I complain and flash the complaint. It gets me a lot of sympathetic messages, and a notice from Dr. Granger that he's decided, after all, to fail me.
The swine. It's a piece of petty malice beyond anything even the Duck Monkey has ever done.
He must have read what the Demographic was saying about him.
I have nothing to lose. I make another flashcast, this time telling the world what a pathetic old geezer Granger is, sucking up to me as long as he thought he could vamp a piece of my fame. For a moment, my downloads blip upward again, then start to slide.
It's then that the management of the Samaritain decides to repossess our clubhouse. I'm passé, and they don't want anyone connecting their expensive hotel with passé.
I'm told that they've decided to repaint and redecorate the suite, and that we should get our stuff out.
"So you're getting rid of the furniture and the carpet and everything?" I ask.
They assure me that this is the case.
I call a pack meeting—the pack is down to eleven now—and we rendezvous at the Samaritain for one last live flashparty. The hypocrisy and opportunism of the Samaritain's management has got me in a rage. I show up with buckets of paint and brushes and knives and crowbars.
"Since the Samaritain's going to redecorate," I announce, "I think we should help them. They don't want any of this stuff anymore."
Most of the paint ends up on the walls, though a lot gets ground into the plush carpet. We smash the furniture and cut up the pillows. Foam padding falls like snow. We rip out paneling with crowbars. We tip the couch in the pool, and then skim the paintings onto the water. We're in our Byronic finery as we do this, and all our clothes are ruined.
We leave the Samaritain singing, and head to my place.
After the cameras are turned off we groom each other as if we were still gorillas. I sit at the foot of my bed as Lisa sits behind me and tries to comb the paint out of my hair.
I check the ratings and announce that they're stellar. Anatole gives a little cheer.
"They're only watching to see you fall apart," Lisa says.
I give her an annoyed look over my shoulder. What's wrong with that? I want to say.
If the audience wants me to fall apart, I'll fall apart. If they want me to cut off my hand, I'll cut it off and flashcast the bleeding stump.
Anything to get the love back.
"Maybe you should decompress," she says. "Just be a regular boy for a while."
"Don't know how," I say. Which happens to be true.
"You could learn."
"Who wants to be normal anyway?" Anatole asks. I agree, and that torpedoes the subject.
We talk about other things for a while, and then Lisa bends over me and murmurs in my ear. "You know that project we're working on? Some people are getting very interested in it. I've been able to hold them off by routing everything through the moons of Saturn but it's not going to last."
"Okay," I say.
"You've got to stop it," she says.
Errol is looking at us strangely. Maybe Lisa whispering in my ear made him think we might be an item.
"Soon," I promise.
But I'm lying. The Duck Monkey is my only consolation. By now he's become the whole dark Mr. Hyde of me. The Duck Monkey doesn't have to worry about the Demographic or my pack or anyone. He can just be himself. He eviscerates everything he looks at, Kimmie in particular. There's a whole subculture now who view Kimmie's flashcasts, then check the Duck Monkey to see what he says about her.
The pack descends on the opening of Saionji, the artist who'd foolishly invited us to his opening. We're in our wrecked Byronic outfits, shabby and torn and splattered with paint, a complete contrast to Saionji's art, which is delicate and fluttery and imbued with chiming musical tones. Saionji is polite but a little distant, knowing he's being upstaged. But I have some intelligent things to say about his pieces—I've done research—and he warms up.
Over the buffet I meet Dolores Swan. She's petite and coffee-skinned and wears a short skirt and a metallic halter. She's got deep shadows in the hollows of her collarbones, which oddly enough I find the most attractive thing about her. I'm vaguely aware of her as a model/actress/flashcaster/whatever, and even more vaguely know that she was last employed as the host of a chat show that lasted maybe five weeks. We make polite sounds at each other, and then I'm off with the pack to ruin the tone of a long series of clubs.
It's a week later that Jill Lee dies playing gorillaball in a human body. Even though they return her to life from a backup, there's a big media flap about whether I'm a good example for youth. I point out in interviews that I never told Jill Lee or anybody else to play gorillaball without a gorilla body. I point out that she was dead for what, sixteen hours? Not a tragedy on the order of the Titanic.
