Altered States: A Cyberpunk Sci-Fi Anthology
Page 11
“You going to make a bid for that girl?”
“A bid? No! You don’t know what you’re talking about! It’s the study, that’s all it is. Jesus Fuck. Okay, now Wynn’s car is honking, out there. Got to go. I’ve got timers on all the faces so you’re going to have to do your schoolwork on the tablet. Dinner’s already prepping. Eat without me but I won’t be home late. We’ll figure out a time for you to see Tarina—probably tomorrow. Or the next day.”
He could feel his son watching him as he turned to the door. The door realized he wanted it open before he’d finished turning, and it was open for him and he went out to the driverless where Wynn waited in the back seat…
2. Just Down the Street
Ryan put up the hood on his jacket. A thin, warm rain fell; the suburban streets were dark with it, the sidewalks reptilian gray. It wasn’t the real Connecticut monsoon yet. Maybe just a hint that it was coming.
He had only walked down his own street once before, when he gone along with Dad on the neighborhood Greet. The Greeters had a strollbot rolling with them; the bot had licensing, and the drones left them alone. Even the houses didn’t react to them. It had been boring.
This wasn’t going to be boring. He knew that and it scared him a little. Two-thirds the neighborhoods on the Eastern Seaboard were HiSec; it’d gone that way quickly after Home Brethren blew up the dikes protecting Atlantic City.
Ryan walked on, realizing he was maybe more afraid, out here, than he’d ever been in his life. Afraid of the houses. And when the Defense Panel opened above the garage door of the lime green ranch style house on his left and the gun muzzle thrust out to point at him, its warning light flashing…he valued boredom again.
“Do not approach the house,” said a genderless voice from the garage. The warning was followed by a steady, baleful beeping sound. It was a wordless warning, but even clearer than the voice’s message.
No quick moves, hodey. Ryan turned and walked slowly away from the house, into the middle of the street. Then he pivoted slowly to the left and walked down the street toward Tarina’s…
The gun tracked him; the light kept flashing red. He kept his stride steady. Only his heartbeat sped up.
A car was coming up behind him, chiming a soft warning, but he didn’t move out of its way. He knew the car would stop—they were always self-driving in this area. The car pulled up and its polite, digitally reproduced female voice said, “Waiting to safely pass. Please move slightly to the left.” He angled just enough to the left so the car could pass on his right. He glanced at is as it went by. The sedan was glittery purple, low slung, almost silent. No one rode in the front seats. In back, a middle aged couple—both spiky haired, much tattooed—were entirely focused on their conversation. Then the woman looked at him, probably startled at his closeness to the car.
He hoped they might offer him a ride, drop him off in front of Tarina’s house. But of course they didn’t. They didn’t even roll down the window. They just cruised by, staring.
The car left Ryan behind, and he took three more long strides—and then heard the soft hum of the first drone. He could feel and smell the oily wind of its rotors.
He glanced up, saw the double-oval of the UAV about thirty feet over his head: in outline like a giant pair of sleek eyeglasses passing over, rotors spinning where the lenses should be. Apart from the flight mechanism the entire drone was a camera, nano-inflected coating taking in his image, transferring it to the chip, transmitting to a human monitor in some distant place.
“Pedestrian,” the drone called, in a mellow voice, somehow no less threatening than house voices, “you are remaining too long in the street.”
He angled toward the sidewalk. When he stepped up onto the curb, another panel opened above another garage and another gun thrust out and tracked him. Another red light strobed. Another computer generated voice warned him. He kept going, heart pounding, trying not to run.
He glanced at the ranch style homes on his left; the bigger split level home across the street on his right. All the windows were set for opaque. The people inside, like the houses, were turned away from the outer world. Most of them were home, he knew, since most people in a neighborhood like this telecommuted, or rented out their biocogs. When they weren’t telecommuting, they were probably under tech. No one had bothered to build a fence. It was superfluous; the houses were so hard to get into that owners who came home drunk in a driverless cab sometimes spent an uncomfortable night in their own driveways. The house knew not to shoot them, but most still required a second identification protocol before they’d open.
