Episode Sixty-Three, in which Basto and Buttercup come to terms with themself and Kindness goes off with the skaetto

Ship was playing a pattern I’d not heard before. We had Basto’s frame stretched out on the couch. I manipulated the BAS receptor as Bael made a few final shifts with her virtual control. Finally we all stopped and waited.

Basto opened his eyes and lay there, very still. Then he screamed. “What have you done to me?”

Bael make a quick move with her virtual control. Basto, or Buttercup, I suppose, froze.

“I’m bringing you in on this, Hare. If you see anything that needs to be done,…you were closer to Buttercup, in the end.”

“Understood.”

“Seventy-four, can you hear me?”

“Why do you call me seventy-four? My name is…. My name is….”

“That’s the style number of your frame. You don’t have a name now, seventy-four. You will need to choose one. You were two AIs, named Basto and Buttercup. You identity has been blended. What do you remember?”

“I remember…asking this idiot to reconstitute me. This wasn’t what I had in mind. Wait, I never asked….”

“Seventy-four, I strongly suggest that you relax your body. I have prevented you from making major movements, but you can still relax all of your muscles and relax your reactions. You will have a lot of memories. Many of them will seem new to you. You will also have thoughts that you, or at least part of you, would never have considered having. You will need to relearn a lot of things. Much of what you feel and sense will seem at the same time familiar and completely new.”

“What the…?”

“The main thing that I want to you to do is to focus on the future, what you need to become. You will have a lot of work to do, and right now, we don’t have a lot of time. Both of your components knew very much about discipline, and I want you to bring that ability into play here. For right now, I want you to go beyond your confusion and your discomfort. Don’t concentrate on your memories; you will have plenty of time for that later. Right now, we are in danger. We will need to move soon, and I need for you be ready for what’s next. You both know the Fremantle routine. You need to focus on that now.”

The AI was silent.

“I think he’ll be all right, Hare. He hasn’t shut down, and that’s a good sign.”

“This is strange,” the AI said. “Everything seems so much more…complicated…than it did before. I feel smarter, and yet not. I feel a whole range of sensations that are new and yet not new. I need some time.”

“Time is what we don’t have,” Bael said. “I can promise you, when we’re safe and we’ve resolved some of this, you’ll have time. But for now….”

I looked at Rosalind. She was watching for the Basto she knew. It was hard to tell what she was finding.

“I’ve found Kindness, Hare,” the Captain said. “You’d better come. Follow this signal, if you can.”

I told Bael where I was going and headed for the front of the house. The blast damage had been limited, and the front was just quietly deserted. The signal grew stronger, then died when I got to a large doorway. I opened the big, heavy door to find a broad savannah. To my left I saw a rocky cliff that led down to small waterfall and a fast-moving creek. Wide-leafed plants of black and purple lined the creek. In front of me, Kindness was naked, sitting on the edge of the cliff, staring down at the creek. His gray hair was wild, flying off in all directions. The receptor on his temple was gone, leaving a tiny purple gash. Those huge eyes looked far away. O’Flaherty was crouched next to him. Somewhere she’d found a pair of trousers. Her feet were bare, with her light dress jammed into the trouser waist.

“I can’t,” the old man was saying. “I can’t come back. Death follows me, and I’m thinking I should follow it as well. Death is an old friend, you know. She is quite a subtle companion.”

“I’m going to get Bael,” I said. It only took me a moment to figure out how to leave the simulation. I ran to the back to see seventy-four sitting up, with Bael standing next to him, and Rosalind holding his hand.

“Bael, I need you. Basto Buttercup seventy-four, you just sit here for a moment. We’ll be right back.” The AI remained motionless. I looked at Kral. The shroll nodded and moved back a little to keep the whole room in view. I caught a slight whiff of cut grass, violets, and tellafin musk.

I took Bael’s hand and we moved back through the house. “Kindness wants to die,” I said. We entered the simulation. One of the blue, spike-necked animals had come up and was nuzzling Kindness’s shoulder, cooing softly. A pack of what looked like meter-long black sausages was standing in the grass watching us, moving back and forth on flat golden pads. They made no noise, and I couldn’t see any eyes, but it was obvious that we—or Kindness—were the focus of their attention.

