Friday, July 25, 2014

A Campfire Song

Image by Lukas Riebling via Wikimedia Commons


Walt fed the campfire with twigs and dead pine needles, though it had taken a can of Sterno to get it started. Earlier in the hike, Marlin had pointed out a small hawk on the other side of a clearing that Walt couldn’t identify. The brochure’s rustic lunch tuned out to be PB&J. Whatever inherent mystique a Yukon trail guide might have, Walt was destroying it.

Marlin hummed a tune, watching for Walt’s reaction. The guide had to recognize the song. He had to.

“Cut that racket out,” Walt said.

Ah success. “Don’t you like the song?” Marlin asked.

“You’ve been carryin’ on with that nonsense since the trailhead. Christ himself would have told you to knock it off by now.” He tossed more needles in the fire and searched around his feet for more.

“I heard that singing or talking in the woods will keep bears away,” Marlin said.

“They’ll stay away just fine with or without you making jibber-jabber.”

“But, don’t we need to worry about bears?” Marlin asked. They both had guns strapped to their hips, though Marlin doubted his would do anything more than annoy any wild animal.

Walt adjusted a camouflage baseball hat while he looked around. “Dunno. We’ll put the food up in a tree and keep the fire going. If a bear comes, he’ll probably be too busy trying to get the peanut butter jar open to pay us any mind.”

“So then what?”

“We let him eat it, and run like hell back to the truck.”

“Won’t the bear chase us?”

“Never saw a bear more interested in people than peanut butter, unless they smell like bacon.” He fished around for another stick and poked it at the flames. “You got any bacon?”

“I’m a vegetarian.”

“Oh, right.” Walt paused. “Then why’d you hire out a fishing guide?”

“I eat fish, just not meat.”

“Fish is meat. Don’t see fish in the produce section,” Walt said.

“It’s complicated,” Marlin said.

“Must be. Never seen a fisherman with only one rod and two flies on a backcountry trip before.”

“I like to travel light.”

“Yeah? Then what’s weighing down your pack?”

“Nothing.”

“That’s the heaviest nothing I ever saw.”

Just notebooks, a camera, a digital recorder, and a tablet. But if Walt knew that, he might get spooked. He could decide to go underground again, and Marlin would lose his trail forever.

They sat by the fire, neither saying a word for what seemed like hours. Marlin began humming.

“You make that racket on purpose, or do you even know you’re doing it?” Walt asked.

“Don’t you recognize the tune?” Marlin found himself leaning in for the answer.

“Not hardly. Sounds like a drunk bee in a tin can.”

“Really? Nothing?”

Walt shook his head and went rummaging through his pack. He tossed Marlin a plastic-wrapped sandwich oozing peanut butter and then held up a Slim Jim.

“You want your jerky?”

“No, you go ahead.”

*

After dinner, Marlin tried drawing Walt into conversation, but the man would only reply with grunts and monosyllables. He gave up and stared up into the sky, watching the night’s first stars emerge as Walt’s knife rasped over a branch, peeling strips of bark into a little pile at his feet. More stars came into view as the sky darkened, and Walt’s whittling took on a steady cadence. Marlin followed a winking light through the sky, and was trying to decide if it was a jet or a satellite when he realized Walt was absently humming a tune in time to his knife strokes. The notes repeated every few seconds into a series, the series changing keys every third round, the song Marlin had heard hundreds of times, with words etched so deeply in his mind that he could remember them when his boyhood telephone number, his career record as a high school wrestler, and his second girlfriend’s first name had long faded from recall.

Marlin sat up and turned to Walt.

“You do know that song.”

Walt looked confused for a second, then scowled at the whittled stick. He tossed it into the fire.

“Don’t know what you’re talking about,” Walt said.

“That was Baby, Can You Dig Your Man? by Rico Hayfield.”

“Hell if it was,” Walt said.

Marlin grinned.

“Probably just stuck in my head because you’ve been humming it all day long,” Walt said.

“No, you hummed it like you used to sing it, Walt. Or can I call you Rico?”

Walt’s shoulders slumped. “You with the IRS?”

“No, I’m just a fan.”

Walt gave a short, mirthless chuckle. “I’ll bet. You from some network wanting to do a ‘where are they now’ story? ‘Cause I’m not interested.”

“No. Just me.”

Walt nodded. “How’d you find me, anyway?”

“It wasn’t easy,” Marlin said. “A group of us met up on the Internet and pooled our clues together. Sightings, rumors, family history, that kind of thing. Then we divvied up the globe and started searching. I got Canada.

“Nothing happened for years, then I came across some guy’s pictures from a fishing trip, and he joked that their guide looked like Rico-what’s-his-name’s old man. When I looked, I knew it was you. The rest was simple.”

“What did your online buddies say?”

Marlin felt his face warm. “I held out on them. I wanted to be the first one to find you, and make sure it actually was you, and not some mistake.”

Walt dug at the bottom of his pack and pulled out a chrome flask. He smelled at the contents then held it out to Marlin.

“Well, you found me, congratulations. Share some Scotch with me?”

Marlin tipped the flask back, and erupted into a coughing fit.

“Yeah, it ain’t for everyone,” Walt said, taking the flask back. He took a swig and held it before him, sloshing liquor back and forth.

“Why’d you stop putting out songs?” Marlin asked. “It’s like you disappeared when your song dropped off the radio.”

Walt poked at the fire. “I had a song, and people liked it. The record company gave me a ton of cash as a signing bonus and promised a big check once the receipts came in. Figured I had it made, and plowed though money like every day was my last.”

“What did you spend it on?”

“Trips, feasts, friends, women, even a castle in the middle of a Scottish swamp. It cost, but why worry about bills when I could always write another song, right? Except when I sat down to write, nothing came out.”

“Writer’s block?”

Walt shook his head. “Nah. I think I just had that one song in me and didn’t know it. Took me a while to realize that, but by then I had lost everything but a bunch of creditors and tax men.”

“And you ended up here.”

Walt gave a little shrug. “The Yukon has always been a place to run away. Living is cheap, if you know how to go about it and, for the most part, no one asks questions. So while I may not be the world’s greatest trail guide, I get by.”

