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-
- Journal Entries 201 / 0057 - 173 / 0058
-
- My head hurts. Hurts? It shouldn't hurt; for that matter, I
- shouldn't have a head. At least, I shouldn't feel like I have one.
-
- Let's try this again. Do I have eyes? Scan left, right. Yes, I
- have eyes, physical ones, so I try the eyelids. They open. Interesting.
- Apparently I'm not deceased, not yet. Typical. Failure. So what am I
- looking at?
-
- Eyes aren't focussing. Not surprised. Wait. Close them again.
- Do a few exercises, like Trill taught me all those years ago. Try the
- eyes again. Open. Okay?
-
- Okay, better. Look around. Wooden roof, couple of crossbeams.
- Good construction, but not typically Pendorian. Hmm. Turn my head to
- see the rest of the room.
-
- Doesn't work. Neck's stiff as hell. Wait. Practice again. One
- muscle, two, two, three... again and again. Force the fire. Try
- something easier. A hand. Toes move, good. Try some more. Ankles.
- I'm getting on my feet, at least. How long was I out, that I feel this
- bad?
-
- Wait a minute. This is familiar. Think. Where have I felt this?
-
- Cryo. Check. Yes! A dead monkey has been sleeping on my tongue.
- At least, that's the way it tastes. I was in cryogenic suspension.
- Odd, the last thing I remember was...
-
- I tried to kill myself. Yes, that was it. Brain is NOT, repeat,
- NOT online. Okay. Acceptance. I tried the old fashioned way,
- too...slit wrists and bath. Stupid. Should have realized that Dave
- would call for help the moment I was out. Didn't try hard enough. Okay
-
- Why did I try? Think.
-
- Nothing.
-
- That's idiotic. Got to be something. Think. Nothing comes. No
- reason for the suicide. Other than.
-
- Depression. Depression of the conceptual artist. There is nothing
- left to live for, not because I've done it all, but because I know I
- can. That's stupid.
-
- Is it? I don't know, it is true. I can do virtually anything.
- Hmm. Frustrated.
-
- Let's try this again. May as well get on my feet. I'm not going
- to try again, at least not until I determine what's going on, where I
- am, and who saved me, and should I hate them or thank them, or both?
-
- Slowly. OUCH! Shit, I'm stiff, I hate cryo. If there's anything
- worse than waking up from coldsleep, I'm not sure what it could be. The
- effort of sitting up makes my head spin, but I do it. The band of
- muscle that attaches left shoulder to skull is tighter than anything,
- hurts like a hot poker. I want to concentrate, banish the pain, but I
- can't summon the strength.
-
- I stand... and fall to my knees. Much better. Can't stand, may as
- well crawl towards the door.
-
- There is a door here. Okay, crawl towards it. Locked. Is there
- another door? Yes. Okay, let me get my bearings. There's a locked
- door, a rather simple bed, a desk, a mirror, another door, and a big
- window. Outside the window I see sunlight, a big tree, a willow, and
- beyond that, the cliff face of a mountain, not to distant, either. Nice
- place. Willow's cold, the leaves yellowing, although it's still early
- in its season, mostly green. I crawl for the other door, which is ajar,
- and peek in around the jamb. It's a bathroom, pretty old-fashioned too.
- Only thing even remotely unusual is the bidet, but that's an
- architectural preference. My bladder screams in recognition, and I
- manage to gradually haul myself up, sit down on the damned commode and
- relieve myself.
-
- My head swims, clears, and I see a glass on the sink. Fill glass
- from sink, drink. Cold, clear, feels wonderful going down. Gods, then,
- it hurts! Throat's raw!
-
- Stupid. Cryo. Forgot that thick syrupy shit I'm supposed to drink
- afterwards. Oh, forget it, who cares if my electrolytes are balanced?
-
- Drink more, ignoring, for the most part, the pain signals. Try to
- rise, steady myself on sink and towel bar. Look in mirror.
-
- Gods I am a mess. No beard, so I wasn't in cryo long. Look at
- wrists. Nothing, not even scars. Good healing job, but there's a pain
- in the crux of my elbow. Oh. Intravenous scarring, they were taking
- care of me, in a serious way. It'll go away, I'm familiar with it.
-
- Walk, unsteady towards window. Look out. Same assesment. More
- trees, again in the beginning of Firith, the season of fading. And
- there's...
-
- What the? I didn't design those!
-
- And who's she? Whoever, she's beautiful. Thick, small blond
- curls, big frame, high sweet breasts, naked, freckles, looking Irish
- almost.
-
- And who built her unicorn? If it's a 'droid, it's from Grand
- Design, nobody else on Pendor makes them that well. If it's not, I'm
- impressed, I thought nobody had reached my talent yet, at least not with
- mammals.
-
- She vanished out of sight almost as soon as I got a good look at
- her. She rode with just a blanket. I looked. I was on the second
- floor, but the window wouldn't open. I pressed my hand to the glass,
- and it was warm to the touch, so I assume it was warm outside.
