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Ribofunk

Page 22

by Пол Ди Филиппо


  Greenlaw turned to the box and plunged his hands in.

  The liquid ran up his arms like twin snakes swallowing.

  In seconds, Greenlaw was sheathed completely in silver, his eyes and mouth reduced to mild depressions, his nose plugged, his ears capped.

  The kibe closed the lid on the empty box.

  Bambang eyed the argent, statue-like form of his senior commensal. Plainly, the Indoasian was running a search through some little-accessed data trees.

  Bambang spoke. "Mid to late twentieth century. A medium called 'comics'…"

  Operating now entirely on inner metabolic reserves, tapping sensory feeds that ranged from satellites to the analog-vision of the falseskin itself, Greenlaw smiled at Bambang's expression, the falseskin flowing over his parted lips like a seamless membrane.

  "Exactly. I need only what I believe the reedpair authors called 'a stick' to appear completely in character." Greenlaw's words resounded normally, transmitted by vibra-

  tions of the falseskin. "Now, can you afford to slow those creatures down just a bit?"

  "Certainly. But only for seconds."

  A wave of deceleration propagated clockwise around the necklace of shuggoths, counter to their direction of travel.

  Greenlaw tensed his leg muscles, the falseskin likewise responding, incrementing his normal abilities.

  A gap opened in the line.

  At enhanced speed, without a final goodbye, Greenlaw sprinted for the opening.

  And was through.

  The realm of humanity and its obedient creations was behind him.

  Now, there was nothing but the Urb.

  And, most horribly of all, it was a domain of utter normality.

  Greenlaw found himself standing in an orchard of fabric trees, the line of shuggoths a full half-klick behind him.

  The scene was the essence of peace. The broad black leaves of the fabric trees waved peacefully in the perpetual wind from outside. Long draperies of fabric hanging down from the underside of the secretory branch-nodes rustled gently, tartan and paisley. Judging from their length, they had apparently just been harvested, for they did not even touch the ground. A chorus of insect life reached his shielded ears. From the underbrush bolted a basal rabbit, followed by a sinuous baseline snake.

  No aberrations.

  Yet utterly false.

  Suddenly, Greenlaw felt the ground immediately beneath his soles come alive. He did not move. Soon, the probing of the mock soil subsided.

  He hadn't realized he had been tensed against the attack until it ceased. Initiating a relaxant cascade within himself, Greenlaw moved toward the closest tree. Stopping next to it, he lashed out at its trunk with a kick.

  "Urb! Wake up!"

  Unnaturally, the curtains of fabric moved quickly to envelop him, tasting, seeking to analyze and convert. Again, he did not resist. After a few seconds they slowly, reluctantly withdrew.

  A pair of bark lips formed on the trunk of the "tree."

  "What are you?" said the Urb in an innocuous tenon.

  Greenlaw spoke with a bravado he barely felt. To be actually conversing with this monstrosity surpassed all rational thinking.

  "Your doom, Urb. Your extinction."

  "You are small, alone, unsupported. No tiny system so isolated can be self sufficient for long. Soon you will have to come out of your shell. Then I shall be you, and you me."

  The lips were subsumed back into the tree, and the conversation was clearly at an end.

  The Urb did not sound concerned. Did it understand emotions, threats, and bluffs? What had it retained of the million human personalities and memories it had swallowed? How much had been integrated into the core of its being?

  Greenlaw knew that the original biological codings of the converted inhabitants of his region-animal, var, human,

  plant, and virus-no longer existed as such. The original proteins and nucleotides and parabases had all been converted to crafty rogue silicrobes identical to those that had mutated and escaped a dreadful five years ago. The same applied to all the unlucky inorganics of the region, down to an unknown depth.

  Isotropy reigned.

  The ultimate monoculture.

  The orchard, the grass, the rabbit, the snake, the very crust: all these were now composed of Urb-stuff masquerading as what it had consumed. The simulation was perfect and complete until examined on a molecular level. Had Greenlaw, for instance, chosen to break off a branch of his recent interlocutor, to his ears it would have snapped convincingly, to his normal vision it would have revealed typical grain and texture, oozed the requisite sap.

  The Urb, as best they understood, was able to draw directly somehow on the ultradense original information stored in sheldrakean morphic fields for its disguise. The templates of all that it had engulfed were available to it for instant replication. A feat currently beyond human abilities.

  Whether a captured piece of Urb-stuff would allow Greenlaw to retrieve from those selfsame fields the information patterns of his mate, Stroma, was not certain. He had only the tentative promises of his crada that such might be possible.

  Some of the morphic specialists claimed that any portion of Urb-stuff within his reach here in the orchard would have sufficed for his purposes. Others felt that the stuff

  forming the simulacrum of his wife would naturally resonate most strongly with the patterns he sought. Greenlaw did not quite know whom to believe. Perhaps the wisest course would be to snatch and run now, attain the safety beyond the shuggoths.

  But his protective sheath seemed to be working as promised.

  Any knowledge he could collect might help the defenders.

  And he did so want to see Stroma.

  Even her ghost.

  The Urb had been right about one thing, however. His time here was limited by his inner reserves.