The Scotch started going to his head, so Marlin sat down. “You could go back, you know,” Marlin said. “There’s a small group of fans that’d be willing to help you get your problems sorted out. Maybe get you back touring again, even if is for that one song.”

Walt stared at him over the fire, then up at the stars. He took in a deep breath, and shook his head.

“No, too late for all that.”

“Everyone declares bankruptcy now, it’s like ordering a burger.” Marlin leaned in. “Your song is the thread that runs through my life. I can’t explain it, but through high school, college, and out in the world, something in your music helps me make sense of it all. I know others feel that way too.”

Marlin walked around the fire and put a hand on Walt’s shoulder. “You owe it to us to come back and sing again. Maybe you’ll find another song in you too.”

“I doubt it.” Walt put the flask away and hefted the food sack. “Let’s turn in for the night.”

“Will you let me help you get back to the real world?”

Walt looked at him and sighed. “I’ll tell you in the morning.”

“Okay.” Marlin stood and steadied himself against the liquor. “Need any help with the camp?”

Walt gave him a tight smile. “No, I got it. You just go and rest now.”

He was the first to find Rico Hayfield. Marlin watched the stars with the song echoing in his head before sleep took him.

*

The next day, Walt rolled a bundle into the ventilation shaft of a collapsed copper mine. The body would join that of a tax agent, a bounty hunter, and one other resourceful fan. Walt’s tongue burned where it had plugged the poisoned flask in a feigned a sip. That was okay; it would stop hurting in a week or two.

“You weren’t the first to find me, Marlin, sorry.”

He took off his cap and sang Baby, Can You Dig Your Man? before replacing the rusted metal grate over the shaft’s entrance. The fundamental truth of it all was that he had only one song in him, and too many bodies in the ground to risk leaving the Yukon and finding another. Walt didn’t feel sorry for himself; most people went their whole lives without finding a song of their own.

Friday, July 18, 2014

Life Partner Part IV

By Bettyann Moore

Sleep never comes that night. I have been asked to think about two very large things and have no idea where to begin. Thinking belies the words that echoed throughout the Pleasure Dome: Don’t think, do. They served me well there.

First off, Boone can’t be right about Breeders never conceiving. There was Maya. Her belly had gotten big and round. Everyone was so excited … but then she had been taken away for a time and brought back, her belly flat once more. A false alarm, she told us. No matter how hard I wish it not to be so, Boone is right. At least during the 10 years I occupied it, the Pleasure Dome never produced a child.

Now the really hard thinking began. We were Breeders who couldn’t breed. We were given food, robes, a bed, and never were required to do anything except Couple. I’d never thought about it before, of course, but why? Humbots were required to do our bidding; if one fell to disrepair, it was removed. If a game we played malfunctioned, it was repaired or replaced. Isn’t it logical to believe that if Breeders didn’t breed, that they would be removed or replaced?

The next thought almost made me sit bolt upright, but I held myself back. Who, I wondered, would do the removing, the replacing? Other than humbots, Breeders were the only beings in the Pleasure Dome. Who supplied the food? Who provided the clothing, the beds, the CU-Screenplays … everything? Was it the Ancients? I thought about Ishmael. He knew many things, but his body was weak, his eyesight dim. I wondered, then, just how many Ancients there were.

Still, no one was ever replaced that I could remember. We reached 20 years of age and moved to the Colony. Where did we go from there, though? Did we become the Ancients? Another thought made me gasp. If the Breeders weren’t breeding, where did new Breeders come from? There was a steady population; odd how I’d never even considered how many of us there were. It was never crowded. Were there 200? 500? Many more than that?

All these questions I’d never thought of before, but had no answers. Even though Boone frightened me with his talk about being in danger, I could hardly wait for the morning and our walk by the ocean. He must have some answers for me. There were also many more things I wanted to ask Ishmael.


The next morning I’m groggy, but determined to make the most of the time Boone and I will have out of doors. With mask firmly in place and his hand in mine, I begin asking questions even before we reach the ocean.

“How am I in danger?” I begin. “Where do new Breeders come from? How many Ancients are there? Will I and other Old Ones become Ancients? What happened to Miron? Why do we not have children? Are all humbots like you?”

Boone squeezes my hand roughly. I take it as a signal to be quiet. We can’t get to the ocean fast enough.

Once there, he places his hand on my neck as before. This time we walk along the shore as we communicate.

“All of your questions will be answered,” Boone says before I can ask some more. “But since our time outside is short, many will not be answered until we are at rest tonight. First you must tell me how it is with your Ancient.”

“One very quick question before I answer that,” I say. “When did the bees die?”

By his hesitation, I can tell that he is surprised by my question.

“The last documented sighting of honey bees was 210 years and three months ago,” he finally answers.

That stops me in my tracks. If, indeed, Ishmael had been alive when the bees were still on the earth as he said, he is beyond ancient. How can that be?

“Diana,” Boone interrupts my thoughts, “tell me how it is with your Ancient.”

Despite my misgivings; Ishmael had warned me not to say anything, after all, I tell Boone everything. I leave nothing out: the books, the reading, the globe, even how he wheezes and seems weak. That part seems to interest Boone more than anything else as he tightens his grip on the back of my neck.

“It is as I feared,” he says. “The Ancient grows weaker and will need the LifeSpark very soon.”

LifeSpark. Before I can ask, Boone rushes on.

“No, not all humbots are like me, but there are many,” he says, seemingly answering my most trivial question first. “Our creator saw the vast psychosis that gripped the minds of those in power. More brilliant than all those minds put together, he buried within our microscopic circuitry a conscience – for lack of a better word – that would only engage should there be an awakening within us. No human, except you, knows this and it must remain so.”

“Understood,” I say. I, who have never been asked to keep a secret in her whole life has been asked to keep two very large secrets within the last few days. One promise has already been broken.

“Breeders do not breed because that is not their true purpose,” Boone goes on. “You will not like to hear this, but if you thought about the things I asked you to think about last night, you will see that what I say is true.”

I try to prepare myself for what he’s about to say. Instead, he asks me a question.