-
- I began an intensive search of the room. The bed was simple, as
- I'd said. Small but comfortable, nothing fancy. Tried the desk...Hmm,
- interesting. The top flips over, keyboard. Okay, where's the...neat,
- the screen is in the mirror. Good effect, hides a lot, but takes
- refocussing, it's like looking into a head's-up display. Drawer's got a
- pen, paper. Try the bathroom. No razor in the medicine chest, in fact
- nothing at all in there. Soap in the bathtub. I smiled. I could slip
- and fall and kill myself.
-
- Do failed suicides always think this way?
-
- What's the vidmirror hooked to? Try it. Standard input, but no
- email output, apparently. Look at the date. 57! It's been FIVE
- YEARS!? Where the Hell have I been?
-
- Frozen solid.
-
- Oh, yeah. Waitaminute! Run to the window. Look. Yeah, sun's
- overhead, can't see much otherwise, damned mountain in the way. Assume
- for the time being I'm on Pendor. Newslines Pendorian, at least. Try a
- music program.
-
- Nothing. No audio throughput at all. I guess I wait for my
- hostess. I went and lay down on the bed.
-
-
-
- "Ken?" Soft voice, sweet and high pitched, with a middlin'
- southern accent, like from north Georgia on Earth somewhere. I come to
- conciousness suddenly, flailing.
-
- "Wha?..." I said. "Easy, easy," she said. My eyes came to rest on
- the young woman I'd seen before. A better look at her face. High
- cheekbones, soft, definitely Irish eyes. But that accent!
-
- "Who are you?" I demanded of my...captor? Saviour?
-
- "Are you feeling alright, Ken? Hungry?"
-
- "Who are you?"
-
- "My name's Brieanna Flanders. Call me Brie."
-
- "Brieanna Flanders? There weren't any Flanders in my designs."
-
- "I know. I'm not anyone you know, or made." Her voice was
- infinitely patient with me.
-
- "That's impossible. The year said it was '57."
-
- "It is."
-
- "Then we're still in the Pocket Realm. You can't be from outside,
- yet, there is no contact with the outside. The Gate is closed, and will
- be until '94."
-
- "I'm from here. I'm just not anyone you ever worked on."
-
- I looked at her. "Then where did you come from. Everyone here is
- someone I worked on, except for one person, and you are not she."
-
- "Oh, no? Why couldn't I be Oenone?"
-
- "Because Oenone reeks of magic, and you, my dear, are exactly what
- I see in front of me, nothing more, nothing less. You are not Paris'
- paramour."
-
- "That's true. Stupid bastard, she should have killed him when she
- had the chance."
-
- "Brie...where am I?"
-
- "The mansion."
-
- "Sounds ominous, like number 2 pronouncing I'm in 'The Village.'"
-
- "Not that bad, but the maps won't tell you where you are, and
- there's no place to go beyond the mountains, anyway."
-
- "Then I am in 'The Village,' at least in that I'm not leaving
- anytime soon. Am I number 6?"
-
- "No, no, nothing like that. You're Ken, and that's all."
-
- "Are we alone?"
-
- "For the most part, it's just you and me in this house. There's an
- SI, too."
-
- "Not an AI?"
-
- "Nope. The only person you have to talk to is me. Sorry."
-
- "Don't be sorry. It's okay. So." I sat up, slowly. "Are you
- going to tell me where you're from?"
-
- "No. And I probably won't for a while. Just take it for granted
- that I'm here, and that I'm a friend of a friend of yours, and I'm your
- friend as well."
-
- "So. Why am I here?"
-
- "I'm not sure about that. I think that's for you to decide."
-
- "And you're here to help me make that decision."
-
- "Well... yes."
-
- "Are you going to help me make my own decision, or the 'right'
- decision, in the eyes of your... friend."
-
- "Your own. At least, I hope I can. We're pretty independent out
- here. It's just you and me. And the animals down in the stable."
-
- "Yeah, I saw that. Is that a 'ganic, or what?"
-
- "It's a real unicorn, trust me."
-
- I looked at her face again. The words and the accent went
- together pretty well. So I've never worked on you in any way, eh, Miss
- Brieanna Flanders? Then who made you?
-
- What are you?
-
-
-
- "Are you hungry?" she asked, after a few minutes that I spent
- studying her face and she spent patiently waiting for me to finish.
-
- "Actually, yeah, I am."
-
- "Then let's go eat. Drac, dinner in the dining hall."
-
- A new voice, this one well modulated, but unless it was conciously
- blocked, obviously SI, said, "Yes, Brieanna."
-
- I looked at her. "Drac? Your computer is named Dracula?"
-
- "Sure, why not? It's not AI, it's just a machine."
-
- I suppose. "Well, then, lead on to dinner." She opened the
- previously locked exit to the bedroom, into what apparently was a main
- hallway and foyer. There was a railing opposite the door, and below was
- a huge room, apparently the main room of the estate. There were a
- couple of stuffed chairs, and some bookshelves. The place had an air of
- age, but it couldn't be that old... could it? And she did not belong,
- other than that her accent matched the obviously southern plantation
- design. There was that wonderful smell of cured, aged wood.
-
- She led on down the single staircase, and when we reached the
- bottom I look around. The carpet was oriental. There was a grand piano
- in one corner, a saxophone next to it. I couldn't play either, so I
- assumed they were both hers, but then she may have lied about being
- alone. She led me through a pair of swinging doors into a room with a
- small square table with two chairs and candles. She sat me, and then
- seated herself.