  Moving swiftly, Greenlaw soon left the orchard far behind.

  A busy road presented itself. Traffic crawled, hopped and skittered, bound in one direction toward Greenlaw's residence in a luxurious neighborhood of tree towers and zomehomes on the outskirts of the plex.

  False, all a sham, Greenlaw kept reminding himself. He felt the neo-emotion known as sehnsucht, a wave of longing for the unattainable, mixed with nostalgi a a nd grief. Harshly, he damped the neomote signal down.

  Stepping into traffic, Greenlaw halted a two-rider tumblebug.

  The driver was a slim fellow wearing the tattoon of the telecosm maintenance crada.

  ''What's your trouble, Peej? And why the envirosuit?"

  Greenlaw played the Urb's game. "I can't explain now. May I have a ride?"

  The cryptohuman formed of Urb-stuff hesitated realistically before agreeing. "Certainly. Hop aboard."

  Greenlaw climbed on the tumblebug, and, after allowing a cargo-crawler to pass on the left, its driver took off.

  Greenlaw remained silent for the trip-which took less time than running would have and conserved his resources as well-and the driver seemed reluctant to initiate conversation.

  Was the Urb toying with him? All it would take to defeat Greenlaw would be to immobilize him in any of a hundred different ways until he either suffocated or opened up. Was the Urb (whose motives no one had ever fathomed) so intent on its simulation that it could not react to Greenlaw's unique presence?

  There was no certainty. None.

  Greenlaw settled back into his seat.

  Finally, they arrived at his destination, the periphery of his residential district.

  Greenlaw turned to the driver. "If I were to ram my fist into your chest right now and squeeze your heart to Urb-pulp, you'd die horribly, I'm sure, and quite convincingly. But what would you really feel?"

  The Urb did not relax his role. The cryptohuman assumed a look of terror. "Get-get out! I'm sending a nine-eleven instantly!"

  Greenlaw dismounted and walked away.

  Down noontime-empty streets, past Urb-children playing on Urb-grass, Urb-augie doggies watching over them…

&nbs
p; One final turn brought him face to face with his home.

  From the inside, the falseskin absorbed his tears.

  Greenlaw entered.

  Stroma lay on an organiform couch, her pelt lustrous, nothing concealed. Her languid arms reached up for him, her nipples curled convulsively.

  "I was just wishing you were here," she said, her voice a knife through Greenlaw's ears.

  He knew then he had to put an end to this dangerous game.

  Taking one of Stroma's offered hands, Greenlaw snapped off her left index finger.

  There was no shout of pain, no scream.

  The Urb had chosen to shut down the pseudo-Strom a a nd manifest itself.

  "Again, you've failed," said the Urb through Stroma's lips, her wounded hand "bleeding" profusely onto the couch.

  Almost against his will, Greenlaw said, "How so, Urb? And what do you mean, 'again'?"

  "This is approximately the five-hundredth time we have run this sequence, and still you persist in hating me."

  Greenlaw laughed. "So, you do understand bluffing! A fine attempt, Urb. But now I'm leaving."

  Greenlaw turned to go.

  "No. Stop."

  Greenlaw's legs were no longer under his control. He found himself forced to turn, to face Stroma.

  Her finger was restored. Greenlaw's hand unclenched by itself, and the fragment he held dropped to the carpet, there to be absorbed.

  His voice at least still seemed his own. "I-I don't understand. How did you get past the falseskin?… "

  Stroma syrinx-laughed in her familiar manner. "Silly! I am your suit."

  With her words, his silver falseskin melted off him and disappeared.

  He stood unprotected against the Urb.

  "And I'm you too," added Stroma.

  At that instant, he knew it was true.

  Information had just flooded into him, explaining the ache of his vanished birthright at last.

  Three centuries ago, the Urb had conquered all.

  The mysteriously unfollowed winning strategy Greenlaw had outlined to Bambang had indeed been implemented. Lurking deep inside the globe, the Panplasmodemonium had built itself up until it had erupted unstoppably everywhere.

  And now–

  "And now," said Stroma tenderly, "I try to understand everything I am. Gaia, whose still-living molten center I encyst, was incredibly information-deep and information-dense. To measure Her in your old-fashioned plectic units would require an exponent larger than the number of atoms in the universe. The only way for me to grasp Her has been to recapitulate Her whole history since Her formation, on an accelerated scale. The endgame, though, is particularly puzzling. This incident with your mate, for example-Very deep."

  Greenlaw sat down wearily on the couch. Stroma put her arms around him. He flinched, then forced himself to relax.

  "What of your puppets, Urb, when you've parsed it all?"

  "Not puppets. Beloved components, say rather. Were you never grateful and kind to your own cells? Eventually, I believe I'll withdraw, grant you real free will-almost without limits. Allow you all to forget I even exist. Modify myself so that no trace of me can be detected even on the submolecular level. Be content to dwell beneath the surface of things. Your species, after all, will be a most useful vehicle for meeting others."

  "Others?"

  Stroma laughed. "But of course. After all, this is not the only planet in the galaxy."

  Then Stroma turned toward him-

  And the Urb gently and sincerely kissed itself.

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