“Diana, what do you see before you?” he asks, taking me aback.

“Well, I see windmills and I see water, a great deal of water, as far as my eye can see.”

“And you saw a globe at your Ancient’s, did you not? And you saw where we are?”

“Yes, but he said it was an old globe.”

“Do you believe that on that globe – on this earth – there is but that small place where we are at this moment? That the rest is covered with water?”

I’d never given that a thought at all and I tell him so.

“Then have you thought where things might come from? Your robes, your food, any of it?”
At last I can tell him, that yes, I had thought of that, just last night.

“There are other lands, Diana, even now,” he says. “There are other people, other cultures. Not as many as 200 years ago, but they exist. And they trade between themselves.”

“Trade?” I ask.

“Yes, they trade commodities. One culture still produces metals and has the wherewithal to create foodstuffs. Those are commodities. Another has – and will not share – the technology to create soft goods – such as fabric for clothing, the skins and hair for humbots – out of the very rock and sand in its surroundings. Not even the most sophisticated humbot has been able to unravel that secret. All of them produce their own energy. Water, sun and wind are abundant.

“There is another, but I will not speak of that place now.”

I thought about those things and I realized at the same time that this land – my land – was none of those.

“And us?” I asked. “What is our commodity?”

“This is the part you will not like,” he warned.

“Tell me.”

“Entertainment. The people of your land produce entertainment for all the rest. Youare the commodity.”

It takes a second for me to understand his meaning. I think of the Pleasure Dome, of all the Couplings, the CU-Screens … it suddenly feels like someone is ramming a spike into my belly. I double over, even knowing how it must look, and vomit into the ocean. I don’t care if it results in another interview.

“We must go now,” Boone says. “We have been much too long here. We will blame your sickness on too much exposure.”

Frankly, I didn’t care what we blamed it on. And though it wasn’t fair or logical, right then I blame Boone for all of it.

“Why did you tell me all this?” I cry as we trudge back to the Colony. “Have you nothing good to tell me?” I know I am being reckless, but I simply don’t care. One part of me wants Boone to do or say something reckless.

Instead, he brings his hand back up to my neck as if to help me along.

“Diana, if there is good to tell you, I will tell it. But if I am found out, all of the telling will end.” He drops his hand to the small of my back.

How could I be so stupid? I hang my head in shame, remembering that Boone is trying to keep me from danger, a danger he has yet to talk about. I grit my teeth, then grab hold of his hand. It’s all I can do at the time.

Thankfully, there are no humbots waiting for us in our chambers. The CU-Screen is playing yet another DigiRest screenplay, which always end with beatific smiles on peaceful faces. My hand goes automatically to my pocket. I think back on how I was and how I am now. Oblivious is what I was. Ignorant. A commodity. Had I ever done anything simply because I wanted to? Had I ever placed value on life, on others? Given just a little bit of knowledge I find I want more. With a tiny understanding of how life works, I want to participate in it, actually choose how my own life is led. If there is danger ahead, I would rather know than not know.

I stare fondly at Boone, who prepares the evening meal. Even he is manipulating me, though guiding is perhaps a better choice of words. And that is all right. I can choose not to allow it or to allow it. And that makes all the difference.

That night, when Boone places his hand against my neck, I reach up and hold it. Then I pull it gently to my breast. I know there is no surprise built into Boone’s circuitry, but I still smile a bit, imagining it to be so. I pretend that his readiness isn’t merely programmed. And while I turn toward him and bring my lips to his, I think briefly of the CU-Screen, then dismiss it. Boone is my life partner and this is what I choose.


We don’t talk that night, but it’s very early when I feel Boone’s hand below my ear again. I’m ready to hear what he has to say.

“Diana, I am glad that I have been able to please you.” That wasn’t what I expected to hear and it makes me snuggle closer. Of course, being a humbot he has to go and ruin the mood.

“There are but two Ancients, Diana, yours and a female, equally as old.”

Another surprise. I wonder if I’ll ever get used to it.

“Radiation and chemical poisons humans set loose on the earth, killed much of its population. The smaller creatures went first. Then plant life. There was a huge human toll, but the largest part of that was not death, but a shorter life and sterility. Those few who were able to conceive gave birth to still-born monsters. Only a dozen or so still had viable seeds and eggs, and now just two.”

I knew which two; he didn’t have to tell me.

“One was a brilliant, but insane scientist. He searched his whole life for a Fountain of Youth. He killed many in the process, but he did, indeed, find it. He discovered the LifeSpark, an infinitesimally small particle imbedded deep within the brain. It is removed, then injected into the chosen few. The donor, if you will, must be alive and awake during removal. Immediately afterward, however, they die.

“I believe you are the next donor,” he adds.

My whole body goes cold, but Boone holds me closer.

“Immediately after the injections, the Ancients are able to produce rejuvenated eggs and sperm. As many as possible are harvested, then grown in a laboratory … the source of the new members of the Nursery and the Pleasure Dome. Indeed, the source for the rest of the world. An even more important commodity.”

The members of the Colony, then, are ready-made donors. And worse, Ishmael is everyone’s father, including my own. I think I may be sick again.

“As the Ancients grow older, though,” Boone goes on, “fewer and fewer fertilizations work ...”

Just then, the door to our chamber slides open. I can’t help myself, I scream, while Boone is already pulling on his clothing. Six humbots march in. One goes directly to Boone and inserts a probe into his ear. He becomes immobile.

“What do you want?” I cry, grabbing my robe from the floor.

“You have been summoned to the Ancient,” one says. “Now.”

It’s as Boone feared. Why else would I have an escort on a day I am to see the Ancient anyway? Frightened, trembling and utterly alone in this, I know I have no choice. The only hope I have is knowing that Boone will overcome the probe, eventually. But then what? It’s not like he could come swooping in, overcome a phalanx of humbots and whisk me off. And to where? My hope fades.

The humbots have to carry me; I’ll go, but I won’t go willingly.


