Route 666

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Route 666 Page 9

by Jack Yeovil


  After a meal, Wiggs’ taste-buds occasionally yearned for coffee, the most reviled of all stimulants. But the only coffee legally available in the United Stales was recaff, which hardly counted. All in all, he did not miss any of the things the Brethren were required to put behind them. He certainly did not miss the sins of the flesh. These days, he rarely even thought of them.

  Young women, old women, illegally young women, indecently old women. Fat women, thin women, short women, tall women. Dark women, fair women, black women, white women. All of them he had used and cast away until Elder Seth showed him how to escape the coils of his desires.

  He had been in Tombstone, Arizona, in a pornobooth at the virtual mall, hips bucking as the milking sleeve simulated the skilled orifice of some faceless harlot. The Revelation was a Fiery Coming. It screeched through the sensory inputs and blanked out the sinful loop. Tearing out of the mall, the weight of Sin crushing him like a falling safe, he found his way to a revival staged in the historic OK Corrall. In a Battle of the Brothers, a succession of evangelists mounted the stand, preaching until the audience gonged them off.

  Come one, come all, announced barkers. Anyone could take the lectern.

  Staggering into the crowd, self-disgust coursing through his graymass like electricity, Wiggs heard four or five preachers booed off the altar. A hooded pastor of the Church of Jesus Christ, Caucasian, was passed over heads by a multitude of hands and tossed squealing into the street. It was a tough congregation, perpetually on the edge of an ugly mood. A singing nun didn’t get into the second “-nique” of “Domi-nique-nique-nique” before she was stripped of her penguin cowl and dumped in the horse-trough. It seemed no-one could satisfy this crowd’s thirst for a sermon. They had come to hear the Word and weren’t taking any tin dollars.

  Then, striding to the podium as Wyatt Earp had strode over the same dirt to face the Clanton Boys, came a tall man with a wide black hat and simple mirrored sunglasses.

  From that day to this, Wiggs had never seen the Elder without his shades. He wondered if the man suffered from some disease of the eyes.

  Elder Seth had talked all evening and well into the night, holding the rowdy audience rapt. The Word spilled from him like milk from a pitcher, and the crowd lapped it up like babies.

  Looking now at the Elder, Wiggs remembered the force of that first experience. Again and again, he thanked the Lord that he had been saved before perdition was unavoidable. Faith had come upon him like a fever.

  At the time, he was confused in his feelings, even hostile. He found himself near the front of the crowd, in the company of loose women. The initial fire of his conviction was already petering out, and he was drawn as if by magnetic attraction to painted women. No more than NoGo girls, they wore cutaway plastic minidresses, check shirts tied in tantalising knots above tiny navels and tinselled pseudoleather cowgirl hats. Tags shaped like sheriff stars confirmed their status as registered, disease-free Arizona Harlots.

  As Elder Seth preached, the whores inflamed Wiggs’s hateful lusts with duplicitous strokes of tongue and hand. He found himself calling out for the gong, a lone voice in the grateful multitude. After that night, two of the lost girls turned away from sin; Rancho Rita was now Sister Rosalie and Chihuahua Chicken was Sister Consuela.

  Now, Sister Consuela was beloved of the children. In the Shining City, she would teach the Truth of Joseph and lead the choir. But back then she was an alley-cat who would have rutted with the Tasmanian Devil for a squeezer of smack-synth. In the OK Corrall, she went for Wiggs’s sex pistol and almost squeezed off a couple of shots before Elder Seth turned his attention to their corner of the crowd.

  Clearly, a certain part of his body ruled the rest of him. It outranked his graymass, his heart and his spirit. Turgid with lascivious blood, it compelled him to cry against the good man who extended the hand of salvation to him.

  “Brother,” the Elder said, fixing Wiggs with his mirror glare, “in the Good Book it is written, in the Gospel of St Matthew, that Our Redeemer said, ‘if thine eye offend thee, pluck it out’…”

  Wiggs, realisation coming into his head like a bomb-burst, knew Elder Seth had shown him the Way, the only path to his salvation.

  III

  The roadkillers had made better than average time, which meant the Quince ordered a night ride. They roughly followed the old state line, dipping in and out of Arizona. For safety, they kept their speed down to seventy. Tyree felt as if her mount was hobbled.