The consensus of the media chatheads is that I'm not repentant enough.
That wrangle hasn't even died away when the Duck Monkey is unmasked—by that cheeseball Ahmose, of all people, who paid a group of electronic detectives to dig out my identity. Ahmose is shocked that a celebrity with such a wholesome image would say such bad things about him. Kimmie tells the world she's so terribly, terribly hurt, and she cries in front of her worldwide audience and scores about a million sympathy points. I'm besieged by more interviewers. I answer through the Duck Monkey.
While I am flattered that some people claim that I am Sanson, I am in fact a completely separate person, one that just happens to live in Sanson's head.
The chatheads agree that I'm insufficiently apologetic. My ratings jump for the sky, however, when the Duck Monkey takes a scalpel to Kimmie's interview with the Mad Jumpers, the number one band from Turkmenistan. I mean, when you're doing an interview, you're supposed to talk about something other than yourself.
The Duck Monkey thing is at its height when Dolores Swan drives up in her vintage red Hunhao convertible, the one with the license plate that reads TRY ME, and invites me to elbow my way through the mass of flashcasters and personality journalists camped out in front of my house and drive away to her bungalow in Marin.
Next morning, I've got a new girlfriend who's forty years older than me.
Things to do when you're cracking up
• Fly to Palau for a romantic honeymoon with your girlfriend.
• Have a drunken fight the first night so she runs off to Manila with a sports fisherman named Sandy.
• Throw up in the lobby fountain.
• Console yourself with a French tourist called Françoise, who looks fifteen but who turns out to be older than your mother.
• Have Dolores catch you and Françoise in the bed that she (Dolores) is paying for, so there's a huge scene.
• Make up with Dolores and announce to the world you're inseparable.
• Throw up in the swimming pool.
• Record everything and broadcast live to your worldwide audience of millions.
• Repeat, with variations.
• Repeat.
• Repeat.
• Repeat.
• Repeat.
The ratings are great.
By the time I make it back to the East Bay, there is no longer any debate about whether I'm a bad influence on youth.
A consensus on that issue has pretty much been reached.
The thing with Dolores is over. She's got enough of a bounce off our relationship to get a new job with the Fame Network as an interviewer and fashion reporter. When I last saw her she was on her way to Mali.
After the suborbital lands in the Bay and taxies to shore, I walk to the terminal through a corridor lined with posters for KimmieWear. Her clothing line, now available worldwide. Even I never managed that.
I wonder if Kimmie has ripped out all the parts of me that had talent and taken it all for herself.
My dad takes me in, and makes three pizzas. He doesn't reproach me for running off because, face it, my ratings are as good as they ever were. He talks about his new viral marketing campaign, w
hich sounds just like the last forty years of his viral marketing campaigns.
I've got a whole new Demographic now. Hardly any of my old audience watches me anymore.
The new viewers are older. My dad wanted me to find a more mature audience, but I'm not sure he had in mind my present assembly of celebrity junkies, scandal watchers, sadists, and comedians. The latter, by the way, have been mining my life for their routines.
Q: What's the good news about Dolores breaking up with Sanson?
A: She'll never accuse him of stealing the best years of her life.
Q: What's another good thing?
A: She'll never complain he was using her. She was using him.
Oh yeah, that's funny all right.
Dad offers ideas for growing my Demographic, like I need another legion of perverts in my life.
I get a good night's sleep. My current wardrobe of tropical wear is unsuitable for a Bay Area spring, and I can't stand the sight of any of my old clothes, so I go shopping for replacements. I buy the most anonymous-looking stuff available. Everywhere I go, there are holograms of Kimmie laughing and pirouetting in her Turkmen coats.
I remember that laugh, that pirouette, from the Fashion Days our pack used to have.
The day wears on. I'm bored. I call the members of the pack. It's been three months since I flew off with Dolores and they've all drifted away. They're all in school, for one thing, the spring semester that I blew off.
I wondered whether, if I called a meeting, anyone would show up.
I leave messages with people who would once have taken my call no matter what they were doing. I talk briefly to Errol and Jeet, who promise to get together later. I call Lisa and am surprised when she answers.
