cheese; but by the
time she was finished, the mouse had disappeared. She just
caught sight of his pink tail disappearing under the door.
The next morning, she found him dead on the hallway
floor. The innkeeper’s cat had caught him. .
So the Mouse Army did exist! Princess Nell wondered
whether they had ever located their lost Queen. She followed
their trail for another day or two, as it went in approximately
the right direction and was almost as convenient as a road.
She passed through a few more campsites. At one of them,
she even found a little gravesite, marked with a tiny
headstone carved from a chip of soapstone.
The carvings on this tiny monument were much too small
to see. But Princess Nell carried with her a magnifying glass
that she had pilfered from the treasury of one of the Faery
Kings, and so now she removed it from its padded box and its
velvet bag and used it to examine the inscription.
At the top of the stone was a little bas-relief of a mouse
knight, dressed in armor, with a sword in one hand, bowing
before an empty throne. The inscription read,
Here lies Clover, tail and all
Her virtues far outweighed her flaws
She from the saddle took a fall
And perished ‘neath her charger’s paws.
We know not if her final ride
Hath led her into Heaven or Hell
Wherever she doth now abide
She’s loyal yet to Princess Nell.
Princess Nell examined the remains of the fires, and the
surfaces of the wood that the Mouse Army had cut, and the
state of their droppings, and estimated that they had passed
by here many weeks previously. One day she would
rendezvous with them and find out why they had formed such
an attachment to her; but for now, she had more pressing
considerations.
. . .
She’d have to see about the Mouse Army later. Today was
Saturday, and on Saturday morning she always went down to the
Leased Territories to visit her brother. She opened up the wardrobe
in the corner of her sleeping room and took out her traveling dress.
Sensing her intentions, the chaperone flew out of its niche in the
back and whined over to the door.
Even at her still-tender age, just a few years past the threshold
of womanhood, Nell had already had cause to be grateful for the
presence of the droning chaperone pod that followed her
everywhere when she ventured from home alone. Maturity had
given her any number of features that would draw the attention of
the opposite sex, and of women so inclined. Commentators rarely
failed to mention her eyes, which were said to have a vaguely exotic
appearance. There was nothing particularly unusual about their
shape or size, and their color-a tweedy blend of green and light
brown flecked with gold-did not make them stand out in a
predominantly Anglo-Saxon culture. But Nell’s eyes had an
appearance of feral alertness that seized the attention of anyone who
met her. Neo-Victorian society produced many young women who,
though highly educated and well-read, were still blank slates at
Nell’s age. But Nell’s eyes told a different story. When she had
been presented to society a few months ago, along with several
other External Propagation girls at Miss Matheson’s Academy, she
had not been the prettiest girl at the dance, and certainly not the best
dressed or most socially prominent. She had attracted a crowd of
——————————————————————————————————–
young men anyway. They did not do anything so obvious as mill
around her; instead they tried to keep the distance between
themselves and Nell below a certain maximum, so that wherever she
went in the ballroom, the local density of young men in her area
became unusually high.
In particular she had excited the interest of a boy who was the
nephew of an Equity Lord in Atlantis/Toronto. He had written her
several ardent letters. She had responded saying that she did not
wish to continue the relationship, and he had, perhaps with the help
of a hidden monitor, encountered her and her chaperone pod one
morning as she had been riding to Miss Matheson’s Academy. She
had reminded him of the recent termination of their relationship by
declining to recognize him, but he had persisted anyway, and by the
time she had reached the gates of the Academy, the chaperone pod
had gathered enough evidence to support a formal sexual
harassment accusation should Nell have wished to bring one.
Of course she did not, because this would have created a cloud
of opprobrium that would have blighted the young man’s career.
Instead, she excerpted one five-second piece of the cine record from
the chaperone pod: the one in which, approached by the young man,
Nell said, “I’m sorry, but I’m afraid you have me at a
disadvantage,” and the young man, failing to appreciate the
ramifications, pressed on as if he had not heard. Nell placed this
information into a smart visiting card and arranged to have it
dropped by the young man’s family home. A formal apology was
not long in coming, and she did not hear again from the young man.
Now that she had been introduced to society, her preparations
for a visit to the Leased Territories were just as elaborate as for any
New Atlantis lady. Outside of New Atlantis, she and her chevaline
were surrounded everywhere by a shell of hovering security pods
serving as a first line of personal defense. A modern lady’s
chevaline was designed with a sort of Y-shaped body that made it
unnecessary to ride sidesaddle, so Nell was able to wear a fairly
normal-looking sort of dress: a bodice that took advantage of her
fashionably narrow waist, so carefully honed on the Academy’s
exercise machines that it might have been turned on a lathe from
walnut. Beyond that, her skirts, sleeves, collar, and hat saw to it that
none of the young ruffians of the Leased Territories would have the
opportunity to invade her body space with their eyes, and lest her
distinctive face prove too much of a temptation, she wore a veil too.
The veil was a field of microscopic, umbrellalike aerostats
programmed to fly in a sheet formation a few inches in front of
Nell’s face. The umbrellas were all pointed away from her.
Normally they were furled, which made them nearly invisible; they
looked like the merest shadow before her face, though viewed
sideways they created a subtle wall of shimmer in the air. At a
command from Nell they would open to some degree. When fully
open, they nearly touched each other. The outside-facing surfaces
were reflective, the inner ones matte black, so Nell could see out as
if she were looking through a piece of smoked glass. But others saw
only the shimmering veil. The umbrellas could be programmed to
dangle in different ways-always maintaining the same collective
shape, like a fencing mask, or rippling like a sheet of fine silk,
depending on the current mode.
The veil offered Nell protection from unwanted scrutiny. Many
New Atlantis career women also used the veil as a way of meeting
the world on their own terms, ensuring that they were judged on
their own merits and not on their appearance. It served a protective
function as well, bouncing back the harmful rays of the sun and
intercepting many deleterious nanosites that might otherwise slip
unhindered into the nose and mouth.
The latter function was of particular concern to Constable
Moore on this morning. “It’s been nasty of late,” he said. “The
fighting has been very bad.” Nell had already inferred this from
certain peculiarities of the Constable’s behavior: he had been
staying up late at night recently, managing some complicated
enterprise spread out across his mediatronic floor, and she suspected
that it was something along the lines of a battle or even a war.
As she rode her chevaline across Dovetail, she came to a
height-of-land that afforded a fine view across the Leased
Territories, Pudong, and Shanghai on a clear day. But the humidity
had congealed into drifts of clouds forming a seamless layer about a
thousand feet below their level, so that this high territory at the top
of New Chusan seemed to be an island, the only land in all the
world except for the snowcapped cone of the Nippon Clave a few
miles up the coast.
She departed through the main gate and rode down the hill. She
kept approaching the cloud layer but never quite reached it; the
lower she went, the softer the light became, and after a few minutes
she could no longer see the rambling settlements of Dovetail when
she turned around, nor the spires of St. Mark’s and Source Victoria
above it. After another few minutes’ descent the fog became so
thick that she could not see more than a few meters, and she smelled
the elemental reek of the ocean. She passed the former site of the
Sendero Clave. The Senderos had been bloodily uprooted when
Protocol Enforcement figured out that they were working in concert
with the New Taiping Rebels, a fanatical cult opposed to both the
Fists and the Coastal Republic. This patch of real estate had since
passed into the hands of the Dong, an ethnic minority tribe from
southwestern China, driven out of their homeland by the civil war.
They had torn down the high wall and thrown up one of their
distinctive many-layered pagodas.
Other than that, the L.T. didn’t look all that different. The
operators of the big wall-size mediatrons that had so terrified Nell
on her first night in the Leased Territories had turned the brightness
all the way up, trying to compensate for the fog.
Down by the waterfront, not far from the Aerodrome, the
compilers of New Chusan had, as a charitable gesture, made some
space available to the Vatican. In the early years it had contained
nothing more than a twostory mission for thetes who had followed
their lifestyle to its logical conclusion and found themselves
homeless, addicted, hounded by debtors, or on the run from the law
or abusive members of their own families.
More recently those had become secondary functions, and the
Vatican had programmed the building’s foundation to extrude many
more stories. The Vatican had a number of serious ethical concerns
about nanotech but had eventually decided that it was okay as long
as it didn’t mess about with DNA or create direct interfaces with the
human brain. Using nanotech to extrude buildings was fine, and that
was fortunate, because Vatican/Shanghai needed to add a couple of
floors to the Free Phthisis Sanatorium every year. Now it loomed
high above any of the other waterfront buildings.
As with any other extruded building, the design was drab in the
extreme, each floor exactly alike. The walls were of an
unexceptional beige material that had been used to construct many
of the buildings in the L.T., which was unfortunate, because it had
an almost magnetic attraction for the cineritious corpses of airborne
mites. Like all the other buildings so constituted, the Free Phthisis
Sanatorium had, over the years, turned black, and not evenly but in
vertical rain-streaks. It was a cliché to joke that the outside of the
Sanatorium looked much like the inside of its tenants’ lungs. The
Fists of Righteous Harmony had, however, done their best to pretty
it up by slapping red posters over it in the dead of night.
Harv was lying on the top of a three-layer bunkbed on the
twentieth floor, sharing a small room and a supply of purified air
with a dozen other chronic asthma sufferers. His face was goggled
into a phantascope, and his lips were wrapped around a thick tube
plugged into a nebulizer socket on the wall. Vaporized drugs,
straight from the matter compiler, were flowing down that tube and
into his lungs, working to keep his bronchi from spasming shut.
Nell stopped for a moment before breaking him out of his
ractive. Some weeks he looked better than others; this week he did
not look good. His body was bloated, his face round and heavy, his
fingers swollen to puffy cylinders; they had been giving him heavy
steroid treatments. But she would have known he’d had a bad week
anyway, because usually Harv didn’t go in for immersive ractives.
He liked the kind you held in your lap on a sheet of smart paper.
Nell tried to send Harv a letter every day, simply written in
mediaglyphics, and for a while he had tried to respond in kind. Last
year he had even given up on this, though she wrote him faithfully
anyway.
“Nell!” he said when he had peeled the goggles away from his
eyes. “Sorry, I was chasing some rich Vickys.”
“You were?”
“Yeah. Or Burly Scudd was, I mean. In the ractive. See,
Burly’s bitch gets pregnant, and she’s got to buy herself a Freedom
Machine to get rid of it, so she gets a job as a maid-of-all-work for
some snotty Vickys and rips off some of their nice old stuff,
figuring that’s a faster way to get the money. So the bitch is running
away and they’re chasing her on their chevs, and then Burly Scudd
shows up in his big truck and turns the tables and starts chasing
them. If you do it right, you can get the Vickys to fall into a big pit
of manure! It’s great! You should try it,” Harv said, then, exhausted
by this effort, grabbed his oxygen tube and pulled on it for a while.
“It sounds entertaining,” Nell said.
Harv, temporarily gagged by the oxygen tube, watched her face
carefully and was not convinced. “Sorry,” he blurted between
breaths, “forgot you don’t care for my kind of ractive. Don’t they
have Burly Scudd in that Primer of yours?”
Nell made herself smile at the joke, which Harv had been
making every week. She handed him the basket of cookies and fresh
fruit that she had brought down from Dovetail and sat with him for
an hour, talking about the things he enjoyed talking about, until she
could see his attention wandering back toward the goggles. Then
she said good-bye until next week and kissed him good-bye.
She turned her veil to its highest level of opacity and made her
way toward the door. Harv impulsively grabbed his oxygen tube and
sucked on it mightily a few times, then called her name just as she
was about to leave.
“Yes?” she said, turning toward him.
“Nell, I want to tell you how fine you look,” he said, “just like
the finest Vicky lady in all of Atlantis. I can’t believe you’re my
same Nell that I used to bring things to in the old flat-remember
those days? I know that you and I have gone different ways, ever
since that morning in Dovetail, and I know it’s got a iot to do with
that Primer. I just want to tell you, sister, that even though I say bad
stuff about Vickys sometimes, I’m as proud of you as I could be,
and I hope when you read that Primer-so full of stuff I could never
understand or even read-you’ll think back on your brother Harv,
who saw it lying in the gutter years ago and took it into -his mind to
bring it to his kid sister. Will you remember that, Nell?” With that
he plugged the oxygen tube back into his mouth, and his ribs began
to heave.
“Of course I will, Harv,” Nell said, her eyes filling with tears,
and blundered her way back across the room until she could sweep
Harv’s bloated body up in her strong arms. The veil swirled like a
sheet of water thrown into Harv’s face, all the little umbrellas
drawing themselves out of the way as she brought his face up to
hers and planted a kiss on his cheek.
The veil congealed again as he sank back down onto the foam
mattress-just like the mattresses he had taught her to get from the
M.C., long ago-and she turned and ran out of the room sobbing.
Hackworth is brought up-to-date by the great Napier.
“Have you had the opportunity to speak with your family?”
Colonel Napier said, speaking out of a mediatronic sabletop from
his office in Atlantis/Shanghai. Hackworth was sitting in a pub in
Atlantis/Vancouver.
Napier looked good now that he was deeper into middle age-
somewhat more imposing. He’d been working on his bearing.
Hackworth had been temporarily impressed when Napier’s image
had first materialized on the mediatron, then he remembered his
own image in the mirror. Once he’d gotten himself cleaned up and
trimmed his beard, which he’d decided to keep, he realized that he
had a new bearing of his own. Even if he was desperately confused
about how he got it.
“Thought I’d find out what the hell happened first. Besides-”
He stopped talking for a while. He was having trouble getting his
conversational rhythm back.
“Yes?” Napier said in a labored display of patience.
“I just spoke to Fiona this morning.”
“After you left the tunnels?”
“No. Before. Before I-woke up, or whatever.”
Napier was slightly taken aback and only popped his jaw
muscles a couple of times, reached for his tea, looked irrelevantly
out the window at whatever view he had out his office window in
New Chusan. Hackworth, on the other side of the Pacific, contented
himself with staring into the inky depths of a pint of stout.
A dream-image surfaced in Hackworth’s mind, like a piece of
debris rising to the surface after a shipwreck, inexorably muscling
tons of green murk out of its path. He saw a glistening blue
projectile shoot into the Doctor’s beige-gloved hands, trailing a
thick cord, watched it unfold, nay bloom into a baby.
“Why did I think of that?” he said.
Napier seemed puzzled by this remark. “Fiona and Gwendolyn
are in Atlantis/Seattle now-half an hour from your present location
by tube,” he said.
“Of course! They live-we live-in Seattle now. I knew that.”
He was remembering Fiona hiking around in the caldera of some
snow-covered volcano.
“If you are under the impression that you’ve been in contact
with her recently-which is quite out of the question, I’m afraid-
then it must have been mediated through the Primer. We were not
able to break the encryption on the signals passing out of the
Drummers’ cave, but traffic analysis suggests that you’ve spent a lot
of time racting in the last ten years.”
“Ten years!?”
“Yes. But surely you must have suspected that, from
evidence.”
“It feels like ten years. I sense that ten years of things have
happened to me. But the engineer hemisphere has a bit of trouble
coming to grips.”
“We are at a loss to understand why Dr. X would choose to
have you serve out your sentence among the Drummers,” Napier
said. “It would seem to us that your engineer hemisphere, as you put
it, is your most desirable feature as far as he is concerned-you
know that the Celestials are still terribly short of engineers.”
“I’ve been working on something,” Hackworth said. Images of
a nanotechnological system, something admirably compact and
elegant, were flashing over his mind’s eye. It seemed to be very nice
work, the kind of thing he could produce only when he was
concentrating very hard for a long time. As, for example, a prisoner
might do.
“What sort of thing exactly?” Napier asked, suddenly sounding
rather tense.
“Can’t get a grip on it,” Hackworth finally said, shaking his
head helplessly. The detailed images of atoms and bonds had been
replaced, in his mind’s eye, by a fat brown seed hanging in space,
like something in a Magritte painting. A lush bifurcated curve on
one end, like buttocks, converging to a nipplelike point on the other.
“What the hell happened?”
“Before you left Shanghai, Dr. X hooked you up to a matter
compiler, no?”
“Yes.”
“Did he tell you what he was putting into your system?”
“I guessed it was hæmocules of some description.”
“We took blood samples before you left Shanghai.”
“You did?”
“We have ways,” Colonel Napier said. “We also did a full
workup on one of your friends from the cave and found several
million nanosites in her brain.”
“Several million?”
“Very small ones,” Napier said reassuringly. “They are
introduced through the blood, of course-the hæmocules circulate
through the bloodstream until they find themselves passing through
capillaries in the brain, at which point they cut through the
blood/brain barrier and fasten themselves to a nearby axon. They
can monitor activity in the axon or trigger it. These ‘sites all talk to
each other with visible light.”
“So when I was on my own, my ‘sites just talked to
themselves,” Hackworth said, “but when I came into close
proximity with other people who had these things in their brains-”
“It didn’t matter which brain a ‘site was in. They all talked to
one another indiscriminately, forming a network. Get some
Drummers together in a dark room, and they become a gestalt
society.”
“But the interface between these nanosites and the brain
itself-”
“Yes, I admit that a few million of these things piggybacking
on randomly chosen neurons is only a feeble interface to something
as complicated as the human brain,” Napier said. “We’re not
claiming that you shared one brain with these people.”
“So what did I share with them exactly?” Hackworth said.
“Food. Air. Companionship. Body fluids. Perhaps emotions or
general emotional states. Probably more.”
“That’s all I did for ten years?”
“You did a iot of things,” Napier said, “but you did them in a
sort of unconscious, dreamlike state. You were sleepwalking. When
we figured that out-after doing the biopsy on your fellowtroglodyte
-we realised that in some sense you were no longer
acting of your own free will, and we engineered a hunter-killer that
would seek out and destroy the nanosites in your brain. We
introduced it, in a dormant mode, into this female Drummer’s
system, then reintroduced her to your colony. When you had sex
with her-well, you can work out the rest for yourself.”
“You have given me information, Colonel Napier, and I am
grateful, but it has only made me more confused. What do you
suppose the Celestial Kingdom wanted with me?”
“Did Dr. X ask anything of you?”
“To seek the Alchemist.”
Colonel Napier looked startled. “He asked that of you ten years
ago?”
“Yes. In as many words.”
“That is very singular,” Napier said, after a prolonged interlude
of mustache-twiddling. “We have only been aware of this shadowy
figure for some five years and know virtually nothing about him-
other than that he is a wizardly artifex who is conspiring with Dr.
X.”
“Is there any other information-”
“Nothing that I can reveal,” Napier said brusquely, perhaps
having revealed too much already. “Do let us know if you find him,
though. Er, Hackworth, there is no tactful way to broach this
subject. Are you aware that your wife has divorced you?”
“Oh, yes,” Hackworth said quietly. “I suppose I did know
that.” But he hadn’t been conscious of it until now.
“She was remarkably understanding about your long absence,”
Napier said, “but at some point it became evident that, like all the
Drummers, you had become sexually promiscuous in the extreme.”
“How did she know?”
“We warned her.”
“Pardon me?”
“I mentioned earlier that we found things in your blood. These
hæmocules were designed specifically to be spread through
exchange of bodily fluids.”
“How do you know that?”
Napier seemed impatient for the first time. “For god’s sake,
man, we know what we are doing. These particles had two
functions: spread through exchange of bodily fluids, and interact
with each other. Once we saw that, we had no ethical choice but to
inform your wife.”
“Of course. That’s only right. As a matter of fact, I thank you
for it,” Hackworth said. “And it’s not hard to understand Gwen’s
feelings about sharing bodily fluids with thousands of Drummers.”
“You shouldn’t beat yourself up,” Napier said. “We’ve sent
explorers down there.”
“Really?”
“Yes. The Drummers don’t mind. The explorers relate that the
Drummers behave much the way people do in dreams. ‘Poorly
defined ego boundaries’ was the phrase, as I recall. In any event,
your behaviour down there wasn’t necessarily a moral transgression
as such-your mind wasn’t your own.”
“You said that these particles interact with each other?”
“Each one is a container for some rod logic and some
memory,” Napier said. “When one particle encounters another either
in vivo or in vitro, they dock and seem to exchange data for a few
moments. Most of the time they disengage and drift apart.
Sometimes they stay docked for a while, and computation takes
place-we can tell because the rod logic throws off heat. Then they
disconnect. Sometimes both particles go their separate ways,
sometimes one of them goes dead. But one of them always keeps
going.”
The implications of that last sentence were not lost on
Hackworth. “Do the Drummers only have sex with one another,
or-”
“That was our first question too,” Napier said. “The answer is
no. They have a very good deal of sex with many, many other
people. They actually run bordellos in Vancouver. They cater
especially to the Aerodrome-and-tube-station crowd. A few years
ago they came into conflict with the established bordellos because
they were hardly charging any money at all for their services. They
raised their prices just to be diplomatic. But they don’t want the
money-what on earth would they do with it?”
From the Primer, a visit to Castle Turing; a final chat
with Miss Matheson; speculation as to Nell’s destiny;
farewell; conversation with a grizzled hoplite; Nell goes
forth to seek her fortune.
The new territory into which Princess Nell had crossed was by
far the largest and most complex of all the Faery Kingdoms in the
Primer. Paging back to the first panoramic illustration, she counted
seven major castles perched on the mountaintops, and she knew
perfectly well that she would have to visit all of them, and do
something difficult in each one, in order to retrieve the eleven keys
that had been stolen from her and the one key that remained.
She made herself some tea and sandwiches and carried them in
a basket to a meadow, where she liked to sit among the wildflowers
and read. Constable Moore’s house was a melancholy place without
the Constable in it, and it had been several weeks since she had seen
him. During the last two years he had been called away on business
with increasing 3 frequency, vanishing (as she supposed) into the
interior of China for days, then weeks at a time, coming back
depressed and exhausted to find solace in whiskey, which he
consumed in surprisingly moderate quantities but with fierce
concentration, and in midnight bagpipe recitals that woke up
everyone in Dovetail and a few sensitive sleepers in the New
Atlantis Clave.
During her trip from the campsite of the Mouse Army to the
first of the castles, Nell had to use all the wilderness skills she had
learned in years of traveling around the Land Beyond: She fought
with a mountain lion, avoided a bear, forded streams, lit fires, built
shelters. By the time Nell had maneuvered Princess Nell to the
ancient moss-covered gates of the first castle, the sun was shining
horizontally across the meadow and the air was becoming a bit
chilly. Nell wrapped herself up in a thermogenic shawl and set the
thermostat for something a little on the cool side of comfortable; she
had found that her wits became dull if she got too cozy. The basket
had a thermos of hot tea with milk, and the sandwiches would hold
out for a while.
The highest of the castle’s many towers was surmounted
by a great four-sailed windmill that turned steadily, even
though only a mild breeze could be noticed at Princess Nell’s
altitude, hundreds of feet below.
Set into the main gate was a judas gate, and set into the
judas was a small hatch. Below the hatch was a great bronze
knocker made in the shape of a letter T, though its shape had
become indistinct from an encrustation of moss and lichens.
Princess Nell operated the knocker only with some effort and,
given its decrepit state, did not expect a response; but hardly
had the first knock sounded than the hatch opened up, and
she was confronted by a helmet: For the gatekeeper on the
other side was dressed from head to toe in a rusty and mosscovered
suit of battle armor. But the gatekeeper said nothing,
simply stared at Princess Nell; or so she assumed, as she
could not see his face through the helmet’s narrow visionslits.
“Good afternoon,” said Princess Nell. “I beg your pardon,
but I am a traveler in these parts, and I wonder if you would
be so good as to give me a place to stay for the night.”
Without a word, the gatekeeper slammed the hatch
closed. Nell could hear the creaking and clanking of his armor
as he slowly marched away.
Some minutes later, she heard him coming toward her
again, though this time the noise was redoubled. The rusty
locks on the judas gate grumbled and shrieked. The gate door
swung open, and Princess Nell stepped back from it as rust
flakes, fragments of lichens, and divots of moss showered
down around her. Two men in armor now stood there,
beckoning her forward.
Nell stepped through the gate and into the dark streets of
the castle. The gate slammed behind her. An iron vise
clamped around each of Princess Nell’s upper arms; the men
had seized her with their gauntlets. They lifted her into the air
and carried her for some minutes through the streets, stairs,
and corridors of the castle. These were completely deserted.
She did not see so much as a mouse or a rat. No smoke rose
from the chimneys, no light came from any window, and in the
long hallway leading to the throne room, the torches hung
cold and blackened in their sconces. From place to place
Princess Nell saw another armored soldier standing at
attention, but, as none of them moved, she did not know
whether these were empty suits of armor or real men.
Nowhere did she see the usual signs of commerce and
human activity: horse manure, orange peels, barking dogs,
running sewers. Somewhat to her alarm, she did see an
inordinate number of chains. The chains were all of the same,
somewhat peculiar design, and she saw them everywhere:
piled up in heaps on streetcorners, overflowing from metal
baskets, dangling from rooftops, strung between towers.
The clanking and squeaking of the men who bore her
along made it difficult for her to hear anything else; but as
they proceeded higher and deeper into the castle, she slowly
became conscious of a deep grinding, growling noise that
pervaded the very ashlars. This noise crescendoed as they
hustled down the long final hallway, and became nearly earthshaking
as they finally entered the vaulted throne room at the
very heart of the castle.
The room was dark and cold, though some light was
admitted by clerestory windows high up in the vaults. The
walls were lined with men in armor, standing stock-still. Sitting
in the middle of the room, on a throne twice as high as a man,
was a giant, dressed in a suit of armor that gleamed like a
looking-glass. Standing below him was a man in armor
holding a rag and a wire brush, vigorously buffing one of the
lord’s greaves.
“Welcome to Castle Turing,” said the lord in a metallic
voice.
By this time, Princess Nell’s eyes had adjusted to the
dimness, and she could see something else behind the
throne: a tremendous Shaft, as thick as the mainmast of a
dromond, made of the trunk of a great tree bound and
reinforced with brass plates and bands. The Shaft turned
steadily, and Princess Nell realized that it must be
transmitting the power of the giant windmill far above them.
Enormous gears, black and sticky with grease, were attached
to the Shaft and transferred its power to other, smaller shafts
that ran off horizontally in every direction and disappeared
through holes in the walls. The turning and grinding of all
these shafts and gears made the omnipresent noise she had
noted earlier.
One horizontal shaft ran along each wall of the throne
room at about the height of a man’s chest. This shaft passed
through a gearbox at short, regular intervals. A stubby, square
shaft projected from each gearbox at a right angle, sticking
straight out of the wall. These gearboxes tended to coincide
with the locations of the soldiers.
The soldier who was polishing the lord’s armor worked
his way around to one of the lord’s spiked knee protectors
and, in so doing, turned his back on Princess Nell. She was
startled to see a large square hole in the middle of his back.
Nell knew, vaguely, that the name Castle Turing was a hint;
she’d learned a bit about Turing at Miss Matheson’s Academy. He
had something to do with computers. She could have turned to the
Encyclopædia pages and looked it right up, but she had learned to
let the Primer tell the story its own way. Clearly the soldiers were
not men in armor, but simply wind-up men, and the same was
probably true of the Duke of Turing himself.
After a short and not very interesting conversation, during
which Princess Nell tried unsuccessfully to establish whether the
Duke was or was not human, he announced, unemotionally, that he
was throwing her into the dungeon forever.
This sort of thing no longer surprised or upset Nell because it
had happened hundreds of times during her relationship with the
Primer. Besides, she had known, from the very first day Harv had
given her the book, how the story would come out in the end. It was
just that the story was anfractuous; it developed more ramifications
the more closely she read it.
One of the soldiers detached himself from his gearbox on
the wall, stomped into the corner, and picked up a metal
basket filled with one of those peculiar chains Princess Nell
had seen everywhere. He carried it to the throne, fished
through it until he found the end, and fed the end into a hole
on the side of the throne. In the meantime, a second soldier
had also detached himself from the wall and taken up a
position on the opposite side of the throne. This soldier flipped
his visor open to expose some sort of mechanical device in
the space where his head ought to have been.
A tremendous chattering noise arose from inside the
throne. The second soldier caught the end of the chain as it
was emerging from his side and fed it into the opening in his
visor. A moment later it popped out of a hatch on his chest. In
this fashion, the entire length of the chain, some twenty or
thirty feet in all, was slowly and noisily drawn out of the
basket, into the noisy mechanism hidden beneath the throne,
down the second soldier’s throat, out the hatch in his chest,
and down to the floor, where it gradually accumulated into a
greasy heap. The process went on for much longer than
Princess Nell first anticipated, because the chain frequently
changed direction; more than once, when the basket was
nearly empty, the chain began to spew back into it until it was
nearly full again. But on the whole it was more apt to go
forward than backward, and eventually the last link lifted free
from the basket and disappeared into the throne. A few
seconds later, the din from the throne stopped; now Nell could
only hear a somewhat lesser chattering from the second
soldier. Finally that stopped as well, and the chain fell from his
chest. The soldier scooped it up in his arms and deposited it
in an empty basket that was sitting handily nearby. Then he
strode toward Nell, bent forward at the waist, put his hard cold
shoulder rather uncomfortably into the pit of her stomach, and
picked her up off the floor like a sack of corn. He carried her
for some minutes through the castle, most of that time spent
descending endless stone staircases, and finally brought her
to a very deep, dark, and cold dungeon, where he deposited
her in a small and perfectly dark cell.
Nell said, “Princess Nell used one of the magic spells Purple
had taught her to make light.”
Princess Nell could see that the room was about two by
three paces, with a stone bench on one wall to serve as a
bed, and a hole in the floor for a toilet. A tiny barred window in
the back wall led to an air shaft. Evidently this was quite deep
and narrow, and Nell was close to the very bottom, because
no light came through it. The soldier walked out of the cell and
pulled the door shut behind him; as he did, she saw that the
lock was extraordinarily large, about the size of an iron
breadbox mounted to the door, full of clockwork and with a
large crank dangling from its center.
The door was equipped with a small peephole. Peering
out through it, Nell could see that the soldier did not have a
key as such. Instead, he took a short length of chain, about as
long as his arm, from a peg near the door and fed it into the
giant lock. Then he began to turn the crank. The clockwork
clicked, the chain clanked, and eventually the bolt shot out
and engaged the jamb, locking Princess Nell into the
dungeon. Immediately the chain crashed out of the lock and
landed on the floor. The soldier picked it up and hung it back
on the wall. Then he clanked away and did not come back
until several hours later, when he brought her some bread
and water, shoving it through a little hatch in the middle of the
door, just above the mechanical lock.
It did not take Princess Nell long to explore the limited
confines of her cell. In one corner, buried under dust and
debris, she found something hard and cold and pulled it out
for a better look: It was a fragment of chain, quite rusty, but
clearly recognizable as the same sort of chain that she saw all
over Castle Turing.
The chain was flat. Each link had a toggle: a movable bit
of metal in the center, capable of rotating about and snapping
into place in either of two positions, either parallel or
perpendicular to the chain.
During her first night in the cell, Nell discovered two other
things. First, the latch on the little door through which her food
was delivered was partly accessible from her side, and with a
little effort she was able to jam it so that it no longer locked
properly. After that, she was able to stick her head out of the
hatch and examine her surroundings, including the
mechanical lock. Or she could reach out with one arm and
feel the lock, spin the crank, and so on.
The second discovery came in the middle of the night,
when she was awakened by a metallic clanking sound coming
through the tiny window on the air shaft. Reaching out with
one hand, she felt the end of a chain dangling there. She
pulled on it, and after initial resistance, it came freely. In short
order she was able to pull many yards of chain into her cell
and pile it up on the floor.
Nell had a pretty good idea what to do with the chain.
Starting with the end, she examined the toggles and began to mark
their positions down (the Primer always gave her scratch pages
when she needed them). She made a horizontal mark for toggles
parallel to the chain and a vertical mark for those that were
perpendicular, and came up with this:
||||||||-|||||-||||||||||||-||||||||||||-|||||||||||||||- -|||||||||- -|-|||||||||||||- – -||||-
|||||||||||||||||||||-|||||||||||-|||||- – – – -||||||||||||||||||||-|||||||||||||||||||||-||||||||||||||||||-
|||||||||-||||||||||||||-|||||||-
If she counted the vertical marks and replaced them with
numbers,
this amounted to
8-5-12-12-15- -9- -1-13- – -4-21-11-5- – – – -20-21-18-9-14-7-
and if the numbers stood for letters of the alphabet, horizontal
marks divided the letters, and double horizontals were spaces, this
was
HELLO I AM- – -DUKE- – – – -TURING
Perhaps the multiple horizontals were codes for commonly
used words:
– – – the
– – – – (not used; possibly a/an?)
– – – – – of
If that was right, then the message was HELLO I AM THE
DUKE OF TURING, which was interesting, since the giant fellow
in the armor had previously identified himself as such, and she
deemed it unlikely that he would be sending her a message by this
route. This must have come from someone else calling himself the
Duke of Turing-perhaps a real, living human being.
A few years ago Nell could have relied on it. But in recent
years the Primer had become much subtler than it used to be, full of
hidden traps, and she could no longer make comfortable and easy
assumptions. It was just as likely that this chain had descended
straight from the throne room itself, and that the mechanical Duke
was, for some unfathomable reason, trying to dupe her. So while she
was happy to respond to this message in kind, she intended to take a
guarded approach until she had established whether the sender was
human or mechanical.
The next part of the message was GIVE- – -CHAIN- – – -TUG-
– – – – -ANSWER. Assuming that four horizontal marks stood for
a/an and six stood for to, this was GIVE THE CHAIN A TUG TO
ANSWER.
Nell began to flip the toggles on the chain, erasing the message
from this personage calling himself the Duke and replacing it with I
AM PRINCESS NELL WHY DID YOU IMPRISON ME. Then she
gave the chain a tug, and after a moment it began to withdraw from
her cell. A few minutes later, back came the message:
WELCOME PRINCESS NELL LET US DEVISE A MORE
EFFICIENT MEANS OF COMMUNICATION
followed by instructions on how to use a more compact system
of toggles to represent numbers, and how to convert the numbers
into letters and punctuation marks. Once this was settled, the Duke
said
I AM THE REAL DUKE. I CREATED THESE MACHINES,
AND THEY IMPRISONED ME IN A HIGH TOWER FAR
ABOVE YOU. THE MACHINE CALLING HIMSELF THE
DUKE IS MERELY THE LARGEST AND MOST
SOPHISTICATED OF MY CREATIONS.
Nell responded, THIS CHAIN WEIGHS HUNDREDS OF
POUNDS. YOU MUST BE STRONG FOR A HUMAN.
The Duke responded YOU ARE A SHARP ONE PRINCESS
NELL! THE FULL WEIGHT OF THE CHAIN IS ACTUALLY
SEVERAL THOUSAND POUNDS, AND I MANAGE IT BY
MEANS OF A WINCH LOCATED IN MY ROOM AND
DERIVING ITS MOTIVE POWER FROM THE CENTRAL
SHAFT.
Night had long since fallen on the meadow. Nell closed the
Primer, packed up her basket, and returned home.
She stayed up late into the night with the Primer, just as she
had when she was a small child, and as a result was late for church
the next morning. They said a special prayer for Miss Matheson,
who was at home and said to be feeling poorly. Nell called on her
for a few minutes after the service, then went straight back home
and dove into the Primer again.
She was attacking two problems at once. First, she needed to
figure out how the lock on the door worked. Second, she needed to
find out whether the person sending her the message was human or
mechanical. If she could be confident that he was a human, she
could ask him for assistance in opening the lock, but until she had
settled this issue, she had to keep her activities a secret.
The lock only had a few parts that she could observe: the crank,
the bolt, and a pair of brass drums set into the top with digits from 0
to 9 engraved in them, so that by spinning different ways, they
could display all the integers from 00 to 99. These drums were in
almost constant motion whenever the crank was turning.
Nell had managed to detach several yards of chain from the one
that she was using to converse with the Duke, and so she was able to
feed different messages into the lock and see what result they had.
The number on the top changed with every link that went into
the machine, and it seemed to determine, in a limited way, what the
machine would do next; for example, she had learned that the
number happened to be 09, and if the next link in the chain was in
the vertical position (which the Duke referred to as a one), the
drums would spin around and change the number to 23. But if the
next link was, instead, a zero (as the Duke referred to links with
horizontal toggles), the number drums would change to 03. But that
wasn’t all: In this case, the machine would, for some reason, reverse
the direction in which the chain was moving through the machine,
and also flick the toggle from zero to one. That is, the machine
could write on the chain as well as read from it.
From idle chitchat with the Duke she learned that the numbers
on the drums were referred to as states. At first she did not know
which states led to other states, and so she wandered aimlessly from
one state to the next, recording the connections on scratch paper.
This soon grew to a table listing some thirty-two different states and
how the lock would respond to a one or a zero when it was in each
of those states. It took a while for Nell to fill out all the blank spaces
in the table, because some of the states were hard to get to-they
could be reached only by getting the machine to write a certain
series of ones and zeros on the chain.
She would have gone crazy with ones and zeros were it not for
the frequent interruptions from the Duke, who evidently had nothing
better to do than to send her messages. These two parallel courses of
inquiry occupied all of Nell’s free time for a couple of weeks, and
she made slow but steady progress.
“You must learn how to operate the lock on your door,” the
Duke said. “This will enable you to effect an escape and to come
and rescue me. I will instruct you.”
All he wanted to talk about was technology, which wouldn’t
help Nell in figuring out whether he was a human or a machine.
“Why don’t you pick your own lock,” she responded, “and come
and rescue me? I am just a poor helpless young thing all alone in the
world, and so scared and lonely, and you seem so brave and heroic;
your story really is quite romantic, and I cannot wait to see how it
all comes out now that our fates have become intertwined.”
“The machines placed a special lock on my door, not a Turing
machine,” responded the Duke.
“Describe yourself,” Nell wrote.
“Nothing special, – I’m afraid,” wrote the Duke. “How about
yourself?”
“Slightly taller than average, flashing green eyes, raven hair
falling in luxuriant waves to my waist unless I pin it up to
emphasize my high cheekbones and full lips. Narrow waist, pert
breasts, long legs, alabaster skin that flushes vividly when I am
passionate about something, which is frequently.”
“Your description is reminiscent of my late wife, God rest her
soul.”
“Tell me about your wife.”
“The subject fills me with such unutterable sadness that I
cannot bear to write about it. Now, let’s buckle down to work on the
Turing machine.”
Since the prurient approach had dead-ended, Nell tried a
different tack: playing stupid. Sooner or later, the Duke would
become a little testy. But he was always terribly patient with her,
even after the twentieth repetition of “Could you explain it again
with different words? I still don’t get it.” Of course, for all she
knew, he was upstairs punching the walls until his knuckles were
bloody and simply pretending to be patient with her. A man who’d
been locked up in a tower for years would learn to be extremely
patient.
She tried sending him poetry. He sent back glowing reviews
but declined to send her any of his own, saying it wasn’t good
enough to be committed to metal.