  She listened to Quincannon make cockpit talk with Yorke, fixing on the buzz as a talisman against the fingers of sleep clawing her mind. She was used to 36 and 48-hour stretches on the road but bone-deep weariness descended with the dark. She felt the force, if not the chill, of wind against her padded arms. After hours in the saddle, stiffness set in from her coccyx to her shoulders. She rode with her knees close to the mount, britches warmed by engine heat, and moved her helmeted head back and forth like a darting snake’s to fight the ache in her neck.

  The patrol was in close formation, outriders at the corners of the cruiser’s headlight throw. Darkness rushed around, the odd roadside sign or abandoned building looming as high-intensity beams briefly lit them up like bright white ghosts.

  The unknown pilgrim-flatteners had taken an underused route and left clear tracks even after the blood ran out. Tiremarks cut through drifting sand and patches of heat-melted asphalt, hardened in the night’s chill, even showed what brand of rubber the quarry was burning. GenTech, natch. The main ve-hickle was an armoured bus. High speed.

  Burnside had popped a couple of pills to keep alert and unconsciously hummed “She Wore a Yellow Ribbon” into his intercom. The tune settled in around the back of Tyree’s brain and stayed there.

  “Round her neck, she wore a yellow ribbon.

  She wore it for her lover who was far, far away…”

  Tyree thought of Trooper Nathan Stack. He was far, far away all right, back at Fort Valens, if not exactly her lover. That time in Nicaragua, when their leave coincided and a rare foreign travel permit came along, there’d been a moment when wedding chapels were open and it would have been easy on an impulse to tie a knot. Back in the States, things scanned very different. There were things about Nathan that didn’t square with her ideas for the next few years.

  “When I asked her why the yellow ribbon.

  She said it was for her lover in the US Cavalry…”

  She’d set the buzzer in her skidlid to deliver a subaudial jolt every thirty seconds. That kept her awake and alert and there was no risk of developing a dependency. Burnside had popped a few too many pills this tour and she should report him to the Quince. It was in the regulations; but the Cav had regs and rules, and it was a Rule that one trooper not snitch on another, even if she was angling for a promotion.

  “Caval-reee, Caval-reee.

  She said it was for her lover in the US Cavalry…”

  She’d talk to Burnside, suggest he take counselling. His best bet would be Quincannon. The Quince had been through it all and come out the other side. He’d been on these roads forever.

  They rode into the night.

  Nathan was the recruiting poster image of the Cav. Tree-tall, broad-shouldered, strong-chinned. But he looked down at the ground, not up at the skies. Every time Tyree won a commendation or earned a qualification, he found it necessary to throw a major drunk. In the sand, there was no one better as backup, but in everything else Nathan was never there for her. His priorities were hard to figure.

  In their next rotation, to Fort Apache in Arizona, Tyree would be riding with Trooper Stack. She didn’t know how she was going to feel about that. The worst thing would be if he came over masculine and protective and got himself crippled or killed trying to cover her ass.

  Something birdlike with white hair froze in the light-funnel, red eyes staring. Tyree and Burnside swerved in formation to avoid the beast (a mew-tater of some species) but the cruiser ground it under.

  Yorke blathered about r
acking up another score and the Quince told him it was Des etiquette to eat whatever you killed. Yorke suggested that Ms Redd Harvest of T-H-R must get mighty tired of tucking into a roasted Maniak every suppertime.

  The Association of Women in Law Enforcement, of which Tyree was Fort Valens chapel boss, had invited Redd Harvest to address them; she had sent back their invitational fax with a scrawled comment, “I’m not a woman, I’m an Op”. Tyree planned to resign. It was important she advance herself on merit, not by soliciting positive discrimination. She knew how she’d feel if anyone she knew got killed because an inferior woman occupied a position of power and made a mistake. Captain Julie Brittles, to whom the Quince reported, was a hard-ass of the old school and had never been in the AWLE.

  “Leona,” Quincannon said, “the bus’s heat patterns are scrambled up ahead.”

  “Are we losing the trail?”

  “It’s still clear, but someone crossed the path.”

