Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom by Cory Doctorow (book series for 12 year olds .txt) đ
- Author: Cory Doctorow
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I took her home to Toronto and we took up residence ten stories underground in overflow residence for the University. Our Whuffie wasnât so hot earthside, and the endless institutional corridors made her feel at home while affording her opportunities for mischief.
But bit by bit, the mischief dwindled, and she started talking more. At first, I admit I was relieved, glad that my strange, silent wife was finally acting normal, making nice with the neighbors instead of pranking them with endless honks and fanny-kicks and squirt guns. We gave up the steeplechase and she had the doglegs taken out, her fur removed, her eyes unsilvered to a hazel that was pretty and as fathomable as the silver had been inscrutable.
We wore clothes. We entertained. I started to rehearse my symphony in low-Whuffie halls and parks with any musicians I could drum up, and she came out and didnât play, just sat to the side and smiled and smiled with a smile that never went beyond her lips.
She went nuts.
She shat herself. She pulled her hair. She cut herself with knives. She accused me of plotting to kill her. She set fire to the neighborsâ apartments, wrapped herself in plastic sheeting, dry-humped the furniture.
She went nuts. She did it in broad strokes, painting the walls of our bedroom with her blood, jagging all night through rant after rant. I smiled and nodded and faced it for as long as I could, then I grabbed her and hauled her, kicking like a mule, to the doctorâs office on the second floor. Sheâd been dirtside for a year and nuts for a month, but it took me that long to face up to it.
The doc diagnosed nonchemical dysfunction, which was by way of saying that it was her mind, not her brain, that was broken. In other words, Iâd driven her nuts.
You can get counseling for nonchemical dysfunction, basically trying to talk it out, learn to feel better about yourself. She didnât want to.
She was miserable, suicidal, murderous. In the brief moments of lucidity that she had under sedation, she consented to being restored from a backup that was made before we came to Toronto.
I was at her side in the hospital when she woke up. I had prepared a written synopsis of the events since her last backup for her, and she read it over the next couple days.
âJulius,â she said, while I was making breakfast in our subterranean apartment. She sounded so serious, so fun-free, that I knew immediately that the news wouldnât be good.
âYes?â I said, setting out plates of bacon and eggs, steaming cups of coffee.
âIâm going to go back to space, and revert to an older version.â She had a shoulderbag packed, and she had traveling clothes on.
Oh, shit. âGreat,â I said, with forced cheerfulness, making a mental inventory of my responsibilities dirtside. âGive me a minute or two, Iâll pack up. I miss space, too.â
She shook her head, and anger blazed in her utterly scrutable hazel eyes. âNo. Iâm going back to who I was, before I met you.â
It hurt, bad. I had loved the old, steeplechase Zed, had loved her fun and mischief. The Zed sheâd become after we wed was terrible and terrifying, but Iâd stuck with her out of respect for the person sheâd been.
Now she was off to restore herself from a backup made before she met me. She was going to lop 18 months out of her life, start over again, revert to a saved version.
Hurt? It ached like a motherfucker.
I went back to the station a month later, and saw her jamming in the sphere with a guy who had three extra sets of arms depending from his hips. He scuttled around the sphere while she played a jig on the piano, and when her silver eyes lit on me, there wasnât a shred of recognition in them. Sheâd never met me.
I died some, too, putting the incident out of my head and sojourning to Disney World, there to reinvent myself with a new group of friends, a new career, a new life. I never spoke of Zed againâespecially not to Lil, who hardly needed me to pollute her with remembrances of my crazy exes.
If I was nuts, it wasnât the kind of spectacular nuts that Zed had gone. It was a slow, seething, ugly nuts that had me alienating my friends, sabotaging my enemies, driving my girlfriend into my best friendâs arms.
I decided that I would see a doctor, just as soon as weâd run the rehab past the ad-hocâs general meeting. I had to get my priorities straight.
I pulled on last nightâs clothes and walked out to the Monorail station in the main lobby. The platform was jammed with happy guests, bright and cheerful and ready for a day of steady, hypermediated fun. I tried to make myself attend to them as individuals, but try as I might, they kept turning into a crowd, and I had to plant my feet firmly on the platform to keep from weaving among them to the edge, the better to snag a seat.
The meeting was being held over the Sunshine Tree Terrace in Adventureland, just steps from where Iâd been turned into a road-pizza by the still-unidentified assassin. The Adventureland ad-hocs owed the Liberty Square crew a favor since my death had gone down on their turf, so they had given us use of their prize meeting room, where the Florida sun streamed through the slats of the shutters, casting a hash of dust-filled shafts of light across the room. The faint sounds of the tiki-drums and the spieling Jungle Cruise guides leaked through the room, a low-key ambient buzz from two of the Parkâs oldest rides.
There were almost a hundred ad-hocs in the Liberty Square crew, almost all second-gen castmembers with big, friendly smiles. They filled the room to capacity, and there was much hugging and handshaking before the meeting came to order. I was thankful that the room was too small for the de rigeur ad-hoc circle-of-chairs, so that Lil was able to stand at a podium and command a smidge of respect.
