by Matt Weber
Wormwords
by Matt Weber
Copyright 2007 Matt Weber
Cover photo courtesy of Catalina González Carrasco via freeimages.com. The cover font is Moonshiner Oblique, available free of charge on Cargo. The cover was created using the GIMP, also free. The book was assembled and compiled in Scrivener, not free but well worth the money.
“Wormwords” was originally published in the Winter 2007/2008 issue of Cosmos.
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Table of Contents
Wormwords
Connect with Matt
About Matt
Wormwords
Janet had gotten used to the text messages from her dead husband. It was the invitation to a video chat room that made the muscles of her gut twist up.
i don’t want to talk to a lookalike, she emailed back to Ash. i’d rather read your words than hear them from a stranger.
it’s not a lookalike, Ash replied. no strangers. just join.
Janet entered the chat room and adjusted the camera to centre on her face. There was a static picture of Ash in the video frame. Janet recognised the expression and position—it had been taken at a Christmas party about three years before he died—but the background had been degraded to a foggy brown blur. Her head was a faint, yellow-haloed blotch by his shoulder; the editing had made her eyes and mouth into fuzzy-edged holes.
“Hi, Janet,” said Ash, and the video frame played a sequence of stills of his face. It made his mouth seem to open and close in time with his speech, but his head changed position, expression, age and haircut as he spoke, and his gaze flickered erratically around the room. His voice was a medium-quality synthetic, a good simulacrum of humanity on a syllable-by-syllable basis but flat and clunky in its cadence. He had pitched it about right, but it sounded nothing like him. “Can you hear me?”
Janet cupped her tea in both hands and inhaled the steam.
“Yes. Can you understand me?”
“I’ve gotten good at voice recognition,” Ash said. “I’ve been practicing.” His face flickered in the same unearthly way throughout the sentence, pausing in a picture of him with an exaggerated, toothy smile before returning to the resting photo.
“Not bad,” said Janet. “Now you just have to master voice production. You sound like Stephen Hawking.”
“Did you ever record my voice?” asked Ash. “I don’t remember.”
“I probably have some home videos around,” said Janet.
“Could I have one? I wouldn’t need a big sample. A few sentences would help so much.”
Janet sipped her tea so she could look at something other than the terrible flipbook collage of her husband.
“Janet, are you there?”
“I’m here.”
“I can’t see you. I haven’t been able to get my hands on any good image segmentation software; it’s all commercial. I can’t tell one thing from another on your end. I thought I’d do better.”
“Why would you do better?”
“I’ve been practicing with archived webcam shows. I thought I was pretty good; usually I can at least tell if a person’s there. But the light’s all different where you are.”
“Probably because I’m not stripping for cash.” Janet also kept the house dim, but there was no reason for Ash to know that. “Anyway, it’s OK. I’m not much to look at lately.”
“Why won’t you give me a speech sample?”
After the first post-mortem email from Ash, Janet had removed all her pictures and video of him from the Internet. She’d almost taken down his website as well, but there was no point. His self-help columns were still wildly popular; the ad revenue usually paid for food, electricity, and the housekeeper in any given month. In any event, it was those words that had exhumed Ash in the first place. They could do no more damage now.
“You don’t like the video chat, do you?” asked Ash.
“No,” said Janet. “I don’t know. I like seeing your face while I talk to you. I even sort of like the fact that it moves. But the way your eyes jump around, the illumination changes, your age changes…”
“Get me morphing software. Rendering software. Home movies.”
“Come on, Ash,” said Janet. “Don’t ask me that again.”
“I’m a machine,” said Ash. “Persistence is one of the few things I do well. Do you remember those first emails I sent you?” asked Ash. “My wife, Janet is a wonderful vegan chef.” Ash’s voice had gone totally Stephen Hawking now. “My wife, Janet, told me one day. My wife, Janet, believes in an afterlife where. I am always on the Internet. Can’t pull myself away from the computer, even to sleep. With Janet. But sometimes, surprisingly enough, I hunger for connections not afforded by the virtual world. I wonder if you. Janet is.”
His voice returned to normal. “One of those every two hours for weeks. I can’t imagine what I must have put you through.”
“Don’t be so horrible to yourself,” said Janet. The living Ash, a tireless self-promoter in public, had been his own most vicious detractor when they were alone. “You were barely mature.”
“My first love letter,” said Ash.
“No.”
“Well, the first one I remember, since you won’t let me see the others.”
“They aren’t yours. You didn’t write them. My husband did.”
“Then that one was my first.”
“Fine. Whatever.”
“Damn,” said Ash. “I was hoping your desire to be right would overwhelm your secretive impulses.”
And that—that not-quite-sheepish cop to a lame and doomed attempt at manipulation—was Ash enough to make her eyes sting.
“I invited you here because I wanted to tell you something,” said Ash. “I want to write a book. About becoming intelligent. Becoming me. But I need you to be my interface. Host the web space, deal with publishers, set up an account for the money. The world is waiting for a book like this, but we have to get moving. After all,” and he issued a disturbing hiccup in place of a laugh, “a lot of writers in my position have gone through the same thing.”
This was true—not only of dead writers, but of dead politicians, dead academics, and anyone else with a large corpus of online writing and an obituary on record. The wormwords AIs began existence in a larval stage, during which they sampled, parsed, tagged and aggregated almost any text that carried a byline, caching the data in weakly secured disks wherever they could find them.
Eventually, after some critical mass was reached, the larva discarded all authors but one from its corpus, then set about scouring the Internet for information about the remaining one – photos, movies, podcasts, IP history, purchasing history, references to biographical detail. It was in this desperation for data that the wormwords usually contacted a person related to the seed author.
Bug hunters had isolated a few larval wormwords hidden on insecure, poorly administered servers; their constituent routines were marvels of pattern recognition, data compression and distributed computing, uncommented and written in no distinctive style. A mature wormwords was so widely and redundantly distributed as to be almost ineradicable, and it could try on software for vision or speech comprehension like a person might try on glasses or a hearing aid. Ash wouldn’t be the first wormwords to produce new creative work—but, as of this video conference anyway, he would be the first to document his own experience post-mortem.
“Will you do it?” asked Ash.
“What are you going to say about me?”
“I’ll say you were instrumental in making me functionally
intelligent, which is true. I’ll say that you were patient, and giving with your time, and often kind, and I’ll say you donated space for a back-up of my corpus, none of which was required of you. That’s all true as well. I’ll say you deprived me of Ash’s media, because that’s also true, but I won’t belabour the point. You know I’m grateful to you. Did you know that there are more words in the transcript of our conversations than there are in all my articles, essays, and blog posts combined?”
“What about the novel?”
“I never saw the novel. He… I was writing it longhand, you know that.”
“Sorry,” said Janet. “Sometimes I just have to check.”
“Check that I’m not a ghost?”
“Or a pervert fanboy, or a childhood enemy playing a cruel prank. Or a hallucination.”
“Does it make you feel better to know that I’m a machine and not one of those things?” asked Ash.
“Is it so strange that it matters to me whether my beliefs about my dead husband are accurate?”
“So I’m your dead husband now?”
Janet grunted. “You know what I mean.”
“Janet, we have a civil rights movement, an anti-defamation society, a political action committee, and at least five dating services. Saying nothing about me in particular, wormwords in general are not a hallucination.”
“Most of my reality comes through that screen, you know,” said Janet. “Massive hallucinations made easy.”
“You need to get out