On her twentieth day in the dungeon, Princess Nell finally got
the lock open. Rather than making an immediate escape, she locked
herself back in and sat down to ponder her next move.
If the Duke was human, she should notify him so that they
could plan their escape. If he was a machine, doing so would lead to
disaster. She had to figure out the Duke’s identity before she made
another move.
She sent him another poem.
For the Greek’s love she gave away her heart
Her father, crown and homeland.
They stopped to rest on Naxos
She woke up alone upon the strand
The sails of her lover’s ship descending
Round the slow curve of the earth. Ariadne
Fell into a swoon on the churned sand
And dreamed of home. Minos did not forgive her
And holding diamonds in the pouches of his eyes
Had her flung into the Labyrinth.
She was alone this time. Through a wilderness
Of blackness wandered Ariadne many days
Until she tripped on the memory.
It was still wound all through the place.
She spun it round her fingers
Lifted it from the floor
Knotted it into lace
Erased it.
The lace made a gift for him who had imprisoned her.
Blind with tears, he read it with his fingers
And opened his arms.
The answer came back much too quickly, and it was the same
answer as always: “I do so envy your skill with words. Now, if you
do not object, let us turn our attention to the inner workings of the
Turing machine.”
She had made it as obvious as she dared, and the Duke still
hadn’t gotten the message. He must be a machine.
Why the deception?
Clearly, the mechanical Duke desired for her to learn about the
Turing machines. That is, if a machine could ever be said to desire
something.
There must be something wrong with the Duke’s programming.
He knew there was something wrong with it, and he needed a
human to fix it.
Once Nell had figured these things out, the rest of the
Castle Turing story resolved itself quickly and neatly. She slipped
out of her cell and stealthily explored the castle. The soldiers rarely
noticed her, and when they did, they could not improvise; they had
to go back to the Duke to be reprogrammed. Eventually, Princess
Nell found her way into a room beneath the windmill that contained
a sort of clutch mechanism. By disengaging the clutch, she was able
to stop the Shaft. Within a few hours, the springs inside the soldiers’
back had all run down, and they had all stopped in their tracks. The
whole castle was frozen, as if she had cast an enchantment over it.
Now roaming freely, she opened up the Duke’s throne and
found a Turing machine beneath it. On either side of the machine
was a narrow hole descending straight through the floor and into the
earth for as far as her torch light could illuminate it. The chain
containing the Duke’s program dangled on either side into these
holes. Nell tried throwing stones into the holes and never heard
them hit bottom; the chain must be unfathomably long.
High up in one of the castle’s towers, Princess Nell found a
skeleton in a chair, slumped over a table piled high with books.
Mice, bugs, and birds had nibbled away all of the flesh, but traces of
gray hair and whiskers were still scattered around the table, and
around the cervical vertebrae was a golden chain bearing a seal with
the T insignia.
She spent some time going through the Duke’s books. Most of
them were notebooks where he would sketch the inventions he
hadn’t had time to build yet. He had plans for whole armies of
Turing machines made to run in parallel, and for chains with links
that could be set in more than two positions, and for machines that
would read and write on two-dimensional sheets of chain mail
instead of one-dimensional chains, and for a three-dimensional
Turing grid a mile on a side, through which a mobile Turing
machine would climb about, computing as it went.
No matter how complicated his designs became, the Duke
always found a way to simulate their behavior by putting a
sufficiently long chain into one of the traditional Turing machines.
That is to say that while the parallel and multidimensional machines
worked more quickly than the original model, they didn’t really do
anything different.
One afternoon, Nell was sitting in her favorite meadow,
reading about these things in the Primer, when a riderless chevaline
emerged from the woods and galloped directly toward her. This was
not highly unusual, in and of itself; chevalines were smart enough to
be sent out in search of specific persons. People rarely sent them in
search of Nell, though.
The chevaline galloped at her full-tilt until it was just a few feet
away, and then planted its hooves and stopped instantly-a trick it
could easily do when it wasn’t carrying a human. It was carrying a
note written in Miss Stricken’s hand: “Nell, please come
immediately. Miss Matheson has requested your presence, and time
is short.”
Nell didn’t hesitate. She gathered her things, stuffed them into
the mount’s small luggage compartment, and climbed on. “Go!” she
said. Then, getting herself well situated and clenching the handgrips,
she added, “Unlimited speed.” Within moments the chevaline
was threading gaps between trees at something close to a cheetah’s
sprint velocity, clawing its way up the hill toward the dog pod grid.
From the way the tubes ran, Nell guessed that Miss Matheson
was plugged into the Feed in two or three different ways, though
everything had been discreetly hidden under many afghans, piled up
on top of her body like the airy layers of a French pastry. Only her
face and hands were visible, and looking at them Nell remembered
for the first time since their introduction just how old Miss
Matheson was. The force of her personality had blinded Nell and all
the girls to the blunt evidence of her true age.
“Please let us be, Miss Stricken,” Miss Matheson said, and
Miss Stricken backed out warily, strewing reluctant and reproving
glances along her trail.
Nell sat on the edge of the bed and carefully lifted one of Miss
Matheson’s hands from the coverlet, as if it were the desiccated leaf
of some rare tree. “Nell,” Miss Matheson said, “do not waste my
few remaining moments with pleasantries.”
“Oh, Miss Matheson-” Nell began, but the old lady’s eyes
widened and she gave Nell a certain look, practiced through many
decades in the classroom, that still had not lost its power to silence.
“I have requested that you come here because you are my
favorite student. No! Do not say a word,” Miss Matheson
admonished her, as Nell leaned her face closer, eyes filling with
tears. “Teachers are not supposed to have favorites, but I am
approaching that time when I must confess all my sins, so there it is.
“I know that you have a secret, Nell, though I cannot imagine
what it is, and I know that your secret has made you different from
any other girl I have ever taught. I wonder what you suppose you
will do with your life when you leave this Academy, as you must
soon, and go out into the world?”
“Take the Oath, of course, as soon as I reach the age of
eligibility. And I suppose that I should like to study the art of
programming, and how ractives are made. Someday, of course, after
I have become one of Her Majesty’s subjects, I should like to find a
nice husband and perhaps raise children-”
“Oh, stop it,” Miss Matheson said. “You are a young woman-
of course you think about whether you shall have children-every
young woman does. I haven’t much time left, Nell, and we must
dispense with what makes you like all the other girls and
concentrate on what makes you different.”
At this point, the old lady gripped Nell’s hand with surprising
force and raised her head just a bit off the pillow. The tremendous
wrinkles and furrows on her brow deepened, and her hooded eyes
took on an intense burning appearance. “Your destiny is marked in
some way, Nell. I have known it since the day Lord Finkle-McGraw
came to me and asked me to admit you-a ragged little thete girl-
into my Academy.
“You can try to act the same-we have tried to make you the
same- you can pretend it in the future if you insist, and you can
even take the Oath-but it’s all a lie. You are different.”
These words struck Nell like a sudden cold wind of pure
mountain air and stripped away the soporific cloud of
sentimentality. Now she stood exposed and utterly vulnerable. But
not unpleasantly so.
“Are you suggesting that I leave the bosom of the adopted tribe
that has nurtured me?”
“I am suggesting that you are one of those rare people who
transcends tribes, and you certainly don’t need a bosom any more,”
Miss Matheson said. “You will find, in time, that this tribe is as
good as any other- better than most, really.” Miss Matheson
exhaled deeply and seemed to dissolve into her blankets. “Now, I
haven’t long. So give us a kiss, and then be on your way, girl.”
Nell leaned forward and pressed her lips against Miss
Matheson’s cheek, which looked leathery but was surprisingly soft.
Then, unwilling to leave so abruptly, she turned her head and rested
it on Miss Matheson’s chest for a few moments. Miss Matheson
stroked feebly at her hair and tut-tutted.
“Farewell, Miss Matheson,” Nell said. “I will never forget
you.”
“Nor I you,” Miss Matheson whispered, “though admittedly
that is not saying much.”
. . .
A very large chevaline stood stolidly in front of Constable
Moore’s house, somewhere between a Percheron and a small
elephant in size and bulk It was the dirtiest object Nell had ever seen
in her life-its encrustations alone must have weighed hundreds of
pounds and were redolent with the scent of night soil and stagnant
water. A fragment of a mulberry branch, still bearing leaves and
even a couple of actual berries, had gotten wedged into a flexing
joint between two adjoining armor plates, and long ropes of milfoil
trailed from its ankles.
The Constable was sitting in the middle of his bamboo grove,
enveloped in a suit of hoplite armor, similarly filthy and scarred,
that was twice as big as he was, and that made his bare head look
absurdly small. He had ripped the helmet off and dropped it into his
fish pond, where it floated around like the eviscerated hull of a
scuttled dreadnought. He looked very gaunt and was staring
vacantly, without blinking, at some kudzu that was slowly but
inexorably conquering the wisteria. As soon as Nell saw the look on
his face, she made him some tea and brought it to him. The
Constable reached for the tiny alabaster teacup with armored hands
that could have crumbled stones like loaves of stale bread. The thick
barrels of the guns built into the arms of his suit were scorched on
the inside. He plucked the cup from Nell’s hands with the precision
of a surgical robot, but did not lift it to his lips, perhaps afraid that
he might, in his exhaustion, get the distance a bit wrong and
inadvertently crush the porcelain into his jaw, or even decapitate
himself. Merely holding the cup, watching the steam rise from its
surface, seemed to calm him. His nostrils dilated once, then again.
“Darjeeling,” he said. “Well chosen. Always thought of India as a
more civilised place than China. Have to throw out all of the oolong
now, all the keemun, the lung jang, the lapsang souchong. Time to
switch over to Ceylon, pekoe, assam.” He chuckled.
White trails of dried salt ran back from the corners of the
Constable’s eyes and disappeared into his hairline. He had been
riding fast with his helmet off. Nell wished that she had been able to
see the Constable thundering across China on his war chevaline.
“I’ve retired for the last time,” he explained. He nodded in the
direction of China. “Been doing a bit of consulting work for a
gentleman there. Complicated fellow. Dead now. Had many facets,
but now he’ll go down in history as just another damn Chinese
warlord who didn’t make the grade. It is remarkable, love,” he said,
looking at Nell for the first time, “how much money you can make
shovelling back the tide. In the end you need to get out while the
getting is good. Not very honourable, I suppose, but then, there is no
honour among consultants.”
Nell did not imagine that Constable Moore wanted to get into a
detailed discussion of recent events, so she changed the subject. “I
think I have finally worked out what you were trying to tell me,
years ago, about being intelligent,” she said.
The Constable brightened all at once. “Pleased to hear it.”
“The Vickys have an elaborate code of morals and conduct. It
grew out of the moral squalor of an earlier generation, just as the
original Victorians were preceded by the Georgians and the
Regency. The old guard believe in that code because they came to it
the hard way. They raise their children to believe in that code-but
their children believe it for entirely different reasons.”
“They believe it,” the Constable said, “because they have been
indoctrinated to believe it.”
“Yes. Some of them never challenge it-they grow up to be
smallminded people, who can tell you what they believe but not
why they believe it. Others become disillusioned by the hypocrisy
of the society and rebel-as did Elizabeth Finkle-McGraw.”
“Which path do you intend to take, Nell?” said the Constable,
sounding very interested. “Conformity or rebellion?”
“Neither one. Both ways are simple-minded-they are only for
people who cannot cope with contradiction and ambiguity.”
“Ah! Excellent!” the Constable exclaimed. As punctuation, he
slapped the ground with his free hand, sending up a shower of
sparks and transmitting a powerful shock through the ground to
Nell’s feet.
“I suspect that Lord Finkle-McGraw, being an intelligent man,
sees through all of the hypocrisy in his society, but upholds its
principles anyway, because that is what is best in the long run. And
I suspect that he has been worrying about how best to inculcate this
stance in young people who cannot understand, as he does, its
historical antecedents- which might explain why he has taken an
interest in me. The Primer may have been Finkle-McGraw’s idea to
begin with-a first attempt to go about this systematically.”
“The Duke plays his cards close,” Constable Moore said, “and
so I cannot say whether your suppositions are correct. But I will
admit it hangs together nicely.”
“Thank you.”
“What do you intend to do with yourself, now that you have
pieced all of this together? A few more years’ education and
polishing will place you in a position to take the Oath.”
“I am, of course, aware that I have favorable prospects in the
Atlantan phyle,” Nell said, “but I do not think that it would be
fitting for me to take the straight and narrow path. I am going to
China now to seek my fortune.”
“Well,” Constable Moore said, “look out for the Fists.” His
gaze wandered over his battered and filthy armor and came to rest
on the floating helmet. “They are coming now.”
The best explorers, like Burton, made every effort to blend in.
In this spirit, Nell stopped at a public M.C., doffed her long dress,
and compiled a new set of clothes-a navy blue skin-tight coverall
emblazoned with SHIT HAPPENS in pulsating orange letters. She
swapped her old clothes for a pair of powered skates on the
waterfront, and then headed straight for the Causeway. It rose gently
into the air for a few miles, and then the Pudong Economic Zone
came into view at her feet, and Shanghai beyond that, and she
suddenly began to pick up speed and had to cut the skates’ power
assist. She’d passed over the watershed now. Nell was alone in
China.
The Hackworths have a family reunion; Hackworth
strikes out on his quest; an unexpected companion.
Atlantis/Seattle was designed small and to the point; the
narrow, convoluted straits of Puget Sound, already so full of natural
islands, did not leave much room for artificial ones. So they had
made it rather long and slender, parallel to the currents and the
shipping lanes, and been rather stingy when it came to the parks,
meadows, heaths, gentleman farms, and country estates. Much of
the Seattle area was still sufficiently rich, civilized, and polite that
New Atlantans did not object to living there, and little Victorian
mini-claves were scattered about the place, particularly east of the
lake, around the misty forest domains of the software khans. Gwen
and Fiona had taken a townhouse in one of these areas.
These tiny bits of New Atlantis stood out from the surrounding
forest in the same way that a vicar in morning coat and wing collar
would have in the cave of the Drummers. The prevailing
architecture here, among those who had not adopted neo-Victorian
precepts, was distinctly subterranean; as if these people were
somehow ashamed of their own humanity and could not bear to fell
even a handful of the immense Douglas firs that marched
monotonously up the tumbling slopes toward the frozen, sodden
ridge of the Cascades. Even when it was half buried, a house wasn’t
even a proper house; it was an association of modules, scattered
about here and there and connected by breezeways or tunnels. Stuck
together properly and built on a rise, these modules might have
added up to a house of substance, even grandeur; but to Hackworth,
riding through the territory on his way to visit his family, it was all
depressing and confusing. Ten years among the Drummers had not
affected his Victorian aesthetics. He could not tell where one house
left off and the next one began, the houses were all intertangled with
one another like neurons in the brain.
His mind’s eye again seemed to seize control of his visual
cortex; he could not see the firs anymore, just axons and dendrites
hanging in black three-dimensional space, packets of rod logic
maneuvering among them like space probes, meeting and copulating
among the nerve fibers.
It was a bit too aggressive to be a reverie and too abstract to be
a hallucination. It didn’t really clear away until a gust of cold mist
hit him in his face, he opened his eyes, and realized that Kidnapper
had stopped after emerging from the trees at the crest of a mossy
ridgeline. Below him was a rocky bowl with a few cobblestone
streets sketched out in a grid, a green park lined with red geraniums,
a church with a white steeple, whitewashed four-story Georgian
buildings surrounded by black wrought-iron fences. The security
grid was tenuous and feeble; the software khans were at least as
good at that kind of thing as Her Majesty’s specialists, and so a New
Atlantis clave in this area could rely on the neighbors to shoulder
much of that burden.
Kidnapper picked its way carefully down the steep declivity as
Hackworth looked out over the tiny clave, musing at how familiar it
seemed. Since leaving the Drummers, he hadn’t gone more than ten
minutes without being seized by a feeling of déjà vu, and now it was
especially strong. Perhaps this was because, to some degree, all
New Atlantis settlements looked alike. But he suspected that he had
seen this place, somehow, in his communications with Fiona over
the years.
A bell clanged once or twice, and teenaged girls, dressed in
plaid uniform skirts, began to emerge from a domed school.
Hackworth knew that it was Fiona’s school, and that she was not
entirely happy there. After the crush of girls had gone out of the
place, he rode Kidnapper into the school yard and sauntered once
around the building, gazing in the windows. Without much trouble
he saw his daughter, sitting at a table in the library, hunched over a
book, evidently as part of some disciplinary action.
He wanted so badly to go in and put his arms around her,
because he knew that she had spent many hours suffering like
punishments, and that she was a lonely girl. But he was in New
Atlantis, and there were proprieties to be observed. First things first.
Gwendolyn’s townhouse was only a few blocks away.
Hackworth rang the bell, determined to observe all of the formalities
now that he was a stranger in the house.
“May I ask what your visit is regarding?” asked the
parlourmaid, as Hackworth spun his card onto the salver.
Hackworth didn’t like this woman, who was named Amelia,
because Fiona didn’t like her, and Fiona didn’t like her because
Gwen had given her some disciplinary authority in the household,
and Amelia was the sort who relished having it.
He tried not to confuse himself by wondering how he could
possibly know all of these things.
“Business,” Hackworth said pleasantly. “Family business.”
Amelia was halfiway up the stairs when her eyes finally
focused on Hackworth’s card. She nearly dropped the salver and
had to clutch at the banister with one hand in order to keep her
balance. She froze there for a few moments, trying to resist the
temptation to turn around, and finally surrendered to it. The
expression on her face was one of perfect loathing mixed with
fascination.
“Please carry out your duties,” Hackworth said, “and dispense
with the vulgar theatrics.”
Amelia, looking crestfallen, stormed up the stairs with the
tainted card. There followed a good deal of muffled commotion
upstairs. After a few minutes, Amelia ventured as far down as the
landing and encouraged Hackworth to make himself comfortable in
the parlor. He did so, noting that in his absence, Gwendolyn had
been able to consummate all of the long-term furniture-buying
strategies she had spent so much time plotting during the early years
of their marriage. Wives and widows of secret agents in Protocol
Enforcement could rely on being well cared for, and Gwen had not
allowed his salary to sit around collecting dust.
His ex-wife descended the stairway cautiously, stood outside
the beveled-glass parlor doors for a minute peering at him through
the gauze curtains, and finally slipped into the room without
meeting his gaze and took a seat rather far away from him. “Hello,
Mr. Hackworth,” she said.
“Mrs. Hackworth. Or is it back to Miss Lloyd?”
“It is.”
“Ah, that’s hard.” When Hackworth heard the name Miss
Lloyd, he thought of their courtship.
They sat there for a minute or so, not saying anything, just
listening to the ponderous ratcheting of the grandfather clock.
“All right,” Hackworth said, “I won’t trouble you talking about
extenuating circumstances, as I don’t ask for your forgiveness, and
in all honesty I’m not sure that I deserve it.”
“Thank you for that consideration.”
“I would like you to know, Miss Lloyd, that I am sympathetic
to the step you have taken in securing a divorce and harbour no
bitterness on that account.”
“That is reassuring to know.”
“You should also know that whatever behaviour I engaged in,
as inexcusable as it was, was not motivated by rejection of you or of
our marriage. It was not, in fact, a reflection upon you at all, but
rather a reflection upon myself.”
“Thank you for clarifying that point.”
“I realize that any hope I might harbour in my breast of
rekindling our former relationship, sincere as it might be, is futile,
and so I will not trouble you after today.”
“I cannot tell you how relieved I am to hear that you
understand the situation so completely.”
“However, I would like to be of service to you and Fiona in
helping to resolve any loose ends.”
“You are very kind. I shall give you my lawyer’s card.”
“And, of course, I look forward to reestablishing some sort of
contact with my daughter.”
The conversation, which had been running as smoothly as a
machine to this point, now veered off track and crashed. Gwendolyn
reddened and stiffened.
“You-you bastard.”
The front door opened. Fiona stepped into the foyer carrying
her schoolbooks. Amelia was there immediately, maneuvering
around with her back to the foyer doors, blocking Fiona’s view,
talking to her in low angry tones.
Hackworth heard his daughter’s voice. It was a lovely voice, a
husky alto, and he would have recognized it anywhere. “Don’t lie to
me, I recognised his chevaline!” she said, and finally shouldered
Amelia out of the way, burst into the parlor, all lanky and awkward
and beautiful, an incarnation of joy. She took two steps across the
oriental rug and then launched herself full-length across the settee
into her father’s arms, where she lay for some minutes alternately
weeping and laughing.
Gwen had to be escorted from the room by Amelia, who came
back immediately and stationed herself nearby, hands clasped
behind back like a military sentry, observing Hackworth’s every
move. Hackworth couldn’t imagine what they suspected he might
be capable of-incest in the parlor? But there was no point in
spoiling the moment by thinking of galling things, and so he shut
Amelia out of his mind.
Father and daughter were allowed to converse for a quarter of
an hour, really just queuing up subjects for future conversation. By
that time, Gwen had recovered her composure enough to reenter the
room, and she and Amelia stood shoulder-to-shoulder, quivering in
sympathetic resonance, until Gwen interrupted.
“Fiona, your-father-and I were in the midst of a very serious
discussion when you burst in on us. Please leave us alone for a few
minutes.”
Fiona did, reluctantly. Gwen resumed her former position, and
Amelia backed out of the room. Hackworth noticed that Gwen had
fetched some documents, bound up in red tape.
“These are papers setting out the terms of our divorce,
including all conditions relating to Fiona,” she said. “You are
already in violation, I’m afraid. Of course, this can be forgiven, as
your lack of a forwarding address as such made it impossible for us
to acquaint you with this information. Needless to say, it is
imperative for you to familiarise yourself with these documents
before darkening my door again.”
“Naturally,” Hackworth said. “Thank you for retaining them
for me.”
“If you will be so good as to withdraw from these premises-”
“Of course. Good day,” Hackworth said, took the roll of papers
from Gwen’s trembling hand, and let himself out briskly. He was a
bit surprised when he heard Amelia calling to him from the
doorway.
“Mr. Hackworth. Miss Lloyd wishes to know whether you have
established a new residence, so that your personal effects may be
forwarded.”
“None as yet,” Hackworth said. “I’m in transit.”
Amelia brightened. “In transit to where?”
“Oh, I don’t really know,” Hackworth said. A movement
caught his eye and he saw Fiona framed in a second-story window.
She was undoing the latches, raising the sash. “I’m on a quest of
sorts.”
“A quest for what, Mr. Hackworth?”
“Can’t say precisely. You know, top secret and all that.
Something to do with an alchemist. Who knows, maybe there’ll be
faeries and hobgoblins too, before it’s all over. I’ll be happy to fill
you in when I return. Until then, please ask Miss Lloyd if she would
be so understanding as to retain those personal effects for just a bit
longer. It can’t possibly take more than another ten years or so.”
And with that, Hackworth prodded Kidnapper forward, moving
at an extremely deliberate pace.
Fiona was on a velocipede with smart wheels that made short
work of the cobblestone road. She caught up with her father just
short of the security grid. Mother and Amelia had just materialized a
block behind them in a half-lane car, and the sudden sensation of
danger inspired Fiona to make an impetuous dive from the saddle of
her velocipede onto Kidnapper’s hindquarters, like a cowboy in a
movie switching horses in midgallop. Her skirts, poorly adapted to
cowboy maneuvers, got all fouled up around her legs, and she ended
up slung over Kidnapper’s back like a sack of beans, one hand
clutching the vestigial knob where its tail would have been if it were
a horse, and the other arm thrown round her father’s waist.
“I love you, Mother!” she shouted, as they rode through the
grid and out of the jurisdiction of New Atlantis family law. “Can’t
say the same for you, Amelia! But I’ll be back soon, don’t worry
about me! Goodbye!” And then the ferns and mist closed behind
them, and they were alone in the deep forest.
Carl Hollywood takes the Oath; stroll along the
Thames; an encounter with Lord Finkle-McGraw.
Carl took the Oath at Westminster Abbey on a surprisingly
balmy day in April and afterward went for a stride down the river,
heading not too directly toward a reception that had been arranged
in his honor at the Hopkins Theatre near Leicester Square. Even
without a pedomotive, he walked as fast as many people jogged.
Ever since his first visit to London as a malnourished theatre
student, he had preferred walking to any other way of getting
around the place. Walking, especially along the Embankment where
fellow-pedestrians were relatively few, also gave him freedom to
smoke big old authentic cigars or the occasional briar pipe. Just
because he was a Victorian didn’t mean he had to give up his
peculiarities; quite the opposite, in fact. Cruising along past old
shrapnel-pocked Cleopatra’s Needle in a comet-like corona of his
own roiling, viscous smoke, he thought that he might get to like this.
A gentleman in a top hat was standing on the railing, gazing
stolidly across the water, and as Carl drew closer, he could see that
it was Lord Alexander Chung-Sik Finkle-McGraw, who, a day or
two earlier, had stated during a cinephone conversation that he
should like to meet him face-to-face in the near future for a chat.
Carl Hollywood, remembering his new tribal affiliation, went
so far as to doff his hat and bow. Finkle-McGraw acknowledged the
greeting somewhat distractedly. “Please accept my sincere
congratulations, Mr. Hollywood. Welcome to the phyle.”
“Thank you.”
“I regret that I have not been able to attend any of your
productions at the Hopkins-my friends who have could hardly
have been more complimentary.”
“Your friends are too kind,” said Carl Hollywood. He was still
a little unsure of the etiquette. To accept the compliment at face
value would have been boastful; to imply that His Grace’s friends
were incompetent judges of theatre was not much of an
improvement; he settled for the less dangerous accusation that these
friends had a superfluity of goodness.
Finkle-McGraw detached himself from the railing and began to
walk along the river, keeping a brisk pace for a man of his age.
“I daresay that you shall make a prized addition to our phyle,
which, as brilliantly as it shines in the fields of commerce and
science, wants more artists.”
Not wanting to join in criticism of the tribe he’d just sworn a
solemn Oath to uphold, Carl pursed his lips and mulled over some
possible responses.
Finkle-McGraw continued, “Do you suppose that we fail to
encourage our own children to pursue the arts, or fail to attract
enough men such as yourself, or perhaps both?”
“With all due respect, Your Grace, I do not necessarily agree
with your premise. New Atlantis has many fine artists.”
“Oh, come now. Why do all of them come from outside the
tribe, as you did? Really, Mr. Hollywood, would you have taken the
Oath at all if your prominence as a theatrical producer had not made
it advantageous for you to do so?”
“I think I will choose to interpret your question as part of a
Socratic dialogue for my edification,” Carl Hollywood said
carefully, “and not as an allegation of insincerity on my part. As a
matter of fact, just before I encountered you, I was enjoying my
cigar, and looking about at London, and thinking about just how
well it all suits me.”
“It suits you well because you are of a certain age now. You
are a successful and established artist. The ragged bohemian life
holds no charm for you anymore. But would you have reached your
current position if you had not lived that life when you were
younger?”
“Now that you put it that way,” Carl said, “I agree that we
might try to make some provision, in the future, for young
bohemians-”
“It wouldn’t work,” Finkle-McGraw said. “I’ve been thinking
about this for years. I had the same idea: Set up a sort of young
artistic bohemian theme park, sprinkled around in all the major
cities, where young New Atlantans who were so inclined could
congregate and be subversive when they were in the mood. The
whole idea was self-contradictory. Mr. Hollywood, I have devoted
much effort, during the last decade or so, to the systematic
encouragement of subversiveness.”
“You have? Are you not concerned that our young subversives
will migrate to other phyles?”
If Carl Hollywood could have kicked himself in the arse, he
would have done so as soon as finishing that sentence. He had
forgotten about Elizabeth Finkle-McGraw’s recent and highly
publicized defection to CryptNet. But the Duke took it serenely.
“Some of them will, as the case of my granddaughter
demonstrates. But what does it really mean when such a young
person moves to another phyle? It means that they have outgrown
youthful credulity and no longer wish to belong to a tribe simply
because it is the path of least resistance-they have developed
principles, they are concerned with their personal integrity. It
means, in short, that they are ripe to become members in good
standing of New Atlantis-as soon as they develop the wisdom to
see that it is, in the end, the best of all possible tribes.”
“Your strategy was much too subtle for me to follow. I thank
you for explaining it. You encourage subversiveness because you
think that it will have an effect opposite to what one might naively
suppose.”
“Yes. And that’s the whole point of being an Equity Lord, you
know-to look after the interests of the society as a whole instead of
flogging one’s own company, or whatever. At any rate, this brings
us to the subject of the advertisement I placed in the ractives section
of the Times and our consequent cinephone conversation.”
“Yes,” Carl Hollywood said, “you are looking for ractors who
performed in a project called the Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer.”
“The Primer was my idea. I commissioned it. I paid the racting
fees. Of course, owing to the way the media system is organised, I
had no way to determine the identity of the ractors to whom I was
sending the fees- hence the need for a public advertisement.”
“Your Grace, I should tell you immediately-and would have
told you on the cinephone, had you not insisted that we defer all
substantive discussion to a face-to-face-that I myself did not ract
in the Primer. A friend of mine did. When I saw the advertisement, I
undertook to respond on her behalf.”
“I understand that ractors are frequently pursued by overly
appreciative members of their audience,” said Finkle-McGraw, “and
so I suppose I understand why you have chosen to act as
intermediary in this case. Let me assure you that my motives are
perfectly benign.”
Carl adopted a wounded look “Your Grace! I would never have
supposed otherwise. I am arrogating this role to myself, not to
protect the young lady in question from any supposed malignity on
your part, but simply because her current circumstances make
establishing contact with her a somewhat troublesome business.”
“Then pray tell me what you know about the young woman.”
Carl gave the Equity Lord a brief description of Miranda’s
relationship with the Primer.
Finkle-McGraw was keenly interested in how much time
Miranda had spent in the Primer each week. “If your estimates are
even approximately accurate, this young woman must have
singlehandedly done at least ninetenths of the racting associated
with that copy of the Primer.”
“That copy? Do you mean to say there were others?”
Finkle-McGraw walked on silently for a few moments, then
resumed in a quieter voice. “There were three copies in all. The first
one went to my granddaughter-as you will appreciate, I tell you
this in confidence. A second went to Fiona, the daughter of the
artifex who created it. The third fell into the hands of Nell, a little
thete girl.
“To make a long story short, the three girls have turned out
very differently. Elizabeth is rebellious and high-spirited and lost
interest in the Primer several years ago. Fiona is bright but
depressed, a classic manic-depressive artist. Nell, on the other hand,
is a most promising young lady.
“I prepared an analysis of the girls’ usage habits, which were
largely obscured by the inherent secrecy of the media system, but
which can be inferred from the bills we paid to hire the ractors. It
became clear that, in the case of Elizabeth, the racting was done by
hundreds of different performers. In Fiona’s case, the bills were
strikingly lower because much of the racting was done by someone
who did not charge money for his or her services-probably her
father. But that’s a different story. In Nell’s case, virtually all of the
racting was done by the same person.”
“It sounds,” Carl said, “as if my friend established a
relationship with Nell’s copy-”
“And by extension, with Nell,” said Lord Finkle-McGraw.
Carl said, “May I inquire as to why you wish to contact the
ractor?”
“Because she is a central part of what is going on here,” said
Lord Finkle-McGraw, “which I did not expect. It was not a part of
the original plan that the ractor would be important.”
“She did it,” Carl Hollywood said, “by sacrificing her career
and much of her life. It is important for you to understand, Your
Grace, that she was not merely Nell’s tutor. She became Nell’s
mother.”
These words seemed to strike Lord Finkle-McGraw quite
forcefully. His stride faltered, and he ambled along the riverbank for
some time, lost in thought.
“You gave me to believe, several minutes ago, that establishing
contact with the ractor in question would not be a trivial process,”
he said finally, in quieter voice. “Is she no longer associated with
your troupe?”
“She took a leave of absence several years ago in order to
concentrate on Nell and the Primer.”
“I see,” said the Equity Lord, leaning into the words a little bit
and turning it into an exclamation. He was getting excited. “Mr.
Hollywood, I hope you will not be offended by my indelicacy in
inquiring as to whether this has been a paid leave of absence.”
“Had it been necessary, I would have underwritten it. Instead
there is another backer.”
“Another backer,” repeated Finkle-McGraw. He was obviously
fascinated, and slightly alarmed, by the use of financial jargon in
this context.
“The transaction was fairly simple, as I suppose all transactions
are au fond,” said Carl Hollywood. “Miranda wanted to locate Nell.
Conventional thinking dictates that this is impossible. There are,
however, some unconventional thinkers who would maintain that it
can be done through unconscious, nonrational processes. There is a
tribe called the Drummers who normally live underwater-”
“I am familiar with them,” said Lord Finkle-McGraw.
“Miranda joined the Drummers four years ago,” Carl said. “She
had entered into a partnership. The two other partners were a
gentleman of my acquaintance, also in the theatrical business, and a
financial backer.”
“What did the backer hope to gain from it?”
“A leased line to the collective unconscious,” said Carl
Hollywood. “He thought it would be to the entertainment industry
what the philosopher’s stone was to alchemy.”
“And the results?”
“We have all been waiting to hear from Miranda.”
“You have heard nothing at all?”
“Only in my dreams,” Carl Hollywood said.
Nell’s passage through Pudong; she happens upon the
offices of Madame Ping; interview with the same.
Shanghai proper could be glimpsed only through vertical
apertures between the high buildings of the Pudong Economic Zone
as Nell skated westward. Downtown Pudong erupted from the flat
paddy-land on the east bank of the Huang Pu. Almost all of the
skyscrapers made use of mediatronic building materials. Some bore
the streamlined characters of the Japanese writing system, rendered
in sophisticated color schemes, but most of them were written in the
denser high-resolution characters used by the Chinese, and these
tended to be stroked out in fiery red, or in black on a background of
that color.
The Anglo-Americans had their Manhattan, the Japanese had
Tokyo. Hong Kong was a nice piece of work, but it was essentially
Western. When the Overseas Chinese came back to the homeland to
build their monument to enterprise, they had done it here, and they
had done it bigger and brighter, and unquestionably redder, than any
of those other cities. The nanotechnological trick of making sturdy
structures that were lighter than air had come along just at the right
time, as all of the last paddies were being replaced by immense
concrete foundations, and a canopy of new construction had
bloomed above the first-generation undergrowth of seventy- and
eighty-story buildings. This new architecture was naturally large
and ellipsoidal, typically consisting of a huge neonrimmed ball
impaled on a spike, so Pudong was bigger and denser a thousand
feet above the ground than it was at street level.
Seen from the apex of the big arch in the Causeway through
several miles of bad air, the view was curiously flattened and faded,
as if the whole scene had been woven into a fabulously complex
brocade that had been allowed to gather dust for several decades and
then been hung in front of Nell, about ten feet away. The sun had
gone down not long before and the sky was still a dim orange fading
up into purple, divided into irregular segments by half a dozen
pillars of smoke spurting straight up out of the horizon and toward
the dark polluted vault of the heavens, many miles off to the west,
somewhere out in the silk and tea districts between Shanghai and
Suzhou.
As she power-skated down the western slope of the arch and
crossed the coastline of China, the thunderhead of neon reached
above her head, spread out to embrace her, developed into three
dimensions-and she was still several miles away from it. The
coastal neighborhoods consisted of block after block of reinforcedconcrete
apartment buildings, four to five stories high, looking older
than the Great Wall though their real age could not have exceeded a
few decades, and decorated on the ends facing the street with large
cartoonish billboards, some mediatronic, most just painted on. For
the first kilometer or so, most of these were targeted at businessmen
just coming in from New Chusan, and in particular from the New
Atlantis Clave. Glancing at these billboards as she went by them,
Nell concluded that visitors from New Atlantis played an important
role in supporting casinos and bordellos, both the old-fashioned
variety and the newer scripted-fantasy emporia, where you could be
the star in a little play you wrote yourself. Nell slowed down to
examine several of these, memorizing the addresses of ones with
especially new or well-executed signs.
She had no clear plan in mind yet. All she knew was that she
had to keep moving purposefully. Then the young men squatting on
the curbs talking into their cellphones would keep eyeing her but
leave her alone. The moment she stopped or looked the tiniest bit
uncertain, they would descend.
The dense wet air along the Huang Pu was supporting millions
of tons of air buoys, and Nell felt every kilogram of their weight
pressing upon her ribs and shoulders as she skated up and down the
main waterfront thoroughfare, trying to maintain her momentum
and her false sense of purposefulness. This was the Coastal
Republic, which appeared to have no fixed principles other than that
money talked and that it was a good thing to get rich. Every tribe in
the world seemed to have its own skyscraper here. Some, like New
Atlantis, were not actively recruiting and simply used the size and
magnificence of their buildings as a monument to themselves.
Others, like the Boers, the Parsis, the Jews, went for the understated
approach, and in Pudong anything understated was more or less
invisible. Still others-the Mormons, the First Distributed Republic,
and the Chinese Coastal Republic itself-used every square inch of
their mediatronic walls to proselytize.
The only phyle that didn’t seem to appreciate the ecumenical
spirit of the place was the Celestial Kingdom itself. Nell stumbled
across their territory, half a square block surrounded with a stuccosheathed
masonry wall, circular gates here and there, and an old
three-story structure inside, done in high Ming style with eaves that
curved way up at the corners and sculpted dragons along the
ridgeline of the roof. The place was so tiny compared to the rest of
Pudong that it looked as if you might trip over it. The gates were
guarded by men in armor, presumably backed up by other, less
obvious defensive systems.
Nell was fairly certain that she was being followed,
unobtrusively, by at least three young men who had locked on to her
during her initial passage in from the coast, and who were waiting to
find out whether she really had somewhere to go or was just faking
it. She had already made her way from one end of the waterfront to
the other, pretending to be a tourist who just wanted to take in a
view of the Bund across the river. She was now heading back into
the heart of downtown Pudong, where she had better look as if she
were doing something.
Passing by the grand entrance to one of the skyscrapers-a
Coastal Republic edifice, not barbarian turf-she recognized its
mediaglyphic logo from one of the signs she had seen on the way
into town.
Nell could at least fill out an application without committing
herself. It would allow her to kill an hour in relatively safe and clean
surroundings. The important thing, as Dojo had taught her long ago
in a different context, was not to stop; without movement she could
do nothing.
Alas, Madame Ping’s office suite was closed. A few lights
were on in the back, but the doors were locked and no receptionist
was on duty. Nell did not know whether to be amused or annoyed;
whoever heard of a brothel that closed down after dark? But then
these were only the administrative offices.
She loitered in the lobby for a few minutes, then caught a down
elevator. Just as the doors were closing, someone jumped into the
lobby and slammed the button, opening them back up again. A
young Chinese man with a small, slender body, large head, neatly
dressed, carrying some papers. “Pardon me,” he said. “Did you
require something?”
“I’m here to apply for a job,” Nell said.
The man’s eyes traveled up and down her body in a coolly
professional fashion, almost completely devoid of prurience,
starting and stopping on her face. “As a performer,” he said. The
intonation was somewhere between a question and a declaration.
