Table of Contents
1. MegaHitler
2. The Small Plastic Blocks of Fate
3. An Advanced Medium-Range Missile Called Harvey
4. The Last Costcotm
5. Pandemonium
6. The Argonizer
7. Space Battleship Scharnhorst and the Planet of Eternal War
8. Fashion Victim
9. The Sword of Gadolinia
10. The Electric Saint
11. Diplomacy
12. Dimension of Wonder
13. Council of War
14. The Ground Ripper
15. Museums
16. The Hunter Lost
17. The Dichoptic Maculatron
18. That Explains a Lot
19. A Private Conversation
20. Blossom
FULL FRONTAL CYBERTANK
Timothy J. Gawne
Copyright 2018 by Timothy J. Gawne
“MegaHitler” by Timothy J. Gawne. Copyright 2015. First Published in
Perihelion Science Fiction Magazine, Sam Bellotto Jr. Editor, Feb. 2015
“Neglect” by Timothy J. Gawne Copyright 2016. First Published in
Perihelion Science Fiction Magazine, Sam Bellotto Jr. Editor, Feb. 2016.
Published by Ballacourage Books on Smashwords
Framingham, MA
1. MegaHitler
"One of the most dangerous things in the universe is an ignorant people with real grievances. That is nowhere near as dangerous, however, as an informed and intelligent society with grievances. The damage that vengeful intelligence can wreak, you cannot even imagine.” Frank Herbert, Heretics of Dune, 20th century.
I am sometimes criticized for telling stories with a repetitive structure. I fly away into space, encounter something unusual, fight it/make friends with it/talk with it/whatever, and then triumph and come back home to tell everyone else. In response, however, that is how most of what is interesting has occurred to me. Should I tell stories where everything goes according to plan and nothing unexpected occurs?
My old colleague Wonderbear would say yes, but then he is a bit of an outlier, taste-in-stories wise. He will listen with rapt attention as I relate an utterly routine trip to perform scheduled maintenance on a communications satellite. He claims that it’s a Zen thing, and that novelty is over-rated. I can’t say as I agree, but he is still a good friend, and a good listener.
And yet, every once in a while something notable happens close to home. Such as the time that I encountered the giant robotic Hitler in the junkyards of Alpha Centauri Prime.
Now whenever we build something and have no further use for it, sometimes we recycle the parts, and sometimes we just dump it off in a scrapyard. It’s no big deal either way. We have so many resources that we don’t need to recycle everything. Often it’s more convenient to refine new materials from raw resources, it just depends. But scrapyards can also be interesting. You never know what sorts of odds and ends you will find there.
I was cruising along in my main hull – all 2,000 metric tons of it – and enjoying the ride through the wide hard-packed dirt roads that wind past small mountains of junk. Here and there I encountered a scraphound: nonsentient machines sent by others of my kind to sift the piles of junk for specific artifacts. They ignored me as I passed, and methodically dug through the rubbish with their multi-jointed arms.
At one pile I saw the remains of an obsolete mark of medium-range missile. It was a design that I used over a thousand years ago when I was in a campaign with my old comrade, the Magma-class cybertank known as “Double-Wide.” I stopped for a bit and let the old memories come back. I thought about keeping the missile as a memento, but decided, no, I have enough junk. The memories are enough. I drove on.
I rounded a corner and right there in front of me was MegaHitler.
He turned and noticed me. “Oh hello there,” said MegaHitler. “Have you seen my elephant?”
MegaHitler was nine meters in height. He was a lifelike replica of the 20th century philosopher-tyrant Adolph Hitler. He wore a simple jacket and tie, white gloves, and of course he had the trademark Hitler mustache. I did a quick scan, and could see that he was, as the records state, a robotic construct with simple girders for arms and legs and hands. His suit and gloves camouflaged the crudity of his construction. Only his face had accurate expression.
You have an elephant?
“Of course I have an elephant,” said MegaHitler. “Otherwise why would I be looking for one? But I am being impolite. We have not been introduced. I am MegaHitler. And whom do I have the pleasure of meeting?”
I am an Odin-Class cybertank. I have a long and boring serial number but most people refer to me as ‘Old Guy.’ I have heard of you, but somehow I thought that you would be taller.
“They all say that. MegaHitler conjures up an image of something that could destroy a city, or wrestle with Megazillus. Nine meters is sizable for a human, but I can’t live up to the apocalyptic connotations of the name. I’ve met some cybertanks before, and you appear to be one of the smaller models, but nonetheless I expect that you could flatten me in a second if you wanted to.”
As you say. And what are you doing out here?
“I already explained that. I am looking for my elephant. Ah, there she is. Come to Adolph, Elephant!"
From around a pile of discarded bogies came what appeared to be a full-grown female Asian elephant. She walked slowly and deliberately, her tail and ears hanging listlessly, trunk dragging on the ground, back sagging. Her eyes were moist and seemingly on the verge of tears. She trudged over to MegaHitler, and came to a stop with her head butting up against the side of his right leg. The elephant stood two and a half meters tall, which compared to MegaHitler made her look like a medium-sized dog.
