Accelerando - Charles Stross (classic books for 10 year olds .txt) 📗
- Author: Charles Stross
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shell at this speed - and the laser sail is in a constant state of
disintegration. A large chunk of the drive system’s mass is silvery
utility flakes for patching and replacing the soap-bubble-thin
membrane as it ablates away. The skill is in knowing how best to
funnel repair resources to where they’re needed, while minimizing
tension in the suspension lines and avoiding resonance and thrust
imbalance. As he trains the patch ‘bots, he broods about the hate mail
from his elder brother (who still blames him for their father’s
accident), and about Sadeq’s religious injunctions - Superstitious
nonsense, he thinks - and the fickleness of powerful women, and the
endless depths of his own nineteen-year-old soul.
While he’s brooding, Ang evidently finishes whatever she was doing and
bangs out - not even bothering to use the polished mahogany door at
the rear of the bridge, just discorporating and rematerializing
somewhere else. Wondering if she’s annoyed, he glances up just as the
first of his ghosts patches into his memory map, and he remembers what
happened when it met the new arrival. His eyes widen: “Oh shit!”
It’s not the film producer but the lawyer who’s just uploaded into the
Field Circus’s virtual universe. Someone’s going to have to tell
Amber. And although the last thing he wants to do is talk to her, it
looks like he’s going to have to call her, because this isn’t just a
routine visit. The lawyer means trouble.
*
Take a brain and put it in a bottle. Better: take a map of the
brain and put it in a map of a bottle - or of a body - and feed
signals to it that mimic its neurological inputs. Read its outputs
and route them to a model body in a model universe with a model of
physical laws, closing the loop. Ren� Descartes would understand.
That’s the state of the passengers of the Field Circus in a
nutshell. Formerly physical humans, their neural software (and a
map of the intracranial wetware it runs on) has been transferred
into a virtual machine environment executing on a honking great
computer, where the universe they experience is merely a dream
within a dream.
Brains in bottles - empowered ones, with total, dictatorial,
control over the reality they are exposed to - sometimes stop
engaging in activities that brains in bodies can’t avoid.
Menstruation isn’t mandatory. Vomiting, angina, exhaustion, and
cramp are all optional. So is meatdeath, the decomposition of the
corpus. But some activities don’t cease, because people (even
people who have been converted into a software description,
squirted through a high-bandwidth laser link, and ported into a
virtualization stack) don’t want them to stop. Breathing is wholly
unnecessary, but suppression of the breathing reflex is disturbing
unless you hack your hypothalamic map, and most homomorphic uploads
don’t want to do that. Then there’s eating - not to avoid
starvation, but for pleasure: Feasts on saut�ed dodo seasoned with
silphium are readily available here, and indeed, why not? It seems
the human addiction to sensory input won’t go away. And that’s
without considering sex, and the technical innovations that become
possible when the universe - and the bodies within it - are
mutable.
*
The public audience with the new arrivals is held in yet another
movie: the Parisian palace of Charles IX, the throne room lifted
wholesale from La Reine Margot by Patrice Ch�reau. Amber insisted on
period authenticity, with the realism dialed right up to eleven. It’s
1572 to the hilt this time, physical to the max. Pierre grunts in
irritation, unaccustomed to his beard. His codpiece chafes, and
sidelong glances tell him he isn’t the only member of the royal court
who’s uncomfortable. Still, Amber is resplendent in a gown worn by
Isabelle Adjani as Marguerite de Valois, and the luminous sunlight
streaming through the stained-glass windows high above the crowd of
actor zimboes lends a certain barbaric majesty to the occasion. The
place is heaving with bodies in clerical robes, doublets, and low-cut
gowns - some of them occupied by real people. Pierre sniffs again:
Someone (Gavin, with his history bug, perhaps?) has been working on
getting the smells right. He hopes like hell that nobody throws up. At
least nobody seems to have come as Catherine de M�dicis …
A bunch of actors portraying Huguenot soldiers approach the throne on
which Amber is seated: They pace slowly forward, escorting a rather
bemused-looking fellow with long, lank hair and a brocade jacket that
appears to be made of cloth-of-gold. “His lordship, Attorney at Arms
Alan Glashwiecz!” announces a flunky, reading from a parchment, “here
at the behest of the most excellent guild and corporation of Smoot,
Sedgwick Associates, with matters of legal import to discuss with Her
Royal Highness!”
A flourish of trumpets. Pierre glances at Her Royal Highness, who nods
gracefully, but is slightly peaky - it’s a humid summer day and her
many-layered robes look very hot. “Welcome to the furthermost soil of
the Ring Imperium,” she announces in a clear, ringing voice. “I bid
you welcome and invite you to place your petition before me in full
public session of court.”
Pierre directs his attention to Glashwiecz, who appears to be worried.
Doubtless he’d absorbed the basics of court protocol in the Ring
(population all of eighteen thousand back home, a growing little
principality), but the reality of it, a genuine old-fashioned monarchy
rooted in Amber’s three-way nexus of power, data, and time, always
takes a while to sink in. “I would be pleased to do so,” he says, a
little stiffly, “but in front of all those -”
Pierre misses the next bit, because someone has just goosed him on the
left buttock. He starts and half turns to see Su Ang looking past him
at the throne, a lady-in-waiting for the queen. She wears an apricot
dress with tight sleeves and a bodice that bares everything above her
nipples. There’s a fortune in pearls roped into her hair. As he
notices her, she winks at him.
