The Ware Tetralogy by Rudy Rucker (most important books of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Rudy Rucker
- Performer: -
Book online «The Ware Tetralogy by Rudy Rucker (most important books of all time .txt) đ». Author Rudy Rucker
Darla and Ken were both on their backs next to him, both with their eyes closed. Ken was catatonically still, breathing quietly with his mouth wide open. Looked like a cave in there. Apple blossoms were blowing across the vizzy screen. Darlaâs little hologram of Bei Ng glowed in the corner. Ken stank. The guy was definitely a skanky dook; Whitey and Darlaâd have to be sure and take some interferon. Be bad to make a habit of this kind of thing, with so many people out to burnâŠ
Whitey had been gazing fondly down at Darlaâs plump face, but just then he saw something that made him jerk in surprise. Her hair was moving. Darlaâs hair filled the space between her head and Kenâs, and something was crawling under it!
Whitey shoved Darlaâs head to one side and saw a flash of hardened plastic. A rat! Ken was a meatie! Whitey snapped his hand down to the floor where heâd left his needlerâbut it was gone.
âWhitey?â Darla sat up and felt the back of her head. âWhydja push me, Whiteyââ Her hand came away wet with blood.
âRAT!â Whitey pulled her off the bed. There was a spot of blood on Darlaâs pillow, and a multiwired little zombie box, not yet hooked up. A zombie box for Darla. The ratâa thumb-sized, teardrop-shaped robot remote, darted across the sheet, scuttled up onto Kenâs face, and crawled back into his mouth. Darla was screaming very loud. She turned off the doorâs zapper and hurried out into the hall, still screaming. Whitey searched desperately for his needler, but Ken must have bagged it before letting his rat start in on Darlaâs spine.
Kenâs systems came back up and he leaped to his feet. Whitey ran out the cubby door after Darla. All the other cubbies on their hall had their zappers on. After all the bad deals that Whitey had been involved in, no one was likely to open up for him. He sprinted towards the chute, catching up with Darla on the way. A needler-burst splintered the floor between them. Whitey glanced back. The meatie was down on one knee, firing at them left-handed with Whiteyâs needler. If Ken could kill them both, his cover wouldnât be blown. Whitey and Darla were really moving now, covering ten meters at a step. In seconds theyâd leaped into the chute, caught hold of the pole, and pushed themselves downward towards the Markt. The meatie would be scared to follow them there. Whitey maneuvered himself to a position lower on the pole than Darla, just in case Ken started shooting down at them. There were limits to what heâd do for Darla.
Fortunately the chute was so crowded that the meatie didnât risk coming after them. They slapped down at the Markt level safe and sound⊠except for being naked and having a gouge in the back of Darlaâs neck.
âLet me see it, sweets,â said Whitey. It was a round, deeply abraded spot half an inch across, still bleeding. Whitey had surprised the rat while its microprobes were still mapping out the main nerve paths of Darlaâs spine. Some of her hair had matted into the wound. It was starting to scab over, but Darla was turning limp. The rat had probably shot her up with something. People were staring at them; full nudity was relatively rare in Einstein, and Darla had blood all over her shoulders.
âGet me some blocker, Whitey,â mumbled Darla, stumbling a bit. âEverythingâs lookin at me funny.â
âClear.â He steered her down the long arcade past the Markt stands and shops, heading for a health club called the Tun. Just when he thought heâd made it, a nicely dressed realwoman blocked his way. She had silver-blonde hair and big shoulderpads. Her handsome face was trembling with anger.
âWhat do you think youâre doing with that poor girl, ridgeback! Do you want help, dear?â
Darlaâdrugged, bloody, nudeâpeered up at the realwoman and shook her head no.
âIâm takin care of her already,â said Whitey. Three more steps and theyâd be in the Tun with friends and a medix, and Darla could crash and he could lotion her wound andâ
âLet her go, or I call the Gimmie.â The realwoman took Darlaâs arm and began trying to muscle her away from Whitey. There was no telling what her plans for Darla really were. Whitey shrugged, released his hold on Darla, and shoved the woman as hard as he could. She tumbled to the ground and skidded down the hall. Whitey hustled Darla into the Tun.
Charles Freck was manning the door. He was an older guy, a real spacehead, and a good friend of Whitey and Darla. He wore his long gray hair in a ponytail, and his rugged face was cleanshaven. He was clothed in a loose pair of living paisley imipolex shorts, and he wore tiny green mirrorshades contact amps over his pupils. This made his eyes look as if the vitreous humor had been replaced with light-bathed seawater.
âMy, how bum,â he said primly. Heâd been standing out of sight and watching Whiteyâs tussle over Darla. In each of his dancing eyes, the tiny, variable dot at the center was bright instead of dark. âIâll turn on the zapper.â A glowing gold curtain filled the door. âOD?â
âRat poison. We got down with a meatie, and the rat crawled out of his skull and bit Darla on the neck. Rat had a zombie box for her. Look where it bit.â He pushed some of Darlaâs hair aside.
âRat poison,â mused Charles Freck. âThatâd probably be ketamine. A pop of beta-endorphinâll fix that toot sweet. Letâs just go in the gym and check on the medix.â
He took Darlaâs other arm, and helped Whitey march her down the hall. Darla was moving like she was half merged, and when she breathed it sounded like snoring. âBig,â muttered Darla. âBig throne. Oscar Mayer, king of the ratfood. His giant rubber crown.â She was hallucinating.