-
- "So."
-
- "So," she repeated. "What do you want to know?"
-
- "Where am I?"
-
- "On Pendor."
-
- "I know that! That's more square klickage than all of the rest of
- the inhabited galaxy together, so that doesn't do me much good. So,
- where am I?"
-
- "Why don't you step outside and take a look?"
-
- The old Shardik came on-line. "Because I've been invited to dinner
- by a beautiful young lady, and I'm not about to step out on her to see
- the weather."
-
- She smiled. "You probably won't recognize it. We're pretty far
- from either of the major inhabited sectors, and we're not close to the
- Farside colony, either."
-
- At that moment, a kitchen droid, real old-fashioned type on wheels,
- no less, came out and began to distribute dinner to the two of us. It
- was a well done bird, turkey, I'd have guessed, and was quite delicious.
- We continued the conversation as we ate.
-
- "So you're not going to tell me where I am?"
-
- "Nope. I'm not even going to give you the sector number."
-
- "Oh well. So, am I a prisoner here?"
-
- "A guest. You've got free rein to the place."
-
- "Even access to the kitchen?"
-
- She smiled, a small, wan, smile. "Yes, even access to the kitchen.
- And I won't hide the knives."
-
- "I appreciate the gesture, but I don't think that's necessary."
-
- "Then you won't try again?" There was a sudden hope in her eyes,
- like a flash.
-
- "I didn't say that. But remember, you said your job was to let me
- make my own decisions. Tell me, Brieanna, are you my savior?"
-
- She smiled thinly. "Nothing like that. Your... savior... simply
- thought that you'd made a rash decision and decided to let you try and
- look at whatever questions and problem you had again."
-
- I sat there and stared at her, trying to absorb what she'd said,
- and still trying to figure out who and what she was. Dinner was
- apparently over. I excused myself, asking for directions to a washroom
- and permission for leave. She gave both graciously.
-
-
-
- Dark fell as suddenly as it always does, and a wild wind whipped
- past the house as I sat in my room. There was a knock on the door.
- Startled, I went to answer it. It was my warden.
-
- "May I come in?" she asked.
-
- "I suppose, don't see why not."
-
- She entered and leaned against the wall of the closet. "Are you
- upset that you're here?"
-
- "Upset? No, not really. Why should I be? I'm alive, after all."
-
- "That's not funny, Ken. Don't be bitter."
-
- "WHY THE HELL NOT? The most precious and personal decision one can
- make is to take their own life, and when the time in my mind came for me
- to exercise that right, you take that power away from me and imprison me
- somewhere on my own homeworld? My warden is a beautiful young women who
- won't answer any of my questions, impossibly claims to not be a
- Pendorian, and won't tell me the way home!"
-
- "I didn't say I wasn't Pendorian."
-
- "You said you were nobody I worked on, and you weren't the child of
- anybody I worked on. The only way that's possible is if you're Oenone,
- and you are so out of character with her, you don't even smell like her.
- You're a human, that's obvious, and you aren't any sort of android I
- know, your scent is too perfect. You aren't Pendorian."
-
- "I am, trust me. Just nobody you ever worked on."
-
- "Okay, say that you are, it's a stupid argument. You still won't
- tell me how to leave."
-
- "You could walk."
-
- "Oh, great. And how far away are we from the nearest town or
- village? That distance could be measured in light-minutes!"
-
- "Actually, the nearest town or village would involve a considerable
- swim, walking in either direction."
-
- "We're on the aspinward side?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Wonderful. Nobody lives out here. My best chance is waiting for
- Maha Oren to find his way by."
-
- "Doubtful, his team is headed the other way, anyway."
-
- "Oh, great. Look, Miss Flanders, I'd really like to go to sleep,
- alone, if I may."
-
- "Okay. Will I see you in the morning?"
-
- "If I feel like seeing you, maybe." I led her to the door, and,
- admittedly, slammed it on her as she left.
-
-
-
- I awoke the next day sometime after daylight, and began to look
- around for something to wear. The less-than-comfortable clothes I'd had
- on yesterday were on the chair, but I had no desire to wear them, so I
- opened the closet and examined its contents.
-
- Seems somebody knows what I like to wear, at least. There were a
- lot of t-shirts, collared simple shirts, a few heavier, nicely-cut
- shirts, two vests with what looked like a million pockets, and several
- pairs of jeans. I hoped silently that they fit. In the drawers I found
- appropriate shorts and socks, and dressed myself comfortably.
-
- I tried the window again. It opened. Figures. Outside was cool
- and comfortable, and I took one of the vests along, the blue one.
-
- I left the room and headed downstairs. I realized that I had no
- idea what this house was like, and the mistress thereof was nowhere to
- be seen so I decided to look around. The first room I headed for was
- where I assumed was the kitchen, and I was right. The kitchen was
- incongrous. It was done in a lot of stonework, and not many windows,
- like that of a medieval castle, and the robobutler looked so out of
- place I laughed. I examined the drawers, and sure enough, she was true
- to her word. I could find the knives if I wanted.
-
- I examined the cold room and the larder,and found the supplies
- adequate. I found some grains, some brown sugar, and some milk, so I
- assumed that that was breakfast. Not bad.
-
- I continued around, finding that a lot of the house was empty.
