Snake Eyes by Tom Maddox (popular novels .TXT) đ
- Author: Tom Maddox
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So strictly speaking there is no Aleph, thus no subject or verb in the sentences with which it expressed itself to itself. Paradox, to Aleph one of the most interesting ot intellectual formsâa paradox marked the limits of a position, even of a mode of being, and Aleph was very interested in limits.
Aleph had observed George Jordanâs arrival, his tossing on his bunk, his interview with Charley Hughes. It luxuriated in these observations, in the pity, compassion, and empathy they generated, as Aleph toresaw the sea change that George would endure, its ecstasies, passions, pains. At the same time it telt with detachment the necessity for his pain, even to the point ot death.
Compassion/detachment, death/life âŠ
Several thousand voices within Aleph laughed. George would soon find out about limits and paradoxes.
Cafeteria Four was a ten-meter-square room in eggshell blue, filled with dark gray enameled table and chair assemblies that could be fastened magnetically to any of the roomâs surfaces. Most of the assemblies hung from walls and ceiling to make room for the people within.
At the door George met a tall woman who said, âWelcome, George. Iâm Lizzie. Charley Hughes told me youâd be here.â Her blond hair was cut almost to the skull, her eyes were bright, gold-flecked blue. Sharp nose, slightly receding chin, and prominent cheekbones gave her the starved look of an out-of-work model, She wore a black skirt, slit on both sides to the thigh, and red stockings. A red rose was tattooed against the pale skin on her left shoulder, its stem curving down between her bare breasts, where a thorn drew a teardrop of blood. Like George, she had shining cable junctions beneath her jaw. She kissed him with her tongue in his mouth.
âAre you the recruiting officer?â George asked. âIf so, good job.â
âNo need to recruit you. I can see youâve already joined up.â She touched him lightly underneath his jaw, where the cable junctions gleamed.
âNot yet I havenât.â But she was right, of courseâwhat else could he do? âYou got a beer around here?â
He took the cold bottle of Dos Equis Lizzie offered him and drank it quickly, then asked for another. Later he realized this was a mistakeâhe was still taking antinausea pills (USE CAUTION IN OPERATING MACHINERY). At the time, all he knew was, two beers and life was a carnival. There were lights, noises, and lots of unfamiliar people.
And there was Lizzie. The two of them spent much of the time standing in a corner, rubbing up against each other. Hardly
Georgeâs style, but at the time it seemed appropriate. Despite its intimacy, the kiss at the door had seemed ceremonialâa rite of passage or initiationâbut quickly he felt ⊠what? An invisible flame passing between them, or a boiling cloud of pheromonesâ her eyes seemed to sparkle with them. As he nuzzled her neck, tried to lick the drop of blood of f her left breast, explored fine, white teeth with his tongue, they seemed twinned, as if there were cables running between the two of them, snapped into the shining rectangles beneath their jaws.
Someone had a Jahfunk program running on a corner. Innis showed up and tried several times without success to get his attention. Charley Hughes wanted to know if the snake liked Lizzieâit did, George was sure of it but didnât know what that meant. Then George fell over a table.
Innis led him away, stumbling and weaving. Charley Hughes looked for Lizzie, who had disappeared for the moment. She came back and said, âWhereâs George?â
âDrunk, gone to bed.â
âToo bad. We were just getting to know each other.â
âSo I saw. How do you feel about this?â
âYou mean do I feel like a traitorous bitch?â
âCome on, Lizzie.â
âWell, donât ask such dumb questions. I feel bad, sure, but I know what George doesnâtâso Iâm ready to do what must be done. And by the way, I really do like him.â
Charley said nothing. He thought, Yes, as Aleph said you would.
Oh Christ, was George embarrassed in the morning. Stumbling drunk and humping in public ⊠ai yi yi. He tried to call Lizzie but only got an answer tape, at which point he hung up. He lay in his bed in a semistupor until the phoneâs buzzer sounded.
Lizzieâs face on the screen stuck its tongue out at him. âCandy ass,â she said. âI leave for a few minutes, and youâre gone.â
âSomebody brought me home. I think.â
âYeah, you were pretty popped. You want to meet me for lunch?â
âMaybe. Depends on when Hughes wants me. Where will you be?â
âSame place, honey. Caff four.â
A phone call got the news that the doctor wouldnât be ready for him until an hour later, so George ended up sitting across from the bright-eyed, manic blondâfully dressed in SenTrax overalls this morning, but they were open almost to the waist. She gave off sensual heat as naturally as a rose smells sweet. In front of her was a plate of huevos rancheros piled with guacamole. Yellow, green, and red, smelling of chilisâin his condition, as bad as cat food. âJesus, lady,â he said. âAre you trying to make me sick?â
âCourage, George. Maybe you should have someâitâll kill you or cure you. What do you think of everything so tar?â
âItâs all a bit disorienting, but what the hell? First time away from Mother Earth, you know. But let me tell you what I really donât getâ Senlrax. I know what I want from them, but what the hell do they want from me?â
âThey want this simple thing, man, perphs, peripherals. You and me, weâre just parts for the machine. Aleph, which is the Al in residence, has got all these inputsâvideo, audio. radiation detectors, temperature sensors, satellite receiversâbut theyâre dumb. What Aleph wants, Aleph getsâIâve learned that much. He wants to use us, and thatâs all there is to it. Think of it as pure research.â
âHe? You mean Innis?â
âNo, who gives a damn about lnnis? Iâm talking about Aleph. Oh yeah, people will tell you Alephâs a machine, an AI, all that bullshit. Uh-uh. Alephâs a personâa weird kind of person, sure, but a definite person. Hell, Alephâs maybe a whole bunch of people.â
âIâll take your word for it. Look, thereâs one thing Iâd like to try. What do I have to do to get outside ⊠go for a spacewalk?â
âEasy enough. You have to get a licenseâthat takes a three-week course in safety and operations. I can take you through it. Iâm qualified as an ESA, extra-station activity instructor. Weâll start tomorrow.â
The cranes on the wall flew to their mysterious destination; looking at the display above the table, George thought it might as well be another universe.
