Strange Attractors (1985)

Home > Other > Strange Attractors (1985) > Page 26
Strange Attractors (1985) Page 26

by Damien Broderick


  How much will I understand? Your pictures certainly mean nothing to me.

  184

  George Turner

  What is the symbolism of a flayed man with a flayed rat in his stomach, and in

  its stomach a plucked fowl laying an egg?

  N o t symbolism? A clear statement? I shouldn’t have asked. No two of these

  pictures seem to be in the same style; there is no theory of art here - that I can

  see. Is this why B.Group made such a splash in its first years, then faded out of

  sight?

  We didn’t fade out of sight; we made our money and withdrew. It

  was shameless on our part, but we had done what was asked of us.

  That is, we had demonstrated that great artists can be created in the

  laboratory, produced our exhibitions of masterpieces on a level slightly

  advanced over the contemporary and then got on with our real work.

  Which has no acceptance. Much too advanced.

  We used hypnotic techniques for quick acceptance. It’s no secret,

  though the critics don’t care to labour the point. We used line, form

  and colour to lure the brain into looking where we wished, then be led

  from point to point of one substantially meaningless area to another,

  allowing it to create interpretations. We weren’t fakes; we introduced

  new techniques and people did find genuine aesthetic-pleasure in the

  works. And we made the money we needed for following our own

  bents. Nobody likes what we do now because they can’t see it whole;

  they think in terms of historical aesthetics, and appreciations come

  only when minds are sufficiently developed to look past their own distractions. Aesthetes aren’t, on the whole, a clever bunch, only a mass of sensitivities.

  Group B is superior, but that in itself is nothing to be proud of. The

  greatest artists and most of the lesser have created themselves out of

  desire and need, but we were created by a computer. Self-expression

  is in our genes but we aren’t fools enough to take credit for it.

  That? Yes, go and look at it. Tell me if it means anything to you.

  It may not, but I must look because — Because for an instant you betrayed

  interest in m y interest in that picture. Well, now. . . parallel verticals composed

  of jumbled geometric forms —

  squares, circles, triangles, rhombs - the space

  between the verticals speckled with pastel colours, very pale, so that the

  canvas —

  no, not canvas, I think it’s glass with a rippled surface —

  looks like

  bars on a background of tinted snow, very deep, three-dimensional - the hypnotic technique?

  I move my head and the thing changes like a kaleidoscope; the bars bend

  in a left-handed spiral, the speckles between them fall into patterns linking the

  spiralling bars while blotches of colour come forward to impinge on the bars

  and to move up and down between them as I look up, look down. I look from

  the other side and the spiral becomes right-handed, all the effects reversed.

  On the nursery floor

  185

  S pirals?

  I peer more closely and have a sensation of tipping forward into the painted

  surface, of being led down a weli of coiour to a particular point where the blazing blotches hover in space, marking off collocations of the tiny geometric figures which form the spiralling bars... in groups of three.

  Mayflower shakes my arm, vigorously, while she laughs. Hypnotic, and how!

  I have been practically inside the thing. Meaning? Such pure fascination needs

  no meaning. But it has one.

  I painted that for Young Feller. He told me what would please him

  in a picture and I painted it for him. So there was one talent not

  programmed into him.

  Yes, as you guessed, he sought us out. For practical reasons, not for

  friendship. He had no feeling for the A and B Groups. Why should

  he? For heaven’s sake, man, we are literally three different species. We

  have no thoughts in common, no needs, no perceptions . . .

  The A Group physical scientists were to him simply bores, as they

  are to me and my sibs — dry people, intent on the struts and gears of

  the universe, seeking incontrovertible facts. Oh, we don’t discount

  facts but we use them to create the parallel universes of the spirit, while

  the As see them only as jigsaw pieces.

  Young Feller came to us for convenience. He found us bearable so

  long as we didn’t try to discuss with him. To him our discussion was

  prattle. So, can you imagine him out there among the street crowds?

  Amid the meaningless jabber, the pointless scurry, the inanities of

  thought? Hum anity drives us to screaming point with its lack of the

  simplest understandings; what do you think it did to him?

  Are you insulted? Too bloody bad.

  At the Project he had gritted his teeth to deal with people who were

  by human standards an intelligent lot, but contact with the raw mass

  of humanity shocked his mind. He refused to leave this house after the

  first days; he had his course of study and a full range of terminals, so

  why go out? W ith the duplicate Library Access Card — which I

  forged for him, by the way — he was content.

  It had to be biology; surely you see that. In his place what would

  your need have been? They couldn’t breed from each other, could

  they? They were clones, identical save for the Y chromosomes; in-

  breeding could only bring regression; copulation would have been

  super-incest with no benefit as random variation regressed the

  children to common stock in a couple of generations. The Group’s

  existence would have become pointless for lack of perpetuation.