- Empty rooms, empty basement, empty hallways. And everything was old,
- older than it should have been, older than it could have been. There
- were a few truly Pendorian characteristics to the place, like the fact
- that there was power, but no outlets. Everything had it's own power
- source, even the kitchen blender, or the electric keyboard I found in
- one room, complete with two speakers. I got it to squeal a few notes.
-
- I found a few locked doors, and I figured that there were good
- reasons they were locked, so I left them alone. Even though, I thought,
- they could hold the stepping disk out of here. Then again, they could
- simply be her bedroom doors. They did concentrate towards the center
- rear of the first floor.
-
- But there were other weird rooms that I didn't understand. If they
- were trying to keep me from trying again, they were doing a lousy job of
- it, whoever 'they' were. I found a room with a couple of brass-enclosed
- chests, unlocked, and when I opened one I found... guns? All sorts of
- guns, rifles, pistols, even one of my person favorites, a .45 Army Colt.
- And there was ammunition for them,too. I took the .45, and, after
- checking the slide and action, loaded seven-plus-one and put it into a
- belt holster I'd found in the chest as well.
-
- There was a wine cellar, again with very Pendorian wines in it,
- including varieties I did not recognize, although they were all dated
- some time ago. This was all so weird, like I'd fallen into another,
- different reality from my own, yet almost like my own.
-
- I found another room with an easel in it, and a half-done portrait
- of myself, apparently done by my captor. It was a fair likeness, I
- decided, but it obviously needed work, since only half was done, the
- other in pencil sketch on canvas. On an impulse, I fast-drew the
- pistol, but I decided against shooting my image. Didn't want to put a
- hole in Brieanna's work, not yet, at least.
-
- I decided, then, that it was time to try the front door, so I
- headed out that way, but on the way I passed the piano. Actually, it
- was a full Pianoforte, and it was well-tuned. I can't play piano worth
- a damn, never did learn anything beyond a few simple melodies. I've
- always been openly envious of people who can play. And the saxophone,
- forget it. I might be able to get a sound out of it, halfway between a
- squeal and a sneeze.
-
- So the front door it was. I opened it and stepped out. The ground
- of the house stopped very short of the door, so I stepped out into the
- long grass and walked away from the house. After about five minute, I
- turned around. The house was in one corner of a large, grassy field,
- three edges of which were of huge primeval forest, and the final edge
- was a mountain cliff. It was a good-sized mountain, and the cliff ran
- vertical for almost, oh, I'd say about four hundred meters. Then I saw
- the joke.
-
- When I realized what I was looking at, I almost died laughing.
- Most people probably wouldn't have gotten it, but it was funny. The
- house was an American southern plantation-style design on the outside.
- What's funny is that there is nowhere in America where the mountain and
- the building exists together. There is nowhere in Dixie where you'll
- find mountains like that. Whoever built this had an interesting and
- subtle sense of comedy.
-
- And a good knowledge of Terra's history. Again, it pointed to
- Brieanna's lying to me somewhere.
-
- Odd. I haven't decided what I'm going to call my prison guard yet.
- Brie is too common, but do I then call her Brieanna or Miss Flanders?
- Gods, Miss Flanders sounds like an old school teacher. Brieanna it is,
- then.
-
- I looked up, then, along the ring. Ring it was, so at least I was
- on a ringworld, although confirming that it was indeed Pendor would take
- some doing. Although, I thought with a smile, there were no other
- ringworlds around, at least as far as I knew.
-
- Glancing up, I watched for a few seconds to register the direction
- the shadows were moving and figure my concepts of 'east' and 'west',
- and, true to her word, I figured we were aspinward of the ocean, and if
- that was the Vinyare' sea, then we were pretty far away from any
- inhabited region. Great.
-
- I walked around the side of the house, and as I did so something
- caught my eye. The touchstone of the building was there, and engraved
- on it was "Paul Lewis, '54." Okay, that confirms something else. Paul
- at least had a hand in this. Figures, my first son doing this to me.
- Do I kill him yet, or what?
-
- I continued on my walk. Behind and slightly to the left of the
- house were a pair of buildings, one of which was open, the other of
- which had a large door on it. I tried the one with the door first, as
- it was closest, and it opened.
-
- Okay, this was not funny, anymore. Lying on the cement floor of
- what appeared to be a garage was a full high-suit of Shirow powered
- armor, and it looked like garbage. Pieces were torn out and the
- upholstery of the harness was shredded. Whoever allowed this to happen
- to their armor was really ignorant and shouldn't be allowed near a
- vehicle again in his life. There were servos scattered about the floor
- and covered with grease. If Hitomi'd seen this, she'd have screamed.
- She virtually worships her armor.
-
- I walked into the dark little garage and looked into the gutted
- armor. There were cracks in the outer shell, too, and the faceplate was
- garbage. The S.L.A. lenses were all missing, and one of the ears was
- snapped off. I looked for one of the power switches in the lower arm,
- and found it. Nothing. I'm more partial to Stark or Haam armor,
- myself, but Hitomi swears the maintainence efforts are worth the power
- of Shirow. I tried some of the alternate power sources, and they were
- dead, too. I looked at the back, and both battery pods were missing,
- and the two PFusion tubes were cracked and drained. I climbed over the
- chestplate and tried to get in. Whoever wore this armor was a little
- shorter than I was, and a little heavier, but if I could find some
- stuffing, I could sew a new harness that would fit me.