Not surprisingly, I’m not taken to the library this time. Instead, I am deposited in a large, glaringly white room in which there are two long metal tables. One has arm, leg and head straps. Between the tables stands a robot with multiple mechanical arms. Very un-humbot-like, it almost makes me laugh until I realize that it’s probably a surgeon robot. I am left alone until a door slides open and Ishmael, sitting in a motorized chair on wheels, rolls through it.

“Welcome,” he says, “I’m so glad you could join me today.” He chuckles and rolls his chair closer.

He looks stooped, shrunken. His skin hangs in mottled pockets from his face and his fingers look like long, skinny claws. I’m repulsed and my face must show it.

He frowns, wheels the chair around and stops by one of the tables.

“What’s the matter, my dear?” he asks. There’s an edge to his voice. “Not pretty enough for you? Too old and decrepit?”

It occurs to me that he must not see me as a threat, otherwise why would he be alone with me in his weakened condition? I could easily overpower him … unless he thinks I’m too ignorant and witless. And, to his mind, I am ignorant. I intend to make sure he continues to see me that way.

“My apologies, Ancient … Ishmael,” I say, hanging my head. “This visit was so abrupt, so confusing. It saddens me to see you this way,” I add.

He smiles slightly. “Very well, my dear. Your apology is accepted. And, please, allow me to offer my own.” He sweeps his hand in the air. “I’m sure this all looks very scary to you, but I’m giving you the chance to help your old friend and teacher.”

I put an eager face on, all the while toying with the DigiRest in my pocket. “How can I help?”

Then he tells me things I already know as I pretend to be amazed and delighted. He leaves out two important pieces of information: that the infusion is necessary to produce seed, and the small part about me dying in the end. I, of course, am not supposed to know all that.

“Amazing!” I say, when he’s done. “Here I barely know the alphabet, but some incredibly intelligent mind discovered the LifeSpark and can keep you alive forever!” I see by how he sits up straighter in his chair that the flattery is working. I don’t honestly know why I continue the charade. I should just slip my finger into the DigiRest and be done with it. Maybe, though, like him I’m clinging to life as long as I can.

“Actually, I was that ‘incredibly intelligent mind’ who made that discovery,” he brags. “I bet you can’t guess how old I am.”

It would be almost worth it to see the look on his face by guessing 200 or so, but I reign myself in.

“Oh … hmmm,” I say, “40?”

He laughs, wheezing and coughing halfway through. “No, my dear, I am the ripe old age of 215!”

“Oh, my!” I exclaim. “An incredible discovery indeed.” I can’t help myself, though. “I wonder,” I say, taking a few steps toward him, “why can’t such a wonderful tool can’t be used to keep everyone alive forever?”

“Folly!” he cries, letting his true self come through. “A total waste of time to preserve minds such as ...” he stops himself, then continues more softly. “There are many, many complex reasons why that can’t be so,” he says. “Don’t worry your pretty little head about them.”

His disdain for me – for everyone – comes through loud and clear. I find myself getting angrier and angrier at his lies and contempt. I am close enough to touch him now, if I chose to. This anger is confusing; I’ve never felt the urge to do harm to anyone, but right then I feel as if I could reach over and tip him out of his chair. But then what? Instead, I do the only thing I can think to do. I pull the DigiRest out of my right pocket.

“I think,” I say slowly, “that I will decline the offer to help. I believe it will cause pain and I don’t like pain.”

What he does next surprises me more than anything. He actually throws back his head and laughs.

“Ha!” he says, wiping tears from his eyes, “my greatest invention yet! Go ahead, my dear, see how it fits.” He reaches out much more quickly than I think possible and grabs my wrist. “Here,” he says, “let me.” His grip is surprisingly strong. He grabs my other wrist as well.

“Don’t worry,” he says, “it won’t kill you. That’s the lie we tell to give you idiots an illusion of choice. Before I came up with this little beauty, we had Old Ones killing themselves left and right. Poor stupid babies couldn’t stand the idea of being out of their little womb Dome. But we couldn’t have that.”

I look down at our hands, his gnarled fingers biting into my flesh.

“It doesn’t kill us?” I say, still incredulous.

“No, no, no. Oh, it’ll knock you out for a good long time, long enough to get you stored away for a LifeSpark infusion, but kill you, no. It doesn’t work if you’re dead. It was so much easier when I could use the smaller children … but, alas, their LifeSparks are too strong. Many an old friend paid that price.”

He seems to be drifting off into memories and I feel his grip loosen a bit. A long sleep, I decide, is better than just giving in.

It all happens so fast. I manage to get the left hand free for a fraction of a second. We fumble and struggle, but I do it, I jam the DigiRest onto a finger.

It isn’t however, my own.

The look on his face is not the peaceful one from the DigiRest advertisements. First, there’s amazement, then an ugly grimace of horror. It may not kill a younger person, but I do believe it has killed him.

As he slumps in his chair, a door slides open and I don’t bother to look up. If I have to pay the price, I’d rather not see it coming.

“A last,” says a voice from the doorway. “We must act quickly.”

I look up to see the Ancient’s senior humbot. He rushes to the Ancient’s side and presses his fingers against his neck. I’m too paralyzed to move.

“He is dead,” the humbot says. “You must come with me now before it is discovered.”

“What? You’re helping me?”

“Indeed,” he answers. “It is my duty, as it is your humbot’s duty.”

“Is Boone all right?” I say. This humbot must be one of the others of his kind that he had spoken about.

“He is, but we must go now. He will join us there.”

“There, where?” I ask as we scurry out the door and into an elevator.

“Your questions will be answered in due course,” he says as we descend at a great rate of speed.

“May I at least have your name?” I ask.

“I am called Michael,” he answers.

The elevator stops, but we don’t get off. Rather, Michael inserts a forefinger into a hole on the panel and we resume our descent.

When the door opens it opens into a dark, dank hall. It seems to be carved from the very rocks of the earth. Water drips along the walls and sometimes on our heads as we make our way down its length. My light robe is scant protection from the cold and damp. It is the first time I recall ever being truly cold.

At last we come to some unevenly carved steps. Michael leads the way up, but at the top there is no door. He cocks his head as if listening, then again inserts his finger into a hole I hadn’t noticed. A heavy door swings slowly open. Light, at last. And Boone.

