The Ware Tetralogy by Rudy Rucker (most important books of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Rudy Rucker
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Randy walked gingerly across the room and nudged the piece of imipolex that Parvati had left.
âI am superleech type 4, series 1, ID #6,â uvvied the hoarse little voice. âI am currently coupled to 723 grams of imipolex with traces of a moldie program. This imipolex was part of the left buttock of a moldie named Parvati.â
âCan you wipe out the moldie traces and run the imipolex yourself?â
âYes. Shall I proceed?â
âDo it. And then keep watch. Grow some feet and walk around. If anyone or anything comes in here, squawk and wake me up. I gotta crash.â
Randy tottered to his bed, took off his uvvy, and fell into a whirling kind of nightmare sleep. At some point in the middle of the night, something hopped into bed with him and snuggled up by his chest. He cradled it against himself and slept a little better.
At dawn, the uvvy rang for him: âRandy Randy Randy Randy⊠â
A creature shaped like a young hen hopped off Randyâs bed onto the floor and began making a ruckus. What? Randy reached out and slapped the uvvy that sat on his bedside table, setting it to projection mode. Jennyâs face appeared. She had a big zit on the side of her forehead.
âRise and shine, Randy! We have a lot to do today.â
âIâm not ready.â He rubbed his face, trying to put together his memory of what had happened the night before. The little chicken strutted this way and that, staring at Randy for approval. The nappy purple shape of the superleech ran down the center of its back.
âI saw it all,â said Jenny, looking eager and gossipy. âI never told you, but I keep a tap on your uvvy? So when I heard you going off about your father, I did some quick research and found out who he is.â
âNow, hold on,â said Randy. âJust slow down here. Parvati is gettinâ me fired anyway. Iâm through working for you skungy Heritagists.â
âIâm not a Heritagist, Randy Karl,â said Jenny. âIâm a soft ware simmie created by a certain loonie moldie whoâs also called Jenny. For fast Earth contact, I need to live down here on a serious machine. So Iâm working for the Heritagists just to like pay the rent for my space on their machine. Iâm living on the Heritagistsâ big underground asimov computer in Salt Lake Cityâbut, um, Randy, I could move? With a client like you, I could be a freelance agent for both you and moldie Jenny from the Moon. I could buy myself a proprietary hardware node in Studio City.â
âForget it!â said Randy. âGood-bye!â
âWait! Donât you want to know who your father is?â
âOkay, who is he?â
âIâll never tell,â giggled Jenny, every bit the snippy teenage Heritagist girl with a secret. âJust kidding! But you have to listen to my new plan too.â
âYeah yeah.â Randy kept being distracted by the antics of the superleech-animated chicken; it was prancing around like a miniature moldie, pretending to scratch for worms in the wooden floor. Wormwood. Randy was still seeing colorful trails every time he moved his eyes. âLet me get it together for a minute, Jenny. I feel mighty rough.â
He went and looked in the kitchen. The floor was bare. There were flies on the vomit in the sink. He ran the water for a minute, taking a drink and rinsing off his face. What was that last thing Parvati had said about dacoits? He checked that the apartment door was locked, then took a pee. The hen trailed after Randy like a chick following its mother.
âIâm gone call you Willa Jean,â Randy told it. âThat fine by you?â The chicken clucked and bobbed its head. Randy leaned over and petted it. âYou my little friend, ainât you, Willa Jean? Iâve always wanted a pet chicken. Good girl. Good Willa Jean.â
Whey-faced Jenny was waiting above the uvvy by Randyâs bed. âOh, excuuuuuse me,â she said. âFinally ready?â
âYep.â
âWell!â said Jenny. âAbout your dad. Of course the Heritage Council has a sample of your DNA on fileâfrom when you applied to live in the Shively Heritage House, remember?âso I ran a similarity search across some DNA databases, starting with Louisville. And right away I found your match in the records of the Louisville jail! Willy Taze, born 2004 to Isle Anderson and Colin Taze. You must have heard of him. Cobb Andersonâs grandson? The inventor of the DIM and the uvvy? In his twenties Willy was employed by the city of Louisville to maintain the Belle asimov computer, and then in 2031 he helped Manchile and his nine-day meatbop boys. Willy was arrested for treason and sentenced to death, but he broke out of prison in the Louisville asimov revolt that happened the day before Spore Day. Willy made it down to Florida and started inventing things. The Gimmie liked his DIMs so much that they pardoned him. And then Willy moved to the Moon. He built himself a place and roomed there for many years with a man named Corey Rhizome. End of info dump.â
âWilly Taze is my dad? Where is he now?â
âWell, I shouldnât really talk about this, but, um, Willy moved out of Einstein and into the moldiesâ Nest. I wouldnât know how you could reach him. I suppose you could uvvy Rhizome for info, but heâs a big old grouch. Coreyâs an artist, and he doesnât like strangers one bit!â
âBut I thought I heard my dad talkinâ to me yesterday after I chopped up Parvati,â wailed Randy. âI thought I heard a manâs voice.â
âYes yes, I arranged that for you,â smirked Jenny. âIt was pretty obvious that you needed itâslashing up your mommy and crying like a baby. What a sight! But that wasnât Willy talking to you. It was a simulation of Cobb Andersonâyour great-grandfather. You know how the Vatican used to have the worldâs biggest library of porno? Well, the Heritagists have the Earthâs biggest archive of bopper memorabilia. And it just so happens that their Salt Lake City Archives own the only existing copy of Cobbâs S-cube. I snuck in and booted it up so Cobb could talk to you and make you happy. Now, listen, Randy, you need to get out of Bangalore before Parvati turns you in. Iâm going to buy you a plane ticket. Get your suitcase packed, and Iâll call right back.â
Randyâs thoughts were in a whirl. âYouâre doing fine, son. Iâm proud of you. Youâre doing just fine.â So that had been Cobb Anderson. The man who invented the boppers; the first man to have his personality coded up as software. Randyâs great-grandfather! It would be nice to have some long talks with him. And Randyâs dadâRandyâs dad was Willy Taze, the glamorous rebel and genius inventor! Maybe Randy could find Willy in the Nest. Maybe Randy would turn out to be a big somebody like Willy and Cobb!