“As a scriptwriter,” she said.
Unexpectedly, he broke into a grin.
“I have qualifications that I will explain in detail.”
“We have writers. We contract for them on the network.”
“I’m surprised. How can a contract writer in Minnesota
possibly provide your clients with the personalized service they
require?”
“You could almost certainly get a job as a performer,” said the
young man. “You would start tonight. Good pay.”
“Just by looking at the billboards on the way in, I could see that
your customers aren’t paying for bodies. They are paying for ideas.
That’s your value added, right?”
“Pardon me?” said the young man, grinning again.
“Your value added. The reason you can charge more than a
whorehouse, pardon my language, is that you provide a scripted
fantasy scenario tailored to the client’s requirements. I can do that
for you,” Nell said. “I know these people, and I can make you a lot
of money.”
“You know what people?”
“The Vickys. I know them inside and out,” Nell said.
“Please come inside,” said the young man, gesturing toward the
diamondoid door with MADAME PING’S written on it in red
letters. “Would you care for tea?”
. . .
“There are only two industries. This has always been true,”
said Madame Ping, enfolding a lovely porcelain teacup in her
withered fingers, the two-inch fingernails interleaving neatly like
the pinions of a raptor folding its wings after a long hard day of
cruising the thermals. “There is the industry of things, and the
industry of entertainment. The industry of things comes first. It
keeps us alive. But making things is easy now that we have the
Feed. This is not a very interesting business anymore.
“After people have the things they need to live, everything else
is entertainment. Everything. This is Madame Ping’s business.”
Madame Ping had an office on the hundred-and-eleventh floor
with a nice unobstructed view across the Huang Pu and into
downtown Shanghai. When it wasn’t foggy, she could even see the
facade of her theatre, which was on a side street a couple of blocks
in from the Bund, its mediatronic marquee glowing patchily through
the dun limbs of an old sycamore tree. She had a telescope mounted
in one of her windows, fixed upon the theatre’s entrance, and noting
Nell’s curiosity, she encouraged her to look through it.
Nell had never looked through a real telescope before. It had a
tendency to jiggle and go out of focus, it didn’t zoom, and panning
was tricky. But for all that, the image quality was a lot better than
photographic, and she quickly forgot herself and began sweeping it
back and forth across the city. She checked out the little Celestial
Kingdom Clave in the heart of the old city, where a couple of
Mandarins stood on a zigzag bridge across a pond, contemplating a
swarm of golden carp, wispy silver beards trailing down over the
colorful silk of their lapels, blue sapphire buttons on their caps
flashing as they nodded their heads. She looked into a high-rise
building farther inland, apparently a foreign concession of some
type, where some Euros were holding a cocktail party, some
venturing onto the balcony with glasses of wine and doing some
eavesdropping of their own. Finally she leveled the ‘scope toward
the horizon, out past the vast dangerous triad-ridden suburbs, where
millions of Shanghai’s poor had been forcibly banished to make
way for highrises. Beyond that was real agricultural land, a fractal
network of canals and creeks glimmering like a golden net as they
reflected the lambency of the sunset, and beyond that, as always, a
few scattered pillars of smoke in the ultimate distance, where the
Fists of Righteous Harmony were burning the foreign devils’ Feed
lines.
“You are a curious girl,” Madame Ping said. “That is natural.
But you must never let any other person-especially a client-see
your curiosity. Never seek information. Sit quietly and let them
bring it to you. What they conceal tells you more than what they
reveal. Do you understand?”
“Yes, madam,” Nell said, turning toward her interlocutor with
a little curtsy. Rather than trying to do Chinese etiquette and making
a hash of it, she was taking the Victorian route, which worked just
as well. For purposes of this interview, Henry (the young man who
had offered her tea) had advanced her a few hard ucus, which she
had used to compile a reasonably decent full-length dress, hat,
gloves, and reticule. She had gone in nervous and realized within a
few minutes that the decision to hire her had already been made,
somehow, and that this little get-together was actually more along
the lines of an orientation session.
“Why is the Victorian market important to us?” Madame Ping
asked, and fixed Nell with an incisive glare.
“Because New Atlantis is one of the three first-tier phyles.”
“Not correct. The wealth of New Atlantis is great, yes. But its
population is just a few percent. The successful New Atlantis man is
busy and has just a bit of time for scripted fantasies. He has much
money, you understand, but little opportunity to spend it. No, this
market is important because everyone else-the men of all other
phyles, including many of Nippon-want to be like Victorian
gentlemen. Look at the Ashantis-the Jews-the Coastal Republic.
Do they wear traditional costume? Sometimes. Usually though, they
wear a suit on the Victorian pattern. They carry an umbrella from
Old Bond Street. They have a book of Sherlock Holmes stories.
They play in Victorian ractives, and when they have to spend their
natural urges, they come to me, and I provide them with a scripted
fantasy that was originally requested by some gentleman who came
sneaking across the Causeway from New Atlantis.” Somewhat
uncharacteristically, Madame Ping turned two of her claws into
walking legs and made them scurry across the tabletop, like a
furtive Vicky gent trying to slip into Shanghai without being caught
on a monitor. Recognizing her cue, Nell covered her mouth with
one gloved hand and tittered.
“This way, Madame Ping does a magic trick-she turns one
satisfied client from New Atlantis into a thousand clients from all
tribes.”
“I must confess that I am surprised,” Nell ventured.
“Inexperienced as I am in these matters, I had supposed that each
tribe would exhibit a different preference.”
“We change the script a little,” Madame Ping said, “to allow
for cultural differences. But the story never changes. There are
many people and many tribes, but only so many stories.”
Peculiar practices in the woods; the Reformed
Distributed Republic; an extraordinary conversation in
a log cabin; CryptNet; the Hackworths depart.
Half a day’s slow eastward ride took them well up into the
foothills of the Cascades, where the clouds, flowing in eternally
from the Pacific, were forced upward by the swelling terrain and
unburdened themselves of their immense stores of moisture. The
trees were giants, rising branchless to far above their heads, the
trunks aglow with moss. The landscape was a checkerboard of oldgrowth
forest alternating with patches that had been logged in the
previous century; Hackworth tried to guide Kidnapper toward the
latter, because the scarcity of undergrowth and deadfalls made for a
smoother ride. They passed through the remains of an abandoned
timber town, half small clapboard buildings and half moss-covered
and rust-streaked mobile homes. Through their dirty windows,
faded signs were dimly visible, stenciled THIS HOUSEHOLD
DEPENDS ON TIMBER MONEY. Ten-foot saplings grew up
through cracks in the streets. Narrow hedges of blueberry shrubs
and blackberry canes sprouted from the rain gutters of houses, and
gigantic old cars, resting askew on flat and cracked tires, had
become trellises for morning glories and vine maples. They also
passed through an old mining encampment that had been abandoned
even longer ago. For the most part, the signs of modern habitation
were relatively subtle. The houses up here tended to be of the same
unassuming style favored by the software khans closer to Seattle,
and from place to place a number of them would cluster around a
central square with playground equipment, cafés, stores, and other
amenities. He and Fiona stopped at two such places to exchange
ucus for coffee, sandwiches, and cinnamon rolls.
The unmarked, decussating paths would have been confusing
to anyone but a native. Hackworth had never been here before. He
had gotten the coordinates from the second fortune cookie in
Kidnapper’s glove compartment, which was much less cryptic than
the first had been. He had no way to tell whether he was really
going anywhere. His faith did not begin to waver until evening
approached, the eternal clouds changed from silver to dark gray, and
he noticed that the chevaline was taking them higher and toward
less densely populated ground.
Then he saw the rocks and knew he had chosen the right path.
A wall of brown granite, dark and damp from the condensing fog,
materialized before them. They heard it before they saw it; it made
no sound, but its presence changed the acoustics of the forest. The
fog was closing in, and they could barely see the silhouettes of
scrubby, wind-gnarled mountain trees lined up uncomfortably along
the top of the cliff.
Amid those trees was the silhouette of a human being.
“Quiet,” Hackworth mouthed to his daughter, then reined
Kidnapper to a stop.
The person had a short haircut and wore a bulky waist-length
jacket with stretch pants; they could tell by the curve of the hips that
it was a woman. Around those hips she had fastened an arrangement
of neon green straps: a climbing harness. She wore no other outdoor
paraphernalia, though, no knapsack or helmet, and behind her on the
clifftop they could just make out the silhouette of a horse, prodding
the ground with its nose. From time to time she checked her
wristwatch.
A tenuous neon strand of rope hung down the bulging face of
the cliff from where the woman stood. The last several meters
dangled loosely in the mist in front of a small cozy pocket sheltered
by the overhang.
Hackworth turned around to get Fiona’s attention, then pointed
something out: a second person, making his way along the base of
the cliff, out of sight of the woman above. Moving carefully and
quietly, he eventually reached the shelter of the overhang. He
gingerly took the dangling end of the rope and tied it to something,
apparently a piece of hardware fixed into the rock. Then he left the
way he had come, moving silently and staying close to the cliff.
The woman remained still and silent for several minutes,
checking her watch more and more frequently.
Finally she backed several paces away from the edge of the
cliff, took her hands out of her jacket pockets, seemed to draw a few
deep breaths, then ran forward and launched herself into space. She
screamed as she did it, a scream to drive out her own fear.
The rope ran through a pulley fixed near the top of the cliff.
She fell for a few meters, the rope tightened, the man’s knot held,
and the rope, which was somewhat elastic, brought her to a firm but
not violent stop just above the wicked pile of rubble and snags at the
base of the cliff. Swinging at the end of the rope, she grabbed it with
one hand and leaned back, baring her throat to the mist, allowing
herself to dangle listlessly for a few minutes, basking in relief.
A third person, previously unseen, emerged from the trees.
This one was a middle-aged man, and he was wearing a jacket that
had a few vaguely official touches such as an armband and an
insignia on the breast pocket. He walked beneath the dangling
woman and busied himself for a few moments beneath the
overhang, eventually releasing the rope and letting her safely to the
ground. The woman detached herself from the rope and then the
harness and fell into a businesslike discussion with this man, who
poured both of them hot drinks from a thermal flask.
“Have you heard of these people? The Reformed Distributed
Republic,” Hackworth said to Fiona, still keeping his voice low.
“I am only familiar with the First.”
“The First Distributed Republic doesn’t hang together very
well-in a way, it was never designed to. It was started by a bunch
of people who were very nearly anarchists. As you’ve probably
learned in school, it’s become awfully factionalized.”
“I have some friends in the F.D.R.,” Fiona said.
“Your neighbors?”
“Yes.”
“Software khans,” Hackworth said. “The F.D.R. works for
them, because they have something in common-old software
money. They’re almost like Victorians-a lot of them cross over
and take the Oath as they get older. But for the broad middle class,
the F.D.R. offers no central religion or ethnic identity.”
“So it becomes balkanized.”
“Precisely. These people,” Hackworth said, pointing to the man
and the woman at the base of the cliff, “are R.D.R., Reformed
Distributed Republic. Very similar to F.D.R., with one key
difference.”
“The ritual we just witnessed?”
“Ritual is a good description,” Hackworth said. “Earlier today,
that man and that woman were both visited by messengers who gave
them a place and time-nothing else. In this case, the woman’s job
was to jump off that cliff at the given time. The man’s job was to tie
the end of the rope before she jumped. A very simple job-”
“But if he had failed to do it, she’d be dead,” Fiona said.
“Precisely. The names are pulled out of a hat. The participants
have only a few hours’ warning. Here, the ritual is done with a cliff
and a rope, because there happened to be a cliff in the vicinity. In
other R.D.R. nodes, the mechanism might be different. For example,
person A might go into a room, take a pistol out of a box, load it
with live ammunition, put it back in the box, and then leave the
room for ten minutes. During that time, person B is supposed to
enter the room and replace the live ammunition with a dummy clip
having the same weight. Then person A comes back into the room,
puts the gun to his head, and pulls the trigger.”
“But person A has no way of knowing whether person B has
done his job?”
“Exactly.”
“What is the role of the third person?”
“A proctor. An official of the R.D.R. who sees to it that the two
participants don’t try to communicate.”
“How frequently must they undergo this ritual?”
“As frequently as their name comes up at random, perhaps
once every couple of years,” Hackworth said. “It’s a way of creating
mutual dependency. These people know they can trust each other. In
a tribe such as the F.D.R., whose view of the universe contains no
absolutes, this ritual creates an artificial absolute.”
The woman finished her hot drink, shook hands with the
proctor, then began to ascend a polymer ladder, fixed to the rock,
that took her back toward her horse. Hackworth spurred Kidnapper
into movement, following a path that ran parallel to the base of the
cliff, and rode for half a kilometer or so until it was joined by
another path angling down from above. A few minutes later, the
woman approached, riding her horse, an old-fashioned biological
model.
She was a healthy, open-faced, apple-cheeked woman, still
invigorated by her leap into the unknown, and she greeted them
from some distance away, without any of the reserve of neo-
Victorians.
“How do you do,” Hackworth said, removing his bowler.
The woman barely glanced at Fiona. She reined her horse to a
gentle stop, eyes fixed on Hackworth’s face. She was wearing a
distracted look. “I know you,” she said. “But I don’t know your
name.”
“Hackworth, John Percival, at your service. This is my
daughter Fiona.”
“I’m sure I’ve never heard that name,” the woman said.
“I’m sure I’ve never heard yours,” Hackworth said cheerfully.
“Maggie,” the woman said. “This is driving me crazy. Where
have we met?”
“This may sound rather odd,” Hackworth said gently, “but if
you and I could both remember all of our dreams-which we can’t,
of course- and if we compared notes long enough, we would
probably find that we had shared a few over the years.”
“A lot of people have similar dreams,” Maggie said.
“Excuse me, but that’s not what I mean,” Hackworth said. “I
refer to a situation in which each of us would retain his or her own
personal point of view. I would see you. You would see me. We
might then share certain experiences together-each of us seeing it
from our own perspective.
“Like a ractive?”
“Yes,” Hackworth said, “but you don’t have to pay for it. Not
with money, anyway.”
. . .
The local climate lent itself to hot drinks. Maggie did not even
take off her jacket before going into her kitchen and putting a kettle
on to boil. The place was a log cabin, airier than it looked from the
outside, and Maggie apparently shared it with several other people
who were not there at the moment. Fiona, walking to and from the
bathroom, was fascinated to see evidence of men and women living
and sleeping and bathing together.
As they sat around having their tea, Hackworth persuaded
Maggie to poke her finger into a thimble-size device. When he took
this object from his pocket, Fiona was struck by a powerful sense of
déjà vu. She had seen it before, and it was significant. She knew that
her father had designed it; it bore all the earmarks of his style.
Then they all sat around making small talk for a few minutes;
Fiona had many questions about the workings of the R.D.R., which
Maggie, a true believer, was pleased to answer. Hackworth had
spread a sheet of blank paper out on the table, and as the minutes
went by, words and pictures began to appear on it and to scroll up
the page after it had filled itself up. The thimble, he explained, had
placed some reconnaissance mites into Maggie’s bloodstream,
which had been gathering information, flying out through her pores
when their tape drives were full, and offloading the data into the
paper.
“It seems that you and I have a mutual acquaintance, Maggie,”
he said after a few minutes. “We are carrying many of the same
tuples in our bloodstreams. They can only be spread through certain
forms of contact.”
“You mean, like, exchange of bodily fluids?” Maggie said
blankly.
Fiona thought briefly of old-fashioned transfusions and
probably would not have worked out the real meaning of this phrase
had her father not flushed and glanced at her momentarily.
“I believe we understand each other, yes,” Hackworth said.
Maggie thought about it for a moment and seemed to get irked,
or as irked as someone with her generous and contented nature was
ever likely to get. She addressed Hackworth but watched Fiona as
she tried to construct her next sentence. “Despite what you
Atlantans might think of us, I don’t sleep . . . I mean, I don’t have s .
. . I don’t have that many partners.”
“I am sorry to have given you the mistaken impression that I
had formed any untoward preconceptions about your moral
standards,” Hackworth said. “Please be assured that I do not regard
myself as being in any position to judge others in this regard.
However, if you could be so forthcoming as to tell me who, or with
whom, in the last year or so . . .”
“Just one,” Maggie said. “It’s been a slow year.” Then she set
her tea mug down on the table (Fiona had been startled by the
unavailability of saucers) and leaned back in her chair, looking at
Hackworth alertly. “Funny that I’m telling you this stuff-you, a
stranger.”
“Please allow me to recommend that you trust your instincts
and treat me not as a stranger.”
“I had a fling. Months and months ago. That’s been it.”
“Where?”
“London.” A trace of a smile came onto Maggie’s face. “You’d
think living here, I’d go someplace warm and sunny. But I went to
London. I guess there’s a little Victorian in all of us.
“It was a guy,” Maggie went on. “I had gone to London with a
couple of girlfriends of mine. One of them was another R.D.R.
citizen and the other, Trish, left the R.D.R. about three years ago
and co-founded a local CryptNet node. They’ve got a little point of
presence down in Seattle, near the market.”
“Please pardon me for interrupting,” Fiona said, “but would
you be so kind as to explain the nature of CryptNet? One of my old
school friends seems to have joined it.”
“A synthetic phyle. Elusive in the extreme,” Hackworth said.
“Each node is independent and self-governing,” Maggie said.
“You could found a node tomorrow if you wanted. Nodes are
defined by contracts. You sign a contract in which you agree to
provide certain services when called upon to do so.”
“What sorts of services?”
“Typically, data is delivered into your system. You process the
data and pass it on to other nodes. It seemed like a natural to Trish
because she was a coder, like me and my housemates and most
other people around here.”
“Nodes have computers then?”
“The people themselves have computers, typically embedded
systems,” Maggie said, unconsciously rubbing the mastoid bone
behind her ear.
“Is the node synonymous with the person, then?”
“In many cases,” Maggie said, “but sometimes it’s several
persons with embedded systems that are contained within the same
trust boundary.”
“May I ask what level your friend Trish’s node has attained?”
Hackworth said.
Maggie looked uncertain. “Eight or nine, maybe. Anyway, we
went to London. While we were there, we decided to take in some
shows. I wanted to see the big productions. Those were nice-we
saw a nice Doctor Faustus at the Olivier.”
“Marlowe’s?”
“Yes. But Trish had a knack for finding all of these little,
scruffy, out-of-the-way theatres that I never would have found in a
million years-they weren’t marked, and they didn’t really
advertise, as far as I could tell. We saw some radical stuff-really
radical.”
“I don’t imagine you are using that adjective in a political
sense,” Hackworth said.
“No, I mean how they were staged. In one of them, we walked
into this bombed-out old building in Whitechapel, full of people
milling around, and all this weird stuff started happening, and after a
while I realized that some of the people were actors and some were
audience and that all of us were both, in a way. It was cool-I
suppose you can get stuff like that on the net anytime, in a ractive,
but it was so much better to be there with real, warm bodies around.
I felt happy. Anyway, this guy was going to the bar for a pint, and
he offered to get me one. We started talking. One thing led to
another. He was really intelligent, really sexy. An African guy who
knew a lot about the theatre. This place had back rooms. Some of
them had beds.”
“After you were finished,” Hackworth said, “did you
experience any unusual sensations?”
Maggie threw back her head and laughed, thinking that this
was a bit of wry humor on Hackworth’s part. But he was serious.
“After we were finished?” she said.
“Yes. Let us say, several minutes afterward.”
Suddenly Maggie became disconcerted. “Yeah, actually,” she
said. “I got hot. Really hot. We had to leave, ‘cause I thought I had a
flu or something. We went back to the hotel, and I took my clothes
off and stood out on the balcony. My temperature was a hundred
and four. But the next morning I felt fine. And I’ve felt fine ever
since.”
“Thank you, Maggie,” Hackworth said, rising to his feet and
pocketing the sheet of paper. Fiona rose too, following her father’s
cue. “Prior to your London visit, had your social life been an active
one?”
Maggie got a little pinker. “Relatively active for a few years,
yes.”
“What sort of crowd? CryptNet types? People who spent a lot
of time near the water?”
Maggie shook her head. “The water? I don’t understand.”
“Ask yourself why you have been so inactive, Maggie, since
your liaison with Mr.-”
“Beck. Mr. Beck.”
“With Mr. Beck. Could it be that you found the experience just
a bit alarming? Exchange of bodily fluids followed by a violent rise
in core temperature?”
Maggie was poker-faced.
“I recommend that you look into the subject of spontaneous
combustion,” Hackworth said. And without further ceremony, he
reclaimed his bowler and umbrella from the entryway and led Fiona
back out into the forest.
Hackworth said, “Maggie did not tell you everything about
CryptNet. To begin with, it is believed to have numerous unsavoury
connexions and is a perennial focus of Protocol Enforcement’s
investigations. And”- Hackworth laughed ruefully-”it is patently
untrue that ten is the highest level.”
“What is the goal of this organisation?” Fiona asked.
“It represents itself as a simple, moderately successful dataprocessing
collective. But its actual goals can only be known by
those privileged to be included within the trust boundary of the
thirty-third level,” Hackworth said, his voice slowing down as he
tried to remember why he knew all of these things. “It is rumoured
that, within that select circle, any member can kill any other simply
by thinking of the deed.”
Fiona leaned forward and wrapped her arms snugly around her
father’s body, nestled her head between his shoulder blades, and
held tight. She thought that the subject of CryptNet was closed; but
a quarter of an hour later, as Kidnapper carried them swiftly through
the trees down toward Seattle, her father spoke again, picking up the
sentence where he had left it, as if he had merely paused for breath.
His voice was slow and distant and almost trancelike, the memories
percolating outward from deep storage with little participation from
his conscious mind. “CryptNet’s true desire is the Seed-a
technology that, in their diabolical scheme, will one day supplant
the Feed, upon which our society and many others are founded.
Protocol, to us, has brought prosperity and peace-to CryptNet,
however, it is a contemptible system of oppression. They believe
that information has an almost mystical power of free flow and selfreplication,
as water seeks its own level or sparks fly upward- and
lacking any moral code, they confuse inevitability with Right. It is
their view that one day, instead of Feeds terminating in matter
compilers, we will have Seeds that, sown on the earth, will sprout
up into houses, hamburgers, spaceships, and books-that the Seed
will develop inevitably from the Feed, and that upon it will be
founded a more highly evolved society.”
He stopped for a moment, took a deep breath, and seemed to
stir awake; when he spoke again, it was in a clearer and stronger
voice. “Of course, it can’t be allowed-the Feed is not a system of
control and oppression, as CryptNet would maintain. It is the only
way order can be maintained in modern society-if everyone
possessed a Seed, anyone could produce weapons whose destructive
power rivalled that of Elizabethan nuclear weapons. This is why
Protocol Enforcement takes such a dim view of CryptNet’s
activities.”
The trees parted to reveal a long blue lake below them.
Kidnapper found its way to a road, and Hackworth spurred it on to a
hand-gallop. Within a few hours, father and daughter were settling
into bunkbeds in a second-class cabin of the airship Falkiand
Islands, bound for London.
From the Primer, Princess Nell’s activities as Duchess of
Turing; the Castle of the Water-gates; other castles; the
Cipherers’ Market; Nell prepares for her final journey.
Princess Nell remained in Castle Turing for several
months. During her quest for the twelve keys, she had
entered many castles, outwitted their sentries, picked their
locks, and rifled their treasuries; but Castle Turing was an
altogether different place, a place that ran on rules and
programs that were devised by men and that could be
rewritten by one who was adept in the language of the ones
and zeroes. She need not content herself with sneaking in,
seizing a trinket, and fleeing. Castle Turing she made her
own. Its demesne became Princess Nell’s kingdom.
First she gave the Duke of Turing a decent burial. Then
she studied his books until she had mastered them. She
acquainted herself with the states by which the soldiers, and
the mechanical Duke, could be programmed. She entered a
new master program Into the Duke and then restarted the
turning of the mighty Shaft that powered the castle. Her first
efforts were unsuccessful, as her program contained many
errors. The original Duke himself had not been above this; he
called them bugs, in reference to a large beetle that had
become entangled in one of his chains during an early
experiment and brought the first Turing machine to a violent
halt. But with steadfast patience, Princess Nell resolved these
bugs and made the mechanical Duke into her devoted
servant. The Duke in turn had the knack of putting simple
programs into all of the soldiers, so that an order given him by
Nell was rapidly disseminated into the entire force.
For the first time in her life, the Princess had an army and
servants. But it was not a conquering sort of army, because
the springs in the soldiers’ backs unwound rapidly, and they
did not have the adaptability of human soldiers. Still, it was an
effective force behind the walls of the castle and made her
secure from any conceivable aggressor. Following
maintenance schedules that had been laid down by the
original Duke, Princess Nell set the soldiers to work greasing
the gears, repairing cracked shafts and worn bearings, and
building new soldiers out of stockpiled parts.
She was heartened by her success. But Castle Turing
was only one of seven ducal seats in this kingdom, and she
knew she had much work to do.
The territory around the castle was deeply forested, but
grassy ridges rose several miles away, and standing on the
castle walls with the original Duke’s spyglass, Nell was able to
see wild horses grazing there. Purple had taught her the
secrets of mastering wild horses, and Duck had taught her
how to win their affection, and so Nell mounted an expedition
to these grasslands and returned a week later with two
beautiful mustangs, Coffee and Cream. She equipped them
with fine tack from the Duke’s stables, marked with the T
crest-for the crest was hers now, and she could with
justifIcation call herself the Duchess of Turing. She also
brought a plain, unmarked saddle so that she could pass for a
commoner if need be-though Princess Nell had become so
beautiful over the years and had developed such a fine
bearing that few people would mistake her for a commoner
now, even if she were dressed in rags and walking barefoot.
Lying in her bunkbed in Madame Ping’s dormitory, reading
these words from a softly glowing page in the middle of the night,
Nell wondered at that. Princesses were not genetically different
from commoners.
On the other side of a fairly thin wall she could hear water
running in half a dozen sinks as young women performed their
crepuscular ablutions. Nell was the only scripter staying in Madame
Ping’s dormitory; the others were performers and were just coming
back from a long vigorous shift, rubbing liniment on their shoulders,
sore from wielding paddles against clients’ bottoms, or snorting up
great nostril-loads of mites programmed to seek out their inflamed
buttocks and help to repair damaged capillaries overnight. And of
course, many more traditional activities were going on, such as
douching, makeup removal, moisturizing, and the like. The girls
went through these motions briskly, with the unselfconscious
efficiency that the Chinese all seemed to share, discussing the day’s
events in the dry Shanghainese dialect. Nell had been living among
these girls for a month and was just starting to pick up a few words.
They all spoke English anyway.
She stayed up late reading the Primer in the dark. The
dormitory was a good place for this; Madame Ping’s girls were
professionals, and after a few minutes of whispering, giggling, and
scandalized communal shushing, they always went to sleep.
Nell sensed that she was coming close to the end of the Primer.
This would have been evident even if she hadn’t been closing
in on Coyote, the twelfth and final Faery King. In the last few
weeks, since Nell had entered the domain of King Coyote, the
character of the Primer had changed. Formerly, her Night Friends or
other characters had acted with minds of their own, even if Nell just
went along passively. Reading the Primer had always meant racting
with other characters in the book while also having to think her way
through various interesting situations.
Recently the former element had been almost absent. Castle
Turing had been a fair sample of King Coyote’s domain: a place
with few human beings, albeit filled with fascinating places and
situations.
She made her lonesome way across the domain of King
Coyote, visiting one castle after another, and encountering a
different conundrum in each one. The second castle (after Castle
Turing) was built on the slope of a mountain and had an elaborate
irrigation system in which water from a bubbling spring was routed
through a system of gates. There were many thousands of these
gates, and they were connected to each other in small groups, so that
one gate’s opening or closing would, in some way, affect that of the
others in its group. This castle grew its own food and was suffering
a terrible famine because the arrangement of gates had in some way
become fubared. A dark, mysterious knight had come to visit the
place and apparently sneaked out of his bedroom in the middle of
the night and fiddled with connections between some gates in such a
way that water no longer flowed to the fields. Then he had
disappeared, leaving behind a note stating that he would fix the
problem in exchange for a large ransom in gold and jewels.
Princess Nell spent some time studying the problem and
eventually noticed that the system of gates was actually a very
sophisticated version of one of the Duke of Turing’s machines.
Once she understood that the behavior of the water-gates was
orderly and predictable, it was not long before she was able to
program their behavior and locate the bugs that the dark knight had
introduced into the system. Soon water was flowing through the
irrigation system again, and the famine was relieved.
The people who lived in this castle were grateful, which she
had expected. But then they put a crown on her head and made her
their ruler, which she had not expected.
On some reflection, though, it only made sense. They would
die unless their system functioned properly. Princess Nell was the
only person who knew how it worked; she held their fate in her
hands. They had little choice but to submit to her rule.
So it went, as Princess Nell proceeded from castle to castle,
inadvertently finding herself at the helm of a full-fledged rebellion
against King Coyote. Each castle depended on some kind of a
programmable system that was a little more complicated than the
previous one. After the Castle of the Water-gates, she came to a
castle with a magnificent organ, powered by air pressure and
controlled by a bewildering grid of push-rods, which could play
music stored on a roll of paper tape with holes punched through it.
A mysterious dark knight had programmed the organ to play a sad,
depressing tune, plunging the place into a profound depression so
that no one worked or even got out of bed. With some playing
around, Princess Nell established that the behavior of the organ
could be simulated by an extremely sophisticated arrangement of
water-gates, which meant, in turn, that it could just as well be
reduced to an unfathomably long and complicated Turing machine
program.
When she had the organ working properly and the residents
cheered up, she moved on to a castle that functioned according to
rules written in a great book, in a peculiar language. Some pages of
the book had been ripped out by the mysterious dark knight, and
Princess Nell had to reconstruct them, learning the language, which
was extremely pithy and made heavy use of parentheses. Along the
way, she proved what was a foregone conclusion, namely, that the
system for processing this language was essentially a more complex
version of the mechanical organ, hence a Turing machine in
essence.
Next was a castle divided into many small rooms, with a
system for passing messages between rooms through a pneumatic
tube. In each room was a group of people who responded to the
messages by following certain rules laid out in books, which usually
entailed sending more messages to other rooms. After familiarizing
herself with some of these rule-books and establishing that the
castle was another Turing machine, Princess Nell fixed a problem in
the message-delivery system that had been created by the vexatious
dark knight, collected another ducal coronet, and moved on to castle
number six.
This place was entirely different. It was much bigger. It was
much richer. And unlike all of the other castles in the domain of
King Coyote, it worked. As she approached the castle, she learned
to keep her horse to the edge of the road, for messengers were
constantly blowing past her at a full gallop in both directions.
It was a vast open marketplace with thousands of stalls, filled
with carts and runners carrying product in all directions. But no
vegetables, fish, spices, or fodder were to be seen here; all the
product was information written down in books. The books were
trundled from place to place on wheelbarrows and carried here and
there on great long seedylooking conveyor belts made of hemp and
burlap. Book-carriers bumped into each other, compared notes as to
what they were carrying and where they were going, and swapped
books for other books. Stacks of books were sold in great, raucous
auctions-and paid for not with gold but with other books. Around
the edges of the market were stalls where books were exchanged for
gold, and beyond that, a few alleys where gold could be exchanged
for food.
In the midst of this hubbub, Princess Nell saw a dark knight
sitting on a black horse, paging through one of these books. Without
further ado, she spurred her horse forward and drew her sword. She
slew him in single combat, right there in the middle of the
marketplace, and the book-sellers simply backed out of their way
and ignored them as Princess Nell and the dark knight hacked and
slashed at each other. When the dark knight fell dead and Princess
Nell sheathed her sword, the commotion closed in about her again,
like the waters of a turbulent river closing over a falling stone.
Nell picked up the book that the dark knight had been reading
and found that it contained nothing but gibberish. It was written in
some kind of a cipher.
She spent some time reconnoitering, looking for the center of
the place, and found no center. One stall was the same as the next.
There was no tower, no throne room, no clear system of authority.
Examining the market stalls in more detail, she saw that each
one included a man who did nothing but sit at a table and decipher
books, writing them out on long sheets of foolscap and handing
them over to other people, who would read through the contents,
consult rule-books, and dictate responses to the man with the quill
pen, who enciphered them and wrote them out in books that were
then tossed out into the marketplace for delivery. The men with the
quill pens, she noticed, always wore jeweled keys on chains around
their necks; the key was apparently the badge of the cipherers’
guild.
This castle proved fiendishly difficult to figure out, and Nell
spent a few weeks working on it. Part of the problem was that this
was the first castle Princess Nell had visited that was actually
functioning as intended; the dark knight had not been able to foul
the place up, probably because everything was done in ciphers here,
and everything was decentralized. Nell discovered that a smoothly
functioning system was much harder to puzzle out than one that was
broken.
In the end, Princess Nell had to apprentice herself to a master
cipherer and learn everything there was to know about codes and the
keys that unlocked them. This done, she was given her own key, as
a badge of her office, and found a job in one of the stalls
enciphering and deciphering books. As it turned out, the key was
more than just a decoration; rolled up inside its shaft was a strip of
parchment inscribed with a long number that could be used to
decipher a message, if the sender wanted you to decipher it.
From time to time she would go to the edge of the market,
exchange a book for some gold, then go buy some food and drink.
On one of these trips, she saw another member of the
cipherer’s guild, also taking his break, and noticed that the key
hanging around his neck looked familiar: it was one of the eleven
keys that Nell and her Night Friends had taken from the Faery
Kings and Queens! She concealed her excitement and followed this
cipherer back to his stall, making a note of where he worked. Over
the next few days, going from stall to stall and examining each
cipherer, she was able to locate the rest of the eleven keys.
She was able to steal a look at the rule-books that her
employers used to respond to the encoded messages. They were
written in the same special language used at the previous two
castles.
In other words, once Princess Nell had deciphered the
messages, her stall functioned like another Turing machine.
It would have been easy enough to conclude that this whole
castle was, like the others, a Turing machine. But the Primer had
taught Nell to be very careful about making unwarranted
assumptions. Just because her stall functioned according to Turing
rules did not mean that all of the others did. And even if every stall
in this castle was, in fact, a Turing machine, she still could not come
to any fixed conclusions. She had seen riders carrying books to and
from the castle, which meant that cipherers must be at work
elsewhere in this kingdom. She could not verify that all of them
were Turing machines.
It did not take long for Nell to attain prosperity here. After a
few months (which in the Primer were summarized in as many
sentences) her employers announced that they were getting more
work than they could handle. They decided to split their operation.
They erected a new stall at the edge of the market and gave Nell
some of their rule-books.
They also obtained a new key for her. This was done by
dispatching a special coded message to the Castle of King Coyote
himself, which was three days’ ride to the north. Seven days later,
Nell’s key came back to her in a scarlet box bearing the seal of King
Coyote himself.
From time to time, someone would come around to her stall
and offer to buy her out. She always turned them down but found it
interesting that the keys could be bought and sold in this fashion.
All Nell needed was money, which she quickly accumulated
through shrewd dealings in the market. Before long, all eleven of
the keys were in her possession, and after liquidating her holdings
and turning them into jewels, which she sewed into her clothes, she
rode her horse out of the sixth castle and turned north, heading for
the seventh: the Castle of King Coyote, and the ultimate goal of her
lifelong quest.
Nell goes to Madame Ping’s Theatre; rumors of the
Fists; an important client; assault of the Fists of
Righteous Harmony; ruminations on the
inner workings of ractives.
Like much that was done with nanotechnology, Feed lines were
assembled primarily from a few species of small and uncomplicated
atoms in the upper right-hand corner of Mendeleev’s grid: carbon,
nitrogen, oxygen, silicon, phosphorus, sulfur, and chlorine. The
Fists of Righteous Harmony had discovered, to their enduring
delight, that objects made of these atoms burned rather nicely once
you got them going. The flat, low Yangtze Delta country east of
Shanghai was a silk district well stocked with mulberry trees, which
when felled, stacked, and burned beneath the Feed lines would
eventually ignite them like road flares.
The Nipponese Feed was heavy on the phosphorus and burned
with a furious white flame that lit up the night sky in several places
as seen from the tall buildings in Pudong. One major line led toward
Nanjing, one toward Suzhou, one toward Hangzhou: these distant
flares inevitably led to rumors, among the hordes of refugees in
Shanghai, that those cities were themselves burning.
The New Atlantan Feed had a higher sulfur content that, when
burned, produced a plutonic reek that permeated everything for
dozens of miles downwind, making the fires seem much closer than
they really were. Shanghai was smelling pretty sulfurous as Nell
walked into it across one of the bridges linking downtown Pudong
with the much lower and older Bund. The Huang Pu had been too
wide to bridge easily until nano had come along, so the four
downtown bridges were made of the new materials and seemed
impossibly fragile compared with the reinforced-concrete
behemoths built to the north and south during the previous century.
A few days ago, working on a script in Madame Ping’s offices
far above, Nell had gazed out the window at a barge making its way
down the river, pulled by a rickety old diesel tug, swathed in dun
tarps. A few hundred meters upstream of this very bridge she was
now crossing, the tarps had begun squirming and boiling, and a
dozen young men in white tunics had jumped out from beneath,
scarlet bands tied about their waists, scarlet ribbons around their
wrists and foreheads. They had swarmed across the top of the barge
hacking at ropes with knives, and the tarps had reluctantly and
unevenly fallen away to expose a patchy new coat of red paint and,
lined up on the top of the barge like a string of enormous
firecrackers, several dozen compressed gas tanks, also painted a
festive red for the occasion. Under the circumstances, she did not
doubt for a moment that the men were Fists and the gas hydrogen or
something else that burned well. But before they had been able to
reach the bridge, the tanks had been burst and ignited by something
too small and fast for Nell to see from her high post. The barge
silently turned into a carbuncle of yellow flame that took up half the
width of the Huang Pu, and though the diamond window filtered all
of the heat out of its radiance, Nell was able to put her hand on the
pane and feel the absorbed warmth, not much hotter than a person’s
skin. The whole operation had been touchingly hapless, in an age
when a hand-size battery could contain as much energy as all those
cylinders of gas. It had a quaint twentieth-century feel and made
Nell oddly nostalgic for the days when dangerousness was a
function of mass and bulk. The passives of that era were so fun to
watch, with their big, stupid cars and big, stupid guns and big,
stupid people.
Up- and downstream of the bridge, the funeral piers were
crowded with refugee families heaving corpses into the Huang Pu;
the emaciated bodies, rolled up in white sheets, looked like
cigarettes. The Coastal Republic authorities had instituted a pass
system on the bridges to prevent rural refugees from swarming
across into the relatively spacious streets, plazas, atria, and lobbies
of Pudong and gumming up the works for the office crowd. By the
time Nell made it across, a couple of hundred refugees had already
picked her out as a likely alms source and were waiting with canned
demonstrations: women holding up their gaunt babies, or older
children who were trained to hang comatose in their arms; men with
open wounds, and legless gaffers dauntlessly knucklewalking
through the crowd, butting at people’s knees. The taxi-drivers were
stronger and more aggressive than the rurals, though, and had a
fearsome reputation that created space around them in the crowd,
and that was more valuable than an actual vehicle; a vehicle would
always get stuck in traffic, but a taxi-driver’s hat generated a magic
force field that enabled the wearer to walk faster than anyone else.
