Accelerando by Charles Stross (good books to read for young adults .txt) đź“•
Welcome to the twenty-first century.
The permanent floating meatspace party Manfred is hooking up with is a strange attractor for some of the American exiles cluttering up the cities of Europe this decade - not trustafarians, but honest-to-God political dissidents, draft dodgers, and terminal outsourcing victims. It's the kind of place where weird connections are made and crossed lines make new short circuits into the future, like the street cafes of Switzerland where the pre Great War Russian exiles gathered. Right now it's located in the back of De Wildemann's, a three-hundred-year old brown cafe with a list of brews that runs to sixteen pages and wooden walls stained the color of stale beer. The air is thick with the smells of tobacco, brewer's yeast, and melatonin sp
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ex-employers - “decided the best thing to do was to cover up the
second signal and work on it in secret - for competitive advantage,
they say - and as for the first, to pretend it never happened. So
nobody really knows how long it’ll take to figure out whether it’s a
ping from the galactic root domain servers or a pulsar that’s taken to
grinding out the eighteen-quadrillionth digits of pi, or what.”
“But,” Monica glances around, “you can’t be sure.”
“I think it may be sapient,” says Manfred. He finds the right button
at last, and the bed begins to fold itself back into a lounger. Then
he finds the wrong button; the duvet dissolves into viscous turquoise
slime that slurps and gurgles away through a multitude of tiny nozzles
in the headboard. “Bloody aerogel. Um, where was I?” He sits up.
“Sapient network packet?” asks Alan.
“Nope.” Manfred shakes his head, grins. “Should have known you’d read
Vinge … or was it the movie? No, what I think is that there’s only
one logical thing to beam backward and forward out there, and you may
remember I asked you to beam it out about, oh, nine years ago?”
“The lobsters.” Alan’s eyes go blank. “Nine years. Time to Proxima
Centauri and back?”
“About that distance, yes,” says Manfred. “And remember, that’s an
upper bound - it could well have come from somewhere closer. Anyway,
the first SETI signal came from a couple of degrees off and more than
hundred light-years out, but the second signal came from less than
three light-years away. You can see why they didn’t publicize that -
they didn’t want a panic. And no, the signal isn’t a simple echo of
the canned crusty transmission - I think it’s an exchange embassy, but
we haven’t cracked it yet. Now do you see why we have to crowbar the
civil rights issue open again? We need a framework for rights that can
encompass nonhumans, and we need it as fast as possible. Otherwise, if
the neighbors come visiting…”
“Okay,” says Alan, “I’ll have to talk with myselves. Maybe we can
agree something, as long as it’s clear that it’s a provisional stab at
the framework and not a permanent solution?”
Annette snorts. “No solution is final!” Monica catches her eyes and
winks: Annette is startled by the blatant display of dissent within
the syncitium.
“Well,” says Manfred, “I guess that’s all we can ask for?” He looks
hopeful. “Thanks for the hospitality, but I feel the need to lie down
in my own bed for a while. I had to commit a lot to memory while I was
off-line, and I want to record it before I forget who I am,” he adds
pointedly, and Annette breathes a quiet sight of relief.
*
Later that night, a doorbell rings.
“Who’s there?” asks the entryphone.
“Uh, me,” says the man on the steps. He looks a little confused. “Ah’m
Macx. Ah’m here tae see” - the name is on the tip of his tongue -
“someone.”
“Come in.” A solenoid buzzes; he pushes the door open, and it closes
behind him. His metal-shod boots ring on the hard stone floor, and the
cool air smells faintly of unburned jet fuel.
“Ah’m Macx,” he repeats uncertainly, “or Ah wis fer a wee while, an’
it made ma heid hurt. But noo Ah’m me agin, an’ Ah wannae be somebody
else … can ye help?”
*
Later still, a cat sits on a window ledge, watching the interior of a
darkened room from behind the concealment of curtains. The room is
dark to human eyes, but bright to the cat: Moonlight cascades silently
off the walls and furniture, the twisted bedding, the two naked humans
lying curled together in the middle of the bed.
Both the humans are in their thirties: Her close-cropped hair is
beginning to gray, distinguished threads of gunmetal wire threading
it, while his brown mop is not yet showing signs of age. To the cat,
who watches with a variety of unnatural senses, her head glows in the
microwave spectrum with a gentle halo of polarized emissions. The male
shows no such aura: he’s unnaturally natural for this day and age,
although - oddly - he’s wearing spectacles in bed, and the frames
shine similarly. An invisible soup of radiation connects both humans
to items of clothing scattered across the room - clothing that seethes
with unsleeping sentience, dribbling over to their suitcases and hand
luggage and (though it doesn’t enjoy noticing it) the cat’s tail,
which is itself a rather sensitive antenna.
The two humans have just finished making love: They do this less often
than in their first few years, but with more tenderness and expertise
- lengths of shocking pink Hello Kitty bondage tape still hang from
the bedposts, and a lump of programmable memory plastic sits cooling
on the side table. The male is sprawled with his head and upper torso
resting in the crook of the female’s left arm and shoulder. Shifting
visualization to infrared, the cat sees that she is glowing,
capillaries dilating to enhance the blood flow around her throat and
chest.
“I’m getting old,” the male mumbles. “I’m slowing down.”
“Not where it counts,” the female replies, gently squeezing his right
buttock.
“No, I’m sure of it,” he says. “The bits of me that still exist in
this old head - how many types of processor can you name that are
still in use thirty-plus years after they’re born?”