He moved quickly around his apartment, tossing clothes and mementos into his bag. Willa Jean raced around with him. When the uvvy sounded again, Randy ran to the bedroom and slapped the uvvy onto his neck.
âYes,â said Jenny. âThe ticketâs all set. Youâre on a direct flight to San Francisco, leaving at 1 P.M.â
âYou think thatâs early enough, Jenny? Parvati said sheâs gonna uvvy Emperor Staghorn in the afternoon. Did you catch what she said to me about dacoits? When Emperor Staghorn gets the word, they gonna send a gang of thugs after me, girl. Get me an earlier ticket!â
âRandy, before you leave, you have to go in to Emperor Staghorn and make me a complete viddy of how Ramanujan makes a superleech. Weâve found you a smart micro-cam thatâll perch on a hair in your eyebrows. Itâs no bigger than a dust mite. You make the viddy and at noon you tell Ramanujan youâre eating lunch in town and go right to Gate 13 at the airport. Theyâll have a first-class ticket for you. No sweat!â
âI donât wanna go to no Emperor Staghorn today, Jenny. Itâs too risky.â
âRandy, unless you can get the complete recipe for the superleech, youâre not going to be of all that much use to us.â
âThis is still for the Heritagists?â
âYes, itâs for the Heritagists, but believe it or not, itâs for the loonie moldies too.â
âBull shit.â
âIs too!â giggled Jenny, crinkling her nose and nodding vigorously. âMmm-hmmm! Youâll see, Randy Karl Tucker. Itâll be fun in California. Youâll work in Santa Cruz. Itâs this funky little beach town an hour south of San Francisco. And you can talk to Cobb Anderson as much as you like. Come on, Randy, donât be a party pooper. At least let us get you to San Francisco.â
âOh man. I dunno.â
âIâve already called a moldie rickshaw for you. Heâll be there in a minute; heâs picking up the micro-cam right now. Let him take you to Emperor Staghorn. Heâll wait there with your suitcase, and youâll be able to leave the instant youâre ready. Come on, Randy. Pretty please.â
âWhat all you got lined up for me in Santa Cruz?â
âWell, I really wasnât supposed to tell you yet, but since weâre such good pals and everythingâoh, why not. Youâll be kidnapping moldies and sending them to the Nest. Liberating them, the way the loonie moldies look at it. Moldie repatriation is something the Nest works on with the Heritagists. Youâll be working with a man named Aarbie Kidd.â
âKidnappinâ moldiesâd be easy with superleeches,â mused Randy Karl. âFor the Nest? I wouldnât mind checkinâ out some oâ them moldie California girls. And get in tight with the loonie moldies? I wouldnât mind that a bit. Hell, oncet I get to know âem, I could go to the Nest and see my dad, couldnât I!â
âAll of that, Randy Karl, and more. Is it a deal? The rickshawâs downstairs.â
âWait. First I wanna talk to Cobb again.â
âCan do! Iâll patch him right in.â
The uvvy image wavered, and then there was Cobb Anderson. He had a strong wide face with high cheekbones. His hair was sandy and he had a short-cropped white beard. He was imaged in much better resolution than Jenny; he looked almost real, floating there in Randyâs visual cortex. The rich Cobb simulation even included scents and air currents. Cobb smelled comfortableâhe smelled like freckles.
âSo youâre Willyâs son,â said Cobb. âIâm a little out of sync. I just came back from heaven. All is One in the SUN. I donât like being run on this asimov machine; I need my own personal hardware.â Cobb paused to channel Randyâs vibe. âSo youâre my great-grandson. Yes. I can tell youâve been hurt. Poor Randy. We can help each other.â
âCobb, whatâs my dad like?â
âWillyâs smart as a whip. A wizard with the cephscope. He saved me and a woman from some racial puritans one time, and he freed a bunch of machines from their asimovs. And I hear that then heââ The old manâs face clouded over. âStop talking in my head, Jenny, and donât rush me. Randy, letâs see if you canât get me off this pathetically inadequate pig machine. Take me to the moldies
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