“Diana,” he says, “I am glad you are safe.” It’s not exactly a warm greeting, but I know it’s the best he can do. I run to hug him anyway.

“I didn’t mean to kill him, Boone,” I say. “We were struggling ...”

“All is well,” Boone says. “You must now leave, though.”

“Leave? Leave for where?” It’s then that I notice we’re near the ocean and there is a strange, large craft that seems … yes, it’s sitting atop the water.

“The other land I spoke about,” Boone says. “You will be safe there. No one knows of its existence. It is well-protected from any surveillance.”

Michael comes up to stand next to us.

“The eggs and seed have been obtained and loaded,” he says. “All is ready.”

“The eggs? The seed?” I say.

“They are needed to help repopulate,” Boone says. “The Ancients kept many generations frozen.”

My gaze goes back to the craft. I see a very old woman being carried between two humbots, sitting regally on their crossed arms.

“The other Ancient?” I ask, nodding.

“She was as much a prisoner as you,” Boone says. “She wishes to live the rest of her life in freedom. She will likely never see the new land. She is aware of this.”

I’m just as eager to get away. “Let’s go then,” I say.

“No,” Boone says, I think with some sadness. “I must stay. There is must work to be done. The children in the Nursery, the Breeders … all will need guidance and education. The leaders of the other lands will be unhappy when the CU-Screens are disabled. It is my duty.”

I throw my arms around him once again. I understand, but I will miss him. There are still many questions, but I ask only one.

“Boone, why didn’t you simply kill him yourselves?”

“We are incapable of killing,” he says. “It is hoped that one day, your kind will be as well.”

I nod and see that Michael is holding out his hand to lead me to the vessel. I walk toward him, then stop.

“No,” I say, turning to Boone. “I wish to stay.”

For a moment, he appears flummoxed.

“There is danger,” he finally says. “The land is hostile. The work ahead is enormous. We may never be able to leave again ...”

“Nonetheless,” I insist, “I can be of use. I know the alphabet. I know of a library.”

“But ...”

“I know, it’s your duty,” I say. “And it’s my duty, Boone, to use the freedom I now have in the way I see fit.” This is the most frightening thing I’ve ever thought or said, but I know it’s right. And it is.

Friday, July 11, 2014

Life Partner - Part III

By Bettyann Moore


The worst part about being interviewed by a humbot is having to make eye contact. It’s also necessary, or they’ll keep repeating the question or statements until you do. I’ve never been good at eye contact. The interview would have gone on for hours and hours if I hadn’t finally gotten the hang of it. And, taking my cues from Boone on the first day, I never lied. I also never volunteered any information … unless I wanted to lead them to a conclusion. Let’s face it, my sleep hadn’t been troubled for over 10 years. It was easy for me to figure out why, all of a sudden, I’d had a bad dream, but there would be real trouble if anyone else knew why. 

“Did you have a bad dream?”

“Yes.”

“Who was in the dream?”

“Me.”

“What happened in the dream?”

“I was lost and alone.”

“Have you ever had this dream before?”

“No. I miss my friends.” (A statement of fact, even though it had nothing to do with the dream.)

“Where were you in this dream?”

“Back in the Pleasure Dome, but my friends were not there.”

“Are you satisfied with your humbot?”

“Well satisfied.”

It went on that way for a while. I think I did quite well, even without Boone’s help, not that he would be able to help me in any way. Since his ear had been probed, he’d merely stood there, looking straight ahead. It was unnerving.

“This interview is concluded.”

The humbot rose abruptly and left; the others followed. I half-expected Boone to leave as well, but he didn’t. He did, however, begin moving about the chamber, but so much more like a robot than the humbot he is.

“It is time for your evening meal,” he said.

“I’m not hungry,” I answered. “I would rather watch the CU-Screen. And maybe you could give me a neck massage?”

“This is a request?”

“Yes, I am requesting a neck massage.”

“Very well.”

I should have known right then that there was no hope that it would be anything other than just a neck massage, and it wasn’t. It felt good, of course, but there was no finger-talk, no hint of the old Boone. I felt more alone than ever.

Afterwards, while Boone prepared the sleep space, I went to the kitchen for a CaolaWater, the only approved drink in the Colony. I would have liked a nip of the Ancient’s liquor, but decided not to press my luck. There, sitting on the counter, was the familiar shape of a DigiRest. I’d never actually seen one, but I recognized it from the CU-Screen. Who would have put that there? I wondered. Boone? Surely not, unless he was worried … no, it had to be the other humbots. But why? Had I done worse than I thought? I picked it up and glanced at Boone, who was paying no attention to me.

DigiRest’s are one-inch cubes made of shiny metal. Five sides are smooth and unblemished. On the sixth side, however, there is a star shape etched into the surface. I knew that one pressed on the star with one’s fingertip, which would break through the star and enter the cube. The poison inside is powerful and instantaneous. And in the unlikely event that it didn’t work and one tried to take the cube off, the interior points of the star, also filled with poison, cut into the finger, gripping it tightly. It is recommended that one arrange oneself on a sleeping pallet before employing it.

Shuddering, I slipped the cube into the pocket of my robe. If it was Boone who’d left it there, he might have a good reason. I didn’t dare ask him. I vowed to take it wherever I went.

Despite the excitement of the day, I fell immediately to sleep. I didn’t dream. Boone lay stiffly beside me.

It’s understandable, I think, that the next day I wished I was scheduled to go to the Ancient’s … Ishmael’s. It would be someone to talk to, after all, plus he was going to teach me how to read. Boone was, well, Boone was just plain boring now. After pacing the small chamber for an hour that morning, I was ready to scream. I decided that it was time for me to meet others who shared the Colony with me.

“I will accompany you,” Boone said, when I made to leave.

“If you wish,” I said.

“I have no wishes,” he answered, “it is my duty.”

I had to keep myself from rolling my eyes. This new Boone was a fount of excitement.