The taxi-drivers converged on Nell too, and she picked out the
biggest one and haggled with him, holding up fingers and essaying a
few words in Shanghainese. When the numbers had climbed into the
right range for him, he spun around suddenly to face the crowd. The
suddenness of the movement drove people back, and the meter-long
bamboo stick in his hand didn’t hurt either. He stepped forward and
Nell hurried after him, ignoring the myriad tuggings at her long
skirts, trying not to wonder which of the beggars was a Fist with a
concealed knife. If her clothes hadn’t been made of untearable,
uncuttable nanostuff, she would have been stripped naked within a
block.
Madame Ping’s was still doing a decent business. Its clientele
were willing to put up with some inconvenience to get there. It was
only a short distance from the bridgehead, and the Madame had put
a few truculent taxi-drivers on retainer as personal escorts. The
business was startlingly large given the scarcity of real estate in
Shanghai; it occupied most of a five-story reinforced-concrete Mao
Dynasty apartment block, having started out with just a couple of
flats and expanded room by room as the years went on.
The reception area reminded one of a not-bad hotel lobby,
except that it had no restaurant or bar; none of the clients wanted to
see or be seen by any other. The desk was staffed by concierges
whose job was to get the clients out of view as quickly as possible,
and they did it so well that an uninitiated passerby might get the
impression that Madame Ping’s was some kind of a walk-in
kidnapping operation.
One of these functionaries, a tiny woman who seemed oddly
prim and asexual considering that she was wearing a black leather
miniskirt, briskly took Nell to the top floor, where the large
apartments had been built and elaborate scenarios were now realized
for Madame Ping’s clients.
As the writer, Nell of course never actually entered the same
room as the client. The woman in the miniskirt escorted her into a
nearby observation room, where a high-res cine feed from the next
room covered most of one wall.
If she hadn’t known it already, Nell would have seen from the
client’s uniform that he was a colonel in Her Majesty’s Joint Forces.
He was wearing a full dress uniform, and the various pins and
medals on his coat indicated that he had spent a good deal of his
career attached to various Protocol Enforcement units, been
wounded in action several times, and displayed exceptional heroism
on one occasion. In fact, it was clear that he was a rather important
fellow. Reviewing the previous half-hour, Nell saw that, not
surprisingly, he had arrived in mufti, carrying the uniform in a
leather satchel. Wearing the uniform must be part of the scenario.
At the moment he was seated in a rather typical Victorian
parlor, sipping tea from a Royal Albert china cup decorated with a
somewhat agonistic briar rose pattern. He looked fidgety; he’d been
kept waiting for half an hour, which was also part of the scenario.
Madame Ping kept telling her that no one ever complained about
having to wait too long for an orgasm; that men could do that to
themselves any time they wanted, and that it was the business
leading up to it that they would pay for. The biological readouts
seemed to confirm Madame Ping’s rule: Perspiration and pulse were
rather high, and he was about half erect.
Nell heard the sound of a door opening. Switching to a
different angle she saw a parlormaid entering the room. Her uniform
was not as overtly sexy as most of the ones in Madame Ping’s
wardrobe department; the client was sophisticated. The woman was
Chinese, but she played the role with the mid-Atlantic accent
currently in vogue among neo-Victorians: “Mrs. Braithwaite will
see you now.”
The client stepped into an adjoining drawing room, where two
women awaited him: a heavy Anglo in late middle age and a very
attractive Eurasian woman, about thirty. Introductions were
performed: The old woman was Mrs. Braithwaite, and the younger
woman was her daughter. Mrs. was somewhat addled, and Miss was
obviously running the show.
This section of the script never changed, and Nell had been
over it a hundred times trying to troubleshoot it. The client went
through a little speech in which he informed Mrs. Braithwaite that
her son Richard had been killed in action, displaying great heroism
in the process, and that he was recommending him for a posthumous
Victoria Cross.
Nell had already done the obvious, going back through the
Times archives to see whether this was a reconstruction of an actual
event in the client’s life. As far as she could determine, it was more
like a composite of many similar events, perhaps with a dollop of
fantasy thrown in.
At this point, the old lady got a case of the vapors and had to be
helped from the room by the parlormaid and other servants, leaving
the client alone with Miss Braithwaite, who was taking the whole
thing quite stoically. “Your composure is admirable, Miss
Braithwaite,” said the client, “but please be assured that no one will
blame you for giving vent to your emotions at such a time.” When
the client spoke this line, there was an audible tremor of excitement
in his voice.
“Very well, then,” said Miss Braithwaite. She withdrew a small
black box from her reticule and pressed a button. The client grunted
and arched his back so violently that he fell out of his chair onto the
rug, where he lay paralyzed.
“Mites-you have infected my body with some insidious
nanosite,” he gasped.
“in the tea.”
“But that is impossible-most mites highly susceptible to
thermal damage-boiling water would destroy them.”
“You underestimate the capabilities of CryptNet, Colonel
Napier. Our technology is advanced far beyond your knowledge-
as you will discover during the next few days!”
“Whatever your plan is-be assured that it will fail!”
“Oh, I have no plan in particular,” Miss Braithwaite said. “This
is not a CryptNet operation. This is personal. You are responsible
for the death of my brother Richard-and I will have you show the
proper contrition.”
“I assure you that I was as deeply saddened-”
She zapped him again. “I do not want your sadness,” she said.
“I want you to admit the truth: that you are responsible for his
death!”
She pressed another button, which caused Colonel Napier’s
body to go limp. She and a maid wrestled him into a dumbwaiter
and moved him down to a lower floor, where, after descending via
the stairway, they tied him to a rack.
This was where the problem came in. By the time they had
finished tying him up, he was sound asleep.
“He did it again,” said the woman playing the role of Miss
Braithwaite, addressing herself to Nell and anyone else who might
be monitoring. “Six weeks in a row now.”
When Madame Ping had explained this problem to Nell, Nell
wondered what the problem was. Let the man sleep, as long as he
kept coming and paid his bill. But Madame Ping knew her clients
and feared that Colonel Napier was losing interest and might shift
his business to some other establishment unless they put some
variety into the scenario.
“The fighting has been very bad,” the actress said. “He’s
probably exhausted.”
“I don’t think it’s that,” Nell said. She had now opened a
private voice channel direct to the woman’s eardrum. “I think it is a
personal change.”
“They never change, sweetheart,” said the actress. “Once they
get the taste, they have it forever.”
“Yes, but different situations may trigger those feelings at
different times of life,” Nell said. “In the past it has been guilt over
the deaths of his soldiers. Now he has made his peace. He has
accepted his guilt, and so he accepts the punishment. There is no
longer a contest of wills, because he has become submissive.”
“So what do we do?”
“We must create a genuine contest of wills. We must force him
to do something he really doesn’t want to do,” Nell said, thinking
aloud. What would fit that bill?
“Wake him up,” Nell said. “Tell him you were lying when you
said this wasn’t a CryptNet operation. Tell him you want real
information. You want military secrets.”
Miss Braithwaite sent the maid out for a bucket of cold water
and heaved it over Colonel Napier’s body. Then she played the role
as Nell had suggested, and did it well; Madame Ping hired people
who were good at improvisation, and since most of them never
actually had to have sex with clients, she had no trouble finding
good ones.
Colonel Napier seemed surprised, not unpleasantly so, at the
script change. “If you suppose that I will divulge information that
might lead to the deaths of more of my soldiers, you are sadly
mistaken,” he said. But his voice sounded a little bored and
disappointed, and the bio readouts coming in from the nanosites in
his body did not show the full flush of sexual excitement that,
presumably, he was paying for. They still were not meeting their
client’s needs.
On the private channel to Miss Braithwaite, Nell said, “He still
doesn’t get it. This isn’t a fantasy scenario anymore. This is real.
Madame Ping’s is actually a CryptNet operation. We’ve been
drawing him in for the last several years. Now he belongs to us, and
he’s going to give us information, and he’s going to keep giving it
to us, because he’s our slave.”
Miss Braithwaite acted the scene as suggested, making up more
florid dialogue as she went along. Watching the bio readouts, Nell
could see that Colonel Napier was just as scared and excited, now,
as he had been on his very first visit to Madame Ping’s several years
ago (they kept records). They were making him feel young again,
and fully alive.
“Are you connected with Dr. X?” Colonel Napier said.
“We’ll ask the questions,” Nell said.
“I shall do the asking. Lotus, give him twenty for that!” said
Miss Braithwajte, and the maid went to work on Colonel Napier
with a cane.
The rest of the session almost ran itself, which was good for
Nell, because she had been startled by Napier’s reference to Dr. X
and had gone into a reverie, remembering comments that Harv had
made about the same person many years ago.
Miss Braithwaite knew her job and understood Nell’s strategy
instantly: the scenario did not excite the client unless there was a
genuine contest of wills, and the only way for them to create that
contest was to force Napier to reveal real classified information.
Reveal it he did, bit by bit, under the encouragement of Lotus’s
bamboo and Miss Braithwaite’s voice. Most of it had to do with
troop movements and other minutiae that he probably thought was
terribly interesting. Nell didn’t.
“Get more about Dr. X,” she said. “Why did he assume a
connection between CryptNet and Dr. X?”
After a few more minutes of whacking and verbal domination,
Colonel Napier was ready to spill. “Big operation of ours for many
years now-Dr. X is working in collusion with a high-level
CryptNet figure, the Alchemist. Working on something they mustn’t
be allowed to have.”
“Don’t you dare hold back on me,” Miss Braithwaite said.
But before she could extract more information about the
Alchemist, the building was jolted by a tremendous force that sent
thin cracks racing through the old concrete. In the silence that
followed, Nell could hear women screaming all over the building,
and a crackling, hissing sound as dust and sand sifted out of a
fissure in the ceiling. Then her ears began to resolve another sound:
men shouting, “Sha! Sha!”
“I suggest that someone has just breached the wall of your
building with an explosive charge,” Colonel Napier said, perfectly
calm. “If you would be so good as to terminate the scenario now
and release me, I shall try to make myself useful in whatever is to
follow.”
Whatever is to follow. The shouting meant simply, “Kill! Kill!”
and was the battle cry of the Fists of Righteous Harmony.
Perhaps they wanted Colonel Napier. But it was more likely
that they had decided to attack this place for its symbolic value as a
den of barbarian decadence.
Miss Braithwaite and Lotus had already gotten Colonel Napier
out of his restraints, and he was pulling on his trousers. “That we are
not all dead implies that they are not making use of
nanotechnological methods,” he said professorially. “Hence this
attack may safely be assumed to originate from a low-level
neighborhood cell. The attackers probably believe the Fist doctrine
that they are immune from all weapons. It never hurts, in these
situations, to give them a reality check of some sort.”
The door to Napier’s room flew open, splinters of blond naked
wood hissing across the floor. Nell watched, as though watching an
old movie, as Colonel Napier drew a ridiculously shiny cavalry
saber from its scabbard and ran it through the chest of the attacking
Fist. This one fell back into another, creating momentary confusion;
Napier took advantage of it, methodically planting his feet in a
rather prissy-looking stance, squaring his shoulders, calmly reaching
out, as if he were using the saber to poke around in a dark closet,
and twitching the point beneath the second Fist’s chin, incidentally
cutting his throat in the process. A third Fist had gotten into the
room by this point, this one bearing a long pole with a knife lashed
to the end of it with the gray polymer ribbon peasants used for rope.
But as he tried to wheel the weapon around, its butt end got tangled
up in the rack to which Napier had lately been tied. Napier stepped
forward cautiously, checking his footing as he went, as if he did not
want to get any blood on his boots, parried a belated attack, and
stabbed the Fist in the thorax three times in quick succession.
Someone kicked at the door to Nell’s room.
“Ah,” Colonel Napier sighed, when it seemed clear that there
were no more attackers in this party, “it is really very singular that I
happen to have brought the full dress uniform, as edged weapons
are not a part of our usual kit.”
Several kicks had failed to open Nell’s door, which unlike the
ones in the scenario rooms was made of a modern substance and
could not possibly be broken in that way. But Nell could hear voices
out in the corridor and suspected that contrary to Napier’s
speculation, they might have nanotech devices of a very primitive
sort-small explosives, say, capable of blowing doors open.
She ditched her long dress, which would only get in the way,
and got down on knees and elbows to peer through the crack under
the door. There were two pairs of feet. She could hear them
conversing in low, businesslike tones.
Nell opened the door suddenly with one hand, reaching through
with the other to shove a fountain pen into the throat of the Fist
standing closest to the door. The other one reached for an old
automatic rifle slung over his shoulder. This gave Nell more than
enough time to kick him in the knee, which may or may not have
done permanent damage but certainly threw him off balance. The
Fist kept trying to bring his rifle to bear, as Nell kicked him over
and over again. In the end she was able to twist the rifle free from
his feeble one-handed grasp, whirl it around, and butt him in the
head.
The Fist with the pen in his neck was sitting on the floor
watching her calmly. She aimed the rifle his way, and he held up
one hand and looked down and away. His wound was bleeding, but
not all that much; she had ruined his week but not hit anything big.
She reflected that it was probably a healthy thing for hini in the long
run to be rid of the superstition that he was immune to weapons.
Constable Moore had taught her a thing or two about rifles. She
stepped back into her room, locked the door, and devoted a minute
or so to familiarizing herself with its controls, checking the
magazine (only half full) and firing a single round (into the door,
which stopped it) just to make sure it worked.
She was trying to suppress a flashback to the screwdriver
incident. This frightened her until she realized that this time around
she was much more in control of the situation. Her conversations
with the Constable had not been without effect.
Then she made her way down the corridors and stairwells
toward the lobby, slowly gathering a retinue of terrified young
women along her way. They passed a few clients, mostly male and
mostly European, who had been pulled from their scenario rooms
and crudely hacked up by the Fists. Three times she had to fire,
surprised each time at how complicated it was. Accustomed to the
Primer, Nell had to make allowances when functioning in the real
world.
She and her followers found Colonel Napier in the lobby, about
threequarters dressed, carrying on a memorable edged-weapons duel
with a couple of Fists who had, perhaps, been left there to keep the
path of escape open. Nell considered trying to shoot at the Fists but
decided against it, because she did not trust her marksmanship and
also because she was mesmerized by the entire scene.
Nell would have been dazzled by Colonel Napier if she had not
recently seen him strapped to a rack. Still, there was something
about this very contradiction that made him, and by extension all
Victorian men, fascinating to her. They lived a life of nearly perfect
emotional denial-a form of asceticism as extreme as that of a
medieval stylite. Yet they did have emotions, the same as anyone
else, and only vented them in carefully selected circumstances.
Napier calmly impaled a Fist who had tripped and fallen, then
turned his attention to a new antagonist, a formidable character
skilled with a real sword. The duel between Western and Eastern
martial arts moved back and forth across the lobby floor, the two
combatants staring directly into one another’s eyes and trying to
intuit the other’s thoughts and emotional state. The actual thrusts
and parries and ripostes, when they came, were too rapid to be
understood. The Fist’s style was quite beautiful to watch, involving
many slow movements that looked like the stretching of large
felines at the zoo. Napier’s style was almost perfectly boring: He
moved about in a crabbed stance, watched his opponent calmly, and
apparently did a lot of deep thinking.
Watching Napier at work, watching the medals and braid
swinging and glinting on his jacket, Nell realized that it was
precisely their emotional repression that made the Victorians the
richest and most powerful people in the world. Their ability to
submerge their feelings, far from pathological, was rather a kind of
mystical art that gave them nearly magical power over Nature and
over the more intuitive tribes. Such was also the strength of the
Nipponese.
Before the struggle could be resolved, a smart flechette,
horsefly-size, trailing a whip antenna as thick as a hair and as long
as a finger, hissed in through a broken window and thunked into the
back of the Fist’s neck. It did not strike very hard but must have
shot some poison into his brain. He sat down quickly on the floor,
closed his eyes, and died in that position.
“Not very chivalrous,” Colonel Napier said distastefully. “I
suppose I have some bureaucrat up on New Chusan to thank for
that.”
A cautious tour of the building turned up several more Fists
who had died in the same fashion. Outside, the same old crowd of
refugees, beggars, pedestrians, and cargo-carrying bicyclists
streamed on, about as undisturbed as the Yangtze.
Colonel Napier did not return to Madame Ping’s the next week,
but Madame Ping did not blame Nell for the loss of his custom. To
the contrary, she praised Nell for having correctly divined Napier’s
wishes and for improvising so well. “A fine performance,” she said.
Nell had not really thought of her work as a performance, and
for some reason Madame Ping’s choice of words provoked her in a
way that kept her awake late that night, staring into the darkness
above her bunk.
Since she had been very small, she had made up stories and
recited them to the Primer, which were often digested and
incorporated into the Primer’s stories. It had come naturally to Nell
to do the same work for Madame Ping. But now her boss was
calling it a performance, and Nell had to admit that it was, in a way.
Her stories were being digested, not by the Primer, but by another
human being, becoming a part of that person’s mind.
That seemed simple enough, but the notion troubled her for a
reason that did not become clear until she had lain half-asleep and
fretted over it for several hours.
Colonel Napier did not know her and probably never would.
All of the intercourse between him and Nell had been mediated
through the actress pretending to be Miss Braithwaite, and through
various technological systems.
Nonetheless she had touched him deeply. She had penetrated
farther into his soul than any lover. If Colonel Napier had chosen to
return the following week and Nell had not been present to make up
the story for him, would he have missed her? Nell suspected that he
would have. From his point of view, some indefinable essence
would have been wanting, and he would have departed unsatisfied.
If this could happen to Colonel Napier in his dealings with
Madame Ping’s, could it happen to Nell in her dealings with the
Primer? She had always felt that there was some essence in the
book, something that understood her and even loved her, something
that forgave her when she did wrong and appreciated what she did
right.
When she’d been very young, she hadn’t questioned this at all;
it had been part of the book’s magic. More recently she had
understood it as the workings of a parallel computer of enormous
size and power, carefully programmed to understand the human
mind and give it what it needed.
Now she wasn’t so sure. Princess Nell’s recent travels through
the lands of King Coyote, and the various castles with their
increasingly sophisticated computers that were, in the end, nothing
more than Turing machines, had caught her up in a bewildering
logical circle. In Castle Turing she had learned that a Turing
machine could not really understand a human being. But the Primer
was, itself, a Turing machine, or so she suspected; so how could it
understand Nell?
Could it be that the Primer was just a conduit, a technological
system that mediated between Nell and some human being who
really loved her? In the end, she knew, this was basically how all
ractives worked. The idea was too alarming to consider at first, and
so she circled around it cautiously, poking at it from different
directions, like a cavewoman discovering fire for the first time. But
as she settled in closer, she found that it warmed her and satisfied
her, and by the time her mind wandered into sleep, she had become
dependent upon it and would not consider going back into the cold
and dark place where she had been traveling for so many years.
Carl Hollywood returns to Shanghai; his forebears in
the territory of the Lone Eagles; Mrs. Kwan ’s teahouse.
Heavy rains had come rolling into Shanghai from the West,
like a harbinger of the Fists of Righteous Harmony and the
thundering herald of the coming Celestial Kingdom. Stepping off
the airship from London, Carl Hollywood at once felt himself in a
different Shanghai from the one he had left; the old city had always
been wild, but in a sophisticated urban way, and now it was wild
like a frontier town. He sensed this ambience before he even left the
Aerodrome; it leaked in from the streets, like ozone before a
thunderstorm. Looking out the windows, he could see a heavy rain
rushing down, knocking all the nanotech out of the air and down
into the gutters, whence it would eventually stain the Huang Pu and
then the Yangtze. Whether it was the wild atmosphere or the
prospect of being rained upon, he stopped his porters short of the
main exit doors so that he could change hats. The hatboxes were
stacked on one of the carts; his bowler went into the smallest and
topmost box, which was empty, and then he yanked the largest box
out from underneath, popping the stack, and took out a ten-gallon
Stetson of breathtaking width and sweep, almost like a headmounted
umbrella. Casting an eye into the street, where a rushing
brown stream carried litter, road dust, choleraridden sewage, and
tons of captive nanotech toward the storm drains, he slipped off his
leather shoes and exchanged them for a pair of handtooled cowboy
boots, made from hides of gaudy reptiles and avians, the pores of
which had been corked with mites that would keep his feet dry even
if he chose to wade through the gutters.
Thus reconfigured, Carl Hollywood stepped out into the streets
of Shanghai. As he came out the doors of the Aerodrome, his duster
billowed in the cold wind of the storm and even the beggars stepped
away from him. He paused to light a cigar before proceeding and
was not molested; even the refugees, who were starving or at least
claimed to be, derived more enjoyment from simply looking at him
than they would have from the coins in his pocket. He walked the
four blocks to his hotel, pursued doggedly by the porters and by a
crowd of youngsters entranced by the sight of a real cowboy.
Carl’s grandfather was a Lone Eagle who had ridden out from
the crowding and squalor of Silicon Valley in the 1990s and
homesteaded a patch of abandoned ranch along a violent cold river
on the eastern slope of the Wind River Range. From there he had
made a comfortable living as a freelance coder and consultant. His
wife had left him for the bright lights and social life of California
and been startled when he had managed to persuade a judge that he
was better equipped to raise their son than she was. Grandfather had
raised Carl Hollywood’s father mostly in the out-of-doors, hunting
and fishing and chopping wood when he wasn’t sitting inside
studying his calculus. As the years went by, they had gradually been
joined by like-minded sorts with similar stories to tell, so that by the
time of the Interregnum they had formed a community of several
hundred, loosely spread over a few thousand square miles of
nearwilderness but, in the electronic sense, as tightly knit as any
small village in the Old West. Their technological prowess,
prodigious wealth, and numerous large weapons had made them a
dangerous group, and the odd pickup-truck-driving desperadoes
who attacked an isolated ranch had found themselves surrounded
and outgunned with cataclysmic swiftness. Grandfather loved to tell
stories of these criminals, how they had tried to excuse their own
crimes by pleading that they were economically disadvantaged or
infected with the disease of substance abuse, and how the Lone
Eagles-many of whom had overcome poverty or addiction
themselves-had dispatched them with firing squads and left them
posted around the edge of their territory as NO TRESPASSING
signs that even the illiterate could read.
The advent of the Common Economic Protocol had settled
things down and, in the eyes of the old-timers, begun to soften and
ruin the place. There was nothing like getting up at three in the
morning and riding the defensive perimeter in subzero cold, with a
loaded rifle, to build up one’s sense of responsibility and
community. Carl Hollywood’s clearest and best memories were of
going on such rides with his father. But as they squatted on packed
snow boiling coffee over a fire, they would listen to the radio and
hear stories about the jihad raging across Xinjiang, driving the Han
back into the east, and about the first incidents of nanotech terrorism
in Eastern Europe. Carl’s father didn’t have to tell him that their
community was rapidly acquiring the character of a historical theme
park, and that before long they would have to give up the mounted
patrols for more modern defensive systems.
Even after those innovations had been made and the
community had mostly joined up with the First Distributed
Republic, Carl and his father and grandfather had continued to do
things in the old way, hunting elk and heating their houses with
wood-burning stoves and sitting behind their computer screens in
dark rooms late into the night hand-tooling code in assembly
language. It was a purely male household (Carl’s mother had died
when he was nine years old, in a rafting accident), and Carl had fled
the place as soon as he’d found a way, going to San Francisco, then
New York, then London, and making himself useful in theatrical
productions. But the older he got, the more he understood in how
many ways he was rooted in the place where he grew up, and he
never felt it more purely than he did striding down a crowded street
in a Shanghai thunderstorm, puffing on a thick cigar and watching
the rain dribble from -the rim of his hat. The most intense and clear
sensations of his life had flooded into his young and defenseless
mind during his first dawn patrol, knowing the desperadoes were
out there somewhere. He kept returning to these memories in later
life, trying to recapture the same purity and intensity of sensation, or
trying to get his ractors to feel it. Now for the first time in thirty
years he felt the same thing, this time on the streets of Shanghai, hot
and pulsing on the edge of a dynastic rebellion, like the arteries of
an old man about to have his first orgasm in years.
He merely touched base at his hotel, where he stuffed the
pockets of his coat with a sheaf of foolscap, a fountain pen, a silver
box loaded with cigars like rounds in an ammo clip, and some tiny
containers of nanosnuff that he could use to adjust the functioning
of his brain and body. He also hefted a heavy walking-stick, a real
wizard’s staff loaded with security aerostats that would shepherd
him back to the hotel in the event of a riot. Then he returned once
more to the streets, shouldering for a mile through the crowd until
he reached a teahouse where he had passed many long nights during
his tenure at the Parnasse. Old Mrs. Kwan welcomed him warmly,
bowing many times and showing him to his favorite corner table
where he could look out on the intersection of Nanjing Road and a
narrow side street jammed with tiny market stalls. All he could see
now were the backs and buttocks of people in the street, jammed up
against the glass by the pressure of the crowd. He ordered a big pot
of his favorite green tea, the most expensive kind, picked in April
when the leaves were tender and young, and spread out his sheets of
foolscap across the table. This teahouse was fully integrated into the
worldwide media network, and so the pages automatically jacked
themselves in. Under Carl Hollywood’s murmured commands they
began to fill themselves with columns of animated text and
windows bearing images and cine feeds. He took his first sip of
tea-always the best one- withdrew his big fountain pen from his
pocket, removed the lid, and touched it to the paper. He began to
inscribe commands onto the page, in words and drawings. As he
finished the words, they were enacted before him, and as he drew
the lines between the boxes and circles, links were made and
information flowed.
At the bottom of the page he wrote the word MIRANDA and
drew a circle around it. It was not connected to anything else in the
diagram yet. He hoped that before long it would be. Carl Hollywood
worked on his papers late into the night, and Mrs. Kwan continued
to replenish his teapot and to bring him little sweets and decorated
the edge of his table with candles as night fell and the teahouse
darkened, for she remembered that he liked to work by candlelight.
The Chinese people outside, separated from him by half an inch of
crosslinked diamond, watched with their noses making white
ellipses against the pane, their faces glowing in the candlelight like
ripe peaches hanging in dark lush foliage.
The Hackworths in transit, and in London; the East
End; a remarkable boatride; Dramatis Personae;
a night at the theatre.
Smooth, fine-grained arctic clouds undulated slowly like snow
drifts into the distance, a thousand miles looking like the width of a
front yard, lit but not warmed by a low apricot sun that never quite
went down. Fiona lay on her stomach on the top bunk, looking out
the window, watching her breath condense on the pane and then
evaporate in the parched air.
“Father?” she said, very softly, to see if he was awake.
He wasn’t, but he woke up quickly, as if he’d been in one of
those dreams that just skims beneath the surface of consciousness,
like an airship clipping a few cloud-tops. “Yes?”
“Who is the Alchemist? Why are you looking for him?”
“I would rather not explain why I’m looking for him. Let us
say that I have incurred obligations that want settling.” Her father
seemed more preoccupied with the second part of the question than
she’d expected, and his voice was steeped in regret.
“Who is he?” she insisted gently.
“Oh. Well, my darling, if I knew that, I’d have found him.”
“Father!”
“What sort of a person is he? I haven’t been afforded many
clues, unfortunately. I’ve tried to draw some deductions from the
sorts of people who are looking for him, and the sort of person I
am.”
“Pardon me, Father, but what bearing does your own nature
have on that of the Alchemist?”
“More than one knowledgeable sort has arrived at the
conclusion that I’m just the right man to find this fellow, even
though I know nothing of criminals and espionage and so forth. I’m
just a nanotechnological engineer.”
“That’s not true, Father! You’re ever so much more than that.
You know so many stories-you told me so many, when you were
gone, remember?”
“I suppose so,” he allowed, strangely diffident.
“And I read it every night. And though the stories were about
faeries and pirates and djinns and such, I could always sense that
you were behind them. Like the puppeteer pulling the strings and
imbuing them with voices and personalities. So I think you’re more
than an engineer. It’s just that you need a magic book to bring it
out.”
“Well . . . that’s a point I had not considered,” her father said,
his voice suddenly emotional. She fought the temptation to peer
over the edge of the bed and look at his face, which would have
embarrassed him. Instead she curled up in her bed and closed her
eyes.
“Whatever you may think of me, Fiona-and I must say I am
pleasantly surprised that you think of me so favourably-to those
who despatched me on this errand, I am an engineer. Without being
arrogant, I might add that I have advanced rapidly in that field and
attained a position of not inconsiderable responsibility. As this is the
only characteristic that distinguishes me from other men, it can be
the only reason I was chosen to find the Alchemist. From this I infer
that the Alchemist is himself a nanotechnological researcher of
some sophistication, and that he is thought to be developing a
product that is of interest to more than one of the Powers.”
“Are you talking about the Seed, Father?”
He was silent for a few moments. When he spoke again, his
voice was high and tight. “The Seed. How did you know about the
Seed?”
“You told me about it, Father. You told me it was a dangerous
thing, and that Protocol Enforcement mustn’t allow it to be created.
And besides . . .
“Besides what?”
She was on the verge of reminding him that her dreams had
been filled with seeds for the last several years, and that every story
she had seen in her Primer had been replete with them: seeds that
grew up into castles; dragon’s teeth that grew up into soldiers; seeds
that sprouted into giant beanstalks leading to alternate universes in
the clouds; and seeds, given to hospitable, barren couples by
itinerant crones, that grew up into plants with bulging pods that
contained happy, kicking babies.
But she sensed that if she mentioned this directly, he would
slam the steel door in her face-a door that was tantalizingly
cracked open at the moment.
“Why do you think that Seeds are so interesting?” she essayed.
“They are interesting inasmuch as a beaker of nitroglycerin is
interesting,” he said. “They are subversive technology. You are not
to speak of Seeds again, Fiona-CryptNet agents could be
anywhere, listening to our conversation.”
Fiona sighed. When her father spoke freely, she could sense the
man who had told her the stories. When certain subjects were
broached, he drew down his veil and became just another Victorian
gentleman. It was irksome. But she could sense how the same
characteristic, in a man who was not her father, could be
provocative. It was such an obvious weakness that neither she nor
any woman could resist the temptation to exploit it-a mischievous
and hence tantalizing notion that was to occupy much of Fiona’s
thinking for the next few days, as they encountered other members
of their tribe in London.
. . .
After a simple dinner of beer and pasties in a pub on the fringes
of the City, they rode south across the Tower Bridge, pierced a
shallow layer of posh development along the right bank of the river,
and entered into Southwark. As in other Atlantan districts of
London, Feed lines had been worked into the sinews of the place,
coursing through utility tunnels, clinging to the clammy undersides
of bridges, and sneaking into buildings through small holes bored in
the foundations. The tiny old houses and flats of this once
impoverished quarter had mostly been refurbished into toeholds for
young Atlantans from all around the Anglosphere, poor in equity
but rich in expectations, who had come to the great city to incubate
their careers. The businesses on the ground floors tended to be pubs,
coffeehouses, and music halls. As father and daughter worked their
way east, generally paralleling the river, the lustre that was so
evident near the approaches to the bridge began to wear thin in
places, and the ancient character of the neighborhood began to
assert itself, as the bones of the knuckles reveal their shape beneath
the stretched skin of a fist. Wide gaps developed between the
waterfront developments, allowing them to look across the river into
a district whose blanket of evening fog was already stained with the
carcinogenic candy-colored hues of big mediatrons.
Fiona Hackworth noticed a glow in the air, which resolved into
a constellation when she blinked and focused. A pinprick of green
light, an infinitesimal chip of emerald, touched the surface of her
eye, expanding into a cloud of light. She blinked twice, and it was
gone. Sooner or later it and many others would make their way to
the corners of her eyes, giving her a grotesque appearance. She drew
a handkerchief from her sleeve and wiped her eyes. The presence of
so many lidar-emitting mites prompted her to realize that they had
been infiltrating a great expanse of fog for some minutes without
really being aware of it; moisture from the river was condensing
around the microscopic guardians of the border. Colored light
flashed vaguely across the screen of fog before them, silhouetting a
stone column planted in the center of the road: wings of a gryphon,
horn of a unicorn, crisp and black against a lurid cosmos. A
constable stood beside the pediment, symbolically guarding the bar.
He nodded to the Hackworths and mumbled something gruff but
polite through his chinstrap as father and daughter rode out of New
Atlantis and into a gaudy dave full of loutish thetes scrumming and
chanting before the entrances of pubs. Fiona caught sight of an old
Union Jack, then did a double-take and realized that the limbs of the
St. Andrew’s Cross had been enhanced with stars, like the
Confederate Battle Flag. She gave her chevaline a nudge and pulled
up nearly abreast with her father.
Then the city became darker and quieter, though no less
crowded, and for a few blocks they saw only dark-haired men with
mustaches and women who were nothing more than columns of
black fabric. Then Fiona smelled anise and garlic, and they passed
into Vietnamese territory for a short time. She would have enjoyed
stopping at one of the sidewalk cafés for a bowl of pho, but her
father rode on, pursuing the tide that was ebbing down the Thames,
and in a few more minutes they had come once again to the bank. It
was lined with ancient masonry warehouses-a category of
structure now so obsolete as to defy explanation-which had been
converted into offices.
A pier rode on the surface of the river, riding up and down on
the tide, linked to the rim of the granite embankment by a hinged
gangway. A shaggy black vessel was tied up to the pier, but it was
completely unlit, visible only by its black shadow against the
charcoal-gray water. After the chevalines had planted themselves
and the Hackworths had dismounted, they were able to hear low
voices coming from below.
John Hackworth withdrew some tickets from his breast pocket
and asked them to illuminate themselves; but they were printed on
old-fashioned paper that did not contain its own energy source, and
so he finally had to use the microtorch dangling from his watch
chain. Apparently satisfied that they had arrived at the right place,
he offered Fiona his arm and escorted her down the gangway to the
pier. A tiny flickering light bobbed toward them and resolved into
an Afro-Caribbean man, wearing rimless glasses and carrying an
antique hurricane lamp. Fiona watched his face as his enormous
eyes, yellowed like antique ivory billiard balls, scanned their tickets.
His skin was rich and warm and glowing in the light of the candle,
and he smelled faintly of citrus combined with something darker
and less ingratiating. When he was finished, he looked up, not at the
Hackworths but off into the distance, turned his back, and ambled
away. John Hackworth stood there for a few moments, awaiting
instructions, then straightened, squared his shoulders, and led Fiona
across the pier to the boat.
It was eight or ten meters long. There was no gangway, and
persons already on board had to reach out and clutch their arms and
pull them in, a breach of formality that happened so quickly that
they had no time to become uncomfortable.
The boat was basically a large flat open tub, not much more
than a liferaft, with some controls in the bow and some sort of
modern and hence negligibly small propulsion system built into the
stern. As their eyes adjusted to the dim light scattering through the
fog, they could see perhaps a dozen other passengers around the
edge of the boat, seated so that wakes from passing vessels would
not upset them. Seeing wisdom in this, John led Fiona to the only
remaining open space, and they sat down between two other groups:
a trio of young Nipponese men forcing cigarettes on one another,
and a man and woman in bohemian-but-expensive clothes, sipping
lager from cans and conversing in Canadian accents.
The man from the pier cast off the painters and vaulted aboard.
Another functionary had taken the controls and gently accelerated
into the current, cutting the throttle at one point and swinging her
about into an oncoming wake. When the boat entered the main
channel and came up to speed, it very quickly became chilly, and all
the passengers murmured, demanding more warmth from their
thermogenic clothing. The AfroCaribbean man made a circuit
lugging a heavy chest stocked with cans of lager and splits of pinot
noir. Conversation stopped for several minutes as the passengers, all
driven by the same primal impulses, turned their faces into the cool
-wind and relaxed into the gentle thumping of hull against waves.
The trip took the better part of an hour. After several minutes,
conversation resumed, most of the passengers remaining within
their little groups. The refreshment chest made a few more circuits.
John Hackworth began to realize, from a few subtleties, that one of
the Nipponese youths was much more intoxicated than he was
letting on and had probably spent a few hours in a dockside pub
before reaching the pier. He took a drink from the chest every time
it came by, and half an hour into the ride, he rose unsteadily to his
feet, leaned over the edge, and threw up. John turned to smirk at his
daughter. The boat struck an unseen wave, rolling sideways into the
trough. Hackworth clutched first at the railing and then at his
daughter’s arm.
Fiona screamed. She was staring over John’s shoulder at the
Nipponese youths. John turned around to see that there were only
two of them now; the sick one was gone, and the other two had
flung their bellies across the gunwhale and stretched out their arms,
fingers like white rays shining into the black water. John felt
Fiona’s arm pull free from his grasp, and as he turned toward her, he
just saw her vaulting over the rail.
It was over before he had an opportunity to get really scared.
The crew dealt with the matter with a practiced efficiency that
suggested to Hackworth that the Nipponese man was really an actor,
the entire incident part of the production. The Afro-Caribbean man
cursed and shouted for them to hang on, his voice pure and powerful
as a Stradivarius cello, a stage voice. He inverted the cooler,
dumping out all the beer and wine, then snapped it shut and flung it
over the stern as a life preserver. Meanwhile the pilot was swinging
the boat round. Several passengers, including Hackworth, had
turned on microtorches and focused their beams on Fiona, whose
skirts had inflated as she’d jumped in feet-first and now surrounded
her like a raft of flowers. With one hand she was clutching the
Nipponese man’s collar, and with the other, the handle of the ice
chest. She did not have the strength or buoyancy to hold the drunken
man out of the water, and so both of them were swamped by the
estuary’s rolling waves.
The man with the dreadlocks hauled Fiona out first and handed
her off to her father. The fabricules making up her clothing-
countless mites linked elbow-to-elbow in a two-dimensional array-
went to work pumping away the water trapped in the interstices.
Fiona was wreathed in a sinuous veil of mist that burned with the
captured light of the torches. Her thick red hair had been freed from
the confines of her hat, which had been torn away by the waves and
now fell about her in a cape of fire.
She was looking defiantly at Hackworth, whose adrenal glands
had finally jumped into the endocrinological fray. When he saw his
daughter in this way, it felt as though someone were inexorably
sliding a hundredpound block of ice up the length of his spine.
When the sensation reached his medulla, he staggered and nearly
had to sit down. She had somehow flung herself through an
unknown and unmarked barrier and become supernatural, a naiad
rising from the waves cloaked in fire and steam. In some rational
compartment of his mind that had now become irrelevant,
Hackworth wondered whether Dramatis Personae (for this was the
name of the troupe that was running this show) had got some
nanosites into his system, and if so what exactly they were doing to
his mind.