  186

  George Turner

  Ay, Lady, gush gush! Al this was plain from the moment we saw why all

  biology texts were removed from the Project site before C Group was advanced enough to get at them. No doubt your script tells you to make sure I understand. Which should mean that my progress is no longer under my control.

  Some sort of an end is in sight.

  So Young Feller had to become the greatest biologist in the world,

  for him not so difficult an achievement, and in eight weeks he learned

  everything that a global information storage network could provide.

  By then he knew precisely how to regulate the guesswork of the Project

  scientists, how to create exactly the mental and genetic types required

  with no gambling on results. He knew how to create an entire race of

  his own kind. Now you know what happened during the two months

  for which he was missing.

  Finish gush; what happened next is history. He went back to the Project site

  and told his siblings what he had seen and done in the world outside. When he

  had finished they sat down facing each other and exercised their control of autonomic functions. With the whole day staff looking on and wondering what the hell, they stopped breathing, stopped their hearts, disrupted their synaptic systems, and died.

  And that was the end of Project IG.

  Why? Young Feller had brought back what he went for, so why?

  Because in the city he had learned something of the real nature of

  the world, in close-up, and encountered the forces against which

  intelligence has no weapon. Having made his plans, he needed a

  means of implementing them — resources of
money, manpower and

  equipment that only a government could finance.

  So he went and asked for them. I mean it. In the innocence of a

  logic which dealt only in commonsense he went to the man who,

  according to his summation, could and would listen and assist. He

  was refused.

  The m anner of the refusal opened his eyes to facts. He was asked

  what use he thought his kind could be in the world, and could give no

  answer. He recognised himself as useless because he could not think

  on this world’s level; he needed a world of his own and had reasoned

  that the power that created him would help him to get it.

  Now he knew that even if he succeeded in creating C Group

  children they would be condemned to life as unwanted, resented

  inhabitants of a madhouse.

  The Group’s life was insupportable, with no escape except death.

  So they escaped.

  On the nursery floor

  187

  Whom had he asked? Why, a very powerful man indeed, one who

  had survived five governments in and out of power to return to the

  position he had held twenty years before as Minister for Science and

  Development, the man who should be profoundly interested in the

  furtherance of his own dreamchild.

  Naturally, this information was withheld at the first interview but

  I think he will talk about it now.

  Go to him as soon as you leave here; he expects you. Don’t try to get

  in touch with your organisation, whatever it is. If you do you will certainly be killed at once and my warning will be the last kindness ever done you.

  Good morning. And good luck. One always needs a little luck.

  Good woman, wicked woman, and does it matter which? Thank you,

  ma’am, for the chill of your send-off. But, please, a last long gaze at the picture

  Young Feller described (dictated?) and you painted. Marvellous, marvellous,

  and I wish I could carry it in my mind forever. Alas, it was designed for a more

  understanding brain than mine; post-internalism is beyond me. But I know a

  thing or two about this example.

  8

  The journalist’s human interest story

  W hat The Mob (my term) wanted was Young Feller’s legacy of biological notebooks detailing the genetic manipulation of intellect. They were sure the notebooks existed because they themselves would never

  leave work undocumented; their cold-blooded A Group minds could

  not envision a super-intelligence operating by a logic different from

  their efficient own. That he might have left them in a form unintelligible to them was outside their imaginative scope; that he might make a joke of some sort (his sort) would be unthought of, an intellectual flightiness.

  It was in some degree incomprehensible to me also, but I could

  make no guesses at the working of Young Feller’s mind; his reasons

  were beyond me but I was sure of my flash of intuition in Mayflower’s

  house. I had seen the ‘blueprint’, his will and testament, to be read by

  whomever could.

  A question: Did Mayflower know what she had painted in that

  trickery of light, form and illusion?

  I thought she did. That final nuance of complicity after the shock

  of warning, after frightening the daylight out of me by revealing that

  the end of the line was where I had begun . . . with the ancient Arm­

  188

  George Turner

  strong, once Minister . . . that jokey, coarse survivor.

  This time there was no pleasant chat on the balcony overlooking the

  ocean. An electronic frisk declared me free of weapons (depending on

  what the frisk was programmed to see as a weapon). I was expected;

  the door flunkey had his orders and led me into the heart of the house,

  to a windowless room.

  Building regulations made windowless rooms illegal, for health reasons, a century and a half ago; a windowless room in a modern house is a private place but not therefore a fine one. A step through the door

  into Armstrong’s holy of unholies was a step from our world into his

  private world. On one side of the door were the small movements and

  reverberations of comforting life; on his side of it was a total lack of

  sound, a deadness in the atmosphere, a removal from the sense of ambient life.