Bael moved softly over to Kindness and put her arm around his shoulder. I could see tears in her eyes. She said something, then there was silence. He continued to look down toward the creek. O’Flaherty stood and waited next to me, casually watching the black sausages. Finally, Kindness raised his head, put his hand on hers, and quietly said something to her. She tightened her hand around his and held it for a moment. Then he stood. I’d never seen a naked Trinn before. His body was essentially human, except for what seemed to be a second navel above the first, a couple of extra toes and fingers, and…a very odd stance. His frame was compact, lined with muscle and taut skin that showed the marks and scars of his years. What caught my eye was the odd structure of his musculature, in his legs especially. It was human, but human redesigned.

“Do not worry, my little Baelyae,” he said, taking both her hands. “It is time.” He touched her face. “I see your mother in you. Very much. She is alive in you, as I will be alive in my Frettalo. Your mother was…. When you find your father, give him three words for me.”

“Oh, Kindness….”

“The words are profile, burning, rivertree. He will know what they mean. And now, my graestaa, I must go.”

He put his arms around her and the two held each other in a long, deep embrace. Then he released her. Seemingly oblivious to the Captain and me, he turned and moved off silently, gracefully stepping through the grass. He went up to the sausages. They swarmed around him, making soft, high-pitched squeals. Followed by his swarm, he moved off toward a stand of trees.

“He taught me to swim, when I was little,” Bael said, watching him go. Her voice was husky and soft. “It was hard, because Trinn swim in their own way. All the others picked it up, but a Trinn-human body is different enough, and I couldn’t quite adapt. I was heartbroken. He showed me how.”

“What is going to happen to him?”

“Kindness has made the decision to die. He is resolute. On Trinn, if someone makes that decision, it usually does not change. The little skaetto will take care of him.”

“Take care of him?”

“Skaetto are the best way to die, even simulated skaetto.” She brushed a tear away from her eye. “Maybe I will see him again. I hope so. Come. We have much to do.”

We found our companions much as we had left them, except that Seventy-Four was standing, and Rosalind was kneading his shoulders.

“Do you see how good this feels?” he said to no one in particular, but I guessed that what was once Basto was talking with what was once Buttercup. I could imagine what fascinating conversations were going on inside that head.

“Hare,” Kli said, “I have something.”

“Tell me.”

“Well, I think I’ve found Bresslaft, twice.

“Twice?”

“I’m pretty sure I know where Bresslaft is, and what he’s up to. And I think I know where he was. Back when you, Ship, Rosalind, and Johnny were on Banyan’s Hell, he was, too.”

“Rosalind?” I said.

She stopped her shoulder kneading. We locked eyes. “I never saw him. At least if he looked like your duke or his brother. But there were a lot of people on Banyan’s, and a lot of coming and going.”

“Where is he?” I asked Kli. How do you know he was on Banyan’s? He and Johnny?”

“Yea. Him and Johnny….Take a look at this.” Kli brought up a sequence. I recognized the background. It was definitely Banyan’s, one of the gambling shops that filled the narrow streets around the port. The streets were packed, but I could readily see two men standing outside. The younger was angry, getting increasingly enraged as the two talked. The older seemed unfazed, dismissive.

“Genuine?”

“Seems so.’

“So the Duke knew Johnny before Trinn. And Taes?”

“Hare, I’m beginning to wonder if Taes ever really existed.”

“Of course he existed,” Bael said quickly. “I knew him on Trinn. He was apparently my father. How could he not exist?”

“Just because he’s your father,” Kli responded, “doesn’t mean that he necessarily exists. From what I’ve been able to pull together, and the patterns I’ve created, I’m beginning to think that Rosalind’s boy Bobbie wasn’t the only human to go through one of those gates on Banyan’s Hell.”

“The Duke?” I asked.

To Be Continued

Published in: on January 20, 2011 at 6:57 am  Comments Off  

Episode Sixty-Two, in which Basto and Buttercup get melded and Rosalind tells of magic dolls

“What’s all the fuss,” Kli said. “He’s an AI.”

