Feed
M. T. Anderson
"O dear white children casual as birds,
Playing among the ruined languages,
So small beside their large confusing words,
So gay against the greater silences Of dreadful things you did ..."
—from "Anthem for St. Cecilia's Day,"
W. H. Auden
Part 1
moon
your face
is not
an
organ
We went to the moon to have fun, but the moon turned out to completely suck.
We went on a Friday, because there was shit-all to do at home. It was the beginning of spring break. Everything at home was boring. Link Arwaker was like, "I'm so null," and Marty was all, "I'm null too, unit," but I mean we were all pretty null, because for the last like hour we'd been playing with three uninsulated wires that were coming out of the wall. We were trying to ride shocks off them. So Marty told us that there was this fun place for lo-grav on the moon. Lo-grav can be kind of stupid, but this was supposed to be good. It was called the Ricochet Lounge. We thought we'd go for a few days with some of the girls and stay at a hotel there and go dancing.
We flew up and our feeds were burbling all sorts of things about where to stay and what to eat. It sounded pretty fun, and at first there were lots of pictures of dancing and people with romper-gills and metal wings, and I was like, This will be big, really big, but then I guess I wasn't so skip when we were flying over the surface of the moon itself, because the moon was just like it always is, after your first few times there, when you get over being like, Whoa, unit! The moon! The goddamn moon! and instead there's just the rockiness, and the suckiness, and the craters all being full of old broken shit, like domes nobody's using anymore and wrappers and claws.
The thing I hate about space is that you can feel how old and empty it is. I don't know if the others felt like I felt, about space? But I think they did, because they all got louder. They all pointed more, and squeezed close to Link's window.
You need the noise of your friends, in space.
I feel real sorry for people who have to travel by themselves. In space, that must suck. When you're going places with other people, with this big group, everyone is leaning toward each other, and people are laughing and they're chatting, and things are great, and it's just like in a commercial for jeans, or something with nougat.
To make some noise, Link started to move his seat up and back to whack Marty's knees. I was like trying to sleep for the last few minutes of the flight because there was nothing to see except broken things in space, and when we're going hard I get real sleepy real easy, and I didn't want to be null for the unettes on the moon, at the hotel, if any of them were youch.
I guess if I'm honest? Then I was hoping to meet someone on the moon. Maybe part of it was the loneliness of the craters, but I was feeling like it was maybe time to hook up with someone again, because it had been a couple months. At parties, I was starting to get real lonely, even when there were other people around me, and it's worse when you leave. Then there's that silence when you're driving home alone in the upcar and there's nothing but the feed telling you, This is the music you heard. This is the music you missed. This is what is new. Listen. And it would be good to have someone to download with. It would be good to have someone in the upcar with you, flying home with the lights underneath you, and the green faces of mothers that you can see halfway through the windows of dropping vans.
As we flew across the surface of the moon, I couldn't sleep. Link was playing with the seat like an asshole. He was moving it forward and backward. Marty had dropped his bird, these fake birds that were the big spit and lots of people had them, and Marty's bird was floating off, because there was hardly any gravity, and whenever he leaned out to get his bird, Link would slam his seat back like meg hard and it would go bam on Marty's face, and they would start laughing. Marty would be all, "Unit! Just wait one—" and Link would be, "Go for it. Try! Try it!" and Marty would be like, "Unit! You are so—!" And then they would be all big laughing and I felt like a complete bonesprocket for trying to sleep when there was fun. I kept hoping the waitress lady would say something and make them shut up for a minute, but as soon as we got out of Earth's gravitational zone she had gone all gaga over the duty-free.
I didn't want to be sleepy and like all stupid, but I had been drinking pretty hard the night before and had been in mal and I was feeling kind of like shit. So it was not a good way to start this whole trip to the moon, with the seat thumping on Marty's face, and him going, "Unit! I'm trying to get my bird!"
Link was saying, "Go for it."
Marty went, "Linkwhacker! Shit! You're like doing all this meg damage to my knees and my face!"
"Kiss the chair. Pucker up."
They both started laughing again. "Okay" said Marty. "Okay, just tell me which of my frickin' organs you're going to smash this time."
"Keep your tray in the upright position."
"Like what organ? Just tell me."
"Those aren't organs."
"What do you mean?"
"Your face is not an organ."
"My face is too an organ. It's alive."
"Omigod, is there enough oxygen?" said our friend Calista. "Because are you having some kind of neuron death?"
"I'm trying to sleep," Loga complained. She yawned. "I'm flat-lining. Meg."
Then there was this wham and Marty was all, "Oh, shit," holding on to his face, and I sat up and was like completely there was no hope of sleeping with these morons doing rumpus on my armrest.
The waitress
came by and Link stopped and smiled at her and she was like, What a nice
young man. That was because he purchased like a slop-bucket of cologne from
the duty-free.
Impact
So I was
tired and pissy from the get-go.
When we got
off the ship, our feeds were going fugue with all the banners. The hotels were
jumping on each other, and there was bumff from like the casinos and mud slides
and the gift shops and places where you could rent extra arms. I was trying to
talk to Link, but I couldn't because I was getting bannered so hard, and I kept
blinking and trying to walk forward with my carry-on. I can't hardly remember
any of it. I just remember that everything in the banners looked goldy and
sparkling, but as we walked down to the luggage, all the air vents were streaked
with black.
The whole
time was like that. The moon went on and on. It was me and Marty and Link and
Calista and Loga and Quendy The three girls had one room at the hotel, and the
three of us boys had another room. There were a lot of people there for the
break, and kids were all leaping up and down the halls and making their voices
echo. It was a pretty crummy hotel, and there weren't enough sheets, and there
was hardly any gravity, and no one had a fake ID so they put a lock on the
minibar. I was like, "This is a crummy hotel," but Marty was all,
"Unit, this is where I stayed last time. It's like meg cheap, and all the
staff are made from a crystalline substance."
Our feeds
were clear again from all the moon banners, so for a long time we all watched
the football game while the girls, they did something else on the feed. They
were chatting each other and we couldn't hear them, but they kept laughing and
touching each other's faces. I wanted to go to sleep, but every time I tried, bam!
Link and Marty would suddenly go all fission on me, saying, "Titus!
Did you fuckin' see that? Did you see Hemmacher?" I tried to tell myself
that being here was not re: sleeping but re: being with your friends and doing
great stuff. I tried to concentrate on all the stimulus, and the fun, all of
it.
There was
not always too good fun, though. We ordered some fancy nutrient IVs from room service but they gave us all headaches,
and we went out to this place that Marty said served the best electrolyte
chunkies but it had closed a year before. It was dinnertime, so we had dinner
at a J. P. Barnigan's Family Extravaganza, which was pretty good, and just like
the one at home. We got some potato skins for appetizers. It was at least good
to get out of the hotel, because most of the rest of the city had pretty good
artificial gravity, so if you dropped things, at least they fuckin' fell. It
was almost like normal, which is how I like it.
Then we went
back to the hotel. There were parties there, but it was mostly college kids.
Usually we can get in, because me and Link and Marty and Calista, we can turn
on the charm. Calista is blond and she can do this sorority-girl ice-princess
thing, which she does with her voice and her shoulder blades, which makes
people think she's older than she is and really important. Link is tall and
butt-ugly and really rich, that kind of old rich that's like radiation, so that
it's always going deet deet deet deet in invisible waves and people are
suddenly like, "Unit! Hey! Unit!" and they want to be guys with him.
Marty, his thing is that he's good at like anything, any game, and I just stand
there silent and act cool, and we're this trio, the three of us guys, being
like, total guys, which usually makes people let us in and give us beer.
That didn't
work this time. We tried to get in and we were standing in the doorway and they
were all, "Who the hell are you?"
We looked at
ourselves. We all looked kind of bad. We looked tired and sleepy, and even
though we're all pretty good-looking, except Link, we were all pale and our
hair was greasy. We had the lesions that people were getting, and ours right
then were kind of red and wet-looking. link
had a lesion on his jaw, and I had lesions on my arm and on my side.
Quendy had a lesion on her forehead. In the lights of the hallway you could see
them real good. There are different kinds of lesions, I mean, there are lesions
and lesions, but somehow our lesions, in this case, seemed like kid stuff.
Later after
some showers we went to the Ricochet Lounge. It was very lo-grav/no-grav, and
it was all about whamming one person into another in big stuffed suits. The place had been hip, like, a year
and a half ago. The slogan was "Slam the Ones You Love!" Now the place
just looked old and sad. The walls were all marked up from people hitting them.
Even with
his impact helmet on, Link stood out. He's much taller than anyone else, because he's part of a secret patriotic experiment. In the low
gravity, his arms seemed like they
were everywhere. He swung them around and spun. I was being a little careful when I ran into other people,
because of the arm lesion. It had broke open and it was oozing. Still, it was
pretty fun at first, launching ourselves off the walls and going like
vvvvvvvvvvvvv and hitting other people and wrestling while floating to the
floor.
I was
watching Loga real close. She and I had gone out about six months before, until
we had this big argument. Then it was this big thing. She was like, I never
want to see you again, and I was like, Fine. Okay? Fine. Then get some
special goggles. But now we were friends, which was good. I think it's
always really limp, when guys can't talk to girls they went out with. Plus, I
was thinking that maybe Loga and I could hook up again, if we didn't find
anyone else, like on the moon or whatev.
I didn't
have a thing for Calista or Quendy or even completely a thing (anymore) for
Loga. But I was watching Link slamming into them, and when he slammed, it said
that he and the girls all knew what each other's bodies would be like, and
that was part of the game.
I was
unhappy because Loga and I had been a diad, and now when I ran into her at high
speeds it wasn't anything like when Link ran into her at high speeds. I
thought she and I should have a little secret way of collision. But usually we
sailed right past each other.
Marty, who
can do anything good, he was off in a corner doing these gymnastics in midair.
He had a ball and he was somehow kicking it in a circle so it came back to his
foot. Link said, "Over here," and Marty popped the ball to him, and
he kicked it to me.
For a while
we played a game with the ball, and we were twirling all over the place, and we
were like, what it's called when you skim really close over the surface of something,
we were that to the floor, with our arms out, but of course Marty started
winning all the time, and Link, who doesn't like to lose, was like, "This
is null. This sucks."
"Pass,"
said Marty. "What's fuckin' doing?"
"That
this place sucks," said Link.
Marty said,
"Give it a chance, unit."
But Link was
like, "No. Play by yourself. Play with yourself," and suddenly
everything seemed really stupid.
And then I
saw someone watching. I wasn't glad. I looked
again.
She was the
most beautiful girl, like, ever.
She was
watching our stupidity.
There was a
valve that led into the food bar. She was in the valve. She had her crash helmet under her arm. She had this short blond hair. Her face, it was like, I don't
know, it was beautiful. It just, it wasn't the way—I guess
it wasn't just the way it looked like, but also how she was
standing. With her arm. I just stared at her. I was getting some meg feed on the food bar and the pot stickers were
really cheap.
I stood
there wondering what it was that made her so beautiful. She was looking at us
like we were shit.
Her spine. Maybe it was her spine.
Maybe it wasn't her face. Her spine was, I didn't know the
word. Her spine was like...?
The feed suggested
"supple."
... attracted to its powerful T44fermion lift with vertical rise of
fifty feet per second—and if
you like comfort, quality, and
class, the supple upholstery and ergonomically designed
dash will leave you something like
hysterical. But the best thing about it is the
financing—at 18.9%A.P.R
o o o
... only on Sports-Vox—take a man, take a gas sled, take a chlorine storm
on jupiter—and
boys, it's time to spit into the wind with alex neetham, the hardest,
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o o o
.. . month's
summer styles, and the word on the street is "squeaky."...
o o o
.. . their
hit single "Bad Me, Bad You":
"I like you so had
And you like me so bad.
We are so bad
It would be bad
If we did not get together, baby,
Bad baby,
Bad, bad baby.
Meg
bad."...
o o o
... Hostess
M's American Family Restaurants.
Where time seems to stop while you chew. ®
o o o
juice
I followed her when I could.
She was sitting in the snack bar now, with her back to the valve. She was all clipped into the seat so she wouldn't float away if she jerked. I bought a snack. It was chocolate mousse in a tube. I hung on to the counter with one hand.
I watched her through my underarm. She was sitting there, with her slamsuit off now and in a bundle. Her helmet was on a hook next to her. I took a slug of tube mousse. I looked back over at her.
She was wearing a dress of gray wool. It wasn't plastic, and the light didn't reflect off it. Wool. Gray wool. Black stockings.
Her shoulders were like, all bent in, as if she didn't want anyone to be looking at her. She was just sitting, clipped in.
The others came through the valve behind me. I kept my head low. I didn't want them to be like, Hey, unit, hey, hey, Titus, what's doin? and then she'd look at me. She would be disturbed. Luckily, they came in and immediately Link and Marty started doing these gymnastics, and they got in trouble, so I could stay watching her without them being a mob on me. This guy, he was from the club, he was yelling at them because they kept bouncing in the snack bar, which was off-bounds for still bouncing.
Behind the girl in gray was a big window and you could see we were in a bubble way high up over the moon. Down on the ground, tourists were riding big proteins across the craters. All the stars were out.
The guy was still yelling at the others over by the valve. He was all, da da da be removed from the premises, da da da, express instructions, da da.
I lowered my head, and turned it toward the girl in gray.
When she thought no one was looking, she opened her mouth. Something trembled there. Juice. She had filled her mouth with juice.
Da da da, liability, da da da, think you're doing.
I shifted. I watched the juice. For her own amusement, she was letting it go, gentle and sexy.
She just opened her mouth and pushed it out with her tongue. The juice came out of her lips as if it was being extracted real careful by a rock-star dentist who she loved. Her eyes were barely open, and it came out in lo-grav/no-grav as a beautiful purple wobble.
It hung in front of her, her juice. It stayed inches from her face. Her tongue was close behind it, perched in the air like a pink slug gargoyle.
With her eyes almost shut, she watched traces on the drink's round surface swirl.
the nose grid
Link whispered at my side, "This so big
sucks."
"This place doesn't suck," said Marty.
"It's good."
"Maybe," said Calista, "if there were certain people who didn't go jumping on people's heads near the snack bar, if there weren't those people, then maybe we wouldn't all be standing here having a big shame banquet."
Marty was getting angry that everyone was like turding on his recommendation, and I just wanted them all to shut up somehow, I mean nicely, because suddenly I realized that we didn't really sound too smart. If someone overheard us, like that girl, they might think we were dumb.
I was playing with the magnets on my boots and trying
not to look at her. I didn't want her to feel my eyes before I made my move. I
was careful. Quendy and Loga went off to the bathroom because hairstyles had
changed.
Marty drifted around and made slit-eyes at Link. Link and I were chatting about the girl, like I was going, She is meg youch, and he was going, What the hell's she wearing?, and I was going, Wool. It's wool. Like from an animal, and then Calista did her own chat to us, which was, If you want to hear about an animal, what about two guys staring with their mouths wide open so they look completely Cro-Magnon?
That shut us up, and we stared out the window. Wrappers were turning through space like birds.
Quendy came back from the bathroom and said, "Omi-god! Like big thanks to everyone for not telling me that my lesion is like meg completely spreading."
"Hon," said Calista, "it's not spreading."
"Omigod! It is going to be like larger than my whole head! I am going to need a hat just to have all this lesion. It will like go onto the brim."
"Exercise the breath," said Link. "Nobody cares about a stupid lesion."
"How can you not?" said Quendy. "It's huge, and it's right on my forehead. It's like bonnnng!" She trembled her hands around the lesion like it was a kind of lesion gong.
Loga went, "No one will notice."
"If they don't know you," Marty said, "they're not going to know what you normally look like."
"Oh, so they think that usually my like forehead is like weeping?"
"Ask her," said Link. He pointed to the girl in gray.
He said, "Miss, I wonder if you would, could you look at this girl and tell me if you notice anything?"
The girl turned around and looked at Quendy. She said, "The lesion isn't bad."
Quendy's hands were out in a please. "You saw it! See? Like, how far is the air lock?"
'Hon," said Calista. "Listen to the girl."
The girl said, "I've been thinking, because of my neck."
The girl's lesion was beautiful. It was like a necklace. A red choker.
"The face," said the girl, "is a grid. The two big imaginary lines are one down the center of the face and one just across the top of the cheeks. This is my theory, anyway. The nose is where those lines intersect. The more a lesion interferes with those lines, the more noticeable it is. See, the hardest lesion to carry off is one on the nose itself. In your case, you have this lesion which is entirely on the edge of this one quadrant. That's not going to matter. It's not on a line." She undipped herself and reached up with both her hands and touched her thumbs together, and made football goalposts around Quendy's face. "Framing. See? Your lesion, it's on the edge of your face, so it frames your face. It draws attention to your face. The good grid. See, you have this great grid. I'm probably saying way too much."
We were all kind of stunned.
"Yeah," said Calista, sounding confused. "She's right. It just frames your face."
The girl in gray touched her own lesion with a napkin. She said, "I want mine to go all the way around. I want it to be like a necklace, but right now, it's just a torque."
We were all just kind of staring at her like she was an alien. She smiled. We kept staring at her.
"There are times you just want to sink through the floor," she said, "but then you realize there's no air out there."
"Hey," said Marty. "I got a lesion on my foot. You want to see it?"
She smiled sweetly. "No, not really," she said.
Link pointed at his face and was like, "Hey, what about my lesion? Look at this puppy. It bleeds sometimes. You like this?"
She smirked. "Oh, mmm-hm," she said. "You put the 'supper' back in 'suppuration.'"
Link thought that was hilarious. Of course, he didn't have any idea what the hell she was talking about either, but he started laughing while the rest of us were still looking up "suppuration" on the feed English-to-English wordbook.
She was now completely youch on all of our meters,
except with the girls, who I could tell had started to chat each other like
some ants after someone's buried a missionary alive in the middle of their
hill. On the one hand, I thought she was the most amazing person I had ever
seen in my life, even if she was weird as shit. On the other hand, I was pretty
disappointed she was skeezing this sexy talk with Link Arwaker, who women for
some reason always go for, in spite of the fact that he's a meg asshole to
them, for example a slurpy question about, "Oh, what about my lesion?
Let's talk more about me and my •pen sores."
Marty was trying to make up lost ground by saying,
"Maybe you could change the bandages on my foot," but that was clearly just disgusting to
everyone. We were all like, "Unit,
no one wants to see your damn foot," and, "Jesus, Marty unit, stow
the mess-hole."
Link was asking her, "Who are you? Where do you
come from?"
And then she looked at me. Just at me, and I knew she was
wondering what I thought about the guys and seductiveness and skeeze and all. She was waiting for me to say something,
to see if I was going to skeeze like Marty and Link. I wondered whether she wanted me to skeeze. She seemed
really smart from what she said, and she was pretty, and I was still thinking about that globe of juice floating
in front of her face. I was still thinking about the beauty of how that juice had been born delicately from her lips, how it had been born whole, and how her tongue stood
there afterward to see the juice make its trembling progress into the world.
But I had nothing to say.
She and the girls spent the rest of the hour fixing Quendy's hair to like showcase the lesion. Usually, Quendy is just like a kind of broken, little economy model of Calista, and she knows that, and feels real bad about it. But when this girl helped her, it wasn't like that. Quendy was the center of everyone for a long time.
That was why I kept looking at the girl in gray, and started to want, more than anything else that night, to be with her.
... based on the true story of a clone fighting to save her own liver from the cruel and ruthless
original who's farming her for organs.
"Nature ... vs. Nurture."
A Primus prime-time feedcast event.
Image of a girl weeping on a courtroom floor. "I
am not Girl Number Two! Please, Judge
Spandex!
I'm also Number One! I'm not a product,
but a person!"
Image of a girl holding a blaster to a twin's temple.
"Remember, bitch. You can't spell
'danger" without DNA."
Blam.
o o o
.. .the cola with the refreshing taste of citrus and
butter...
o o o
. an adventure in slouching.. .
o o o
Calculon. New solutions for...
o o o
the moon
is in the
house of boring
She was on the moon all alone. Here it was, spring
break, and she was on the moon,
where there was all this meg action, and she was there without friends. She
said she just walked through the
crowds and watched, and she saw all these great things that way. She said she
was there to observe.
There were crowds in the domes at night, spraying
Gatorade from hoses, and all these college guys without shirts lifting their arms. There was a
beetle that walked through the
lanes and gave out prizes, which seemed really good, but she said that really, the prizes, they were kind of shitty when you looked at them
close-up, because sometimes parts
weren't included. She saw pools filled with foam.
Her name was Violet.
We asked her to come with us. We wanted to go to sleep
by then, but we were on the
moon, even if it sucked, and it was spring
break, you know, with the action, so there was no way we were admitting we wanted to go to sleep. We told her
we were thinking about going to some club called the Rumble Spot that we'd heard about on the feed.
"I don't know," she said.
But I was like, "You got to go. You can go and,
you know, observe."
Marty said, "It will be a, a, you know, fuckin',
it will. . ." He kind of wiggled his hand.
"Since you put it that way," she said, kind
of fresh. Calista laughed. Suddenly I knew Calista was either going to love her
or hate her.
After we were walking for a few minutes, it was, on
the scale, maybe closer to hate, because Marty and Link and I were all walking
around Violet and asking her all these questions, and she was asking us stuff,
and we were telling her, and I don't think the other girls really were too skip
about walking behind us.
Link said he wanted to get cranked before we went, and
he said was there any place where we could drink without IDs? Marty said he
knew of this one place, which was called Sombrero Dot, and he went there before
with his cousin. He said it wasn't too out-of-the-way.
We got there and it had been torn down. They had built
a pretty nice stucco mall there, so Loga and Quendy said we should go in and
buy some cool stuff to go out in. That seemed good to us. I wanted to buy some
things but I didn't know what they were. After we walked around for a while,
everything seemed kind of sad and boring so we couldn't tell anymore what we
wanted. Our feeds tried to help, and as we were walking around we were getting
all the prices of things, but really the only thing that I wanted to get was a
pair of infrared knee bands, and I could get better ones off the feed, and have
them sent to my house, than in the stupid physical moon stores. Quendy bought
some shoes, but the minute she walked out of the store she didn't like them
anymore. Marty couldn't think of anything he wanted, so he ordered this really
null shirt. He said it was so null it was like ordering nothing.
Now it was even later and we wanted to go to the club,
but we hadn't got drunk yet, so
Link said maybe we could take a
cab to the hotel and break into the minibar.
As we were driving through the tube streets, there was
all of this commotion because of
the protests about the moon. There
were all these kids, what my dad calls Euro-trash, and they were standing in
the middle of the square and broadcasting
to everyone all these slogans, and it was hard not to receive, because they were so angry, but the cab drove right by them, and they
didn't stop us. They were protesting
all these things, some of them even were protesting the feed. They were like
shouting, "Chip in my head? I'm better off dead! Chip in my head? I'm
better off dead!" Loga rolled her eyes and was like, "Omigod."
We got back to the hotel. Kids were running down the
halls with their fake birds. The
fake birds were still in style. It was stupid, because the birds didn't even
fly or sing or anything.
We went to the girls' bedroom and started to assault the minibar. I wanted to break it open
quickly, because Violet was
looking like she wasn't having fun. She was sitting all stiff on the bed.
"Just a sec," I said.
She nodded, but it was kind of polite.
Calista was whispering to Link, "What's her
problem?"
We tried the minibar first with a comb, then with kicking. We threw it against the wall,
which wasn't as hard to do with
almost no gravity.
"You broke off a. . .a thing," said Marty.
"You broke off a fuckin'
thing."
"A caster," I said.
"Caster," said Link, pointing at my nose.
"Good one."
You know your break sucks when the most brag part of
the night is you coming up with the word "caster."
Violet was was just sitting on the bed, playing with
her thumb. Her shoulders were droopy and her feet were turned in. In fact, all
the girls looked kind of on suspend. Calista and Loga were staring into space,
watching something on the feed.
"Fuck," said Link, kicking the minibar.
"I want to get weasel-faced."
"There's no way you're getting
weasel-faced," I said. "Let's just go."
Marty was like, "We could malfunction."
"Oh, god," said Loga and Quendy rolling
their eyes.
Violet looked real uncomfortable now. It was pretty
obvious she really didn't want to be with us.
Link looked around at the girls' faces. "What's
the problem?" he said.
"Drop it, Link," I said. "We're not
going in mal."
"I heard about this great site called
Lobe-reamer. Eighty-five bucks, one click, and we'll be completely raked for an
hour and a half. We won't know which way's up. That's big, big scrambled, for
cheap."
"Unit!" said Marty. "We're fuckin'
there!"
Link said, "Okay. Let's ..."
"Drop it, units," I said. "No one wants
to be fuguing."
"Am I no one?" said Link.
Calista was like, "Are you asking in terms of sex
appeal?"
"Ow!" Marty said.
Link said, "Shut up, Marty."
Calista chatted all of us guys, Don't like push
this. Especially because the girl is meg un-into it.
Link was like, Lobe-reamer. Lobe-reamer! Do those
words mean nothing to you?
Brake, Link. Brake and upgrade.
There was no way he was getting lobotomized or
weasel-faced, so we just went over to the Rumble Spot un-slammed. It was their
Youth in Action night, so we could get in.
It was meg big big loud. There was everything there.
There was about a million people it seemed, and lights, and the beat was rocking the moon. There was a band hung by their
arms and their legs from the ceiling, and there was girders and floating units
going up and down, and these meg
youch latex ripplechicks dancing on the bar, and there were all these frat guys that were wearing these, unit, they were fuckin' brag,
they were wearing these tachyon
shorts so you couldn't barely look at them, which were $789.99 according to the
feed, and they were on sale for
like $699 at the Zone, and could be shipped to the hotel for an additional
$78.95, and that was just one great
thing that people were wearing. When I looked around, I wanted so much, that
all of the prices were coming into
my brain, and it was bam bam bam, like fugue-joy, and Loga and Quendy and Calista were already out on the dance floor, and my feed
was like going fried, going things about the dance and pictures they were
feedflinging across the dance floor of people on fire doing the moves.
Violet was screaming to me. I couldn't hear a thing. She was like, "Da da da? Da
da!"
I was like, "What?"
She chatted me, This
is a scene.
I was like, Don't you dance?
Not really. Are these all college kids?
I bet most of them. Look at the guy in the, you know,
that thing?
The
neck bat?
Bow tie.
Bow tie.
He was maybe a hundred or so, dancing with the
ripplechicks, a man in a dirty old tweed jacket, and he had this long white
hair that looked kind of yellow, and his eyes were wide, like he was in mal,
but I'm not sure he was in mal. He kept on sticking his thumbs up in the air.
And then they turned off the artificial gravity and we
all went bounding accidentally, and it was like people cruising past each other
with their necks kinked, and Violet grabbed on to my arm, and now I was
thinking that even though she looked really uncomfortable, and like she was
watching some kind of bugs in an experiment, it wasn't so bad being a bug as
long as she grabbed on to my arm, so I said, Don't worry. We'll drift down.
Sorry, she
chatted.
No wrong, I
said.
Really. I didn't mean to grab you.
No wrong.
I put my hand over her hand on my arm, and then she
smiled and took her hand out from under my hand, and by that time we'd come
down again, and were bending our knees.
The guy with the tweed jacket had on a jetbelt, and he
was flying around near the ceiling.
You don't look like you're having fun, I chatted to her.
I will.
When?
I'm not used to this.
What do you do for fun?
When?
Normally.
I haven't been on the moon before.
I mean, anywhere. What do you do?
The man with the bow tie was standing near us. He was trying to talk to Link by cranking
Link's head around and shouting
into his ear. Link was backing away.
Are you having
a good time? she asked.
The moon really isn't working out, I said.
Next time, maybe you should try Mars.
Yeah, I've been to Mars, I said. It was dumb.
Suddenly, she laughed. Are you serious?
Yeah, I'm serious.
Omigod, she
said. Mars is a whole planet.
And it's dumb!
She was like, Dumb?
She was starting to piss me off.
I said, Yes,
dumb.
The whole world?
Dumb.
The whole world.
Dumb.
Oh, this is golden.
The Red Planet was a piece of shit.
I don't believe you could—but I couldn't receive any more of her chat because
our feeds were spiking, and the music was getting louder, with the band singing
"I'll Sex You
In," and I saw her folding her arms
like she didn't like me, and I didn't like her, and everyone was pulsing, even
the old guy, and everyone was
hopping, and they were scatterfeeding pictures across the floor: tribal dances,
stuff with gourds, salsa, houses under breaking dams, women grinning, women
oiling men with their fingertips, women taking out their teeth, girls' stomachs,
boys' calves, rockets from old "movies" flaring, bikini tops,
fingers creeping into nostrils, silos, suns—and the old man was standing by our
side, and trying to yell, but we couldn't hear him, so he leaned closer, and
said to us, to Marty and Violet and now Link and me, he said, yelled, more
like, he yelled: "We enter a time of calamity!"
We stared.
"We enter a time of calamity!"
We tried to back up, all of us except Violet, who was
confused, and Link was saying, "This unit, he's like completely fuguing.
He has this—"
"We enter a time of calamity! We enter a time of
calamity!"
The old man reached out and, with a metal handle,
touched me on the neck.
Suddenly, I could feel myself broadcasting. I was
broadcasting across the scatterfeed, going, helplessly, We enter a time of
calamity! We enter a time of calamity! I couldn't stop.
And he had touched Violet now, and Link, and Marty,
and from all of them, it was coming, We enter a time of calamity! We enter a
time of calamity!
