Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom by Cory Doctorow (book series for 12 year olds .txt) š
- Author: Cory Doctorow
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He had a point. Here I was, only in my second or third adulthood, and already ready to toss it all in and do something, anything, else. He had a pointābut I wasnāt about to admit it. āSo you say. I say, I take a chance when I strike up a conversation in a bar, when I fall in love ā¦ And what about the deadheads? Two people I know, they just went deadhead for ten thousand years! Tell me thatās not taking a chance!ā Truth be told, almost everyone Iād known in my eighty-some years were deadheading or jaunting or just gone. Lonely days, then.
āBrother, thatās committing half-assed suicide. The way weāre going, theyāll be lucky if someone doesnāt just switch āem off when it comes time to reanimate. In case you havenāt noticed, itās getting a little crowded around here.ā
I made pish-tosh sounds and wiped off my forehead with a bar-napkināthe Gazoo was beastly hot on summer nights. āUh-huh, just like the world was getting a little crowded a hundred years ago, before Free Energy. Like it was getting too greenhousey, too nukey, too hot or too cold. We fixed it then, weāll fix it again when the time comes. Iām gonna be here in ten thousand years, you damn betcha, but I think Iāll do it the long way around.ā
He cocked his head again, and gave it some thought. If it had been any of the other grad students, Iād have assumed he was grepping for some bolstering factoids to support his next sally. But with him, I just knew he was thinking about it, the old-fashioned way.
āI think that if Iām still here in ten thousand years, Iām going to be crazy as hell. Ten thousand years, pal! Ten thousand years ago, the state-of-the-art was a goat. You really think youāre going to be anything recognizably human in a hundred centuries? Me, Iām not interested in being a post-person. Iām going to wake up one day, and Iām going to say, āWell, I guess Iāve seen about enough,ā and thatāll be my last day.ā
I had seen where he was going with this, and I had stopped paying attention while I readied my response. I probably should have paid more attention. āBut why? Why not just deadhead for a few centuries, see if thereās anything that takes your fancy, and if not, back to sleep for a few more? Why do anything so final?ā
He embarrassed me by making a show of thinking it over again, making me feel like I was just a half-pissed glib poltroon. āI suppose itās because nothing else is. Iāve always known that someday, I was going to stop moving, stop seeking, stop kicking, and have done with it. Thereāll come a day when I donāt have anything left to do, except stop.ā
On campus, they called him Keep-A-Movinā Dan, because of his cowboy vibe and because of his lifestyle, and he somehow grew to take over every conversation I had for the next six months. I pinged his Whuffie a few times, and noticed that it was climbing steadily upward as he accumulated more esteem from the people he met.
Iād pretty much pissed away most of my Whuffieāall the savings from the symphonies and the first three thesesādrinking myself stupid at the Gazoo, hogging library terminals, pestering profs, until Iād expended all the respect anyone had ever afforded me. All except Dan, who, for some reason, stood me to regular beers and meals and movies.
I got to feeling like I was someone specialānot everyone had a chum as exotic as Keep-A-Movinā Dan, the legendary missionary who visited the only places left that were closed to the Bitchun Society. I canāt say for sure why he hung around with me. He mentioned once or twice that heād liked my symphonies, and heād read my Ergonomics thesis on applying theme-park crowd-control techniques in urban settings, and liked what I had to say there. But I think it came down to us having a good time needling each other.
Iād talk to him about the vast carpet of the future unrolling before us, of the certainty that we would encounter alien intelligences some day, of the unimaginable frontiers open to each of us. Heād tell me that deadheading was a strong indicator that oneās personal reservoir of introspection and creativity was dry; and that without struggle, there is no real victory.
This was a good fight, one we could have a thousand times without resolving. Iād get him to concede that Whuffie recaptured the true essence of money: in the old days, if you were broke but respected, you wouldnāt starve; contrariwise, if you were rich and hated, no sum could buy you security and peace. By measuring the thing that money really representedāyour personal capital with your friends and neighborsāyou more accurately gauged your success.
And then heād lead me down a subtle, carefully baited trail that led to my allowing that while, yes, we might someday encounter alien species with wild and fabulous ways, that right now, there was a slightly depressing homogeneity to the world.
On a fine spring day, I defended my thesis to two embodied humans and one prof whose body was out for an overhaul, whose consciousness was present via speakerphone from the computer where it was resting. They all liked it. I collected my sheepskin and went out hunting for Dan in the sweet, flower-stinking streets.
Heād gone. The Anthro major heād been torturing with his war-stories said that theyād wrapped up that morning, and heād headed to the walled city of Tijuana, to take his shot with the descendants of a platoon of US Marines whoād settled there and cut themselves off from the Bitchun Society.
So I went to Disney World.