“You know as well as anybody,” I said. “He was built for sensory-feedback-based decision making. With a visceral understanding of that feedback. For his kind of AI, he couldn’t help growing a deeper consciousness. When we added the Rollot pattern and what came after, we just accelerated that process. And she seems to think he’s more than an AI.”

Rosalind was oblivious to us, deep in her tears, caressing Basto’s lifeless frame.

“Unlike Buttercup,” I continued, pulling the little cube from my pouch. “The Model 4 was designed to do just the opposite, to process input according to a fixed and complex set of rules, with little feeling if any for the results of its actions. Buttercup was beginning to break out of that, building a new awareness, and I can’t help but think that it was moving toward deep consciousness. But for Buttercup, that episode is over.”

“Ah,” Kli said. “I begin to see what you’re up to. Use the Model 4 to unlock Basto’s ID. But that means that the Model 4….”

“Buttercup will survive,” I said, “but is going to have, what’s that strange archaic phrase? A steep learning curve.”

“An AI mind-meld,” Ship said.

“What?”

“Nothing,” she said.

“Do we have time?” O’Flaherty said. “We can’t stay here.”

“Do it.” Bael had come up behind me. She still looked tired, but the emptiness had begun to lift from her eyes. “Both of these AIs deserve it. Despite what I thought, neither had allowed themselves to become a robot. That’s worth a lot to me. You can do it now; I’ll help. Ship, we’ll need the Rollot again, but modulated by the Beelagen, with a few modifications. Can you manage that?”

“It will take a few minutes,” Ship said. “Ah, locking in with you now.”

“I’m not needed here,” the Captain said. “I want to make sure that those two are more secure than last time.” She gestured toward the break. Kral had just brought in Johnny and Melissa and had dumped them both on the floor. “And I’m wondering what happened to Kindness. He’s not among the bodies, and I don’t detect him in the house. I think I’ll take a look around.”

“What’s left of your network?” I asked.

“Surprisingly intact.”

“Compromised?”

“No. Your problems with Linda, the monkeys, or the enforcers have nothing to do with my people. My network is disciplined and incorruptible. We all are working toward a goal. Our devotion to that goal probably goes beyond what you can understand.”

“Try me….”

“We need Johnny’s memories in order to discover completely the process with which he destabilized Chance. Who did what, and how? Who was fooled; who was trapped into betrayal? What started the cascading collapse that destroyed the court? Only then can we begin to reverse the tragedy and restore the Court. And ohen we can begin to save Chance.”

“Well, if your network is intact, can you see what they know of Louis’s whereabouts? I’m beginning to get a little bothered by his disappearances.”

“I’m nearly ready,” Ship said. “Bael, I like your thinking on the Beelagen pattern. Yes, that’s what needs to…I’m almost finished…there.”

I took Buttercup’s cube and was about to open the BAS receptor in his finger. Bael’s hand closed over mine. She was close, and brought her eyes up to mine. “You’re good, my Hare, but I’m better. This is my primary training.”

I smiled at her. “And staff fighting and timely rescues and confidence games and magic tricks and finding clogged hydroponics pumps and creating jump traces and….”

She laughed. “I told you, my father believed in a well-rounded education. Now give me the cube.”

She moved fast. She set up a small virtual control and did some things to the cube I’d never seen before.

“Just stabilizing the patterns,” she said, as if reading my mind. “That little AI is in there, somewhere, buried in the data. I just hope it reconstitutes in the correct sequences. Otherwise…it won’t be set to unlock Basto’s ID. Or maybe I should start calling it “him.” He’s about to experience gender for the first time, and won’t get much of a chance at practice.” She nodded at Rosalind, who had sunk into one of the couches, her head in her hands.

“I treated him so badly,” she was saying to herself. “So bad.”

“Kli, looks like Bael can handle this herself. What were you able to find, before you had to move?”