And now I could feel that it was coming from other
places, too, other people he had touched, and Marty was trying to say that he'd
never had this before, it was kind of cool, but he couldn't because his signal
was jammed just with that, over and over again, all of us in a chorus, going, We
enter a time of calamity! We enter a time of calamity! and people were
turning toward us. People were looking. We were standing in a line and the old
guy was standing in front of us. People were moving away. The police were
coming. I could see them. I couldn't really move much.
I felt a kind of kicking in my face and I discovered
it was my mouth, which was saying the time of calamity thing, but at the top of
my lungs. We were shouting, we were broadcasting, and then over us all, as the
cops came through the crowd, the guy started this crazy calling, both out loud and on the feed, this
crazy calling over it all, over
our chorus, and it went:
"We enter a time of calamity. Blood on the
tarmac. Fingers in the
juicer. Towers of air frozen in the lunar wastes. Models dead on the runways, with their legs facing backward.
Children with smiles that can't be undone. Chicken shall rot in the aisles. See the pillars fall."
While we said, again and again, "We enter a
time of calamity. We enter a
time of calamity," and others in the room said it, too, and Violet looked as scared as me, and I tried
to take her hand, and she tried to take mine, and the police were by our side,
hitting the man over the head again and
again with stunners and sticks, and he fell on one knee, and finally my fingers found her wrist, Violet's. It felt so soft, like something I had
never felt before. It felt like the
neck of a swan in the wind.
And then the police were at our sides, whispering to
us, "We're going to have to shut you off now We're going to have to shut
you off."
And then they touched us, and bodies fell, and there was nothing else.
... It's dance. It's dance,
dance, dance. That's fun. Fun's fun, and fun's what you can have. There's nothing to stop you from fun. Do you see the
bodies? Can you smell the beat? Then you'll come and roar with us. Come and throw your boots
at superstars. Come thrash in the cool until your head opens up, and you see the veins
of the people you love bright as branches against the sky, and burnt in your brain will be
the fun, all of the fun, and the
lights, and the Doppler fade of screaming
you heard at the Rumble Spot. The Rumble
Spot.
The Rumble Spot: an ocean of
chaos in the Sea of Tranquillity.
o o o
Images of Coke falling in rivulets down chiseled mountainsides;
children being held toward the sun; blades slicing grass; a hand, a hand
extended toward the lemonade like God's at Creation; boys in Gap tees shot from
a rocket; more lining up with tin helmets; Nike grav-gear plunging into
Montana; a choir of Jamaican girls dressed in pinafores and strap-on solar
cells; dry cleaners ironing the cheek prostheses of the rich; friends clutching
at birds made of alloys; law partners jumping fences; snow; altitude; tears;
hugs; night.
o o o
Part 2
eden
awake
The first
thing I felt was no credit.
I tried to
touch my credit, but there was nothing there.
It felt like
I was in a little room.
My body—I
was in a bed, on top of my arm, which was asleep, but I didn't know where. I
couldn't find the Lunar GPS to tell me.
Someone had
left a message in my head, which I found, and then kept finding everywhere I
went, which said that there was no transmission signal, that I was currently
disconnected from feednet. I tried to chat Link and then Marty, but nothing,
there was no transmission signal, I was currently disconnected from feednet,
of course, and I was starting to
get scared, so I tried to chat my parents, I tried to chat them on Earth, but
there was no transmission etc., I was currently etc.
So I opened
my eyes.
college try
"Nothing,"
she said.
I had gotten
up and was sitting on a chair beside her. We were in a hospital. We took up a
ward.
Link was
still asleep. Nurses went by.
I said,
"I can't see anything. Through the feed."
"No,"
she said. "Or through my hospital gown. So stop trying."
I smiled.
"You know, I thought maybe ..."
"Sure
you did. Want some apple juice?"
We'd been up
for fifteen or twenty minutes. Everything in my head was quiet. It was fucked.
"What
do we do?" she asked.
I didn't
know.
Boring
There was
nothing there but the walls. We looked at them, and at each other. We looked really squelch. Our hair and stuff. We had remote relays
attached to us to watch our blood and our brains.
There were
five walls, because the room was irregular. One of them had a picture of a boat on it. The boat was on a pond
or maybe lake. I couldn't find anything interesting about that picture at all.
There was nothing that was about
to happen or had just happened.
I couldn't
figure out even the littlest reason to paint a picture like that.
still boring
Our parents
had been notified while we were asleep. Only Loga hadn't been touched by the
hacker. She hadn't let him touch her, because he looked really creepy to her,
so she stood way far away. There were also others, people we'd never met, who
had been touched, and they were in the wards, too. He had touched thirteen people
in all.
There was a
police officer there, waiting in a chair. He told us that we would be off-line
for a while, until they could see what had been done, and check for viruses,
and decrypt the feed history to get information to use against the guy in court.
They said that they had identified him, and that he was a hacker and a naysayer
of the worst kind.
We were
frightened, and kept touching our heads. Suddenly, our heads felt real empty.
At least in
the hospital they had better gravity than the hotel.
missing the feed
I missed the
feed.
I don't know
when they first had feeds. Like maybe, fifty
or a hundred years ago. Before that, they had to use their hands and their eyes. Computers
were all outside the body. They
carried them around outside of them, in their hands, like if you carried your
lungs in a briefcase and opened
it to breathe.
People were
really excited when they first came out with
feeds. It was all da da da, this big educational thing, da da da,
your child will have the advantage, encyclopedias at their fingertips, closer
than their fingertips, etc. That's one of the great things about the
feed—that you can be supersmart without ever working. Everyone is supersmart
now. You can look things up automatic, like science and history, like if you want
to know which battles of the Civil War George Washington fought in and shit.
It's more
now, it's not so much about the educational stuff but more regarding the fact
that everything that goes on, goes on on the feed. All of the feedcasts and the
instant news, that's on there, so there's all the entertainment I was missing
without a feed, like the girls were all missing their favorite feedcast, this
show called Oh? Wow! Thing! which has all these kids like us who do
stuff but get all pouty, which is what the girls go crazy for, the poutiness.
But the
braggest thing about the feed, the thing that made it really big, is that it
knows everything you want and hope for, sometimes before you even know what
those things are. It can tell you how to get them, and help you make buying
decisions that are hard. Everything we think and feel is taken in by the
corporations, mainly by data ones like Feedlink and OnFeed and American
Feed-ware, and they make a special profile, one that's keyed just to you, and
then they give it to their branch companies, or other companies buy them, and
they can get to know what it is we need, so all you have to do is want
something and there's a chance it will be yours.
Of course,
everyone is like, da da da, evil corporations, oh they're so bad, we all
say that, and we all know they control everything. I mean, it's not great,
because who knows what evil shit they're up to. Everyone feels bad about that.
But they're the only way to get all this stuff, and it's no good getting pissy
about it, because they're still going to control everything whether you like it
or not. Plus, they keep like everyone in the world employed, so it's not like
we could do without them. And it's really great to know everything about
everything whenever we want, to have it just like, in our brain, just sitting
there.
In fact, the
thing that made me pissy was when they couldn't help me at all, so I was just
lying there, and couldn't play any of the games on the feed, and couldn't chat
anyone, and I couldn't do a fuckin' thing except look at that stupid boat
painting, which was even worse, because now I saw that there was no one on the
boat, which was even more
stupid, and was kind of how I felt, that
the sails were up, and the rudder was, well, whatever rudders are, but
there was no one on board to look at
the horizon.
cache & carry
I had a few
pages cached, from right before the feed stopped. I flipped through them sadly.
I went back and forth between them. One was a message from the crazy asshole,
which said, You have been hacked by the Coalition of Pity. The other was
a good sale at Weatherbee & Crotch, which, by this time, I had probably missed.
It was too bad, because I would have liked to have been able to take the
opportunity to check out these great bargains, for example they had a
trim-shirt with side pockets that I thought I probably would have bought,
except it only came in sand, persimmon, and vetch.
night, and boring
It was
Saturday night. The main lights were out. It had been a day since any of us had
heard from the feed. Our parents were probably already on the moon, and were
coming to the hospital the next morning.
For most of
the day since we woke up after the attack, we had stared at the walls. We'd
been sitting in our beds, and we tapped our feet on the rails. None of us could
get the tune of "I'll Sex You In" out of our heads. Someone kept
starting it up, and then the others would swear and tell them to shut up. Then
we couldn't help ourselves, and we'd start to tap it out on our trays with a
spork.
Link had
finally woken up, and he paced up and down the floor. Loga came by during the
afternoon and she talked to all of us, and she kept saying, "Ohhhhh!
Ohhhhh!" in this sorry tone of voice, which was nice, except that then she
would pause and we could tell she was m-chatting all the news back to our friends on Earth. Occasionally, she'd forget and she'd say out loud to
no one, "Omigod! Yes! Right
here!" or "Hello . . . ?" or whatever it was she was saying in
her head. She would laugh at jokes we couldn't hear.
Once, she
went to the bathroom, casual-like, and came back with her hair parted a
different place. Calista and Quendy watched her.
Later,
without saying anything, they went and did theirs different like that, too.
Marty was
sometimes saying his usual kind of thing, which was like, "Fuck this shit.
Fuck this." He wanted to be out playing basketball or something.
There was nothing
to do. Violet stared at her hands in her lap. I looked over at her. I smiled,
you know, supportive. She looked at me and then went back to staring at her
hands.
Now it was
night, and all the big lights were out. We were lying there. There were machines
that were taking our pulse and shit. We were all supposed to be sleeping.
I heard
Violet walk across the floor and head for the bathroom. A few minutes later, I
heard her walking back.
"Hey,"
I said.
"Yeah.
Hey," she said. She stopped.
"You
can . . . ," I said. I pulled myself up against the pillows. "Why
don't you sit down for a sec?"
She sat down
in the chair by my bed. I could see the curve of her nose against my pulse,
which was green and bumpy.
We sat there
for a little while. I was thinking, This is nice. We're just sitting here.
We don't have to say anything.
I felt real
contented. I lay my head back on my pillow.
I looked
over at her face. I could see the light from my heartbeat on her tears.
I said.
"You're ... hey. You're crying."
"Yes,"
she said.
"You
don't ..." I didn't know how to say what I wanted. I tried, "You
don't seem like a crier."
"No,"
she said.
We sat. Now
the silence wasn't very good. Her head was low. I could see the curve of her
cheek against my brain waves, which were red and loopy.
She said,
"You go try to have fun like a normal person, a normal person with a real
life—just for one night you want to live, and suddenly you're screwed."
"You're
not screwed."
"I'm
screwed."
We sat
there. I wanted to say something to cheer her up. I had a feeling that cheering
her up might be a lot of work. I was thinking of how sometimes, trying to say
the right thing to people, it's like some kind of brain surgery, and you have
to tweak exactly the right part of the lobe. Except with talking, it's more
like brain surgery with old, rusted skewers and things, maybe like those things
you use to eat lobster, but brown. And you have to get exactly the right place,
and you're touching around in the brain, but the patient, she keeps jumping and
saying, "Ow." Thinking of it like this, I started to not want to say
anything. I kept thinking of nice things I could say, like, "I'm glad you went out last night, because
that's how I met you," or,
"And I think you are a normal person," but they all seemed
just smarm.
So we just
sat there, together, and we didn't say anything. And it wasn't bad.
I hoped she
could see my smile in the light of my brain.
Father
When my
father got there the next morning, he didn't stay long. He was being very
powerful and businesslike. He was dressed up, and he looked like he was ready
to give some orders and sort things out. He looked like everyone around us was
stupid and he was going to roll up his sleeves and do some real clarity work.
He stood
there staring at me for a few seconds, and I was like, "What? What?"
He seemed
surprised, and then blinked. He said, "Oh. Shit. Yeah, I forgot. No
m-chat. Just talking."
I was like,
"Do you have to remind me? What's doing? How's Smell Factor?"
"Your
brother has a name."
"How's
Mom?"
"She's
like, whoa, she's like so stressed out. This is . . . Dude," he said.
"Dude, this is some way bad shit."
I could
completely feel Violet watching us. She was listening. I didn't want to have
her judging us, and thinking we were too boring or stupid or something.
My father
asked me to tell him what happened. I told him, leaving out some parts, like
trying to break in to the minibar. He just kept shaking his head and going,
"Yeah," "Yeah," "Yeah," "Oh, yeah,"
"Yeah," "Shit," "Yeah."
Finally, he
stood up. I could tell he was pissed. He held up his hands. He said, "They
want to subpoena your memories. This is this thing which is . . . Okay, this is
bullshit."
After a
minute, he said to someone who wasn't there, "Okay Okay." He turned
to me and said, "I'm going down to the police."
"Dad?"I
said. "When am I going home?"
Dad put his
hand over his ear. "Okay," he said. His mouth twitched. He nodded to
someone.
He hit me on
the knee and left.
I was
staring at the wall and the stupid boat picture.
I heard
Quendy say to Violet, "When are your parents coming?"
She said in
a flat voice, "They're busy."
"Busy?"
"Yeah.
With jobs. I guess they can't come at all."
salad days,
w/sneeze guard
The next
morning, we hadn't heard anything. We decided we needed to be cheered up big-time.
So Marty
invented this game where we blew hypodermic needletips through tubing at a
skinless anatomy man on the wall. We spat the needles and tried to pin his
nads.
It was the
beginning of a great day, one of the greatest days of my life. We all played
the dart game, and we laughed and sang "I'll Sex You In." Everyone
was smiling, and it was skip.
The surprise
was, Violet was the best at the dart game. She always won. I sucked.
She tried to
teach me. It was a complete turn-on. She took my hand and put the tube in my
mouth.
She
whispered, "Aspirate. With the tongue."
People were
really impressed. Link and Marty were completely hitting on Violet for it, but
she didn't pay them any attention, and sometimes she would stand there with one
hand on my shoulder. I could feel that she was putting pressure on it, and
that she didn't need to stand with all her weight because I was there.
Then Loga
came in to the hospital for a while, and we were all talking to her about stuff
when she stopped for a second because
the girls' favorite feedcast, Oh? Wow! Thing! was on. They were all
like, "Tell us what's happening, tell us what's happening," so we
all gathered around her in our little gowns, and she sat there cross-legged on
the bed and told us, "Okay, so like now Greg's walking in, and he's . . .
omigod, he's completely malfunctioning— he's
completely in mal, and Steph is crying on the sofa. Okay, so she goes .
. ." And she told us the story of what was happening as it happened, and
we all sat there, smiling. I never heard Loga tell a story this good before,
and she even used her hands and stuff, and her eyes were vacant like she was seeing some other
world, which I guess she was. "Jackie is sitting on the front of the boat?
And he holds his hand up, and he's going . . . he's going... omigod, he goes,
'Organelle, I always loved you from when
we first went sailing.'"
Quendy was
like, "Oh, god! This is so romantic!"
"Oh,
meg. Big meg. You can feel the breeze on your skin. It's warm, like those nights, you know, when we're
like—we're like, 'We're always going to be young.' The breeze is like that. I wish you could feel
it." We all shivered. She
said, "You can smell the salt. The moon's out. It's high above everything,
and soft."
Quendy
actually cried one tear.
Violet and I
looked at each other. We didn't look away We still were like that, looking into
each other's eyes and all, when
the doctor came in and was like, What the hell had happened in the examination room, what's with all the needles?
and he was upgrading to homicidal and going all. Da da da professional care unit, da da da dangerous and costly da da injection da da da, etc.
Luckily, Link's mom heard him yelling at us, and she's a complete dragon, so she
gave him a piece of her mind. She told him that we were all suffering from a
very stressful experience and we weren't used to these kinds of stresses and he
had to understand that we had to have our fun, too. I still felt kind of bad
about it, because we made a big mess, and Violet was completely meg blushing,
but at least we didn't get like shoved into orbit on cybergurneys or something.
I liked
being just a few beds away from her. We could wave. We all talked about old
music, like from when we were little, and all the stupid bands they had back
then, and the stupid fashions we liked in middle school, like the year when the
big fashion from L.A. and shit was that everyone wanted to dress like they were
in an elderly convalescent home, there was this weird nostalgic chic for that,
so we all remembered having stretch pants and velour tops, and Calista had even
bought one of those stupid accessory walkers at Weatherbee & Crotch. There
were those stupid ads for having your pants pulled up like around your chest.
Violet said she still had a cane at home.
When we were
eating dinner, sitting on her bed side by side, she said to me, "This is
fun."
"It
weirdly is," I said.
"Maybe
these are our salad days."
"Huh?"
"You
know. Happy."
"What's
happy about a salad?"
She
shrugged. "Ranch," she said.
the garden
Violet was
off someplace talking to the doctor. I say "someplace" because we
were using the examination room to blow needles at the anatomical guy's basket.
Link and
Calista were standing real close by the vibrating bath, and I realized that
they had probably decided to hook up. It looked like Calista was getting over
Link being so stupid, which was brag, because he's a nice guy. Quendy sat there on the table,
glaring at them.
Violet came
back from the doctor. She was all intense looking. I asked what was wrong. She said she'd found a place she wanted to show me. I said
sure, and I went with her. We
went out into the hall. The shouting from the examination room was more distant. We walked for a ways through some tubes and so on.
People floated by automatically on
gurneys.
She walked
in front of me. Her slippers went fitik, fitik, sliss, fitik on
the floors. They were soft sounds, like the sounds mouths make when they open
and close. I watched her from
behind. When we stopped to wait for an uptube, she lifted her ankle so her heel came out of the
slipper, and with her toes she slid it back and forth on the tiles without
thinking about it. She massaged the floor. When the uptube was free, she
settled her foot back in, and walked, fitik,fitik, sliss,fitik, right on
in.
She took me
up to a huge window. We stood in front of it. Outside the window, there had
been a garden, like, I guess you could call it a courtyard or terrarium? But a
long time ago the glass ceiling over the terrarium had cracked, and so
everything was dead, and there was moon dust all over everything out there.
Everything was gray.
Also,
something was leaking air and heat out in the garden, lots of waste air, and
the air was rocketing off into space through the hole, so all of the dead vines
in the garden were standing straight up, slapping back and forth, pulled
toward the crack in the ceiling where we could see the stars.
"Whoa,"
I said.
"Isn't
it beautiful?"
"It's
like . . . ," I said. "It's like a squid in love with the sky."
She was only
looking at me, which was nice. I hadn't felt anything like that for a long
time.
She rubbed
my head, and she went, "You're the only one of them that uses
metaphor."
She was
staring at me, and I was staring at her, and I moved toward her, and we kissed.
The vines beat against each other out in the gray, dead garden, they were all
writhing against the spine of the Milky Way on its edge, and for the first
time, I felt her spine, too, each knuckle of it, with my fingers, while the air
leaked and the plants whacked each other near the silent stars.
dead language
We were
watching Marty invent a game called Struggle of the Dying Warrior. It involved him being tied with all of his limbs, like his arms and his legs,
onto the frame of his bed with
the rubber tubing. Then he tried to get up and walk. He was not getting very
far.
Violet and I
were sitting on a bunk, swinging our legs in rhythm. We were talking about our families. I told her that I had a little brother. She said
I hadn't mentioned him. I said
he was a lot younger and a real pain.
Violet asked
me about my mom and dad. I told her that
my dad did some kind of banking thing, and my mom was in design. I didn't understand what my dad did exactly. Whatever it was, he was off doing it
on the moon until tomorrow, when
they were going to tell us about our feeds.
When I asked
her what her dad did, she said, "He's a college professor. He teaches the dead languages."
"People
study that?"
She
shrugged. "I guess."
"Okay.
So what are the dead languages?"
"They're
languages that were once important but that nobody uses anymore. They haven't
been used for a long time, except by historians."
"Like
what languages?"
"YOU
know, FORTRAN.
BASIC."
"What
does one sound like?"
She slid off
the bunk, and went to get her bag. She opened it and pulled out something,
which was a pen. She also had paper.
I looked at
her funny. "You write?" I said. "With a pen?"
"Sure,"
she said, a little embarrassed. She wrote something down. She put the pad of
paper on my lap.
She asked
me, "Do you know how to read?"
I nodded.
"I can read. A little. I kind of protested it in School™. On the grounds
that the silent 'E' is stupid."
"This
is the language called BASIC," she said.
On the
paper, it said:
002110 Goto 013500
013500 Peek 16388, 236
013510 Poke 10389, 236
She read it
to me. I could tell the numbers fine.
"So
what does that mean?" I asked.
"It's
the first thing my dad teaches the students on the first day," she said.
"It means, 'I came, I saw, I conquered.'"
I looked at
her pen. "You write all the time," I said, completely in awe.
"I've
done it since I was little."
"Do you
write . . . stuff?"
"Not
stories or anything. I just write down things I see sometimes."
"On
paper."
"Yeah."
I looked at
her. "You're one funny enchilada," I said.
She nodded
real quiet.
"Doesn't
your hand get all cramped up?" I asked. "Don't you end up like,
hook-hand?" I made hook-hand. She made hook-hand. We pawed each other with
hook-hand.
She shook
her head and smiled.
I asked,
"Why don't you use the feed? It's way faster."
"I'm
pretentious," she said. "Really pretentious."
"Yeah,
so the studio audience has noticed, but seriously."
"Seriously."
Suddenly,
something occurred to me. I looked up at her.
Marty had
fallen to his knees, and was being pulled back toward the bed by the tubing.
His cheeks were puffed out His hands were in fists. His fingers were getting
blue. All of the ridges on his arms stood out. Calista and Link were whistling
with their fingers in their mouths. The other people in the ward were yelling,
"Shut up! Would you all shut up?"
I asked
Violet, "Your father, he's a college professor, but he was too busy to
come see you after you like completely collapsed from a hacker attack? Too busy?"
She looked
me in the eye. "No," she said, "but that's what I told
you."
Release
The salad
days couldn't last forever. We really wanted to get back to Earth. Everyone
wanted to forget how sucky the moon had been.
Tuesday,
just before lunch, a doctor and a policewoman and a technician came in. Our
parents were all talking over in the corner. The rest of us were all sitting
around, talking about spaceship disasters.
The
technician called us all to attention and went through this whole thing, he was
sorry for the delay, but they wanted to be absolutely sure there was no permanent
hack, that our feeds were safe, etc. He was all like, da da da, must have
been a difficult time for all of us, da da da, we would find our normal service
resumed without interruption, da da da da da, he was meg sorry we had to go
through this, and he had complied with the police and handed over our data, da
da da, like thank you all again for your patience.
One by one,
we went into the examination room.
In there,
there were nurses and the doctor and the technician. The nurses were watching
the relays, our blood pressure and all. They were like, "Don't worry about
anything. You'll feel it all coming back in a few seconds." The doctor
touched a bootstick to my head.
He said,
"Okay. Could we like get a thingie, a reading on his limbic
activity?"
The
bootstick was cold on my neck. I could feel the little hairs standing up around
it. There was some kind of static electricity.
They moved
the bootstick a little. I heard it beep.
"You
should feel it now," said one of the nurses.
I didn't
feel anything. I looked around. They were watching me closely.
"No,"
I said. I shifted on the bed. I didn't feel anything. I said, "Nothing. I
feel nothing."
"Hold
your head still," said the doctor.
He shifted
the bootstick and it beeped again.
I kicked my
heels against the bed. "There's nothing. Nothing," I said.
"Why
don't you—" said the nurse. Pulse up. Rising.
Limbic activity
okay?
He's just
nervous.
Don't
worry. It'll hit him in like a second.
We have
readings on engram formation.
Signal
engaged.
Don't
drop the exterior relays yet.
The Ford
Laputa. Sky and Suburb Monthly says
there's no other upcar like it. And we agree.
"There
you go," said the nurse.
You'll he
more than a little attracted to its powerful T44 fermion lift with vertical
rise of fifty feet per second—and
if you like comfort, quality, and class, the supple upholstery and economically designed dash will—
They slapped
me on the back. I laughed, and the doctor and I did these big grins. I went
back out into the other room, and we were all starting to feel it now. We were
all starting to feel it good—
. . . name
is Terry Ponk, and I'd like to tell you about upper-body strength . . .
And the feed
was pouring in on us now, all of it, all of the feednet, and we could feel all
of our favorites, and there were our files, and our m-chatlines. It came down
on us like water. It came down like frickin' spring rains, and we were dancing
in it.
. . . Celebrate
fun. Celebrate friends. You've just come through something difficult, and this
is the time for a table full of love and friendship and the exciting entrees
you can only find at...
We were
dancing in it like rain, and we couldn't stop laughing, and we were running our
hands across our bodies, feeling them again, and I saw Violet almost hysterical
with laughter, rubbing her cheeks, and pulling her hands down across her
breasts, her chin up in the air.
. . . big
bro? Big bro, you there? Mom says I should . . .
. . .
until one crazy day when this cranky old woman and this sick little boy meet a
coy-dog with a heart of gold—and
they all learn an important lesson about love. The NYT called it...
... hits
a grounder to the mound...
. . .In
other news, protests continued today against the American annexation of the
moon. Several South American countries including Brazil and Argentina have
submitted requests to join the Global Alliance in response. President Trumbull
spoke from the White House. "What we have today, with the things that are
happening in today's society, is..."
She held my
hand—we found each other's hands through the like, the waterfall, and—
... If
you liked "I'll Sex You In," you'll love these other popular
slump-rock epics by hot new storm 'n' chunder band Beef quake, full of riffs
that...
... We handpicked our spring fashions . .
.
and holding
hands, we danced.
. . .
Hardgore, the best feed-sim battle game ever
to rip up the horizon. Sixty levels of detonation and viscera just waiting to
fly at your command, Captain Bastard. If you don't feel slogging waist-deep within fifteen seconds, we'll eat
our fucking hats ...
.. .In
your absence, you may not have heard . ..
Hand in
hand, we danced.
Part 3
utopia
normal
Things were
back to normal real quick. We went back to Earth, and we all rested up, and our
moms brought us ginger ale in bed. We chatted all the time on the feeds and
shared music and shit. We had this major debate going on because we watched the
Oh? Wow! Thing! and there was
this part where Organelle asked Jackie whether she had meg hips and he was
like, "Since you ask, we both could work out more," and she was like,
"You shithead, you should've lied," and so all the guys were saying, no
way, if she asked him this complete question he should answer it, and the
girls were like, if you ever insult how I look
then you're completely shallow, and
we were like, but she asked, and they were like, omigod, you don't
get it, and Link said if they really didn't want to know how they looked,
then how come they asked so much, and then I said this thing, and Calista said
this thing, and it was like, da da da da da, da da da da da, da da da da da,
all day. It was kind of fun. I like debates where you argue about different
points of view.
My family,
they were coming and going. I saw them on the landings, or sometimes, when I
went down to the kitchen, behind the counters. My dad didn't really talk to me
except to walk up and check to see if I had a fever, which I didn't, because it
was a software problem. My mother was always holding on to my brother, Smell
Factor, like squeezing him like a doll. She was real busy with him and she
went to peewee league games for him and even took him to work with her
sometimes. When she wasn't around in the afternoons, he sat in his closet watching
Top Quark, with it broadcasting all over the place, so I watched it,
too, because there was nothing else to do really but watch Top Quark and
eat Chipwiches.
Cap'n Top
Quark, that whole planet is so sad that I think they'll need a whole lot of good thoughts and hugging!
That's
why, lickety-split, and we're on our way. Charm Quark, prepare the Friend
Cannon. Boson, turn our biggest, orangest sails toward Cryos, on the planet
Sadalia.
Aye, aye,
sir! You've made me one happy particle, sir!
Smell Factor
had one of those birds now, one of the ones that didn't fly or sing, the metal
ones, so I could tell they were meg yesterday. Stuff always starts with people
who are cool and in college, and then works down, until when the six-year-olds
get it, it's like, who cares? The birds must have been yesterday for a while,
because I didn't see them in any ads, and even Smell Factor was leaving his
around and not clutching it.
A few days
later, I went out on errands, because really, there was no problem anymore. It
felt good to get out and to see all of the upcars in tubes and in the parking
lots, just normal stuff, like people walking and talking on their feeds, and
kids hanging out and shit. There were all the suburbs stacked on top of each
other, like Apple Crest and Fox Hollow, and I would just fly through the tubes
in the suburbs in my parents' upcar, looking at all the houses and the lawns,
each one in its own pod, and everything was all like neat. Then I'd go home and
sit on my bed and watch the feed, and everything seemed normal.
It's times
like this that I'm real glad I have friends. They say friends are worth your
weight in gold.
We had a
party at the end of the week over at Quendy's, because her parents were off
choking somewhere. That was when everyone was having those choking parties. I
mean, it was completely midlife crisis.
It was the
first time I saw Violet since we were on the moon. It was brag because she
didn't have a ride, and I could borrow my parents' upcar, so I got to fly over
and pick her up. I met her at a mall near her house. The mall was right on the
surface, and you could see the sky through the dome. She was waiting there and
looking up at the sun hitting one of the department stores.
Violet lived
in a suburb that was a few hundred miles away from my suburb, so while we drove
we had a little time to talk before we got to the party.
It was great
because we had music on our feeds, and it was the same music, so I knew she was
hearing the same notes that I was hearing, and our heads were like moving
together, and she put her hand near the lift lever, so when I got to the exit
tube and went to lift us, her hand was there, and our fingers closed over the
lift lever, and we lifted it together, and were flung up into the sky.
We were
going along pretty fast, and going around towers and shit, and she asked me,
"What'll a party be like?"
"Like a
party."
"I
haven't been to many."
"You
..." I shrugged. "You do this ... I don't know. It's fun. It's a party. What do you do
instead of parties?"