-
- Wait a minute. I have no intention of wearing this armor. It
- doesn't work. I climbed back out and headed towards the other building.
-
- Horses. It was a stable, again with a robot Maintenance Unit. I
- asked the MU where its mistress was, but there was no answer. Damned
- SI, it's not programmed to respond to my voice. Oh well. There were
- three stalls, but only two had horses in them, one a grey stallion, the
- other a brown mare. Not knowing much about horses, that's all I could
- tell you. Except that they seemed to be in excellent condition, with
- good muscle tone and pelt color. They were shoed, and their teeth were
- whole and healthy.
-
- So what was the point of all this? Was it some sort of amusement
- park for suicidal Shardiks? If it was, it was a very poor job, I was
- not amused. So what then?
-
- The answer was right there, in front of my face. It would be some
- time before I figured it out, though. The pistol, the horses, the
- piano, the shredded powered armor, the beautiful girl. All pieces of a
- puzzle. Even the mountain.
-
-
-
- Time passes quickly when there's very little to measure it against
- other than the time of days. Of course, children grow up quickly,
- classes come to an end, even projects and spells have their durations,
- but when you're doing none of those things, but instead merely existing
- on a day-to-day basis, you don't notice the passage of time.
-
- In any event, the newsline from the outside informed me of said
- passage, and it meant little. About five weeks had passed, and the
- weather had gone from pleasant Autumn to cold Winter, and the first
- snows had come. It wasn't sticking well, but at least it was very white
- where it did stick. I had taken to daily walks, but these were going to
- be difficult soon.
-
- My captor, Brieanna, is still here, and I see her daily. We've
- gone to the point of being informal around each other, seeing as
- apparently I have to put up with her; either that or take a hike, and
- I've nowhere to go.
-
- Speaking of hiking, I did find a pair of good walking boots and a
- backpack, apparently suggestive that I can leave if I want to, but I no
- longer do. There's a mystery here, and I want to solve it. Of course,
- the mystery surrounds me. Why am I here? I don't think I'm going to
- end up being told by Brieanna, but maybe I will.
-
- I've also taken over some of the duties of the household. Brieanna
- suggested a fire in the living room, so I cut down a few trees and split
- some logs the other day. Funny how doing physical work like that
- changes attitudes. There was something more... more real... in doing
- things like that. In cutting down a tree.
-
- Not that I'm going to become a lumberjack, mind you. But I've read
- a lot of books in Brieanna's library, almost to the point of saturation,
- and I'm becoming bored. The other day I set up a holography set I found
- in one of the rooms, a room that had been empty a few weeks ago. It was
- an enourmous set of gear, and it took me all day to set it up in the
- field in front of the house. I kept glancing up and praying for it to
- not rain. It was overcast, but I hoped for the best. Actually it
- started snowing the next morning.
-
- But after about seven hours in the sun, I waited for nightfall.
- And when it came, I stuck in a laserdisc of a holographic realization of
- Shakespeare's King Richard. About halfway through I began to do some of
- the parts myself, standing up and mimicking the actors on the video.
- Well, since it was a holographic realizations, the images filled a good
- deal of the field. About halfway through Richard's curse to the King, I
- heard a giggle behind me. Somewhat aghast at having been found out, I
- turned around.
-
- Of course, It was Brieanna. She said, "Don't stop, you were doing
- wonderfully."
-
- "I don't do public performances," I replied, somewhat angrily.
-
- "But why not? You do an excellent Richard."
-
- "You like Shakespeare?" The fact that she spoke Anglic was
- something I already knew; Her library was full of the stuff. I was
- suprised, however, that she also spoke some Arabic, a language I don't
- know.
-
- "Of course. He's fascinating, don't you think?"
-
- "Well, yeah, but..." The play continued on. I hit the PAUSE
- button on the VHR. The actors came to a dead stop, in mid-argument.
-
- "Why don't you continue?" she asked again.
-
- "Look, if you want to watch the play with me, sit down, but there
- is no way in Hell you're going to get me to continue."
-
- "But I thought all humans like to copy their heroes. I saw a movie
- some time ago, from your collection. Risky Business? Same thing."
-
- "Yeah, well. Notice Cruse did that scene alone? It's... well..."
-
- "You're embarassed. Afraid that if you make a mistake, someone
- somewhere is laughing at you."
-
- "Well, sure, wouldn't you be?"
-
- "I don't know. I've never really been in that position." Her eyes
- were dreamy for a moment, and then she said, "Ken, tell me... You made
- all of this. I mean, the Ring, the people, the whole thing. Well,
- okay, you didn't make the life on it, but you changed it..."
-
- "That's what a genetic engineer does."
-
- "Yes, I know. What I mean is, how can you be embarassed about
- stumbling in something so simple as a line in a play when you so boldly
- set out to make all this?" She gestured around her.
-
- "Brieanna, I did not make all this. These trees, that grass, the
- mountain, are all just natural products, spread out after they were
- imported from Terra. As for the sentients, well, they're... You know,
- sometimes you are a pain, especially for a prison warden."