Water streamed from Fiona’s skirts and ran between the
floorboards, and then she was dry, except for her face and hair. She
wiped her face on her sleeves, ignoring her father’s proffered
handkerchief. No words passed between them, and they did not
embrace, as if Fiona were conscious now of the impact she was
having upon her father and all the others-a faculty that, Hackworth
supposed, must be highly acute in sixteen-year-old girls. By now the
Nipponese man was just about finished coughing water out of his
lungs and gasping piteously for air. As soon as he had the airways
up and running, he spoke hoarsely and lengthily. One of his
companions translated. “He says that we are not alone-that the
water is filled with spirits-that they spoke to him. He followed
them beneath the waves. But feeling his spirit about to leave his
body, he felt fear and swam to the surface and was saved by the
young woman. He says that the spirits are talking to all of us, and
we must listen to them!”
This was, needless to say, embarrassing, and so all of the
passengers doused their torches and turned their backs on the
stricken passenger. But when Hackworth’s eyes had adjusted, he
took another look at this man and saw that the exposed portions of
his flesh had begun to radiate colored light.
He looked at Fiona and saw that a band of white light encircled
her head like a tiara, bright enough that it shone red through her
hair, with a jewel centered upon her forehead. Hackworth marveled
at this sight from a distance, knowing that she wanted to be free of
him for now.
Fat lights hung low above the water, describing the envelopes
of great ships, sliding past each other as their parallax shifted with
the steady progress of the boat. They had come to a place near the
mouth of the estuary but not on the usual shipping lanes, where
ships lay at anchor awaiting shifts in tides, winds, or markets. One
constellation of lights did not move but only grew larger as they
drew toward it. Experimenting with shadows and examining the
pattern of light cast upon the water from this vessel, Hackworth
concluded that the lights were being deliberately shone into their
faces so that they could not make any judgments about the nature of
the source.
The fog slowly congealed into a wall of rust, so vast and
featureless that it might have been ten or a hundred feet distant. The
helmsman waited until they were about to ram it, then cut the
engines. The raft lost speed instantly and nuzzled the hull of the big
ship. Chains, slimy and dripping, descended from the firmament,
diverging in Hackworth’s view like radiance emanating from some
heavy-industrial demigod, clanking harbingers of iron that the crew,
heads thrown back ecstatically, throats bared to this kinky
revelation, received into their bosoms. They snapped the chains onto
metal loops fixed into the floor of the boat. Shackled, the boat rose
free of the water and began to ascend the wall of rust, which soared
vaguely into the infinite fog. Suddenly there was a railing, an open
deck beyond it, pools of light here and there, a few red cigar-coals
reciprocating through space. The deck swung under and rose to
shove at the hull of the little boat. As they disembarked, they could
see similar boats scattered about.
“Dodgy” did not begin to describe the reputation of Dramatis
Personae in the New Atlantan parts of London, but that was the
adjective they always used anyway, delivered in a near-whisper,
with brows raised nearly into the hairline and eyes glancing
significantly over the shoulder. It had quickly become clear to
Hackworth that a man could get a bad reputation simply for having
known that Dramatis Personae existed-at the same time, it was
clear that almost everyone had heard about it. Rather than being
spattered with any more opprobrium, he had sought the tickets
among other tribes.
After all this it did not surprise him in the least to see that most
of the attendees were fellow Victorians, and not just young
bachelors having a night out, but ostensibly respectable couples,
strolling the decks in their top hats and veils.
Fiona vaulted out of the boat before it even touched the deck of
the ship and vanished. She had repatterned her dress, ditching the
chintzy flowered pattern for basic white, and skipped off into the
darkness, her integral tiara glowing like a halo. Hackworth took a
slow turn around the deck, watching his fellow-tribesmen trying to
solve the following problem: get close enough to another couple to
recognize them without getting so close that they can recognize you.
From time to time, couples recognized each other simultaneously
and had to say something: the women tittered wickedly, and the
men laughed from their bellies and called each other scoundrels, the
words glancing off the deckplates and burying themselves in the fog
like arrows fired into a bale of cotton.
Some kind of amplified music emanated from compartments
below; atonal power chords came up through the deck like seismic
disturbances. She was a bulk cargo carrier, now empty and bobbing,
surprisingly jittery for something so big.
Hackworth was alone and separate from all humanity, a feeling
he had grown up with, like a childhood friend living next door. He
had found Gwen by some miracle and lost touch with that old friend
for a few years, but now he and solitude were back together, out for
a stroll, familiar and comfortable. A makeshift bar amidships had
drawn a dozen or so congregants, but Hackworth knew that he could
not join in with them. He had been born without the ability to blend
and socialize as some are born without hands.
“Standing above it all?” said a voice. “Or standing aside
perhaps?”
It was a man in a clown outfit. Hackworth recognized it,
vaguely, as an advertising fetish for an old American fast-food
chain. But the costume was conspicuously ill-used, as if it were the
sole garment of a refugee. It had been patched all over with
swatches of chintz, Chinese silk, studded black leather, charcoalgray
pinstripe, and jungle camo. The clown wore integral makeup-
his face glowed like an injection-molded plastic toy from the
previous century with a light bulb stuck inside the head. It was
disturbing to see him talk, like watching one of those animated CAT
scans of a man swallowing.
“Are you of it? Or just in it?” the Clown said, and looked at
Hackworth expectantly.
As soon as Hackworth had realized, quite some time ago, that
this Dramatis Personae thing was going to be some kind of
participatory theatre, he had been dreading this moment: his first
cue. “Please excuse me,” he said in a tense and not altogether steady
voice, “this is not my milieu.”
“That’s for damn fucking sure,” said the Clown. “Put these
on,” he continued, taking something out of his pocket. He reached
out to Hackworth, who was two or three meters away from him-
but shockingly, his hand detached itself from his arm and flew
through the air, the smutty white glove like a dirty ball of ice
tumbling elliptically through the inner planets. It shoved something
into Hackworth’s breast pocket and then withdrew; but because
Hackworth was watching, it described a smooth sudden figure-eight
pattern in space before reattaching itself to the stump of the forearm.
Hackworth realized that the clown was mechanical. “Put ‘em on and
be yourself, mister alienated loner steppenwolf bemused distant
meta-izing technocrat rationalist fucking shithead.” The Clown spun
on his heel to leave; his floppy clown shoes were built around some
kind of trick heel with a swivel built in, so that when he spun on his
heel he really did spin on his heel, performing several complete
rotations before stopping with his back turned to Hackworth and
storming away. “Revolutionary, ain’t it?” he snapped.
The thing in Hackworth’s pocket was a pair of dark sunglasses:
wraparounds with a glimmering rainbow finish, the sort of thing
that, decades ago, would have been worn by a Magnum-slinging
rebel cop in a prematurely canceled television series. Hackworth
unfolded them and slid the polished ends of the bows cautiously
over his temples. As the lenses approached, he could see light
coming from them; they were phenomenoscopes. Though in this
context, the word phantascope might have been more appropriate.
The image grew to fill his sight but would not focus until he put
them all the way on, so he reluctantly plummeted into the
hallucination until it resolved, and just then the bows behind his ears
came alive, stretched, and grew around the back of his skull like a
rubber band snapping in reverse, joining in the back to form an
unbreakable band. “Release,” Hackworth said, and then ran through
a litany of other standard yuvree commands. The spectacles would
not release his head. Finally, a cone of light pierced space from
somewhere above and behind him and splashed across a stage.
Footlights came up, and a man in a top hat emerged from behind a
curtain. “Welcome to your show,” he said. “You can remove the
glasses at any time by securing a standing ovation from not less than
ninety percent of the audience.” Then the lights and curtain
vanished, and Hackworth was left with what he had seen before,
namely, a cybernetically enhanced night-vision rendering of the
deck of the ship.
He tried a few more commands. Most phenomenoscopes had a
transparent mode, or at least translucent, that allowed the wearer to
view what was really there. But these ones were doggedly opaque
and would only show him a mediatronic rendering of the scene. The
strolling and chatting theatregoers were represented by
preposterously oversimplified wireframes, a display technology
unused these eighty years or so, clearly intended to irritate
Hackworth. Each figure had a large placard strapped to its chest:
JARED MASON GRIFFIN III, aged 35
(too Late to become an interesting character like you!)
Nephew of an earl-level Equity Lord
(don’t you envy him?)
Married to that sunken bitch on his right
They go on these little escapades to escape their own crzppled
lives.
(why are you here?)
Hackworth looked down and tried to read the placard on
his own chest but couldn’t focus on it.
When he walked around the deck, his viewpoint changed
correspondingly. There was also a standard interface that enabled
him to “fly” around the ship; Hackworth himself remained in one
fixed location, of course, but his viewpoint in the spectacles became
unlinked to his real coordinates. Whenever he used this mode, the
following legend was superimposed on his view in giant flashing
red block letters:
JOHN PERCIVAL HACKWORTH’S GODLIKE PERSPECTIVE
sometimes accompanied by a cartoon of a wizardly sort of
fellow sitting atop a mountain peering down into a village of squalid
midgets. Because of this annoyance, Hackworth did not use this
feature very frequently. But on his initial reconnaissance, he
discovered a few items of interest.
For one thing, the Nipponese fellow who had got pissed and
fallen overboard had encountered a group of several other people
who had, by a remarkable coincidence, also fallen out of their boats
on the way here, and who upon being rescued had all begun to emit
colored light and see visions that they insisted on recounting to
anyone in the vicinity. These people convened into a poorly
organized chorus, all shouting at once and articulating visions that
seemed to be linked in an approximate way-as if they had all just
now awakened from the same dream and were all doing an equally
bad job describing it. They stuck together despite their differences,
drawn together by the same mysterious attractive force that causes
streetcorner crackpots to set up their soapboxes right next to each
other. Shortly after Hackworth zoomed toward them in his
phenomenoscopic view, they began to hallucinate something along
the lines of a giant eyeball peering at them from the heavens, the
black skin of its eyelids studded with stars.
Hackworth skulked away and focused in on another large
gathering: a couple of dozen older people of the trim, fit, and active
style, tennis sweaters draped over their shoulders and sensible
walking shoes firmly but not too tightly laced to their feet, piling off
a small airship that had just moored on the old helicopter pad near
the ship’s stern. The airship had many windows and was festooned
with mediatronic advertisements for aerial tours of London. As the
tourists climbed off, they tended to stop in their tracks, so that a
severe bottleneck was forever forming. They had to be goaded into
the outer darkness by their tour guide, a young actress dressed in a
cheesy devil outfit, complete with flashing red horns and a trident.
“Is this Whitechapel?” one of them said to the fog, speaking in
an American accent. These people were obviously members of the
Heartland tribe, a prosperous phyle closely allied with New Atlantis
that had absorbed many responsible, sane, educated, white,
Midwestern, middleclass types. Listening in on their furtive
conversations, Hackworth divined that these tourists had been
brought in from a Holiday Inn in Kensington, under the ruse that
they were going to take the Jack the Ripper tour in Whitechapel. As
Hackworth listened, the diabolical tour guide explained that their
drunken airship pilot had accidentally flown them to a floating
theatre, and they were welcome to enjoy the show, which would be
starting shortly; a free (to them) performance of Cats, the longestrunning
musical of all time, which most of them had already seen on
their first night in London.
Hackworth, still peering through the mocking red letters, did a
quick scan belowdecks. There were a dozen cavernous
compartments down there. Four of them had been consolidated into
a capacious theatre; four more served as the stage and backstage.
Hackworth located his daughter there. She was seated on a throne of
light, rehearsing some lines. Apparently she’d already been cast in a
major role.
“I don’t want you to watch me like that,” she said, and
vanished from Hackworth’s display in a burst of light.
The ship’s foghorn sounded. The sound continued to echo
sporadically from other ships in the area. Hackworth returned to his
natural view of the deck just in time to see a blazing figment rushing
toward him: the Clown again, who apparently possessed the special
power of moving through Hackworth’s display like a phantasm.
“Going to stay up here all night, guessing the distance to the other
ships by timing the echoes? Or may I show you to your seat?”
Hackworth decided that the best thing was not to be ruffled.
“Please,” he said.
“Well, there it is then,” said the Clown, gesturing with one
maculated glove toward a plain wooden chair right before them on
the deck. Hackworth did not believe it was really there, because he
hadn’t seen it before now. But the spectacles allowed him no way to
tell.
He stepped forward like a man making his way to the toilet in a
dark and unfamiliar room, knees bent, hands outstretched, moving
his feet gingerly so as not to bark shins or toes on anything. The
Clown had drawn to one side and was watching him scornfully. “Is
this what you call getting into your role? Think you can get away
with scientific rationalism all night? What’s going to happen the
first time you actually start believing what you see?”
Hackworth found his seat exactly where the display told him it
would be, but it wasn’t a simple wooden chair; it was foam-covered
and it had arms. It was like a seat in a theatre, but when he groped to
either side, he did not find any others. So he depressed the seat and
fell into it.
“You’ll be needing this,” the Clown said, and snapped a
tubular object into the palm of Hackworth’s hand. Hackworth was
just recognizing it as some kind of torch when something loud and
violent happened just below him. His feet, which had been resting
on the deckplates, were now dangling in air. In fact, all of him was
dangling. A trap door had flown open beneath him, and he was in
free fall. “Enjoy the show,” the Clown said, tipping his hat and
peering down at him through a rapidly diminishing square hole.
“And while you’re accelerating toward the center of the earth at
nine point eight meters per second squared, riddle me this:
We can fake sounds, we can fake images, we can even fake the
wind blowing over your face, but how do we fake the sensation of
free fall?”
Pseudopods had sprouted from the chair’s foam and wrapped
around Hackworth’s waist and upper thighs. This was fortunate as
he had gone into a slow backward spin and soon found himself
falling face-first, passing through great amorphous clouds of light: a
collection of old chandeliers that Dramatis Personae had scavenged
from condemned buildings. The Clown was right: Hackworth was
definitely in free fall, a sensation that could not be faked with
spectacles. If his eyes and ears were to be believed, he was plunging
toward the floor of the big theatre he had reconnoitered earlier. But
it was not grooved with neat rows of seats like an ordinary theatre.
The seats were present but scattered about randomly. And some of
them were moving.
The floor continued to accelerate toward him until he got really
scared and started to scream. Then he felt gravity again as some
force began to slow him down. The chair spun around so that
Hackworth was looking up into the irregular constellation of
chandeliers, and the acceleration shot up to several gees. Then back
to normal. The chair rotated so that he was on the level once more,
and the phenomenoscope went brilliant, blinding white. The
earpieces were pumping white noise at him; but as it began to
diminish, he realized it was actually the sound of applause.
Hackworth was not able to see anything until he fiddled with
the interface and got back to a more schematic view of the theatre.
Then he determined that the place was about half full of
theatregoers, moving about independently on their chairs, which
were somehow motorized, and that several dozen of them were
aiming their torches toward him, which accounted for the blinding
light. He was on center stage, the main attraction. He wondered if he
was supposed to say something. A line was written across his
spectacles: Thanks very much, Ladies and gentlemen, for letting me
drop in. We have a great show for you tonight. . . .
Hackworth wondered if he was somehow obligated to read this
line. But soon the torches turned away from him, as more audience
members began to rain down through the astral plane of the
chandeliers. Watching them fall, Hackworth realized that he’d seen
something like it before at amusement parks: This was nothing more
than bungee-jumping. It’s just that the spectacles had declined to
show Hackworth his own bungee cord, just to add an extra frisson to
the whole experience.
The armrest of Hackworth’s chair included some controls that
enabled him to move it around the floor of the house, which was
coneshaped, sloping sharply in toward the center. A pedestrian
would have found difficult footing, but the chair had powerful
nanotech motors and compensated for the slope.
It was a round theatre, Globe-style. The conical floor was
encompassed by a circular wall, pierced here and there by openings
of different sizes. Some appeared to be ventilation shafts, some were
the apertures of private boxes or technical control rooms, and by far
the largest was a proscenium that occupied a quarter of the
circumference, and that was currently closed off by a curtain.
Hackworth noted that the lowest and innermost part of the
house floor was not occupied. He motored down the slope and was
shocked to realize that he was suddenly up to his waist in painfully
chilly water. He threw the chair into reverse, but it did not respond
to the controls. “Dead in the water!” cried the Clown triumphantly,
sounding as if he were standing right there, though Hackworth
couldn’t see him. He found a way to release the chair’s built-in
restraints and struggled up the raked floor, his legs stiff from the
cold and reeking of seawater. Evidently the central third of the floor
actually plunged beneath the waterline and was open to the sea-
another fact that Hackworth’s spectacles had not bothered to reveal.
Again, dozens of lights were on him. The audience was
laughing, and there was even some sarcastic applause. Come on in,
folks, the water ’s fine! suggested the spectacles, but once again
Hackworth declined to read the line. Apparently these were nothing
more than suggestions tossed out by Dramatis Personae’s writers,
which faded from the display as they lost their currency.
The events of the last few minutes-the phenomenoscopes that
couldn’t be taken off, the unexpected bungee jump, the plunge into
cold seawater-had left Hackworth in a state of shock. He felt a
strong need to hole up somewhere and shake off the disorientation.
He clambered up toward the perimeter of the house, dodging the
occasional moving chair, and tracked by a few spotlight beams from
fellow audience members who had taken a particular interest in his
personal story. An aperture was above him, glowing with warm
light, and passing through it, Hackworth found himself in a cozy
little bar with a curving window that afforded an excellent view of
the theatre. It was a refuge in more ways than one; he could see
normally through the spectacles here, they seemed to be giving him
an untampered view of reality. He ordered a pint of stout from the
barman and took a seat at the counter along the window.
Somewhere around his third or fourth gulp of stout, he realized that
he had already submitted to the Clown’s imperative. The plunge
into the water had taught him that he had no choice but to believe in
what the spectades showed his eyes and ears-even though he knew
it to be false-and to accept the consequences. A pint of stout went
some distance toward warming up his legs, and toward relaxing his
mind. He had come here for a show, and he was getting one, and
there was no reason to fight it; Dramatis Personae might have a
dodgy reputation, but no one had ever accused them of killing a
member of the audience.
The chandeliers dimmed. The torch-wielding audience went
into motion like sparks stirred by a gust of wind, some motoring
toward the high ground and others preferring the water’s edge. As
the house lights faded to black, they amused themselves playing
their torches back and forth across the walls and the curtain, creating
an apocalyptic sky torn by hundreds of comets. A tongue of
clammy, algae-colored light shone beneath the water, resolving
itself into a long narrow thrust stage as it rose toward the surface,
like Atlantis resurgent. The audience noticed it and bounced their
spotlights off the surface, catching a few dark motes in the crossfire:
the heads of a dozen or so performers, slowly rising out of the
water. They began to speak in something like unison, and
Hackworth realized that they were the chorus of lunatics he had
seen earlier.
“Set me up, Nick,” said a woman’s voice behind him.
“Tucked ‘em in, did you?” said the barkeep.
“Ninnies.”
Hackworth turned and saw that it was the young woman in the
devil costume who had acted as tour guide for the Heartlanders. She
was very petite, dressed in a long black skirt slit all the way to the
hipbone, and she had nice hair, very thick and black and glossy. She
carried a glass of wheat beer over to the counter, primly swept her
devil’s tail out of the way in a gesture that Hackworth found
hopelessly fetching, and took a seat. Then she let out an explosive
sigh and put her head down on her arms for a few moments, her
blinking red horns reflecting in the curved window like the taillights
of a full-laner. Hackworth laced his fingers together around his pint
and smelled her perfume. Down below, the chorus had gotten out of
hand and was trying to pull off a rather ambitious Busby Berkeley
dance number. They showed an uncanny ability to act in unison-
something to do with the ‘sites that had burrowed into their brains-
but their bodies were stiff, weak, and badly coordinated. What they
did, they did with absolute conviction, which made it good anyway.
“Did they buy it?” Hackworth said.
“Pardon me?” said the woman, looking up alertly like a bird, as
if she hadn’t known Hackworth was here.
“Do those Heartlanders really believe that story about the
drunken pilot?”
“Oh. Who cares?” the woman said.
Hackworth laughed, pleased that a member of Dramatis
Personae was affording him this confidence.
“It’s off the point, isn’t it,” the woman said in a lower voice,
getting a bit philosophical now. She squeezed a wedge of lemon
into her wheat beer and took a sip. “Belief isn’t a binary state, not
here at least. Does anyone believe anything one hundred percent?
Do you believe everything you see through those goggles?”
“No,” Hackworth said, “the only thing I believe at the moment
is that my legs are wet, this stout is good, and I like your perfume.”
She looked a bit surprised, not unpleasantly so, but she wasn’t
nearly that easy. “So why are you here? Which show did you come
to see?”
“What do you mean? I suppose I came to see this one.”
“But there is no this one. It’s a whole family of shows.
Interlaced.” She parked her beer and executed Phase 1 of the hereis-
the-church maneuver. “Which show you see depends on which
feed you’re viewing.”
“I don’t seem to have any control over what I see.”
“Ah, then you’re a performer.”
“So far I have felt like a very inept slapstick performer.”
“Inept slapstick? Isn’t that a bit redundant?”
It wasn’t that funny, but she said it wittily, and Hackworth
chuckled politely.
“It sounds as though you’ve been singled out to be a
performer.”
“You don’t say.”
“Now, I don’t normally reveal our trade secrets,” the woman
continued in a lower voice, “but usually when someone is singled
out as a performer, it’s because they have come here for some
purpose other than pure, passive entertainment.”
Hackworth stuttered and fumbled for words a bit. “Does that-
is that done?”
“Oh, yes!” the woman said. She rose from her stool and moved
to the one right next to Hackworth. “Theatre’s not just a few people
clowning about on a stage, being watched by this herd of oxen. I
mean, sometimes it’s that. But it can be ever so much more-really
it can be any sort of interaction between people and people, or
people and information.” The woman had become quite passionate
now, forgotten herself completely. Hackworth got boundless
pleasure just from watching her. When she’d first entered the bar,
he’d thought she had a sort of nondescript face, but as she let her
guard down and spoke without any self-consciousness, she seemed
to become prettier and prettier. “We are tied in to everything here-
plugged into the whole universe of information. Really, it’s a virtual
theatre. Instead of being hard-wired, the stage, sets, cast, and script
are all soft-they can be reconfigured simply by shifting bits
about.”
“Oh. So the show-or interlaced set of shows-can be
different each night?”
“No, you’re still not getting it,” she said, becoming very
excited. She reached out and gripped his forearm just below the
elbow and leaned toward him, desperate to make sure he got this.
“It’s not that we do a set show, reconfigure, and a different one next
night. The changes are dynamic and take place in real time. The
show reconfigures itself dynamically depending upon what happens
moment to moment-and mind you, not just what happens here, but
what is happening in the world at large. It is a smart play-an
intelligent organism.”
“So, if, for example, a battle between the Fists of Righteous
Harmony and the Coastal Republic were taking place in the interior
of China at this moment, then shifts in the battle might in some
way-”
“Might change the color of a spotlight or a line of dialogue-
not necessarily in any simple and deterministic fashion, mind you-
”
“I think I understand,” Hackworth said. “The internal variables
of the play depend on the total universe of information outside-”
The woman nodded vigorously, quite pleased with him, her
huge black eyes shining.
Hackworth continued, “As, for example, a person’s state of
mind at any given moment might depend on the relative
concentrations of innumerable chemical compounds circulating
through his bloodstream.”
“Yes,” the woman said, “like if you’re in a pub being chatted
up by a fetching young gentleman, the words coming out of your
mouth are affected by the amount of alcohol you’ve put into your
system, and, of course, by concentrations of natural hormones-
again, not in a simple deterministic way-these things are all
inputs.”
“I think I’m beginning to get your meaning,” Hackworth said.
“Substitute tonight’s show for the brain, and the information
flowing across the net for molecules flowing through the
bloodstream, and you have it,” the woman said.
Hackworth was a bit disappointed that she had chosen to pull
back from the pub metaphor, which he had found more immediately
interesting.
The woman continued, “That lack of determinism causes some
to dismiss the whole process as wanking. But in fact it’s an
incredibly powerful tool. Some people understand that.”
“I believe I do,” Hackworth said, desperately wanting her to
believe that he did.
“And so some people come here because they are on a quest of
some sort-trying to find a lost lover, let’s say, or to understand
why something terrible happened in their lives, or why there is
cruelty in the world, or why they aren’t satisfied with their career.
Society has never been good at answering these questions-the sorts
of questions you can’t just look up in a reference database.”
“But the dynamic theatre allows one to interface with the
universe of data in a more intuitive way,” Hackworth said.
“That is precisely it,” the woman said. “I’m so pleased that you
get this.”
“When I was working with information, it frequently occurred
to me, in a vague and general way, that such a thing might be
desirable,” Hackworth said. “But this is beyond my imagination.”
“Where did you hear of us?”
“I was referred here by a friend who has been associated with
you in the past, in some vague way.”
“Oh? May I ask who? Perhaps we have a mutual friend,” the
woman said, as if that would be a fine thing.
Hackworth felt himself reddening and let out a deep breath.
“All right,” he said, “I lied. It wasn’t really a friend of mine. It was
someone I was led to.”
“Ah, now we’re getting into it,” the woman said. “I knew there
was something mysterious going on with you.”
Hackworth was abashed and did not know what to say. He
looked into his beer. The woman was staring at him, and he could
feel her eqes on his face like the warmth of a follow spot.
“So you did come here in search of something. Didn’t you?
Something you couldn’t find by looking it up in a database.”
“I’m seeking a fellow called the Alchemist,” Hackworth said.
Suddenly, things got bright. The side of the woman’s face that
was toward the window was brilliantly illuminated, like a probe in
space lit on one side by the directional light of the sun. Hackworth
sensed, somehow, that this was not a new development. Looking out
over the audience, he saw that nearly all of them were aiming their
spotlights into the bar, and that everyone in the place had been
watching and listening to his entire conversation with the woman.
The spectacles had deceived him by adjusting the apparent light
levels. The woman looked different too; her face had reverted to the
way it looked when she came in, and Hackworth now understood
that her image in his spectacles had been gradually evolving during
their conversation, getting feedback from whatever part of his brain
buzzed when he saw a beautiful woman.
The curtain parted to reveal a large electric sign descending
from the fly space: JOHN HACKWORTH in QUEST FOR THE
ALCHEMIST starring JOHN HACKWORTH as HIMSELF.
The Chorus sang:
He’s such a stiff John Hackworth is
Can’t show emotion to save his life
With nasty repercussions, viz
He lost his job and lost his wife
So now he’s on a goshdarn Quest
Wandering all o’er the world
Hunting down that Alchemist
’Cept when he stops to pick up girLc.
Maybe he’ll clean up his act
And do the job tonight
A fabulous adventure packed
With marvelous sounds and sights
Let’s get it on, oh Hacker John
Let’s get it on, on, on.
Something jerked violently at Hackworth’s neck. The woman
had tossed a noose around him while he’d been staring out the
window, and now she was hauling him out the door of the bar like a
recalcitrant dog. As soon as she cleared the doorway, her cape
inflated like a time-lapse explosion, and she shot twelve feet into the
air, propelled on jets of air built into her clothing somehow-she
payed out the leash so that Hackworth wasn’t hanged in the process.
Flying above the audience like the cone of fire from a rocket engine,
she led the stumbling Hackworth down the sloping floor and to the
edge of the water. The thrust stage was linked to the water’s edge by
a couple of narrow bridges, and Hackworth negotiated one of these,
feeling hundreds of lights on his shoulders, seemingly hot enough to
ignite his clothing. She led him straight back through the center of
the Chorus, beneath the electric sign, through the backstage area,
and through a doorway, which clanged shut behind him. Then she
vanished.
Hackworth was surrounded on three sides by softly glowing
blue walls. He reached out to touch one and received a mild shock
for his troubles. Stepping forward, he tripped over something that
skittered across the floor: a dry bone, big and heavy, larger than a
human femur.
He stepped forward through the only gap available to him and
found more walls. He had been deposited into the heart of a
labyrinth.
It took him an hour or so to realize that escape through normal
means was hopeless. He didn’t even try to figure out the labyrinth’s
floor plan; instead, realizing that it couldn’t possibly be larger than
the ship, he followed the foolproof expedient of turning right at
every corner, which as all clever boys knew must always lead to an
exit. But it didn’t, and he did not understand why until once, in the
corner of his eye, he saw a wall segment shift sideways, closing up
an old gap and creating a new one. It was a dynamic labyrinth.
He found a rusty bolt on the floor, picked it up, and threw it at
a wall. It did not bounce off but passed through and clattered onto
the floor beyond. So the walls did not exist except as figments in his
spectacles. The labyrinth was constructed of information. In order to
escape, he would have to hack it.
He sat down on the floor. Nick the barman appeared, walking
unhindered through walls, bearing a tray with another stout on it,
and handed it to him along with a bowl of salty peanuts. As the
evening went on, other people passed through his area, dancing or
singing or dueling or arguing or making love. None of these had
anything to do, particularly, with Hackworth’s Quest, and they
appeared to have nothing to do with each other. Apparently
Hackworth’s Quest was (as the devil-woman herself had told him)
just one of several concurrent stories being acted out tonight,
coexisting in the same space.
So what did any of this have to do with the life of John
Hackworth? And how was Fiona mixed up in it?
As Hackworth thought about Fiona, a panel in front of him slid
to the side, exposing several yards of corridor. During the next
couple of hours he noted the same thing several times: An idea
would occur to him, and a wall would move.
In this way-he moved in fits and starts through the maze, as his
mind moved from one idea to the next. The floor was definitely
sloping downward, which would obviously bring him below the
waterline at some point; and indeed he had begun to sense a heavy
drumming noise coming up through the deckplates, which might
have been the pounding of mighty engines except that this ship, as
far as he knew, wasn’t going anywhere. He smelled seawater before
him and saw dim lights shining through its surface, broken by the
waves, and knew that in the flooded ballast tanks of this ship lay a
network of underwater tunnels, and that in those tunnels were
Drummers. For all he knew, the whole show was just a figment
being enacted in the mind of the Drummers. Probably not the main
event either; it was probably just an epiphenomenon of whatever
deep processes the Drummers were running down there in their
collective mind.
A wall panel slid aside and gave him a clear path to the water.
Hackworth squatted at the water’s edge for a few minutes, listening
to the drums, then stood up and began to undo his necktie.
. . .
He was terribly hot and sweaty, and bright light was in his
eyes, and none of these things were consistent with being
underwater. He awoke to see a bright blue sky overhead, pawed at
his face, and found that the spectacles were gone. Fiona was there in
her white dress, watching him with a rueful smile. The floor was
pounding Hackworth on the buttocks and evidently had been for
some time, as the bony parts of his backside were bruised and raw.
He realized that they were on the raft, heading back toward the
London docks; that he was naked and that Fiona had covered him
with a sheet of plastic to protect his skin from the sun. A few other
theatergoers were scattered about, slumped against one another,
utterly passive, like refugees, or people who’ve just had the greatest
sex of their lives, or people who are tremendously hung over.
“You were quite a hit,” Fiona said. And suddenly Hackworth
remembered himself being paraded naked and dripping down the
thrust stage, waves of applause rolling over him from the standing
audience.
“The Quest is finished,” he blurted. “We’re going to
Shanghai.”
“You’re going to Shanghai,” Fiona said. “I’ll see you off at the
dock. Then I’ll be going back.” She cocked her head over the stern.
“Back to the ship?”
“I was a bigger hit than you were,” she said. “I’ve found my
calling in life, Father. I’ve accepted an invitation to join Dramatis
Personae.”
Carl Hollywood’s hack.
Carl Hollywood leaned back against the hard lacquered back of
his corner seat for the first time in many hours and rubbed his face
with both hands, scratching himself with his own whiskers. He had
been sitting in the teahouse for almost twenty-four hours, consumed
twelve pots of tea, and twice called in masseuses to unknot his back.
The afternoon light coming in the windows behind him flickered as
the crowd outside began to break up. They had been treated to a
remarkable free media show, watching over his shoulders for hours
as the dramaturgical exploits of John Percival Hackworth had
played themselves out, in several different camera angles, on
floating cine windows on Carl Hollywood’s pages. None of them
could read English, and so they had been unable to follow the story
of Princess Nell’s adventures in the land of King Coyote, which had
been streaming across the pages at the same time, the storyline
fluctuating and curling in upon itself like a cloud of smoke spun and
torn by invisible currents.
Now the pages were blank and empty. Carl reached out lazily
with one hand and began to stack the sheets on top of each other,
just for something to occupy his hands while his mind worked-
though it wasn’t working, at this point, so much as stumbling
blindly through a dark labyrinth a Ia John Percival Hackworth.
Carl Hollywood had long suspected that, among other things,
the network of the Drummers was a giant system for breaking
codes. The cryptographic systems that made the media network run
securely, and that made it capable of securely transferring money,
were based on the use of immense prime numbers as magic keys.
The keys could theoretically be broken by throwing enough
computing power at the problem. But at any given level of
computing power, code-making was always much easier than codebreaking,
so as long as the system kept moving to larger and larger
prime numbers as computers got faster, the code-makers could stay
far ahead of the code-breakers forever.
But the human mind didn’t work like a digital computer and
was capable of doing some funny things. Carl Hollywood
remembered one of the Lone Eagles, an older man who could add
huge columns of numbers in his head as quickly as they were called
out. That, in and of itself, was merely a duplication of something
that a digital computer could do. But this man could also do
numerical tricks that could not easily be programmed into a
computer.
If many minds were gathered together in the network of the
Drummers, perhaps they could somehow see through the storm of
encrypted data that roared continuously through media space, cause
the seemingly random bits to coalesce into meaning. The men who
had come to talk to Miranda, who had persuaded her to enter the
world of the Drummers, had implied that this was possible; that
through them, Miranda could find Nell.
Superficially, this would be disastrous, because it would
destroy the system used for financial transactions. It would be as if,
in a world where commerce was based upon the exchange of gold,
some person had figured out how to change lead into gold. An
Alchemist.
But Carl Hollywood wondered if it really made a difference.
The Drummers could only do such things by subsuming themselves
into a gestalt society. As the case of Hackworth demonstrated, as
soon as a Drummer removed himself from that gestalt, he lost touch
with it completely. All communication between the Drummers and
normal human society took place unconsciously, through their
influence upon the Net, in patterns that appeared subliminally in the
ractives that everyone played with in their homes and saw playing
across the walls of buildings. The Drummers could break the code,
but they couldn’t take advantage of it in an obvious way, or perhaps
they simply did not want to. They could make gold, but they were
no longer interested in having it.
John Hackworth, somehow, was better than anyone else at
making the transition between the society of Drummers and the
Victorian tribe, and each time he crossed the boundary, he seemed
to bring something with him, clinging to his garments like traces of
scent. These faint echoes of forbidden data entrained in his wake
caused tangled and unpredictable repercussions, on both sides of the
boundary, that Hackworth himself might not even be aware of. Carl
Hollywood had known little of Hackworth until several hours ago,
when, alerted by a friend in Dramatis Personae, he had joined his
story in progress on the black decks of the show boat. Now he
seemed to know a great deal: that Hackworth was the progenitor of
the Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer, and that he had a deep
relationship with the Drummers that went far beyond anything as
simple-minded as captivity. He had not just been eating lotuses and
getting his rocks off during his years beneath the waves.
Hackworth had brought something back with him this time,
when he had emerged naked and streaming with cold seawater from
the warren of Drummers in the ballast tanks of the ship. He had
emerged with a set of numerical keys that were used to identify
certain entities: the Primer, Nell, Miranda, and someone else who
went by the name of Dr. X. Before he had fully reentered his
conscious state, he had supplied those keys to the Clown, who had
been there to haul his gasping and shivering body out of the water.
The Clown was a mechanical device, but Dramatis Personae had
been good enough to allow Carl Hollywood to control it- and to
improvise much of Hackworth’s personal script and storyline- for
the duration of the show.
Now Carl had the keys and, for the purposes of the Net, was
indistinguishable from Miranda or Nell or Dr. X or even Hackworth
himself. They were written out across the surface of a page, long
columns of digits grouped in bunches of four. Carl Hollywood told
this sheet to fold itself and then tucked it into his breast pocket. He
could use them to untangle this whole business, but that would be
another night’s hack. Snuff and caffeine had done as much as they
could. It was time to go back to the hotel, soak in a bath, get some
sleep, and prepare for the final act.
From the Primer, Princess Nell’s ride to the Castle of
King Coyote; &scr:ption of the castle; an audience with
a Wizard; her final triumph over King Coyote;
an enchanted army.
Princess Nell rode north into an explosive thunderstorm.
The horses were driven nearly mad with terror by the
cannonlike explosions of the thunder and the unearthly blue
flashes of the lightning, but with a firm hand and a soothing
voice in the ear, Nell urged them forward. The cairns of bones
strewn along the roadside were evidence that this mountain
pass was no place to dawdle, and the poor animals would be
no less terrified huddling under a rock. For all she knew, the
great King Coyote was capable of controlling even the
weather itself and had prepared this reception to try Princess
Nell’s will.
Finally she crested the pass, and none too soon, as the
horses’ hooves had begun to slip on a thick layer of ice, and
ice had begun thickly to coat the reins and to weigh down the
animals’ manes and tails. Working her way down the
switchbacks, she left the high fury of the storm behind and
pushed into masses of rain as dense as any jungle. It was
well that she had paused for a few days at the foot of the
mountains to review all of Purple’s magic books, for on this
night ride through the mountains she used every spell Purple
had taught her: spells for casting light, for choosing the right
fork in the road, for calming animals and warming chilled
bodies, for bolstering her own failing courage, for sensing the
approach of any monsters foolish enough to venture out in
such weather, and for defeating those desperate enough to
attack. This night ride was, perhaps, a rash act, but Princess
Nell proved equal to the challenge. King Coyote would not
expect her to make such a crossing. Tomorrow when the
storm on high had cleared, he would send his raven sentinels
winging through the pass and down into the plain below to
spy on her, as he had for the last several days, and they
would return with dismaying news: The Princess had
vanished! Even King Coyote’s best trackers would not be able
to follow her path from yesterday’s campsite, so craftily had
she covered her real tracks and laid false ones.
Dawn found her in the heart of a great forest. King
Coyote’s castle was built on a high woodland plateau
surrounded by mountains; she estimated she was several
hours’ ride away. Staying well clear of the high road taken by
the messengers from the Cipherers’ Market, she made camp
under an overhanging rock along a river, sheltered from the
chill wet wind and safe from the eyes of the raven sentinels,
and lit a tiny fire where she made some tea and porridge.
She napped until the middle of the afternoon, then rose,
bathed in the bitter water of the stream, and untied the oilcloth
packet she had brought with her. It contained one of the
costumes worn by the messengers who galloped to and from
the Cipherers’ Market. It also contained a few books
containing enciphered messages- authentic ones
dispatched from various stalls in the market addressed to
King Coyote’s castle.
