Authors: Paul di Filippo
“I didn’t really think so. But you have to trace all the pathways.”
K-mart twirled his mustachios like some reductionist-paradigm villain. “You know what I figure?”
“What?”
“The Blankie itself was supposed to do the kidnapping. Crawl away with the prodge out the window, after it got its subversion-shot from the bird. But the ganglia-mappings were screwy—bad engineering—and the heist went sour.”
I thought about K-mart’s theory for a moment. It just didn’t ring true to me. How would the combined mass of the Blankie and its human burden have gotten past the sensate alarm? Surely any kidnappers sophisticated enough to gimmick a bird like that would have considered such a crucial detail. Maybe the Blankie could have bypassed the house’s circuits somehow after its alteration. But then where would the pickup have occurred? I couldn’t picture the Blankie inch-worming its way through town unnoticed. And there had been no suspicious intruders located in the immediate neighborhood. No, the whole kidnapping angle, although it was the obvious answer, seemed wrong somehow.
“These Blankies—I’ve never heard of them before this. Are they new? “
K-mart chased down a few hyperlinks and found the information. “Ixsys submitted all the documentation and beta-test results on them six months ago. The NUdies approved the Blankies for the domestic market a month after that. Global licensing from the WTO still pending.”
“What’s their market-share?”
“Only ten percent. The Blankies don’t have a lot of the higher functions of other childminders. Most parents still favor Carebears and Mother Gooses when the prodge gets a little older. But the Blankies are cheap and easy for round-the-clock sanitary functions and monitoring. They never sleep, for one thing. Helps explain how they went from a zero to ten share in just under half a year.…”
I got up from my imipolex seat, which flattened out into its default shape, awaiting the next occupant. “Sign a lie-detector out of the stables.” I didn’t work with the IRS splices directly anymore, leaving that part of the job to K-mart. “We’re going to pay the swellheads and trumps at Ixsys a little visit.”
“You smell corprotage?”
“Does the Goddess’s Daughter on Earth wear Affymax tits?”
* * *
Like many peltsies and beeves, Ixsys had no centralized headquarters
per se
, being a distributed organization. The local node was just a few minutes away from central Boston, in the edge city of Newton.
I met K-mart down on the street. He had signed out both a cruiser and a lie-detector. The vehicle was a standard Daewoo Euglenia, the hydrogen source for its ceramic engine plain water continuously and smoothly broken down by a bioreactor full of cytofabbed algae with photon input piped from roof solar traps. The lie-detector was an Athena Neurosci Viper model. With a combination of infrared, vomeronasal and lateral-line sensory input, the transgenic creature could read epidermal and subdermal blood-flow, as well as ambient pheromone and respiratory data, right off a suspect to make its judgment on veracity. With basal humans, its accuracy rate approached unity; highly modified subjects introduced varying degrees of uncertainty. But most innocent citizens didn’t sport the kind of moddies necessary to defeat a Viper, and the presence of such blocks was in itself evidence of a sort. In my book, if not a court of law.
“I’ll drive,” said K-mart, and we all got in, the Viper sinuously slithering into the backseat without saying anything.
The bawab at the Ixsys node was one of their massive Ottoman Eunuch models, 15 percent human pedigree, the rest a mix of simian and water buffalo. I saw the same kind as doorman at my apartment complex every night. He towered over us, his shaggy head level with the door’s lintel. The scimitar by his side was, I knew, really a quick-lysing device: liquid protease compressed in the handle could be released as a spray from micropores in the blade, melting flesh in picoseconds.
The Eunuch growled wordlessly when he saw our lack of Ixsys tags. But a flash of our UPCM idents triggered a hardwired servility response, and he let us in.
We hadn’t called ahead, not wishing to precipitate any kind of cover-your-ass reaction. (Although news of the Day-Lewis murder had already been culled from the net and disseminated by millions of newsie demons throughout the metamedium, and any half-smart executive with damage suits glimmering in his brain would have already gotten ready for our visit.) So we had to wait while the receptionist arranged for one of the Ixsys trumps to meet us. I spent my time admiring the colorful, throbbing, hot-blooded plants in their terrariums and tiying to decipher the circuit diagrams of signaling pathways that hung decoratively on the walls.