-
- "I've told you, you can leave anytime you want."
-
- "Yeah, right, and where am going to go? Walk forever?"
-
- "You could. I know your capabilities."
-
- "Oh, thanks. Look, can I watch the rest of the play?"
-
- "Oh, sorry. Sure, go ahead."
-
- I hit the PAUSE button and the play resumed. We watched in
- silence, and when the play was over, we parted in silence, as well.
-
-
-
- Captivity, Week 12.
-
- It's snowing out again. The snow is now feet deep, and getting to
- my latest project is a task and a half unto and of itself. I decided
- that, to stave off the insanity that boredom brings, it was time to work
- on the Shirow armor.
-
- Well, damn, I hate Shirow's designs! Alright, so the man is
- talented beyond words when it comes to conceptual designs in powered
- armor. But, hell, that doesn't mean maintaining one of these hunks of
- garbage is any fun.
-
- The first thing was to check the PFusion tubes. The compression
- rods were intact, and there was a reservoir, so, assuming I could
- reeassemble the parts accurately, I could get full power into the suit.
- So that was first.
-
- Disassembled the power plant, tried to fix the reaction chamber.
- Okay, so, after examining the thing, I find the muon reactor is trash.
- Great. Biggest problem is getting a laser and carbon short for this
- thing.
-
- Found the laser. Oh, well, no more Shakespeare. Disassembled the
- laser-disc player. PFusions plants don't need a whole lot of laser
- power, just something to start the ionization process that contributes
- to muon release. As for the carbon short, well, there's one less
- floodlight on the outside of the house. Broke it to get the carbon rod.
- Spent hours with a micrometer and a nailfile getting it to the right
- size.
-
- Reassembled the whole mess, hoping against the odds that everything
- was right. Eventually, the hydrogen nuclei would fuse. Hopefully.
-
- In the mean time, I was feeding power to the suit through a
- disassembled power receiver I stole from some servobot. The garage is
- also cold as a seal's teat, but that's okay. I've got some heavy
- clothing.
-
- Computer's okay, but the memory's wiped. Means I'm going to have
- to write some serious learn-by-doing routines and then try to maneuver
- in a suit that doesn't want to maneuver.
-
- Made a kiln, too, to compress the ceramics I needed for the outer
- hull of the thing. Also spent a few hours sewing a new harness.
-
- All in all, it took me about four weeks of heavy, constant physical
- work to get it nearly done. I walked out with a small lasertape player
- and proceeded to feed my new software routines into the computer through
- an interface in the main cabin. First mistake.
-
- Second mistake was kneeling across the upper arm section. See,
- Shirow armor has four arms; Each pair on a side responds according to
- the way you move your arms inside the lower set; Those are more heavily
- shielded, but they slide open to expose your hands if you want to do
- delicate work; In this case the upper arms are rotated out of the way.
- The upper arms are for combat, like picking up and throwing cars and
- other suits of armor. Oh, and in case you're wondering, if I keep
- referring to this thing as a 'suit' don't be put out; Truth is, the
- damn thing's a vehicle, three meters tall. That it's vaguely shaped
- like a man has nothing to do with its classification.
-
- In any event, the program went in rather quietly and I hit the red
- reboot button to bring the processor online. The upper right arm
- shuddered underneath me, and pain exploded across my right leg and my
- chest. I went flying until I hit the wall of the garage, where my left
- shoulder and head received equal treatment. Then I fell to the ground,
- doing just a little more damage to my already hurting body.
-
- After a few seconds of intense concentration, I looked up. The
- right arm had slammed against the ground, and was shuddering violently.
- Damn. I tried to right myself. I was suddenly very hot, and I felt
- something wet against my cheek. Great, my head was bleeding. I got
- into a sitting position, only to realize... Oh, shit, at least three
- ribs are floating free. I'm a mess. I suddenly noticed how much it
- hurt to breathe.
-
- But I kept breathing. I'm damned cussed about something like
- breathing; I'm rather fond of it. I found, to my pleasure, that I
- hadn't penetrated the lung lining; Cardio-vascular system was still
- intact. Great.
-
- So what did this mean? I could wait until Brieanna noted that I
- hadn't shown up for dinner. Not really an option. I could think of a
- dozen nasty things that could happen before then, not the least of which
- was losing bladder control. Never mind; That's already happened.
-
- That's when I heard Brieanna; She was heading for her horses,
- probably to exercise them. I gathered my breath; Oh, Gods! that hurt!
- and shouted, once "Brie!" The effort made my head spin.
-
- I heard her shout back, but I didn't understand the words. I heard
- her footsteps crunch a little closer through the snow, and I heard her
- say, "Ken?"
-
- "Brieanna?" I panted, barely above a whisper.
-
- She must not have heard me, as she came closer. "Ken? Are you
- okay?" She must have been right outside.
-
- "Brieanna? I'm hurt." Now that's an understatement.
-
- She opened the side door, and when she saw how much of a mess I
- was, she ran to my side. "Don't touch me, yet!" I screamed.
-
- "What?"
-
- I coughed. "Broke...broke a few ribs. Maybe a leg, maybe the
- shoulder. Definitely concussed; don't let me pass out. Talk... talk to
- me." I hacked again, but no blood came up. I was at least somewhat
- intact, internally.