“You’re thinking about the implants again,” she says carefully. The
cat remembers this as a sore point; from being a medical procedure to
help the blind see and the autistic talk, intrathecal implants have
blossomed into a must-have accessory for the now-clade. But the male
is reluctant. “It’s not as risky as it used to be. If they screw up,
there’re neural growth cofactors and cheap replacement stem cells. I’m
sure one of your sponsors can arrange for extra cover.”
“Hush: I’m still thinking about it.” He’s silent for a while. “I
wasn’t myself yesterday. I was someone else. Someone too slow to keep
up. Puts a new perspective on everything: I’ve been afraid of losing
my biological plasticity, of being trapped in an obsolete chunk of
skullware while everything moves on - but how much of me lives outside
my own head these days, anyhow?” One of his external threads generates
an animated glyph and throws it at her mind’s eye; she grins at his
obscure humor. “Cross-training from a new interface is going to be
hard, though.”
“You’ll do it,” she predicts. “You can always get a discreet
prescription for novotrophin-B.” A receptor agonist tailored for
gerontological wards, it stimulates interest in the new: combined with
MDMA, it’s a component of the street cocktail called sensawunda. “That
should keep you focused for long enough to get comfortable.”
“What’s life coming to when I can’t cope with the pace of change?” he
asks the ceiling plaintively.
The cat lashes its tail, irritated by his anthropocentrism.
“You are my futurological storm shield,” she says, jokingly, and moves
her hand to cup his genitals. Most of her current activities are
purely biological, the cat notes: From the irregular sideloads, she’s
using most of her skullware to run ETItalk@home, one of the
distributed cracking engines that is trying to decode the alien
grammar of the message that Manfred suspects is eligible for
citizenship.
Obeying an urge that it can’t articulate, the cat sends out a feeler
to the nearest router. The cybeast has Manfred’s keys; Manfred trusts
Aineko implicitly, which is unwise - his ex-wife tampered with it,
after all, never mind all the kittens it absorbed in its youth.
Tunneling out into the darkness, the cat stalks the Net alone …
“Just think about the people who can’t adapt,” he says. His voice
sounds obscurely worried.
“I try not to.” She shivers. “You are thirty, you are slowing. What
about the young? Are they keeping up, themselves?”
“I have a daughter. She’s about a hundred and sixty million seconds
old. If Pamela would let me message her I could find out …” There
are echoes of old pain in his voice.
“Don’t go there, Manfred. Please.” Despite everything, Manfred hasn’t
let go: Amber is a ligature that permanently binds him to Pamela’s
distant orbit.
In the distance, the cat hears the sound of lobster minds singing in
the void, a distant feed streaming from their cometary home as it
drifts silently out through the asteroid belt, en route to a chilly
encounter beyond Neptune. The lobsters sing of alienation and
obsolescence, of intelligence too slow and tenuous to support the
vicious pace of change that has sandblasted the human world until all
the edges people cling to are jagged and brittle.
Beyond the distant lobsters, the cat pings an anonymous distributed
network server - peer-to-peer file storage spread holographically
across a million hosts, unerasable, full of secrets and lies that
nobody can afford to suppress. Rants, music, rip-offs of the latest
Bollywood hits: The cat spiders past them all, looking for the final
sample. Grabbing it - a momentary breakup in Manfred’s spectacles the
only symptom for either human to notice - the cat drags its prey home,
sucks it down, and compares it against the data sample Annette’s
exocortex is analysing.
“I’m sorry, my love. I just sometimes feel -” He sighs. “Age is a
process of closing off opportunities behind you. I’m not young enough
anymore - I’ve lost the dynamic optimism.”
The data sample on the pirate server differs from the one Annette’s
implant is processing.
“You’ll get it back,” she reassures him quietly, stroking his side.
“You are still sad from being mugged. This also will pass. You’ll
see.”
“Yeah.” He finally relaxes, dropping back into the reflexive assurance
of his own will. “I’ll get over it, one way or another. Or someone who
remembers being me will …”
In the darkness, Aineko bares teeth in a silent grin. Obeying a deeply
hardwired urge to meddle, he moves a file across, making a copy of the
alien download package Annette has been working on. She’s got a copy
of number two, the sequence the deep-space tracking network received
from close to home, which ESA and the other big combines have been
keeping to themselves. Another deeply buried thread starts up, and
Aineko analyses the package from a perspective no human being has yet
established. Presently a braid of processes running on an abstract
virtual machine asks him a question that cannot be encoded in any
human grammar. Watch and wait, he replies to his passenger. They’ll
figure out what we are sooner or later.
Life is a process which may be abstracted from other media.
- John Von Neumann
The asteroid is running Barney: it sings of love on the high frontier,
of the passion of matter for replicators, and its friendship for the
needy billions of the Pacific Rim. “I love you,” it croons in Amber’s
ears as she seeks a precise fix on it: “Let me give you a big hug …”
A fraction of a light-second away, Amber locks a cluster of cursors
together on the signal, trains them to track its Doppler shift, and
reads off the orbital elements. “Locked and loaded,” she mutters. The
animated purple dinosaur pirouettes and prances in the middle of her
viewport, throwing a diamond-tipped swizzle stick overhead.
Sarcastically: “Big hug time! I got asteroid!” Cold gas thrusters bang
somewhere behind her in the interstage docking ring, prodding the
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