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Page 19


  Jinx held up one hand. "Parity-plus, Arnie. I'll give you the urals, and you can see for yourself."

  I chuckled some more. Those ancients-where were their heads at?!

  Before too long, we were dismounting at Bughouse Square.

  The thronging Square always reminded me of an old-time carnival midway you might see on some historical chan-

  nel of the metamedium: lines of garish booths and arcades, peopled by touts and vendors under gaudy silicrobe signage. The centerpiece of the Square, the original Chiron Bughouse, looked positively postmodern, next to the more recent exotic additions to the meatmart.

  Here you could find a chromosartor or genebender or simple trope doser who would perform any possible alteration on your somatype or genotype-for a price. If you had the eft, you could be snipped, ripped or zipped; pumped, stumped or trumped; strobed, lobed or probed; primped, skimped or pimped; vented, scented or demented.

  I stood for a minute or so bathing in the scary, alluring, surreal circus, until Jinx tugged at the hem of my doublet.

  "Let's find number ten-forty, before we change our minds."

  Tracking round the Square, past the TATA Box and the Primordium, past the Organelle Store and Radio Shack Biocircuits outlet, we soon came to the G Gnome's Cave.

  Its facade was all fractal-modeled grocrete stalactites and stalagmites framing an irregular entrance curtained by enviromental ribbons.

  I looked at Jinx, and he looked at me. Taking his hand, I tried to be as brave as my truncated spaceling.

  "Let's get spiked," I said.

  And we went through the ribbons.

  My dads told me that a decade or two ago there was a rage for somatypes modeled on the characters in some old reedpair fantasy novel, sparked by a new virtuality rendering of the work. So for a while all you saw on the streets were

  bobbits and snorks and smogs, or creatures with some such names.

  I figured the G-Gnome must have modeled himself on a troll or dwarf or some other runt from that book. His big blue eyes, capped by furry brows, were nearly on a level with Jinx's, and the G-Gnome was standing on his bandy legs! Two tufts of snowy fiuffaduff sprang from behind his ears and decorated his otherwise bare skull. He wore a leather bib apron over a Windskin suit, and his hands were more massive than Jinx's.

  To have maintained the same outdated look all these years made me think he was a conservative, slowmole kind of guy, and I instantly felt better to be putting myself in his brawny hands, so reassuringly similar to my proxy's.

  "Children," the G-Gnome rumbled, "how can I help you?"

  "We're here-" I began, then stopped.

  A thrid– vid display had come on at our arrival, and now, cycling through a display of the G-Gnome's wetwares, it had reached the boobs.

  They were so beautiful. Conical or melony, brown or creamy, drip-nippled or virgin-tipped, they were like taunting mirages in my personal desert.

  It was all I could do to turn back to the G-Gnome and beg, "Please, shut that off." With my luck, the next thing shown would be a variety of the cocks Jinx lacked.

  The proprietor complied, and I could breathe.

  "Thank you. We're here to get spikes."

  The G– Gnome's professional smile never wavered, but I could sense something tightening inside him.

  "You have your parents'-"

  "We've got this," I said, and offered Honeysuckle's card.

  Taking it, the G-Gnome flexed it back and forth with a noncommittal expression, but I could see nudollar signs in his eyes.

  "Peej Rancifer lent you her card without, ah, duress?… "

  I tried a haughty sniff like Honeysuckle used. "Of course. We're the best of friends."

  "There should be no problem then."

  "I hope not," I said, as the G-Gnome's words made my knees go watery.

  "Please, be seated."

  When Jinx and I were side by side, the G-Gnome activated the display again. But this time it ran through the various models of spike.

  By the second rep, we had made up our minds.

  "I'll take the Staghorns," said Jinx.

  "And I'll take the Coral Cage."

  "Very fine choices, both. The placement of each differs slightly. The Staghorns are implanted in the frontal region, whereas the Cage tends more toward the temporals."

  The G– Gnome had donned gloves while he was talking and now squeezed from a tube a line of paste. He approached Jinx and rubbed the goop into his skull, up front.