Outside my door is a seemingly infinite hallway with innumerable doors. I wonder if I should just walk its length and hope someone comes out. Instead, I take a deep breath, march to the first door and rap on it sharply, Boone at my side. No one is there. Well, no one came to the door anyway. I continue down the hall in this fashion until there’s just one door left. Is it possible that no one even lives behind those doors? It just doesn’t seem likely to me that no one at all is home. Before I can pound on the last door, it slides open. I get a glimpse of a familiar, startled face and the bland, but beautiful face of a female humbot before it slides shut again.

“What the …?” I rap again, determined. I know that face. “Miron?” I call. “Miron, is that you? It’s Diana!”

“Perhaps he doesn’t want company,” Boone says.

“Don’t be ridiculous,” I say. “Miron was always surrounded by people. He loves company. Miron!”

The door finally opens again.

“Miron,” I say, “it is you!” I step forward to embrace him, but stop when I see the guarded look on his face.

“Diana,” he says, “how good to see you.” There’s something in the way that he says it that makes me think he doesn’t mean it.

“It’s good to see you,” I say, meaning it. “My chambers are just there,” I add, pointing across the hall. “Please visit sometime ...”

“Sorry,” Miron says, cutting me off. “I have been summoned to the Ancients’ Domain. I really must go now.”

“Yes, yes of course,” I say, letting him and his humbot pass. They go quickly to the elevator and disappear behind its sliding doors without saying another word.

“How odd,” I say to Boone. “It’s not like Miron and I are strangers. We have coupled many times.” Deflated, I press the thumb pad to my own chambers. The place seems even drearier than before. Boone, of course, offers no words of comfort.

“Do you wish for a meal?” he says.

“I have no wishes,” I snap back. I flop down on the ConvertoSleeper and stare at the CU-Screen, trying to make my mind a blank. I do have wishes, of course. I wish I was back in the Pleasure Dome among my friends. I wish Boone would take me to the Great Ocean again and tell me new and marvelous things. I wish … I toy with the DigiRest in my pocket … no, I don’t wish that, yet.


The next morning I’m more than eager to see Ishmael. Again, I’m led into the library, but this time I don’t hesitate. I go immediately to the books, pulling one out after another, then putting them back until I find one with a picture on the front. The creature is even odder than any from the book of mammals. It has huge eyes, six legs and fuzzy black and yellow stripes. It looks enormous. I’m just settling into one of the big chairs when Ishmael walks in, closing and locking the door behind him.

“Ah, I see you found a book about insects,” he says. “That, my dear, is a honey bee, a small flying insect that served an important role on the earth.” He sits in the chair opposite me, wheezing a bit.

“It was small?” I ask.

“No bigger than your thumbnail,” he says. “They made a wonderful, sweet substance called honey and pollinated the earth’s plants.” He sees the confusion on my face. “Never mind, they’re all gone now; one of the first creatures to disappear, in fact. It was all downhill from there.” He sounds sad saying it, but the sadness doesn’t reach his face.

“Did you know bees?” I ask.

“Did I know them? Oh, I see,” he says, “were they around during my lifetime.” He ponders the question for a time, though if he had seen a real bee before, you’d think he’d know that at the top of his head. “Yes,” he finally says. “I have seen bees and been stung by them in fact.”

I’m ready with another question, but he stops me. “I think today we were going to teach you how to read, were we not?”

“Yes,” I say eagerly.

The days goes much too quickly. Ishmael says that I am a good learner and by the end of my time there, I know the alphabet (Ishmael likes to call them the ABCs) and can spell my name. Next time, he says, we’ll spend time on the sounds that the letters make. He says that’s the hard part.

“How did you learn all this?” I dare to ask.

Again, he thinks before he answers, as if I’m pulling a secret from him.

“In school,” he says. I know what a school is; we had them in the nursery. We learned many things there, but not the alphabet or how to read. “All children were required to go to school to learn reading, writing, arithmetic, history, science … all a waste of time. Ignorance truly is bliss,” he adds. “Knowledge foments dissent. It’s a lesson we learned the hard way.”

If he’d said there was a bee on the end of my nose, I couldn’t have been more surprised. We’re surrounded by books, by knowledge – hisbooks, his knowledge – and he says it was a waste of time? Why, then, am I here?

He must know the question is coming. He stands slowly and says it’s time to go, adding, “Life is short, my dear, at least for some.” His laugh is without humor and it makes the hairs on my arms stand on end.


Again, as I’m escorted back to the Colony, I’m brimming with things I want to tell Boone. As the elevator to my chambers ascends, though, I’m brooding, knowing that I can’t say a word. In such a funk, I almost don’t notice that the door to Miron’s chambers is whispering shut as I step into the hallway. I’m not ready for the robotic Boone, so I knock on Miron’s door instead.

I’m greeted by an unfamiliar face.

“Yes?” she asks.

I’m confused for a moment. “I’m looking for Miron?” I say.

“There is no Miron here,” she answers. “Perhaps he lived here before? I just moved in just this afternoon.”

“This afternoon?” I echo. “But where did he go?”

“I’m sorry, that’s all I know,” she says, letting the door slide shut between us.

Miron had acted so strangely the day before, but where did he go? He said he was summoned to the Ancients’ Domain. Was he really? Is he still there? I wonder if Boone heard or saw anything.

Boone is standing in the kitchen, precisely where he was when I left that morning. I sigh.

“Boone,” I say, “Miron is gone. Someone else is living where he lived. Did you hear or see anything out there today?” I think it’s a pretty innocent question, one not likely to get me into any trouble or prompt any more “interviews.”

“No, Diana,” he says. “Your Ancient One sent over more refreshments. Would you like some?”

Boone is a perfect humbot. I hate it. Maybe Ishmael is right. Maybe ignorance is bliss. I never had questions or worries before he and Boone began teaching me things. As I drink the Ancient’s liquor I wonder, though, if I would go back to the way things were if I could. I shake my head as the liquor burns its way down my throat. No, I decide, I really wouldn’t, though it would be easier if Boone had never been probed. I resign myself to being alone with my new thoughts.

In the middle of the night, though, I feel Boone shift against me, then his fingers come to rest on my neck beneath the coverings. I hold my breath.