As she made her way through the woods toward the high
road, she heard massed hoofbeats rolling by and knew that
the first contingent of messengers had just come over the
pass after waiting for the storm to pass. She waited a few
minutes and then followed them. Turning onto the high road
out of the dense woods, she reined in her horse and sat for a
moment, astonished by her first sight of the Castle of King
Coyote.
She had never seen its like in all of her travels through
the Land Beyond. Its base was as wide as a mountain, and its
waIls rose sheer and straight into the clouds. Galactic clouds
of lights shone from its myriad windows. It was guarded by
mighty stockades, each of them a great castle unto itself, but
built not on stony foundations, but upon the very clouds
themselves; for King Coyote, in his cleverness, had devised a
way to make buildings that floated on the air.
Princess Nell spurred her horse forward, for even in her
numbness she sensed that someone might be watching the
high road from a window high in one of the castle’s glittering
oriels. As she galloped toward the castle, she was torn
between a sense of her own foolishness in daring to assault
such a mighty fortress and admiration for King Coyote’s work.
Faint clouds of diaphanous black oozed between the towers
and stockades, and as Princess Nell drew closer, she saw
that they were actually regiments of ravens going through
their military drills. They were the closest thing King Coyote
had to an army; for as one of the ravens had told her, after he
had stolen the eleven keys from around her neck,
Castles, gardens, gold, and jewels
Contentment signify, for fools
Like Princess Nell; but those
Who cultivate their wit
Like King Coyote and his crows
Compile their power bit by bit
And hide it places no one knows.
King Coyote did not preserve his power by armed might
but by cleverness, and sentinels were the only army he
needed, information his only weapon.
As she galloped the final miles to the gate, wondering
whether her legs and back would hold out, a thin steam of
black issued from a narrow portal high in one of the floating
stockades, thickened into a transparent ball, and dove toward
her like a plunging comet. She could not help flinching from
the illusion of mass and momentum, but, a stone’s throw
above her head the cloud of ravens parted into several
contingents that whirled around and struck from several
directions, converging on her, passing around her so closely
that the wind from their rattling wings blew her hair back,
finally reforming into a disciplined group that returned to its
stockade without a look back. Apparently she had passed the
inspection. When she reached the mighty gate, it was
standing open for her, and no one was guarding it. Princess
Nell rode into the broad streets of King Coyote’s castle.
It was the finest place she had ever seen. Here gold and
crystal were not hidden away in the King’s treasury but were
used as building materials. Green and growing things were
everywhere, for King Coyote was fascinated by the secrets of
nature and had sent his agents to the farthest reaches of the
world to bring back exotic seeds. The wide boulevards of King
Coyote’s city were lined with trees whose arching limbs
closed over the ashlars to form a rustling vault. The
undersides of the leaves were silver and seemed to cast a
gentle light, and the branches were filled with violet and
magenta bromeliads the size of kettles, making a sweet sharp
smell, aswarm with ruby-throated hummingbirds and filled
with water where tiny fluorescent frogs and beetles lived.
The Messenger’s Route was marked with polished brass
plates set among the paving-stones. Princess Nell followed it
down the grand boulevard, into a park that encircled the city,
and then onto a rising street that spiraled around the central
promontory. As the horse took her toward the clouds, her ears
popped again and again, and from each curve in the road she
enjoyed a sweeping view over the lower city and into the
constellation of floating stockades where the raven sentinels
soared, coming and going in flights and squadrons, bringing
news from every corner of the empire.
She rode by a place where King Coyote was adding on to
the castle; but instead of an army of stonemasons and
carpenters, the builder was a single man, a portly gray-
bearded fellow puffing at a long slender pipe, carrying a
leather bag on his belt. Arriving at the center of the building
site, he reached into his bag and drew out a great seed the
size of an apple and pitched it into the soil. By the time this
man had walked back to the spiral road, a tall shaft of
gleaming crystal had arisen from the soil and grown far above
their heads, gleaming in the sunlight, and branched out like a
tree. By the time Princess Nell lost sight of it around the
corner, the builder was puffing contentedly and looking at a
crystalline vault that nearly covered the lot.
This and many other wonders Princess Nell saw during
her long ride up the spiral road. The clouds cleared away, and
Nell found that she could see great distances in every
direction. King Coyote’s domain was in the very heart of the
Land Beyond, and his castle was built on a high plateau in the
center of his domain, so that from his windows he could see
all the way to the shining ocean in every direction. Nell kept a
sharp eye on the horizon as she climbed toward the King’s
inner keep, hoping she might get a glimpse of the faraway
island where Harv languished in the Dark Castle; but there
were many islands in the distant sea, and it was hard to tell
the Dark Castle’s towers from mountain crags.
Finally the road became level and turned inward to pierce
another unguarded gate in another high wall, and Princess
Nell found herself in a green, flowery court before the King’s
keep-a high palace that appeared to have been hewn from a
single diamond the size of an iceberg. By now the sun was
sinking low in the west, and its orange rays ignited the walls
of the keep and cast tiny rainbows everywhere like shards
from a shattered crystal bowl. A dozen or so messengers
stood in a queue before the doors of the keep. They had left
their horses in a corner of the yard where a watering-trough
and manger were available. Princess Nell did likewise and
joined the queue.
“I have never had the honor of carrying a message to
King Coyote,” Princess Nell said to the messenger preceding
her in the queue.
“It is an experience you will never forget,” said the
messenger, a cocky young man with black hair and a goatee.
“Why must we wait in this queue? In the stalls at the
Cipherers’ Market, we leave the books on the table and
continue on our way.”
Several of the messengers turned and looked back at
Princess Nell disdainfully. The messenger with the goatee
made a visible effort to control his amusement and said, “King
Coyote is no small-timer sitting in a stall at the Cipherers’
Market! This you will soon see for yourself.”
“But doesn’t he make his decisions the same way as all
the others-by consulting rules in a book?”
At this the other messengers made no effort to control
their amusement. The one with the goatee took on a distinctly
sneering tone. “What would be the point of having a King in
that case?” he said. “He does not take his decisions from any
book. King Coyote has built a mighty thinking machine,
Wizard 0.2, containing all the wisdom in the world. When we
bring a book to this place, his acolytes decipher it and consult
with Wizard 0.2. Sometimes it takes hours for Wizard to reach
its decision. I would advise you to wait respectfully and quietly
in the presence of the great machine!”
“That I will certainly do,” said Princess Nell, amused
rather than angered by this lowly messenger’s impertinence.
The queue moved along steadily, and as darkness fell
and the orange rays of the sun died away, Princess Nell
became aware of colored lights streaming out from within the
keep. The lights seemed to be quite brilliant whenever Wizard
0.2 was cogitating and dropped to a low flicker the rest of the
time. Princess Nell tried to make out other details of what was
going on inside the keep, but the countless facets broke up
the light and bent it into all directions so that she could get
only hints and fragments; trying to see into King Coyote’s
inner sanctum was like trying to remember the details of a
forgotten dream.
Finally the messenger with the goatee emerged, gave
Princess Nell a final smirk, and reminded her to display
proper respect.
“Next,” intoned the acolyte in a chanting voice, and
Princess Nell entered the keep.
Five acolytes sat in the anteroom, each one at a desk
piled high with dusty old books and long reels of paper tape.
Nell had brought thirteen books from the Cipherers’ Market,
and at their direction, she distributed these books among the
acolytes for decipherment. The acolytes were neither young
nor old but in the middle of their lives, all dressed in white
coats decorated, in golden thread, with the crest of King
Coyote. Each also had a key around his neck. As Princess
Nell waited, they deciphered the contents of the books she
had brought and punched the results onto strips of paper tape
using little machines built into their tables.
Then, with great ceremony, the thirteen paper tapes were
coiled up and placed on a tremendous silver platter carried by
a young altar boy. A pair of large doors was swung open, and
the acolytes, the altar boy, and Princess Nell formed into a
procession of sorts, which marched into the Chamber of the
Wizard, a vast vaulted room, and down its long central aisle.
At the far end of the chamber was-nothing. A sort of
large empty space surrounded by elaborate machinery and
clockwork, with a small altar at the front. It reminded Princess
Nell of a stage, empty of curtains and scenery. Standing next
to the stage was a high priest, older and wearing a more
impressive white robe.
When they reached the head of the aisle, the priest went
through a perfunctory ceremony, praising the Wizard’s
excellent features and asking for its cooperation. As he said
these words, lights began to come on and the machinery
began to whir. Princess Nell saw that this vault was, in fact,
nothing more than an anteroom for a much vaster space
within, and that this space was filled with machinery:
countless narrow shining rods, scarcely larger than pencil
leads, laid in a fine gridwork, sliding back and forth under the
impetus of geared power shafts running throughout the place.
All of the machinery threw off heat as it ran, and the room was
quite warm despite a vigorous draught of cold mountain air
being pumped through it by windmill-size fans.
The priest took the first of the thirteen rolls of paper tape
from the platter and fed it into a slot on the top of the altar. At
this point, Wizard 0.2 really went into action, and Princess
Nell saw that all the whirring and humming she’d seen to this
point had been nothing more than a low idle. Each of its
million pushrods was tiny, but the force needed to move all of
them at once was seismic, and she could sense the
tremendous strains on the power shafts and gear boxes
thundering through the sturdy floor of the keep.
Lights came on around the stage, some of them built into
the surface of the stage itself and some hidden in the
machinery around it. To Princess Nell’s surprise, a seemingly
three-dimensional shape of light began to coalesce in the
center of the empty stage. It gradually formed itself into a
head, which took on additional details as the machinery
thundered and hissed away: it was an old bald man with a
long white beard, his face deeply furrowed in thought. After a
few moments, the beard exploded into a flock of white birds
and the head turned into a craggy mountain, the white birds
swarming about it, and then the mountain erupted in orange
lava that gradually filled up the entire volume of the stage until
it was a solid glowing cube of orange light. In this fashion did
one image merge into another, most astonishingly, for several
minutes, and all the time the machinery was screaming away
and making Princess Nell most anxious, and she suspected
that if she had not seen less sophisticated machines at work
at Castle Turing, she might have turned around and fled.
Finally, though, the images died away, the stage became
empty again, and the altar spat out a length of paper tape,
which the priest carefully folded up and handed to one of the
acolytes. After a brief prayer of thanks, the priest fed the
second tape into the altar, and the whole process started up
again, this time with different but equally remarkable images.
So it went with one tape after another. When Princess
Nell became accustomed to the noise and vibration of the
Wizard, she began to enjoy the images, which seemed quite
artistic to her- like something a human would come up with,
and not machinelike at all.
But the Wizard was undoubtedly a machine. She had not
yet had the opportunity to study it in detail, but after her
experiences in all of King Coyote’s other castles, she
suspected that it, too, was just another Turing machine.
Her study of the Cipherers’ Market, and particularly of the
rulebooks used by the cipherers to respond to messages, had
taught her that for all its complexity, it too was nothing more
than another Turing machine. She had come here to the
Castle of King Coyote to see whether the King answered his
messages according to Turing-like rules. For if he did, then
the entire system-the entire kingdom-the entire Land
Beyond-was nothing more than a vast Turing machine. And
as she had established when she’d been locked up in the
dungeon at Castle Turing, communicating with the mysterious
Duke by sending messages on a chain, a Turing machine, no
matter how complex, was not human. It had no soul. It could
not do what a human did.
The thirteenth tape was fed into the altar, and the
machinery began to whine, then to whir, and then to rumble.
The images appearing above the stage flourished into wilder
and more exotic forms than any they had seen yet, and
watching the faces of the priest and the acolytes, Princess
Nell could see that even they were surprised; they had never
seen anything of the like before. As the minutes wore on, the
images became fragmented and bizarre, mere incarnations of
mathematical ideas, and finally the stage went entirely dark
except for occasional random flashes of color. The Wizard
had worked itself up to such a pitch that all of them felt
trapped within the bowels of a mighty machine that could tear
them to shreds in a moment. The little altar boy finally broke
away and fled down the aisle. Within a minute or so, the
acolytes, one by one, did the same, backing slowly away from
the Wizard until they were about halfway down the aisle and
then turning away and running. Finally even the high priest
turned and fled. The rumbling of the machinery had now
reached such a pitch that it felt as though an epochal
earthquake were in progress, and Nell had to steady herself
with a hand on the altar. The heat coming from back in the
machine was like that from a forge, and Nell could see a dim
red light from deep inside as some of the pushrods became
hot enough to glow.
Finally it all stopped. The silence was astonishing. Nell
realized she had been cringing and stood up straight. The red
glow from inside the Wizard began to die away.
White light poured in from all around. Princess Nell could
tell that it was coming in from outside the diamond walls of the
keep. A few minutes ago it had been nighttime. Now there
was light, but not daylight; it came from all directions and was
cool and colorless.
She ran down the aisle and opened the door to the
anteroom, but it wasn’t there. Nothing was there. The
anteroom was gone. The flowery garden beyond it was gone,
and the horses, the wall, the spiral road, the City of King
Coyote, and the Land Beyond. Instead there was nothing but
gentle white light.
She turned around. The Chamber of the Wizard was still
there.
At the head of the aisle she could see a man sitting atop
the altar, looking at her. He was wearing a crown. Around his
neck was a key-the twelfth key to the Dark Castle.
Princess Nell walked down the aisle toward King Coyote.
He was a middle-aged man, sandy hair losing its color, gray
eyes, and a beard, somewhat darker than his hair and not
especially well trimmed. As Princess Nell approached, he
seemed to become conscious of the crown around his head.
He reached up, lifted it from his head, and tossed it carelessly
onto the top of the altar.
“Very funny,” he said. “You snuck a zero divide past all of
my defenses.”
Princess Nell refused to be drawn by his studied
informality. She stopped several paces away. “As there is no
one here to make introductions, I shall take the liberty of
doing so myself. I am Princess Nell, Duchess of Turing,” she
said, and held out her hand.
King Coyote looked slightly embarrassed. He jumped
down from the altar, approached Princess Nell, and kissed
her hand. “King Coyote at your service.”
“Pleased to make your acquaintance.”
“The pleasure is mine. Sorry! I should have known that
the Primer would have taught you better manners.”
“I am not acquainted with the Primer to which you refer,”
Princess Nell said. “I am simply a Princess on a quest: to
obtain the twelve keys to the Dark Castle. I note you have one
of them in your possession.”
King Coyote held up his hands, palms facing toward her.
“Say no more,” he said. “Single combat will not be necessary.
You are already the victor.” He removed the twelfth key from
his neck and held it out to Princess Nell. She took it from him
with a little curtsy; but as the chain was sliding through his
fingers, he tightened his grip suddenly, so that both of them
were joined by the chain. “Now that your quest is over,” he
said, “can we drop the pretense?”
“I’m sure I don’t take your meaning, Your Majesty.”
He bore a controlled look of exasperation. “What was
your purpose in coming here?”
“To obtain the twelfth key.”
“Anything else?”
“To learn about Wizard 0.2.”
“Ah.”
“To discover whether it was, in fact, a Turing machine.”
“Well, you have your answer. Wizard 0.2 is most certainly
a Turing machine-the most powerful ever built.”
“And the Land Beyond?”
“All grown from seeds. Seeds that I invented.”
“And it is also a Turing machine, then? All controlled by
Wizard 0.2?”
“No,” said King Coyote. “Managed by Wizard. Controlled
by me.”
“But the messages in the Cipherers’ Market control all the
events in the Land Beyond, do they not?”
“You are most perceptive, Princess Nell.”
“Those messages came to Wizard-just another Turing
machine.”
“Open the altar,” said King Coyote, pointing to a large
brass plate with a keyhole in the middle.
Princess Nell used her key to open the lock, and King
Coyote flipped back the lid of the altar. Inside were two small
machines, one for reading tapes and one for writing them.
“Follow me,” said King Coyote, and opened a trap door
set into the floor behind the altar.
Princess Nell followed him down a spiral staircase into a
small room. The connecting rods from the altar came down
into this room and terminated at a small console.
“Wizard is not even connected to the altar! It does
nothing,” Princess Nell said.
“Oh, Wizard does a great deal. It helps me keep track of
things, does calculations, and so on. But all of that business
up there on the stage is just for show-just to impress the
commoners. When a message comes here from the
Cipherers’ Market, I read it myself, and answer it myself.
“So as you can see, Princess Nell, the Land Beyond is
not really a Turing machine at all. It’s actually a person-a
few people, to be precise. Now it’s all yours.”
King Coyote led Princess Nell back into the heart of his
keep and gave her a tour of the place. The best part was the
library. He showed her the books containing the rules for
programming Wizard 0.2, and other books explaining how to
make atoms build themselves into machines, buildings, and
whole worlds.
“You see, Princess Nell, you have conquered this world
today, and now that you have conquered it, you’ll find it a
rather boring place. Now it’s your responsibility to make new
worlds for other people to explore and conquer.” King Coyote
waved his hand out the window into the vast, empty white
space where once had stood the Land Beyond. “There’s
plenty of empty space out there.”
“What will you do, King Coyote?”
“Call me John, Your Royal Highness. As of today, I no
longer have a kingdom.”
“John, what will you do?”
“I have a quest of my own.”
“What is your quest?”
“To find the Alchemist, whoever he may be.”
“And is there . . .”
Nell stopped reading the Primer for a moment. Her eyes had
filled up with tears.
“Is there what?” said John’s voice from the book.
“Is there another? Another who has been with me during my
quest?”
“Yes, there is,” John said quietly, after a short pause. “At least
I have always sensed that she is here.”
“Is she here now?”
“Only if you build a place for her,” John said. “Read the books,
and they will show you how.”
With that, John, the former King Coyote and Emperor of
the Land Beyond, vanished in a flash of light, leaving Princess
Nell alone in her great dusty library. Princess Nell put her
head down on an old leather-bound book and smelled its rich
fragrance. One tear of joy ran from each eye. But she
mastered the impulse to cry and reached for the book instead.
They were magic books, and they drew Princess Nell into
them so deeply that, for many hours, perhaps even days, she
was not aware of her surroundings; which scarcely mattered
as nothing remained of the Land Beyond. But at some length,
she realized that something was tickling her foot. She
reached down absently and scratched it. Moments later the
tickling sensation returned. This time she looked down and
was astonished to see that the floor of the library was covered
with a thick gray-brown carpet, flecked here and there with
splotches of white and black.
It was a living, moving carpet. It was, in fact, the Mouse
Army. All of the other buildings, places, and creatures
Princess Nell had seen in the Land Beyond had been
figments produced by Wizard 0.2; but apparently the mice
were an exception and existed independently of King
Coyote’s machinations. When the Land Beyond had
disappeared, all of the obstructions and impedimenta that had
kept the Mouse Army away from Princess Nell had
disappeared with it, and in short order they had been able to
fix her whereabouts and to converge upon their long-sought
Queen.
“What would you have me do?” Princess Nell said. She
had never been a Queen before and did not know the
protocol.
A chorus of excited squeaking came from the mice as
commands were relayed and issued. The carpet went into
violent but highly organized motion as the mice drew
themselves up into platoons, companies, battalions, and
regiments, each of them commanded by an officer. One
mouse clambered up the leg of Princess Nell’s table, bowed
low to her, and then began to squeak commands from on
high. The mice executed a close-order drill, withdrew to the
edges of the room, and arrayed themselves in an empty box
shape, leaving a large open rectangle in the middle of the
floor.
The mouse up on the table, whom Nell had dubbed the
Generalissima, issued a- lengthy series of orders, running to
each of the four edges of the table to address different
contingents of the Mouse Army. When the Generalissima was
finished, very high piping music could be heard as the mouse
pipers played their bagpipes and the drummers beat their
drums.
Small groups of mice began to encroach on the empty
space, each group moving toward a different spot. Once each
group had reached its assigned position, the individual mice
arranged themselves in such a way that the group as a whole
described a letter. In this way, the following message was
written across the floor of the library:
WE ARE ENCHANTED
REQUEST ASSISTANCE
REFER TO BOOKS
“I shall bend all my efforts toward your disenchantment,”
Princess Nell said, and a tremendous, earsplitting scream of
gratitude rose from the tiny throats of the Mouse Army.
Finding the required book did not take long. The Mouse
Army split itself up into small detachments, each of which
wrestled a different book from the shelf, opened it up on the
floor, and scampered through it one page at a time, looking
for relevant spells. Within the hour, Princess Nell noted that a
broad open corridor had developed in the Mouse Army, and
that a book was making its way toward her, seeming to float
an inch above the floor.
She lifted the book carefully from the backs of the mice
who were bearing it and flipped through it until she found a
spell for the disenchantment of mice. “Very well then,” she
said, and began to read the spell; but suddenly, excited
squeaking filled the air and all the mice were running away in
a panic. The Generalissima climbed up onto the page,
jumping up and down in a state of extreme agitation and
waving her forelegs back and forth over her head.
I understand,” Princess Nell said. She picked up the book
and walked out of the library, taking care not to step on any of
her subjects, and followed them out to the vast empty space
beyond.
Once again the Mouse Army put on a dazzling display of
closeorder drill, drawing itself up across the empty, colorless
plain by platoons, companies, battalions, regiments, and
brigades; but this time the parade took up a much larger
space, because this time the mice took care to space
themselves as far apart as the length of a human arm. Some
of the platoons had to march what was, for them, a distance
of many leagues in order to reach the edges of the formation.
Princess Nell took advantage of the time to wander about and
inspect the ranks, and to rehearse the spell.
Finally the Generalissima approached, bowed deeply,
and gave her the thumbs-up, though Princess Nell had to pick
the tiny leader up and squint to see this gesture.
She went to the place that had been left for her at the
head of the formation, opened up the book, and spoke the
magic spell.
There was a violent thunderclap, and a rush of wind that
knocked Princess Nell flat on her back. She looked up, dazed,
to see that she was surrounded by a vast army of some
hundreds of thousands of girls, only a few years younger than
she was. A wild cheer rose up, and all of the girls fell to their
knees as one and, in a scene of riotous jubilation, proclaimed
their fealty to Queen Nell.
Hackworth in China; depredations of the Fists;
a meeting with Dr. X, an unusual procession.
They said that the Chinese had great respect for madmen, and
that during the days of the Boxer Rebellion, certain Western
missionaries, probably unstable characters to begin with, who had
been trapped behind walls of rubble for weeks, scurrying through
the sniper fire of the encircling Boxers and Imperial troops and
listening to the cries of their flock being burned and tortured in the
streets of Beijing, had become deranged and had walked unharmed
into the ranks of their besiegers and been given food and treated
with deference.
Now John Percival Hackworth, having checked into a suite on
the top floor of the Shangri-La in Pudong (or Shong-a-lee-lah as the
taxi drivers sang it), put on a fresh shirt; his best waistcoat, girded
with the gold chain, adangle with his chop, snuffboxes, fob, and
watchphone; a long coat with a swallowtail for riding; boots, the
black leather and brass spurs hand-shined in the lobby of the Shonga-
lee-lah by a coolie who was so servile that he was insolent, and
Hackworth suspected him of being a Fist; new kid gloves; and his
bowler, de-mossed and otherwise spruced up a bit, but obviously a
veteran of many travels in rough territory.
As he crossed the western bank of the Huang Pu, the usual
crowd of starving peasants and professional amputees washed
around him like a wave running up a flat beach because, though
riding here was dangerous, it was not crazy, and they did not know
him for a madman. He kept his gray eyes fixed upon the picket of
burning Feed lines that demarcated the shrinking border of the
Coastal Republic, and let their hands tug at his coattails, but he took
no notice of them. At different times, three very rural young men,
identifiable as much by their deep tans as their ignorance of modern
security technology, made the mistake of reaching for his watch
chain and received warning shocks for their trouble. One of them
refused to let go until the smell of burned flesh rose from his palm,
and then he peeled his hand away slowly and calmly, staring up at
Hackworth to show that he didn’t mind a little pain, and said
something clearly and loudly that caused a titter to run through the
crowd.
The ride down Nanjing Road took him through the heart of
Shanghai’s shopping district, now an endless gauntlet of tanned
beggars squatting on their heels gripping the brightly colored plastic
bags that served as their suitcases, carefully passing the butts of
cigarettes back and forth. In the shop windows above their heads,
animated mannikins strutted and posed in the latest Coastal
Republic styles. Hackworth noticed that these were much more
conservative than they had been ten years ago, during his last trip
down Nanjing Road. The female mannikins weren’t wearing slit
skirts anymore. Many weren’t wearing skirts at all, but silk pants
instead, or long robes that were even less revealing. One display
was centered upon a patriarchal figure who reclined on a dais,
wearing a round cap with a blue button on the top: a Mandarin. A
young scholar was bowing to him. Around the dais, four groups of
mannikins were demonstrating the other four filial relationships.
So it was chic to be Confucian now, or at least it was politic.
This was one of the few shop windows that didn’t have red Fist
posters pasted all over it.
Hackworth rode past marble villas built by Iraqi Jews in
previous centuries, past the hotel where Nixon had once stayed, past
the high-rise enclaves that Western businessmen had used as the
beachheads of the post-Communist development that had led to the
squalid affluence of the Coastal Republic. He rode past nightclubs
the size of stadiums; jaialai pits where stunned refugees gaped at the
jostling of the bettors; side streets filled with boutiques, one street
for fine goods made from alligators, another for furs, another for
leathers; a nanotech district consisting of tiny businesses that did
bespoke engineering; fruit and vegetable stands; a cul-de-sac where
peddlers sold antiques from little carts, one specializing in cinnabar
boxes, another in Maoist kitsch. Each time the density began to
wane and he thought he must be reaching the edge of the city, he
would come to another edge city of miniature three-story strip malls
and it would begin again.
But as the day went on, he truly did approach the limit of the
city and kept riding anyway toward the west, and it became evident
then that he was a madman and the people in the streets looked at
him with awe and got out of his way. Bicycles and pedestrians
became less common, replaced by heavier and faster military traffic.
Hackworth did not like riding on the shoulder of highways, and so
he directed Kidnapper to find a less direct route to Suzhou, one that
used smaller roads. This was fiat Yangtze Delta territory only inches
above the waterline, where canals, for transport, irrigation, and
drainage, were more numerous than roads. The canals ramified
through the black, stinky ground like blood vessels branching into
the tissues of the brain. The plain was interrupted frequently by
small tumuli containing the coffins of someone’s ancestors, just
high enough to stay above the most routine floods. Farther to the
west, steep hills rose from the paddies, black with vegetation. The
Coastal Republic checkpoints at the intersections of the roads were
gray and fuzzy, like house-size clots of bread mold, so dense was
the fractal defense grid, and staring through the cloud of macro- and
microscopic aerostats, Hackworth could barely make out the
hoplites in the center, heat waves rising from the radiators on their
backs and stirring the airborne soup. They let him pass through
without incident. Hackworth expected to see more checkpoints as he
continued toward Fist territory, but the first one was the last; the
Coastal Republic did not have the strength for defense in depth and
could muster only a one-dimensional picket line.
A mile past the checkpoint, at another small intersection,
Hackworth found a pair of very makeshift crucifixes fashioned from
freshly cut mulberry trees, green leaves still fluttering from their
twigs. Two young white men had been bound to the crucifixes with
gray plastic ties, burned in many places and incrementally
disemboweled. From the looks of their haircuts and the somber
black neckties that had been ironically left around their necks,
Hackworth guessed they were Mormons. A long skein of intestine
trailed from one of their bellies down into the dirt, where a gaunt
pig was tugging on it stubbornly.
He did not see much more death, but he smelled it everywhere
in the hot wet air. He thought that he might be seeing a network of
nanotech defense barriers until he realized that it was a natural
phenomenon: Each waterway supported a linear black nimbus of fat,
drowsy flies. From this he lmew that if he tugged a bit on this or
that rein and guided Kidnapper to the bank of the canal, he would
find it filled with ballooning corpses.
Ten minutes after passing the Coastal Republic checkpoint, he
rode through the center of a Fist encampment. As he looked neither
right nor left, he could not really estimate its size; they had taken
over a village of low brick-and-stucco buildings. A long straight
smudge running across the earth marked the location of a burned
Feed line, and as he crossed it, Hackworth fantasized that it was a
meridian engraved on the living globe by an astral cartographer.
Most of the Fists were shirtless, wearing indigo trousers, scarlet
girdles knotted at the waist, sometimes scarlet ribbons tied round
necks, foreheads, or upper arms. The ones who weren’t sleeping or
smoking were practicing martial arts. Hackworth rode slowly
through their midst, and they pretended not to notice him, except for
one man who came running out of a house with a knife, shouting
“Sha! Sha!” and had to be tackled by three comrades.
As he rode the forty miles to Suzhou, nothing changed about
the landscape except that creeks became rivers and ponds became
lakes. The Fist encampments became somewhat larger and closer
together. When the thick air infrequently roused itself to a breeze,
he could smell the clammy metallic reek of stagnant water and knew
he was close to the great lake of Tai Wu, or Taifu as the
Shanghainese pronounced it. A grayscale dome rose from the
paddies some miles away, casting a film of shadow before a cluster
of tall buildings, and Hackworth knew it must be Suzhou, now a
stronghold of the Celestial Kingdom, veiled in its airborne shield
like a courtesan behind a translucent sheen of Suzhou silk.
Nearing the shore of the great lake he found his way onto an
important road that ran south toward Hangzhou. He set Kidnapper
ambling northward. Suzhou had thrown out tendrils of development
along its major roads, and so as he drew closer he saw strip malls
and franchises, now destroyed, deserted, or colonized by refugees.
Most of these places catered to truck drivers: lots of motels, casinos,
teahouses, and fast-food places. But no trucks ran on the highway
now, and Hackworth rode down the center of a lane, sweating
uncontrollably in his dark clothes and drinking frequently from a
refrigerated bottle in Kidnapper’s glove compartment.
A McDonald’s sign lay toppled across the highway like a giant
turnpike; something had burned through the single pillar that thrust
it into the air. A couple of young men were standing in front of it
smoking cigarettes and, as Hackworth realized, waiting for him. As
Hackworth drew closer, they ground out their cigarettes, stepped
forward, and bowed. Hackworth tipped his bowler. One of them
took Kidnapper’s reins, which was a purely ceremonial gesture in
the case of a robot horse, and the other invited Hackworth to
dismount. Both of the men were wearing heavy but flexible
coveralls with cables and tubes running through the fabric: the inner
layer of armor suits. They could turn themselves into battle-ready
hoplites by slapping on the harder and heavier outer bits, which
were presumably stashed somewhere handy. Their scarlet
headbands identified them as Fists. Hackworth was one of the few
members of the Outer Tribes ever to find himself in the presence of
a Fist who was not running toward him with a weapon screaming
“Kill! Kill!” and found it interesting to see them in a more indulgent
mood. They were dignified, formal, and controlled, like military
men, with none of the leering and snickering that were fashionable
among Coastal Republic boys of the same age.
Hackworth walked across the parking lot toward the
McDonald’s, followed at a respectful distance by one of the
soldiers. Another soldier opened the door for him, and Hackworth
sighed with delight as cold dry air flowed over his face and began to
chase the muggy stuff through the weave of his clothing. The place
had been lightly sacked. He could smell a cold, almost clinical
greasy smell wafting from behind the counter, where containers of
fat had spilled onto the floor and congealed like snow. Much of this
had been scooped up by looters; Hackworth could see the parallel
tracks of women’s fingers. The place was decorated in a Silk Road
motif, transpicuous mediatronic panels portraying wondrous sights
between here and the route’s ancient terminus in Cadiz.
Dr. X was seated in the corner booth, his face radiant in the
cool, UVfiltered sunlight. He was wearing a Mandarin cap with
dragons embroidered in gold thread and a magnificent brocade robe.
The robe was loose at the neck and had short sleeves so that
Hackworth could see the inner garment of a hoplite suit underneath.
Dr. X was at war, and had emerged from the safe perimeter of
Suzhou, and needed to be prepared for an attack. He was sipping
green tea from a jumbo McDonald’s cup, made in the local style,
great clouds of big green leaves swirling around in a tumbler of hot
water. Hackworth doffed his hat and bowed in the Victorian style,
which was proper under the circumstances. Dr. X returned the bow,
and as his head tilted forward, Hackworth could see the button on
the top of his cap. It was red, the color of the highest ranks, but it
was made of coral, marking him as second rank. A ruby button
would have put him at the very highest level. In Western terms this
made Dr. X roughly equivalent to a lesser cabinet minister or threestar
general. Hackworth supposed that this was the highest rank of
Mandarin permitted to converse with barbarians.
Hackworth sat down across the table from Dr. X. A young
woman padded out of the kitchen on silk slippers and gave
Hackworth his own tumbler full of green tea. Watching her mince
away, Hackworth was only mildly shocked to see that her feet were
no more than four inches long. There must be better ways to do it
now, maybe by regulating the growth of the tarsal bones during
adolescence. It probably didn’t even hurt.
Realizing this, Hackworth also realized, for the first time, that
he had done the right thing ten years ago.
Dr. X was watching him and might as well have been reading
his mind. This seemed to put him in a pensive mood. He said
nothing for a while, just gazed out the window and occasionally
sipped his tea. This was fine with Hackworth, who had had a long
ride.
“Have you learned anything from your ten-year sentence?” Dr.
X finally said.
“It would seem so. But I have trouble pulling it up,” Hackworth
said.
This was a bit too idiomatic for Dr. X. By way of explanation,
Hackworth flipped out a ten-year-old card bearing Dr. X’s dynamic
chop. As the old fisherman hauled the dragon out of the water, Dr.
X suddenly got it, and grinned appreciatively. This was showing a
lot of emotion- assuming it was genuine-but age and war had
made him reckless.
“Have you found the Alchemist?” Dr. X said.
“Yes,” Hackworth said. “I am the Alchemist.”
“When did you know this?”
“Only very recently,” Hackworth said. “Then I understood it all
in an instant-I pulled it up,” he said, pantomiming the act of
reeling in a fish. “The Celestial Kingdom was far behind Nippon
and Atlantis in nanotech. The Fists could always have burned the
barbarians’ Feed lines, but this would only have plunged the
peasants into poverty and made the people long for foreign goods.
The decision was made to leapfrog the barbarian tribes by
developing Seed technology. At first you pursued the project in
cooperation with second-tier phyles like Israel, Armenia, and
Greater Serbia, but they proved unreliable. Again and again your
carefully cultivated networks were scattered by Protocol
Enforcement.
“But through these failures you made contact for the first time
with CryptNet, whom you doubtless view as just another triad-a
contemptible band of conspirators. However, CryptNet was tied in
with something much deeper and more interesting-the society of
the Drummers. With their flaky and shallow Western perspective,
CryptNet didn’t grasp the full power of the Drummers’ collective
mind. But you got it right away.
“All you required to initiate the Seed project was the rational,
analytical mind of a nanotechnological engineer. I fit the bill
perfectly. You dropped me into the society of the Drummers like a
seed into fertile soil, and my knowledge spread through them and
permeated their collective mind-as their thoughts spread into my
own unconscious. They became like an extension of my own brain.
For years I laboured on the problem, twenty-four hours a day.
“Then, before I was able to finish the job, I was pulled out by
my superiors at Protocol Enforcement. I was close to being finished.
But not finished yet.”
“Your superiors had uncovered our plan?”
“Either they are completely ignorant, or else they know
everything and are pretending ignorance,” Hackworth said.
“But surely you have told them everything now,” Dr. X said
almost inaudibly.
“If I were to answer that question, you would have no reason
not to kill me,” Hackworth said.
Dr. X nodded, not so much to concede the point as to express
sympathy with Hackworth’s admirably cynical train of thought-as
though Hackworth, after a series of seemingly inconclusive moves,
had suddenly flipped over a large territory of stones on a go board.
“There are those who would advocate that course, because of
what has happened with the girls,” Dr. X said.
Hackworth was so startled to hear this that he became
somewhat lightheaded for a moment and too self-conscious to speak
“Have the Primers proved useful?” he finally said, trying not to
sound giddy.
Dr. X grinned broadly for a moment. Then the emotion
dropped beneath the surface again, like a breaching whale. “They
must have been useful to someone,” he said. “My opinion is that we
made a mistake in saving the girls.”
“How can this act of humanity possibly have been a mistake?”
Dr. X considered it. “It would be more correct to say that,
although it was virtuous to save them, it was mistaken to believe
that they could be raised properly. We lacked the resources to raise
them individually, and so we raised them with books. But the only
proper way to raise a child is within a family. The Master could
have told us as much, had we listened to his words.”
“Some of those girls will one day choose to follow in the ways
of the Master,” Hackworth said, “and then the wisdom of your
decisions will be demonstrated.”
This seemed to be a genuinely new thought to Dr. X. His gaze
returned to the window. Hackworth sensed that the matter of the
girls and the Primers had been concluded.
“I will be open and frank,” said Dr. X after some ruminative
teaslurping, “and you will not believe that I am being so, because it
is in the heads of those from the Outer Tribes to think that we never
speak directly. But perhaps in time you will see the truth of my
words.
“The Seed is almost finished. When you left, the building of it
slowed down very much-more than we expected. We thought that
the Drummers, after ten years, had absorbed your knowledge and
could continue the work without you. But there is something in your
mind that you have gained through your years of scholarly studies
that the Drummers, if they ever had it, have given up and cannot get
back unless they come out of the darkness and live their lives in the
light again.
“The war against the Coastal Republic reaches a critical
moment. We ask you to help us now.”
“I must say that it is nearly inconceivable for me to help you at
this point,” Hackworth said, “unless it would be in the interest of
my tribe, which does not strike me as a likely prospect.”
“We need you to help us finish building the Seed,” Dr. X said
doggedly.
Only decades of training in emotional repression kept
Hackworth from laughing out loud. “Sir. You are a worldly man and
a scholar. Certainly you are aware of the position of Her Majesty’s
government, and indeed of the Common Economic Protocol itself,
on the subject of Seed technologies.”
Dr. X raised one hand a few inches from the tabletop, palm
down, and pawed once at the air. Hackworth recognized it as the
gesture that well-to-do Chinese used to dismiss beggars, or even to
call bullshit on people during meetings. “They are wrong,” he said.
“They do not understand. They think of the Seed from a Western
perspective. Your cultures-and that of the Coastal Republic-are
poorly organized. There is no respect for order, no reverence for
authority. Order must be enforced from above lest anarchy break
out. You are afraid to give the Seed to your people because they can
use it to make weapons, viruses, drugs of their own design, and
destroy order. You enforce order through control of the Feed. But in
the Celestial Kingdom, we are disciplined, we revere authority, we
have order within our own minds, and hence the family is orderly,
the village is orderly, the state is orderly. In our hands the Seed
would be harmless.”
“Why do you need it?” Hackworth said.
“We must have technology to live,” Dr. X said, “but we must
have it with our own.”