  Then he did the same to me, more toward the middle of my head.

  Carefully peeling off the gloves and dropping them into a D-Grade-All unit, the G-Gnome said, "A mix of topical anesthetic and bonemelt. It takes a few moments to work. I shall debit Peej Rancifer's card while we wait, if you have no objections."

  When he was done with that, the G-Gnome went to a cabinet, from which he removed the spikes.

  I had never seen the things except on the metamedium, where they were always filtershot real sexy, so I was unprepared for how innocuous they looked in real life: just a pair of square-ish, pointy, drab-well, spikes, like the kind you might find holding down reedpair railroad ties.

  Next from the cabinet came a shiny chrome-handled, rubber-headed mallet.

  And with this, the G-Gnome drove the spikes into our heads.

  I couldn't feel anything, even when the spike penetrated my dura mater. That G Gnome was slouch-negative! He had that single tap down perfect. Naturally, I should have known that Honeysuckle and her family would patronize only the best.

  Next, the G-Gnome slapped crawlypatches on our arms and began to lecture us.

  "These are nutraceutical supplements. You're going to need them. The spikes will be utilizing some of your body's energy to grow. Even with the patches, you'll want to stoke up with something like Genzyme Carbprot afterwards, to make up for the loss."

  Now I could half-feel ghostly invasions of my cranium. Right on cue, the G Gnome explained, "The spikes are

  growing osteo-anchors, as well as paraneurons that will interface with yours. That's how they're able to control the color and pattern changes that reflect your moods. Once the endogrowth is done, the exogrowth will begin. Let me get a mirror."

  The G– Gnome wheeled a digital mirror into place and turned it on, just in time.

  The exogrowth, the visible part of the process, was starting.

  From the single spike centered in Jinx's head, a pair of antlers began to develop, magnificent self-similar branchings.

  From mine a rough coral stalk shot straight up. When it reached a height of about eight centimeters, it began to overspread into a gorgeous latticework umbrella.

  Jinx and I watched ourselves and each other admiringly in the mirror, while the G-Gnome smiled benevolently on.

  By the time the growth was finished, we were already adjusting to the novel weight of our new accessories. Jinx's antlers almost doubled his height, while my cage had stopped at nose level like a living lace veil.

  "How do I look?" asked Jinx, his antlers flaring a crimson I knew from metamedium shows meant excitement.

  "Very muskophallic! How about me?"

  "Brain coral goddess!"

  The G– Gnome clapped his hands together, and we knew he was eager for us to leave.

  "I'm glad you're pleased. Remember, removal is a rather more time-consuming and costly process."

  "Oh, we'd never want to get rid of them!" I said.

  On the way out, Jinx had a little trouble with the door-ribbons catching on his rack, but aside from that, everything went superstring.

  Until we got home, of course.

  Jinx came in with me, and my poohs just lost it.

  I will never ever forget the sight of them that day. They kind of scared even me, their own daughter, who should be used to them.

  My dads are biological brothers who were in the same IMF assault unit during the last Short War. They were lying in a trench together, under enemy fire, when a shell was lobbed in on them.<
br />
  The weapon contained some weird parazyme that no one's ever quite figured out yet. What it did was to fuse my dads together everywhere they were touching, as well as introduce a lot of collateral damage and changes, right down to the mitochondrial level.

  The bonescrapers patched them up as best they could. Ironically, they had to use a couple of bulgy remora-cords to join them even more symbiotically, since Alvin and Calvin had to share a lot of cytokines to stay alive.

  When they were demobbed, their experiences led them to join the Moderationists, for whom they became instant and effective spokesmen.

  I came along as a teratoma.

  My dads kept developing these squelchy growths all over their bodies, which the bonies kept removing. One of the growths had more than usual baseline human structure to it, and my dads got the idea that it would be nice to turn it into

  a daughter. It cost a lot, both in eft and in compromise of their noninterventionist principles. But they were really kind of lonely, and I guess the Moderationists finally relented on the dogma part.

  Naturally, I'm glad they did.