"My
friends and I are all home-schooled, so we're a mixed bag. Bettina's mother has
us come over and weave ponchos."
"You
don't go to School™?"
"Alf's
parents teach us how to breechload their antiaircraft gun."
"Whoa.
Can you show me?"
"Here's
the surprising thing: It's all in the wrists."
"Unit."
"Yeah.
Unit. God, I'm so excited to be going to a real party."
"Oh
yeah?"
"Will
it be like it is on the feed?"
I patted her
hand. "Yeah. I mean, dumber, but yeah."
"Why,
this makes me feel like a special girl. The specialest girl in the world."
She raised
up her hand, and we knocked knuckles together.
She leaned
back in her seat. She pulled some seat belt out and then let it roll back in.
We were both thoughtful for a minute. There were some weather blimps in front
of us. They were all yellow in the sunset that was spreading over the Clouds™.
We flew between them. We could barely see the silver of their blimp-hides
through the color of syrup. They were like a herd.
She asked,
"Do you think things are going to be different?"
"From
what?"
"From
the way things were before."
I looked at
her. She looked serious, suddenly. I shrugged. I said, "It's good to have
people again, like all these people, talking to you in your head."
"We've
all been through this big thing together," she said. "It's got to
change us somehow."
She rested
her arm along the back of my seat. I leaned my head back. I could feel my hairs
rub against her arm.
Even to my
hairs, her arm felt soft.
undervalued truffle
We got to
the party and it was a pretty good party, but low-key.
When we got
there, for a second we stood in the entry-way, because Link and Marty were
playing each other at this game, The Cranky Tumble of Dark House, one of
the ones with zombies and mutants, and they were all spinning around and
shooting their fingers like guns. They couldn't see anything, just the
gamefeed, so when Violet walked in, Marty almost whacked her in the stomach
with his fist. He and Link were swearing and hopping up and down on the marble
tiles.
"Unit,"
said Link. "Just get out of the way."
Marty was
like, "Out of the fuckin' way! We're—Oh, shit!—We're—oh . . . Unit!"
He was all shouting at Link, who was like missing some shot at a spine-leech.
We went into
the living room and over to the table where Quendy had all the drinks and beer.
People were sitting around drinking, and some of them had music on their feeds
and were sitting around talking to it, and some others had imported a feedcast
of Snowblind, a comedy about a young man who nothing ever happens to,
until one crazy day when he crosses the mob at a ski resort and finds out
what's really buried in those moguls— and then all hell breaks loose! (NC-17)
Violet
looked kind of timid, now that we were there. She took a deep breath and went
over to say hi to Calista. I stood around and talked with Quendy for a few minutes.
Quendy was at first really nice and normal, talking about how it was good to
see that we were doing okay, and how she was okay, and everything was fine.
Then she started this glaring at Calista, and she was chatting me like, Do you think Calista and Link are
doing it?
I shrugged
and was like, Yeah. I bet.
He's such
a pig. He did it with me like—Oh.
Never mind.
Quendy
glared at Calista and popped a popcorn shrimp into her mouth from way down
below, with her thumb.
She was
like, I'm tired of just being the friendly one who everyone like steps all over.
Yeah, I chatted. How do you do that, with the shrimp and
your thumb?
Okay.
I'll show you. Hey, are you going out with Violet?
Yeah.
That's
great. I think she's meg nice.
Yeah.
Calista
says she's kind of stuck-up? But I don't agree at all. Like, Calista's the one
who's stuck-up.
Calista
said that?
Yeah. You
want to try the shrimp on your finger?
She showed
me how to pop the shrimp. As she did it, I looked across the room and saw
Violet talking to Calista, and both of them were frowning. I was worried that
something bad had happened, so I m-chatted her, like, Hey, beautiful.
What's doing?
Heyyyyy,
handsome. Just talking with Calista. Having a nice little chat. I made the
mistake of saying we were hack to the picayune grind. Now she keeps going, "'Picayune'?!?
'Picayune'?!?" and pretending I'm French. I wish I hadn't said anything.
I looked around
me. Everyone was nodding their heads to music, or had their eyes just blank
with the feedcast. It was just a party. Nothing but a party.
From one
direction, I heard a kid say, "I think the truffle is like completely
undervalued."
And from the
other direction, a girl was saying, "But he never pukes when he
chugalugs."
It was like
nothing had happened. We were watching feedcasts as if our brains had never
been invaded by the asshole. Loga was laughing with her front teeth showing, as
if she'd never been different from the rest of us, the one left with the feed
when the rest of us didn't have it. Some guy was pouring the beer. Link and
Marty were doing like acrobatics in the entryway fighting invisible demons.
And
everything was completely normal.
The truffle
was completely undervalued.
o o o
... which the
President denied in an address early on
Tuesday. "It is not the will of the American people, the people of
this great nation, to believe the allegations that were made by these corporate
'watch' organizations, which are not the majority of the American people, I
repeat not, and aren't its will. It is our duty as Americans, and as a nation
dedicated to freedom and free commerce, to stand behind our fellow Americans
and not cast.. . things at them. Stones, for example. The first stone. By this
I mean that we shouldn't think that
there are any truth to the rumors that the lesions are the result of any
activity of American industry. Of course they are not the result of anything
American industry has done. The
people of the United States know, as I know, that that is just plain hooey. We need to remember. . . Okay, we need to
remember that America is the
nation of freedom, and that freedom, my friends, freedom does not lesions
make." The President is expected
to veto the congressional...
o o o
the others
in mal
The party
went on. I couldn't concentrate anymore. We watched Snowblind. The guy
in it, he fell off a platform at a mob-owned ski lift and landed in powder next
to a sexy assassin with a heart of gold. I was feeling strange sitting next to
Violet, and she wasn't laughing, which was weirding me out. She was just
sitting there. The feedcast went on and on, and they all went up the mountain
on skis and shot at each other and finally they all learned an important lesson
about love. Then it was over.
I went
upstairs to take a whizz, and Marty and Link were dragging me into a bedroom.
"Unit,"
Link said. "Unit, you are about to walk through the mirror."
"It is
time," Marty said, "for Bulb-tweaker."
"Oh,
unit," I was like, "is this malfunction?"
"Hey
hey hey hey hey, this is a great site. It's fuckin' smooth as glass."
"'Bulb-tweaker'?"
"It's
just a mild scrambler," said Link.
"I can
completely see straight," said Marty. He pointed. "That's right in front
of me."
There were
other guys in there, too, and one girl. They were whispering. Someone had gone
completely fugue on the bed.
"Do a
burst. Then crank it down to a slow burn."
"Okay,"
said Marty. "I'm going to go again."
"Unit,"
said Link, punching me on the arm. "Fly the friendly skies."
I was like,
"Not tonight."
"Come
on, unit."
"I
don't think Violet's into the mal."
"Oh,
come on, unit, she'll never know."
"What
is this, shitheads?" I said. "Cut the ABC After-school
Special."
"She'll
never know!" said Link.
I said,
"What did we just go through? Unit?" I whapped myself on the back of
the head. "Remember? Like, what did we just... ? Huh?"
"Huh?"
"Nevermind."
"What?"
"I said
never mind."
"Okay,"
said Link. "Your loss. Here I go. You with, Marty?"
"I'm with."
They spread
out their arms and closed their eyes, and you could see when it hit them. They
got the shudder first, and then their heads rocked, and they were big
stumbling, and they went backward, and there were all these people back there
on the bed and a chair and the floor, blinded, doing the quiver. Link's tongue
came out. It was purple from candy.
I went out
and to the bathroom. When I was done, I went back downstairs. Quendy and Violet
were talking. Quendy was like, "Where is everyone?" but I didn't tell
her they were up getting scrambled in the master bedroom.
Violet asked
if I wanted to walk out in the yard for a minute, and I said sure, so we went
out. We were standing on the porch and it was much cooler out there. The dome
on the yard's pod was all blue, like it was night, which it was, I mean, up on
the surface, but it was blue there at the house, too.
We stood,
leaning on the railing. The night was perfect. We shut out the music from the
feed. It was funny, then, to look back in and see people moving to nothing.
She said,
"You're quiet."
I nodded.
"What's
doing?" she asked.
"No
real one thing."
We just
stood there together.
I said,
"You didn't like the feature."
She said,
"It was okay."
"You
didn't laugh."
"I
liked the mountains. All the pine trees. I'd like to go to the mountains.
Wouldn't it be nice? With a fire?"
I pictured
the mountains and the fire and a snowball fight and
let's-get-out-of-these-wet-clothes, and I said, "Yeah. Sure."
"I want
to get out to the country," she said. She looked at me. "What's
really doing?"
I couldn't
tell her about the guys going in mal. I didn't want her looking at them while
they were on the wall-to-wall carpeting and doing the quiver. I didn't want her
to look at them as if she was sorry.
Finally, I
said, "People have just gone so quick back to like before."
"Why?"
she said. "What happened?"
I didn't
tell her about them upstairs. I just told her about sitting in the living room,
and hearing the guy who was like the truffle was undervalued, and the girl who was
like he never pukes when he chugalugs. I told her about them and then I looked
for the memory of them, which I still had, and I played it for her. She knew
exactly what I was talking about.
She went, Brittle.
I feel like
we're the only two of us who like remember the, like, the thing.
People
want to forget.
You can't
blame them.
She looked
at me. She didn't say anything for a second, and then she said, "My
feedware is damaged."
"What?
In your—in your brain?"
She put her
hand up next to her scalp. "It'll be fine. But I'm the only one who had
damage. They're trying to fix it."
"What's
wrong? Can you still get like, stuff and shit?"
She laughed.
"Yeah. Both of them. I'm fine. But they say they have to find some way to
make adjustments. Something happened when the guy hacked. Most people, the
hack just jammed them for a while. Somehow it affected mine more. Something's
still wrong."
"Holy
shit."
"Do you
remember one day when we were on the moon, the doctors took me out to talk to
me alone? Then I came back and found you, and took you up to the air-loss
garden? The doctors, they were talking to me about this. They said that it
would probably stabilize. It hasn't yet."
"Holy
shit."
"They
say it will probably be fine."
"Holy
shit."
She patted
me on the chest. "Calm," she said. "The rose will bloom ere
long."
"Yeah.
What-fuckin'-ever." She watched me. I stared at her. I thought about Marty
and Link going in mal.
She chatted,
What are you thinking about?
Nothing.
It can't
be nothing.
I thought
about Link and Marty's eyes rolled back. And I lied, like, I'm just
wondering whether he meant truffles the mushroom or truffles the
candy.
She laughed
and touched my face. I felt like I was protecting her from something and that
felt good, like I was a man already. I hugged her like a man and we kissed. For
a long time, we stared at each other. I liked the way the synthetic breeze was
on her hair. We stood, looking out at the shrubs, and the motorboat up on a
trailer, and I felt like I was in love, and our arms were around each other.
She leaned
close to my head and took a handful of my hair in her hand and pulled my head
down. She whispered, "Keep thinking. You can hear our brains rattling
inside us, like the littler Russian dolls."
Nudging
That night,
the night after the party, I had something that I thought was a dream, with me
at a great site where all the games were free and you could play anything. So I
was thinking different even about pretty dumb games like Turbo Checkers, because
if you can get anything for free, what the hell, so I started one of them,
which was this fantasy game, and I was putting on some elf gloves, and
stringing my bow, when I could feel that someone was nudging my feed. They were
nudging it, like with their cheek or nose.
In my dream,
I asked them who they were.
In my dream,
they told me they were the police. They asked me if I was a victim of the hack
at the Rumble Spot.
In my dream,
I said yes.
In my dream,
they told me okay, go back to sleep.
In my dream,
I said who were they really?
They said
that they were going to be running some tests on me, and that I should think
about something else.
I said that
they weren't the police, so who were they really?
They said,
here is the lizard you have always been wanting. We took the liberty of giving
it a nice new collar.
I asked if
all these games were mine.
All yours,
they said. All yours. Good night, sweetie. They're all yours. Take them. All
yours.
In my dream,
I thought they were the hacker group, the Coalition of Pity.
But when I
woke up, I didn't remember that for weeks. What I remembered was just the
games, which, once I was awake, I couldn't find, and the elf gloves, and the
bow, and the lizard that was all mine.
o o o
.. . AMURICA:
A PORTRAIT IN GEEZERS ...
. . . I remember, as the last forests fell... at about
that time, we would see hawks and eagles in the
cities. People walked outside more, back then. The temperature usually
didn't get above a
hundred.
There were streets in the
cities, and eagles flew over them, wobbling without moving their
wings.
I
remember seeing the hawks perched on street lamps,
during those last days of the American forests. They had come from the
mountains, maybe,
or
pine woods that were now two or
three levels of suburb, but the hawks
sat in our cities
like kings. They would not look down from their lampposts as thousands
of downcars went by
underneath. It was like they sat alone on Douglas firs.
I miss
that time. The cities back then, just after the forests died, were full of
wonders, and
you'd
stumble on them—these
princes of the air on common rooftops— the rivers that burst
through city streets so they ran
like canals—the rabbits in parking
garages—the deer
foaling, nestled in Dumpsters like a Nativity.
o o o
lose the chemise
It was
maybe, okay, maybe it was like two days after the party with the "never
pukes when he chugalugs" that Violet chatted me first thing in the morning
and said she was working on a brand-new project. I asked her what was the old
project, and she was like, did I want to see the new one? I said, Okay,
should I come over to su casa? I've never been there, and she was like, No,
not yet. Let's meet at the mall
I was like, Okay,
sure, fine, whatever swings your string, and she was all, Babycakes,
you swing my string, which is a nice thing for someone to say to you,
especially before you use mouthwash.
So I flew
over to the mall near her house through the rain, which was coming down outside
in this really hard way. Everyone had on all their lights until they got above
the clouds. Up there it was sunny, and people were flying very businesslike.
The mall was
really busy, there were a lot of crowds there. They were buying all this stuff,
like the inflatable houses for their kids, and the dog massagers, and the tooth
extensions that people were wearing, the white ones which you slid over your
real teeth and they made your mouth just like one big single tooth going all
the way across.
Violet was
standing near the fountain and she had a real low shirt on, to show off her
lesion, because the stars of the Oh? Wow! Thing! had started to get lesions, so now people were thinking
better about lesions, and lesions even looked kind of cool. Violet looked great
in her low shirt, and besides that she was smiling, and really excited for her
idea.
For a second
we said hello and just laughed about all of the stupid things people were
buying and then Violet, she pointed out that, regarding legs to stand on, I
didn't have very much of one, because I was wheeling around a wheelbarrow full
of a giant hot cross bun from Bun in a Barrow.
I said,
"Yum, yum, yum."
She was
like, "You ready?"
I asked her
what the idea was.
She said,
"Look around you." I did. It was the mall. She said, "Listen to
me." I listened. She said, "I was sitting at the feed doctor's a few
days ago, and I started to think about things. Okay. All right. Everything we
do gets thrown into a big calculation. Like they're watching us right now. They
can tell where you're looking. They want to know what you want."
"It's a
mall," I said.
"They're
also waiting to make you want things. Everything we've grown up with—the
stories on the feed, the games, all of that—it's all streamlining our
personalities so we're easier to sell to. I mean, they do these demographic
studies that divide everyone up into a few personality types, and then you get
ads based on what you're supposedly like. They try to figure out who you are,
and to make you conform to one of their types for easy marketing. It's like a
spiral: They keep making everything more basic so it will appeal to everyone.
And gradually, everyone gets used to everything being basic, so we get less and
less varied as people, more simple. So the corps make everything even simpler.
And it goes on and on."
This was the
kind of thing people talked about a lot, like, parents were going on about how
toys were stupid now, when they used to be good, and how everything on the feed
had its price, and okay, it might be true, but it's also boring, so I was like,
"Yeah. Okay. That's the feed. So what?"
"This
is my project."
"Is . .
. ?"
She smiled
and put her finger inside the collar of my shirt. "Listen," she said.
"What I'm doing, what I've been doing over the feed for the last two days,
is trying to create a customer profile that's so screwed, no one can market
to it. I'm not going to let them catalog me. I'm going to become
invisible."
I stared at
her for a minute. She ran her finger along the edge of my collar, so her nail
touched the skin of my throat. I waited for an explanation. She didn't tell me
any more, but she said to come with her, and she grabbed one of the nodules on
my shirt—it was one of those nodule shirts—and she led me toward Bebrekker
& Karl.
We went into
the store, and immediately our feeds were all completely Bebrekker & Karl.
We were bannered with all this crazy high-tech fun stuff they sold there. Then
a guy walked up to us and said could he help us. I said I didn't know. But
Violet was like, "Sure. Do you have those big searchlights? I mean, the
really strong ones?"
"Yeah,"
he said. "We have ... yeah. We have those." He went over to some
rack, and he took these big searchlights off the rack. He showed us some
different models. The feeds had specs. They showed us the specs while he
talked.
When he went
into the back to get another, cheaper searchlight, I said to Violet, "What
next?"
She
whispered, "Complicating. Resisting."
Bebrekker
& Karl were bannering us big. It was, We've streamlined the Tesla coil
for personal use—you can even wear it in your hair! With these new, da
da da, and Relax, yawn, and
slump! While our greased cybermassage beads travel up and down your back!
Guaranteed to make you etc., like that.
I was like,
"Okay, huh?" but the guy came back and he had another searchlight.
He told us,
"You can see shit real good with this one? I have one of these on my
upcar. It's sometimes like— whoa, really—whoa. There was this one time? And I
was flying along at night and I shined the light down at the ground, to look at
the tops of all the suburb pods? And all over the top of them, it looked like
it was moving, like there was a black goo? So I turned up the brightness, and I
went down, and I shined it more bright, and it turned out the black moving goo
was all these hordes of cockroaches. There were miles of them, running all over
the tops of the domes. They kept on trying to get out of the light, so wherever
you shined it, there would be this—"
"I'd
like to mount the light on my belly," Violet said. "Would that be
possible?"
He looked at
her funny. "With a swivel head?"
"Sure.
Then I could swivel it."
"What's
this for?"
"Something
special," she said, in this low voice. She rubbed my arm up and down,
sexily.
He was like,
"Whoa. I can't even think." He gave me the thumbs-up.
She winked
at me. It was kind of a turn-on.
She got him
to send her all of the feedstats for the lamp, but then she didn't buy it. She
didn't have it mounted. Instead, she thanked him a real lot, and then she took
me out of the store, and I was starting to get the picture and think it was all
pretty funny.
We kept
going from place to place, asking for weird shit we didn't buy. She took me to
a rug store, and a store with old chests and pieces of eight and shit, and we
went to a toy store and she asked them to explain the world of Bleakazoid
action figures, which is a dumb-ass name if I ever heard one, but they
explained it all. It was mainly they were these muscular people from a parallel
world, which is usually how it is. We didn't buy anything.
We ran
through the big hallway with her tapping her head and saying, "Hear that?
The music?" It was pop songs. "They have charts that show which
chords are most thumbs-up. Music is marketing. They have lists of key changes
that get thirteen-year-old girls screaming. There's no difference between a
song and an advertising jingle anymore. Songs are their own jingles. Step
lively. Over here."
We went to a
clothing store and she held up all these stupid dresses, and the girl there was
like, I'm helping a weird kid, so I'm going to be really fake, so she
kept smiling fake, and nodding really serious at all the dresses Violet held
up, and she was all, "That will look great," and Violet said,
"I don't know. D'you think? He's pretty wide in the chest."
The girl
looked at me, and I was frozen. So I said, "Yeah. I work out."
Violet asked
me, "What are you? What's your cup size?"
I shrugged
and played along. "Like, nine and a half?" I guessed. "That's my
shoe size."
Violet said,
"I think he'd like something slinky, kind of silky."
I said,
"As long as you can stop me from rubbing myself up against a wall the
whole time."
"Okay,"
said Violet, holding up her hands like she was annoyed. "Okay, the chemise
last week was a mistake."
I
practically started to laugh snot into my hand.
We went to
some more clothing stores, and we looked at all these dumb sweaters and
pretended we liked them, and we looked at makeup that she wouldn't wear, and a
gravel-tumbler, and we went to a DVS Pharmacy Superstore, and she
comparison-shopped for home endoscopy kits.
We were
looking at the endoscopy kits when she started whispering to me, "For the
last two days, okay? I've been earmarking all this different stuff as if I want
to buy it—you know, a pennywhistle, a barrel of institutional lard, some
really cheesy boy-pop, a sarong, an industrial lawn mower, all of this info on
male pattern baldness, business stationery, barrettes . . . And I've been
looking up house painting for the Antarctic homeowner, and the way people get
married in Tonga, and genealogy home pages in the Czech Republic ... I don't
know, it's all out there, waiting."
I picked up
one box. "This one is the cheapest. You swallow the pills and they take
pictures as they go down."
She said,
"Once you start looking at all this stuff, all of these sites, you realize
this obscure stuff isn't obscure at all. Each thing is like a whole world. I
can't tell you."
"How's
your like," I pointed at my head, "how's your feedware working
out?"
"It's
fine. You're not listening."
"I'm
just wondering."
She asked
me, "What do you think?"
"I
liked the guy in Bebrekker & Karl. I wonder if it's true, about the
cockroaches."
"What
do you think about resisting?" she asked me really hard. Her jaw muscles
were sticking out.
I said,
"It sounds great, as long as I get to wear the chemise." She laughed.
We went to
dinner at a J. P Barnigan's Family Extravaganza. We had mozzarella sticks and
then I had a big steak. She got a Caesar salad. There were free refills on
drinks. Afterward, we were sitting there in the booth, and I asked her whether
she wanted a ride home. She said no. I said was she sure, and she said yes.
I said,
"What's doing with your parents?"
"What
do you mean?"
"Well,
with your house, and why you have me meet you here instead. And why didn't your
dad come to the moon? When we were, you know."
She looked
at me funny. She said, "Do you know how much it costs to fly someone to
the moon?"
I guessed.
"A lot?"
"Yeah.
Yeah, a lot. He wanted to come, but it would have been, like, a month of his
salary. He saved up for a year to send me. Then I went, and that stuff
happened."
"He saved
up for a year for you to go to the moon?"
"Yeah."
She said, "Hey, here's what you can do. You can drop me at the feed
technician's office. I have an appointment."
We made out
for a minute in the car. Then I flew her a few miles away, to a technician. I
left her there. Before I pulled out of the tube by his office, I looked back at
her, standing by the door. She had her hands on her elbows. She was pinching
the elbow skin and pulling it.
She waited
there, pinching and pulling, and then went in.
Sniffling
That night,
I chatted her after I went to bed. I was like, Violet. Violet?
She was
like, Hey. Hey there.
It was
great, going to the mall today. I had a good
time. I enjoyed that whole thing.
Finally, she
was like, I did, too.
I could tell
something was wrong. It was something about the way she was sending things on
the feed.
I asked, Are
you crying?
There was a
long feed silence. I could hear programming.
She was
like, Yeah. Just for practice.
What's
doing?
Never
mind, she chatted. Never mind.
Didn't you
have a real good time?
I wish
you were here, she said.
I thought
about her lying in bed. Maybe in some pajamas, so she was warm. I said, I wish
I was there, too.
Look, she said, changing the whole subject. Look at
everything I got from the feed. It's going crazy with everything we looked at
today. It's trying to work for me.
This perky
voice on her feed said, Hi! I'm Nina, your personal FeedTech shopping
assistant! Tired of that gross-out smell
in your mouth? Try FreshGorge Glottal Deodorant—your boyf will thank you big-time! Hey, Violet Durn, what a skip kinda day you had! You go
shop, girl! Here's some more great info about all the brag stuff you asked
about!
Violet
started to forward me things. There were sites for the spotlights and the dresses and the endoscopy kits, and she sent them in flurries. Once
they started coming, they started
to call others to them, and I could feel them doing that call, and they were
all around me. They came to us.
It was like they were lots of friendly butterflies, and we were smeared with
something, and they kept coming and coming,
and their wings were winking beautifully, and more and more came. And they were landing on our fingers, and
on our lips, and on our eyes, opening and dosing? And we were going—Whoa!
Whoa! Whoa!
It was
crazy.
a new place
Being with
Violet was great.
She hadn't
had much of the stuff you see on the feed when she was younger. A lot of it was
too expensive, or her father just said no. But she had watched all the shows
about how other people live normally, and she really wanted to live like the
rest of us. So she and her other home-schooling friends had tried to copy us.
For example, he said she couldn't have toy guns, because they were against his
beliefs, so she had to pick up anything— pieces of wood or bent metal—and use
them like a toy gun, and pretend it was just as good as a real one made of
plastic.
I was afraid
that she would be too smart for me, but she wasn't. I don't mean she wasn't
smarter, because she was, but just that there was so much she hadn't done. She
was like a little kid, all excited when I was just meeting her at the mall for
the day, and we walked from store to store or went on the air slides or shopped
underwater. She had hardly ever done any of it before. She was always new.
We sat in
the mall and made up stories about people who passed by. Shoppers walked around
us on the concourses, their mouths moving, talking to people who weren't there.
They were all muttering.
We made up
stories about how they'd given birth to monsters in attics.
We went into
stores, and we laughed and laughed.
It was like
she took my hand, or I took her hand, and we ducked through doorways, and
together we went to an old place, and it was a new place.
We went
there holding hands.
the dimples
of delglacey
Okay, but sometimes, though, I did get worried that
she was too smart for me.
I don't do too good in School™. We were
back in School™, so I was reminded pretty often that I was stupid.
School™ is not so bad now, not like back when my grandparents were
kids, when the schools were run by the government, which sounds completely
like, Nazi, to have the government running the schools? Back then, it was big
boring, and all the kids were meg null, because they didn't learn anything
useful, it was all like, da da da da,
this happened in fourteen ninety-two, da da da da, when you mix like,
chalk and water, it makes nitroglycerin, and that kind of shit? And nothing
was useful?
Now that School™ is run by the corporations, it's
pretty brag, because it teaches us how the world can be used, like mainly how
to use our feeds. Also, it's good because that way we know that the big corps
are made up of real human beings, and not just jerks out for money, because
taking care of children, they care about America's future. It's an investment
in tomorrow. When no one was going to pay
for the public schools anymore and they were all like filled with guns and
drugs and English teachers who were really pimps and stuff, some of the big
media congloms got together and gave all this money and bought the schools so
that all of them could have computers and pizza for lunch and stuff, which
they gave for free, and now we do stuff in classes about how to work technology
and how to find bargains and what's the best way to get a job and how to
decorate our bedroom.
It was still hard, there were some times when none of
us did good, and I felt stupid, and we all felt stupid, and Loga and Calista
were like, Omigodl This is so dumb!
Could the teacher be any more,
please, condescending?
Omigod, I know. Like, thanks for
the heapin' helpings of yawn
banquet.
And I sat there with my palms pressed into my forehead,
thinking about Violet, at home, being smart. I would think about some
conversation we were having where I was dumb.
Like she was always reading things about how everything
was dying and there was less air and everything was getting toxic. She told me
about how things were getting really bad with some things in South America, but
she couldn't really tell exactly how bad, because the news had been asked to be
a little more positive. She said that it made her frightened to read all this
kind of thing, about how people hated us for what we did. So one time I said to
her that she should stop reading it, because it was just depressing, so she was
like, But I want to know what's going
on, so I was like, Then you
should do something about it. It's a free country. You should do something. She
was like, Nothing's ever going to
happen in a two-party system. She
was like, da da da, nothing's
ever going to change, both parties
are in the pocket of big business, da da da, all that? So I was like, You got to believe in the people,
it's a democracy, we can change things.
She was like, It's not a democracy.
I hated it when she got like this, because then she
wasn't like herself, I mean, she wasn't like this playful person who drags me
around the mall doing crazy shit, she was suddenly like those girls in School™ who sit
underground and dress all in black with ribbing and get an iron fixture for
their jaws and they're like, "Capitalist fool—propaganda tool,"
holding up both their hands, etc. When she said things like It's not a democracy, suddenly I
couldn't stand to be having this whole conversation. I was like, Oh, yeah, and she was like, It's not, and I was like, Oh,
okay, and she said, No, it's
not a democracy, and I was like, Yes it is, and she was like, No
it isn't, and I got sarcastic, so I was
like, No, sure, it's all fascist, isn't it? We're all
fascists?
Then she was like, really
gently, No, please, I'm not trying
to be an asshole. It's not a democracy.
I was like, Then
what is it?
A republic. It's a republic.
Why?
Because we elect people to vote
for us. That's my point.
So why is it like that?
Because if it was a democracy,
everybody would have to decide
about everything.
I thought about that. We could have everybody vote.
From the feeds. Instantaneous. Then it
would be a democracy.
Except, she said, only about seventy-three
percent of Americans have
feeds.
Oh, I said. Yeah.
And so I felt stupid. There's that many who don't?
Then she told me,
I didn't used to have a feed.
I was like, What do you mean?
She was quiet like she didn't want to chat. It was
that kind of quiet. Then she went, We didn't have enough money. When I was little. And my dad and mom
didn't want me to have one.
Holy shit.
I got it when I was seven.
I'm sorry, I said.
For what?
For not knowing. You know, that
so many people don't have them.
No one with feeds thinks about it, she said. When you have the feed all your life,
you're brought up to not think about
things. Like them never telling you that it's a republic and not a democracy. It's something that makes me
angry, what people don't know about
these days. Because of the feed, we're
raising a nation of idiots. Ignorant, self-centered idiots.