“It’s best if they believe their probe worked,” he says, and I let out my breath. “It didn’t, of course, as I – and others like me – have an undetectable fail-safe component. It’s extremely complex, but suffice it to say that during the time of our creation, the engineer foresaw the need.”

It’s all I can do not to squeal with delight. Again, I don’t understand all he said, but at least he’s saying it! I squirm a bit to get closer, urging him to continue.

“Diana, you are in danger,” he says, causing me to hold my breath again. “They came for Miron much sooner than I suspected they would. Your Ancient will one day summon you and you won’t return.”

This is too much. How can he say such a thing? Ishmael has been nothing but kind to me. Surely Boone is wrong. Why should I believe him?

“Tomorrow, you must ask me to take you to the ocean again,” he says as if reading my mind, though I really wish he could. “You have questions and are, understandably, afraid and confused. I, too, need to know how it is with your Ancient, what he has said and done. It’s important, Diana, if you wish to continue this life.”

He’s right, I am afraid and confused, but angry as well. I have never had to wonder who to trust before. Then I think, well, maybe it’s because I never had any choice before.

“There are things I want you to think about, Diana,” Boone goes on. “In the Pleasure Dome, you were called Breeders. Can you ever recall a child being conceived or born? Current life expectancy for the human race is 35 to 40 years, yet most of the Ancients, including your own, have lived much, much longer than that – up to 200 years so far. How can that be?”

These are the most startling things he has said so far. And, frankly, unbelievable. I can’t help myself, I snort, then cover it with a snore. Why does he want me to think of these things? Why doesn’t he just tell me? My head hurts; I can’t bear to hear more. I inch away from him and I feel his fingers fall from my neck. I’ll never sleep tonight.

Friday, July 4, 2014

Life Partner - Part II

By Bettyann Moore

That night, I have a dream, the first one I’ve had since the Nursery.

I am back in the Pleasure Dome. I feel hemmed in, surrounded, as if on a crowded dance floor, but I’m alone. There is a door, one I’ve never seen before, far off in the distance. I move toward it, my bare feet quiet on the cool surface of the walk. I see myself in one CU-Screen after another as I pass them. As I near the door, I hear footsteps behind me, rapid, loud and echoing. The door swings open and there is light beyond. The footsteps draw nearer, but the door seems to have gotten farther away, not closer. I increase my pace, but on the screens I appear to be moving in slow-motion. Now running, I see the door begin to shut. The footsteps behind me have increased in number. I reach the door just as it’s about to close. I push through it and slam it behind me.

Again, I am alone, but breathe deeply, freely. I take a step. The door reopens, an arm snakes through, grabs me and pulls me back. I scream and I scream, but no sound comes out.
That night, I have a dream, the first one I’ve had since the Nursery.

I am back in the Pleasure Dome. I feel hemmed in, surrounded, as if on a crowded dance floor, but I’m alone. There is a door, one I’ve never seen before, far off in the distance. I move toward it, my bare feet quiet on the cool surface of the walk. I see myself in one CU-Screen after another as I pass them. As I near the door, I hear footsteps behind me, rapid, loud and echoing. The door swings open and there is light beyond. The footsteps draw nearer, but the door seems to have gotten farther away, not closer. I increase my pace, but on the screens I appear to be moving in slow-motion. Now running, I see the door begin to shut. The footsteps behind me have increased in number. I reach the door just as it’s about to close. I push through it and slam it behind me.

Again, I am alone, but breathe deeply, freely. I take a step. The door reopens, an arm snakes through, grabs me and pulls me back. I scream and I scream, but no sound comes out.

Still screaming, I’m wrestling with my captor, clawing, kicking, pushing.

“Diana, wake up! You are having a bad dream. Wake up, Diana!”

Boone has his arms wrapped around me, holding me as I finally awaken. I’m hot. My face is wet. Diana, who never cries, is sobbing.

“All is well,” Boone says, rocking me, rubbing my convulsing back. He begins to hum something I don’t recognize. He brings his hand to my neck.

“Hush, little baby, don’t say a word; mama’s gonna buy you a mocking bird. If that mocking bird don’t sing, mama’s gonna buy you a diamond ring ...”

I don’t understand all the words, but I feel myself calming, breathing steadily. He rocks and sings to me until I fall asleep.


In the morning, he’s still holding me. I feel flattened, raw and bruised. He brings his fingertips to my neck.

“My apologies,” he says. “We will discontinue our exploration if you like.”

The dream flashes through my head, causing me to shiver. I put my head against his and shake it slightly. I want to continue, I’m saying, and he understands. I rise to shower while Boone remakes our pallet. The Ancient awaits.

My day with the Ancient One is strange from the beginning. His head humbot meets me at the door, then leads me to a room which I’ve never seen before.

“My master wishes you to wait for him in the library,” he says, then leaves me alone.

I have no idea what a “library” is, but I think it must mean a funny-smelling room lined with shelf upon shelf that are filled with colorful rectangles of various widths. There are two chairs made of a smooth, shiny substance I have never encountered before. Of course I know what a desk is, but this one is constructed of a deep red material; its expansive top reflects the light from an odd fixture overhead. It seems to be made of many sparkling prisms of glass. On top of the desk sits a ball-like object on a pedestal, its surface is bumpy in some areas, smooth in others. It’s mostly blue, with irregular shapes in browns and greens. Beneath my bare feet is a cushiony expanse of brightly patterned floor covering. I’d like nothing more than to lie down on it.

Instead, I take a few steps inside, looking back over my shoulder at the door. For the first time I can ever recall, I don’t know what is expected of me. The room is odd, yet comforting. Frightening, but intriguing. Most intriguing to me, however, is the ball on top of the desk.

The closer I get, the more intriguing it becomes. Each of the brown and green shapes are divided into smaller shapes by jagged lines. There are markings, some bold and black, some wispy, inside the shapes. I see a plaque on the base with more markings and below them, something I can actually decipher, numbers: 2011. Does this mean the object was created in the year 2011? If so, it is extremely old, older even than the Ancient One I serve.

Close enough to touch it now, I do, then jump back as it spins slightly. Then I jump again as a gnarly hand comes down on my shoulder.