Pierre freezes the scene, decoupling them from reality, and she faces
him. “Are we alone now?” she asks.
“Guess so. You want to talk about something?” he asks, heat rising in
his cheeks. The noise around them is a random susurrus of
machine-generated crowd scenery, the people motionless as their shared
reality thread proceeds independently of the rest of the universe.
“Of course!” She smiles at him and shrugs. The effect on her chest is
remarkable - those period bodices could give a skeleton a cleavage -
and she winks at him again. “Oh, Pierre.” She smiles. “So easily
distracted!” She snaps her fingers, and her clothing cycles through
Afghani burqua, nudity, trouser suit, then back to court finery. Her
grin is the only constant. “Now that I’ve got your attention, stop
looking at me and start looking at him.”
Even more embarrassed, Pierre follows her outstretched arm all the way
to the momentarily frozen Moorish emissary. “Sadeq?”
“Sadeq knows him, Pierre. This guy, there’s something wrong.”
“Shit. You think I don’t know that?” Pierre looks at her with
annoyance, embarrassment forgotten. “I’ve seen him before. Been
tracking his involvement for years. Guy’s a front for the Queen
Mother. He acted as her divorce lawyer when she went after Amber’s
Dad.”
“I’m sorry.” Ang glances away. “You haven’t been yourself lately,
Pierre. I know it’s something wrong between you and the Queen. I was
worried. You’re not paying attention to the little details.”
“Who do you think warned Amber?” he asks.
“Oh. Okay, so you’re in the loop,” she says. “I’m not sure. Anyway,
you’ve been distracted. Is there anything I can do to help?”
“Listen.” Pierre puts his hands on her shoulders. She doesn’t move,
but looks up into his eyes - Su Ang is only one-sixty tall - and he
feels a pang of something odd: teenage male uncertainty about the
friendship of women. What does she want? “I know, and I’m sorry, and
I’ll try to keep my eyes on the ball some more, but I’ve been in my
own headspace a lot lately. We ought to go back into the audience
before anybody notices.”
“Do you want to talk about the problem first?” she asks, inviting his
confidence.
“I -” Pierre shakes his head. I could tell her everything, he realizes
shakily as his metaconscience prods him urgently. He’s got a couple of
agony-aunt agents, but Ang is a real person and a friend. She won’t
pass judgment, and her model of human social behavior is a hell of a
lot better than any expert system’s. But time is in danger of
slipping, and besides, Pierre feels dirty. “Not now,” he says. “Let’s
go back.”
“Okay.” She nods, then turns away, steps behind him with a swish of
skirts, and he unfreezes time again as they snap back into place
within the larger universe, just in time to see the respected visitor
serve the queen with a class-action lawsuit, and the Queen respond by
referring adjudication to trial by combat.
*
Hyundai +4904/[-56] is a brown dwarf, a lump of dirty hydrogen
condensed from a stellar nursery, eight times as massive as Jupiter
but not massive enough to ignite a stable fusion reaction at its core.
The relentless crush of gravity has overcome the mutual repulsion of
electrons trapped at its core, shrinking it into a shell of slush
around a sphere of degenerate matter. It’s barely larger than the gas
giant the human ship uses as an energy source, but it’s much denser.
Gigayears ago, a chance stellar near miss sent it careening off into
the galaxy on its own, condemned to drift in eternal darkness along
with a cluster of frozen moons that dance attendance upon it.
By the time the Field Circus is decelerating toward it at short range
- having shed the primary sail, which drifts farther out into
interstellar space while reflecting light back onto the remaining
secondary sail surface to slow the starwhisp - Hyundai +4904/[-56] is
just under one parsec distant from Earth, closer even than Proxima
Centauri. Utterly dark at visible wavelengths, the brown dwarf could
have drifted through the outer reaches of the solar system before
conventional telescopes would have found it by direct observation.
Only an infrared survey in the early years of the current century gave
it a name.
A bunch of passengers and crew have gathered on the bridge (now
running at one-tenth of real time) to watch the arrival. Amber sits
curled up in the captain’s chair, moodily watching the gathered
avatars. Pierre is still avoiding her at every opportunity, formal
audiences excepted, and the damned shark and his pet hydra aren’t
invited, but apart from that, most of the gang is here. There are
sixty-three uploads running on the Field Circus’s virtualization
stack, software copied out of meatbodies who are mostly still walking
around back home. It’s a crowd, but it’s possible to feel lonely in a
crowd, even when it’s your party. And especially when you’re worried
about debt, even though you’re a billionairess, beneficiary of the
human species’ biggest reputations-rating trust fund. Amber’s clothing
- black leggings, black sweater - is as dark as her mood.
“Something troubles you.” A hand descends on the back of the chair
next to her.
She glances round momentarily, nods in recognition. “Yeah. Have a
seat. You missed the audience?”
The thin, brown-skinned man with a neatly cropped beard and deeply
lined forehead slips into the seat next to her. “It was not part of my
heritage,” he explains carefully, “although the situation is not
unfamiliar.” A momentary smile threatens to crack his stony face.
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