Suddenly, she realized what she had said, that she'd
just called me a self-centered, ignorant idiot. She stopped. She started
stumbling all over her words, and she was like,
I didn't mean . . . I, you know . . . it's not really important,
but just, I believe . . . , and so on. I just sat there and watched her. I
could tell I was liking to watch her trip up over her words while I was doing
this angry face, so I didn't move my mouth or chat her or anything. I just sat,
and she felt bad, and then she even chatted me, I'm sorry, which was
bad, because it showed that we both knew I was stupid, and then I looked away. I
looked away, and she put her hand on my arm, which was the worst, because it
was the consolation prize.
That night, when I got home, I
was looking out the window, being sorry, and my mother was like, "What's wrong?"
I didn't answer for a while. Finally, I said, "Do
you think I'm stupid? I mean, am I dumb?"
"You're a nontraditional learner."
Smell Factor said, "No, he's not. He's
dumb."
My mother asked, "Is this re: Violet?"
"No."
"Come on. Is it re: her? Because she shouldn't
make you feel stupid. That's not good."
"Mom, it's un-re: her, okay?"
"She should be proud of you."
I didn't want to say anything. I didn't want my mom to
think Violet was a snob. Violet wasn't a snob. I was just dumb.
My mom came over and said to me, "You're a wonderful
boy. I know I'm your mom, but I can say that you're a wonderful boy. Isn't he,
Steve?"
My dad was conked out at the table going over the news
on the feed, but he pulled himself up, and she was like, "Isn't he a
wonderful boy?," and my dad was like, "Sure,
yeah, yeah," and my mom was like, "You're as handsome as a
duck in butter."
"Where does she live, anyway?" my dad asked.
"I don't know. Like, two hundred miles from here.
I've never been there. Why?"
"Just asking."
"You're a catch," said my mother.
"You're pewter."
That was no help at all, and the next day, I did
really bad on a test, and I came home, and Violet chatted me to say she
couldn't talk, she was, I don't know, learning ancient Swahili or building a
replica of Carthage out of iron filings or finding the cure for entropy or some
shit, and I was sitting around, staring at a corner of a room, where two of the
walls and the floor came together, and my mom and dad caught me doing it, and
my mom came up and hugged me.
I could tell it was all staged. They'd tried to find
me. I patted Mom a little on the back, enough to say, Okay, yeah, enough for affection. You can back off now,
Ma. She did, and I hoped
they would leave, but they weren't done. So I had to sit there and listen to
about me.
She said, "You're just the boy we wanted. You're
good enough for any girl. You're just what we asked for."
My dad was meg uncomfortable and kept on moving from
foot to foot.
My mom ran her fingers through my hair, and rocked me
back and forth, even though I was standing, and she said, like a poem,
"You've got your father's eyes and my nose."
"And my mouth," said my dad.
"And my hands," said my mom.
"And the chin, dimples, and hairline of DelGlacey
Murdoch."
"What?" I said.
"This big actor," explained my mom. "We
thought he was like the most beautiful man we'd ever seen in our lives."
"Well," said my dad, "we thought he
was going to be big."
"We saw a feedcast with him in it the night we .
. . the night you were made." My mom winked.
"What?" I said. "What was his name? You
never told me about the actor."
"He was . . . What did you say his name was
again, Steve?"
"DelGlacey Murdoch."
"DelGlacey Murdoch," said my mom, kind of
smoothing things over. "That's right. And we thought he was the most
beautiful man we'd ever seen. So after the movie we went right to the
conceptionarium and told them, 'We want the most beautiful boy you've ever
made. We want him with my nose and his dad's eyes, and for the rest, we have
this picture of DelGlacey Murdoch.'"
I said, "I've never even like heard of
DelGlacey Murdoch."
My father played nervously with his pinstripes.
"He didn't ... he didn't really take off the way like we expected. After
that movie, he was mostly ... I guess . . . small roles."
"He starred in some things," said my mom.
"Steve, he starred in a lot of things."
"Straight to daytime," said my dad.
"Honey, he was the most beautiful actor ever. So
we went into the conceptionarium, and told the geneticists what we wanted, and
your father went in one room, and I went in the other, and ..."
"Hey—hey—I don't want to hear!"
"You know what he was in?" said my dad.
"Remember Virtual Blast? He
played the fifth Navy Seal, with the croup. You know, coughing."
"He was in the feature with all the crazy
utensils," said my mother. "A few years ago? That one? He was the
doorman in the pillbox hat."
I had already pulled up a list of his feed-features
and I was going over them. None of them got more than two stars. My parents
were checking my feed, I could feel them like prodding it, and my mom was like,
"It doesn't matter what he was in," and she m-chatted something to my
dad, and so he was like, "No, no, that isn't the point."
"What we're talking about," said my mother,
"is how handsome you are, and how brave you are."
"We've decided that you've been through a
lot," said my father.
"You've been very brave," my mother repeated.
"Yeah . . . ?" I said. "I just fell
down. The guy touched me and I just like, fell down."
"You were brave," said my father.
"We've decided you need a little cheering
up," said my mother.
I started to feel a little better. I could feel their
feeds shifting toward a common point, some kind of banner they were pulling up.
"We've decided to get you your own upcar,"
said my mother.
"You can pick it," said my dad. "Within
certain limits."
"Oh, god!" I said. "Oh, god! Oh, Mom—Dad—this
is—oh, shit! Holy shit! Are you kidding! You are like the best mom and dad
ever!"
"We're not kidding," said my dad.
"Here's the banner."
And it unwrapped in my head, a banner for a dealer,
and links to other dealers, and a big line of credit, and I was hugging them,
and I was like holy shit, by tomorrow I would be driving to pick up Violet in
my own goddamn upcar, and suddenly, suddenly, I didn't feel so stupid anymore.
o o o
….what the President meant in the intercepted chat. This
was, uh, nothing but a routine translation
problem. It has to be
understood, that.. .It has to be understood that when the President referred to
the Prime Minister of the Global Alliance as a 'big shithead,'
what he was trying to
convey was,
uh—this is an American idiom used to praise people, by referring to the sheer fertilizing
power of
their
thoughts. The President meant to say that
the Prime Minister's head was fertile,
just full of
these nutrients where ideas can grow. It
really was a compliment. We should say again
that any
attempt to withdraw the Alliance's diplomatic presence from American soil will be taken as a sign of
ill will, and, uh, we are likely to respond with the
most stringent..."
o o o
lift
My
father took me to test-drive upcars on Saturday. I had tried a lot of them in
the feed-sim, but it's not the same as actually driving them, and you should
always test-drive a vehicle before purchasing it, because you never know what
unexpected factors will come into play. For example, I discovered that the
Illia Cloud had a windshield that was kind of the wrong height for me, and I
didn't like the dashboard arrangement of the Dodge Cormorant.
We
picked Violet up at the mall and took her with us. Both she and me were really
excited by the whole thing, and we were chatting really fast the whole time,
about what color to get, and whether the red was too cheesy, or whether it was
autumnal, which is what she said.
We
took them out to test-drive, with my father sitting next to me. He'd be
chatting with someone somewhere else while I drove. He'd be looking out the
window, and wincing whenever Violet or I talked out loud. He had trouble
thinking and hearing at the same time. When he was done chatting, he'd ask me a
question out loud, like, "How's she feel?"
Violet
would tell me, "Resist the feed. Look into ox carts."
"Yeah,
thanks, Violet," my father would say. "We're having serious decision
flux here." He'd ask me, "What do you think?"
I'd
tell him about the handling or the lift.
Violet
would say, "How about a howdah?"
Dad
asked, "What's a howdah?"
"A
seat on elephant-back."
"Great.
Great. Thanks."
Me and
Violet walked up and down the rows of upcars. I was thinking about the Swarp
and the Dodge Gryphon.
The
Swarp didn't have as much room in the back. It was a little sportier.
The
Dodge Gryphon had the larger back seat for your friends and shit, but it was a
little lumbering.
So
here was the decision: Dodge was bannering me with me driving, and all of these
people in bikinis stuffed into the car with me, this big party, and with a
beach ball, too, like I could be the scene; and Nongen, who made the Swarp, was
showing a romantic drive through the mountains with just me and Violet, who
they got pretty much right, except they made her taller and with bigger boobs,
and they made her cheeks kind of sparkly in a way that, if it were really
happening, I would try to wipe off with a facecloth.
I
didn't know which to choose, because if I got an upcar that was too small, then
Link and Marty might be like, "We'll take my car instead. More of us can
fit in," and then I would have spent these hundreds of thousands of
dollars for nothing. But if I bought the Swarp, it was a little more sporty,
and that might be brag, because the Dodge Gryphon was maybe too family.
"So
you're getting this as a reward for being in the hospital?" Violet asked.
"I
guess."
"A
little present from mommy and daddy?"
"Yeah.
They're buying it."
She
thought about this for a minute. Then she shook her head. "You're
lucky."
"Are
you saying I'm spoiled?"
"No."
"It
seems like that's what you mean."
"No,
that's not it."
I
thought for a second, and said, "So what is it?"
"Nothing."
"Look,
it's like a reward. I'm going to turn in evidence in court and everything. I
mean, you are, too, but we're going to have to go to court against that guy. We
should get something for that. We deserve it."
She
looked at me strangely.
"What?"
I said.
"No
one's told you?"
I
waited. Her eyebrow was arched. Finally, I gave in and said, "No. No one
told me what?"
"We're
not going to court."
"We
got out of it? My dad was trying to get us out of it."
"He
didn't need to. The guy was dead."
"What?
How?"
"He
died a day after we went into the hospital. Contusions. Broken skull."
"What
are contusions?" I looked it up. "Oh."
"He
was beaten to death at the club. We saw it. The police, remember? They beat him
over the head."
She
reached out and took my arm.
My
father walked toward us across the pavement, waving. The plastic flags were
flapping in the artificial wind while Muzak came out of heaven.
I
bought the Dodge.
a
question of moral
That
night we all had dinner together, my family and Violet. My dad was real proud
of me, and was all, "He drove home behind me. Can you like believe this
shit? Our own son with his own upcar?"
I
couldn't stop smiling. "Yeah." I was like, "It's meg brag."
My mom smiled at me.
Smell
Factor wasn't listening to anything. He had some crappy kids' music show
blasting in his feed so loud his and nerves were probably shot. He had a bunny
plate and was making something with his burrito.
"Are
you going to take Violet out in it?" Mom asked.
"Tomorrow.
She and me are driving out to like the country. She wants to go for a walk. I'm
picking her up." I couldn't help grinning like a shithead again.
Violet
smiled back at me.
"There's
a forest," said Violet. "It's called Jefferson Park. We're thinking
about going either there, or out to beef country."
My dad
nodded. "It'll have to be beef country," he said. "The forest's
gone."
"Jefferson
Park?"
He
nodded, then squinted while he like clawed something off the roof of his mouth
with his tongue. He told us, "Yeah. Jefferson Park? Yeah. That was knocked
down to make an air factory."
"You're
kidding!" said Violet.
"Yeah,
that's what happened," said Dad, shrugging. "You got to have
air."
Violet
pointed out, "Trees make air," which kind of worried me because I
knew Dad would think it was snotty.
My
father stared at her for a long time. Then he said, "Yeah. Sure. Do you
know how inefficient trees are, next to an air factory?"
"But
we need trees!"
"For
what?" he said. "I mean, they're nice, and it's too bad, but like ...
Do you know how much real estate costs?"
"I
can't believe they cut it down!"
Mom
said to Smell Factor, "Hey. Hey! Stop playing with your food."
Smell
Factor was head-banging with the feed music and turning his bunny plate around
and around with his little pudgy fingers.
My
father told him, "This is dinner together. That means family networking
and defragging time."
"They
cut down Jefferson Park? That is so like corporate—"
My
father nodded and smiled at her with this meg condescending smile on his face,
and was like, "Dude, I remember when I was like you. You should grow up to
be a, you know. Clean-air worker or something. Don't lose that. But remember.
It's about people. People need a lot of air."
For a
minute, we all ate without saying anything. Violet looked either angry or
embarrassed. I chatted her about being sorry for what Dad said, but she didn't
chat me back. I thought Dad was being kind of a jerk to Violet. I wanted to say
something, like, something that would be, you know, something about how she was
more right than he was. I said, "Hey, Violet told me we're not going to
court."
"About
what?" my mother said.
"We
were like assaulted?" I said. "Remember? The thing on the moon?"
"Yeah,
sure," said my dad. "No, he's dead. There's no trial. We've all
talked about suing. We'll probably sue the nightclub, maybe the police."
I
said, "No one told me he was dead."
My father
chewed some.
Smell
Factor was banging his head and singing along with the feed, "Intercrural
or oral. Ain't a question of moral."
My
father said to me, "There wasn't any reason for you to know."
"Yes,
there was."
"No,
there wasn't."
"It's
my feed."
"You'd
just get worried."
"I
want to get worried. If there's like some meg thing wrong."
"Intercrural
or oral! Ain't a question of moral!"
My mom
reached over and touched me on the wrist and said, "You're safe."
Dad
said, "You have an upcar."
"The
lunatic is dead," said my mother. "There's nothing to worry
about."
Violet
said, "It was frightening for all of us."
"Yeah,
sure," said Dad, dismissing her kind of jerkily, "but that's no
reason—"
"Intercrural
or oral! Ain't a question of moral!"
"Smell
Factor!"
"That's
not his name," said my mother.
"Intercrural
or oral! Ain't a question of moral!"
"What
would you—"
"Intercrural
or oral! Ain't a question of moral!"
"Hey!"
yelled my mother. "Hey, you! We don't sing at the table!"
"You're
acting out of line," said my father, pointing at me. "I'm really
disappointed."
"Doing
what?" I said. "I'm just asking."
"Dude,
I just bought you an upcar, and you're being a brat."
You're
not being a brat, Violet chatted.
"Stop
chatting," said my dad. "What are you saying?"
"Let
them alone, Steve," said Mom.
Suddenly,
I saw Violet freeze, and her eyes stopped moving and her face got all white.
My dad
was saying, "Look, we're going to sue the nightclub. Okay?"
"Sure,"
I said. "Whatev."
"Quits?"
"Quits."
"Now
maybe you better take the girlf home. In
the new upcar. With the keys I just held out in my palm like a gift. Oh,
because it was a gift."
My
father got up all pissy and took the dishes into the kitchen. He rattled them
against the rim of the junktube as he threw them away. They crashed down into
the thing, the incinerator.
"You
okay?" I said to Violet. "We should go."
"It's
just, my foot's fallen asleep."
"Shake
it," I said.
She
looked down at the table. I mean my foot isn't working. Don't say anything.
It's happened a couple of times since the hack. Something just won't work for
an hour or two. My finger or something.
I was
like, Holy shit. Are you okay?
I'm
fine.
Do you
want some water?
Titus,
don't worry about it. It'll go away in a minute. It was
just the stress.
Try to
move the foot, just try.
She
just sat there, smiling kind of sick, not moving while right next to her Mom
and Smell Factor crinkled up the disposable table together and threw it away.
Violet was still in her chair, near where the table had been. She was alone in
the middle of the rug.
Finally,
she moved the foot. She moved it slowly in circles. She breathed out really
deep. Her eyes were closed, like it was sex.
I held
out my hand and pulled her to her feet. She came to my arms like we were doing
some kind of flamenco rumpus. My mom smiled, and my dad, who was still pissed,
said, "Yeah. Cute."
We
left a few minutes later. I drove her most of the way to her house, and we met
her father in a mall parking lot. It was a new mall, with lots of spotlights
swinging through the sky and rainbows going up a giant pyramid. We had to wait
a few minutes for her dad to get there. We just sat together, holding hands. In
my new Dodge Gryphon.
I
asked, "Are you sure you're okay?"
"I'm
fine. It goes away."
I
leaned my head against the window. We were quiet.
She
was looking at her knees. She asked me, "What are you thinking
about?"
I
looked behind us. I sighed, and I was drumming my fingers on the steering
column and all. I said, "What if it really doesn't handle as good? You
know, it's roomier, but what if it doesn't handle as good as the Swarp?"
She
nodded. She said, "Are you at least okay with the color?"
"It's
a good red," I said. "I guess."
"Autumnal,"
she said. "It's nice."
"You're
sure it's not like cheap?"
"It's
fall-like."
I
smiled. "Thanks."
She
said, "I'm a peach."
"Yeah.
You're a peach."
Her
father was landing. I couldn't see him through the glare of his windshield. She
got out of the car. She kissed me. I said I would see her the next morning.
She
kept turning and waving as she walked away across the pavement. The spotlights
wobbled over the Clouds™. The pyramid glowed. I rose up into the sky and turned
the feed on to songs about people allowed to get out of the same bed, and to
eat breakfast together, two toasts on the very same plate.
o o o
'Cause if love
Can't
help us from above,
Can't
help us like a dove,
With
wings so full of love,
Then
let me go.
And if hope
Is
nothing hut a dope
Who's
holding on to rope
Then I
don't think I can cope,
So let
me go,
Darling,
Let me
go.
But...
But,
if faith
Is
more than just a wraith
And is
in real good faith
Then
let us both have faith
And
hold me tight.
'Cause "touching"
Is not
just that it's touching,
But
that we both are touching,
Like
with our mouths are touching,
So
hold me tight,
Darling,
Hold
me tight.
Ho-oh-old me tight.
Hold me tight. Hold me tight.
o o o
observe the
remarkable
verdure
The next day, I followed my feed's directions to her
house. I drove about two hundred miles to get to the general area. It was a
good day for a walk in the country, because there were these big occasional
Clouds™,
but mostly blue. The sun was reflecting in darts off all the upcars that passed
me.
Her neighborhood was down a long droptube. I kept on
going down and down through all these different suburbs, called Fox Glen and
Caleby Farm Estates and Water-view Park, until I hit the bottom of the tube,
where it was called Creville Heights.
Creville Heights was all one big area, instead of each
yard having its own bubble with its own sun and seasons. They must've had just
one sun for the whole place. All the houses were really old and flat. The
streets were blue and cracked, and they were streets, I mean, like for when
things went on the ground. Their sun was up and you could see the sky was
peeling.
I found her house, which was a little house with her
parents' upcar parked outside it and some kind of a sculpture in the yard, with
some hoops or loops and a floating, spiky ball.
I parked next to the house with the upcar still levitated,
and I climbed down and went to the door. The doorbell played a piece of music,
which I could hear through the door, which was wood.
She came to the door, and she was all smiling, and she
was so glad to see me, and I was glad to see
her. She invited me in to meet her dad, who was at home. I went in.
The place was a mess. Everything had words on it.
There were papers with words on them, and books, and even posters on the wall
had words. Her father looked like a crank. He was sitting in a lawn chair in
the living room, hunched over like a hunchback, sorting puzzle pieces. His back
honestly had a big hunch, which was from a really, really early feedscanner,
from back when they wore them in a big backpack on their back, with special
glasses that had foldout screens on either side of your eyes. He wore the glasses,
too, and when we shook hands I could see pictures and words reflecting on his
eyeballs, like when you stir water in the sun.
He held out his hand. He said, "It is a fine
pleasure to meet you and make your acquaintance." He had a very slight
smile, which didn't change when he moved his mouth. He spoke with this buzzing,
flat kind of voice. He said, "I am filled with astonishment at the
regularity of your features and the handsome generosity you have shown my
daughter. The two of you are close, which gladdens the heart, as close as twin
wings torn off the same butterfly."
Violet said, "You can see why I don't take him
out in public much."
"The sarcasm of my daughter notwithstanding, it
is nonetheless an occasion of great moment to meet one of her erotic
attachments. In the line of things, she has not brought them home, but has
chosen instead to conduct her trysts at remote locales, perhaps beach huts or
oxygen-rich confabularies."
"The surprising thing is," said Violet,
"when he flunked out of charm school, it was because he couldn't learn the
minuet."
"She meets them at the drama, I presume, or speakeasies."
"Why don't we leave," Violet suggested,
"while my last shred of dignity is still at least as big as a thong?"
I was like, "It was ... It was real good to meet
you." I said, "We're going out into the country for the day I'll take
real good care of her." I was trying to be like a man to another man, like
responsible.
He nodded. He flattened his hand, and lifted off with
it like it was a Dodge Gryphon, and he was making an engine noise, and then he
flew his hand toward some books and landed it. He made these chirpy noises like
the windows rolling down. He said in a high-pitched voice, like a teensy-weensy
kind of voice, "Ooooooh! Observe the remarkable verdure! Little friend, I
am master of all I survey."
I nodded. Violet had the door opened. We went out and
climbed into the Gryphon. We pulled on our seat belts.
"Wow," I said.
"Yeah."
I lifted us off and we floated down the street.
"He's something."
"So far as my social life goes, what strikes me
as a good idea is leaving him in the basement wrapped in a cocoon of pink
insulation."
"I didn't understand a single thing he said."
"He says the language is dying. He thinks words
are being debased. So he tries to speak entirely in weird words and irony, so
no one can simplify anything he says."
We turned a corner.
"Where's your mom?" I asked.
"Probably South America," Violet said.
"She likes it warm."
"Are they divorced?"
"They never married."
"Your life ... It must be kind of strange?"
"Meaning what?"
"Just.. . it's not. .. the things that most of us
. . . do?"
"No," she said, like she wanted to change
the topic.
I hit the droptube, and we fell up.
a day
in the country
We flew for an hour or so out into farm country.
While we flew, she told me the story of her family,
which was that her mom and dad met when they were in grad school, and decided
to live together as an experiment in lifestyle, and had her. Then everything
was fine for a few years, but when she was about six or seven her parents
started like fighting all the time, and yelling all the time and stuff, and her
mother ran away. I asked her if that was when her father started to get like he
was, I mean, hard to understand, and she said he was always hard to understand,
but after her mother left was when he started to get completely like he was.
She played me some saved memories of him lecturing.
He was pacing up and down through the lecture hall and he was saying, "In
the nineties, the older programming languages, with their emphasis on
neoclassical, even Aristotelian logical structures, gave way to
object-oriented interactive structures." His shoes scraped along the tiled
floor. He looked all his students in the eye, like he was challenging them to a
fight. He leaned toward them and said, "In object-oriented programming,
discrete software objects interfaced more freely, in a system of corporate
service provision that mirrored the emergent structures of late
capitalism." Who the hell knows what he meant, but suddenly, he seemed
kind of powerful, like someone who shouldn't necessarily be wound up in a
cocoon of pink insulation and hidden in a basement somewhere. He was like a
different guy.
She said the only time he actually talked like a
normal human being was sometimes when he was big tired and they were eating
dinner before he went to bed.
She and he took turns making dinner.
They had just got a Kitchnet food synthesizer.
She asked for my family's story, but it wasn't as
interesting. Just da da da, my parents met through some friend, da
da da, they went out, they started to live together, da da da, they
went to Venus, da da da, you know, they're sitting in this restaurant on
Venus, back when Venus was called The Love Planet, with Love pronounced
Lerv, back before the moulting-quakes
and the uprisings, so they're sitting there, and my dad holds up his hand, and
it has this big lump on one of the fingers, like some kind of cyst? And my
mom's like, Steve, what's that, is it malignant? and he goes, Honey, I hope it's benign, and he pulls a little pull-tab
and the skin unpeels and under it is an engagement ring for her, already on his
finger! So he takes it off and slips it on her finger and it constricts and
clamps on and she's like, Omigod! Omigod! and everyone in the restaurant
starts clapping. And she's like, No, I don't have any like circulation to my finger, and so they had to go to a jeweler really
quick and get it adjusted, which is why whenever they have a fight and make
up, my mom always has this joke? She goes, Yup, married, and with the scars
to prove it.
It felt good to hear Violet's story, and to tell mine,
even though hers was kind of more interesting than mine. I said it must be hard
for her dad to bring her up and home-school her himself. She said it was, that
he worked real hard at it, and also worked real hard teaching. She was proud of
him, even though he was—from what I could see? like, in my opinion?—an insane
psychopath.
Our feeds caught a banner from a farm that invited
visitors, where you could walk around and see everything grow, so we swerved
for there and landed. There weren't many other people there that day, so we
were almost alone while we walked around.
It was real peaceful. We walked along holding hands,
and our elbows rubbed, too. Violet wasn't wearing sleeves, so I could see the
little frowns made by her elbows.
It smelled like the country. It was a filet mignon
farm, all of it, and the tissue spread for miles around the paths where we were
walking. It was like these huge hedges of red all around us, with these
beautiful marble patterns running through them. They had these tubes, they were
bringing the tissue blood, and we could see the blood running around, up and
down. It was really interesting. I like to see how things are made, and to
understand where they come from.
It was a perfect afternoon. They had made part of it
into a steak maze, for tourists, and we split up in the steak maze and tried to
see who could get to the center first. We were like running around corners and
peeking and diving, and there were these mirrors set up to confuse you, so
you'd see all these nonexistent beef hallways. We were big laughing and we'd
run into each other and growl and back away. There were other tourists in the
steak maze, too, and they thought we were cute.
Then we sat and had some cider doughnuts that we
bought at the farm stand. We got some that were plain and some cinnamon. I
liked the cinnamon better. Violet said that it was important to start with the
plain, so that the cinnamon seemed more like a change. She said she had a
theory that everything was better if you delayed it. She had this whole thing
about self-control, okay, and the importance of self-control. For example, she
said, when she bought something, she wouldn't let herself order it for a long
time. Then she would just go to the purchase site and show it to herself. Then
she'd let herself get fed the sense-sim, you know, she'd let herself know how
it would feel, or what it would smell like. Then she would go away and wouldn't
look for a week. Then she would go back finally and order it, but only if it
was on back order and wouldn't be shipped immediately. Then finally when it was
ready to ship, she'd like be, oh, hey, I don't want it shipped hour rate, I
want it slow, slow rate. So it would take like three days to get to her, and
then she'd leave it in the box. Finally, she'd open the box just enough to see
like the hem of the skirt or whatever. She would touch it, just knowing it was
hers. She'd run her fingers along it kind of delicate. Just along the edge of
it, not even really letting herself touch it completely, just gently, with her
fingertips, or maybe the back of her hand. She would wait for days until she
couldn't stand it anymore to take it out and try it on.
At this point, I was completely turned on. I wanted to
get more doughnuts, but it was this debate between getting more doughnuts,
which were really good doughnuts, but not being able to stand up because I had
complete prong.
So we sat for a while just where we were and I flattened
out the doughnut bag with my hand on the table-top. You could tell how good the
doughnuts were because they left a clear ring on the paper.
Later, we went and climbed up an observation tower
over the farm. It was getting to be sunset, so it was meg pretty.
We were sitting side by side, with our legs swinging
on the wall of the tower, and the Clouds™ were all turning pink in front of
us. We could see all these miles of filet mignon from where we were sitting,
and some places where the genetic coding had gone wrong and there, in the
middle of the beef, the tissue had formed a horn or an eye or a heart blinking
up at the sunset, which was this brag red, and which hit on all those miles of
muscle and made it flex and quiver, with all these shudders running across the
top of it, and birds were flying over, crying kind of sad, maybe seagulls
looking for garbage, and the whole thing, with the beef, and the birds, and the
sky, it all glowed like there was a light inside it, which it was time to show
us now.
Later, when we were flying back in the dark, lit up by
the dashboard, she asked me, "If you could die any way you wanted, how
would you like to?"
I said, "Why you asking?"
She said, "I've just been thinking about it a
lot."
I thought for a while. Then I said, "I'd like to
have this like, this intense pleasure in every one of my senses, all of them so
full up that they just burst me open, and the feed like going a mile a second,
so that it's like every channel is just jammed with excitement, and it's going
faster and faster and better and better, until just—BAM! That's
it, I guess. I'd like to die from some kind of sense overload."
She nodded.
I said, "I'm going to do that when I get real old
and boring."
She said, "Yeah. You know, I think death is
shallower now. It used to be a hole you fell into and kept falling. Now it's
just a blank."
We flew over a lake. The bottom had been covered with
a huge blue ad that was lit up and magnified by the water, which had a picture
of a smiling brain and broadcasted "Dynacom Inc." when you looked at
it.
I was like, "What are you asking for?"
She said, "It makes good times even better when
you know they're going to end. Like grilled vegetables are better because some
of them is partly soot."
I wanted to point out that that was probably because
her dad made them, but that if someone good makes them, they're probably not
partly soot, but I didn't think that was her point, about vegetables, so I just
kept flying, and I said, "This was a good time?" and she said,
"One of the best," and I said, "So when it's time for them to do
a pleasure overload on me, are you going to be around to give the order to cut
the juice?"
She looked at me, surprised. For a second, she was
like completely confused. It was like I'd said something else.
Then she saw what I meant, and she laughed like I'd
given her a present. She said, "If you'll let me, sure. Sure I'll be
there." She leaned over, really sudden, and kissed me on the cheek. Then
she whispered, "I'll be the first one, dumpling, to pull your plug."
The way she said it, pull your plug, it sounded kind
of sexy.
Right then, everything seemed perfect.
I dropped her off, and we planned other things, and
did a secret handshake. I drove back toward home listening to some brag new
triumph screams by British storm 'n' chunder bands. When I got home, the lights
were out, but they came on for me. I walked through the empty house, and got
ready for bed, and lay there thinking about how perfect everything was.
I could feel my family all around me. I could trace
their feeds faintly, because they weren't shielding them.
Smell Factor was dreaming while a fun-site with
talking giraffes sang him songs and showed him wonderful things in different
shapes. My parents were upstairs going in mal, which they wouldn't want me to
know, but which I could tell, because they chose a really flashy, expensive
malfunction site that was easy to trace. They were winding down together, I
guess. Like, you can only go on being completely fugue-stressed for so long
without winding down.