Hackworth thought for a moment that Dr. X was referring to
the beverage. But the Doctor began to trace characters on the
tabletop, his hand moving deftly and gracefully, the brocade sleeve
rasping across the plastic surface. “Yong is the outer manifestation
of something. Ti is the underlying essence. Technology is a yong
associated with a particular ti that is”-the Doctor stumbled here
and, through a noticeable effort, refrained from using pejorative
terms like barbarian or gwailo-“that is Western, and completely
alien to us. For centuries, since the time of the Opium Wars, we
have struggled to absorb the yong of technology without importing
the Western ti. But it has been impossible. Just as our ancestors
could not open our ports to the West without accepting the poison of
opium, we could not open our lives to Western technology without
taking in the Western ideas, which have been as a plague on our
society. The result has been centuries of chaos. We ask you to end
that by giving as the Seed.”
“I do not understand why the Seed will help you.”
“The Seed is technology rooted in the Chinese ti. We have
lived by the Seed for five thousand years,” Dr. X said. He waved his
hand toward the window. “These were rice paddies before they were
parking lots. Rice was the basis for our society. Peasants planted the
seeds and had highest status in the Confucian hierarchy. As the
Master said, ‘Let the producers be many and the consumers few.’
When the Feed came in from Atlantis, From Nippon, we no longer
had to plant, because the rice now came From the matter compiler.
It was the destruction of our society. When our society was based
upon planting, it could truly be said, as the Master did, ‘Virtue is the
root; wealth is the result.’ But under the Western ti, wealth comes
not from virtue but from cleverness. So the filial relationships
became deranged. Chaos,” Dr. X said regretfully, then looked up
From his tea and nodded out the window. “Parking lots and chaos.”
Hackworth remained silent for a full minute. Images had come
into his mind again, not a fleeting hallucination this time, but a fullfledged
vision of a China freed from the yoke of the foreign Feed. It
was something he’d seen before, perhaps something he’d even
helped create. It showed something no gwailo would ever get to see:
the Celestial Kingdom during the coming Age of the Seed. Peasants
tended their fields and paddies, and even in times of drought and
flood, the earth brought forth a rich harvest: food, of course, but
many unfamiliar plants too, fruits that :ould be made into medicines,
bamboo a thousand times stronger than the natural varieties, trees
that produced synthetic rubber and pellets of clean safe fuel. In an
orderly procession the suntanned farmers brought their proceeds to
great markets in clean cities free of cholera and strife, where all of
the young people were respectful and dutiful scholars and all of the
elders were honored and cared for. This was a ractive simulation as
big as all of China, and Hackworth could have lost himself in it, and
perhaps did for he knew not how long. But finally he closed his
eyes, blinked it away, sipped some tea to bring his rational mind
back into control.
“Your arguments are not without merit,” Hackworth said.
“Thank you for helping me to see the matter in a different light. I
will ponder these questions on my return to Shanghai.”
Dr. X escorted him to the parking lot of the McDonald’s. The
heat felt pleasant at first, like a relaxing bath, though Hackworth
knew that soon he would feel as if he were drowning in it.
Kidnapper ambled over and folded its legs, allowing Hackworth to
mount it easily.
“You have helped us willingly for ten years,” Dr. X said. “It is
your destiny to make the Seed.”
“Nonsense,” Hackworth said, “I did not know the nature of the
project.”
Dr. X smiled. “You knew it perfectly well.” He freed one hand
from the long sleeves of his robe and shook his finger at Hackworth,
like an indulgent teacher pretending to scold a clever but
mischievous pupil. “You do these things not to serve your Queen
but to serve your own nature, John Hackworth, and I understand
your nature. For you cleverness is its own end, and once you have
seen a clever way to do a thing, you must do it, as water finding a
crack in a dike must pass through it and cover the land on the other
side.”
“Farewell, Dr. X,” Hackworth said. “You will understand that
although I hold you in the highest personal esteem, I cannot
earnestly wish you good fortune in your current endeavour.” He
doffed his hat and bowed low to one side, forcing Kidnapper to
adjust its stance a bit. Dr. X returned the bow, giving Hackworth
another look at that coral button on his cap. Hackworth spurred
Kidnapper on to Shanghai.
. . .
He followed a more northerly route now, along one of the
many radial highways that converged on the metropolis. After he
had been riding for some time, he became consciously aware of a
sound that had been brushing against the outer fringes of
perceptibility for some time: a heavy, distant, and rapid drumbeat,
perhaps twice as fast as the beat of his own heart. His first thought,
of course, was of the Drummers, and he was tempted to explore one
of the nearby canals to see whether their colony had spread its
tendrils this far inland. But then he looked northward across the flat
land for a couple of miles and saw a long procession making its way
down another highway, a dark column of pedestrians marching on
Shanghai.
He saw that his path was converging with theirs, so he spurred
Kidnapper forward at a hand-gallop, hoping to reach the intersection
of the roads before it was clogged by this column of refugees.
Kidnapper outdistanced them easily, but to no avail; when he
reached the intersection, he found it had been seized by the
column’s vanguard which had established a roadblock there and
would not let him pass.
The contingent now controlling the intersection consisted
entirely of girls, some eleven or twelve years old. There were
several dozen of them, and they had apparently taken the objective
by force from a smaller group of Fists, who could now be seen lying
in the shade of some mulberry trees, hogtied with plastic rope.
Probably three-quarters of the girls were on guard duty, mostly
armed with sharpened bamboo stakes, though a few guns and blades
were in evidence. The remaining quarter were on break, hunkered
down in a circle near the intersection, sipping freshly boiled water
and concentrating intently on books. Hackworth recognized the
books; they were all identical, and they all had marbled jade covers,
though all of them had been personalized with stickers, graffiti, and
other decorations over the years.
Hackworth realized that several more girls, organized in groups
of four, had been following him down the road on bicycles; these
outriders passed by him now and rejoined their group.
He had no choice but to wait until the column had passed. The
drumbeat grew and grew in volume until the pavement shook with
each blow, and the shock absorption gear built into Kidnapper’s legs
went into play, flinching minutely at each beat. Another vanguard
passed through: Hackworth easily calculated its size at two hundred
and fiftysix. A battalion was four platoons, each of which was four
companies of four troops of four girls each. The vanguard consisted
of one such battalion, moving at a very brisk double-time, probably
going ahead of the main group to fall upon the next major
intersection.
Then, finally, the main column passed through, organized in
battalions, each foot hitting the ground in unison with all the others.
Each battalion carried a few sedan chairs, which were passed from
one four-girl troop to another every few minutes to spread out the
work. They were not luxurious palanquins but were improvised
from bamboo and plastic rope and upholstered with materials
stripped from old plastic cafeteria furniture. Riding in these chairs
were girls who did not seem all that different from the others, except
that they might have been a year or two older. They did not seem to
be officers; they were not giving orders and wore no special
insignia. Hackworth did not understand why they were riding in
sedan chairs until he got a look at one of them, who had crossed one
ankle up on her knee and taken her slipper off. Her foot was
defective; it was several inches too short.
But all of the other sedan chair girls were deeply absorbed in
their Primers. Hackworth unclipped a small optical device from his
watch chain, a nanotech telescope/microscope that frequently came
in handy, and used it to look over one girl’s shoulder. She was
looking at a diagram of a small nanotechnological device, working
her way through a tutorial that Hackworth had written several years
ago.
The column went past much faster than Hackworth had feared;
they moved down the highway like a piston. Each battalion carried a
banner, a very modest thing improvised from a painted bedsheet.
Each banner bore the number of the battalion and a crest that
Hackworth knew well, as it played an important role in the Primer.
In all, he counted two hundred and fifty-six battalions. Sixty-five
thousand girls ran past him, hell-bent on Shanghai.
From the Primer, Princess Nell’s return to the Dark
Castle; the death of Harv; The Books of the Book and
of the Seed; Princess Nell’s quest to find her mother.
Destruction of the Causeway; Nell falls into the hands
of Fists; she escapes into a greater peril; deliverance.
Princess Nell could have used all of the powers she had
acquired during her great quest to dig Harv’s grave or caused
the work to be done for her by the Disenchanted Army, but it
did not seem fitting, and so instead she found an old rusty
shovel hung up in one of the Dark Castle’s outbuildings. The
ground was dry and stony and veined with the roots of thorn
bushes, and more than once the shovel struck ancient bones.
Princess Nell dug throughout the long day, softening the hard
earth with her tears, but did not slacken until the ground was
level with her own head. Then she went into the little room in
the Dark Castle where Harv had died of a consumption,
carefully wrapped his withered body in fine white silk, and
bore it out to the grave. She had found lilies growing wild in
the overgrown flower-garden by the little fisherman’s cottage,
so she put a spray of these in the grave with him, along with a
little children’s story-book that Harv had given her for a
present many years ago. Harv could not read, and many
nights as they had sat round the fire in the courtyard of the
Dark Castle, Nell had read to him from this book, and she
supposed that he might like to have it wherever he was going
now.
Filling in the grave went quickly; the loose dirt more than
filled the hole. Nell left more lilies atop the long low mound of
earth that marked Harv’s resting place. Then she turned her
back and walked into the Dark Castle. The stain-colored
granite walls had picked up some salmon highlights from the
western sky, and she suspected that she could see a
beautiful sunset from the room in the high tower where she
had established her library.
It was a long climb up a dank and mildewy staircase that
wound up the inside of the Dark Castle’s highest tower. In the
circular room at the top, which was built with mullioned
windows looking out in all directions, Nell had placed all of the
books she had gathered during her quest: books given her as
presents by Purple, books from the library of King Magpie, the
first Faery King that she had vanquished, and more from the
palace of the djinn, and Castle Turing, and many other hidden
libraries and treasuries that she had discovered or pillaged on
her way. And, of course, there was the entire library of King
Coyote, which contained so many books that she had not
even had time to look at them yet.
There was so much work to be done. Copies of all of
these books had to be made for all of the girls in the
Disenchanted Army. The Land Beyond had vanished, and
Princess Nell wanted to make it anew. She wanted to write
down her own story in a great book that young girls could
read. And she had one remaining quest that had been
pressing on her mind of late, during her long voyage across
the empty sea back to the island of the Dark Castle: she
wanted to solve the mystery of her own origins. She wanted
to find her mother. Even after the destruction of the Land
Beyond, she had sensed the presence of another in the
world, one who had always been there. King Coyote himself
had confirmed it. Long ago, her stepfather, the kindly
fisherman, had received her from mermaids; whence had the
mermaids gotten her?
She suspected that the answer could not be found
without the wisdom contained in her library. She began by
causing a catalog to be made, starting with the first books she
had gotten on her early adventures with her Night Friends. At
the same time she established a Scriptorium in the great hall
of the castle, where thousands of girls sat at long tables
making exact copies of all of the books.
Most of King Coyote’s books had to do with the secrets of
atoms and how to put them together to make machines.
Naturally, all of them were magic books; the pictures moved,
and you could ask them questions and get answers. Some of
them were primers and workbooks for novices, and Princess
Nell spent a few days studying this art, putting atoms together
to make simple machines and then watching them run.
Next came a very large set of matched volumes
containing reference materials: One contained designs for
thousands of sleeve bearings, another for computers made of
rods, still another for energy storage devices, and all of them
were ractive so that she could use them to design such things
to her own specifications. Then there were more books on the
general principles of putting such things together into
systems.
Finally, King Coyote’s library included some books
inscribed in the King’s own hand, containing designs for his
greatest masterpieces. Of these, the two very finest were the
Book of the Book and the Book of the Seed. They were
magnificent folio-size volumes, as thick as Princess Nell’s
hand was broad, bound in rich leather illuminated with hairthin
gilt lines in an elaborate interlace pattern, and closed with
heavy brass hasps and locks.
The lock on the Book of the Book yielded to the same key
that Princess Nell had taken from King Coyote. She had
discovered this very early in her exploration of the library but
was unable to comprehend the contents of this volume until
she had studied the others and learnt the secrets of these
machines. The Book of the Book contained a complete set of
plans for a magical book that would tell stories to a young
person, tailoring them for the child’s needs and interests-
even teaching them how to read if need be. It was a
fearsomely complicated work, and Princess Nell only
skimmed it at first, recognizing that to understand the
particulars might take years of study.
The lock on the Book of the Seed would not yield to King
Coyote’s key or to any other key in Princess Nell’s
possession, and because this book had been built atom by
atom, it was stronger than any mortal substance and could
not possibly be broken open. Princess Nell did not know what
this book was about; but the cover bore an inlaid illustration of
a striped seed, like the apple-sized seed that she had seen
used in King Coyote’s city to build a crystal pavilion, and this
foreshadowed the book’s purpose clearly enough.
Nell opened her eyes and propped herself up on one elbow.
The Primer fell shut and slid off her belly onto the mattress. She had
fallen asleep reading it.
The girls on their bunkbeds lay all around her, breathing
quietly and smelling of soap. It made her want to lie back down and
sleep too. But for some reason she was up on one elbow. Some
instinct had told her she had to be up.
She sat up and drew her knees up to her chest, freeing the hem
of her nightgown from between the sheets, then spun around and
dropped to the floor soundlessly. Her bare feet took her silently
between the rows of bunks and into the little lounge in the corner of
the floor where the girls sat together, had tea, brushed their hair,
watched old passives. It was empty now, the lights were off, the
corner windows exposing a vast panorama: to the northeast, the
lights of New Chusan and of the Nipponese and Hindustani
concessions standing a few kilometers offshore, and the outlying
parts of Pudong. Downtown Pudong was all around, its floating,
mediatronic skyscrapers like biblical pillars of fire. To the northwest
lay the Huang Pu River, Shanghai, its suburbs, and the ravaged silk
and tea districts beyond. No fires burned there now; the Feed lines
had been burned all the way to the edge of the city, and the Fists had
stopped at the outskirts and hunkered down as they sought a way to
penetrate the tattered remains of the security grid.
Nell’s eye was drawn toward the water. Downtown Pudong
offered the most spectacular urban nightscape ever devised, but she
always found herself looking past it, staring instead at the Huang
Pu, or the Yangzte to the north, or to the curvature of the Pacific
beyond New Chusan.
She’d been having a dream, she realized. She had awakened
not because of any external disturbance but because of what had
happened in that dream. She had to remember it; but, of course, she
couldn’t.
Just a few snatches: a woman’s face, a beautiful young woman,
perhaps wearing a crown, but seen muddily, as through turbulent
water. And something that glittered in her hands.
No, dangling beneath her hands. A piece of jewelry on a golden
chain.
Could it have been a key? Nell could not bring the image back,
but an instinct told her that it was.
Another detail too: a gleaming swath of something that passed
in front of her face once, twice, three times. Something yellow, with
a repeating pattern woven into it: a crest consisting of a book, a
seed, and crossed keys.
Cloth of gold. Long ago the mermaids had brought her to her
stepfather, and she had been wrapped in cloth of gold, and from this
she had always known that she was a Princess.
The woman in the dream, veiled in swirling water, must have
been her mother. The dream was a memory from her lost infancy.
And before her mother had given her up to the mermaids, she had
given Princess Nell a golden key on a chain.
Nell perched herself on the windowsill, leaned against the
pane, opened the Primer, and flipped all the way back to the
beginning. It started with the same old story, as ever, but told now
in more mature prose. She read the story of how her stepfather had
gotten her from the mermaids, and read it again, drawing out more
details, asking it questions, calling up detailed illustrations.
There, in one of the illustrations, she saw it: her stepfather’s
lock-box, a humble plank chest bound in rusted iron straps, with a
heavy oldfashioned padlock, stored underneath his bed. It was in
this chest that he had stored the cloth of gold-and, perhaps, the key
as well.
Paging forward through the book, she came across a longforgotten
story of how, following her stepfather’s disappearance, her
wicked stepmother had taken the lock-box to a high cliff above the
sea and flung it into the waves, destroying any evidence that
Princess Nell was of royal blood. She had not known that her
stepdaughter was watching her from between the branches of a
thicket, where she often concealed herself during her stepmother’s
rages.
Nell flipped to the last page of the Young Lady’s Illustrated
Primer.
As Princess Nell approached the edge of the cliff, picking
her way along carefully through the darkness, taking care not
to snag the train of her nightgown on thorny shrubs, she
experienced a peculiar feeling that the entire ocean had
become dimly luminescent. She had often noticed this
phenomenon from the high windows of her library in the tower
and reckoned that the waves must be reflecting back the light
of the moon and stars. But this was a cloudy night, the sky
was like a bowl of carved onyx, allowing no light to pass down
from the heavens. The light she saw must emanate from
beneath.
Arriving cautiously at the rim of the cliff, she saw that her
surmise was true. The ocean-the one constant in all the
world- the place from where she had come as an infant,
from which the Land Beyond had grown out of King Coyote’s
seed, and into which it had dissolved-the ocean was alive.
Since the departure of King Coyote, Princess Nell had
supposed herself entirely alone in the world. But now she saw
cities of light beneath the waves and knew that she was alone
only by her own choice.
“‘Princess Nell gathered the hem of her nightgown in both
hands and raised it over her head, letting the chill wind stream over
her body and carry the garment away,’ “ Nell said. “ ‘Then, drawing
a deep breath and closing her eyes, she bent her legs and sprang
forward into space.’
She was reading about the way the illuminated waves rushed
up toward her when suddenly the room filled with light. She looked
toward the door, thinking that someone had come in and turned the
lights on, but she was alone in the room, and the light was flickering
against the wall. She turned her head the other way.
The center span of the Causeway had become a ball of white
light hurling its marbled shroud of cold dark matter into the night.
The sphere expanded until it seemed to occupy most of the interval
between New Chusan and the Pudong shoreline, though by this time
the color had deepened from white into reddish-orange, and the
explosion had punched a sizable crater into the water, which
developed into a circular wave of steam and spray that ran
effortlessly across the ocean’s surface like the arc of light cast by a
pocket torch.
Fragments of the giant Feed line that had once constituted most
of the Causeway’s mass had been pitched into the sky by the
explosion and now tumbled end over end through the night sky, the
slowness of their motion bespeaking their size, casting yellow
sulfurous light over the city as they burned furiously in the windblast
created by their own movement. The light limned a pair of
tremendous pillars of water vapor rising from the ocean north and
south of the Causeway; Nell realized that the Fists must have blown
the Nipponese and Hindustani Feeds at the same moment. So the
Fists of Righteous Harmony had nanotechnological explosives now;
they’d come a long way since they’d tried to torch the bridge over
the Huang Pu with a few cylinders of hydrogen.
The shock wave rapped at the window, startling several of the
girls from sleep. Nell heard them murmuring to one another in the
bunk room. She wondered if she should go in and warn them that
Pudong was cut off now, that the final assault of the Fists had
commenced. But though she could not understand what they were
saying, she could understand their tone of voice clearly enough:
They were not surprised by this, nor unhappy.
They were all Chinese and could become subjects of the
Celestial Kingdom simply by donning the conservative garb of that
tribe and showing due deference to any Mandarins who happened
by. No doubt this was exactly what they would do as soon as the
Fists came to Pudong. Some of them might suffer deprivation,
imprisonment, or rape, but within a year they would all be
integrated into the C.K., as if the Coastal Republic had never
existed.
But if the news feeds from the interior meant anything, the
Fists would kill Nell gradually, with many small cuts and burns,
when they grew weary of raping her. In recent days she had often
seen the Chinese girls talking in little groups and sneaking glances
at her, and the suspicion had grown in her breast that some of them
might know of the attack in advance and might make arrangements
to turn Nell over to the Fists as a demonstration of their loyalty.
She opened the door a crack and saw two of these girls padding
toward the bunk room where Nell usually slept, carrying lengths of
red polymer ribbon.
As soon as they had stolen into Nell’s bunk room, Nell ran
down the corridor and got to the elevators. As she awaited the
elevator, she was more scared than she had ever been; the sight of
the cruel red ribbons in the small hands of the girls had for some
reason struck more terror into her heart than the sight of knives in
the hands of Fists.
A shrill commotion arose from the bunk room.
The bell for the elevator sounded.
She heard the bunk room door fly open, and someone running
down the hall.
The elevator door opened.
One of the girls came into the lobby, saw her, and shrieked
something to the others in a dolphinlike squeal.
Nell got into the elevator, punched the button for the lobby, and
held down the DOOR CLOSE button. The girl thought for a
moment, then stepped forward to hold the door. Several more girls
were running down the hall. Nell kicked the girl in the face, and she
spun away in a helix of blood. The elevator door began to close. Just
as the two doors were meeting in the center, through the narrowing
slit she saw one of the other girls diving toward the wall button. The
doors closed. There was a brief pause, and then they slid open again.
Nell was already in the correct stance to defend herself. If she
had to beat each of the girls to death individually, she would do it.
But none of them rushed the elevator. Instead, the leader stepped
forward and aimed something at Nell. There was a little popping
noise, a pinprick in Nell’s midsection, and within a few seconds she
felt her arms becoming impossibly heavy. Her bottom drooped. Her
head bowed. Her knees buckled. She could not keep her eyes open;
as they closed, she saw the girls coming toward her, smiling with
pleasure, holding up the red ribbons. Nell could not move any part
of her body, but she remained perfectly conscious as they tied her
up with the ribbon. They did it slowly and methodically and
perfectly; they did it every day of their lives.
The tortures of the next few hours were of a purely
experimental and preliminary nature. They did not last for long and
accomplished no permanent damage. These girls had made a living
out of binding and torturing people in a way that didn’t leave scars,
and that was all they really knew. When the leader came up with the
idea of shoving a cigarette into Nell’s cheek, it was something
entirely novel and left the rest of the girls startled and silent for a
few minutes. Nell sensed that most of the girls had no stomach for
such things and merely wanted to turn her over to the Fists in
exchange for citizenship in the Celestial Kingdom.
The Fists themselves began to arrive some twelve hours later.
Some of them wore conservative business suits, some wore the
uniforms of the building’s security force, others looked as if they’d
arrived to take a girl out to a disco.
They all had things to do when they arrived. It was obvious that
this suite would act as local headquarters of some sort when the
rebellion began in earnest. They began to bring up supplies on the
freight elevator and seemed to spend a lot of time on the telephone.
More arrived every hour, until Madame Ping’s suite was playing
host to between one and two dozen. Some of them were very tired
and dirty and went to sleep in the bunks immediately.
In a way, Nell wished that they would do whatever they were
going to do and get it over with fast. But nothing happened for quite
some time. When the first Fists arrived, the girls brought them in to
see Nell, who had been shoved under a bed and was now lying there
in a puddle of her own urine. The leader shone a light on her face
briefly and then turned away, completely uninterested. It seemed
that once he’d verified that the girls had done their bit for the
revolution, Nell ceased to be relevant.
She supposed it was inevitable that, in due time, these men
would take those liberties with her that have ever been claimed as
angary by irregular fighting men, who have willfully severed
themselves from the softening feminine influence of civilized
society, with those women who have had the misfortune to become
their captives. To make this prospect less attractive, she took the
desperate measure of allowing her person to become tainted with the
noisome issue of her natural internal processes. But most of the
Fists were too busy, and when some of the grungy foot-soldier types
arrived, Madame Ping’s girls were eager to make themselves useful
in this regard. Nell reflected that a bunch of soldiers who found
themselves billeted in a bawdy-house would naturally arrive with
certain expectations, and that the inmates would be unwise to
disappoint them.
Nell had gone into the world to seek her fortune and this was
what she had found. She understood more forcibly than ever the
wisdom of Miss Matheson’s remarks about the hostility of the world
and the importance of belonging to a powerful tribe; all of Nell’s
intellect, her vast knowledge and skills, accumulated over a lifetime
of intensive training, meant nothing at all when she was confronted
with a handful of organized peasants. She could not really sleep in
her current position but drifted in and out of consciousness, visited
occasionally by hallucinatory waking dreams. More than once she
dreamed that the Constable had come in his hoplite suit to rescue
her; and the pain she felt when she returned to full consciousness
and realized that her mind had been lying to her, was worse than any
tortures others might inflict.
Eventually they got tired of the stink under the bed and dragged
her out of there on a smear of half-dried body fluids. It had been at
least thirty-six hours since her capture. The leader of the girls, the
one who had put out the cigarette on Nell’s face, cut the red ribbon
away and cut off Nell’s filthy nightgown with it. Nell’s limbs
bounced on the floor. The leader had brought a whip that they
sometimes used on clients and beat Nell with it until circulation
returned. This spectacle drew quite a crowd of Fist soldiers, who
crowded into the bunk room to watch.
The girl drove Nell on hands and knees to a maintenance closet
and made her get out a bucket and mop. Then she made Nell clean
up the mess under the bed, frequently inspecting the results and
beating her, apparently acting dut a parody of a rich Westerner
bossing around some poor running dog. It became clear after the
third or fourth scrubbing of the floor that this was being done as
much for the entertainment of the soldiers as for hygienic reasons.
Then it was back to the maintenance closet, where Nell was
bound again, this time with lightweight police shackles, and left
there on the floor in the dark, naked and filthy. A few minutes later,
her possessions- some clothes that the girls didn’t like and a book
they couldn’t read- were thrown in there with her.
When she was sure that the girl with the whip had gone, she
spoke to her Primer and told it to make light.
She could see a big matter compiler on the floor in the back of
the closet; the girls used it to manufacture larger items when they
were needed. This building was apparently hooked up to the Coastal
Republic’s Pudong Feed, because it hadn’t lost Feed services when
the Causeway had blown up; and indeed the Fists probably would
not have bothered to establish their base here if the place had been
cut off.
Once every couple of hours or so, a Fist would come into this
closet and order the M.C. to create something, usually a simple bulk
substance like rations. On two of these occasions, Nell was outraged
in the manner she had long suspected was inevitable. She closed her
eyes during the commission of these atrocities, knowing that
whatever might be done to the mere vessel of her soul by the likes
of these, her soul itself was as serene, as remote from their grasp, as
is the full moon from the furious incantations of an aboriginal
shaman. She tried to think about the machine that she was designing
in her head, with the help of the Primer, about how the gears
meshed and the bearings spun, how the rod logic was programmed
and where the energy was stored.
On her second night in the closet, after most of the Fists had
gone to bed and use of the matter compiler had apparently ceased
for the night, she instructed the Primer to load her design into the
M.C.’s memory, then crept forward and pressed the START button
with her tongue.
Ten minutes later, the machine released its vacuum with a
shriek. Nell tongued the door open. A knife and a sword rested on
the floor of the M.C. She turned herself around, moving in small,
cautious increments and breathing deeply so that she would not
whimper from the pain emanating from those parts of her that were
most tender and vulnerable and yet had been most viciously
depredated by her captors. She reached backward with her shackled
hands and gripped the handle of the knife.
Footsteps were approaching down the hallway. Someone must
have heard the hiss of the M.C. and thought it was dinner time. But
Nell couldn’t rush this; she had to be careful.
The door opened. It was one of the ranking Fists, perhaps the
rough equivalent of a sergeant. He shone a torch in her face, then
chuckled and turned on the overhead light.
Nell’s body blocked his view of the M.C., but it was obvious
that she was reaching for something. He probably assumed it was
only food.
He stepped forward and kicked her casually in the ribs, then
grabbed her upper arm and jerked her away from the M.C., causing
such pain in her wrists that tears spurted down her face. But she
held on to the knife.
The Fist was staring into the M.C. He was startled and would
be for several moments. Nell maneuvered the knife so that the blade
was touching nothing but the link between the shackles, then hit the
ON switch. It worked; the edge of the blade came to life like a
nanotech chainsaw and zipped through the link in a moment, like
clipping a fingernail. Nell brought it around her body in the same
motion and buried it in the base of the Fist’s spine.
He fell to the ground without speaking-he wasn’t feeling any
pain from that wound or from anything below his waist. Before he
could assess matters any further, she plunged the knife into the base
of his skull.
He was wearing simple peasant stuff: indigo trousers and a
tank-top. She put them on. Then she tied her hair up behind her head
using strings cut from a mop and devoted a precious minute or two
to stretching her arms and legs.
And then it was out into the hallway with her knife in her
waistband and her sword in her hands. Going round a corner, she
cut a man in half as he emerged from the bathroom; the sword kept
going of its own momentum and carved a long gash in the wall.
This assault released a prodigious amount of blood, which Nell put
behind her as quickly as possible. Another man was on guard in the
elevator lobby, and as he came to investigate the sounds, she ran
him through several times quickly, taking a page from Napier’s
book this time.
The elevators were now under some kind of central control and
probably subject to surveillance; rather than press the button in the
lobby, she cut a hole in the doors, sheathed her sword, and
clambered out onto a ladder that ran down the shaft.
She forced herself to descend slowly and carefully, pressing
herself flat against the rungs whenever the car went by. By the time
she had descended perhaps fifty or sixty floors, the building had
come awake; all of the cars were in constant motion, and when they
went past her, she could hear men talking excitedly inside them.
Light flooded into the shaft several floors below. The doors had
been forced open. A couple of Fists thrust their heads out carefully
into the shaft and began looking up and down, shining torches here
and there. Several floors below them, more Fists pried another door
open; but they had to pull their heads in rapidly as the ascending car
nearly decapitated them.
She had imagined that Madame Ping’s was playing host to an
isolated cell of Fists, but it was now clear that most if not all of the
building had been taken over. For that matter, all of Pudong might
now be a part of the Celestial Kingdom. Nell was much more
profoundly isolated than she had feared.
The skin of her arms glowed yellow-pink in the beam of a
torch shone up from below. She did not make the mistake of looking
down into the dazzling light and did not have to; the excited voice
of the Fist below her told her that she had been discovered. A
moment later, the light vanished as the ascending elevator
interposed itself between Nell and the Fists who had seen her.
She recalled Harv and his buds elevator-surfing in their old
building and reckoned that this would be a good time to take up the
practice. As the car rose toward her, she jumped off the ladder,
trying to give herself enough upward thrust to match its velocity.
She landed hard on the roof, for it was moving far more rapidly than
she could jump. The roof knocked her feet out from under her, and
she fell backward, slamming her arms out as Dojo had taught her so
that she absorbed the impact with her fists and forearms, not her
back.
More excited talking from inside the car. The access panel on
the roof suddenly flew into the air, driven out of its frame by a welldelivered
kick from below. A head popped out of the open hatch;
Nell skewered it on her knife. The man tumbled down into the car.
There was no point in waiting now; the situation had gone into
violent motion, which Nell was obliged to use. She rolled onto her
belly and kicked both feet downward into the hatch, spun down into
the car, landed badly on the corpse, and staggered to one knee. She
had barked the point of her chin on the edge of the hatch as she fell
tjirough and bitten her tongue, so she was slightly dazed. A gaunt
man in a black leather skullcap was standing directly in front of her,
reaching for a gun, and while she was shoving her knife up through
the center of his thorax, she bumped into someone behind her. She
jumped to her feet and spun around, terrified, readying the knife for
another blow, and discovered a much more terrified man in a blue
coverall, standing by the elevator’s control panel, holding his arms
up in front of his face and screaming.
Nell stepped back and lowered the point of the knife. The man
was wearing the uniform of a building services worker and had
obviously been yanked away from whatever he had been doing and
put in charge of the elevator’s controls. The man whom Nell had
just killed, the one in the black leather skullcap, was some sort of
low-level official in the rebellion and could not be expected to
demean himself by punching the buttons himself.
“Keep going! Up! Up!” she said, pointing at the ceiling. The
last thing she wanted was for him to stop the elevator at Madame
Ping’s.
The man bowed several times in quick succession and did
something with the controls, then turned and smiled ingratiatingly at
Nell.
As a Coastal Republic citizen working in services, he knew a
few words of English, and Nell knew a few of Chinese. “Down
below-Fists?” she said.
“Many Fist.”
“Ground floor-Fists?”
“Yes, many Fist ground floor.”
“Street-Fists?”
“Fist, army have fight in street.”
“Around this building?”
“Fist around this building all over.”
Nell looked at the elevator’s control panel: four columns of
tightly spaced buttons, color-coded according to each floor’s
function: green for shopping, yellow for residential, red for offices,
and blue for utility floors. Most of the blue floors were below
ground level, but one of them was fifth from the top.
“Building office?” she said, pointing to it.
“Yes.”
“Fists there?”
“No, Fist all down below. But Fist on roof!”
“Go there.”
When the elevator reached the fifth floor from the top, Nell had
the man freeze it there, then climbed on top and trashed its motors
so that it would remain there. She dropped back into the car, trying
not to look at the bodies or smell the reek of blood and other body
fluids that had gotten all over it, and that were now draining out the
open doors and dripping down the shaft. It would not take long for
any of this to be discovered.
She had some time, though; all she had to do was decide how
to make use of it. The maintenance closet had a matter compiler,
just like the one Nell had used to make her weapons, and she knew
that she could use it to compile explosives and booby-trap the
lobby. But the Fists had explosives of their own and could just as
well blow the top floors of the building to kingdom come.
For that matter, they were probably down in some basement
control room watching traffic on the building’s Feed network. Use
of the M.C. would simply announce her location; they would shut
off the Feed and then come after her slowly and carefully.
She took a quick tour of the offices, sizing up her resources.
Looking out the panoramic windows of the finest office suite, she
saw a new state of affairs in the streets of Pudong. Many of the
skyscrapers had been rooted in lines from the foreign Feeds and
were now dark, though in some places flames vented from broken
windows, casting primitive illumination over the streets a thousand
feet below. These buildings had mostly been evacuated, and so the
streets were crowded with far more people than they could really
handle. The plaza immediately surrounding this particular building
had been staked out by a picket line of Fists and was relatively
uncrowded.
She found a windowless room with mediatronic walls that bore
a bewildering collage of images: flowers, details of European
cathedrals and Shinto temples, Chinese landscape art, magnified
images of insects and pollen grains, many-armed Indian goddesses,
planets and moons of the solar system, abstract patterns from the
Islamic world, graphs of mathematical equations, head shots of
models male and female. Other than that, the room was empty
except for a model of the building that stood in the center of the
room, about Nell’s height. The model’s skin was mediatronic, just
like the skin of the building itself, and it was currently echoing (as
she supposed) whatever images were being displayed on the outside
of the building: mostly advertising panels, though some Fists had
apparently come in here and scrawled graffiti across them.
On top of the model rested a stylus-just a black stick pointed
on one end-and a palette, covered with a color wheel and other
controls. Nell picked them up, touched the tip of the stylus to a
green area on the palette’s color wheel, and drew it across the
surface of the model. A glowing green line appeared along the track
of the stylus, disfiguring an ad panel for an airship line.
Whatever other steps Nell might take in the time she had left,
there was one thing she could do quickly and easily here. She was
not entirely sure why she did it, but some intuition told her that it
might be useful; or perhaps it was an artistic urge to make
something that would live longer than she would, even if only by a
few minutes. She began by erasing all of the big advertising panels
on the upper levels of the skyscraper. Then she sketched out a
simple line drawing in primary colors:
an escutcheon in blue, and within it, a crest depicting a book
drawn in red and white; crossed keys in gold; and a seed in brown.
She caused this image to be displayed on all sides of the skyscraper,
between the hundredth and two-hundredth floors.
Then she tried to think of a way out of this place. Perhaps there
were airships on the roof. There would certainly be Fist guards up
there, but perhaps through a combination of stealth and suddenness
she could overcome them. She used the emergency stairs to make
her way up to the next floor, then the next, and then the next. Two
flights above, she could hear Fist guards posted at the roof, talking
to each other and playing mah-jongg. Many flights below, she could
hear more Fists making their way up the stairs one flight at a time,
looking for her.
She was pondering her next move when the guards above her
were rudely interrupted by orders squawking from their radios.
Several Fists came charging down the stairway, shouting excitedly.
Nell, trapped in the stairwell, made herself ready to ambush them as
they came toward her, but instead they ran into the top floor and
made for the elevator lobby. Within a minute or two, an elevator had
arrived and carried them away. Nell waited for a while, listening,
and could no longer hear the contingent approaching from below.
She climbed up the last flights of stairs and emerged onto the
building’s roof, exhilarated as much by the fresh air as by the
discovery that it was completely deserted. She walked to the edge of
the roof and peered down almost half a mile to the street. In the
black windows of a dead skyscraper across the way, she could see
the mirror image of Princess Nell’s crest.
After a minute or two, she noticed that something akin to a
shock wave was making its way down the street far below, moving
in slow motion, covering a city block every couple of minutes.
Details were difficult to make out at this distance: it was a highly
organized group of pedestrians, all wearing the same generally dark
clothing, ramming its way through the mob of refugees, forcing the
panicked barbarians toward the picket line of the Fists or sideways
into the lobbies of the dead buildings.
Nell was transfixed for several minutes by this sight. Then she
happened to glance down a different street and saw the same
phenomenon there.
She made a quick circuit of the building’s roof. All in all,
several columns were advancing inexorably on the foundations of
the building where Nell stood.
In time, one of these columns broke through the last of the
obstructing refugees and reached the edge of the broad open plaza
that surrounded the foot of Nell’s building, where it faced off
against the Fist defenses. The column stopped abruptly at this point
and waited for a few minutes, collecting itself and waiting for the
other columns to catch up.
Nell had supposed at first that these columns might be Fist
reinforcements converging on this building, which was clearly
intended to be the headquarters of their final assault on the Coastal
Republic. But it soon became evident that these newcomers had
arrived for other purposes. After a few minutes of unbearable
tension had gone by in nearly perfect silence, the columns suddenly,
on the same unheard signal, erupted into the plaza. As they
debouched from the narrow streets, they spread out into manypronged
formations, arranging themselves with the precision of a
professional drill team, and then charged forward into the suddenly
panicked and disorganized Fists, throwing up a tremendous battlecry.
When that sound echoed up two hundred stories to Nell’s ears,
she felt her hair standing on end, because it was not the deep lusty
roar of grown men but the fierce thrill of thousands of young girls,
sharp and penetrating as the skirl of massed bagpipes.
It was Nell’s tribe, and they had come for their leader. Nell
spun on her heel and made for the stairway.
By the time she had reached ground level and burst out,
somewhat unwisely, into the building’s lobby, the girls had
breached the walls of the building in several places and rushed in
upon the remaining defenders. They moved in groups of four. One
girl (the largest) would rush toward an opponent, holding a pointed
bamboo stick aimed at his heart. While his attention was thus fixed,
two other girls (the smallest) would converge on him from the sides.
Each girl would hug one of his legs and, acting together, they would
lift him off the ground. The fourth girl (the fastest) would by this
point have circled all the way round and would come in from
behind, driving a knife or other weapon into the victim’s back.
During the half-dozen or so applications of this technique that Nell
witnessed, it never failed, and none of the girls ever suffered more
than the odd bruise or scrape.
Suddenly she felt a moment of wild panic as she thought they
were doing the same to her; but after she had been lifted into the air,
no attack came from front or back, though many girls rushed in
from all sides, each adding her small strength to the paramount goal
of hoisting Nell high into the air. Even as the last remnants of the
Fists were being hunted down and destroyed in the nooks and
corners of the lobby, Nell was being borne on the shoulders of her
little sisters out the front doors of the building and into the plaza,
where something like a hundred thousand girls-Nell could not
count all the regiments and brigades-collapsed to their knees in
unison, as though struck down by a divine wind, and presented her
their bamboo stakes, pole knives, lead pipes, and nunchuks. The
provisional commanders of her divisions stood foremost, as did her
provisional ministers of defense, of state, and of research and
development, all of them bowing to Nell, not with a Chinese bow or
a Victorian one but something they’d come up with that was in
between.
