Blindsight by Peter Watts (the unexpected everything TXT) đź“–
- Author: Peter Watts
- Performer: 0765312182
Book online «Blindsight by Peter Watts (the unexpected everything TXT) 📖». Author Peter Watts
I do as I’m told. For a long time I hear nothing, but I am infinitely patient and incapable of boredom. Eventually a fleeting, familiar signal brushes against my afferent array. I reacquire and track it to source, which I am well-equipped to describe: a trans-Neptunian comet in the Kuiper Belt, approximately two hundred kilometers in diameter. It is sweeping a 21-cm tightbeam radio wave across the heavens with a periodicity of 4.57 seconds. This beam does not intersect Mission Control’s coordinates at any point. It appears to be directed at a different target entirely.
It takes much longer than usual for Mission Control to respond to this information. When it does, it tells me to change course. Mission Control informs me that henceforth my new destination is to be referred to as Burns-Caulfield. Given current fuel and inertial constraints I will not reach it in less than thirty-nine years.
I am to watch nothing else in the meantime.
*
I’d been liaising for a team at the Kurzweil Institute, a fractured group of cutting-edge savants convinced they were on the verge of solving the quantum-glial paradox. That particular log-jam had stalled AI for decades; once broken, the experts promised we’d be eighteen months away from the first personality upload and only two years from reliable Human-consciousness emulation in a software environment. It would spell the end of corporeal history, usher in a Singularity that had been waiting impatiently in the wings for nigh on fifty years.
Two months after Firefall, the Institute cancelled my contract.
I was actually surprised it had taken them so long. It had cost us so much, this overnight inversion of global priorities, these breakneck measures making up for lost initiative. Not even our shiny new post-scarcity economy could withstand such a seismic shift without lurching towards bankruptcy. Installations in deep space, long since imagined secure by virtue of their remoteness, were suddenly vulnerable for exactly the same reason. Lagrange habitats had to be refitted for defense against an unknown enemy. Commercial ships on the Martian Loop were conscripted, weaponised, and reassigned; some secured the high ground over Mars while others fell sunward to guard the Icarus Array.
It didn’t matter that the Fireflies hadn’t fired a shot at any of these targets. We simply couldn’t afford the risk.
We were all in it together, of course, desperate to regain some hypothetical upper hand by any means necessary. Kings and corporations scribbled IOUs on the backs of napkins and promised to sort everything out once the heat was off. In the meantime, the prospect of Utopia in two years took a back seat to the shadow of Armageddon reaching back from next Tuesday. The Kurzweil Institute, like everyone else, suddenly had other things to worry about.
So I returned to my apartment, split a bulb of Glenfiddich, and arrayed virtual windows like daisy petals in my head. Everyone Icons debated on all sides, serving up leftovers two weeks past their expiry date:
Disgraceful breakdown of global security.
No harm done.
Comsats annihilated. Thousands dead.
Random collisions. Accidental deaths.
(who sent them?)
We should have seen them coming. Why didn’t we—
Deep space. Inverse square. Do the math.
They were stealthed_!_
(what do they want?)
We were raped!
Jesus Christ. They just took our picture.
Why the silence?
Moon’s fine. Mars’s fine.
(Where are they?)
Why haven’t they made contact?
Nothing’s touched the O’Neills.
Technology Implies Belligerence!
(Are they coming back?)
Nothing attacked us.
Yet
Nothing invaded.
So far.
(But where are they?)
(Are they coming back?)
(Anyone?)
Jim Moore Voice Only
encrypted
Accept?
The text window blossomed directly in my line of sight, eclipsing the debate. I read it twice. I tried to remember the last time he’d called from the field, and couldn’t.
I muted the other windows. “Dad?”
“Son,” he replied after a moment. “Are you well?”
“Like everyone else. Still wondering whether we should be celebrating or crapping our pants.”
He didn’t answer immediately. “It’s a big question, all right,” he said at last.
“I don’t suppose you could give me any advice? They’re not telling us anything at ground level.”
It was a rhetorical request. His silence was hardly necessary to make the point. “I know,” I added after a moment. “Sorry. It’s just, they’re saying the Icarus Array went down, and—”
“You know I can’t—oh.” My father paused. “That’s ridiculous. Icarus’s fine.”
“It is?”
He seemed to be weighing his words. “The Fireflies probably didn’t even notice it. There’s no particle trail as long as it stays offstream, and it would be buried in solar glare unless someone knew where to search.”
It was my turn to fall silent. This conversation felt suddenly wrong.
Because when my father went on the job, he went dark. He never called his family.
Because even when my father came off the job, he never talked about it. It wouldn’t matter whether the Icarus Array was still online or whether it had been shredded and thrown into the sun like a thousand kilometers of torn origami; he wouldn’t tell either tale unless an official announcement had been made. Which—I refreshed an index window just to be sure— it hadn’t.
Because while my father was a man of few words, he was not a man of frequent, indecisive pauses—and he had hesitated before each and every line he’d spoken in this exchange.
I tugged ever-so-gently on the line—“But they’ve sent ships.”—and started counting.
One one-thousand, two one-thousand—
“Just a precaution. Icarus was overdue for a visit anyway. You don’t swap out your whole grid without at least dropping in and kicking the new tires first.”