MegaHitler bent down and scratched the elephant’s head, and told her that she was a good elephant. Other than one desultory touching of his pants’ leg with her trunk, the elephant did not show any obvious signs of pleasure – but also did not back off. I did another scan: like MegaHitler, the elephant was a robotic construct.
Your elephant seems somewhat depressed. Is something the matter with her?
“She has always been like this. I discovered her in this scrapyard, and reactivated her. She cannot speak, but I imagine that, as with myself, she was constructed at the whim of some long-dead oligarch. You know that I was intended for a child’s birthday party back when there were still biological humans? When they ordered up a giant robot Hitler they must have expected a megalomaniacal fiend. Instead all they got was a boring middle-aged man in a plain jacket. They should have gone with Ernst Kaltenbrunner. Now there was a man who could scare children. He certainly scared me.”
Yes, I have heard others make similar statements. But back to the elephant: what’s up with her?
“Why she gives the appearance of being perpetually sad I cannot say. Sometimes she wanders off when I sleep, and then I worry about her terribly until I can find her again. For who else will take care of Elephant?”
Does she have a name other than ‘Elephant’?
“No. For a time I tried other names – Blondi, Brunnhilde, Angela – but none of them seemed to suit her, and she would not answer to them. Besides, there is only one elephant around here, so “Elephant” is as practical a name as any.”
Well, OK then. I was wondering, do you actually think of yourself as the real Adolph Hitler?
“A good question. I know that the original Hitler died many thousands of years ago. I know that my mind is a mathematical guess as to what he was really like based on the historical record. I have considered changing my name and appearance, and pretending to be someone else, but I was programmed to believe that I am Adolph Hitler, and I
am as close to a reincarnation of him as is possible, so why not. Perhaps you could think of me as Hitler 2.0.”
Elephant had had enough of being scratched, so she backed off from MegaHitler, and trudged slowly to the other side of the dirt road. She turned around and, for the rest of the conversation, watched us with her large, sad eyes.
Does it ever get tiresome being a symbol of evil?
“That I should be vilified by my old enemies is just part of the game. “History is written by the victors” – a cliché, but still true. It does annoy me that I am considered to be an apotheosis of evil, when there were so many as bad or worse. I mean, it doesn’t bother me personally. I only object to people not thinking clearly, and lacking perspective. Two of my contemporaries, Stalin and Mao-Tse Tung, killed more even than I did.”
True. According to the Whipple-Jerner scale of relative evil, they rank higher than you.
“Yes I am familiar with this scale. Nevertheless, even though I am far from the top rank of evilness, I am still considered the iconic reference standard. That’s why the scale quantifies evil in units of ‘Hitlers’.”
You don’t think of yourself as evil?
“I did not say that. I deliberately killed – or caused to be killed – many millions of people. I also started a war that killed a few tens of millions. If someone wants to label that evil, why, I can scarcely object. But I was no different from all the other statesman of the day – Tojo, Stalin, Mao, Grant, Sherman and Sheridan, Andrew Jackson, and Mehmet Talaat, to name but a few – I fought for my people, for my tribe, and if that meant killing the members of other tribes to make room for my own, well, that was how the game was played back then.”
Two wrongs don’t make a right.
“Correct. But a hundred wrongs define reasonable and customary.”
Sophistry. In any event, we no longer act in that manner.
“That’s because you are a member of the last human tribe standing. You cybertanks have no competitors. You have plenty of resources and living space, so of course you are peaceful. I would have been as well, had the German people found themselves in such a fortunate situation. But I have heard stories of your kind also fighting a war of extermination. Against neoliberal economists, as I recall.”
That was different. We were in a battle for survival against a corrupt financial oligarchy that would have enslaved or killed us.
“And so was I, against the Jews and others like them. Perhaps we have more in common than you would care to admit?”
I don’t think so.
Hitler chuckled. “You cybertanks all get so defensive whenever I try to draw parallels. You would not be so quick to judge if you were having a conversation with a butcher like Stalin or Crassus, I would wager.”
Do you ever regret your past actions?
“Of course I do. If I had only stopped with France, and consolidated, I would never have been dislodged. I would have built my thousand-year Reich and today it would be my enemies that are vilified. I should have also known better than to pick on the Jews. They were always the best publicists. It’s their fault that today I am an icon of evil. I should have just sent them off to some godforsaken homeland in some godforsaken desert and let them be someone else’s problem. But, I have had my revenge on them. For I collect royalties every time they use a Nazi in a movie or book!”
I was not aware of that. It sounds legally implausible.
Hitler nodded. “Yes, many said so but the lawyers had a wonderful time arguing my case. In the end it all came down to a matter of what they call ‘standing.’ The legal maneuvers dragged on for years, and eventually we settled out of court. I do admit to a certain ironic pleasure whenever I get a percentage of the profits for a story where Nazis try to take over the universe.”
We have not had copyright law for several millennia.
“Really? Then that explains why I have not gotten a check in a while. Well no matter, I have no need for money. But it was amusing while it lasted.”
I suppose.
MegaHitler straightened his tie. “Also, I should never have allowed the Wehrmacht to have those snappy uniforms. If my soldiers had worn lumpy brown outfits and gone around spouting nonsense about world peace, I could have killed five times as many and still been little more than a historical footnote. Ah well.”