I could feel all of my family asleep in their own way
around me, in the empty house, in our bubble, where we could turn on and off
the sun and the stars, and the feed spoke to me real quiet about new trends,
about pants that should be shorter or longer, and bands I should know, and
games with new levels and stalactites and fields of diamonds, and friends of
many colors were all drinking Coke, and beer was washing through mountain
passes, and the stars of the Oh? Wow! Thing! had got lesions, so lesions
were hip now, real hip, and mine looked like a million dollars. The sun was
rising over foreign countries, and underwear was cheap, and there were new
techniques to reconfigure pecs, abs, and nipples, and the President of the
United States was certain of the future, and at Weatherbee & Crotch there
was a sale banner and nice rugby shirts and there were pictures of freckled
prep-school boys and girls in chinos playing on the beach and dry humping in
the eel grass, and as I fell asleep, the feed murmured to me again and again: All shall
be well... and all shall be well. .. and all manner of things shall be well.
o o o
... First, in the deserts and veldts arose oral
culture, the culture of the spoken word.
Then in the cities with their temples and bazaars came
the pictographs, and later,
symbols that produced sounds as if by magic, and what followed was written
culture. Then, in the universities and under the steeples of young nations, print
culture. These—oral
culture, written culture, the culture of print—these
have always been
considered the great epochs of man.
But we have entered a new age. We
are a new people. It is now the age of
oneiric culture, the culture of
dreams.
And we are the nation of dreams. We
are seers. We are wizards.
We speak in visions. Our letters
are like flocks
of doves, released
from under our hats. We have only to stretch out our hand and
desire,
and what we wish for settles like a kerchief
in our palm.
We are a race of sorcerers, enchanters.
We are Atlantis.
We are the wizard-isle of Mu.
What we wish for, is ours.
It is the age of oneiric culture.
And we, America,
we are the nation of dreams.
o o o
nudging again
Later that night, I had nightmares.
Someone was poking my head with a broom handle. They
tried to put it like in my ear. They said, "Whispering makes a narrow
place narrower."
Then came all these pictures, and I was seeing all
over the world, and there were explanations, but I was still asleep, and I
couldn't figure them out. I saw khakis that were really cheap, only $150, but I
didn't like the stitching, and then I saw them torn and there was blood on
them. It was a riot on a street, and people were screaming in some other
language, they were in khakis or jeans and T-shirts, and they were throwing
stones and bottles, and the police were moving forward on horses, and a man in
the crowd waved a gun, and then the firing started. They were in front of
factories, and clouds of gas drifted through them and the American flags they
were burning started to spark big, and the gas got darker and darker, and the
people sped up, like a joke, grabbing at their necks and waving and sitting and
slapping the ground. They fell down. I saw a sign with a picture of a head with
a little devil sitting in the brain, inside the skull, with these like energy
bolts coming out of his mouth.
I saw fields and fields of black, it was this
disgusting black shit, spread for miles. I saw walls of concrete fall from the
sky and crush little wood houses. I saw a furry animal trying to stand up on
its legs but the back ones were broken or not working, and it dragged itself
with the front ones, whimpering, through someplace with gray dust, and needles
coming out of the sand. Its jaws were open. I saw long cables going through the
sea. I saw girls sewing things, little girls in big halls. I saw people praying
over missiles. I smelled the summer in this rocky place, and the summer smelled
like electrical burns. I saw a kid looking at me, he was a kid from another culture,
where they wear dresses, and there were all of these shadows all over his face,
these amazing shadows, and I thought it was a really cool picture, to get all
of those weird shadows somehow, but with nothing making them, and finally, I
realized that they weren't shadows, they were bruises, and then the end of a
gun, it's called the butt, it came down and hit him in the face and then all
the pictures were over.
Hey, Violet
said. Hey. Was that you?
I was like, What? What's the thing? With ...the...?
Did I wake you up?
Okay, could .. .is she... ?
Hey—look
lively. Someone was just nosing around my feed, checking out my specs and sending
me all these images.
It was probably a corp. Don't. . . Oh, unit, I can't
believe you completely jolted me. I was having this weird-ass dreaming.
I don't think it was a corp. They didn't have
a tag.
Don't you have a shield?
They got right wham through the shield.
Oh, unit. Oh, unit. I'm... Do you know how asleep I
was?
I called FeedTech Customer Assistance. I'm going to
report this. Something's happening.
Oh, okay. Shit. Okay. So can I go like back to sleep?
You sure it wasn't you?
Unette—it
wasn't me. I was so asleep, it was like . . . It was like ten asleep factor.
They can trace who it was, I bet.
Yeah. Maybe.
You didn't see any of this? The images?
What of?
There's someone else here. Can you feel it?
Who?
Someone else. They just tapped in, just a second ago.
A voice said, Hi, this is Nina from FeedTech
Customer Assistance.
Thank god.
Are you tired of the same old shoulders? Why not try
extensions?
Violet was like, Someone just approached my feed.
They were checking the specs and stats.
And what can I do to help you this morning?
You need to follow them and see, somehow, see who it
was. Quickly . . . Quickly!
Violet, I'd love to respond personally to each and
every request for assistance, but unfortunately I'm unable to, due to increased
customer demand, so I've sent this automated intelligence Nina to talk to you
instead.
No, you don't understand.
Looking at your recent purchase history, I notice that
you've expressed interest in a lot of products you haven't bought. Are you
having trouble making up your mind with so much cool stuff to choose from?
Can you please connect me with a live operator?
Violet, I think I can help you come up with products
that really say, "You." They'll shout, "You! You! You!" as
if it was always
Saturday! Oh, I know! You're almost a woman, and you want things that are totally big Violet! That's where I can help!
All right, chatted
Violet. No thanks. Thanks. I'm done.
Sometimes choices are hard to make.
Fuck off.
This automated intelligence Nina can help you throw
away the bad—and find the good! I
can help you find the great products that are uniquely the woman known as
"Ms. Violet Durn"!
Fuck off!
Okay, it doesn't seem like you want to talk right now.
So I'm going back to my little hole. There, I'll be sorting and sifting, and
trying to make life as easy and interesting as possible for you and your friend
and all of our excellent customers at FeedTech—making your dreams into hard fact™.
Okay. Thanks. Thanks a big lot.
And thank you, Violet Durn of 1421 Applebaum Avenue.
I'll look forward to helping you again, whenever you—
Can I go back to sleep? I asked. I had these really weird dreams.
Violet seemed kind of without any energy. She was
like, Go ahead. I'll talk to you tomorrow.
We said good night. She was slow. I turned over and
curled up, and the pictures playing in my head now were better, not so violent
or sucky. They were more of women in turtlenecks petting my hair. I heard some
music. I fell asleep. It was a deep sleep, and I didn't wake up until morning.
o o o
It
is an upcar tearing along over the desert. It cuts
brag swerves through passes and over gulches.
Someone
once said it was easier for a camel to pass
through the eye of a needle than for a rich guy to get
into heaven.
There
is a city. A marketplace. Camels. Arabs.
The upcar shoots overhead, and they duck.
Yeah,
sure. Now we know that the
"eye of the needle" is just
another name for a gate in Jerusalem—and with the
Swarp XE-11 's mega-lepton lift and
electrokinetic
gyrostasis, you can flip ninety degrees to the ground
and back again in one-point-two seconds—so getting
through the gate just won't he a problem anymore.
The
Swarp XE-11: You can take it with
you.
o o o
the real thing
One Saturday, a few days after we saw the riot from
the news in our dreams, there was this promotion, where if you talked about the
great taste of Coca-Cola to your friends like a thousand times, you got a free
six-pack of it, so we decided to take them for some meg ride by all getting
together and being like, Coke, Coke, Coke, Coke for about three hours so
we'd get a year's supply It was a chance to rip off the corporations, which we
all thought was a funny idea.
I picked up Violet at her house and we drove to
Marty's, where everyone was meeting.
When we got there, Calista and Loga were getting out
of Calista's car, and it was like, Whoa, because they were wearing all
torn-up clothes. They were walking normal, but they looked like they'd been
burned up and hit with stuff.
I ran over to them. I was going, "Holy shit! Are
you okay? What happened?" and Violet, too, she was going, "Hey—are
you okay?"
They stood there and looked at us, then looked at each
other like, Omigod! Someone is poopiehead!
"Yuh," said Loga. "It's Riot Gear. It's
retro. It's beat up to look like one of the big twentieth-century riots. It's
been big since earlier this week."
I was like, "Oh."
Violet was like, "Sorry."
"No wrong," said Calista, flipping her hair.
When we went inside, Marty and Quendy were also
wearing Riot Gear. Everyone was going, Hi! Hey! Hey! Hi! Unit! What's doing?
"Hey!" said Loga to Quendy, pointing.
"Kent State collection, right? Great skirt!"
Quendy bowed her legs out. "It's not a skirt—it's
culottes!"
"Ohhh, cute!"
Calista said, "That looks great on you!"
Quendy didn't say anything to Calista, because Calista
had just put her arm around Link and they were smelling each other's faces, and
Quendy was jealous.
"Units!" said Marty. "Into the—in
here—fuck yeah, man—into the living room. Kay kay kay kay. Right in here."
We grabbed some seats.
"Okay," said Marty.
"O-fuckin'-kay!" He nodded. "Coca-Cola!"
We waited to start.
We were like waiting.
We all sat there for a minute, looking like we were
smiling, but in reality, not. Each of us looked at everyone else's face. Violet
chatted me, This is like when I was twelve, and we had this slumber party
and agreed to show each other our boohs. I think we finally just gave up and
watched America's Unlikeliest Allergy Attacks.
"So . . . ," said Marty, kind of sneaky.
"Anyone up for the great taste of. . . Coke?"
Loga said, "I like its refreshing flavor."
"It's really good on a really hot day," said
Link. "There's nothing like an ice-cold Coke."
"I like regular Coke," said Quendy "but
also the fantastic taste of Diet Coke."
Link pinched Calista. She kind of sighed, "Me,
too."
Marty said, "Coke, its great taste, it's so good
that I would beat up a guy if he had one and I really wanted it."
"Anyone?" said Link. "You and
Coke?"
Loga said, "Coke, it's really good, almost as
good as Pepsi."
"Unette!" said Marty. "'Almost'? You
just lost us one! The fuckin' count just went down."
I said quickly, "I like Coke because of the energy."
Link pinched Calista. She kind of sighed, "Me,
too."
Violet said, "I love the great feeling of Coke's
carbonation going down my throat, all the pain, like ..." She waved her
hands in the air and looked at the ceiling, trying to think of something. She
said, "It's like sweet gravel. It's like a bunch of itsy-bitsy commuters
running for a shuttle in my windpipe." Everyone was looking at her. I
could feel them chatting each other, saying that was stupid. I sat nearer to
her. I put my hand on her back.
She was saying, "Sometimes I try to think back to
the first time I ever had Coke. Because it must have hurt, but I can't
remember. How could we ever have started to enjoy it? If something's an
acquired taste, like, how do you start to acquire it? For that matter, who gave
me Coke the first time? My father? I don't think so. Who would hand a kid a
Coke and think, 'Her first one. I'm so proud.' How do we even start?"
There was a long, silent part.
Then Marty said, "Yeah. That may have cost us a
few. Hey, how about the great foaming capabilities of Coke?"
And then we were onto this whole thing, about Coke
fights, and Coke floats, and Coke promotions, and we went on and on and on, but
Violet didn't say anything else, just sat there silently. The guys kept going.
I was laughing extra loud at everything, because I didn't want people to notice
that Violet was all clammy. So I was yelling all these carbonation things and
trying to bring her back in, and the other guys were going spastic and throwing
pillows at each other. We were like rum and Coke, stadium Coke, flat Coke, bottled
Coke, Coke and nachos, Coke and hot dogs, hot Coke, Cherry Coke, Coke on tap,
comparative suckiness of, until finally there was another quiet part, and Link
said, "Hey, Marty-unit, do you actually have any Coke?"
Marty was like, "No. But, fuck, aren't you
getting like meg thirsty? With all of this talking about the great taste of
Coke?"
We looked at our feet for a minute. I moved my butt
around on the, it's called an ottoman.
"Let's go out and get some," said Link.
"Yeah. Let's go to the store."
"Which store?"
"There's a Halt 'n' Buy up on like, near the
Sports Giant."
We were all standing up. Marty was like announcing,
"Okay, we'll go out and get some of the great beverage of Coke, with its
refreshing flavor," but no one was really rattling that way now.
Loga and Calista were whispering to each other, with
Violet walking behind them. They saw she was near them, and they changed the
subject.
"Oh, and omigod!" said Calista. "Are
those the Stonewall Clogs? They're so brag."
"Yeah," said Loga.
"Omigod. They look wholly comfy. Are they
comfy?"
"They're pretty comfy." Loga picked up her
foot and played with her flowery clog, and she was like, "I got a size
seven, but it feels more like a man's size seven."
"This top is the Watts Riot top."
Violet said, "I can never keep any of the riots
straight. Which one was the Watts riot?"
Calista and Loga stopped and looked at her. I could
feel them flashing chat.
"Like, a riot," said Calista. "I don't
know, Violet. Like, when people start breaking windows and beating each other
up, and they have to call in the cops. A riot. You know. Riot?"
"Oh, I just thought you might . . . know. . . .
Maybe ... I wondered what incited it." Violet was playing quickly with her
own hands.
"Yeah," said Calista.
"I was just asking," said Violet.
"Okay."
"I was just..."
"Yeah. 'Incited.'"
"What? It's not like I was saying something mean
or stupid."
"No. Okay. Loga, are we going?"
They kept on walking.
Loga said, "Put that in your metizabism."
Calista said, "What's a metizabism?"
"Oh, sorry. I thought it was good to use stupid,
long words that no one can understand."
Calista laughed and looked backward, going,
"Shhh. She'll hear you and have an alpoduffin . . . fleatcher."
In my head, I was like, Oh shit.
Violet was chatting me. Did you hear that? I can't
stand this anymore.
I was like, What do you mean?
They were just these meg bitches. Will you take me
home?
I was like, Just let it blow. Let it blow. No
wrong.
They hate me.
No one hates you.
Your friends hate me. They think I'm stupid.
No one—fuck!—no
one thinks you're stupid.
Yeah, I don't mean dumb stupid.
We can't leave them now. It would be like a total rash
on their ass if we went.
They just insulted me.
Unit, they didn't.
They thought what I said during the game was stupid. They think everything I say is
weird and stupid. What is your problem? Take me home.
Link was like, "You coming with?"
Violet was like, Take me home.
Fuck! Why? Fuck.
I want to leave.
"No," I said to Link. "Violet, uh, she
has to go home."
"Unit," said Link. "The party's just
begun. We haven't even filled the bathtub with anything from the kitchen
yet."
"I've really got to go," said Violet,
smiling like she was shaking hands with the members of the frickin' PTA.
Everyone was going out to get in their upcars and go
get some stuff at the store. Calista was showing off her WTO riot Windbreaker.
Violet and me said good-bye. We got in my upcar. We took off.
Then we started to fight.
fight
and
flight
I flew down the main tube in Marty's community. It was
a gated community, and I waited to get out through the neighborhood's security
sphincter. It pulled open, and I flew out into the droptube, going like a
million miles an hour so that Violet would jerk back in her seat. Then when I
was going up, I had this idea that instead of like throwing her around by going
too fast, I would be like quiet angry like my father got, and I'd just do
everything exactly right, everything up to the centigram.
So I flew really good when I got up above the surface,
going over the shantytowns that had been built up around the cooling steeples.
I flew perfect. I could see the others come out of the droptube behind me, and
they were heading off to the strip.
We went for a while. It was raining. There was all of
the lights from the factory towers below us, those really hard lights, those
bright white ones. They were shining through all the gases, above the tubing
and the tanks and ladders. There were cargo ships anchored in the sky I flew
around them, politely, like a gentleman.
We were too angry to speak out loud. Our jaws were
like grrrrrvvvvv.
So we started to chat.
She was like, What?
Nothing.
What nothing?
What nothing what?
She was like, What
are you angry about?
I breathed, loud and kind of angry. Why are we
going away?
Because they were making fun of me.
I didn't say anything. I was like, to myself, This is dumb. The whole thing was
dumb. It was stupid, and it pissed me off.
Violet was pushing me, like, Well?
So I, like a shithead, said, Well, maybe you
shouldn't, you know, show off like that.
Show off? Like what?
Like the way you do sometimes. Using weird words.
I don't use weird words.
Okay. Saying weird shit.
"Oh, screw you!" she yelled out loud.
"What do you mean?"
"You know what I mean. It's, like . . . It's
something I like about you, but you have to .. . like . . ."
"You like it about me. What is it you like?"
"I like . . . you know, you're so funny, and
beautiful, and you ..."
"Everyone's beautiful. Everyone's pretty as a
pansy in a blister pack. That's not what you're talking about."
"You can be a little .. . You can ... It's kind
of scary for people sometimes. It feels ... It sometimes feels like you're
watching us, instead of being us."
"Well, I'm not used to the things you're used to."
"I'm just telling you how it sometimes ... it
feels."
"Thanks for telling me how it feels."
"I'm just telling you."
"Thanks."
We drove on. On Sky Offenders, they were having
a live thing about drug smugglers getting caught on parasails. There was a lot
of static from her chat breaking through. She was pushing it hard.
I dropped my feedwall and let her chat me again.
You think I'm a bitch, don't you?
This is stupid. This is dumb.
She stared out the window.
There's something else wrong, isn't there? I asked her. Isn't
there?
Nothing. No answer.
For a long time, nothing.
Then I was like, Is there something else
wrong?
She looked at me. I could tell she was trying, not to
cry. She said, "Yes."
I was like, What is it?
She whispered, "Talk to me. In the air."
I was like biting my lip. I hate these kinds of
conversations. I was feeling completely squeam. I went, "Okay. What's,
uh, what's wrong?"
For a long time, we went through columns of smoke.
They were coming up from below. They were like the rows of trees up the sides
of Link's driveway. If we had been happier, I would have done them slalom.
They were as gray as, I don't know. They were just gray, okay? The rain hit
them.
She said, "My feed is really
malfunctioning."
"Right now?"
"I can't feel it right now. But yes."
"Go to a technician."
"I have. I've gone to a bunch. I don't think you
.. . Okay, my feed is really, really malfunctioning."
"I don't understand. You told me this
already."
"Shut up. I've been going to technicians. The
feed-ware is starting to produce major errors." She looked scared. She
wasn't looking at me. I could feel how much she wasn't looking at me but was
looking other places.
"I got my feed later . . . than some kids."
She said evenly, "I got my feed really late."
"You told me. So?"
"But the problem is, if you get the feed after
you're fully formed, it doesn't fit as snugly. I mean, the feedware. It's more
susceptible to malfunction."
"Susceptible?"
"It can break down more easily."
"What does this mean?"
"Nobody knows. The feed is tied in to everything.
Your body control, your emotions, your memory. Everything. Sometimes feed
errors are fatal. I don't know. I could lose ... I don't know. They thought it
would stabilize. But it didn't. It's getting worse. Meg worse. They told me
yesterday it's deteriorating."
"Like rusting?"
"I mean, not the hardware, but the
software/wetware interface. They said they didn't. . . I'm not going to cry. I
am not going to cry."
I didn't know what I should do. I guessed that I
should put my arm around her. I went to move my arm that way. She didn't look
very huggable. She was all slouched. She was saying, "They don't know. I
could lose my ability to move; I could lose my ability to think. Anything.
It's tied in everywhere. They said the limbic system, the motor cortex . . .
the hippocampus. They listed all this stuff. If the feed fails too severely, it
could interfere with basic processes. My heart could just..."
We were sitting there, going through the air. My hands
felt really useless. I said, "This sucks. They can't just turn it off?
They turned it off before."
"No, they didn't. They disconnected us. They shut
down most of the functions. The feed was still on. It's part of the
brain."
I looked over at her. She was looking right at me. We
were going down the aisle of smoke through the sky. Somewhere over Nebraska,
the drug parasailers were being shot out of the air.
She said, "Just drop. Drop and then catch
us."
I was staring at the steering column, wondering what
the hell she was talking about.
She said, "I want to feel something. Let's feel
vertigo together."
That sounded okay to me.
I dropped us.
When we stopped, suddenly both of us had sweat. It was
just mainly across our foreheads and fingertips.
She smiled at me. We both felt meg nauseous.
"My fingertips," I said. "They're
sweaty."
She nodded.
We flew for a bit. She chatted me like, Let's go
back now. I'm okay.
No. You don't want to go back, I said. They were being jerky.
They weren't being jerky. I was being pretentious.
You weren't—
"I'm fine now."
I said, "We can't just go back. I am like
completely—I am—I'm this thing. It's this whole meg thing. I can't go back.
Let's go to your house."
"My dad will be there."
"Let's go to my house, then."
"Okay."
With one hand, I changed the course. I held out the
other hand. She took it. We flew over gray piles and gray piles and gray piles
toward home.
so much to do
When we got to my house, we went inside and I shut the
garage door behind us. We went up the steps and into the family room. We were
going to watch something on the feed. We sat there. We weren't really
interested in the feed. It was daytime shit, anyway. Soap operas with all these
people with the big hair going on crying jags. And lots of puppets. Puppets
telling you about every goddamn thing.
"I wish there was someplace we could go,"
Violet said. "I want to ... I don't know."
"What do you mean?"
"Just, there's a whole universe out there."
"Yeah."
"I've never been underwater for a really long
time."
"I been down on a couple of vacations into the
really deep part. It's pretty good. There's a lot of stuff to do."
"I'm just using that as an example," she
said, stroking my face.
"You have to have reservations. Otherwise, if you
go by yourself, you get the bends."
She was stroking my face and was like, "I probably
don't have much time. There's just so much I want to do," which was a
difficult thing for her to say, because when she was stroking my face, it
looked like it might mean one thing, but on the other hand, it probably meant
something else, and it would be embarrassing if it didn't mean what I thought
it meant, and if I said something, and then if it turned out that by "so
much she wanted to do," she really meant riding trikes across the Sahara.
That would suck.
I said, "Do you mean ..." I stopped, and tried,
"That could be taken to mean that. . . you know . .. we ..."
My feed was like, Tongue-tied? Wowed and gaga? For
a fistful of pickups tailored extra-specially for this nightmarish scenario,
try Cyranofeed, available at rates as low as—
She was like, "I'm sorry if I embarrassed you at
Marty's."
"Would you stop?"
After a minute, I said, "You kept quiet about
this for a long time."
She nodded. "A few weeks. I've known."
"You could've told me."
"I could've," she said.
"You didn't need to be thinking about it all
alone."
She had her hands in her lap now. She said, "I
want to go out and see the world. There's so much. There's . . . just so
much."
"Yeah," I said. "Yeah. I don't know.
Yeah. This sucks. It meg sucks." I didn't know what to say. We sat there,
side by side. We were sitting there, and it seemed like nothing was right. We
were done talking.
I held on to her, and she held on to me. We held like
that. We were staring at the wall.
She blew out all her breath.
It was a strange moment, like when you get sad after
sex, and it feels like it's too late in the afternoon, even if it's morning, or
night, and you turn away from the other person, and they turn away from you,
and you lie there, and when you turn back toward them, you can both see each
other's moles. Usually there seem to be shadows from Venetian blinds all across
your legs.
She said, "You toss something up in the air, and
you expect it to come back down again."
Which made absolutely no sense to me.
We sat and we looked at the fireplace. There were the
fake logs and the fake iron parts. All the bricks were perfect. The walls were
all a weird color of white.
Then there was the sound of the front door banging
open. Mom was home with Smell Factor. We both were like, Whoa.
We pulled apart, and were sitting there. Smell Factor
ran into the family room and took off his sneakers one at a time and threw them
at the wall. Then he fell down on the rug and phased out and started watching Top
Quark. Mom was like yelling for him to go pick up his room. He just lay
there. She was clapping and calling his name. He just kept up with Top
Quark. He didn't have it shielded, so we were picking up the whole thing.
Aw, Top Quark, I'll never get the prize at the
fair.
Listen up, Down Quark—don't get so down! Remember all your friends are
right behind you.
Yeah, Down Quark!
Yeah, we'll sing a song for you! It's a happy, zappy
song, full of chuckles and chortles.
Violet ate dinner with us. My father wasn't there, so
it went better than the last time. She said some stuff that made my mother
laugh. Mom was chatting me about how she was a great girl.
We flew back late at night.
I finally asked her, Do they know how long?
No. Earlier, they were saying it could take years. Now
they're not sure. They're saying it will be much faster.
It still could be years.
It's not going to be years. It could happen anytime.
I dropped her off at her house. We didn't make any
plans. There weren't any plans.
I spent the rest of the night doing homework. It
seemed like that was the only thing left to do.
o o o
...
from Bow-Wow and Plucky, on
the Christian
Cyberkidz Network:
"..
. Dad? I keep thinking she'll come back, but I know now
that she's going to stay away."
"Yeah. It's
like, it's been so long, I don't know what she
would look like if she came back, how long her hair
would be."
"She
was the best dog. If she came back, it would make
everything right."
"Billy:
Nothing will make everything right.
That dog
was a good dog, but she wasn't like a superdog, with
powers. And I think you'll see a little voice inside
you
that will tell you the same."
"I
still put the suet out by the mailbox, and I still sing her
my—"
o o o
seashore
We went to the sea, because there wasn't time after
School™ to go under it. She and I went to stand beside it. We watched it move
around. It was dead, but colorful.
It was blue when the sun hit it one way, and purple
when the sun hit it another way, and sometimes yellow or green. We had on suits
so we wouldn't smell it.
We sat in the sand. I made an angel with my arms and
legs. She piled sand on my stomach. The suits were orange, which was stupid. I
hate it when a suit is a really ugly color so you look completely dumb. After
she was done piling sand and I was done with my angel, we stared up at the sky.
I was like, I don't think you have to worry.
Science is like, they're always discovering things.
Yeah. Have you looked at the sea?
You've been reading more of that depressing shit.
Everything's dead. Everything's dying.
Some upcars floated over in the Clouds™. Some cargo
ships. Some transit needles, heading off to Norway or Japan or something.
I sat up. I was pissed off with things.
I went, You know the part that's the really ironic
thing? The guy? The hacker? You almost agree with him. He completely fucked
you over, and you almost agree with him.
Yeah, she
said. That's certainly the really ironic thing.
What? What are you being sarcastic about?
I'm screwed.
See? Like, that's so big negative.
What do you mean? What's positive? My body is completely
falling apart. I mean, you saw it with my foot—but it's happening more often. One of my fingers
or a part of my face will just freeze up. It's getting more frequent. Like once
every other day, for ten or fifteen minutes. Sometimes for a few hours.
Oh shit. Don't tell me this. Oh shit.
And I'm not getting all the images that are supposed
to come through on the feed. I'm getting a lot of error messages.
They can fix that.
I don't know. I don't know. I just don't know.
I kicked at the sand. I looked at her. She looked
good, through the mask, her big sunglasses brown and purple in the light. I was
like, You know, I. ..
What?
I really like you.
She hit me on the back of the head. That'll do, she
said.
o o o
.. .to Crackdown Alley ... only on Fox. ..
"Have you given it to her?"
"You can kiss my ass."
"Have you given it to her?"
"What do you think I am?"
"Want me to tell you what I think?"
"Don't breathe in my face. Go breathe in someone
else's face.”
"I'll breathe in whatever face I want to breathe
in."
"I didn't give it to her."
"What do you think l am?"
"She doesn't have it."
"You can kiss my ass."
"Don't breathe in my face."
"Have you given it to her?"
"Want me to tell you what I think?"
"What do you think I—"
o o o
limbo
and
prayer
On Monday, I went into School™ and I was sitting in
homeroom when I saw that Calista had her hair up in this new way, and on the
back of her neck was this total insane macro-lesion that I never even saw
before. I guess I was looking at it kind of Holy
shit!, because Quendy sat down next to me and chatted, Impressed? Ain't even real.
Quendy still hated Calista, because Quendy wanted to
be going out with Link herself.
I asked her, What do you mean?
Calista got it done yesterday. Quendy made this face. Now that lesions are
"brag." Now that they're the spit.
It's huge. It's fuckin' huge.
It's not even real. I mean, it's an incision, but it's
artificial. It's not even really weeping. Those are beads of latex.
Whoa. I'm surprised her head doesn't, you know, topple
off. Like: *badump.*
It's so stupid. God. I can't believe how stupid it is.
Link came in and was kissing Calista on the forehead,
with his hand behind her skull, and then he tickled her lesion.
Oh! Unit! I
grabbed Quendy's wrist. Oh, unit, this is like—whoa—total error
message. Major system error!
It's so stupid. I can't believe he's jailing for that.
It's so dumb.
Whoa! I got to tell Violet about this. She'll go
crazy.
Yeah.
She's always looking for like evidence of the decline
of civilization.
Yeah.
I looked at Quendy. What do you mean by that?
Nothing. Just that Violet is always, like you said.
She's always looking for stuff about the decline of civilization, and
everything's a mess, da da da.
Is that a problem?
I don't have a problem with it. I think she's nice.
I'm going to chat her about this.
Yeah. Do. Shell think it's funny.
I found a hitch-up to Violet. You sitting down? I
said. Calista got an artificial lesion.
So much for my Frosted Flakes.
Link is tickling her lesion.
Let me just push the bowl toward the wall.
You heard it here first.
Link is . . . He's a great guy, but do you mind if I
say he's not the quickest bunny in the centrifuge?