Nearly three seconds to respond.
“You’re on the moon,” I said.
Pause. “Close enough.”
“What are you—Dad, why are you telling me this? Isn’t this a security breach?”
“You’re going to get a call,” he told me.
“From who? Why?”
“They’re assembling a team. The kind of—people you deal with.” My father was too rational to dispute the contributions of the recons and hybrids in our midst, but he’d never been able to hide his mistrust of them.
“They need a synthesist,” he said.
“Isn’t it lucky you’ve got one in the family.”
Radio bounced back and forth. “This isn’t nepotism, Siri. I wanted very much for them to pick someone else.”
“Thanks for the vote of conf—”
But he’d seen it coming, and preempted me before my words could cross the distance: “It’s not a slap at your abilities and you know it. You’re simply the most qualified, and the work is vital.”
“So why—” I began, and stopped. He wouldn’t want to keep me away from some theoretical gig in a WestHem lab.
“What’s this about, Dad?”
“The Fireflies. They found something.”
“What?”
“A radio signal. From the Kuiper. We traced the bearing.”
“They’re talking?”
“Not to us.” He cleared his throat. “It was something of a fluke that we even intercepted the transmission.”
“Who are they talking to?”
“We don’t know.”
“Friendly? Hostile?”
“Son, we don’t know. The encryption seems similar, but we can’t even be sure of that. All we have is the location.”
“So you’re sending a team.” You’re sending me. We’d never gone to the Kuiper before. It had been decades since we’d even sent robots. Not that we lacked the capacity. We just hadn’t bothered; everything we needed was so much closer to home. The Interplanetary Age had stagnated at the asteroids.
But now something lurked at the furthest edge of our backyard, calling into the void. Maybe it was talking to some other solar system. Maybe it was talking to something closer, something en route.
“It’s not the kind of situation we can safely ignore,” my father said.
“What about probes?”
“Of course. But we can’t wait for them to report back. The follow-up’s been fast-tracked; updates can be sent en route.”
He gave me a few extra seconds to digest that. When I still didn’t speak, he said, “You have to understand. Our only edge is that as far as we know, Burns-Caulfield doesn’t know we’re on to it. We have to get as much as we can in whatever window of opportunity that grants us.”
But Burns-Caulfield had hidden itself. Burns-Caulfield might not welcome a forced introduction.
“What if I refuse?”
The timelag seemed to say Mars.
“I know you, son. You won’t.”
“But if I did. If I’m the best qualified, if the job’s so vital…”
He didn’t have to answer. I didn’t have to ask. At these kind of stakes, mission-critical elements didn’t get the luxury of choice. I wouldn’t even have the childish satisfaction of holding my breath and refusing to play—the will to resist is no less mechanical than the urge to breathe. Both can be subverted with the right neurochemical keys.
“You killed my Kurzweill contract,” I realized.
“That’s the least of what we did.”
We let the vacuum between us speak for a while.
“If I could go back and undo the—the thing that made you what you are,” Dad said after a while, “I would. In a second.”
“Yeah.”
“I have to go. I just wanted to give you the heads-up.”
“Yeah. Thanks.”
“I love you, son.”
Where are you? Are you coming back?
“Thanks,” I said again. “That’s good to know.”
*
This is what my father could not unmake. This is what I am:
I am the bridge between the bleeding edge and the dead center. I stand between the Wizard of Oz and the man behind the curtain.
I am the curtain.
I am not an entirely new breed. My roots reach back to the dawn of civilization but those precursors served a different function, a less honorable one. They only greased the wheels of social stability; they would sugarcoat unpleasant truths, or inflate imaginary bogeymen for political expedience. They were vital enough in their way. Not even the most heavily-armed police state can exert brute force on all of its citizens all of the time. Meme management is so much subtler; the rose-tinted refraction of perceived reality, the contagious fear of threatening alternatives. There have always been those tasked with the rotation of informational topologies, but throughout most of history they had little to do with increasing its clarity.
The new Millennium changed all that. We’ve surpassed ourselves now, we’re exploring terrain beyond the limits of merely human understanding. Sometimes its contours, even in conventional space, are just too intricate for our brains to track; other times its very axes extend into dimensions inconceivable to minds built to fuck and fight on some prehistoric grassland. So many things constrain us, from so many directions. The most altruistic and sustainable philosophies fail before the brute brainstem imperative of self-interest. Subtle and elegant equations predict the behavior of the quantum world, but none can explain it. After four thousand years we can’t even prove that reality exists beyond the mind of the first-person dreamer. We have such need of intellects greater than our own.
But we’re not very good at building them. The forced matings of minds and electrons succeed and fail with equal spectacle. Our hybrids become as brilliant as savants, and as autistic. We graft people to prosthetics, make their overloaded motor strips juggle meat and machinery, and shake our heads when their fingers twitch and their tongues stutter. Computers bootstrap their own offspring, grow so wise and incomprehensible that their communiqués assume the hallmarks of dementia: unfocused and irrelevant to the barely-intelligent creatures left behind.
And when your surpassing creations find the answers you asked for, you can’t understand their analysis and you can’t verify their answers. You have to take their word on faith—
—Or you use information
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