âHi there!â she said, brightly. The weepy puffiness was still present around her eyes, if you knew how to look for it, but she was expert at putting on a brave face no matter what the ache.
The ad-hocs roared back a collective, âHi, Lil!â and laughed at their own corny tradition. Oh, they sure were a barrel of laughs at the Magic Kingdom.
âEverybody knows why weâre here, right?â Lil said, with a self-deprecating smile. Sheâd been lobbying hard for weeks, after all. âDoes anyone have any questions about the plans? Weâd like to start executing right away.â
A guy with deliberately boyish, wholesome features put his arm in the air. Lil acknowledged him with a nod. âWhen you say âright away,â do you meanââ
I cut in. âTonight. After this meeting. Weâre on an eight-week production schedule, and the sooner we start, the sooner itâll be finished.â
The crowd murmured, unsettled. Lil shot me a withering look. I shrugged. Politics was not my game.
Lil said, âDon, weâre trying something new here, a really streamlined process. The good part is, the process is short. In a couple months, weâll know if itâs working for us. If itâs not, hey, we can turn it around in a couple months, too. Thatâs why weâre not spending as much time planning as we usually do. It wonât take five years for the idea to prove out, so the risks are lower.â
Another castmember, a woman, apparent 40 with a round, motherly demeanor said, âIâm all for moving fastâLord knows, our pacing hasnât always been that hot. But Iâm concerned about all these new people you propose to recruitâwonât having more people slow us down when it comes to making new decisions?â
No, I thought sourly, because the people Iâm bringing in arenât addicted to meetings.
Lil nodded. âThatâs a good point, Lisa. The offer weâre making to the telepresence players is probationaryâthey donât get to vote until after weâve agreed that the rehab is a success.â
Another castmember stood. I recognized him: Dave, a heavyset, self-important jerk who loved to work the front door, even though he blew his spiel about half the time. âLillian,â he said, smiling sadly at her, âI think youâre really making a big mistake here. We love the Mansion, all of us, and so do the guests. Itâs a piece of history, and weâre its custodians, not its masters. Changing it like this, well âŠâ he shook his head. âItâs not good stewardship. If the guests wanted to walk through a funhouse with guys jumping out of the shadows saying âbooga-booga,â theyâd go to one of the Halloween Houses in their hometowns. The Mansionâs better than that. I canât be a part of this plan.â
I wanted to knock the smug grin off his face. Iâd delivered essentially the same polemic a thousand timesâin reference to Debraâs workâand hearing it from this jerk in reference to mine made me go all hot and red inside.
âLook,â I said. âIf we donât do this, if we donât change things, theyâll get changed for us. By someone else. The question, Dave, is whether a responsible custodian lets his custodianship be taken away from him, or whether he does everything he can to make sure that heâs still around to ensure that his charge is properly cared for. Good custodianship isnât sticking your head in the sand.â
I could tell I wasnât doing any good. The mood of the crowd was getting darker, the faces more set. I resolved not to speak again until the meeting was done, no matter what the provocation.
Lil smoothed my remarks over, and fielded a dozen more, and it looked like the objections would continue all afternoon and all night and all the next day, and I felt woozy and overwrought and miserable all at the same time, staring at Lil and her harried smile and her nervous smoothing of her hair over her ears.
Finally, she called the question. By tradition, the votes were collected in secret and publicly tabulated over the data-channels. The groupâs eyes unfocussed as they called up HUDs and watched the totals as they rolled in. I was offline and unable to vote or watch.
At length, Lil heaved a relieved sigh and smiled, dropping her hands behind her back.
âAll right then,â she said, over the crowdâs buzz. âLetâs get to work.â
I stood up, saw Dan and Lil staring into each otherâs eyes, a meaningful glance between new lovers, and I saw red. Literally. My vision washed over pink, and a strobe pounded at the edges of my vision. I took two lumbering steps towards them and opened my mouth to say something horrible, and what came out was âWaaagh.â My right side went numb and my leg slipped out from under me and I crashed to the floor.
The slatted light from the shutters cast its way across my chest as I tried to struggle up with my left arm, and then it all went black.
I wasnât nuts after all.
The doctorâs office in the Main Street infirmary was clean and white and decorated with posters of Jiminy Cricket in doctorsâ whites with an outsized stethoscope. I came to on a hard pallet under a sign that reminded me to get a check-up twice a year, by gum! and I tried to bring my hands up to shield my eyes from the over bright light and the over-cheerful signage, and discovered that I couldnât move my arms. Further investigation revealed that this was because I was strapped down, in full-on four-point restraint.
âWaaagh,â I said again.
Danâs worried face swam into my field of vision, along with a serious-looking doctor, apparent 70, with a Norman Rockwell face full of crowâsfeet and smile-lines.
âWelcome back, Julius. Iâm Doctor Pete,â the doctor said, in a kindly voice that matched the face. Despite my recent disillusion with castmember bullshit, I found
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