  So anyhow, there my Siamese dads stood, linked by flesh and remora-cords straining fit to burst, shouting their heads off at me and Jinx, whose spike growths were turning green with contrition and purple with sorrowful anger at how innocent kids like us always got quenched in the end.

  To make a long story short, we had to get rid of the spikes (but not before everyone in our cohort saw us with them), and Honeysuckle's parents had to pay for it all, and she had her estrogen shut off for a month, and Jinx, my darling Jinx, got sent back to Asgard.

  But I really am not worried. Like Jinx said, a year is not such a long time to wait till we're franchised.

  And after seeing me with a spike, there wasn't much resistance from the poohs a month later, when I pleaded one last time for tits.

  And they're from a much classier vendor's line than hers!

  Up the Lazy River

  1. Muscle Fatigue

  Flying northwest, parallel to the interface of the River Seven bankside forest and the manicured savannah, across which herds of null-sophont cultivars roamed peacefully, Norodom Dos Santos grieved for his hyperfluid charge.

  Normally, River Seven appeared from the air as a thick two-toned viscous snake, subtly pulsing in controlled opposing flows. Constrained by its mostly baseline geophysical channel, two-thirds dirty quicksilver grey and one-third matte black, it resembled a stripe of gel like the squeezings from a tube of antique toothpaste.

  Today, River Seven lacked its usual luster, seemed lifeless and dispirited, victim of the unexplained changes Dos Santos was speeding to investigate.

  I'm personifying the River again, Dos Santos mildly chided himself. What would Master Trexler think of such imprecision in one of his students?

  After all, even dead, Trexler still exhibited all those old personality traits which a Turing Level Eight platform

  was capable of emulating, and one did not care to disappoint him.

  Transferring his Synergen-grown craft to kibe autopilot (a simple TL4), Dos Santos resolved to abandon sentimentalism for work. Prompting his higher centers into microsleep, he freed up paraneurons to run deep plectic simulations of the River's failure.

  Midway through the third evocation, disaster struck.

  Propulsion myofibrils ripped away from the left COfiber-polysaccharide lattice wing with a sound like a cleaver through a slab of lapinovine.

  The abnormal sound instantly reawakened the River Master's full awareness.

  With a sinking feeling, Dos Santos realized his ladybug was going down.

  The sudden threat to his life triggered a criticality flash that cascaded across his Sphinxco wetware mods: this mission was deeper than a simple repair call…

  Dos Santos knew better than to try to wrest control away from the kibe unit under emergency conditions-although a gut response still jerked his hands toward the control ganglia. Instead, he quickly snugged the wrist-dangling gloves of his millipore survival suit on, effectively disabling his CamNeuro digiface.

  The kibe unit spoke as the gloves sealed themselves, and by then it was too late to do anything even if he had known what to do.

  "I am sorry, Peej Dos Santos, but conditions require your immediate immobilization."

  Nodules studded around the sides of his organiform chair burst like spore capsules. Compressed somatropic lianas sprayed out, wrapping him in an sticky biolastic net.

  Out the windscreen, Dos Santos could see the line of jungle on his left rising up and around like a wall.

  Dos Santos barely had time to utter the start of a prayer to the goddess of his Camspanic ancestors: ''Holy Mary Kannon, Highest of Dakinis-" And then he felt the dose of Sandman perfuse his skin…

  ***

  The birds resumed their singing slowly. The loud crack of a damaged branch finally giving way stopped them again, but they quickly found their multifarious voices once more.

  One fauxvian called out over and over in a raspy human voice: "Shop here, shop here, shop here… " An escaped urban adbird…

  Fronds of orange foliage starred with orchidenias lay across the intact single crystal windscreen, obscuring Dos Santos's view of his new surroundings. As he struggled to free himself from the safety restraints, the kibe unit spoke.

  "Please allow me, Peej Dos Santos."

  A fine mist dispersed from the ladybug's ceiling, dissolving the vines: Catalytica Calmbalm. At the same time, Dos Santos felt various aches and pains he had hardly realized he was feeling disappear, as the mist was recognized and allowed in through his smartsuit.