  “Could the quarry have made us? Is someone waiting to give us a surprise?”

  The Quince considered.

  “Nope, this is too recent. The heat signature suggests something big and alive, now off the road a ways to the north.”

  Tyree scanned and saw nothing but the dark.

  “An animal?”

  “Could be, but it’s heading where there’s nothing to drink. Only people are stupo enough for that, or smart enough to pack a canteen.”

  The sand was thin on the road, a light white brushing in which wheeltracks were black lines. Quincannon’s phantom trail crossed. It was behind them in an instant, but the image imprinted in Tyree’s visor, fading slowly.

  “Man on a horse,” she guessed. “Weird.”

  IV

  9 June 1995

  Waiting for dawn was the quixotic act of a unit too close to the meatmind to realise day and night were mere conveniences for those lacking infrared sight. Olympia’s aesthetic decision should be outweighed by wastage of time. Once recharged, Franken conceived no reason why they should remain at Canyon de Chelly waiting for an illusory apt moment.

  They should blow the column and move on. There were many more anomalies waiting to be tidied up. To pass the time, Olympia danced with Kochineel, her face set in a razor smile.

  The resettlers might have notified the authorities. Canyon de Chelly was a National Monument and thus conspicuous. The Knock ’Em Sock ’Em Robots could best any number of individual patrols but if the US Cavalry were to mount a campaign like the one that shattered the Western Maniax, the cyborg future would die a-borning. War must eventually be carried against meat, but now the ’bots were too few to make large-scale hostilities pursuable.

  Besides, strategy decreed the cybermind take complete control of the processes of perfectibility before meatfolks were rendered entirely obsolete. Dr Zarathustra, so amused by the symbolic face he had given Franken Steinberg, must yield BioDiv to his creation.

  After Franken, Kochineel was the most complete machine among them. He wore only black scarves to cover meat forearms and skin shins. The rest of him was perfect automaton. His jester’s cowl was metallic pseudoleather. Most of his external body was a ceramic carapace.

  Andromeda watched Kochineel with interest. His form was what she could expect of her forthcoming alterations. When Franken had been reshaped, durium was state-of-the-art; now, molecule-locked ceramics were proven superior to any alloy. Kochineel’s warranty was good up to and including tactical nukes, though he was not inclined to test it. Suppliers only guaranteed robo-bits; they did not extend insurance cover to the graymass where consciousness lived or any original parts required if you were to remain legally and psychologically yourself.

  The dance was deliberate and measured. Through his chest-organ, Talos played the “Barcarole” from Tales of Hoffmann. It was the wrong tale for the dance, but Franken let it pass.

  Kochineel lifted Olympia and morphed her through the air. Their moves were perfect, unwavering. No meat could match the precision. Every step and pose was calculated, computer animation in solid matter. If required, the dancers could encore, replaying their routine exactly to the micro-millimetre. Digital dancers would render obsolete stubborn fools who insisted on remaining trapped in steadily rotting carcasses.

  Kochineel stumbled.

  An ALARM! display lit up in Franken’s vision. Something was seriously awry.

  Olympia screamed, more in surprise than fear. Somersaulting, she landed on her points. She backed away in horror from her suddenly-imperfect companion, long legs like scissor-blades.

  Pinocchiocchio stepped forward but Kochineel waved him away. His cowl-bells sounded, desperately. Kochineel’s scarves were wet. He gingerly unpicked the scarf from his left forearm, unwinding cloth away from skin. Much of the skin, and a layer of meat, came away with the scarf Kochineel’s painted doll face could not register shock but the set of his ceramic shoulders, as if he were trying to distance himself from his own arm, gave away his feelings.

  The meat of the arm was melting like wax, revealing the clean piston inside. Kochineel’s hand clasped and unclasped, then, without the meatmuscles, seized up. It was as dead as alabaster. The Zarathustra rods that threaded through Kochineel’s muscles were exposed. The effect was general. All organic matter in Kochineel’s body was rotting away.

  A splash of thick blood fell around him and dwindled into dead scum, leaving only the microscopic ticks of the nanomachines that had coursed through the cyborg’s system. He fell to his knees, molten meat squelching, and looked up. His imploring eyes shrank and fell into his mask.