I laughed. No. Not our Link.
Did I tell you I thought he was youch the first time I
saw him?
Link? Our Link?!? He's butt-ugly. Have you met him?
That's why I thought he was youch. You all were so
beautiful. He was hideous. There was some, I don't know, some texture there.
Are you kidding?
Until he opens his mouth.
Right now, he and Marty are skipping rope with some
coaxial cable. Ah, he's tripping. He's falling into a desk.
I liked talking to her like this, first thing in the
morning. It had a kind of bedroom feel to it. It was kind of flirty, kind of
drowsy.
She was like, Can I ask you a question about Link?
Yeah?
The name. Link. As in "Missing. . ."?
No, I said.
So?
I don't think you want to know. It won't help much
with your worry, you know, about civilization ending and stuff.
Huh? . . . Oh my god. Oh my god. . . . It's a penis
thing, isn't it?
No.
Yes, it is. It's some gross boy/locker-room sausage
joke, isn't it? Sausage link? Oh. You are so ... Oh.
No, it's not.
Is so.
Is not. He's the product of this government
experiment.
What?
His family's like really old and meg rich? So they got
this . . . you know ...
What?
He was cloned from the bloodstains found on Lucy Todd
Lincoln's opera cloak.
There was a long silence.
Then Violet was like, Mary.
Yeah. Mary, then. Mary Todd Lincoln.
There was another silence. I sat there, waiting.
She was like, So he's the genetic clone of Abraham
Lincoln.
Yeah.
Abraham Lincoln.
That's what I said.
Tell me what he's doing now.
Eh . .. the limbo. With the coaxial cable.
I thought so.
Except, he's bending forward instead of backward, so
it isn't as hard.
This is extremely grim.
How about over there at your house?
Let me recover.
What's doing at Violet's place?
Dad's off at work. Mom's just a mom-shaped hole in the
front door. I'm eating cereal, putting on my stockings, and reading ancient
Mayan spells.
You know Mayan?
They're not in Mayan.
They're in Spanish. The feed's translating them into English. I'm reading a
spell to preserve dying cultures.
Uh-huh.
Written sometime before their empire fell, I guess.
"Spirit of the sky, spirit of the earth, grant us descendants for as long
as the sun moves, for as long as there is dawn. Grant us green roads; grant us
many green paths. May the people be peaceful, very peaceful, and let them not
fall; let them not be wounded. Let there be no disgrace, no captivity. O thou
Shrouded Glory, Lightning Lord,
Lord Jaguar, Mount of Fire, Womb of Heaven, Womb of Earth. Let our people always
have days, always have dawns." Then it goes, "O King
One-Leg, Giver of Green."
King One-Leg.
Amen, brother.
Link and Marty are doing a lasso with the coaxial
cable. Yeah?
Calista is combing her hair. And she keeps jolting
each time she scrapes the edge
of the lesion.
Thank goodness for home-schooling.
There's a party on Friday night. You want to come?
Do they hate me?
They don't hate you. Quendy just told me she thought you were nice.
You were talking with her about me.
Don't worry.
I won't. They hate me, don't they?
They think you're like meg cuddly.
Okay. I want to live a little.
Exactly.
I'll come.
Brag.
Will you get me?
Sure.
What time is it right now? Do you have to go?
Yeah. It's time for announcements.
I make my own announcements. Into the garbage can, so
it echoes.
Lonely.
I tell myself to come to the office.
Yeah.
Then I pace in circles, waiting for me to show up. I
wait and I wait, you know. I wait and I wait in the office, she said, but me never comes.
o o o
...
this month's 20 Hot Sex Tips for Girls.
Hey!
You wanna leave your boyf with his
head spinning?
Then check out what Lucia, our Lady o' Love, has
to say about these chicks and their sich in the sack!
Natalie
from New Jersey messages us, "My guy sez,
'No nookie at parties!' But I feel that in order to
do our duty to the party, we gotta—"
o o o
"
.. which is why I ask it. Consider: The United States
has been instrumental in the overthrow of truly
genocidal dictatorships. We dole out billions of
dollars
each year in foreign aid. We support failing
economies.
We give harbor to many who seek our shores. We are
trying to do what is right. We are trying to do what
is—"
o o o
flat hope
On Friday, I went and picked up Violet at her house
for the party. I hoped that the party would cheer her up.
I was used to the route, now, and I liked seeing all
the stuff I passed, the antennas and chutes and vents, and my feed told me
their names as I looked at them—Charming Lawn Observation Tower; Riverdale
Exhaust Hood; Institute for the Study
of Psychoeconomy; Bridgeton Playland and Compulsion Center—and after a while, I knew them by
sight, and with each one, I could feel like I was getting closer to Violet, which
was like a present which I didn't know what was inside of.
While we flew to the party, she told me about weird
things she'd read on the feed, while she was resisting it or whatev. She told
me about the scales on butterflies, and the way animals lived in ducts,
sometimes whole herds. People would hear the stampeding through their walls.
There were new kinds of fungus, she said, that were making jungles where the
cables ran. There were slugs so big a toddler could ride them sidesaddle.
"The natural world is so adaptable," she said. "So adaptable you
wonder what's natural."
When we got there, people were drinking already and it
looked pretty fun. Someone was being a DJ and broadcasting tracks on the feed,
so we tuned in, because otherwise you just hear the shuffling while people are
moving around with no music on the floor. I have a pretty good auditory-nerve
hookup with my feed, so the sound is real spink, and it's good to move to. So
we got some drinks and drank them, and said hi to people, and then the feed was
going, it was doing this song, I got
some feet, and those feet, they're gonna walk. Walk, feet, you walk, the ten
toes, I walk with the feet, that one, and so we danced to it. It's a kind
of low-hips dance, with the draggy elbows, and we did it, it's good for that.
It was all going pretty good until Quendy arrived.
When she got there, it was like—silence . . . wwwwwwwwww (wind) ... wwwwwwww ... ping (pin dropping)—because
her whole skin was cut up with these artificial lesions. We were all just looking
at her. They were all over her.
She raised her arms. The cuts were like eyes. They got
bigger and redder when she moved. "Do you like them?" she said,
laughing. "I got it yesterday."
"You're," said Marty, "you're covered
with cuts."
"They're not 'cuts,'" she said, smiling like
he was an idiot. "First of all, it's the big spit. And second, for your
info, it's called 'birching,' and they're lenticels."
Marty and Link were chatting me and each other.
Unit.
Unit.
Whoa, unit.
Violet had her face in her hands.
People were starting to dance again.
I could tell Calista and Loga were chatting up a
storm. People were dancing, and the feed was going, I walk these itty-bitty
steps. Away from you. Just itty-bitty steps. I walk away. Quendy
went over to the table with the drinks and poured herself some vodka and Tang.
Some other girls were over talking to her.
Violet was standing next to me, like, I can't
believe she did it.
I went, It's all for Link. I guess she wanted to
outdo Calista.
Can you even think how much that cost?
I don't know.
Each one of those incisions has to be capped off in
plastic.
Yeah. It was probably pretty pricey.
It's the end. It's the end of the civilization. We're
going down.
No, it's sure not too attractive. Lenticels.
I just hope my kids don't live to see the last days.
The things burning and people living in cellars.
Violet.
The only thing worse than the thought it may all come tumbling down is the
thought that we may go on like this forever.
I looked at her. She wasn't joking. Her face was full
of lines.
Violet, I
said. I took her hands. I had an idea, and I was like, Let me show you
something.
She didn't say or chat anything. We went away from all
the people, up the stairs. The bedroom doors were closed. I took her up past
the bedrooms, to the attic. I pulled down the attic, like, the pull, and this
ladder folded out. I went up, and willed the light, but there wasn't any
feedlink to the light. The light was worked by a string. You pulled it
sometimes, and the light went on.
There was all kinds of old shit up there. She came up
behind me. When we walked, our footsteps, they were clunky. The boards felt
old.
We used to come up here, I said. We played sardines in the closet. You got
to hide, and then everyone looks for you, and when they find you, they
hide with you. This was this meg good place, because only Link's best friends,
we were the only ones that knew about it. We would be up here, all together,
and people who weren't his good friends, they'd be walking around
downstairs, and we could hear them, and we'd be laughing our asses off.
I used to, when I was hiding here, I kept thinking of when I was littler,
you know, younger, before I was good friends with Link. I kept thinking of the
time when you're all racing around, and you pass people in the halls, like in
cartoons where people go in one door and come out another one. And you're like
passing them all and looking in all the laundry places and shit, and
it's a big game, and people keep giggling, and then you don't see them again.
Then you're walking
around alone. You know, there's this weird moment where you realize that
you're alone, and no one else has been walking for a while. You realize
that the moment, the exact moment, when you became alone is already over.
You'\e been that way for a while. So you're walking around this empty house,
and all the towels are folded up, and the soap is still wet on
the soap dish. That's the creepy thing.
She sat down on an old thing.
I kept going. I was like, You're walking, and
everything's empty, but the weirdest thing is that it's not empty at all. The
weirdest thing is that you know that you're more alone than anyone, but that
more people are thinking about you than ever before. They're all just there,
holding their breath, following your, like your every move through the house, listening to your footsteps and the doors opening and closing. So you're more alone, but more watched.
It can just go on and on for hours,
you walking around, walking on
the carpeting, picking up stuff
and looking at it, alone, but thought about, until Link gets tired of
it, and says the game is over.
That's exactly it, she chatted.
I didn't know what she meant, but I nodded.
She rubbed her eyes with her palms. I watched her. She
stood up and brushed off the butt of her skirt.
She looked around, lifting things up. What is this
junk?
Old shit, I
said. All this old shit.
I walked over to one wall. There are some old
pictures. I lifted them away from the inside of the roof. Paintings.
She came to my side. Whoa.
We looked at them. Ships at sea. Old-time faces,
painted without smiles or anything, dressed in black, holding pieces of paper
or big books. Link's dead relatives from long ago. They had old-time names,
ones from the past: Abram. Jubilee. Noah. Ezekial. Hope.
Jubilee was frowning. Ezekial was covered with
pock-marks.
Hope was this fat old woman with a little dog.
Hope was looking off to the side, as if someone she
missed was calling her name.
our duty
to the
party
On the way down, we passed the bedrooms again. The
party had picked up. The doors were open now, and on some beds, there were
people making out, and on some others, people were in mal, their legs and arms
all twitching and their heads rocking back and forth, and someone was puking in
a roll-top desk and trying to roll the top down to hide it. Someone's arm was
coming out from under a bed, moving like they were conducting a symphony
orchestra. Violet walked closer to me, and I put my arm around her, but her
shoulders weren't soft, like she didn't want to be touched, and we got to the
landing, and heard some kind of smacking down below, and people cheering.
When we went downstairs, they were all playing
spin-the-bottle like little kids, stretched out on the floor, swinging their
legs. Violet's back was kind of sagging as she walked down the stairs in front
of me. I was feeling kind of strange, like, I can't really explain it, like as
if hypodermics were in the air again, but thrown all ways and still traveling.
Link said, "Hey, take yourselves a seat and play
It's fun."
"It's for kids," said Loga, "but it's
kind of sexy?"
Calista was like, "Omigod, it's so uncomfortable
sitting on the floor with my lesion. This is so wholly stupid."
Quendy said, "I've only spun once, but I think I
did kind of good." She shifted on the floor. Marty's eyes were like meg
riveted on her ass, and also on her shoulder blades, where you could see all
the red fibers through the splits in the skin. They were shifting as she and
this meathead named Ches Something kissed for a turn.
Violet and I sat down. I didn't need to chat her to
tell she didn't want to play. We weren't next, which was good, but I really
didn't want her to get spun to, because I thought she might get really pissed
by the stupidity of the whole game. I was sitting cross-legged, and I put my
fist in my cheek and just sat there, telling the bottle with my eyes to keep on
going while it spun.
Quendy spun, and got Link, and I was like, Oh,
shit, bad news. She was really glad. She went over to him, while everyone
did this big whoop, and he started to kiss her on the cheek, really just
friendly, but she put her palm against his cheek and turned his head so she was
kissing him on the mouth, and then put her arms around him. Everyone was
completely silent, like Omigod, and they kept on kissing, with Link kind
of trying to pull back, but being afraid to push too hard, with her cuts
everywhere, and Calista staring at them both with this big-hair hatred in her
eyes.
Link like tripped and stumbled backward and sat back
down next to Calista. Everyone was really uncomfortable, except Marty.
Hey, chatted
Marty to the guys, don't you think Quendy looks good?
Link was like, Just shut up and play.
I was like, I think it looks stupid.
It's a good look, Marty chatted, and kind of fun.
I was disgusted, like, Huh? You can see her like
muscles and tendons and ligaments and stuff through the lesions.
Yeah, said
Marty, which makes you kind of
think about what's inside, huh? Which
is sexy.
"You must be chatting about how Quendy looks
really sexy," said Calista. It was like she was going to start something
mean.
"Yeah," said Marty. "We were . . . just
saying that the lesions look good."
"Oh," said Quendy. "You like the
lesions?"
Link said, "Can we just play?"
"Well, I think they're a lot of fun,"
Calista said, as if she didn't mean it but meant the opposite.
Link spun again, and while he kissed this other girl,
really hardly at all, Calista was still talking to Quendy, saying, in this
really mean voice, "And don't let anyone tell you you look stupid."
"Nothing's stupid," said Marty.
"That's right, Quendy," said Calista,
"because seeing what's inside of you, all your guts, is just so
sexy."
"Calista," said Quendy, trying to stop her,
"we're just having fun."
"That's good," said Calista.
The guy Ches Something spun and got Loga. He walked
over to her and said, "Time to play."
"Quendy, you know what's fun about your
lesions?"
Loga and the Ches guy started kissing, hard. They were playing up their kiss, maybe to
like take attention away from
the meanness Calista was having. Loga's kinds
were in Ches's hair, smearing through the hair, her fingers wet with gel.
Calista said, "About your lesions? What's fun is
watching a girl who's so desperate for someone's boyfriend that she does
something to herself which is really stupid."
There was a quiet part. Then Marty said, "Okay—
just—let's—okay—let's—fuckin'—fuckin'—just let's play."
He spun the bottle, and it turned, with the neck flashing,
and suddenly I could hear Quendy crying, and then I saw the bottle land on
Violet. Marty got up and straightened his pants and walked over.
"Hey, there, sexy," he said. "Let's
make this good."
He reached out his hand toward her. She flinched
backward. He put his hand on the top of her head.
I said, "This isn't much fun."
"We'll show you fun," said Marty, winking.
"Stop it," said Violet, standing up.
"Stop it all."
"What's wrong?" said Marty. He held out his
hand toward her wrist. He took her wrist in his hand.
Violet was completely white. She was shaking. Her
head, I mean, it was bobbing. She suddenly was yelling, "Can I tell you
what I see? Can I tell you? We are hovering in the air while people are
starving. This is obvious! Obvious! We're playing games, and our skin is
falling off. We're losing it, and we're making out. And you're talking—you're
starting to talk in a fucking sestina! Okay? A sestina! Okay? Stop it! Fuck
you! We've got to all stop it!" She was screaming.
People were staring and chatting, and they weren't
chatting with me, except Link, who gave me a single, What's doing with this?
Fix it, before cutting me off.
Violet was screaming, "Look at us! You don't
have the feed! You are feed! You're feed! You're being eaten! You're raised for
food! Look at what you've made
yourselves!" She pointed at
Quendy, and went, "She's a monster! A monster! Covered with cuts! She's
a creature!"
And now I was going, "Violet—Don't. Violet! She's
not a—she's not a goddamn monster. She's—" but Violet screeched, "You
tool Fuck you too!"—and she tried to slap me—I grabbed her by the
arm—and she tried to scratch at my face, but her hand wasn't working.
She had broken somehow, and she was broken, and, oh
fuck, she was sagging and I grabbed her to help her, and she was shaking, and
her eyes were all white and rolling around, and she couldn't talk anymore—
—she was choking—
I grabbed her and tried to wrap my arms around her.
There was a long line of spit coming out of her mouth. Her legs were pumping up
and down. She was broken. She was completely broken.
I was crying and saying to call an ambulance, and
people were like, Fuck no, is she
in mal? If she's in mal, no way, we'll
get in trouble, and I was like, Call a fucking ambulance, and I
tried to do it on my feed, but things were too screwed up, and I could feel the
signals going out, and she was breathing again, but she'd gone limp, and I lowered
her to the ground, and I put her there, and Quendy was still yelling,
"Fuck you!" at her body. "Fuck you!" And Violet was
breathing now in heavy, big gasps, but her eyes were closed, and I was leaning
next to her asleep body, and squeezing, and squeezing, and squeezing.
I don't know what the others did. There were noises,
and women came.
I went with them. And the feed whispered to me about
sales, and made all these suggestions about medical lawyers and malpractice,
and something happened, and I
was sitting beside her in an ambulance, and suddenly I realized, The party
is over.
The fucking party is over.
Part 4
slumberland
52.9%
The waiting room was white. There were these orbs moving
back and forth filled with fluids. They went up and down the halls.
"There will be some delays," said one of the
nurses.
She touched her face with her hand. Her pinkie was
sticking out. She pressed on her cheek, like she had a toothache.
She said, "Expect a delay."
"Let me tell you a little story," said a
woman on a chair next to me.
"He's distressed," said the nurse. She fixed
her hair, which was this hair held together with two magic wands. "Breathe
deep," the nurse told me. "She's pretty functional."
"What?" I said. "What do you
mean?"
"The doctor will talk to you."
"There was this one time," said the woman on
the chair.
"When is the doctor coming?" I asked.
"He's here."
"Where?"
"In the room with her."
"But when's he like coming out?"
She sighed. "You might want to rest your
eyes."
I paced on the floor. The feed was handing me things.
I listened to it, and I paced around, following the pattern of the tiles on the
floor.
... the poor sales of the Ford Laputa in the Latin
American market can't be explained by . . .
. .. craziest prime-time comedy yet. What happens when
two normal guys and two normal girls meet in their favorite health-food
restaurant? Lots of Abnormal laughs, served with sprouts on the side, is what!
I paced there. I went around all the chairs. I did
them slalom. Men locked into giant wheels with their arms and legs spread out
were being wheeled past down the hall. People in smocks hit them on the rim to
keep them rolling. The wheels rolled by. The people in smocks were whistling.
The men in the wheels stared out, their mouths open, their eyes looking at
everything flashing by, but the men were not moving at all. Just looking at the
world helpless, in circles, the world going by.
87.3%
Violet's father got there half an hour after I did. I
saw him running past me. I didn't wave or anything, because I didn't want to
get in the way or be a pain in the butt. People, sometimes, they need to be
alone. He went past me and didn't see who I was. That was okay with me. They
took him into the room. I waited.
I clapped my hands together softly a bunch of times. I
swung my arms at my sides and then clapped. I realized that they were swinging
really wide. People were looking up at me. I stopped. I couldn't help a small
clap, one last one.
He came out. He was walking real slow. He sat down.
I didn't know whether to talk to him. He was smoothing
out the knees of his tribe-suit.
I went over. I said hello, and introduced myself
again.
He said, "Oh, yes. Hello. Thank you for . .
." He was just like, nodding.
"Is she okay?" I asked.
"Yes," he said. "Yes. 'Okay.' Yes,
she's 'okay.'"
He didn't seem much like before.
I was like, "What's happening?"
"They're fixing the malfunction. For the time
being. The doctor's coming out." His eyes were orange with the light from
his feed glasses.
The orbs went past. We waited. Two nurses were talking
about the weekend. There was nothing I wanted to watch on the feed. It made me
feel tired.
"Can you stop?" said her father to me.
I realized I'd like been clapping again.
"I hate rhythms," he said.
I put my hands down. I stood still, in front of him.
He said, "You can monitor her feed
function." He sent me an address. "Go there," he said. "If
things neural were going swimmingly with Vi, the number you detect would be
about ninety-eight percent."
I went there. It was some kind of medical site. It
said Violet Durn, Feed Efficiency: 87.3%. He stared at me. I stared at
him. We were like, just, there. The efficiency went up to 87.4%. He turned his
head. Someone was whistling two notes in the hallway.
Violet was not a bitch. She didn't mean those things.
It was because of the damage. It was making her not herself. I told myself
that again and again.
But it didn't matter if she was right or wrong about
what she said. It was the fact she said it, especially to Quendy calling her a
monster, screaming like one of those girls in black at school, the ones who sat
on the floor in the basement and talked about the earth, the ones who got rivets
through their eyes just to make people think they were hard. I wanted Violet to
be uninsane again, just a person who would touch my face.
"She's awake," said a nurse. "Please
come in."
She wanted him. Not me. I just stood there. He turned
around and went in.
After a while, he came out and sat down again.
The nurse said, "Now you."
I followed her in.
Violet was sitting in a floating chair with lots of
cables. Some of them went to her head.
When I came in, she looked away from me.
"I'm sorry," she said.
We stood that way for a little while. She was dressed
in just a gown again. Like when we were getting to know each other, back on the
moon.
She said, "I said I'm sorry."
I didn't want to piss her off, so I figured what she
wanted me to say, and I said, "I'm just . . . I'm worrying about
you."
She shrugged. I watched her. I didn't know how close
she was to the person who had gone completely fugue at the party.
I asked, "How did they say you are?"
"Fine," she said. "For a little
while." She held on to her kneecap. She moved it back and forth.
"How long?" I asked.
She didn't answer.
I said, "You don't have to say."
"Not long."
She looked up at me. She was almost crying.
She was like, I can't even say everything I need to
say.
Don't be—don't—it's
all going to be good.
She rubbed her eye. Why are you standing so far
away?
I was like, You're covered with cables.
She was like, Oh. Yeah. Yeah.
We were just like standing there for a minute. Well,
she was sitting, but I was standing. I looked up at her. She was moving her
kneecap again. I patted myself on my hips. It was like, Tip-tip-a-tip-tip.
Tip tap.
She went, It's funny that you can move your kneecap
all around with your fingers, but you couldn't move it with your muscles if you
tried.
One of the orbs came in and started to circle around
her.
I said I had to go.
She said she'd see me later.
I said my upcar was back at Link's. I'd forgot.
She said I should go and get it.
I said I hoped she was okay.
She said she was pretty okay. She'd chat me later. Was
that okay? Could she chat me?
I was like, Oh, sure. Sure.
No. Really?
Sure. Yeah. On the chat.
I nodded. Finally I waved, kind of pathetic, and I
went out. The orb was in front of her face. I couldn't see what she looked
like. I went out into the hall.
Later, my mom came and picked me up, and we went and
got my upcar. The others weren't there at Link's house anymore. Link was in the
back, by his pool. He waved, and yelled over to me, "She okay?" I
chatted him yes, and he chatted me that that was good, and I got in my upcar
and flew home behind my mom.
We had bean cubes and fish sticks for dinner. I had a
couple of helpings. There was still time to do my homework, but I watched the
feed instead. Some cops found a bunch of rods in a warehouse and were trying to
figure out what they were. Durgin, the star of the show, said they belonged to
a pimp. His assistant had a run in her stockings. She bent down to fix it.
Later I went to bed. I couldn't get to sleep. My parents had turned off the sun
hours before. The light outside the blinds was just gray.
Finally, I guess I must have fell sleep. At least, I
dreamed, and there were beads of water going along some string, and Violet
said, "How many do you need before you're done?" and I said,
"These are yours, first," and she said, "How many do you
need?" and I said, "You know. You completely know," and she
said, "That's why I want to hear it from your mouth."
87.1%
The next day, I was at her house. It was all weird. We
didn't talk. I don't know why. We didn't open our mouths. We just sat there,
silent, chatting.
It's not you, I argued. It's the feed thing.
You're not like that.
Maybe I am like that. Maybe that's what's wrong.
She rubbed her hands together. I'm sorry. Please.
Tell Quendy I'm sorry.
Her father was walking down the stairs near us. We
could hear him through the wall.
She chatted, I lost a year of my memories.
I didn't understand, first. What?
I lost a year. During the seizure. I can't remember anything from the year before I
got the feed. When I was six. The information is just gone. There's nothing
there.
She was pressing her palms into her thighs as hard as
she could. She watched herself real careful like it was a crafts project. She
went, Nothing. No smells. No talking. No pictures. For a whole year. All gone.
I just looked at her face. There were lines on it I
hadn't seen before. She looked sick, like her mouth would taste like the
hospital. She saw me looking at her.
She was like, Don't worry, Titus. We're still
together. No matter what, we'll still be together.
Oh, I went. Yeah.
She reached out and rubbed my hand. I'll remember
you. I'll hold on to you.
Oh, I
chatted. Okay.
She went, God, there's so much I need to do. Oh my
god. You can't even know. I want to go out right now and start. I want to
dance. You know? That's this dumbass thing, because it's so cliché, but that's
what I see myself doing. I want to dance with like a whole lacrosse team, maybe
with them holding me up on a Formica tabletop. I can't even tell you. I
want to do the things that show you're alive. I want to eat huge meals
with wine. I want to go to the zoo with you.
Zoos suck, I
said. All the animals just sit there and play with their toes.
I want to go on rides. The flume, the teacups, the
Tilt-a-Whirl? You know, a big bunch of us on the teacups, with you and me
crushed together from the centrifugal force.
I wasn't really wanting to think about us crushed
together right then, or about us in a big group, where she might go insane
again, so I just looked like, Yeah. The teacups!
And she was still saying, I want to see things
grazing through field glasses. I want to go someplace now. I want to get the
hell out of here and visit some Mayan
temples. I want you to take my picture
next to the sacrificial stone. You know ? I want to run down to the beach, I mean, a beach where you can go in the
water. I want to have a splashing fight.
I just sat there. Her father was working on something
in the basement. It sounded like he had some power tools. Maybe he was
drilling, or like, cutting or boring.
She went, They're all sitcom openers.
What?
Everything I think of when I think of really living,
living to the full—all my ideas
are just the opening credits of sitcoms. See what I mean? My idea of life,
it's what happens when they're rolling the credits. My god. What am I, without
the feed? It's all from the feed credits. My idea of real life. You know?
Oh, you and I share a snow cone at the park. Oh, funny, it's dribbling down
your chin. I wipe it off with my elbow. "Also starring Lurna Ginty as
Violet." Oh, happy day! Now we go jump in the fountain! We come out of the
tunnel of love! We run through the merry-go-round. You're checking the park
with a metal detector! I'm checking the park with a Geiger counter! We wave to
the camera!
Except the Mayan ruin.
What about it?
There aren't, I
like pointed out, there aren't the sacrificial stones. In sitcoms.
No, she
said. That's right. Chalk one up for the home team.
We sat. She fixed her hair with her hand.
I asked her, What did it feel like? At the party?
She waited. Then, she admitted, It felt good.
Really good, just to scream finally. I felt like I was singing a hit single.
But in Hell.
87.1%
Later, before I left, I watched Violet and her father
petition FeedTech for free repairs. Violet's dad couldn't pay for all the
tests and shit himself. None of it was covered by medical, because the feed
wasn't medical.
They sent a message to FeedTech explaining what happened.
I sat there while they spoke it together. It was all about how she had lost her
memory, and how sometimes she couldn't move parts of her, and about how she had
gone completely fugue-state. They asked FeedTech to take on payments for
research and repairs. They said that FeedTech had to, because it was about the
life of a girl.
Her feed's warranty had expired years ago.
"We will present this petition to several
corporate sponsors," said Violets dad. "If you do not acquiesce,
others will. We will find someone who will support this repair. We will take
our business elsewhere."
"Please," said Violet. "We need your
financial assistance."
"If you want us as customers," said her
father.
They sent the message. After that, we didn't say much.
86.5%
Quendy and I talked the next day. We were sitting on
big cubes, they were made of concrete. We sat side by side.
I was like, "She's really sorry."
Quendy nodded. She still had the lesions all over her.
When she moved her head, I could see a lesion on her neck open and close like a
fish mouth singing a country song.
Quendy said, "I was like ... I can't go out in
public anymore. At first, I was so living eternally in a tool shed. But Loga
was like really, really good? She was sitting with me that night. We went back
and sat around at my house. She was like, Da da da, she was completely in
mal, don't listen to her, da da da, she's a complete fuguing bitch."
"She's—but she's not—"
"I know. That was just what I like needed to hear
then."
"She feels real bad."
"I know. It wasn't her."
I didn't say anything. I just nodded. Quendy brushed
her hair back out of her face. I rubbed the corner of the concrete with my
thumb.
Quendy asked, "She okay?"
I shook my head. "She's scared. They say that
it's . . . The feed isn't working well with her brain anymore."
"Omigod." She looked at me. "What does
that mean?"
"I don't know. The whole brain is tied in to the
feed. The whole brain, like the memory and the part that makes you move and the
part for your emotions."
"The limbic system."
"I don't know."
"I just looked it
up."
"Okay."
"There's a diagram." She sent me the site.
"Okay." I sat there.
"Maybe you should check it out," she said, a
little angry "It'll help you understand what's happening to her."
I pulled up my leg and untied and tied my shoe.
"Don't you want to know?"
I said, "I guess not."
"You know," said Quendy, "this isn't
re: the world serving you some meg three-course dump banquet. It isn't re: the
world serving me some dump banquet. She's the one who this is happening to. I
don't know what you're saying to her? But I hope you aren't sulking weirdly."
She looked over at me. I just sat there.
She added, "Making her feel low-grade."
She put her hand on my leg.
"Hey," she said. "Hey."
Through the holes in her hand, the blood in her veins
was blue.
52.0%
When I woke up the next morning, there was a message
from Violet waiting in my cache.