  He climbed out of the chair, suit slick and hair damp, and stood tentatively on the canted floor. The craft seemed stable.

  "What happened?"

  "The left wing suddenly lost all haemocyanin flow, and the tissue immediately degenerated below the functional threshold. Probability of spontaneous failure, point one percent. Probability of maintenance error, thirty percent. Probability of deliberately induced failure, sixty-eight percent…

  Wait. Abnormal protease traces registering… Revised probability of sabotage, ninety-nine-point-six percent."

  "Sabotage… " muttered Dos Santos. "But why?"

  "I have no answer to your question, Peej Dos Santos. However, despite the overwhelming evidence of nonculpability, I am required by law to supply you with the metamedium address of my manufacturer, should you wish to file a suit against them. Synergen is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Primordium Chaebol. Telecosm address is At-prim-kay-"

  "Forget it." Dos Santos began to gather equipment and supplies from an overhead ovoid locker. "How far are we from our destination?"

  "Contact with Global Positioning's navsats remains firm, and I have us located within the standard three-meter deviation. Machine Lake is approximately fifty klicks to the north. However, I managed to set us down only a hundred yards from River Seven."

  "And We're still on the upstream bank?"

  "Yes."

  "Good job."

  "Thank you, Peej Dos Santos. I hope you will take my actions into account in the event of any possible lawsuit."

  "Don't worry, there's not going to be any legal action. It's plain that whoever stopped the River doesn't want me coming to investigate. There'll have to be a purge of all the splices on the maintenance crew back at the base."

  "Organics are inherently less trustworthy and more liable to be compromised than kibernetika, if I may say so."

  Dos Santos cracked the ladybug's hatch, and warm, wet air blew in past a curtain of bamboon.

  "Where are you going, Peej? I've sent out a distress call and received an acknowledgement. Would it not be wise to wait here?"

  "How do I know all the other 'bugs haven't been tampered with too? I could wait for days. No, I've got to finish my mission. I'm too close now to wait. And the River can't stay down much longer."

  Patting his left breast pocket, which held the vital vial of Instruction Set wh
ich would repair the River, and adjusting the bandoliers that held his Intratec splat-pistol, extra lysing cartridges and other equipment, Dos Santos placed one booted foot over the sill.

  "I must protest, Peej. Under Regulation Two-Ten of the Riparian Administration Handbook-"

  "Listen," interrupted Dos Santos. "Who's the River Master here, you or me?"

  Somehow the TL4 kibe managed to sound wounded and resigned. "You are, Peej."

  "Correct."

  "May I make a suggestion, then?"

  "Certainly."

  "At least let me accompany you. I am more capable than your low-level suit assists. Also, if you are terminated and I am later recovered, I shall be able to make a full report."

  "What a cheerful notion."

  "I am simply trying to fulfill my autofac-implanted imperatives, Peej… "

  "All right."

  Dos Santos stepped to the console and ejected the kibe, a featureless silver wafer the diameter of a hockey puck, but only half as thick. Fitting it flat into the appropriate sticktite slot on his harness, he turned to leave the disabled ladybug.

  "I am now fully integrated with your suit sensors, Peej. They are of high quality."

  "I have a feeling we'll need them," said Dos Santos. "Activate my retinal displays, please."

  "Done."

  Dos Santos 's peripheral vision filled with translucent shimmerstats, and he stepped tentatively into the jungle.

  2. Infoslam

  The first report indicating that something was seriously wrong with River Seven had come a mere twelve hours ago, emanating from the kibe unit captaining one of the numerous floating autofacs-cum-general-stores that supplied the indigenous Riverside population. The unit, a mere hundred klicks from

  Machine Lake, had messaged that the River's downstream velocity was decreasing radically, dropping toward ancient baseline values or below; probes launched into the upstream side, however, still registered normal values. Continued updates revealed a steady decline in the force of the artifical current.

  When other reports from further downRiver began to flood in-a tourist vessel, a passenger ferry, a fleet of sport skimmers and striders-it became obvious to Dos Santos that River Seven-his River-was dying.