When you were under tech you wanted the protection. You were too vulnerable without it.
The drone was still following, its shadow a shape like dark glasses on the sidewalk. After a few more steps, it spoke to him, a little more insistently this time. “Pedestrian in proximity, please turn on your street licensing. Please call a strollbot. Please identify your home.”
Ryan called out his name and home address.
The drone seemed to ponder. Then, “Please turn on your street licensing.”
“I haven’t got any on me. Or a strollbot either.”
“Your personal information isn’t verifiable at this time. Please stop walking until verification.”
“No, sorry,” Ryan said, trying to keep his tone even. A negative stress analysis could get him arrested. But he was only a half block, maybe less, from Tarina’s house. “I’m almost at my destination!” he added.
“Your heart rate is elevated, is there something we should be concerned about?” the drone asked.
“No!” he told it, walking a little faster. It was that house on the left, right on the corner…
He ground his teeth, shivering with anger at his father. They could have lived in an area without a HiSec Contract. But Dad said he had to be careful, because people invested in meergas were pissed off at him and some were in investor cults, which were known for violence.
So what. Dad could get another job, he could study something else, he didn’t have to piss people off… Really unfair…
“You’re hurrying now, is there something we should be concerned about?”
“No!”
“Please stop for discussion.”
“No, I don’t have to! I live on this street! Look it up!”
“We are not equipped with voice identification. Facial I.D. is inconclusive. Please stop for possible temporary detention—”
“No! I’m just going to see my friend on the corner! She lives around here and so do I! I already gave you my fucking address! I’m just going to four-five-five Willow Row!”
“Hey kid!” came a different voice from the drone; an annoyed, weary older male voice. The human monitor. “Stop, for crying out loud! It’s no big deal! They send a car, they call your old man, hodey takes you home, no harm no foul! Won’t take more than an hour! Walking around like that here is too dangerous!”
He knew the monitor was right. Neighborhood security detention was nothing much. You sat in a waiting room, you watched television, your dad picked you up. A little exasperation all around and it was over. They wouldn’t hurt him and it wouldn’t take all that long.
But…he was going to see Tarina. That’s how it was going to be.
He was angering the house on his left. It had opened a panel under an opaque front window, as well as over the garage door. Two sets of lights flashed alternately red and orange…
The next house was Tarina’s. The door knew him and he had the access code, if her dad hadn’t changed it.
The drone started warning him in the automatic voice again, saying it might be forced to drop a Taser net if he didn’t stop, please stop…
But it was only about thirty-five steps to her front door…
Now: Just run.
Ryan jolted into a sprint, trying to confuse the devices with sudden motion and a sharp turn, cutting across the corner of a lawn to get into her front yard faster. But the lawn was in front of the angry
house, and the grass was artificial, slippery, so he fell, skidding, on his stomach. He heard a loud thudding report that echoed down the street as something kicked him in the left hip.
Shouldn’t have crossed that house’s lawn…
The angry house was reciting the Home Protection Bill, and the laws that gave it the right to do what it had done. It sounded so distant, now, as if the voice were coming from another street…
Shaking, Ryan got up, feeling as if he were lifting an enormous weight on his hip. He put lurched forward, hearing the monitor’s voice from the drone. “Kid—just get back down and lay still! Don’t try to get up!”
But he was taking another step, an iciness spreading through his left leg, as he stepped onto the bark dust verge of Tarina’s front yard. He didn’t look down at the wound. He was afraid he’d fold up and start vomiting if he did. He just went through a haze of growing numbness to the door, tapped the code and, along with facial recognition, it was enough. The house had guessed he might come.
The door opened. The house smelled of old sweat, of unflushed toilets, unwashed people. But he went in, legs and stomach lurching, hoarsely calling her name…
He could feel blood running warm down his leg, twining his ankle.
“Tarina!”
The dusty hallway and front room were empty. Wasn’t she home?
“Tarina!”