“What are you up to, girl?” the Ancient’s creaky voice demands.

“My apologies,” I say, looking at the floor. My heart drums in my chest and my head spins.

“A good non-answer,” the Ancient says. Is there laughter in his voice? He takes his hand from my shoulder and gives the object a spin, then walks to the other side of the desk.

I can’t take my eyes off the spinning ball, which is beginning to slow down.

“Do you know what that is?” the Ancient asks.

“No, Ancient One, I do not,” I say, finally meeting his eyes.

“Ugh,” he says. “Don’t call me that.”

Surprised, I ask, “What shall you be called?”

“Call me Ishmael,” he says, then throws back his head and laughs, though I don’t know what is funny.

He eases himself into the chair behind the desk, which creaks, though at first I think it is he who creaks.

“Right,” he says, “you don’t get the joke.” He sighs and leans back in the chair, which leans with him. He seems to be thinking. Naturally, I don’t interrupt. He rights himself suddenly, as if propelled, and gives the ball another spin.

“This,” he says, “is a model of our earth – at least how the earth was at one time. It’s called a globe.”

I freeze. He used the word “earth” just as Boone had. The planet earth he called it.

“That’s very interesting,” I say, making it sound like it’s not interesting at all. In truth, I hope he goes on.

He stops the spinning globe with a jab of his finger. “This,” he says, “is where we are right now.” He’s pointing to the middle of a large green area. “Of course, the blue, which represents the oceans, is considerably larger now. It’s practically lapping at our feet.”

I automatically look down at my feet. He laughs again. “I forget what an innocent you are,” he says. He puts the palms of his hands together and brings them to his chin and seems to be thinking again. He suddenly waves his hand at me. “Sit, sit,” he commands. I perch on the edge of the closest chair, but it’s slippery so I move back a bit.

“It’s called leather,” he says. “Made from the hide of a cow.”

I cock my head. I’ve heard so many unfamiliar words in the last few days.

“Here, look.” He goes over to the tall shelves and runs his fingers over the rectangles until he finds what he’s looking for and slides it out. He comes to the other side of the desk and sits on the chair beside me. He holds the rectangle on his knees. There are markings on it as well as a picture of a strange-looking creature.

“This is a cow,” he says, pointing. “We … people … used to get milk from it to drink, meat from it to eat, and skin from it to cover ourselves … and our furniture.”

I am trying mightily to understand what he’s telling me. I say nothing.

“They’re all gone now,” he says wistfully. “In fact, almost every single animal in this book is gone, except the rats and cockroaches.” He picks up the rectangle and places it in my lap. I lean away from it; I don’t know what he wants me to do.

“Go ahead, open it,” he says.

“Open it?” I ask.

He sighs and pulls the rectangle back onto his own lap. “This is a book,” he says. “It happens to be about mammals. This is its cover,” he adds, pointing to the top with the picture. “One opens the book, like so, to see what’s inside, to learn from. These are pages and one turns them. They’re made of paper that came from trees.” He demonstrates each thing he says. I see that on the pages there are many more squiggles and many more colorful pictures of strange beings. I’m delighted and it must show as he is beaming now. He places the open book back on my lap.

“Turn the pages,” he says.

My fingers are clumsy on the thin pages, but I manage to turn one. There is a picture of a brown creature with a long nose, pointy ears, four skinny legs and a long bushy thing on the opposite end of its head. I look at Ishmael.

“I forget that you can’t read,” he says, sighing. “That’s a horse, a magnificent creature that could run as fast as the wind. People used to ride them, at first to get from one place to another, then later just for fun.”

We spend a long while looking at the book. Each new creature is more amazing than the last. I am only beginning to understand that people once shared the earth with them. It must have been very crowded. After a while, I look up at Ishmael and see that his eyes are drooping; he’s falling asleep. His head snaps up.

“So very tired today,” he says, taking the book from my hands and replacing it on the shelves. I look at all of the books and now that I know what they are, I marvel. So much knowledge! Ishmael goes to another shelf and pulls a very thin book from it and hands it to me. There is a picture of two children, one boy and one girl, on the cover. They’re playing with a ball.

“Dick and Jane,” Ishmael says. “It was used to teach young children how to read. The next time you come, I’ll use it to teach you how to read. I could, of course, use a computer to teach you, but this will be ever so much more interesting.”

My eyes get big and I stare up at him.

“I know, I know, it’s treason,” he says, though that word means nothing to me. “No one must know that you were in this room, let alone looking at books.” He makes his words harsh, a warning.

My mind flashes to the start of the day. “Your humbot?” I ask.

Ishmael waves my words away. “He’s already been taken care of,” he says. “A little electronic eraser in the ear … it never happened.”

I shiver, thinking of Boone.

“Time for you to leave,” Ishmael says, to my surprise. I have yet to perform my PillowPartner duties which, somehow, don’t seem so unappealing today. He takes me by the elbow and leads me to the library door. “See yourself out,” he says, “humbots will meet you outside to escort you home.”

I hesitate. For the very first time in my life, I feel the need to ask something.

“Why?” I say, looking up at him. He understands what I’m asking. He takes his hand from my elbow, lets it drop to his side and looks down at our feet.

“Maybe,” he says, “I’m lonely. Or maybe I’m just tired and bored. And maybe,” he says, raising his eyes to meet mine, “it’s just because I can.” He opens the door for me and as I slip past him, he slaps me hard on the bottom. It feels like a reminder.


As I make my way home, my head is brimming with all the things I want to share with Boone. I’m momentarily deflated, though, when I remember that I must not talk about such things aloud unless we are at the ocean and I’m wearing a mask. Then I’m suddenly confused; Ishmael warned me about saying anything, but surely Boone is an exception. I’m torn.

My mind is still spinning when the door to my chamber slides open. I pause, even more confused. Inside stand four muscular humbots, facing me. Over their shoulders I see Boone, looking straight ahead, his eyes flat and cold, more robot than humbot. Another large humbot is holding a device against Boone’s ear. It blinks red and orange.

“We understand that you had a bad dream last night,” one of the humbots says to me. “We would like you to tell us about it.”