-
- "Stay right here." She was suddenly business-like. It occurred to
- me that whoever set her here had made sure she was qualified to keep me
- alive, if I so chose. So she had to have medical training.
-
- She disappeared out into the snow, and returned in about eight long
- minutes, with two of her maintenance units.
-
- "I'm going to load you onto a stretcher." And she did, with me
- screaming in absolute agony. She ignored me. They trundled me towards
- the mansion, I assume. I don't know. Somewhere along the way, despite
- my warning to her, I passed out anyway.
-
- So much for my theory.
-
-
-
- When I awoke, I was indeed in a different room, and an IV was
- in my arm, with a couple of bags hanging from it. How quaint, I
- thought, IV. My ribs were wrapped, and I was doped to the gills on some
- sort of painkiller, probably a somewhat addictive opiate.
-
- Wonderful. After I get out of bed, I get to go through withdrawl.
- I thanked Osiris that I'm not the addictive type personality. I checked
- my motion.
-
- Great. I've got my right arm. And that's about it.
-
- I sat and contemplated my condition. What was I going to do in my
- present condition? And where was I?
-
- Well, the scent of place told me I was in the mansion, still, so my
- medical emergency hadn't gotten me out of whatever prison it was
- intended to be. But, there was a strong presence of Brieanna's here, so
- I assumed I was in one of her private rooms.
-
- That's when I saw it. I'd been avoiding the idea for sometime.
- But there on the table was a cyberinterface net, but not one like I use;
- this one was an induction cyber-cyber link. Brieanna was an android.
-
- That's impossible. You can make AI's that size, and you can stuff
- them into android bodies that are virtually indistinguishable from
- human, but there are always things that give an android away.
-
- Like their scent. Can't make an android smell exactly like a
- human, no way, no how. Like their body temperature. I'd seen
- Brieanna's IR signature once, through a rifle scope I'd been tinkering
- with (No, I did NOT point a rifle at Brieanna), and she was human. Even
- a 'chassis' type design tends to be too cool to be perfect, and a
- 'chassis' breath is never even close. Like her aura. I'll never be a
- competent mage; It's too much effort and tech can do ninety-nine percent
- of what magic can, so why bother? But I knew enough; she was human.
-
- So what was that link for? My mysterious savior? Unlikely; I was
- convinced that this was a plot by Dave, Carrol and Paul. An agent? Why
- bother, Brieanna could just make her own reports?
-
- So what was the damned link for? I decided it wasn't worth
- bothering about in my doped condition, and fell back into dark slumber.
-
-
-
- When I awoke, a few hours later, I was pleased to find my warden
- sitting on the bed next to me. "Hi," I managed to croak.
-
- "Hi yourself. You had me frightened."
-
- "Thanks. I guess it'd have been bad to lose your best prisoner."
-
- "You're still bitter about being here."
-
- "No, not really. Just the drugs, the pain, and the frustration
- talking. I'm sorry, Brie, but it hurts like Hell to be slammed up
- against the wall by a Shirow PAPA." Personal Assault Powered Armor.
-
- "I imagine. Well, I'll tell you the prognosis, above and beyond
- the fact that you're going to live. You broke four ribs, and I had to
- set one surgically, so under that wrap is a lot of scarring, but in your
- case that'll fade away. The right leg is also shattered, and it's set
- as well. The ceramics are chemically coded, so I can take them out
- almost at will, but you'll be needing them for a few weeks, at least.
- The shoulder is also torn up, but not so bad. You should have both arms
- back in about a week. In the mean time, you sit right where you are."
-
- "And where am I?" I asked.
-
- "The bedroom next to mine. I've moved your stuff down, and I've
- given Drac a limited set of instructions to follow to your voice."
-
- "Thanks" I said, dryly. That the SI she had responded only to her
- annoyed me.
-
- "I've got my reasons. It's violating my paramters just to give you
- control of one maintenance unit. But I figure this is an emergency.
- I'd hate for you to be bedridden AND bored, and I've got work of my own
- to do."
-
- "Brieanna." I reached out to touch her, but she was out of reach.
-
- "Hmm?"
-
- "I won't ask what your work is, you probably won't tell me. But,
- thank you. In your own special way, you're doing a great job."
-
- She smiled. "Thanks. I appreciate that. Now get some sleep."
- She rose. "Or at least, settle down and accept the fact that you're
- going to be in there for a few weeks."
-
- "I will."
-
- "Bye."
-
-
-
- "Hi," Brieanna said as she walked in.
-
- "Hi yourself."
-
- "Feeling better?"
-
- "Well, it's nice to have both arms working. I can turn pages by
- myself now."
-
- She smiled. "That's good. What 'ya reading?"
-
- "The Art of Professional Homicide, by Gurney Halleck."
-
- "Oh. Planning on killing someone?"
-
- "Who is there to kill? You? Would that do me any good?"
-
- She shrugged. "Would it make you feel any better?"
-
- "I sort of doubt it. You've been good to me, for a warden."
-
- She smiled then, untroubled apparently at my repeated attempts to
- jibe her by comparing her present career to that of a jailor. "Anyway,"
- she continued, "I brought you something you might like to try your hand
- at."
-
- "What?"