He stumbled down the hall. Something ran along the ceiling, clinging to it, watching him. He felt it confirm his features with its laser, a warm lick across him.
“Tarina!”
Her parents’ bedroom door was opened. The floor was all cushion, wall to wall, no furnishings. All three of them were there, Tarina and her mom and dad, lying on their backs side by side. Her dad—round bellied, bearded, in yellowed underwear, wired, with tubes in his arm and at his crotch; her tall skinny mom—tubed and wired, hair lank on a pillow, stertorous breathing. Tarina was in pajamas; her shaved scalp had grown dark stubble, her thin cheeks were sunken. Her lips were parted, half-open eyes flicking in REM movements; her arms and legs twitched in dreams. She’d given up waiting, and gone under tech.
Poised directly over all three of them was the inductor, like a hood over a gas stove, communicating with their interfaces and biocog chips. He felt like it was feeding on Tarina.
He took a step toward her, then heard a wet pattering sound, looked down at the scored-open flesh of his left hip; a bit of bone showing pinkish white; shotgun pellets in pockmarks. Runneling blood…a puddle growing around his leg…
He went to his knees, and that seemed to open a door for the pain. He hissed when it rippled through him, and let himself fall across Tarina, his whole lower half throbbing with hurt. He could smell her, and her parents, quite sharply. His other senses were fading.
“Tarina…”
She didn’t respond. Why was it so dark in the room? And darker.
3. Non-standard Meerga
Murray sat at the desk, in the little glass-walled office the meerga company had loaned him. He was watching the video on the desktop. Nothing much of interest in this interview with a standard meerga. She was beautiful, chirpy, and dim-witted, as they all were.
He went back to the first video interview with Addy Creske and his wife Scalia. Both were tall, blond people—Addy’s hair was lush but short. Hers was long, but the fine strands on them both seemed identical. Probably they’d had the same gen-en cosmetic styling done. The Creskies were a tanned, fit couple, late fifties but looking late thirties. They’d had all the cell renewals. They both wore white, though Addy’s suit was more a cream color. Scalia wore a linen pants suit, with a low cut blouse. She had long sculpted fingernails, sparkling intricately—something about the Zodiac. Scalia’s teeth were perfect and shiny white; so were Addy’s. His nails were colored, too, in a sort of glossy dull-gold that matched his designer choker.
“We did have some reservations,” Scalia was saying. She spoke through a smile; it scarcely varied. “The study had overtones of…”
She looked at her husband for support. “Hostility,” Addy suggested.
“Yes. Hostility. An assumption that we were inhumane. But we treat meergas very kindly. We’re never inhumane. We don’t sell them to anyone who won’t treat them well—they have to sign a contract to that effect. We have to be able to monitor them. We don’t sell them to sadists. Everyone has to have a frontal lobe scan before they can buy a meerga.”
“The origins of the term meerga—kind of insensitive?” Murray’s voice asked—he’d interviewed them from off camera.
Addy shrugged. “It’s from Mere Girl, as that was the original name for the company, and we did assign them numbers, Mere Girl one, two, up through a hundred three. Some people were bothered by that. They were mixing up human girls with ours, in their minds, so we went with our own in-house slang, meerga, and no one seems to mind…”
“And now you’ve given them names instead of numbers.”
“We give them each a name, yes. Numbers are used only for filing. We actually give them a selection of names and we watch how they react and we give them the one they seem to react to best. We’ve just started using Molly and Thumbelina.”
“Thumbelina? Okay, well—the genetic engineering of these girls—”
“We don’t like the term girls with respect to our product,” Scalia broke in, her voice brittle. “We prefer meerga, or ‘peep pets.'”
Murray’s voice, on the video, was harder to hear than theirs. “They’re pretty thoroughly human, in most respects. They’re…I mean, low IQs don’t exclude a mentally handicapped girl, born in the conventional way, from being called a human. A human girl.”
“Their DNA is so very designer modeled,” Addy said, with a patronizing smile. “They simply can’t be considered human. They’re genetically engineered pets. On the exterior they look like beautiful human models.”