Perhaps. But what was it with you and the Jews? Did you really hate them?
“Back in my day, everyone hated the Jews (or at least pretended to). It was standard in polite society, like making small talk about the weather. As a leader I singled them out for oppression simply because they made such wonderfully useful scapegoats. A small minority, seen as holding themselves apart, wealthy enough to excite envy, but not so powerful as to be able to defend themselves when the knives came out. It was also helpful in playing divide and conquer against the upper class. If I had taken on all the bankers at once I would have been crushed like a beetle. But the non-Jewish financial elite were happy to have their competitors taken out. The greedy idiots must have thought it would leave more for them. They thought they could control me, and when they realized that they could not, it was too late.”
I am nearly speechless. So any new plans for conquering the universe?
MegaHitler snorted. “Now you are speaking foolishly. Examine the historical record: there was never a tyrant less megalomaniacal than I was.”
Really?
“Yes, really. I was a corporal in World War I, a simple messenger. If I had been ambitious, don’t you think I would have tried to at least make it to officer-level? I was a nonentity, totally average, just trying to get by. I later tried to make a living as a simple painter of landscapes. My enemies always used my lack of artistic talent as further proof of my crimes – as if a mediocre ability to make postcards is the gateway drug to hell. Would a man aiming for political power have tried to earn a living in that manner? I don’t think so.”
But you conquered most of Europe and nearly the world. Surely you had some talent for fiendish plans?
MegaHitler shook his head. “No, I was just lucky. I was this nothing person that had been gassed and shot and blinded. My countrymen had been stabbed in the back and driven into dire poverty by a vile and corrupt elite. I was angry. My anger smoldered deep, and I spoke out. I was not really much of an orator – Winston Churchill had so much more rhetorical range than I did, even if he was a second-class intellect. I was just in the right place at the right time, and my ranting – how do you say this? – went bacterial.”
I believe that we say: “went viral.”
“Do you? I think it works either way. In any event, the people were eager for someone to give voice to their feelings, and there I was. I think it also helped that I was not naturally ambitious. People who had groomed themselves for power all their lives – running for high school office, practicing sucking up to superiors, organizing their lives with a focus only on advancement – these people could tell that I was not one of them, and they did not take me seriously. They assumed that they could ride my temporary success, manage me, and then discard me. Idiots.”
But you must have been at least a little megalomaniacal, surely?
“Yes, I must admit to that – only not at first. I let it go to my head. I started to believe my own propaganda. Always a mistake.” MegaHitler shook his finger at me. “Never, never, believe in your own propaganda. It will be your downfall.”
Useful advice I’m sure. I am afraid that I need to be off now. But before I go, I was wondering. Do you have any idea what happened to the biological humans?
“You all ask me that. I gather that you cybertanks worked with the humans for a long time, and then one day, they simply weren’t there. Some of you think that they were killed off by an insidious alien attack, and others think that they evolved to a higher level and left you behind as their civilizational heirs.”
Yes. So, do you know anything about that?
MegaHitler was silent for a while. “No.”
Well the
n. This has certainly been an… interesting… conversation.
MegaHitler chuckled. “You cybertanks react to me in one of three ways. Some become outraged, scream that I must be trying to subtly poison their minds with lies and they rush off refusing to listen to anything else that I might have to say. Others are polite and leave thoughtful but somehow disturbed – you would fit into that class.”
What about the third reaction?
“Oh, yes the third. That came from the cybertank that you call “Schadenfreude.” Interesting person. Charming name.”
And Schadenfreude’s reaction to you was?
“That’s private. Perhaps you could ask him yourself? But I see that there is enough daylight left for a walk. Come, Elephant! Let’s go for a late afternoon stroll!”
MegaHitler turned and began to walk away. Elephant did not move at first, but then slowly followed after MegaHitler with her sad, dragging gait.
I was about to drive off when I noticed a vibration from the surrounding piles of scrap. Paranoid that I am, I boosted the activation level of my local defense grid. Good thing too, or I would not be here to tell you this story.
I was attacked by a reinforced squadron of Amok Blade Fetish. Now the Amok were a fiendish alien race dedicated to combat and destruction for destruction’s sake. We made peace with them – I think – and they, and some of us, left to found a new colony based on principles that I do not understand. We still stumble upon some of their old sleeper weapons systems from time to time. The worst are the Happy Leeches, but the Blade Fetish are nearly as bad.
As technology advances, ranged weaponry increasingly dominates over close-combat weapons. A man with a rifle may shoot a man with a sword a dozen times before he can close the distance. But the Blade Fetish are the exception to the rule. They appear vaguely spider-like, with from four to nine limbs each. Each appendage ends in a wicked composite blade that could slice through diamond. They don’t have much endurance, but for a brief time their super-powered limbs and rocket thrusters can propel them to supersonic speeds. Their blades can double as aerodynamic surfaces, so they can corner astonishingly fast. In effect, they are as fast and agile as projectile weapons, and they are experts at attacking from ambush.
Full Frontal Cybertank Page 1