The Tun gymnasium was a huge cube of space, painted white all over. Energetic thuddy music played, and holos of handsome people gogo-exercised to the beat. There were a handful of actual people, too; two women on a weight machine, a couple of guys up on the trapezes, some people wrestling on the mats, and a woman riding a bike around and around the sharply banked velodrome that ran along the huge gymâs edges.
Charles Freck led them out from under the velodrome to the snackbar island in the gymâs center. He touched the white probe of the medix to the edge of Darlaâs wound and peered attentively at the readout.
âEven so. Ketamine. Here.â He punched a code into the dispenser, and a syrette of betendorf popped out. âWhitey?â
Whitey injected the ketamine blocker into Darlaâs biceps. âIâll take some snap.â
âEven so.â Freck handed Whitey a packet of snap crystals. Whitey opened the packet and tossed the contents onto his tongue. The crystals snapped and sputtered, releasing the energizing fumes of cocaine freebase. He breathed deep and felt things around him slow down. The last hour had been one long jangleâMooney shooting at him, Darla sharing him, the rat and the meatie, the realwomanâs Gimmie threatâbut now, thanks to the snap, he could sit aside from it all and feel good about how well heâd handled things. Darlaâs turgor was returning, too. He maneuvered her onto one of the barstools and bent her head forward.
âHold still, Darla, and weâll fix this now.â
Charles Freck cleaned the wound, moving slowly and fastidiously. He used a laser shear to snip off the rough edges. Slight smell of burnt Darla meat. Charles took a flat, whitish steak out of the fridge and carefully cut out a piece to match the hole in Darlaâs neck.
âWhatâs that?â Whitey wanted to know.
âUDT. Undifferentiated tissue. Itâs neutralized so she can gene-invade it.â He tapped and snipped, pinned and patted. Took out some gibberlin and rubbed it in. âThatâll do it, unless the rat put in something biological. I didnât know Darla went for meaties.â He smiled merrily and poured himself a little glass of something.
Darla lifted her head and looked around. âI want a bath,â she said. âLike in pure interferon. Ugh. Thatâs the last time I call that creepshow Bill Dingâs Pink Party.â
âSo that was it,â said Whitey. âWhy didnât you admit it?â
âI didnât know for sure that someone was going to answer my spot,â said Darla. âI said Iâd fuff for merge. And then when Ken showed up I thought youâd be⊠â She looked down at her soiled bod. âHow wrong I was. Iâm taking a bath.â
âYou mean if weâd left the camera on, we would have been on Bill Ding?â said Whitey, briefly enthused. âYou should have told me, Darla, âcause we were gigahot. How many people watch Bill Ding anyway?â
The door signal chimed just then. Charles tossed off his potion with an abrupt, birdlike snap of his head. âIf itâs the woman you decked, Whitey, Iâll tell her Whitey says come in to cut a gigahot four-way Bill Ding fuff vid.â
âDonât do that,â said Whitey, his eyes rachetting. With the dirty blond matted hair running down to his bare ass, he looked subhuman. The good part of the snaprush was already over, and events were crowding in on him again. He kept rerunning the last hourâs brutal changes through his mindscreen with the setting turned to Loop (High Speed), looking for a pattern that might predict what was coming next. Mooney was, he realized just then, as he looked into his mind, in the midst of a conversation with someone with a very clear booming bass voice. A robot voice. Mooney was talking on and on with a bopper somewhere. Whitey couldnât tell if it was vizzy or close link, heâd missed something, with all this kilp coming down so heavy so fast.
âPrerequisites,â Mooney was saying. â_Whatâs the difference between prerequisites, perquisites, and perks, eh, Cobb? I mean thatâs where the realpeople are at. Maybe youâre right, I canât decide just like that. Berenice. And you say thatâs an Ed Poe name? Wavy. Iâll come out to the trade center right now⊠_â
Whitey took note of the one salient fact and let the rest of the slushed babble shrink back into subliminality. Charles Freck had paused halfway across the gym to grin at Whitey with his knowing green eyes. âDonât let her in,â repeated Whitey, just loud enough. âSheâll call the Gimmie and someoneâll die. Someone like you.â
âWu-wei,â said Freck, wagging a minatory finger. âMeans _wave with it _in China. Iâll tell Miz Krystle Carrington you went thataway.â He crossed the rest of the gym in three high, high hops.
âThe shower,â said Darla.
Whitey followed her into the constantly running showers. The water splashed lavishly from every side of the great room. The floor was black-and-white-tiled in a Penrose tessellation, and the walls and ceiling were faced with polished bimstone, a marbled deep-red lunar mineral. Hidden behind the walls there was a highly efficient distillerâa cracking refinery, reallyâthat kept repurifying the water through all its endless recycles. The bopper-built system had separate tanks in which it stored up the various hormones and ketones and esters that it cracked out of the sweat, saliva, mucus, and urine which it removed from the water. Many of the cracked biochemicals could be sold as medicines or drugs. The water was hot and plentiful and definitely worth the monthly dues that Whitey paid the Tun.
Water took on entirely
Comments (0)