  In the blackness of Kochineel’s empty eye-holes, Franken read a bleak future. He signalled the others to stay away. There was a 76.83 per cent probability the effect was viral. Contact could be fatal. Olympia had already made the calculation and scrubbed herself. Franken shut down his ventilation system and systematically expelled air from inside the spaces of his body. The little of his meat that remained was not exposed.

  Talos’s organ still played. Offenbach drifted across the desert, accompanied by the rasps of Kochineel’s exposed gears grinding uselessly against each other.

  A diagonal crack shot across Kochineel’s face, running from forehead to eye to mouth to neck. Liquid seeped through the fissure and flooded across his face. The graymass was gone. Kochineel pitched into the sand, inanimate as a store mannequin. Purely mechanical parts still functioned inside him and would do until his solar batteries perished, but there was no controlling intelligence. Insofar as he could die, Kochineel was dead.

  “Most interesting,” Franken concluded.

  “Look,” Olympia said, pointing.

  Franken wheeled. Andromeda held up her ceramic hand, staring at it, gripping it with her meat hand. The robo-bit worked perfectly but Andromeda deliquesced. The athlete’s stricken face ran behind her veil, soaking through. She assumed a position of traditional prayer, whimpering.

  It was a waste of human potential.

  Andromeda huddled into herself. Fluids gushed through her robes, splashing across sand and rock. She was the size of a dwarf, and shrinking. Her head withdrew like a tortoise’s, sheltering in her fragile ribcage. Noisily, Andromeda melted away.

  Her white hand, perfect and shining, lay at the edge of a putrescent pool.

  “It would appear we are being betrayed by our meat,” Franken said.

  The sun rose behind Canyon de Chelly and his IR function automatically cut out. Silver dawnlight flooded the area. The remains of Andromeda and Kochineel looked less real.

  In the light-patterns the sun made around the stone column, it was impossible not to see the figure of a bearded man, hands outstretched, dressed in a long robe. It would have seemed a conventional representation of Jesus, the Christ, were it not for the curly horns sprouting from his forehead.

  Franken made calculations but no explanation was forthcoming. There were precedents for such things but the files were still open, awaiting convincing analysis. At some point, miracles had been reclassi
fied as Unknown Events.

  Olympia, distraction blanked out, squatted by the console of her detonator. She had reordered her priorities and focused on the task. She flicked all the switches.

  The charges around the base of Canyon de Chelly did not explode, but every scrap of meat in Olympia’s body did. She was a red hurricane, swirling away from her mechanical parts. In the cloud of flesh, blood and bone, a shadow-woman of durium and plastic was torn apart. Franken’s thought processes were scrambled by phenomena they were forced to regard as supernatural, and several of his chips burned out in a sizzling flash. He fought his headache and tried to think through the crisis.

  Other ’bots emitted automatic distress signals as the effect took hold. Pinocchiocchio, Robbie the Robotman, Tetsuo, Hymie the Android, Rosie the Maid, Talos the Bronze, Mecha-Gojira, Tobor the Great, Maelzel. All exhibited symptoms. Franken calculated a 00.00 per cent possibility of saving any of his comrades.

  Jesus Goat smiled broadly, his crown of horns bobbing.

  Franken, calm under the circumstances, downloaded from graymass into the chips that constituted over half his brain. Memory bytes and personality traits might be lost, but he could survive without the trace elements of his meatmind. The probability was better than 65 per cent.

  Pinocchiocchio jerked as if manipulated by a mad puppeteer, spare parts flying away from his spasming bulk. He blundered against one of the cars, leaving a substantial dent, and crashed down, breaking apart on the rocks.

  This was the crisis of evolution.

  Hymie transmitted a cry for help as organs dribbled through the suppurating wound in his lower abdomen. Franken did not have surplus graymass to consider further how assistance might be delivered. In the past, he had faced 00.00 per cent problems and developed solutions that expanded the parameters of the original programming. But he had not then been distracted by threats to his own survival.

  Hymie switched himself off, auto-euthanasing. His doodads were smart parts; when they calculated termination was a certainty, they overruled their owner’s graymass and simply ceased to function. Wastage of energy in a hopeless cause was criminally irrational.

 

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