  So Armstrong had a protected room — spyproof. I had heard such

  places described in eerie terms but had never been in one. Eerie may

  have been the word for it but I was tense and frightened, concerned

  with realities before impressions.

  It was a council chamber, boardroom, furnished with long table

  and sixteen chairs and the usual array of reference terminals. What

  vice was bred in this secret womb? I don’t know; I don’t care. I am

  alive, which is what I care about.

  Armstrong sat alone at the head of the table, old beyond his desert

  but looking healthily middle-aged. He smiled agreeably because he

  had spent a lifetime smiling agreeably over tiger thoughts, and said,

  ‘I imagine you are wired for sight and sound, as the phrase goes.’

  ‘O f course.’ But not really; the circuits were printed on my bones

  and the visual segued directly into the optic system, but why alert him

  to techniques he knew nothing of?

  He said, still agreeable, still with claws sheathed, ‘I shan’t waste my

  time or yours. To whom do you report?’

  To whom. His native, educated English with no overlay of the common touch he had practised on the hustings. A man of intent, seeking knowledge.

  ‘I don’t report.’

  I took a dozen paces down the length of the room and his hand slid

  to the dashboard in the table’s edge. Alarm? A weapon of some sort?

  He smiled, very briefly, without humour. (Just a journalist after a human interest story.’

  On the nursery floor

  189

  ‘Not at all.’ It was far too late for evasion or delay. ‘I don’t report because I am monitored continuously. I have no storage capacity, so you can’t drain the content.’

  ‘Who monitors you?’

  ‘Does it matter? When I entered this room the monitoring was cut

  off by your dampers. O ur business is therefore private.’ He became

  visibly alert to possible threat, the idea that matters might be less simple than he had assumed. I raked the exposed nerve. ‘My location when communication ceased will have been recorded. You are

  pinpointed.’

  I think my voice was steady. When there is no way to go but forward

  the mind divests itself of waste frights and scurryings.

  ‘By whom?’ He was conceding nothing.

  ‘The Mob,’ I said.

  Momentarily he was rocked. ‘A criminal gang?’ The association of

  ideas was as old as melodrama. An underworld organisation? I don’t

  believe you.’

  I shrugged. He leaned back in his chair, making a production of

  studying me while he groped for decision. ‘I can have information

  electro-probed out of you.’ I nodded agreement. ‘O r physical torture.

  Quicker but finally less reliable.’

  ‘Crime then on both sides,’ I suggested, without any specific

  intention. ‘These days the gangs don’t battle it out; they make a deal.’

  ‘Ah!’

  .................'

  It was such a satisfied sound that 1 could have kicked myself for not

  realising that he needed knowledg
e and a deal might be the means of

  pursuing it.

  ‘Listen to me,’ he said. ‘I made things easy for you. I monitored your

  appointments and had some of your interviewees give you a little confidential information, enough to keep your nose to the trail, to lead you on until your aim became plain.’

  A nd did it?’

  ‘No. That is why you are here. Tell me.’

  Why not? The situation needed clearing. ‘I wanted Young Feller’s

  notes. We were sure they existed.’

  He was most alert. And . . . ?’

  ‘I found them.’

  ‘Where?’

  ‘Hanging on Mayflower’s wall.’

  ‘Excellent!’ He sounded genuinely appreciative of my perception

  — which was in fact intuition of the sort that graces my level of IQ

  190

  George 'Eirner

  once in a lifetime. I had been half hypnotised by the thing when it

  declared itself. Armstrong murmured, as though it explained everything, ‘Mayflower is my m istress’

  It explained a great deal, but I would not until then have accused

  Mayflower of pigsty taste.

  ‘She and I can’t decipher it, although she painted the thing, and

  asking experts to do it would only spread knowledge that is better kept

  close. Can your Mob decipher it?’

  I had my doubts but I said, ‘They can design and build the computer to do the job. It will require unusual programming.’

  ‘T hat is my thought. So, a deal.’

  ‘W hat do you offer?’

  He spread his hands. ‘Intangibles. Protection and the path-easing

  of wealth, industrial power and contacts in useful areas. Alternatively,

  I can have your mind torn open and their identities revealed, after

  which I will take over direction of the operation,’

  I pretended to think it over. I was about six metres from him and his

  hand only inches from a button. I decided that I could get closer

  without alarming him, and did so between exchanges, as naturally as

  I could manage.

  ‘W hat puzzles me,’ I said, ‘is what you expect to gain. Do you want

  to establish a factory for the production of super-intelligences?’

  He snorted a contempt which seemed to me the most natural thing

  about him; he became for a moment the larrikin politician ‘Who the

 

‹ Prev