In deference to Dan, I took the flight in realtime, in the minuscule cabin reserved for those of us who stubbornly refused to be frozen and stacked like cordwood for the two hour flight. I was the only one taking the trip in realtime, but a flight attendant dutifully served me a urine-sample-sized orange juice and a rubbery, pungent, cheese omelet. I stared out the windows at the infinite clouds while the autopilot banked around the turbulence, and wondered when Iād see Dan next.
My girlfriend was 15 percent of my age, and I was old-fashioned enough that it bugged me. Her name was Lil, and she was second-generation Disney World, her parents being among the original ad-hocracy that took over the management of Liberty Square and Tom Sawyer Island. She was, quite literally, raised in Walt Disney World and it showed.
It showed. She was neat and efficient in her every little thing, from her shining red hair to her careful accounting of each gear and cog in the animatronics that were in her charge. Her folks were in canopic jars in Kissimmee, deadheading for a few centuries.
On a muggy Wednesday, we dangled our feet over the edge of the Liberty Belleās riverboat pier, watching the listless Confederate flag over Fort Langhorn on Tom Sawyer Island by moonlight. The Magic Kingdom was all closed up and every last guest had been chased out the gate underneath the Main Street train station, and we were able to breathe a heavy sigh of relief, shuck parts of our costumes, and relax together while the cicadas sang.
I was more than a century old, but there was still a kind of magic in having my arm around the warm, fine shoulders of a girl by moonlight, hidden from the hustle of the cleaning teams by the turnstiles, breathing the warm, moist air. Lil plumped her head against my shoulder and gave me a butterfly kiss under my jaw.
āHer name was McGill,ā I sang, gently.
āBut she called herself Lil,ā she sang, warm breath on my collarbones.
āAnd everyone knew her as Nancy,ā I sang.
Iād been startled to know that she knew the Beatles. Theyād been old news in my youth, after all. But her parents had given her a thoroughāif eclecticāeducation.
āWant to do a walk-through?ā she asked. It was one of her favorite duties, exploring every inch of the rides in her care with the lights on, after the horde of tourists had gone. We both liked to see the underpinnings of the magic. Maybe that was why I kept picking at the relationship.
āIām a little pooped. Letās sit a while longer, if you donāt mind.ā
She heaved a dramatic sigh. āOh, all right. Old man.ā She reached up and gently tweaked my nipple, and I gave a satisfying little jump. I think the age difference bothered her, too, though she teased me for letting it get to me.
āI think Iāll be able to manage a totter through the Haunted Mansion, if you just give me a moment to rest my bursitis.ā I felt her smile against my shirt. She loved the Mansion; loved to turn on the ballroom ghosts and dance their waltz with them on the dusty floor, loved to try and stare down the marble busts in the library that followed your gaze as you passed.
I liked it too, but I really liked just sitting there with her, watching the water and the trees. I was just getting ready to go when I heard a soft ping inside my cochlea. āDamn,ā I said. āIāve got a call.ā
āTell them youāre busy,ā she said.
āI will,ā I said, and answered the call subvocally. āJulius here.ā
āHi, Julius. Itās Dan. You got a minute?ā
I knew a thousand Dans, but I recognized the voice immediately, though itād been ten years since we last got drunk at the Gazoo together. I muted the subvocal and said, āLil, Iāve got to take this. Do you mind?ā
āOh, no, not at all,ā she sarcased at me. She sat up and pulled out her crack pipe and lit up.
āDan,ā I subvocalized, ālong time no speak.ā
āYeah, buddy, it sure has been,ā he said, and his voice cracked on a sob.
I turned and gave Lil such a look, she dropped her pipe. āHow can I help?ā she said, softly but swiftly. I waved her off and switched the phone to full-vocal mode. My voice sounded unnaturally loud in the cricket-punctuated calm.
āWhere you at, Dan?ā I asked.
āDown here, in Orlando. Iām stuck out on Pleasure Island.ā
āAll right,ā I said. āMeet me at, uh, the Adventurerās Club, upstairs on the couch by the door. Iāll be there ināā I shot a look at Lil, who knew the castmember-only roads better than I. She flashed ten fingers at me. āTen minutes.ā
āOkay,ā he said. āSorry.ā He had his voice back under control. I switched off.
āWhatās up?ā Lil asked.
āIām not sure. An old friend is in town. He sounds like heās got a problem.ā
Lil pointed a finger at me and made a trigger-squeezing gesture. āThere,ā she said. āIāve just dumped the best route to Pleasure Island to your public directory. Keep me in the loop, okay?ā
I set off for the utilidoor entrance near the Hall of Presidents and booted down the stairs to the hum of the underground tunnel-system. I took the slidewalk to cast parking and zipped my little cart out to Pleasure Island.
I found Dan sitting on the L-shaped couch underneath rows of faked-up trophy shots with humorous captions. Downstairs, castmembers were working the animatronic masks and idols, chattering with the guests.
Dan was apparent fifty plus, a little paunchy and stubbled. He had raccoon-mask bags under his eyes and he slumped listlessly. As I approached, I pinged his Whuffie and was
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