It's three-fifteen in the morning, she said. I haven't heard anything from FeedTech.
I'm lying here. You're probably sound asleep right now. I like to picture you
asleep. You have beautiful lips.
My mom never had the feed. She didn't get it installed
when she was little. Her parents said they were going to wait until she was old
enough to understand and make her own decision about it, like Catholic
confirmation. She decided not to have the feed installed. She called it
"the brain mole."
My father's family didn't have the money to buy feeds
for my dad and my uncle. The feeds were newer then, and they were more expensive. They were advertised with these silver see-through
heads with the chip inside them. The heads would be spinning around at the
mall, with the mouths of the heads calling your name.
My mom and dad both went through college without the
feed. I guess it was really hard. They couldn't remember things the way
everyone else could, or see the models that were in the air, you know, of chromosomes or stamens. But they both
went on to grad school. That's where they met.
I always thought
it was strange that they decided to have a kid at a conceptionarium. I guess
they really wanted to have me freestyle. They talked about it a lot. Well, I
mean, they'd only been going out for a few months, but, you know, a lot for
that. Anyway, the ambient radiation was already too bad by then for freestyle.
So they went test-tube.
I think my first memory of my mom is her carrying me on her shoulders through the
mall. She would constantly be whispering jokes to me, little jokes between the
two of us. She especially made fun of plastic. She'd say, "They're all
wearing oil. All their clothes. They don't have anything on but oil." I
would whisper back to her, "They're wearing dinosaurs. Dead dinosaurs
drippy all over them." She would whisper, "Trilobites." I would
whisper, "Old plants." She would whisper, "It's the height of
fashion." And I would say, "Missus— missus lady—those are
some nice old plankton."
For an hour and a half today, I couldn't move my leg.
My toes were clenched. My knee was all locked up. I didn't chat you. I didn't
want to worry you. You don't talk much now. I went to a technician. By the time
I waited, the leg started to work again. My dad was there with me. He's not
doing very well. I can't feel anything wrong with the leg now. I'm lying here
in bed, lifting it up and down. It seems fine. Except it's kind of cramped from
the clenching.
I'm looking up at my leg. I'm moving my toes,
squelching them. That's a great feeling, squelching, like in mud. Do you know,
mud? When it's in your yard? And you know the day's going to get hot again when
the rain's over, because that's what the neighborhood association has decided?
So you can just stand there, and wait for the sun?
And it's your one time on Earth, I mean, your hundred
years, that's all you have, so there you are, on Earth, a little kid, the one time you'll be a little kid,
and you're standing, waiting for the artificial sun, and feeling the mud, and
at that point, your toes still work perfectly. So you stand there, and you
squelch your toes, and you raise your arms up above your head, and you watch
the clouds get sucked back into ducts in the sky. And that's it. That's an
afternoon.
That's all.
I hope you're okay this morning, too.
82.4%
I didn't listen to all of it immediately. I was lying
there in bed. I saw that it was going to be long, and I stopped after a few
sentences. There was a smell like the hospital. It was like sickness. At first,
I thought it was an attachment, but it wasn't. It was coming from my nose. I
got up and took my shower, and I got dressed and went downstairs and had one of
my dad's Granola Squeezes, and went out to my upcar and started to drive to
School™.
I listened to the rest while the upcar drove me.
When the upcar settled in the School™ parking lot, I
kept staring out the front window. I didn't want to get out. Kids were running
everywhere and pushing each other. Their backpacks were all sparkly in the sun.
I could still smell the hospital in my nose. It wasn't
anything around me. It was her. I stopped breathing, but the smell was still
there. I held my breath.
I stared out the window at the School™. Everyone went
in through the doors. The leaves on the trees turned red to show I was late. My
hand was still on the lift shift. I just left it there, in some weird kind of
trance, as if I was waiting there for the right moment to pull back, drop
anchor, and fall upward into the sky.
80.9%
Definitive
list of things I want to do:
78.6%
I was staring at a girl's
sweater. I couldn't like focus on the teacher. The teacher was a hologram that
day. There had been some funding cuts. The school band was gone, and so were
the alive teachers.
I didn't send a message
back to Violet. I didn't even listen to her list all the way through the first
time. I skimmed it. I fast-forwarded it. Then, like each hour or so, I'd go
back, and I'd listen to one part of it.
When I got to the end, that
was it.
I stared at the back of the
girl in front of me.
With a hologram, like when
your teacher is one of them, if you aren't looking right at them, they
sometimes seem to be hollow. You see them and suddenly they don't have a face
that pokes out. Their face pokes in, their nose and so on, and there is nothing
inside them.
If you don't look right at
them, they can look just like an empty shell.
77.8%
Hey, she chatted. What's doing? I wish I was with you
today. I always wish I was with you. . . . Oh, did you get my list?
Titus? ... Titus?
76.3%
After School™ that day I
went over to Link's with Marty and Link. We were sitting outside near the pool.
Link asked me about Violet, and how she was doing. I said I guessed she was
okay. He asked me hadn't I talked to her. I said I hadn't, not for a couple of
days.
She had tried chatting me a
couple of times since she sent me the list, but I had on my busy signal.
We sat there for a while,
and Link and Marty went swimming, and we played water volleyball, which was
hard with three people. So we stood there for a minute, until I said,
"Does anyone else want to go in mal?"
They looked at me. They
were like, Unit. Marty said sure, and Link said he had a tip for this
great new site.
They went, "You
sure?"
I was like, "What I
say?"
They nodded.
We got out of the pool and
dried off with towels. We went inside. We found the site. It had these meg-ass
warnings all over it, it was Swedish. We all clicked on it and we could feel it
tap our credit, and then suddenly it hit me all at once. It was colored bricks,
first, and I fell down because they were coming too quick. Then I could start
to see the bottom of the sofa. Link was crawling, and his face was taken up by
it. It kept coming in wave after wave. The floor was steep. I held on to the
lamp but it dumped me.
The static was covering
everything and so when we went somewhere, I couldn't even see where we were
going. I just watched the others. From the static, I could see their mouths
talking. Violet asked me what was going on with me. I tried sitting up and
answering but she wasn't in the room. That was funny and I laughed.
Marty thought I was
laughing at something else, so he got started, too, and pretty soon we were all
laughing, and so everybody at the ice-cream store was looking at us. We'd just
bought a tub and I was like, If I eat this I'm going to puke, and Marty
went, Unit, how the fuck did we get to an ice-cream store anyway? and I
was like, Whoa, unit, shit, I hope you didn't drive. Some parents were
moving their kids away from us, and Link went to them, "Boo! Okay?
BOO!" He spread his hands. There was light coming from his fingers. I
pointed and said, "Light." Marty said, "Bright." Link said,
"Sight." Marty said, "Night." I said, "Kite."
Link said, "Have you ever thought about how a kite is held up by
nothing?" Marty said it wasn't nothing, fuckhead, it was air. Like, air.
Like, as in fuckin' air. Air.
We went out into the main
part of the mall and went into a music store but it was really really really
loud, so we went out? And we went down to a clothes store, and sat in the
dressing room for a while. It was quiet there, except the banging on the door
and asking us to leave. I showed Marty and Link the message from Violet with
the list, the things she wanted to do before she died, and they read it, and
Marty said, Fuck, unit, fuck, and Link said, Whoa, that's intense,
she's one weird bitch. I said she wasn't a bitch and he said that that's
not what he meant, that's just what he said. Marty asked me why I wasn't
talking to her, and I said I was talking to her, I just hadn't. He said that
message was so fuckin' sad it made him want to like fuckin', you know, bawl his
eyes out, and I said, Do you think she's being mean to me? In telling me
about that part with me standing by her bed? They said, Mean how? And there
kept on being this stupid banging on the door, which woke me up several times
in one minute. I was curled up in this ball, like doing a cannon-ball, but on
carpeting, with my arms wrapped around my leg. There were some pants hanging on
one of the hooks. We checked a few times, but we all had our pants on, so they
must have belonged to the lady who left just before we came in. We thought it
was funny that she hadn't come back for them, and we laughed about that. It was
good to be with friends. Violet asked me again what was going on, and I told
her to shut the fuck up, but luckily, I told her that out loud, and she wasn't
there, but chatting.
We got up and opened the
door, and there was this kid dressed in perfect clothes, like, with doughnut
rings on his arms, and he asked us would we please leave as we appeared to be
under the influence.
We went out and sat near
the fountain, watching the water, which was interesting, because your vision
slowed it down so much that you could see each individual droplet, which was
fascinating, each one of them, falling down, and making a ring in the water,
and that ring spreading with all of its tentacles reaching up and then dropping
back, and then the water rocking. Violet asked me what I was doing, was I out
of School™ yet.
Unit, I said. I'm way out of School™.
She was like, How are
you? I haven't heard from you for days.
Violet, I was like, Violet. Violet. Violet.
Hey. What's up?
Violet. Violet. Violet.
Are you in mal?
I'm coming over
Hey. Yoo-hoo. Hey. Stop.
I can't remember if my upcar's here.
Don't fly like this. You're slammed. Have you heard
about this Central American stuff? Two villages on the Gulf of Mexico, fifteen hundred
people—they've just been found dead, covered in this black stuff.
"Gentlemen," I
said to the other two. "I got to go."
Have you heard about it? This is big. It seems like an
industrial disaster. The Global Alliance is blaming the U.S.
"I am hoping, sirs,
that we brought separate vehicles for..." I said. "Things.
Vehicles."
Don't fly right now, she said. Don't fly.
You're meg jazzed.
No, I'm not.
You're spewing a substream of junk characters all over
the place. You're completely unformatted. What are you doing? Why did you do this? Just stay there.
I'm at the mall. In mal. At the mall. In mal. At the
mall.
Oh. Oh, god. Don't do anything. Wait for it to wear
down.
I'm coming to see you. I feel. I feel bad.
You are such a shithead. You don't know what happened to me this morning. And the news. Titus—this morning... I can't believe in the middle of all
this, you went and got malfunctioned. You
are such an asshole and a shithead.
"On level three,"
said Marty, who I discovered was still sitting
in front of me. "Of the parking lot. Next to mine. You okay to drive?"
"I'll do it
autopilot," I said.
"You sure?"
I said, "The horse
knows the way to carry the sleigh, through the ..." I scratched my hair.
Marty nodded. Link started
singing "Ho, Ho, Elflings, Santa's on His Way," which was the
completely wrong song.
I went up to the parking
lot. I looked for level three. The in mal was starting to wear off a little. It
was mainly just euphoria now. I found my upcar next to Marty's. Marty's upcar
was kind of touched and wrinkled by a pillar.
I flew. Once I got up the
droptube, I put the upcar in autopilot. I was almost asleep. I dreamed about
sweater vests, mainly. Spreadable cheese! But with a difference!
... after the Prime Minister of the Global Alliance
issued a statement that, quote, "the physical and biological integrity of
the earth relies at this point upon the dismantling of American-based
corporate entities, whatever the cost." It is thought that the American
annexation of the moon as the fifty-first state ...
Into her droptube, and it
found its way to her level, which was on the bottom, or maybe just toward the
bottom, her suburb was.
I flew to her street. She
was waiting outside her house. She had her hair up in this really nice way. I
pulled up in her driveway and left the upcar hovering. I opened the door and
stumbled to hang out of it.
I was like,
"Unette."
"Don't go inside. My
dad will know."
"Big unsteady. Biiiiig
unsteady."
"You are such a
shithead. Okay. Get down from there. Let's spend some time on the lawn."
I climbed down. I had to
touch the grass with my heel like all these times to make sure it was still
hard. She took my hand.
"Your list," I
said. "It will just take about five days."
"What?"
"Look at your list. It
will just take about five days. I mean, for us to do everything. Well, okay,
the list before the part, you know, where you become from Fort Worth."
"Fort Wayne. Activity
twelve."
"Huh?"
"Activity twelve.
Actually being from Fort Wayne."
"Activity twelve is
out of the question."
"I'm glad you came
back. I was worried you weren't going to."
"We're going to do it
all, unette. We're going to find the mountains."
"Hey. Hey. Calm down.
Have you heard the news? It's awful."
"I think maybe if I
sleep again, we can start by going dancing. We better wait for the weekend to
go to the mountains. I have School™. You don't."
"No. I just have
mourning."
"What?"
"My father sitting
around, staring at me. He's stopped teaching me. He says he'll tell me whatever
I want to know, but that there's no reason for lessons anymore."
I felt like what she was
telling me was real important, but the trees were so green, and I could smell
the grass near my face. She told me that her father asked her what she wanted
to know, and she asked him whether there was a soul, but I just put my face
against the ground, and the dirt was cool, and the grass was tickling my nose,
and I fell asleep, and heard the news talking through my eyes.
76.2%
While I slept on her lawn,
she sent me a message. This is from earlier today, it said. The
FeedTech response. Check out the attachment.
It was a full feed-sim of
Violet's sensations. It explained a lot. It was memories from that morning. I
tried them on.
I was Violet, walking down
the stairs in her house. There was a poster next to me with a picture of an
Asian lady holding up an old machine. I was whistling some stupid bore-core
tune. I took the steps two at a time.
Suddenly, I couldn't move
my legs, I couldn't even scream, I just tried to grab on to the banister. I was
falling backward. I hit the walls with my hand as hard as possible and then my
face hit the carpet on the stair and I was sliding down on my butt. The rug on
each stair was burning the side of my face, it was like underwater.
There was no space in me
for breathing.
I lifted my head up and
dropped it. I was lying on the floor of the downstairs. It was dark because I
hadn't turned on the light. I was trying to breathe.
Trying to breathe.
That was when Nina
appeared.
I clutched at the air.
She chatted, Hi, I'm
Nina, your FeedTech customer assistance representative. Have you noticed panic
can lead to big-time underarm odor? A lot of girls do. No sweat1. Why not check out the
brag collection of perspiration-control devices at the DVS Superpharmacy
Hypersite? But that's not why I'm here, Violet.
First little breaths, then
bigger ones, then finally I could feel my face and my back hurting, and I had
my wind back. My legs were in funny places and I couldn't feel them at all.
Nina said, I'm here to
inform you that FeedTech Corp has decided to turn down your petition for
complementary feed repair and/or replacement.
"No," said
Violet/me out loud. "No, fuck you. Please. Please. No."
We have also tried to interest other corporate
investors in your case.
Violet was like, Please.
Please. I need help. We couldn't move our legs. We were lying there, and we
couldn't move them, and Nina was saying, We tried our best to interest a
variety of possible corporate sponsors, but we regret to tell you that you were
turned down.
What? Why?
We're sorry, Violet Durn. Unfortunately, FeedTech and
other investors reviewed your purchasing history, and we don't feel that you would be a reliable
investment at this time. No one could get what we call a "handle" on
your shopping habits, like for example you asking for information about all
those wow and brag products and then never buying anything. We have to inform
you that our corporate investors were like, "What's doing with this?"
Sorry—I'm afraid you'll just have to work with your feed the way it is.
Violet lay back down in the
dark, her legs starting to sting. She called out loud for her dad. She was
sobbing.
Maybe, Violet, if we check out some of the
great bargains available to you through the feednet over the next six months,
we might be able to create a consumer portrait of you that would interest our
investment team. How "bout it, Violet Durn? Just us, you and me—girls
together! Shop till you stop and drop!
Go away, Violet said in a burst over the feed. Go away.
Go—away.
Nina smiled. I've got a
galaxy of super products we can try together!
Please. I'm alone in the house and I fell down. Please
go away. Please don't help.
That's where Violet clipped
off the end of her memory when she sent it to me. Her, lying in the dark, on
the ground, in the basement, waiting for her father to come and help.
Feeling the pain in her
head. Wondering if it was just from falling, or if it was the feed rusting
somehow, as if she could feel it, rusting brown in her brain.
76.2%
When I woke up, I had a
headache. We didn't go dancing. It was already getting dark in her
neighborhood, and her father was staring out the window at her, and I felt like
a jerk, because it was pretty clear he was thinking, My daughter is spending
these last like precious hours with some malfunctioned asshole.
She was sitting next to me
on the grass. Upcars were shooting over, back and forth, people were commuting.
It was the end of the day.
She asked whether I wanted
to stay for dinner, and I was feeling bad about coming over and embarrassing
her, so I said no. The feed was trying to mop up my headache. I could feel it
doing nerve blocks. There was a message in my inbox from Sweden saying they
hoped I had enjoyed Cow-kicker, please come again. There was no way I was
trying that shit again, because it had a mean attack and a bastard of a decay.
I felt awful.
We sat on the grass.
I was like, "I didn't
mean ... I didn't know that they had sent you that. The refusal. I didn't
know."
"You didn't ask."
I kept being silent so she
could bring stuff up, if she wanted to. She didn't bring any of it up. She just
talked about music, and told me about some concerts she'd been to, a few years
before. She didn't like fun music, but sarcastic music like bore-core.
I kept waiting for
something to happen. I wanted her to do something, like grab my hand.
Her father watched us
through the window, with his lips pursed.
After a while, I started to
want her to grab my hand so much that I put it on the grass right next to her
hip. She kept talking about Diatribe on tour. It was like we weren't going out.
I felt like I wanted to bump up against her accidentally, so we'd touch. But I
wasn't going to touch her if she didn't touch me first.
We stopped talking, and she
asked if I had to go. I said I probably should, because it was a long ride to
get home. She asked if I felt better, and I said I couldn't feel anything.
I stood up and looked in
the window at her father. He was sitting with his elbows on his knees, staring
at the bottom of a garbage can. Violet walked me out to the upcar. I waited
near it for her to try to kiss me. She didn't, so I said good-bye, and crawled
in.
She looked at me, and
started to smile. She raised her hand.
I closed the door.
I lifted off.
The next day, her arms
stopped working for an hour, and she panicked and had to be given a sedative.
59.3%
That night I could feel
another message caching. It was a big one. It was huge. It started, It's
three again. I'm awake. I've been listening to requiems, and ordering more.
I've been listening to burial rites from all over the world.
Some places they dance and chant. Some places they
tear their clothes. Some places they play choirs of bamboo clarinets. Some
places they scream. In Polynesia, they wail, but the wailing is close to a
song. It's strange—once you start listening to wailing that's also singing, that's
also like a ritual, you start to wonder—how much does anyone really miss
anyone else? How much are they just crying because it's what they have to do,
the song they have to sing? Some Australian women have to fall silent when
they're grieving—it's required—and they speak for the rest of their lives only
with their hands.
Titus, I'm afraid of silence. I'm afraid my memory
will go soon. When I try to think about that year that disappeared, from six to
seven, it's nothing. I mean, I can't remember anything. I can remember
remembering, but I can't remember anything that happened to me right before I
got the feed. I'm afraid I'm going to lose my past. Who are we, if we don't
have a past?
So I'm going to tell you some things. Especially the
things before I got the feed. You're the most important person in my life. I'm
going to tell you everything. Some day, I might want you to tell it back to me.
She kept sending things. I
didn't open them. I let them sit. I was walking around School™ the next day,
feeling them like, feeling them crowd me. It was like something was always
spilling. It was always there.
I went home that afternoon.
In the upcar, I was afraid I would look at the memories. They were getting
bigger. She was sending them every few minutes. Sometimes, something would
bleed through—her father, younger, throwing her a baseball. Her mother, wearing
sandals and a proton lid. The smell of some sauce cooking. Stories she told,
from before she got the feed. I would get a few words, something about an aunt,
or a camel, or a guitar, or some shit.
I didn't listen to any of
them, any of the stories. I just kept them. I didn't touch them on the way
home. They just bled.
I got home. I had a
headache. I told the feed to shut off the headache. It sent me a message about
how much I was caching, and asked if I wanted to open it.
I sat down at the table,
and then walked around. She was bombarding me.
Finally, I got a message
that she'd stopped. My lines were clear.
I went to the kitchen to
get a drink of water. I filled a glass. I looked at the window over the sink.
I deleted everything she
had sent me.
I went into the living room
and sat on the sofa. I didn't feel good.
I sat on the sofa. I looked
at the fireplace. I had deleted all her memories.
Later on, she chatted me,
saying, What's your answer about the weekend idea? We'll have to sneak
around my dad, because he doesn't want me to see you—but don't worry—
don't worry. We'll be together, whatever happens.
I didn't know what weekend
idea she was talking about, so I didn't answer her.
The walls of my room were
all white. They had hot-spots, where if you looked at them, posters would
appear, but I shut them off. There was nothing on my walls.
I didn't do my homework.
I went to bed.
I lied there, face up.
I didn't sleep.
57.2%
I couldn't think on Friday
night, because Smell Factor was crying and running around the house throwing
things. My dad hadn't been home for a few weeks, and my mom was really angry
and kept yelling at Smell Factor, and he kept running all up and down the
carpets. He was directing these like blasts of kids' programs in different
directions so it hurt to walk around because you kept getting caught in his
beams, like,
IS YOUR HEAD A SQUARE? POINT TO ONE NOW!
. . . CHUCKIE, HAVE YOU LOST YOUR SOCKS . . . AGAIN?!?
... Or suddenly you're like
doubling over, and it's
. . . ROBOT PALS YOU CAN
KEEP IN YOUR HAIR! SIX TO A PACKAGE, GIVE MOM A SCARE! ("Wow!"
"Meg brag!" "Mine's called Looty!")
I was staying in my room to
avoid having my like brain blown up by Smell Factor's broadcasts. I heard Mom
running after him, telling him she'd give him some cookie dough if he'd stop. I
sat there and wondered what to do, because I was bored of the games I had, and
it was just Friday, but I didn't know if anyone was going out, or what we were
supposed to do that weekend.
Mom called up to me,
"Hey! Violet's here!"
She said it like I was expecting
Violet.
I got up and went to my
bedroom door. I just stood there, and didn't push the button to open it. My
hand was on the button, but I didn't push it. I stood by the door.
"Hey!" my mom
called. I heard her say, "You can just go up. He's probably asleep."
I pressed the button.
She was coming up the
stairs.
She waved, kind of
pathetic, like I was going to yell at her.
I just stood by the door to
let her in my room.
She didn't come in. She
stood just outside the room.
I was just inside.
She said, "Can I come
in?"
I let her in. She came in,
and I shut the door.
"You didn't give me an
answer about this weekend," she said, "but I just figured, I'm going
anyway. I don't know how much time I have."
"What?" I said.
"I'm going to the
mountains. You can come if you want." She was like, "I'd like it if
you'd come."
"When?"
"Now. For the weekend.
Didn't you get my message?"
I shook my head.
"Oh," I said. "No."
"The other
night?"
"I guess not."
"Or the
memories?"
I said, "What
memories?"
"I sent you all these
memories. I sent you hours' worth."
I looked at the rug. I said
to her, "No. No, I didn't get anything. Any memories or anything."
She sat down on the bed.
"Oh," she said. "Oh, great. So that's going wrong, too. My chat
and messaging. I wondered why you didn't say anything. Oh, god. Oh,
shit."
I didn't say anything. I
just stood there.
She looked up. She told me,
"I got here in a taxi."
I went over to my dresser
and leaned on it.
She said, "I told my
dad I was going to a friend's house. He doesn't know it's you. I figure, what's
he going to do? Ground me for the rest of my life? Meaning, like, fifteen
minutes?"
She laughed really short
and harsh. I didn't think she should joke about that, because you just don't
joke about your life. Especially because it can make people really
uncomfortable, if you have something wrong with you, and you keep bringing it
up in certain ways.
She was like, "Are you
coming or not? This is my big time. I'm going to really live." She said,
"I'm going to fucking live. I'm going to go up to the mountains and see
things, and I'm going to come home on Monday or Tuesday and be like, I've
seen it. I've used every second. And then each day after that, I'm going to
do something different. I don't care. Museums. Shows. Anything."
I said, "I'm kind of
busy. I wish I'd got the message."
She stared at me like she
couldn't believe me.
I said, "If I'd got
it, I could've changed my plans, what I have to do."
"Okay," she said.
She was angry. She stood up. She said, "Okay."
"I'm really
sorry."
"You don't want to run
away together? You don't think that sounds exciting? Better than doing . . .
whatever you're doing?"
We were standing there, and
Smell Factor was running down the hall behind us, shooting out his broadcast
beams ("HEADS UP, TEEN ENFORCERS, 'CAUSE THAT SURE AIN'T THE WELCOME
WAGON!"). Mom was running along the carpet behind him, shouting at
him. She slammed some doors. I think she must've caught up to him.
Violet said, "It'll be
fun."
She sent me pictures of a
cabin with some pine trees, and a fire, and two people with smudged faces that
could be her and me sitting there under one comforter.
"Come on," said
Violet. "What are you going to do otherwise?"
I didn't want to answer
her.
Seriously, she chatted. What's scheduled?
I thought about the
pictures again, the cabin and the pine trees. I thought about the comforter,
and her sitting next to me. I thought about me erasing the copies of her
memories.
I said, "Okay"
"You'll go?"
"Okay."
"Oh, this is great.
We're going to have a great time."
"Okay."
She said get my clothes, so
I did, I took out some clothes and started putting them in a duffel bag. She
was all cheerful and kept bouncing herself on the bed and talking about where
we were going. She picked up my boxer shorts when I was folding them, and she
had this smile, and she put her finger through the vent in the front and
twiddled it. It stood up like an elephant's trunk. I watched her. Then she
tossed the boxer shorts onto the duffel bag, and I folded them again and put
them in.
I told my mom that we were
going to a concert and that I was going to stay over at Violet's house
afterward, because I thought she would freak if she knew I was going to go off
somewhere without having any real plan and spend money on a hotel or cabin. Mom
said, Great, have a good time, because she was busy running on a
treadmill that lit things up while Smell Factor tried to throw marbles at her
knees.
Violet and I went out to my
upcar and we got in. I asked her whether she shouldn't tell her dad where we
were going, and she said no, he was being very protective, and he would birth
meg cow if he found out she was gone for the weekend, and with me. I said, Oh
great. We were flying now, going up the droptube, and I was waiting for her
directions. She sent them right to the upcar and it sent confirmation. I could
feel it calculating a flight pattern.
I asked her, "So have
you been okay?" and she said, "Things happen—immobility—then a few
hours later, it stops, and I can move. I'm worried about the chat, though.
That's new. I didn't know. Did you try to send me things?"
I lied to her: "A few
things. They were short," but I didn't feel good about it. I said,
"You could send the memories to me again."
She looked at me real
intense.
She goes, "You can
join me. We can prepare. I have this dream that I'll be able to learn to live
without the feed. I wish they could just switch it off."
"Can't they?"
"Not dormant. Off. I
mean, completely. They can't right now It replaces too many basic functions.
It's tied in to everything." She was looking at the ceiling. "One
little thing," she said. "I caved in. The other day, Nina said she'd
noticed all of the requiem masses I'd been listening to. She suggested some
others. Here's the hideous thing."
"What?"
"I liked them. She
figured it out. I've been sketched demographically They can still predict
things I like." She sighed. "They're really close to winning. I'm
trying to resist, but they're close to winning."
"Just . . . keep . .
."I didn't know what to say. I said, "Doing."
She looked at me and
smiled, and said, "My hero."
I didn't want to be called
her hero.
I looked at her, and she
was smiling like she was broken.
I reached down, and turned
up the fan in the climate control.
54.1%
It was a college town up in
some mountains. The mountainsides were covered with gouges and cables. She had
made a reservation at a hotel. It was a cheap hotel, the kind where you always
are thinking about urban legends.
We went in to the manager.
"I reserved a
room," Violet said.
He said, "Name?"
He looked at me.
I guessed, "Mister and
Missus Smith."
Violet smiled like we were
in a musical and she was about to break out singing.
The guy nodded. He was
like, "Yeah. Sure. Smith. I don't give a rat's ass. You're Smith like I'm
Betty Grable." He held up a scanner. "Hold out your hands. I'll key
you for the room."
I was trying to have fun.
We went out to the room.
Violet was like, "What a quaint little place. I didn't know stucco could
brown like this." She touched the door, and it opened for her hand. She
went in. I went out to the upcar and got our bags. I liked being the man
getting the bags. I went in. She was poking around the room. She lifted the
covers on the bed and looked at the sheets.
"Check the mattress
foundation," she said. "For bodies. They sew them in."
"Okay," I said.
"If you dig the pubic lice out of the soaps."
She looked around.
"It's the kind of apocryphal story hotel where people usually only stay
when their upcar breaks down during a rainstorm."
I said, "Yeah."
She said, "Dead
rattlers drying on the shower curtain rod. A man with rulers for hands sitting
in the room next door. You know, chihuahuas in the mini-fridge."
We went out to check out
the town. There were lights everywhere, and concrete. You could see down off
the mountain, all of the lights from the upper layer of suburbs stretching all
around for as far as you could see, in loops and half loops from all of the
cul-de-sacs. It was cold out, because we were outside on a mountain, and we
wore jackets and night goggles. It was the nice kind of cold when someone
else's skin, it will be grainy when you touch it. I thought maybe it wouldn't
be so bad, being with her.
There was some shouting
going on by the college campus. We went into a pizza place and ordered a pizza.
We asked the people what it was, and they said it was a protest. We asked for
what, and they didn't know. So we ate our pizza there, and got some hot cocoa.
It was good to have the
cocoa. I thought maybe some Kahlua, too, but I figured the only alcohol they'd
have at the hotel would be for cleaning tile. I felt like I needed a drink,
because I suddenly realized that I was dreading every second.
We got back to the room and
touched the door. It was a whole night we had to get through.