“They feel like it too,” said Scalia impishly. “I mean—if you stroke them, play with them, they feel like a beautiful human girl. They have such incredibly lovely skin. It’s literally a work of art.”
“But—doesn’t it ever disturb you that, looking so human, they’re used almost entirely for sex?”
Scalia blinked. “Well. They can also be trained for simple serving. Just, you know, carrying trays of canapés, that kind of thing.”
“They’re also great decorator pieces,” Addy put in. He seemed quite deadpan serious about it.
“—but at the very least it encourages people to think about women as sex objects alone. Mentally handicapped ones in this case.”
“I don’t think of human women that way,” said Addy blandly. “And I use the product. So does my wife! We love our pets.”
His smiling wife nodded enthusiastically.
“They’re illegal in most countries. Doesn’t that suggest that the majority of people are repelled by them?”
“You see?” Addy shook his head sadly. “Hostility. We’re completely legal in the USA.”
“A special law had to be passed and the campaign contributions from Creske Labs were—”
“It’s not your job to get political here, is it?” Scalia interrupted, still smiling—but smiling in a puzzled way. “You’re doing a scientific study. To give Congress cover, really, that’s all.”
Addy looked at her warningly. The remark about Congress had been awkward.
“Do any of your customers ever feel odd about having sex with a person who’s only about four years old?”
“They’re not a person, in the human sense,” said Addy stiffly. “They’re meerga. They don’t even look like human children—except in the growers, when no one sees them but the technicians. When they wake up, they look exactly like adult women and men. They’re simply not human. They’re a special category of human-like pets. That is, pets that appear human. But aren’t.”
“Pets men have sex with.”
Addy waved dismissively. “And women do too! Have you seen our male selection?”
�
��Yes. I have.” The males—the meerbas—were even more distasteful to Murray, perhaps because he was the father of a boy. “But if they’re not human—why do some men marry the meerga females?”
“They don’t, in this country. That’s something that happens with a few people in the United Muslim Republic. We can’t control every last thing they do with meergas when they get them there. Meergas cannot have offspring—so I don’t see the harm of having some sort of silly marriage ceremony, if it’s not illegal to ‘marry’ a pet in their country. But they all know they’re not people. They leave them in their wills to their children! The meergas can live to be more than two hundred, and stay pretty for most of that time, before they start aging—that’s a valuable commodity.”
“What about the cast-offs, the ones you guys put down at birth? Less pretty?”
“Happens with pet breeding,” Addy said, shrugging sullenly.
Murray hit pause, freezing Addy in his shrug, and fast-forwarded to the images of the girl who insisted on calling herself Meerga. She wouldn’t say why she called herself only Meerga. Murray suspected it was a kind of statement of solidarity with her duller sisters.
Her official name had been Salome. Then one day she’d refused to be addressed by that name. Refusal was unknown, among meergas. But soon she began to make demands, and refused to eat, demanding they first give her a room of her own, and something to draw with. Demands too were unknown among meergas.
They’d planned to have her put to sleep, of course, but their biotechs had wanted to observe her first, run some tests, see what had gone wrong. Then the Murrays' study became aware of her, and made its own rather indeterminate determination. Her skull was normal—that is, normal for ordinary human beings. A standard meerga’s skull seemed normal externally, but was mostly porous bone, inside, down to a brain less than half the size of a typical human’s. Meerga’s brain was the size of a conventional human’s and, if anything, she was a genius on conventional human standards.
The biotechs suspected one of their subordinates had tampered with her growth patterns. Certainly someone had given her extra mental imagery through the inducers. It was standard for them to be placed in inspection units already knowing how to speak; to arrive there housebroken and prone to cleanliness and with a basic sense of cosmetic style and a hair-trigger for heterosexual arousal. They were also given a variety of specialized skills, most of them inputted through direct cerebral induction. But someone had put too much data in a brain that should never have been as large as it was. Mutation was presumed—but perhaps an artificially induced mutation?