Truncated optic nerves sticking out like insect antennae, a brain floated beneath the extended black plastic snout of a Sony holoptics projector. As Hughes worked the keyboard in front of him, the organ turned so that they were looking at its underside. It had a fine network of silver wires trailing from it but seemed normal.
âThe George Jordan brain,â Innis said. âWith attachments. Very nice.â
âMakes me feel like Iâm watching my own autopsy, looking at that thing. When can you operate, get this shit out of my head?â
âLet me show you a few things.â As he typed, the convoluted gray cortex, became transparent, revealing red, blue, and green color-coded structures within. Hughes reached into the brain and clenched his fist inside a blue area at the top of the spinal cord. âHere is where the electrical connections turn biologicalâthose little nodes along the pseudoneurans are the bioprocessors, and they wire into the so-called r-complexâ which we inherited from our reptilian forefathers. The pseudoneurons continue into the limbic system, the mammalian brain, it you will, and thatâs where emotion enters in. But there is further involvement to the neocortex, through the RAS, the reticular activating system, and the corpus callosum. There are also connections to the optic nerve,â
âIâve heard this gibberish before. So what?â
âThe pseudoneurons are not just implantedâtheyâre now a functional, organic part of your brain.â
Innis said, âThereâs no way of removing the implants without loss of order in your neural maps. We canât remove them.â
âOh shit, man
Charley Hughes said, âThough the snake cannot be removed, it can perhaps be charmed. Your difficulties arise from its uncivilized, uncontrolled natureâits appetites are, you might say primeval. An ancient part of your brain has gotten the upper hand over the neocortex, which properly should be in command. Through working with Aleph, these ⊠propensIties can be integrated into your personality and thus controlled.â
âWhat choice you got?â Innis asked. âWeâre the only game in town. Come on, George. Weâre ready tor you just down the corridor.â
The only light in the room came from a globe in one corner. George lay across a lattice of twisted brown fibers strung across a transparent plastic frame and suspended from the ceiling ot the small, dome-ceilinged, pink room. Flesh-colored cables ran from his neck and disappeared into chrome plates sunk into the floor.
Innis said, âFirst weâll run a test program. Charley will give you perceptionsâcolors, sounds, tastes, smellsâand you tell him what youâre picking up. We need to make sure weâve got a clean interface. Call the items off, and heâIl stop you if he has to.â
Innis went into a narrow room, where Chartey Hughes sat at a dark plastic console studded with lights. Behind him were chrome stacks of monitor-and-control equipment, the yellow Sentrax sunburst on the face of each piece of shining metal.
The pink walls went to red, the light strobed, and George writhed in the hammock. Charley Hughesâs voice came through Georgeâs inner ear: âWe are beginning.â
âRed,â George said. âBlue. Red and btue. A wordâostrich. A smell, ahh ⊠sawdust maybe. Shit. Vanilla. Almonds âŠ
This went on for quite a while. âYouâre ready,â Charley Hughes said.
When Aleph came online, the red room disappeared. A matrix eight hundred by eight hundredâsix hundred forty thousand pixels forming an optical imageâthe CAS A supernova remnant, a cloud of dust seen through a composite of X ray and radio wave from NASAâs High Energy High Orbit Observatory. George didnât see the image at allâhe listened to an ordered, meaningful array of information.
Byte-transmission: seven hundred fifty million groups squirting from a National Security Agency satellite to a receiving station near Chincoteague Island, off the eastern shore of Virginia. He could read them.
âItâs all information,â the voice saidâits tone not colorless but sexless and somehow distant. âWhat we know, what we are. Youâre at a new level now. What you call the snake cannot be reached through languageâit exists in a prelinguistic modeâbut through me it can be manipulated. First you must learn the codes that underlie language. You must learn to see the world as I do.â
Lizzie took George to be fitted for a suit, and he spent that day learning how to get in and out ot the stiff white carapace without assistance. Then over the next three weeks she ted him through its primary operations and the dense list of satety procedures.
âRed burn,â she said. They floated in the suit locker, empty suit cradles beneath them and the white shells hanging from the wall like an audience of disabled robots. âYou see that one spelled out on your faceplate, and you have screwed up. Youâve put yourself into some kind ot no-return trajectory So you just coot everything and call for help, which should arrive in the torm of Aleph taking control of your suit
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