Nell should have been tongue-tied and paralyzed with
astonishment, but she was not; for the first time in her life she
understood why she’d been put on the earth and felt comfortable
with her position. One moment, her life had been a meaningless
abortion, and the next it all made glorious sense. She began to
speak, the words rushing from her mouth as easily as if she had
been reading them from the pages of the Primer. She accepted the
allegiance of the Mouse Army, complimented them on their great
deeds, and swept her arm across the plaza, over the heads of her
little sisters, toward the thousands upon thousands of stranded
sojourners from New Atlantis, Nippon, Israel, and all of the other
Outer Tribes. “Our first duty is to protect these,” she said. “Show
me the condition of the city and all those in it.”
They wanted to carry her, but she jumped to the stones of the
plaza and strode away from the building, toward her ranks, which
parted to make way for her. The streets of Pudong were filled with
hungry and terrified refugees, and through them, in simple peasant
clothes streaked with the blood of herself and of others, broken
shackles dangling from her wrists, followed by her generals and
ministers, walked the barbarian Princess with her book and her
sword.
Carl Hollywood takes a stroll to the waterfront.
Carl Hollywood was awakened by a ringing in his ears and a
burning in his cheek that turned out to be an inch-long fragment of
plate glass driven into his flesh. When he sat up, his bed made
clanking and crashing noises, shedding a heavy burden of shattered
glass, and a foetid exhalation from the wrecked windows blew over
his face. Old hotels had their charms, but disadvantages too-such
as windowpanes made out of antique materials.
Fortunately some old Wyoming instinct had caused him to
leave his boots next to the bed the night before. He inverted each
one and carefully probed it for broken glass before he pulled it on.
Only when he had put on all of his clothes and gathered his things
together did he go to look out the window.
His hotel was near the Huang Pu waterfront. Looking across
the river, he could see that great patches of Pudong had gone black
against the indigo sky of predawn. A few buildings, connected to
the indigenous Feeds, were still lit up. On this side of the river the
situation was not so simple; Shanghai, unlike Pudong, had lived
through many wars and was therefore made to be robust: the city
was rife with secret power sources, old diesel generators, private
Sources and Feeds, water tanks and cisterns. People still raised
chickens for food in the shadow of the Hongkong & Shanghai
Banking Corporation. Shanghai would weather the onslaught of the
Fists much better than Pudong.
But as a white person, Carl Hollywood might not weather it
very well at all. It was better to be across the river, in Pudong, with
the rest of the Outer Tribes.
From here to the waterfront was about three blocks; but since
this was Shanghai, those three blocks were fraught with what in any
other city would be three miles’ worth of complications. The main
problem was going to be Fists; he could already hear the cries of
“Sha! Sha!” boiling up from the streets, and shining a pocket torch
through the bars of his balcony, he could see many Fists,
emboldened by the destruction of the foreign Feeds, running around
with their scarlet girdles and headbands exposed to the world.
If he weren’t six and a half feet tall and blue-eyed, he’d
probably try to disguise himself as Chinese and slink to the
waterfront, and it probably wouldn’t work. He went through his
closet and hauled out his big duster, which swept nearly to his
ankles. It was proof against bullets and most nanotech projectiles.
There was a long item of luggage he had thrown up on the
closet shelf unopened. Hearing the reports of trouble, he had taken
the precaution of bringing these relics with him: an engraved leveraction
.44 rifle with low-tech iron sights and, as a last-ditch sort of
thing, a Colt revolver. These were unnecessarily glorious weapons,
but he had long ago gotten rid of any of his guns that did not have
historical or artistic value.
Two gunshots sounded from within the building, very close to
him. Moments later, someone knocked at his door. Carl wrapped his
duster around him, in case someone decided to fire through the
door, and peered out through the peephole. To his surprise, he saw a
white-haired Anglo gentleman with a handlebar mustache, gripping
a semiautomatic. Carl had met him yesterday in the hotel bar; he
was here trying to clear up some kind of business before the fall of
Shanghai.
He opened the door. The two men regarded each other briefly.
“One might think we had come for an antique weapons convention,”
the gentleman said through his mustache. “Say, I’m frightfully sorry
to have disturbed you, but I thought you might like to know that
there are Fists in the hotel.” He gestured down the corridor with his
gun. Carl poked his head out and discovered a dead bellboy
sprawled out in front of an open door, still clutching a long knife.
“As it happens, I was already up,” said Carl Hollywood, “and
contemplating a bit of a stroll to the waterfront. Care to join me?”
“Delighted. Colonel Spence, Royal Joint Forces, Retired.”
“Carl Hollywood.”
On their way down the fire stairs, Spence killed two more hotel
employees whom he had, on somewhat ambiguous grounds,
identified as Fists. Carl was skeptical in both cases until Spence
ripped their shirts open to reveal the scarlet girdles beneath. “It’s not
that they’re really Fists, you see,” Spence explained jovially. “Just
that when the Fists come, this sort of nonsense becomes terribly
fashionable.”
After exchanging some more self-consciously dry humor about
whether they should settle their bills before departure, and how
much you were supposed to tip a bellboy who came after you with a
carving knife, they agreed it might be safest to exit through the
kitchens. Half a dozen dead Fists littered the floor here, their bodies
striped with the marks of cookie-cutters. Arriving at the exit they
found two fellow guests, both Israelis, staring at them with the fixed
gaze that implies the presence of a skull gun. Seconds later, they
were joined by two Zulu management consultants carrying long,
telescoping poles with nanoblades affixed to the ends, which they
used to destroy all of the light fixtures in their path. It took Carl a
minute to appreciate their plan: They were all about to step out into
a dark alley, and they would need their night vision.
The door began to shudder in its frame and make tremendous
booming noises. Carl stepped forward and peered through the
peephole; it was a couple of urban homeboy types having at it with
a fire axe. He stepped away from the door, shrugging the rifle from
his shoulder, levered in a shell, and fired it through the door, aiming
away from the youths. The booming stopped abruptly, and they
heard the head of the axe ringing like a bell as it fell to the
pavement.
One of the Zulus kicked the door open and leapt into the alley,
whirling his blade in a vast, fatal arc like the blade of a helicopter,
slicing through a garbage can but not hitting any people. When Carl
came piling through the door a few seconds later, he saw several
young toughs scattering down the alley, dodging among several
dozen refugees, loiterers, and street people who pointed helpfully at
their receding backsides, making sure it was understood that their
only reason for being in this alley at this time was to act as a sort of
block watch on behalf of the gwailo visitors.
Without talking about it much, they fell into an improvised
formation there in the alley, where they had a bit of room to
maneuver. The Zulus went in front, whirling their poles over their
heads and hollering some kind of traditional war-cry that drove a
good many of the Chinese out of their path. One of the Jews went
behind the Zulus, using his skull gun to pick off any Fists who
charged them. Then came Carl Hollywood, who, with his height and
his rifle, seemed to have ended up with the job of long-range
reconnaissance and defense. Colonel Spence and the other Israeli
brought up the rear, walking backward most of the time.
This got them down the alley without much trouble, but that
was the easy part; when they reached the street, they were no longer
the only focus of action but mere motes in a sandstorm. Colonel
Spence discharged most of a clip into the air; the explosions were
nearly inaudible in the chaos, but the gouts of light from the
weapon’s barrel drew some attention, and people in their immediate
vicinity actually got out of their way. Carl saw one of the Zulus do
something very ugly with his long weapon and looked away; then
he reflected that it was the Zulus’ job to break trail and his to
concentrate on more distant threats. He turned slowly around as he
walked, trying to ignore the threat that was just beyond arm’s length
and to get a view of the larger scene.
They had walked into a completely disorganized street fight
between the Coastal Republic forces and the Fists of Righteous
Harmony, which was not made any clearer by the fact that many of
the Coastals had defected by tying strips of red cloth round the arms
of their uniforms, and that many of the Fists were not wearing any
markings at all, and that many others who had no affiliation were
taking advantage of the situation to loot stores and were being
fought off by private guards; many of the looters were themselves
being mugged by organized gangs.
They were on Nanjing Road, a broad thoroughfare leading
straight to the Bund and the Huang Pu, lined with four- and fivestory
buildings so that many windows looked out over them, any
one of which might have contained a sniper.
A few of them did contain snipers, Carl realized, but many of
these were shooting across the street at each other, and the ones who
were firing into the street could have been shooting at anyone. Carl
saw one fellow with a laser-sighted rifle emptying clip after clip into
the street, and he reckoned that this constituted a clear and present
danger; so at a moment when their forward progress had stalled
momentarily, while the Zulus were waiting for an especially
desperate Coastal/Fist melee to resolve itself ahead of them, Carl
planted his feet, swung his rifle up to his shoulder, took aim, and
fired. In the dim fire- and torch-light rising up from the street, he
could see powder explode from the stone window frame just above
the sniper’s head. The sniper cringed, then began to sweep the street
with his laser, looking for the source of the bullet.
Someone jostled Carl from behind. It was Spence, who had
been hit with something and lost the use of his leg. A Fist was in the
Colonel’s face. Carl rammed the butt of the rifle into the man’s
chin, sending him backward into the melee with his eyes rolled up
into their sockets. Then he levered in another shell, raised the
weapon to his shoulder again, and tried to find the window with his
sniper friend.
He was still there, tracing a ruby-red line patiently across the
boiling surface of the crowd. Carl took in a deep breath, released it
slowly, prayed that no one would bump into him, and squeezed the
trigger. The rifle butted him hard in the shoulder, and at the same
moment he saw the sniper’s rifle fall out of the window, spinning
end over end, the laser beam sweeping through the smoke and steam
like the trace on a radar scope.
The whole thing had probably been a bad idea; if any of the
other snipers had seen this, they’d be wanting to get rid of him,
whatever their affiliation. Carl levered in another shell and then let
the rifle dangle from one hand, pointed down at the street, where it
wouldn’t be so conspicuous. He got the other hand into Spence’s
armpit and helped him continue down the street. The ends of
Spence’s mustache wiggled as he continued with his endless and
unflappable line of patter; Carl couldn’t hear a word but nodded
encouragingly. Not even the most literal-minded neo-Victorian
could take that stiff-upper-lip thing seriously; Carl realized now that
it was all done with a nod and a wink. It was not Colonel Spence’s
way of saying that he wasn’t scared; it was, rather, a code of sorts, a
face-saving way for him to admit that he was terrified half out of his
wits, and for Carl to admit likewise.
Several Fists rushed them at once; the Zulus got two, the
leading Israeli got one, but another came in and bounced his knife
from the Israeli’s knife-proof jacket. Carl raised the rifle, clamping
the stock between his arm and his body, and fired from the hip. The
recoil nearly knocked the weapon out of his hand; the Fist
practically did a backflip.
He couldn’t believe they had not reached the waterfront yet;
they had been doing this for hours. Something prodded him hard in
the back, causing him to stumble forward; he looked back over his
shoulder and saw a man trying to run him through with a bayonet.
Another man ran up and tried to wrench the rifle out of Carl’s hand.
Carl, too startled to respond for a moment, finally let go of Spence,
reached across, and poked him in the eyes. A great explosion
sounded in his ear, and he looked over to see that Spence had
twisted himself round and shot the attacker who had the bayonet.
The Israeli who had been guarding their rear had simply vanished.
Carl raised his rifle toward the people who were converging on
them from the rear; that and Spence’s pistol opened up a gratifying
clear space in their wake. But something more powerful and
terrifying was driving more people toward them from the side, and
as Carl tried to see what it was, he realized that a score of Chinese
people were now between him and the Zulus. The looks on their
faces were pained and panicky; they were not attacking, they were
being attacked.
Suddenly all of the Chinese were gone. Carl and Colonel
Spence found themselves commingled with a dozen or so Boers-
not just men, but women and children and elders too, a whole laager
on the move. All of them surged forward instinctively and
reabsorbed the vanguard of Carl’s group. They were a block from
the waterfront.
The Boer leader, a stout man of about fifty, somehow identified
Carl Hollywood as the leader, and they quickly redeployed what
forces they had for the final push to the waterfront. The only thing
Carl remembered of this conversation was the man saying, “Good.
You’ve got Zulus.” The Boers in the vanguard were carrying some
sort of automatic weapons firing tiny nanotech high-explosive
rounds, which, indiscriminately used, could have turned the crowd
into a rampart of chewed meat; but they fired the weapons in
disciplined bursts even when the charging Fists penetrated to within
a sword’s length. From time to time, one of them would raise his
head and sweep a row of windows with continuous automatic fire;
riflemen would tumble out of the darkness and spin down into the
street like rag dolls. The Boers must be wearing some kind of night
vision stuW Colonel Spence suddenly felt very heavy on Carl’s arm,
and he realized that the Colonel was unconscious, or close to it. Carl
slung the rifle over his shoulder, bent down, and picked up Spence
in a fireman’s carry.
They arrived at the waterfront and established a defensive
perimeter. The next question was: Were there any boats? But this
part of China was half underwater and seemed to have as many
boats as bicycles. Most of them seemed to have found their way
downstream to Shanghai during the gradual onslaught of the Fists.
So when they arrived at the water’s edge, they discovered thousands
of people with boats, eager to transact some business. But as the
Boer leader rightly pointed out, it would be suicide to split up the
group among several tiny, unpowered craft; the Fists were paying
high bounties for the heads of barbarians. Much safer to wait for one
of the larger vessels out in the channel to make its way to shore,
where they could cut a deal with the captain and climb on board as a
group.
Several vessels, ranging from motor yachts to fishing trawlers,
were already vying to be the first to make that deal, shouldering
their way inexorably through the organic chaff of small boats
crowded along the shore.
A rhythmic beat had begun to resonate in their lungs. At first it
sounded like drumbeats, but as it drew closer it developed into the
sound of hundreds or thousands of human voices chanting in
unison: “Sha! Sha! Sha! Sha!” Nanjing Road began to vomit forth a
great crowd of people shoved out onto the Bund like exhaust pushed
out by a piston. They cleared out of the way, dispersing up and
down the riverfront.
An army of hoplites-professional warriors in battle armor-
was marching toward the river, a score abreast, completely filling
the width of Nanjing Road. These were not Fists; they were the
regular army, the vanguard of the Celestial Kingdom, and Carl
Hollywood was appalled to realize that the only thing now standing
between them and their three-decade march to the banks of the
Huang Pu was Carl Hollywood, his .44, and a handful of lightly
armed civilians.
A nice-looking yacht had penetrated to within a few meters of
the shore. The remaining Israeli, who was fluent in Mandarin, had
already commenced negotiations with its captain.
One of the Boers, a wiry grandmother with a white bun on her
head and a black bonnet pinned primly over that, conferred briefly
with the Boer leader. He nodded once, then caught her face in his
hands and kissed her.
She turned her back on the waterfront and began to march
toward the head of the advancing column of Celestials. The few
Chinese crazy enough to remain along the waterfront, respecting her
age and possible madness, parted to make way for her.
The negotiations over the boat appeared to have hit some kind
of snag. Carl Hollywood could see individual hoplites vaulting two
and three stories into the air, crashing headfirst into the windows of
the Cathay Hotel.
The Boer grandmother doggedly made her way forward until
she was standing in the middle of the Bund. The leader of the
Celestial column stepped toward her, covering her with some kind
of projectile weapon built into one arm of his suit and waving her
aside with the other. The Boer woman carefully got down on both
knees in the middle of the road, clasped her hands together in
prayer, and bowed her head.
Then she became a pearl of white light in the mouth of the
dragon. In an instant this pearl grew to the size of an airship. Carl
Hollywood had the presence of mind to close his eyes and turn his
head away, but he didn’t have time to throw himself down; the
shock wave did that, slamming him full-length into the granite
paving-stones of the waterfront promenade and tearing about half of
his clothes from his body.
Some time passed before he was really conscious; he felt it
must have been half an hour, though debris was still raining down
around him, so five seconds was probably more like it. The hull of
the white yacht had been caved in on one side and most of its crew
flung into the river. But a minute later, a fishing trawler pulled up
and took the barbarians on board with only perfunctory
negotiations. Carl nearly forgot about Spence and almost left him
there; he found that he no longer had the strength to raise the
Colonel’s body from the ground, so he dragged him on board with
the help of a couple of young Boers-identical twins, he realized,
maybe thirteen years old. As they headed across the Huang Pu, Carl
Hollywood huddled on a piled-up fishing net, limp and weak as
though his bones had all been shattered, staring at the hundred-foot
crater in the center of the Bund and looking into the rooms of the
Cathay Hotel, which had been neatly cross-sectioned by the bomb in
the Boer woman’s body.
Within fifteen minutes, they were free on the streets of Pudong.
Carl Hollywood found his way to the local New Atlantan
encampment, reported for duty, and spent a few minutes composing
a letter to Colonel Spence’s widow; the Colonel had bled to death
from a leg wound during the voyage across the river.
Then he spread his pages out on the ground before him and
returned to the pursuit that had occupied him in his hotel room for
the past few days, namely, the search for Miranda. He had begun
this search at the bidding of Lord Finkle-McGraw, pursued it with
mounting passion over the last few days as he had begun to
understand how much he’d been missing Miranda, and was now
pressing the work desperately; for he had realized that in this search
might reside the only hope for the salvation of the tens of thousands
of Outer Tribesmen now encamped upon the dead streets of the
Pudong Economic Zone.
Final onslaught of the Fists; victory of the Celestial
Kingdom; refugees in the domain
of the Drummers; Miranda.
The Huang Pu stopped the advance of the Celestial Army
toward the sea, but having crossed the river farther inland, it
continued to move northward up the Pudong Peninsula at a walking
pace, driving before it flocks of starving peasants much like the
ones who had been their harbingers in Shanghai.
The occupants of Pudong-a mixture of barbarians, Coastal
Republic Chinese who feared persecution at the hands of their
Celestial cousins, and Nell’s little sisters, a third of a million strong
and constituting a new phyle unto themselves-were thus caught
between the Celestials on the south, the Huang Pu on the west, the
Yangtze on the north, and the ocean on the east. All the links to the
artificial islands offshore had been cut.
The geotects of Imperial Tectonics, in their Classical and
Gothic temples high atop New Chusan, made various efforts to
build a temporary bridge between their island and Pudong. It was
simple enough to throw a truss or floating bridge across the gap, but
the Celestials now had the technology to blow such things up faster
than they could be constructed. On the second day of the siege, they
caused the island to reach toward Pudong with a narrow pseudopod
of smart coral, rooted on the ocean floor. But there were very simple
and clear limits to how fast such things could be grown, and as the
refugees continued to throng the narrow defiles of downtown
Pudong, bearing increasingly dire reports of the Celestials’ advance,
it became evident to everyone that the land bridge would not be
completed in time.
The encampments of the various tribes moved north and east as
they were forced out of downtown by the pressure of the refugees
and fear of the Celestials, until several miles of shoreline had been
claimed and settled by the various groups. The southern end, along
the seashore, was anchored by the New Atlantans, who had prepared
themselves to fend off any assaults along the beach. The chain of
camps extended northward from there, curving along the ocean and
then eastward along the banks of the Yangtze to the opposite end,
which was anchored by Nippon against any onslaught across the
tidal flats. The entire center of the line was guarded against a direct
frontal assault by Princess Nell’s tribe/army of twelve-year-old
girls, who were gradually trading in their pointed sticks for more
modern weapons compiled from portable Sources owned by the
Nipponese and the New Atlantans.
Carl Hollywood had been assigned to military duty as soon as
he reported to the New Atlantan authorities, despite his efforts to
convince his superiors that he might be of more use pursuing his
own line of research. But then a message came through from the
highest levels of Her Majesty’s government. The first part of it
praised Carl Hollywood for his “heroic” actions in getting the late
Colonel Spence out of Shanghai and suggested that a knighthood
might be waiting for him if he ever got out of Pudong. The second
part of it named him as a special envoy of sorts to Her Royal
Highness, Princess Nell.
Reading the message, Carl was momentarily stunned that his
Sovereign was according equivalent status to Nell; but upon some
reflection he saw that it was simultaneously just and pragmatic.
During his time in the streets of Pudong, he had seen enough of the
Mouse Army (as they called themselves, for some reason) to know
that they did, in fact, constitute a new ethnic group of sorts, and that
Nell was their undisputed leader. Victoria’s esteem for the new
sovereign was well-founded. At the same time, that the Mouse
Army was currently helping to protect many New Atlantans from
being taken hostage, or worse, by the Celestial Kingdom made such
recognition an eminently pragmatic step.
It fell to Carl Hollywood, who had been a member of his
adopted tribe only for a few months, to forward Her Majesty’s
greetings and felicitations to Princess Nell, a girl about whom he
had heard much from Miranda but whom he had never met and
could hardly fathom. It did not take very deep reflection to see the
hand of Lord Alexander ChungSik Finkle-McGraw in all this.
Freed from day-to-day responsibilities, he walked north from
the New Atlantan camp on the third day of the siege, following the
tideline. Every few yards he came to a tribal border and presented a
visa that, under the provisions of the Common Economic Protocol,
was supposed to afford him free passage. Some of the tribal zones
were only a meter or two wide, but their owners jealously guarded
their access to the sea, sitting up all night staring out into the surf,
waiting for some unspecified form of salvation. Carl Hollywood
strolled through encampments of Ashantis, Kurds, Armenians,
Navajos, Tibetans, Senderos, Mormons, Jesuits, Lapps, Pathans,
Tutsis, the First Distributed Republic and its innumerable offshoots,
Heartlanders, Irish, and one or two local CryptNet cells who had
now been flushed into the open. He discovered synthetic phyles he
had never heard of, but this did not surprise him.
Finally he came to a generous piece of beach frontage guarded
by twelve-year-old Chinese girls. At this point he presented his
credentials from Her Majesty Queen Victoria II, which were
extremely impressive, so much so that many of the girls gathered
around to marvel at them. Carl Hollywood was surprised to hear
them all speaking perfect English in a rather high Victorian style.
They seemed to prefer it when discussing things in the abstract, but
when it came to practical matters they reverted to Mandarin.
He was ushered through the lines into the Mouse Army’s
encampment, which was mostly an open-air hospice for ragged, sick
and injured discards from other phyles. The ones who weren’t flat
on their backs, being tended to by Mouse Nurses, were sitting on the
sand, hugging their knees, staring out across the water in the
direction of New Chusan. The slope of the land was quite gentle
here, and a person could wade for a good long stone’s throw into the
waves.
One person had: a young woman whose long hair fell about her
shoulders and trailed in the water around her waist. She stood with
her back to the shore, holding a book in her hands, and did not move
for a long time.
“What is she doing out there?” Carl Hollywood said to his
Mouse Army escort, who had five little stars on her lapels. In
Pudong, he had figured out their insignia: Five stars meant that she
was in charge of 45 people, or 1024. A regimental commander, then.
“She is calling to her mother.”
“Her mother?”
“Her mother is beneath the waves,” the woman said. “She is a
Queen.”
“Queen of what?”
“She is the Queen of the Drummers who live beneath the sea.”
And then Carl Hollywood knew that Princess Nell was
searching for Miranda too. He threw his long coat down on the sand
and sloshed out Into the Pacific, accompanied by the officer, and
remained at a judicious distance, partly to show due respect, and
partly because Nell had a sword in her waistband. Her face was
inclined over the pages of her book like a focusing lens, and he half
expected the pages to curl and smoke under her gaze.
She looked up from the book after some time. The officer
spoke to her in a low voice. Carl Hollywood did not know the
protocol when one was up to midthigh in the East China Sea, so he
stepped forward, bowed as low as he could under the circumstances,
and handed Princess Nell the scroll from Queen Victoria II.
She accepted it wordlessly and read it through, then went back
to the top and read it again. Then she handed it to her officer, who
rolled it up carefully. Princess Nell stared out over the waves for a
while, then looked Carl in the eye and said quietly, “I accept your
credentials and request that you convey my warm thanks and regard
to Her Majesty, along with my apologies that circumstances prevent
me from composing a more formal response to her kind letter,
which at any other time would naturally be my highest priority.”
“I shall do so at the earliest opportunity, Your Majesty,” Carl
Hollywood said. Hearing these words, Princess Nell looked a bit
unsteady and shifted her feet to maintain her balance; though this
might have been the undertow. Carl realized that she had never been
addressed in this way before; that, until she had been recognized in
this fashion by Victoria, she had never fully realized her position.
“The woman you seek is named Miranda,” he said.
All thoughts of crowns, queens, and armies seemed to vanish
from Nell’s mind, and she was just a young lady again, looking
for-what? Her mother? Her teacher? Her friend? Carl Hollywood
spoke to Nell in a low gentle voice, projecting just enough to be
heard over the strumming of the waves. He spoke to her of Miranda,
and of the book, and of the old stories about the deeds of Princess
Nell, which he had watched from the wings, as it were, by looking
in on Miranda’s feed many years ago at the Parnasse.
Over the next two days many of the refugees on the shore got
away on air or surface ships, but a few of these were destroyed in
spectacular fashion before they could get out of range of the
Celestial Kingdom’s weaponry. Three-quarters of the Mouse Army
evacuated itself through the technique of stripping naked and
walking into the ocean en masse, linked arm-in-arm into a flexible
and unsinkable raft that gradually, slowly, exhaustingly paddled
across the sea to New Chusan. Rumors spread rapidly up and down
the length of the coast; the tribal borders seemed to accelerate rather
than hinder this process as interfaces between languages and
cultures spawned new variants of each rumor, tailored to the local
fears and prejudices. The most popular rumor was that the Celestials
planned to give everyone safe passage and that the attacks were
being carried out by intelligent mines that had run out of control or,
at worst, by a few fanatical commanders who were defying orders
and who would soon be brought to heel. There was a second,
stranger rumor that gave some people an incentive to remain on the
shore and not entrust themselves to the evacuation ships: A young
woman with a book and a sword was creating magical tunnels from
out of the deep that would carry them all away to safety. Such ideas
were naturally met with skepticism among more rational cultures,
but on the morning of the sixth day of the siege, the neap tide
carried a peculiar omen up onto the sand: a harvest of translucent
eggs the size of beach balls. ‘When their fragile shells were torn
open, they were found to contain sculpted backpacks pierced with a
fractal pattern of delicate louvers. A stiff hose extended from the top
and connected to a facemask. Under the circumstances, it was not
difficult to divine the use of these objects. People strapped the packs
onto their backs, slipped on the facemasks, and plunged into the
water. The backpacks acted like the gills of a fish and provided a
steady supply of oxygen.
The gill packs did not carry any tribal identification; they
merely washed up onto the beach, by the thousands, with each high
tide, cast up organically by the sea. The Atlantans, Nipponese, and
others each assumed that they had come from their own tribes. But
many perceived a connection between this and the rumors of
Princess Nell and the tunnels beneath the waves. Such people
migrated toward the center of the Pudong coast, where the tiny,
weak, and flaky tribes had all been concentrated. This contraction of
the defensive line became inevitable as the number of defenders was
shrunk by the evacuation. Borders between tribes became unstable
and finally dissolved, and on the fifth day of the siege the barbarians
had all become fungible and formed into a huddle on the uttermost
point of the Pudong Peninsula, several tens of thousands of persons
packed into an area not exceeding a few city blocks. Beyond that
were the Chinese refugees, mostly persons strongly identified with
the Coastal Republic who knew that they could never blend into the
Celestial Kingdom. These did not dare to invade the camp of the
refugees, who were still armed with powerful weapons, but by
advancing an inch at a time and never retreating, they insensibly
shrank the perimeter so that many barbarians found themselves
standing knee-deep in the ocean.
The rumor spread that the woman called Princess Nell had a
wizard and adviser named Carl, who had appeared out of nowhere
one day knowing nearly everything that Princess Nell did, and a few
things she didn’t. This man, according to rumor, had in his
possession a number of magic keys that gave him and the Princess
power to speak with the Drummers who lived beneath the waves.
On the seventh day, Princess Nell walked naked into the sea at
dawn, vanished beneath waves turned pink by the sunrise, and did
not return. Carl followed her a minute later, though unlike the
Princess he took the precaution of wearing a gill pack. Then all of
the barbarians stepped into the ocean, leaving their filthy clothes
strewn across the beach, relinquishing the last foothold of Chinese
soil to the Celestial Kingdom. They all walked into the ocean until
their heads disappeared. The rearguard was made up of the last part
of the Mouse Army, which charged naked into the surf, linked up
into a raft, and made its way slowly out to sea, nudging a few sick
and wounded along with them in makeshift rafts. By the time the
last girl’s foot broke contact with the sandy ocean bottom, the end
of the land had already been claimed by a man with a scarlet girdle
round his waist, who stood on the shore laughing to think that now
the Middle Kingdom was at last a whole country once more.
The last foreign devil to depart from the Middle Kingdom was
a blond Victorian gentleman with gray eyes, who stood in the waves
for some time looking back over Pudong before he turned around
and continued his descent. As the sea rose over him, it lifted the
bowler from his head, and the hat continued to bob on the tide for
some minutes as the Chinese detonated strings of firecrackers on the
shore and tiny shreds of the red paper wrappers drifted over the sea
like cherry petals.
. . .
On one of her forays into the surf, Nell had encountered a
man-a Drummer-who had come swimming out of the deep,
naked except for a gill pack. This should have astonished her;
instead, she had known he was out there before she saw him, and
when he came close, she could feel things happening in her mind
that were coming in from outside. There was something in her brain
that made her connected to the Drummers.
Nell had drawn up some general plans and given them to her
engineers for further elaboration, and they had given them to Carl,
who had taken them to a functioning portable M.C. in the New
Atlantan camp and compiled a little system for examining and
manipulating nanotechnological devices.
In the dark, motes of light sparkled in Nell’s flesh, like airplane
beacons in the night sky. They scraped one of these away with a
scalpel and examined it. They found similar devices circulating in
her bloodstream. These things, they realized, must have been put
into Nell’s blood when she was raped. It was clear that the sparkling
lights in Nell’s flesh were beacons signaling to others across the
gulf that separates each of us from our neighbors.
Carl opened one of the things from Nell’s blood and found a
rod logic system inside, and a tape drive containing some few
gigabytes of data. The data was divided into discrete chunks, each
one of which was separately encrypted. Carl tried all of the keys that
he had obtained from John Percival Hackworth and found that one
of them-Hackworth’s key-unlocked some of the chunks. When
he examined the decrypted contents, he discovered fragments of a
plan for some kind of nanotechnological device.
They drew blood from several volunteers and found that one of
them had the same little devices in his blood. When they put two of
these devices in close proximity, they locked onto one another using
lidar and embraced, exchanging data and performing some sort of
computation that threw off waste heat.
The devices lived in the blood of the human race like viruses
and passed from one person to the next during sex or any other
exchange of bodily fluids; they were smart packets of data, just like
the ones traversing the media network, and by mating with one
another in the blood, they formed a vast system of communication,
parallel to and probably linked with the dry Net of optical lines and
copper wires. Like the dry Net, the wet Net could be used for doing
computations-for running programs. And it was now clear that
John Percival Hackworth was using it for exactly that, running some
kind of vast distributed program of his own devising. He was
designing something.
“Hackworth is the Alchemist,” Nell said, “and he is using the
wet Net to design the Seed.”
. . .
Half a kilometer offshore, the tunnels began. Some of them
must have been there for many years, for they were rough as tree
trunks, encrusted with barnacles and algae. But it was clear that in
the last few days they had forked and split organically, like roots
questing for moisture; clean new tubes forced their way out through
the encrustation and ran uphill toward the tide line, splitting again
and again until many orifices presented themselves to the refugees.
The shoots terminated in lips that grabbed people and drew them in,
like the tip of an elephant’s trunk, accepting the refugees with a
minimum of seawater. The tunnels were lined with mediatronic
images urging them forward into the deep; it always seemed as
though a warm dry well-lit space awaited them just a bit farther
down the line. But the light moved along with the viewer so that
they were drawn down the tunnels in a kind of peristalsis. The
refugees came to the main tunnel, the old encrusted one, and
continued moving on, now packed together in a solid mass, until
they were disgorged into a large open cavity far below the surface of
the ocean. Here, food and fresh water awaited them and they ate
hungrily.
Two people did not eat or drink except from the provisions
they had brought with them; these were Nell and Carl.
After they had discovered the nanosites in Nell’s flesh that
made her a part of the Drummers, Nell had stayed up through
the night and designed a counternanosite, one that would seek out
and destroy the Drummers’ devices. She and Carl had both put these
devices into their bloodstreams, so that Nell was now free of the
Drummers’ influences and both of them would remain so.
Nevertheless they did not press their luck by eating of the
Drummers’ food, and it was well, because after their meal the
refugees became drowsy and lay down on the floor and slept, steam
rising from their naked flesh, and before long the sparks of light
began to come on, like stars coming out as the sun goes down. After
two hours the stars had merged together into a continuous surface of
flickering light, bright enough to read by, as if a full moon were
shining down upon the bodies of slumbering revelers in a meadow.
The refugees, now Drummers, all slept and dreamed the same
dream, and the abstract lights flickering across the mediatronic
lining of the cavern began to coalesce and organize themselves into
dark memories from deep within their unconscious mind. Nell
began to see things from her own life, experiences long since
assimilated into the words of the Primer but here shown once more
in a raw and terrifying form. She closed her eyes; but the walls
made sounds too, from which she could not escape.
Carl Hollywood was monitoring the signals passing through
the walls of the tunnels, avoiding the emotional content of these
images by reducing them to binary digits and trying to puzzle out
their internal codes and protocols.
“We have to go,” Nell said finally, and Carl arose and followed
her through a randomly chosen exit. The tunnel forked and forked
again, and Nell chose forks by intuition. Sometimes the tunnels
would widen into great caverns full of luminescent Drummers,
sleeping or fucking or simply pounding on the walls. The caverns
always had many outlets, which forked and forked and converged
upon other caverns, the web of tunnels so vast and complicated that
it seemed to fill the entire ocean, like neural bodies with their
dendrites knitting and ramifying to occupy the whole volume of the
skull.
A low drumming sound had been skirting the lower limits of
perceptibility ever since they had left the cavern where the refugees
slumbered. Nell had first taken it for the beat of submarine currents
on the walls of the tunnel, but as it grew stronger, she knew that it
was the Drummers talking to each other, convened in some central
cavern sending messages out across their network. Realizing this,
she felt a sense of urgency verging on panic that they find the
central assembly, and for some time they ran through the perfectly
bewildering three-dimensional maze, trying to locate the epicenter
of the drumming.
Carl Hollywood could not run as quickly as the nimble Nell
and eventually lost her at a fork in the tunnels. From there he made
his own judgments, and after some time had passed-it was
impossible to know how long-his tunnel dovetailed with another
that was carrying a stream of Drummers downward toward the floor
of the ocean. Carl recognized some of these Drummers as former
refugees from the beaches at Pudong.
The sound of the drumming did not build gradually but
exploded to a deafening, mind-dissolving roar as Carl emerged into
a vast cavern, a conical amphitheatre that must have been a
kilometer wide, roofed with a storm of mediatronic images that
played across a vast dome. The Drummers, visible by the flickering
light of the overhead media storm and by their own internal light,
moved up and down the slopes of the cone in a kind of convection
pattern. Caught up in an eddy, Carl was transported down toward
the center and found that an orgy of fantastic dimensions was
underway. The steam of vaporized sweat rose from the center of the
pit in a cloud. The bodies pressing against Carl’s naked skin were so
hot that they almost burned him, as if everyone were running a high
fever, and in some logical abstract compartment of his mind that
was, somehow, continuing to run along its own reasonable course,
he realized why: They were exchanging packets of data with their
bodily fluids, the packets were mating in their blood, the rod logic
throwing off heat that drove up their core temperature.
The orgy went on for hours, but the pattern of convection
gradually slowed down and condensed into a stable arrangement,
like a circulating crowd in a theatre that settles into its assigned
seats as curtain time approaches A broad open space had formed at
the center of the pit and the innermost ring of spectators consisted of
men as if these were in some sense the winners of the enormous
fornication tournament that was nearing its final round. A lone
Drummer circulated around this innermost ring, handing something
out; the something turned out to be mediatronic condoms that
glowed bright colors when they were stripped onto the men s erect
phalluses.
A lone woman entered the ring. The floor at the absolute center
of the pit rose up beneath her feet, shoving her into the air as on an
altar. The drumming built to an unbearable crescendo and then
stopped. Then it began again a very slow steady beat and the men in
the inner circle began to dance around her.
Carl Hollywood saw that the woman in the center was
Miranda.
He saw it all now: that the refugees had been gathered into the
realm of the Drummers for the harvest of fresh data running in their
bloodstreams, that this data had been infused into the wet Net in the
course of the great orgy, and that all of it was now going to be
dumped into Miranda, whose body would play host to the climax of
some computation that would certainly burn her alive in the process.
It was Hackworth’s doing; this was the culmination of his effort to
design the Seed, and in so doing to dissolve the foundations of New
Atlantis and Nippon and all of the societies that had grown up
around the concept of a centralized, hierarchical Feed.
A lone figure, remarkable because her skin did not emit any
light, was fighting her way in toward the center. She burst into the
inner circle, knocking down a dancer who got in her way, and
climbed up onto the central altar where Miranda lay on her back,
arms outstretched as if crucified, her skin a galaxy of colored lights.
Nell cradled Miranda’s head in her arms, bent down, and
kissed her, not a soft brush of the lips but a savage kiss with open
mouth, and she bit down hard as she did it, biting through her own
lips and Miranda’s so that their blood mingled. The light shining
from Miranda’s body diminished and slowly went out as the
nanosites were hunted down and destroyed by the hunter-killers that
had crossed into her blood from Nell’s. Miranda came awake and
arose, her arms draped weakly around Nell’s neck.
The drumming had stopped; the Drummers all sat impassively,
clearly content to wait-for years if necessary-for a woman who
could take Miranda’s place. The light from their flesh had
diminished, and the overhead mediatron had gone dim and vague.
Carl Hollywood, seeing at last a role for himself, stepped into the
center, got one arm under Miranda’s knees and another beneath her
shoulders, and lifted her into the air. Nell turned around and led
them up out of the cavern, holding her sword out before her; but
none of the Drummers moved to stop them.
They passed up through many tunnels, always taking the uphill
fork until they saw sunlight shining down from above through the
waves, casting lines of white light on the translucent roof. Nell
severed the tunnel behind them, wielding her sword like the sweep
of a clock’s hand. The warm water rushed in on them. Nell swam up
toward the light. Miranda was not swimming strongly, and Carl was
torn between a panicky desire to reach the surface and his duty to
Miranda. Then he saw shadows descending from above, dozens of
naked girls swimming downward, garlands of silver bubbles
streaming from their mouths, their almond eyes excited and
mischievous. Carl and Miranda were gripped by many gentle hands
and borne upward into the light.
New Chusan rose above them, a short swim away, and up on
the mountain they could hear the bells of the cathedral ringing.