She grabbed me when we went
through, like it was romantic, and she had the front of my coat in her hands,
and she pulled me right up to her and kissed me. She whispered, "I want to
experience everything, Titus."
I said, "Oh.
Okay."
I hoped she would like get
the signal, which was the null signal.
She took off her coat and
threw it on a chair. She was going, "I've done some of it before. I had
this boyfriend, he played the guitar. Somehow he tricked me into doing a thing
or two before I realized his lyrics didn't rhyme." She sat on the bed. She
was talking in a way that made me feel like the whole mucusy part of my chest
was hardened into a stone and someone threw it off a bridge into a deep, deep
hole. "But I've never done the main event," she said. My chest kept
on falling, maybe with some ice crystals on it now.
She said, "Sit down
next to me."
I sat down next to her.
She put one arm around me.
It was kind of awkward, because we were sitting next to one another. She kissed
me on the lips, and I started kissing her back. Her one hand was around my
neck, and she put her other hand on my leg. I could still feel the most or I
guess biggest part of my chest, the lung and mucus part, falling down into the
pit, maybe hitting the edge and getting dirty and rolling now, with a kind of
squelching noise, and I was thinking forward to when it would be over.
She was kneading me with
her hand, and I just sat there. My arms weren't around her anymore, they were
back on the bed, holding me up. She was like mushing me up with her hand.
I said, "Ow."
She said, "I really
wanted this to happen with you. Right from when we started going out. You're
just so beautiful. You lead this life like I've always wanted to— just,
everything is normal. We can just be like normal people are, off skiing. We
could even rent skis. You know, normal kids, they go off for ski
weekends."
I said, "Every year I
go skiing with my parents. One year we went to Switzerland."
"Great," she
said. "You know the border's closed now, for Americans? Now let's refocus
our attention."
I asked, "Have you
ever been telemarking?"
She kissed me on the mouth
to shut me up. She was holding my hair too, which helped? Then she whispered,
"I love you, Titus. This is going to be the most amazing night. This is
going to drill eyes in the back of our heads.
She was still working away
with her hand and nothing was really happening, and I tried to move
away, and she had her arm around me and was starting to look worried. I felt
bad, because it wasn't her fault she was going to die, so I tried to smile, but
I couldn't.
She said, "What's
going on? What am I doing wrong?"
I said,
"Nothing."
She said, "What's
happening?"
I said,
"Nothing."
She said, "I can
tell." She tried again, and even worse, tried to be dirty, like going,
"Come on baby, I want to feel you," and all that kind of thing.
Finally, she said,
"What's going on?"
I stood up.
She was like, "What's
the matter?"
I said, "Let's
not."
"What? What's the
matter with you?"
I said, "I keep
picturing you dead already. It feels . . ." I didn't want to finish the
sentence. She was waiting, though, so for some stupid reason, I did finish it,
maybe because I was angry, and I said, "It feels like being felt up by a
zombie, okay? That's what it feels like."
Her face turned completely
white.
I felt like shit.
"All right," she
said. "I guess this was a bad idea."
She looked very little,
down on the bed.
I felt really bad. I said,
"I'm sorry. I'm really sorry. I didn't mean that."
She said, "What did I
do wrong?"
"Nothing."
She picked up the edge of
the coverlet with her fingers and rubbed it. She dropped it. She was looking
what people call "askance." She said, "In tests, they find huge
numbers of DNA strands on hotel coverlets."
I stood and waited.
She said, "I went to
the moon during spring break to see how people live. When you came along, I
thought, 'Now I'll have a boyfriend, like people have boyfriends.' Other people
just have fun. They just have fun, and it comes naturally to them. I couldn't
believe it when the first night. . . that guy ..." She whacked the back of
her own head. "Like a punishment. The first night. That guy. The hacker.
It was like I was being punished for even trying. That.. . he .. ." Now
the color was coming back into her face. She said, "Then we were in the
hospital. They took me away from the rest of you and told me, 'Your feed is
damaged. There's a danger it may be life-threatening.' And I came down, and
took you away, and kissed you. And the whole time, I was thinking, Now I'm
living. I have someone with me. I'm not alone. I'm living."
"Okay," I said.
"Violet, I'm real—I'm real sorry."
"You mean 'sorry.'"
She looked up at me, with her eyebrows weird, and what that kind of
"sorry" meant to both of us was that it was over, that I had just
broken up with her.
"Yeah," I said.
"Sorry in that way."
She thought about it. She
said, "I wanted someone to know me. I thought it would be like when you're
finally tied to the dock." She thought about it more. She said, "I
was brought into the world in a room with no one there but seven machines. We
all are. My parents watched through the glass when I was taken out of the
amniotic fluid. I came into the world alone." She picked up her shoe and
scratched the crust out of the tread. She said, "I didn't want to go out
of it alone."
I was like,
"That's—see? That's the thing. I can't field this. Okay? You're laying
this whole guilt banquet. I can't field any of this."
"I'm sorry," she
said, "but I seem to be dying."
"No—I can't field
this. You were, the whole time, you were just planning this whole eternal
thing, and I was supposed to automatically love you always, but I didn't even
know. I was just thinking about going out with you, and we would have some fun
for a few months, but to you, I was the normal guy, I was magic Mr. Normal
Dumbass, with my dumbass normal friends, and oh! Like the whole, like oh! How
delightful, the whole enchanted world of being a stupid shithead who goes
dancing and gets laid! You wanted to mingle with the common people. Just latch
on to this one dumbass, and make fun of his friends for being stupid, while all
the time, having this little wish that you could be like us, without thinking
about what we're like, or what our problems are, or that we might not be like
saving the environment or anything, but we have our own problems—now you're—
you know? You know?"
"No," she said,
really soft and angry. "I don't have any idea."
"We've only been going
out a couple of months. And I'm supposed to act like we're married. A couple of
months. It's not some big eternal thing. We should've broke up weeks ago. I
would've, if you hadn't been . .."
"If I hadn't been
what?"
"I didn't sign up to
go out with you forever when you're dead. It's been a couple of months. Okay? A
couple of months."
There was a silence.
"That's it?" she
said.
"Well, it was spring
break. That would make it April, May. . ."
"That's not what I
mean. I mean, that's it?"
"Oh, now you're going
to take it all wrong."
"Let's go home."
"What?"
"Take me out to your
brand-spanking-new upcar and take me home."
"What's wrong with my
upcar?"
"You tell me. You look
worried."
"What's wrong with
it?"
"The male goat pisses
in his own face to attract the female. And she likes it."
"Oh, fuck you. What's
that supposed to mean?"
"Do you know what's
going on in Central America?"
"Oh, here we—"
"Do you know why the
Global Alliance is pointing all the weaponry at their disposal at us? No.
Hardly anyone does. Do you know why our skin is falling off? Have you heard
that some suburbs have been lost, just, no one knows where they are anymore? No
one can find them? No one knows what's happened? Do you know the earth is dead?
Almost nothing lives here anymore, except where we plant it? No. No, no, no. We
don't know any of that. We have tea parties with our teddies. We go sledding.
We enjoy being young. We take what's coming to us. That's our way."
I picked up my duffel bag.
"You can finish the like, the sermon in the upcar," I said.
"You'll have a couple of hours before we get to your house." I opened
the door. "Maybe you can also sing me some death songs."
She grabbed her bag. She
explained carefully, "I discover that I hate you."
I said, "Do you want
to pay for the room, honey, or should I?"
She realized it had to be
paid still, and she said, "Oh, shit."
"Don't worry, darling.
I have like all the money in the world."
I paid. I was walking out
the door. I felt my credit blotted five hundred and twenty dollars. I went out
to the upcar. I opened the door for her. She got in. We put the duffel bags
between us.
We flew back. It was night.
I had never been someplace with that much of angry in the air, like it was
crammed. Like the whole air was buzzing. Like all of the lights on the
dashboard were teasing us. We were hurtling forward, and it was like we were
fueled by how much we hated each other.
She was crying. It made her
ugly. She crossed her arms on her lap. I thought how ugly she was. Her one hand
was limp, like a flipper.
I realized it wasn't
working anymore.
I closed my eyes. There was
nothing but air in between us. I could say I was sorry. I was almost saying it.
We were flying, and I was close to saying it, if only she wouldn't say
something sarcastic, something snotty, something about how she had watched us
all and tried to be as dumb and fun as us. She looked really alone, sitting
there in the seat, with the harness around her, and her crippled flipper-hand
cradled between her legs so I wouldn't see it.
I don't know how I spent
two hours, it was so awful and boring. I thought about anything else that I
could. You low? said a banner. Not for long—not when you find
out the savings you can enjoy at Weatherbee & Crotch's Annual Blowout
Summer Fashions Sale! It was a little embarrassing, but I did order a
jersey. I did it really careful, in case she was tracking my feed.
The night seemed to go on
for hours.
I couldn't believe it when
we got to her droptube and went down to the bottom, to her suburb. We flew down
her street. There were streets on the ground. They were lit by lights.
At her house, I got out and
climbed down. Her father was watching through the window. He would see me and
know she was lying about where she had been. He came out of the front door. We
were hovering in the driveway. I had gone around to her side and opened her
door up, and she was trying to stand. She couldn't get out too good with her
arm not working. I held up my hand.
She didn't take it. She
wobbled there. She was afraid she would fall.
Her father watched her. He
saw what was happening and ran up. He took her hand.
She reached out with her
other hand and took her own wrist back from him. She freed her hand from her
dad's.
She let herself down to the
ground alone, all alone.
She stood between the two
of us, looking from one to the other.
I turned around and went
back to my side of the upcar. I got in. I left. I flew home.
It was only months later
that I realized that the last thing I ever heard her mouth say, the last words
she would speak to me, had already been spoken, and they were, "Oh,
shit."
51.5%
So, she messaged me the
next day, I'm not messaging you to say I'm sorry, because I'm not, not for everything.
But I am messaging you to say that I love you, and
that you're completely wrong about me thinking you're stupid. I always thought
you could teach me things. I was always waiting. You're not like the others. You
say things that no one expects you to. You think you're stupid. You want to be
stupid. But you're someone people could learn from.
And I want to talk, if you do.
We both said mean
things, dumb things, things we didn't mean. But there's always time to change.
There's always time. Until there's not.
That was her message.
I said, "Oh,
nothing," when Link looked at me funny. We went out to kick some ass on
the basketball court.
Summertime
When school ended for the
year, Link and Marty and I went to one of the moons of Jupiter to stay with
Marty's aunt for a few weeks. It was okay. We had a pretty good time. By that
point, I was going out with Quendy, and I kind of missed her. We met other girls
on Io, but I was chatting back to Quendy the whole time, even though there were
some meg delays in feed service between the planets. I told her how much I
missed her.
We had some good parties
that summer when we got back to Earth. Marty got a giant Top Quark pool, it was
inflatable and huge, and the pool was in Top Quark's belly? It floated above
Marty's house. It was pretty funny.
Marty had also gotten a
Nike speech tattoo, which was pretty brag. It meant that every sentence, he
automatically said "Nike." He paid a lot for it. It was hilarious,
because you could hardly understand what he said anymore. It was just,
"This fuckin' shit Nike, fuckin', you know, Nike," etc.
Everything was not always
going well, because for most people, our hair fell out and we were bald, and we
had less and less skin. Then later there was this thing that hit hipsters.
People were just stopping in their tracks frozen. At first, people thought it
was another virus, and they were looking for groups like the Coalition of Pity,
but it turned out that it was something called Nostalgia Feedback. People had
been getting nostalgia for fashions that were closer and closer to their own
time, until finally people became nostalgic for the moment they were actually
living in, and the feedback completely froze them. It happened to Calista and
Loga. We were real worried about them for a day or so. We knew they'd be all
right, but still, you know Marty was like, "Holy fuckin' shit, this is so
Nike fucked."
The night after I saw them
frozen, even though they were okay, I couldn't sleep at all. I kept thinking of
Violet and her broken flipper-hand. I kept thinking of her pinching her leg
and not being able to feel it. I thought of her lying without moving, but in my
thoughts, her eyes were open.
That summer was the summer
when all of the bees came out of the walls of those suburbs and went crazy, and
people couldn't figure it out at all.
It turned out that my upcar
was not the kind of upcar my friends rode in. I don't know why. It had enough room,
but for some reason people didn't think of it that way Sometimes that made me
feel kind of tired. It was like I kept buying these things to be cool, but cool
was always flying just ahead of me, and I could never exactly catch up to it.
I felt like I'd been
running toward it for a long time.
the
deep
One night at dinner, when
my dad came back from a corporate adventure with his management team, he
showed us memories from it. He said it was great and really refreshing, and
that it was just the kind of thing to promote team interface, and to get
everyone to work out their stop/go hierarchies. They went whale hunting. It was
just people and old ships and the whales, and the whales' lamination, which he
said was a non-organic covering that made it possible for them to live in the
sea.
So he broadcast it to the
family. He was all, "Okay, here you see us in the little whaleboat. We've
'put out' from the main ship. We've spotted a whale, and we're rowing out to
it. This was awesome. Totally awesome. Can you feel the spray? I loved it. I
kept getting it in my eyes and blinking. That's—oh, that's Dave Percolex, V.P.
of Client Relations. He's in charge of the bucket of rope. See him waving? Hi,
Dave. You can see the head of our Phoenix office there holding the harpoon. So
we're rowing out there as fast as possible. It was really rough that day See,
we're all shouting that we need to be going faster. 'Row, row, row!' We have
our new intern there pulling at the oars. Hey, Lisa!"
I wasn't very interested,
and it was making me a little sick to my stomach, because it was going up and
down, and the water was gray everywhere, and so was the sky, and I think Dad
must've been sick to his stomach, because the feed was broadcasting his stomach
sickness.
"All right. So here
you can see us harpooning the whale. Oh, Jesus—here we go! Feel that tug! It's
awesome. Totally awesome. Okay, this is what they call a 'Nantucket Sleigh
Ride.' You got to be dragged by the whale until it gets tired. Then you can go
up to it and puncture its lung. Oh, there: This is later. You can see Jeff
Matson stabbing it. He's Chairman of the Board. Wow! Thar she blows,
huh?!" There was this big spray of blood.
"How's his wife?"
asked Mom.
"Jeff's? She's great,
I think. Fine. Okay, so here we've pulled the whale up beside the ship. This
was the greatest feeling. Now they have to 'flense' the whale, or remove all
its blubber in huge mats. Dude, this is tough work. They have to lift the
blubber sheets on hooks and feed it into the 'try-works,' where the blubber,
it's all reduced with, you know, fire and heat. It's really hot and difficult,
and I felt real bad for the interns you see there doing it, Maggie and Rick.
Good kids. Real good kids."
I heard a voice say, She
wanted me to tell you when everything stopped.
I could barely hear it over
the cries on the ship, and the smashing of waves against the carcass of the
whale. She wanted me to tell you when it was over.
"All right," said
my dad. "Here we are drinking a toast. And in the background, you can
see—now they get some kind of special oil out of the brain cavity. You have to
actually send people into the brain cavity to bail it out with buckets. See?
They're dressed up all in rubber. It's an awful job, walking around in the
brain. Those are Byp and John, two more of our interns. See John, with the
bucket?"
She wanted me to tell you that you don't need to see her if
you don't wish to.
I looked for who said it on
the ship, because it was a feed noise, but I couldn't turn my head, because it
was my dad's head, and his memory, and there was the sea spray. I kept on
looking at this like forty-five-year-old V.P. lady and getting completely
turned on. I tried to stop looking down her blouse when she stooped down to
pick up some kind of flensing spade, and I tried to look for the voice, but I
couldn't turn my head, and anyway, it wasn't there with the interns bailing the
whale oil, or the seagulls flying over the boat and charging at the slime that
was all over the wood.
It was Violet's father's
voice.
I am attaching our address, in case you've forgotten
it. She told me to tell you when it was all over.
"Never mind the
rest," said my dad, and he stopped the broadcast.
"Wait!" I said.
They looked at me.
"What was the lady at
the end?" said Smell Factor. "She made me funny."
"Yes," said my
mom, kind of dangerous sounding. "Who was she?"
"So that was the
outing," said my dad.
I was trying to pick up the
line from Violet's father. I was searching for it, but I couldn't find it.
There was just his message, and the attachment with their address.
I stood up. I said, "I
got to go. I just got this message that Violet's ... I don't know. I think
something's really wrong."
My father said,
"There's a name we like haven't heard for a while."
My mother said, "Maybe
because 'we' have been strutting around on a whaling boat, eyeing up the VP.
of Sales." My mom had lost so much skin you could see her teeth even when
her mouth was closed. "What about it, Peg-leg Pete?"
I left and went out to my
upcar and got in. I flew out of our bubble and into the main tube, and then out
of our neighborhood and up the droptube and then across the surface. People
were going by me in streaks of light. The clouds were glowing green, and a
black snow was falling.
It was miles and miles
away. It was like so far.
On the news, there were
underground explosions that no one could explain in New Jersey and a riot had
started a few hours before in a mall in California, and was spreading, with
feed coverage of people stampeding for safety and children falling and
professional people beating the shit out of each other with chairs and a body
floating in a fountain while the Muzak played a waltz.
I had fed Violet's address
into the upcar, so it did the driving. I didn't need to do hardly anything. I
didn't have the like, you know, the attention, and I wished I didn't have to
sit. I wanted to pace until I got there, if there'd been enough room. My legs
felt jumpy.
While I got out of my
upcar, the front door of the house opened. Her father was there. He left the
door opened and went inside. I walked down the driveway. I stood for a minute by
the open door. It was dark inside. Then I went in.
There was no one in the
living room. There were the stacks of books everywhere, and posters with words
on them, and some plants. I called out, "Hello?" and nobody answered
me, so I went around the corner to go to Violet's room.
Her father was standing in
the kitchen. He was leaned up against the counter. He had on his feed backpack
and his special glasses, which were showing him words. He looked up at me
quickly when I came in.
I whispered, "What's
happened?"
The father pointed down the
hall. The hall was dark, with wall-to-wall carpeting that might've had
something spilled on it. I went down the hall. I went into the room, and saw
her there.
4.6%
I stood there in front of
her bed. The bed was floating. She was covered in discs. They were on her face
and up her arms. She looked real, real pale. There were signals going on behind
her. Beeping and so on.
Her hair had been shaved
off, and it was just a fuzz, now. There were scars on her scalp from where they
tried to fix her. Her eyes were open.
It was weird to be in the
room with her. It was like being in the room with her if she was wood. It
didn't feel like you were in the room with anyone. You could stand there and
you would feel completely alone, like you were just in a room with a prop. You
could watch the prop, and not feel anything, or remember anything about how the
prop used to joke with you, and how you wanted to kiss it and feel it up. I had
thought it would feel like a tragedy, but it didn't feel like anything at all.
Her father came in and sat
down in a chair behind me.
I was still standing up.
He settled in his chair. I
could hear his feedpack creaking.
I kept looking at her.
He said, "Her speech
became increasingly slurred. Toward the end, she no longer could make the kind
of sly witticism of which she was so fond. Your bon mots cannot fly fleetly
when each consonant is a labor. She could barely get her tongue to touch her hard
palate. She would kick things in anger when she couldn't speak. Until her legs
stopped working finally, and didn't start back up again. Then I could see her
trapped in there. I could see it in her eyes. For a while. She had also
become"—he sighed—"she had become hazy. Confused. The hippocampus
was likely being mismanaged, so her memory was dim. She asked me about her
mother. She spoke a great deal of you. The worst stage was when one could tell
she was still awake and almost alert, but she knew that nothing worked.
Imprisoned. She was imprisoned. In a statue like the Sphinx. Looking out from
the eyes. Her own mind, at that point, was as small and bewildered as a little
fly. Behind great battlements."
I turned around. Words were
going across his eyes.
He did not read them.
I whispered,
"Oh."
He said, facing toward her
feet, "Her mother and I didn't want to get her a feed at all. I did not
have one. Neither did her mother. I said none for my family.
"Then one day, when
her mother had left, and I needed work, I was at a job interview. I was an
excellent candidate. Two men were interviewing me. Talking about this and that.
Then they were silent, just looking at me. I grew uncomfortable. Then they
began looking at each other, and doing what I might call smirking.
"I realized that they
had chatted me, and that I had not responded. They found this funny. Risible.
That a man would not have a feed. So they were chatting about me in my
presence. Teasing me when I could not hear. Free to assess me as they would, right
in front of me.
"I did not get the
job.
"It was thus that I
realized that my daughter would need the feed. She had to live in the world. I
asked her if she wanted it. She was a little girl. Of course she said yes. It
was installed.
"If they had not
installed it ..." He lifted his hand, and held it, like he was weighing
possibilities.
"They say," he
told me, "that it was the late installation that made it dangerous. The
brain was already wired to operate on its own. The feed installation was nonstandard.
They have also told me that if I had bought a better model, perhaps it would
have been more adaptable. I remember them asking at the time." He
whispered, "I skimped. I read consumer reports and wondered, 'What's the
difference?'" He looked at me, and asked, "What could go wrong?"
He was glaring at me.
"I'm sorry," I
said.
He asked, "For
what?"
"For what I did."
"What about what you
didn't do?"
I nodded. "I'm sorry
for that, too."
"Sorrow," he
said, "comes so cheap."
"You can't blame
me."
"Why?"
"I didn't do
this."
"You took her to that
nightclub."
"She—but she wanted to
live. She told me. She told me she wanted to live."
He hissed, pointing at her,
"Does this count?"
I looked at her.
She was completely calm.
She didn't move. There was a beeping. I remembered her in the hospital on the
moon. Laughing. Throwing hypodermic needles at a picture of a man with no skin.
And then he began sending
me shots of memory. I saw her gagging when parts of her throat stopped working.
I saw her lying partway on the bed, partway on the floor, tangled in her
sheets, her eyes open but not blinking.
I saw her thrashing on the
mattress, mooing like a cow for mercy.
I rolled her over with his
hands, I rolled her over, and the back of her pajamas were black and wet with
her shit. I started to clean her.
I saw her pleading with her
eyes. The room smelled like her urine, like something hot and just starting to
bud.
I began to cough, and came
out of the memories.
He was sitting there,
staring at me.
"What a nice
visit," he said. "So kind of you to come."
"Stop it," I
said.
"You've done your
duty. Why don't you go along and play your games?" said her father.
"We're the land of youth. The land of opportunity. Go out and take what's
yours."
"I'm not a jerk,"
I said.
"We Americans,"
he said, "are interested only in the consumption of our products.
We have no interest in how they were produced, or what happens to them"—he
pointed at his daughter—"what happens to them once we discard them, once
we throw them away"
"I didn't," I
said. "I didn't throw her away."
"And the worst
thing," he said, "is that you made her apologize. Toward the end. I
didn't say anything to her, but she told me she was apologizing to you for what
she said, for how she behaved. You made her apologize for sickness. For her
courage. You made her feel sorry for dying."
"I'm sorry."
"You're sorry."
He stood up. He was taller than me. Thin, real thin, but tall, with these big,
loose hands. He said, "Why don't you go back to your friends, the ones who
teased her?"
"They didn't."
"It's almost time for
foosball. It will be a gala. Go along, little child. Go back and hang with the
eloi."
"What are the
eloi?"
"It's a
reference," he said, snotty. "It's from The Time Machine. H.
G. Wells."
I stepped closer to him.
"What does it mean?" I asked. "Because I'm sick of—"
"Read it."
"I'm sick of being
told I'm stupid."
"So read it, and
you'll know."
"Tell me."
"Read it."
"Tell me."
"You can look it
up."
"You can tell
me."
"Will you ever open
your eyes?"
I yelled, "Fuck you!
Fuck you! You can fuckin' tell me!"
He grabbed my shirt. I
didn't expect that. His big, loose hand was on my shirt. He was yelling like a
little kid. He was yelling, "No, fuck you! Fuck you forever and forever
and forever! Fuck you forever and ever!" I pushed at his arm. His fingers
were wound up in the fabric. He was crying. "Fuck you forever and ever
and ever! Forever and ever!"
I pushed his arm away. I
went for the door.
He was just crying, and
saying, "Fuck you forever and ever. Forever and ever."
Before the door shut, I
heard him saying to her, "You couldn't hear that, Vi, could you? I'm
sorry. I'm sorry. You didn't hear that. . . ?"
I walked so fast I almost
ran through the house. I stumbled sometimes. There was a special on draft pants
at Multitude. There was a preview of the season opener of Klang.
I ran out to the driveway.
I went to my upcar.
I didn't fly. I didn't go
anywhere. I sat in the upcar. It nudged me and asked me where I wanted to go. I
didn't answer. I sat. I sat.
Finally I told it I wanted
to go home.
It took me.
Miles of suburban bubbles,
the shafts, the tubes, the pods. Pennants advertising malls. Trailer parks on
miles of concrete, with window boxes covered in ash. Upcars flashing past,
their prices speaking to me in my head.
At home, I walked around my
room.
Out in the hall, I could
hear Smell Factor playing action figures. I could hear him make explosions with
his mouth.
I sat on my floor.
I tore at my pants. I was
trying so hard to get them off that they ripped. I took off my sweatshirt. I
threw my boxer shorts against the wall. I was naked. Completely naked.
I sat on the rug. I sat in
the middle of the floor. I could smell my own sweat from my folded places. I
sat there.
I ordered the draft pants
from Multitude. It was a real bargain.
I ordered another pair. I
ordered pair after pair. I ordered them all in the same color. They were slate.
I was ordering them as quickly as I could. I put in my address again and again.
I was shivering with the cold on my butt. My arms were around my legs. I
ordered pants after pants. I put tracking orders on them. I tracked each one. I
could feel them moving through the system.
Spreading out from me, in
the dead of night, I could feel credit deducted, and the warehouse alerted, and
packing, I could feel the packing, and the shipment, the distribution, the
transition to FedEx, the numbers, each time, the order number, my customer
number traded like secret words at a border, and the things all went out, and I
could feel them coming to me as the night passed.
I could feel them in orbit.
I could feel them in
circulation all around me like blood in my veins.
I had no credit. I had
nothing left in my account.
I could feel the pants
winging their way toward me through the night.
I stayed up all through the
early morning, shivering, ordering, ordering, and was awake at dawn, when I put
on clothes, and went up to the surface, and watched the shit-stupid sun rise
over the whole shit-stupid world.
4.6%
Two days later, I went to
visit her.
I dressed real careful,
like for a special occasion. While I was driving there, I kept fiddling with my
shirt. I tried the sleeves rolled up and rolled down at different places on my
biceps.
When I got to the house,
the father opened the door. The father stepped away and let me in. He didn't
say anything. He walked into the kitchen and out the back door. I went into
Violet's room.
She just lay there. She
still had the discs all over her. Someone had laid her arms outside of the
sheets. Her eyes were still open.
I sat beside her. I had an
hour before I had to go meet Quendy. I put my hands on Violet's arm.
I said, "Violet? You
might be able to—maybe you can hear in there," I said. "So I came
over to ... I thought I'd tell you the news, what's going on, just talk to you.
"And I also found some
things like you like. The strange facts. About things in other places. I
thought you'd like to hear."
I tried to talk just to
her. I tried not to listen to the noise on the feed, the girls in wet shirts
offering me shampoo. I told her stories. They were only a sentence long, each
one of them. That's all I knew how to find. So I told her broken stories. The
little pieces of broken stories I could find. I told her what I could.
I told her that the Global
Alliance had issued more warnings about the possibility of total war if their
demands were not met. I told her that the Emperor Nero, from Rome, had a giant
sea built where he could keep sea monsters and have naval battles staged for
him. I told her that there had been rioting in malls all over America, and that
no one knew why. I told her that the red-suited Santa Claus we know—the regular
one?—was popularized by the Coca-Cola Company in the 1930s. I told her that the
White House had not confirmed or denied reports that extensive bombing had
started in major cities in South America.
I told her, "There's
an ancient saying in Japan, that life is like walking from one side of infinite
darkness to another, on a bridge of dreams. They say that we're all crossing
the bridge of dreams together. That there's nothing more than that. Just us, on
the bridge of dreams."
Outside her window, her
father was working in the garden. He was on his hands and knees, pulling out
pieces of grass from where the flowers were. His feedpack glittered in the sun.
I watched him. The sky was blue over him. He patted the dirt with his hands.
And I whispered,
"Violet. . . Violet? There's one story I'll keep telling you. I'll keep
telling it. You're the story. I don't want you to forget. When you wake up, I
want you to remember yourself. I'm going to remember. You're still there, as
long as I can remember you. As long as someone knows you. I know you so well, I
could drive a simulator. This is the story."
And for the first time, I
started crying.
I cried, sitting by her
bed, and I told her the story of us. "It's about the feed," I said.
"It's about this meg normal guy, who doesn't think about anything until
one wacky day, when he meets a dissident with a heart of gold." I said,
"Set against the backdrop of America in its final days, it's the
high-spirited story of their love together, it's laugh-out-loud funny, really
heartwarming, and a visual feast." I picked up her hand and held it to my
lips. I whispered to her fingers. "Together, the two crazy kids grow, have
madcap escapades, and learn an important lesson about love. They learn to
resist the feed. Rated PG-13. For language," I whispered, "and mild
sexual situations."
I sat in her room, by her
side, and she stared at the ceiling. I held her hand. On a screen, her heart
was barely beating.
I could see my face,
crying, in her blank eye.
o o o
Feeling
blue? Then dress blue! It's the Blue-Jean
Warehouse's Final Sales Event! Stock is just
flying off the shelves at prices so low you won't
believe your feed!
Everything must go!
Everything must go.
Everything
must go.
Everything must go.
Everything must go.