“Not much, Hare. You saw where Johnny was headed. As far as the enforcers go, they’re on the move all over Forest, but not much more than usual, with no apparent action pattern. And there’s nothing on Bresslaft, except for some standard historical gossip. I think you’ve seen that. But I did find out where the answers may lie.”

“Yea?”

“I’ve seen another of those dolls.”

“Hare,” Bael said. “I need your help. We need to get Basto sitting up. I need to run some tests on him, and I want to look at his functions.”

We pushed aside one of the bodies and lifted the AI’s frame onto a couch. Bael set to work on him.

“Where did you see the doll?”

“Not a doll, exactly, but an image of one.” The image appeared before my eye, a woman I didn’t recognize, holding one of the little figures. She was in a room surrounded by artifacts.

“It comes from one of the shadow cultures, from a long time ago. This one was found in the ruins on Banyan’s Hell.”

“What’s its symbol?”

“It looks like a cracked eggshell, a half-circle with a serrated edge.”

“What’s the story?”

“These dolls are more than simple artifacts,” he said. “They appear to be remnants of a technology that is so foreign to us as to be invisible. I have no idea what they do, but it appears that a certain number of them is required in order to do anything.”

“That’s what I was trying to tell you,” Rosalind said. “Our action gang found a trove of them in the ruins of the golden palace on Banyan’s. We used to have big parties out there whenever we finished an action. One of our guys was digging to bury some swag and began to find boxes. They were old, made from some kind of wood and covered with carvings. Each box held a little doll. We started pulling them out of the boxes, and when we got eleven of them out, they started to glow and get hot. A creature began to materialize in front of us.

“It was small, maybe a meter high, with a big translucent head and long orange tentacles. And then in a flash, it disappeared. We put the dolls back in their boxes, and they stopped glowing. We tested all of them; they were nothing more than baked clay with a few trace elements. We brought them out a bunch more times in the days that followed. We tried various combinations. Most times, nothing happened.”

“Most times?”

“We thought at first that the dolls together were some sort of recorder, showing pictures from another time. But the last time we brought out all eleven and put them together in the same placement as the first time. The little guy with the tentacles reappeared with two other tentacle characters. This time the images stayed longer. Then, before we could do anything, the first guy reached out and grabbed Bobbie with one of those orange tentacles. It was stronger than it looked. Then all of them disappeared. We never put the dolls together again after that.”

“A hole and space/time?”

“Yea, that’s what we thought. But the energy needed for a hole like that would be huge; it just wasn’t there.”

“Who was Bobbie?”

“Just one of the guys in the action gang. He and I used to sleep together, but I never knew him all that well. Then he was gone.”

“So what happened?”

“There were twelve of us left, and eleven boxes. That was all we could find. Each of us kept one, except for the woman who was with Johnny at the time. She died a little while later, killed in a gang battle. And the tutors, of course. They just sat in the background anyway, watching Johnny. Individually, the dolls were useless, and apparently even in numbers less than eleven. Although once, mine glowed briefly, but only for a few seconds, then it stopped. We decided to use them as badges, symbols of our membership in the gang. It was silly, really, but I think each of us has held onto theirs.”

“Johnny was there? And Louis?”

“Yea. They worked together well, back in those days.”

“Curiouser and curiouser. I’d have thought you would try to sell them. I wonder if Johnny’s been trying to collect them. Do you have yours?”

“Sort of. When I met Johnny again, decided that I needed to ensure my safety. Call it instinct, but nobody trusts Johnny. I made sure that it was in a safe and reliable spot, a place even I would have difficulty discovering, with standing orders that it be destroyed if I die, or don’t check in. Johnny knows that, and he’s so far left me alone. As for selling, we all could never agree on that. So we never did.”

“Hare, we’re almost ready,” Bael said. “I need your help again.”

Ship was playing a pattern I’d not heard before. We had Basto’s frame stretched out on the couch. I manipulated the BAS receptor as Bael made a few final shifts with her virtual control. Finally we all stopped and waited.

Basto opened his eyes and lay there, very still. Then he screamed. “What have you done to me?”

To Be Continued

Published in: on January 4, 2011 at 7:13 am  Comments Off  
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