The company rep finally emerged: a broadly smiling young plug with a modest crest of small bronze-colored dragon-like spines running from his brow over his head and down his back, his suit slit to accomodate them. Pride in a recent degree in biobiz administration was written all over his face. Sacrificial lamb, an expendable toe dipped into possibly shark-infested waters. Achieve maximal deniability at all costs. It made me sick.
He stuck out his hand. “Pleased to meet you, Officers. I’m Tuck Kitchener, in charge of community relations and risk bubble analysis. How can I help you?”
“You’re aware of yesterday’s Blankie murder, I take it?”
Kitchener tsk-tsked. “Most unfortunate and deplorable. A clear case of warranty violation. The Blankie should never have been exposed to exo-avian secretagogues under any circumstances. The owners of the Blankie were clearly at fault. I hope you agree. There’s no question of corporate responsibility, is there?”
“I don’t know yet. That’s why we’re here. I’d like a look at your design facilities. Talk to the team members responsible for the Blankie.”
“Why, certainly! Nothing could be easier. If you’ll just accompany me to the sterilization lock—”
Before long, K-mart, the Viper and I were sluiced, dusted, and wrapped. The exit procedure would be even stricter, involving internal search-and-destroy, to insure we didn’t try to smuggle any proprietary secrets out.
Once through the lock, we made our way past breeding vats and reactors, paragenesis chambers and creches, wunderkammers and think-tanks, all staffed by efficiently bustling Ixsys staff.
“As you can see,” Kitchener said boastfully, “we run a tight ship here. All by the regs. No spills, no chills, that’s our byword—”
K-mart interrupted. “We’re not inspectors from NUSHA, Peej Kitchener. We’re the Protein Police. And we’re trying to solve a murder. A murder involving one of your products.”
It still amazes me that anyone falls for good-cop-bad-cop, but they do. Uncertain of who was senior, Kitchener looked imploringly at me. But I just raised my eyebrows. The young trump began nervously to stroke his cranial comb, which bent like stiff rubber. “Ah, yes, of course. Why don’t we proceed directly with your interview of the Blankie team?”
“Why don’t we?”
So Kitchener took us to the swellheads.
Although I had dealt with doublebrains in the line of duty before, the sight of their naked bulging encephaloceles always made me somewhat queasy. Cradled in their special neckbrace support chairs, surrounded by their digitools and virtuality hookups, their basal metabolisms necessarily supplemented with various nutritional and trope exofeeds, they seemed to regard us visitors with a cold Martian scrutiny.
K-mart appeared unaffected by the massed clammy gaze of the eight Cerebrally Enhanced—or at least capable of putting up a better front than I —and plunged right into querying the swells.
“Okay—how many backdoors did you jokers install in the Blankie ganglia?”
The team members exchanged significant glances among themselves, then one spoke. “I am Simon, the leader of the octad. I shall answer your questions. There are no hidden entrypoints. All is as the published specs declare.”
“For the moment, I’ll assume that’s true.” K-mart glanced meaningfully at our Viper, who had not objected yet. But I wondered how good its skills would be against the swells. “Who did you steal from to build it? Come on, I know you seebens are always plundering each other’s finds. Who’s got a mindworm against Ixsys and wants you to look bad?”
Simon actually betrayed a tiny measure of affronted dignity. “We derive all our insights and findings direct from the numinous sempiternal sheldrakean ideosphere. Our labors are unremitting and harsh, as we prospect among uncharted territories of ideospace. To accuse us of theft is to demean our very existence!”
The rest of the interrogation went just as awkwardly, yielding nothing. Finally even the tenacity of K-mart wilted.
As we were leaving, my partner turned to the recumbent CE’s and said, “See y’all at Madame Muskrat’s, boys!”