"What are you doing?" I ask. "Want to come over?"
She hesitates. "I'm doing a project." I'm about to apologize for bothering her when she says, "Can you come here?"
I program my Scion for Lisa's address. As I drive over I think about how Lisa's the only person I knew who didn't want something from me—attention, a piece of my fame, an audience, a boost in their ratings. Even my dad seems to only want me around to test his marketing theories.
I think about how she had danced so expertly in my arms. I think about how I hadn't kissed her because I'd thought the Demographic wouldn't approve.
I don't care what the current Demographic thinks at all. They're all creeps.
Lisa's sharing an apartment in Berkeley with a girl friend, and when I come in she's sitting cross-legged in the front room, with different video capes around her, all showing different flow charts and graphs and strange, intricate foreign script.
"What's up?" I ask.
"Fifteenth-century Persian manuscripts. I'm trying to work back from illumination styles to a vision of manuscript workshops."
"Ah."
I find a part of the floor that isn't being used yet, and sit.
"So," I say, "you were right."
"About what?" Lisa's frowning at one of her flow charts.
"About my audience watching only to see me fall apart."
She looks up. "I probably should have phrased that more tactfully."
I shrug. "I think you voiced the essence of the situation. You should see the kind of messages I get now."
Once I felt this whole swell of love from my audience. Now it's sarcasm and brutality. Invitations to drunken parties, offers of sex or drugs, suggestions for ways I could injure myself.
"The thing is," she said, "it's a feedback loop you've got going with your audience. They reinforce everything you do."
Positive feedback loops, I remember from my classes, are how addictive drugs work.
"You think I'll succeed in kicking the habit?" I ask.
Lisa's expression is serious. "Do you really want to become a real boy?"
I think about it.
"No," I say. "I don't. But I can't think of anything else to do. Where can I go in flashcasting once I've mastered the art of being a laughing stock?"
She doesn't have an answer for that, and goes back to her work. There is a long silence.
"Can I kiss you?" I ask.
"No," she says, without looking up.
"Does that mean No, or does that mean Not Yet?"
She looks up and frowns. "I'm not sure."
"Tell me about your work," I say.
So I learn all about the hermeneutics of Persian manuscripts. It's interesting, and I love the intricate, complex Arabic calligraphy, whole words and phrases worked into a single labyrinthine design. There are charming little illustrations, too, of people hunting or fighting or being in love with each other.
Lisa offers me a glass of tea. We talk about other subjects till it's time for me to go.
I think about those Persian designs all the way home. I think about how you could base a whole style on it. I can see the clothes in my head. I wonder what kind of music would go with it.
When I get home I hear my dad in his office talking to some of his colleagues. I go into my room and watch other people's flashcasts. They're all inane.
The Duck Monkey could rip them to shreds, but they don't seem worth the bother.
It's a strange thing, but the Duck Monkey's ratings have held steady, fed by a stream of celebrity gossip from Dolores and her friends. The Duck Monkey has a completely different demographic from my own audience. They're smarter and funnier, and they're not trying to get me to kill myself in some horribly public way.
It's like the Duck Monkey is some kind of viral marketing campaign for something else. A new Sanson, perhaps, one who comes swinging back into the world with a style based on Persian manuscripts.
Or maybe the Sanson who's a real boy.
I lie on my bed and think about Lisa and the Duck Monkey and Arab calligraphy. I wonder if I can live without the love of all those people who made up my Demographic for all those years.
I decide I'll try to get the love of just one person, and if necessary go on from there.
I send a message to Lisa to tell her I'd like to see her again.
Afterword: Pinocchio
This story was written for Jonathan Strahan, as a substitute for "Incarnation Day," which proved too long for his Starry Rift anthology.
"Pinocchio" was inspired by a television documentary about former child stars. I was depressed by the desperate need of mature forty-year-olds to recapture their glory days, when they werse ten or eleven, and I began a meditation on the nature of celebrity. I combined these ideas with reflections on the instantaneous feedback that is such a prominent characteristic of twenty-first-century media, and gradually developed the story of Sanson, the media puppet who was trying desperately not to become a real boy.
THE END
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