-
- She reached into the small duffel she'd carried in and deposited in
- my lap a... "A flute? What's this for?"
-
- "Well, you told me you liked Ian Anderson, so I figured while you
- were bedridden like this, you might appreciate a chance to at least play
- with one."
-
- "Brie, I told you... I have absolutely no musical skill whatsoever.
-
- "I heard you playing Chariots of Fire on the piano a few weeks ago.
- That's not no skill!"
-
- "Oh come on..."
-
- "Listen to me. That's not an easy piece. I've looked at it, and
- it's in D-Minor, not an easy key."
-
- "Oh, yes it is. Vangelis only uses four different chords, and as
- for the key, it's every white key slid down to it's next black key,
- except for F and C."
-
- "And you say you have no musical skill. Listen to you. You're
- talking about it in a musician's way. Of course you can learn music.
- You just never put any effort into it."
-
- "But..." She's patronizing me.
-
- "Ken, I don't give a damn if you never touch that thing again. But
- at least, give it a try."
-
- "Okay."
-
- "Promise."
-
- "No, and I will not let you listen to me make a fool of myself."
-
- "Even after you told me all those wonderful jokes?"
-
- "Even then. That was performance; This is practice. Besides,
- doing that sort of thing comes easy to me; I'm auretic, and gestures
- come easily, so doing skits like that is easy."
-
- "Okay. I'll come by and see you later?"
-
- "Sure."
-
- Why in God's name had I told her I like Anderson? Because he's a
- great musician, with a hell of a talent? I picked up the flute and
- began to fiddle with it. I managed a squeak.
-
-
-
- She walked in the next day to look in on her charge, and I was
- feeling a little better. Hadn't gotten much of anyplace with the flute,
- but at least I was figuring out what notes went where. The damned thing
- was complicated. Whoever invented the thing should be slow-roasted.
-
- What she wore when she entered really piqued my interest. She came
- in wearing what looked like mutant riding boots and an electric guitar.
-
- "What's all that?" I asked.
-
- "This? This is my practice gear. I'm learning guitar. There are
- speakers in the boots so I can hear."
-
- "You're kidding."
-
- "No, really." You know, I'm rather fond of her soft southern
- accent all of a sudden.
-
- She distracted me again by hitting a riff on the guitar. Whoa.
- Those little speakers in her boots put out a lot of sound. She hit a few
- dials that I was unfamiliar with on the guitar and dropped both the buzz
- and the volume, until it was at a civilized level, and proceeded to play
- a few things for me.
-
- "Well?" she asked.
-
- "Not bad. Certainly a lot better than I am. Guitar is not my
- instrument."
-
- "Is the flute?"
-
- "I doubt it. It's not a keyboard instrument. But I'll work at it.
-
- "I could bring the Korg in here."
-
- "Naah. Let me play with this thing before I retreat into the
- simplicity of a synthesizer," I said.
-
- She shrugged. "Okay, your choice. Tell me, though," she said,
- changing the subject, "are you planning on working on the armor when
- you're well?"
-
- "I don't see why not. Why shouldn't I?"
-
- "Well, it almost killed you this time."
-
- "I'll be more careful."
-
- She sat down on the bed next to me, and covered my hand gently with
- hers. "I worry about you."
-
- I looked away. "It's your job."
-
- "No, it's not! Look at me. I'm your... your whatever you want to
- call me, Jailor, Healer, whatever. But I do it because it's what I am,
- not because I'm hired or because of any damned sense that I need quote
- the all-father unquote."
-
- Looking into her eyes, I realized the one last straw was gone;
- there was no way in hell she was anything else than human. She was also
- about to cry. I made the classic "come here" gesture with my hand, and
- when I could, I grabbed the blouse she was wearing with my hand and
- pulled her towards me, until she was about two cm from my face. She
- looked into my eyes with a momentary confusion, and then, realizing what
- I was doing, descended on me, kissing me.
-
- Our tongues met, and hers was soft and kind to mine as we danced in
- each others' mouth, and I was lost in the pleasure of the kiss for as
- long as it went on. Which was quite a while.
-
- After what felt like a long time that was too short anyway, she
- broke away. "Why'd you do that?"
-
- I shrugged, felt ribs settle painfully. "Because I wanted to."
-
- "Did you really?" She asked, her eyes full of both nervousness and
- wonderment.
-
- "Yeah..." I smiled. "Yes, I did. You're a good kisser."
-
- "You're not angry towards me, then?"
-
- "I haven't been angry with you in a while. I just didn't want to
- get intimate with my warden."
-
- "Oh." She gathered up her guitar.
-
- "Hey, where are you going?" I asked.
-
- "I need... I'd like to attend to some other things. I'll be back
- later." She left hurriedly.
-
- Damn. I wanted to be with her a little longer. She's probably
- left to report to her co-conspirators. Leaving me frustrated.
-
- She's a damned good kisser. And what in hell am I going to do with
- an erection on the wrong side of a lower-body cast?
-
-
- --
- "Brieanna, part 1"
- The Journal Entries of Kennet R'yal Shardik, et. al., And Related Tales
- are (c) 1989, 1992 Elf Matheiu Sternberg. May be freely distributed by
- cybernetic media; hardcopies are limited to single printings for
- personal use.
-