We headed slowly toward the exit, while I tried to think of another lead. Kitchener’s smug look didn’t help my concentration.
Then something from the Day-Lewis bio came back to me. The father’s job.
I turned to Kitchener. “Who field-tested the Blankie?”
“Ah, that employee is currently on extended leave—”
“He is lying,” said the Viper.
Pay dirt! K-mart jumped in.
“Allow me to read you your rights under the NU Treaty. You have the right to a kibernetic counsel rated at Turing Level Five —”
Kitchener laughed like a man caught with his hand in his pants at a Amish church picnic. “Certainly you don’t intend to arrest me for a mere slip of the tongue, Officers? What I meant to say is that the employee in question had to be fired under prejudicial circumstances.”
“What’s the name? We’ll want all your files on him. And what did he do?”
“His name … Um, let me recall. Bert something. Bertrand Mayr.”
“And why did you let him go?”
“Flagrant misuse and theft of corporate property.”
“Precisely?”
Kitchener smoothed his saurian crest again. “A small matter of sex. He was having sex with the product.”
* * *
Sometimes I try to imagine what it was like to live in reedpair times. It was only last century, after all. A lot of that cohort are still actually hanging around, admittedly without many of their original organs or neurons. But even when talking with them, you can’t really understand what their world was truly like. One of the biggest puzzles is how they managed sex. They had to cope with deadly venereal diseases, intractable neuroses, fixed morphologies, social condemnation of natural urges, and merely human sex-workers who offered mostly heartless, perfunctory service due to their oppression and mistreatment.
Today, gratuitous venereal diseases have been extirpated. (Deliberately inflicted ones are, of course, still a problem. I remember last year the tricky time we had tracking down the perp spreading neo-koro, the penis-inversion plague.) The witch doctors of psychology have been replaced by trope closers. Malleable anatomy is no longer destiny. Laws finally reflect actual desires (at least in the NU; the situation elsewhere varies). And playpets bred and trained for their essential erotic functions come in a nearly infinite variety. (And humane treatment extends even beyond their useful stage. I understand that their retirement ranches offer a wide range of crafts and games.)
But despite all this, you still get a few hesomagari, the “twisted navels,” those full-blooded humans contrary or perverse enough to seek a fulfillment not socially sanctioned.
Such as Bert Mayr.
We had his files downloaded before we left Ixsys. And this was what we learned.
Mayr was the son of NU citizens Rowena and Boris Mayr, ex-settlers who had retreated in failure from the hard life on board Aquarius, the floating arcology and OTEC power plant off the coast of Madagascar. Their Lotto-won berths had gone to others when they fled back to Boston.
Boris had died here shortly after Bert’s birth. Caught in the middle of a turf war between the Morgue Boys and the Thai Guys out in Charlestown, where the mother still lived. She had never rebonded on a permanent basis.
Mayr had grown up to be your archetypical loner. No friends, no resident erotofiscal partner, no transient lovers. Apparently, he had followed this solitary lifestyle ever since becoming fully enfranchised.
My cop’s intuition drew me a picture of a mama’s boy, the only token of his lost father, a coddled and fussed-over introvert.
In his final year of schooling, Mayr had shown aptitude as a chromosartor. Given the standard Scios Nova cooker-splicer setup for twelve-year-olds, he had soon modified it with add-ons purchased with his pocket money to produce standalone entities up to the level of annelids. He loved to hack nucleotides and amino acids, perhaps too much so. Legal and moral boundaries appeared to mean little to him. He had almost gotten expelled for the prank of infesting the school’s showers with nonreproductive hookworms. He had programmed them with only a thirty-day lifespan—but in that time they also secreted low levels of psilocybin-analogues directly into the victim’s gut.
When he had graduated, he found that his juvenile record of misdemeanors worked against him. No respectable peltsie would hire him as a chromosartor (at least without Mayr consenting to a course of corrective tropes, a measure he apparently rejected), for fear of his dangerously irresponsible attitude. The best job he could get was field-testing at Ixsys, a position he had held unremarkably for the past decade.