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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by the boarded-up front of a gas station on a desert road; remembers
the animated chatter of two synthetic housewives, one in traditional
black and the other in some imported Eurotrash fashion. “Are you sure
they aren’t real?” she asks.
“Quite sure.” But for a moment, she sees Sadeq looking uncertain.
“Shall we go? Do you have the occupiers ready to move in yet?”
“Yes to the first, and Pierre’s working on the second. Come on, we
don’t want to get trampled by the squatters.” She waves and opens a
door back onto the piazza where her robot cat - the alien’s nightmare
intruder in the DMZ - sleeps, chasing superintelligent dream mice
through multidimensional realities. “Sometimes I wonder if I’m
conscious. Thinking these thoughts gives me the creeps. Let’s go and
sell some aliens a bridge in Brooklyn.”
*
Amber confronts the mendacious ghost in the windowless room stolen
from 2001.
“You have confined the monster,” the ghost states.
“Yes.” Amber waits for a subjective moment, feeling delicate fronds
tickle at the edges of her awareness in what seems to be a timing
channel attack. She feels a momentary urge to sneeze, and a hot flash
of anger that passes almost immediately.
“And you have modified yourself to lock out external control,” the
ghost adds. “What is it that you want, Autonome Amber?”
“Don’t you have any concept of individuality?” she asks, annoyed by
its presumption at meddling with her internal states.
“Individuality is an unnecessary barrier to information transfer,”
says the ghost, morphing into its original form, a translucent
reflection of her own body. “It reduces the efficiency of a capitalist
economy. A large block of the DMZ is still inaccessible to we-me. Are
you sure you have defeated the monster?”
“It’ll do as I say,” Amber replies, forcing herself to sound more
confident than she feels - sometimes that damned transhuman cyborg cat
is no more predictable than a real feline. “Now, the matter of payment
arises.”
“Payment.” The ghost sounds amused. But Pierre’s filled her in on what
to look for, and Amber can now see the translation membranes around
it. Their color shift maps to a huge semantic distance; the creature
on the other side, even though it looks like a ghost-image of herself,
is very far from human. “How can we-us be expected to pay our own
money for rendering services to us?”
Amber smiles. “We want an open channel back to the router we arrived
through.”
“Impossible,” says the ghost.
“We want an open channel, and for it to stay open for six hundred
million seconds after we clear it.”
“Impossible,” the ghost repeats.
“We can trade you a whole civilization,” Amber says blandly. “A whole
human nation, millions of individuals. Just let us go, and we’ll see
to it.”
“You - please wait.” The ghost shimmers slightly, fuzzing at the
edges.
Amber opens a private channel to Pierre while the ghost confers with
its other nodes. Are the Wunch in place yet? she sends.
They’re moving in. This bunch don’t remember what happened on the
Field Circus, memories of those events never made it back to them. So
the Slug’s got them to cooperate. It’s kinda scary to watch - like the
Invasion of the Body Snatchers, you know?
I don’t care if it’s scary to watch, Amber replies, I need to know if
we’re ready yet.
Sadeq says yes, the universe is ready.
Right, pack yourself down. We’ll be moving soon.
The ghost is firming up in front of her. “A whole civilization?” it
asks. “That is not possible. Your arrival -” It pauses, fuzzing a
little. Hah, Gotcha! thinks Amber. Liar, liar, pants on fire! “You
cannot possibly have found a human civilization in the archives?”
“The monster you complain about that came through with us is a
predator,” she asserts blandly. “It swallowed an entire nation before
we heroically attracted its attention and induced it to follow us into
the router. It’s an archivore - everything was inside it, still frozen
until we expanded it again. This civilization will already have been
restored from hot shadows in our own solar system: There is nothing to
gain by taking it home with us. But we need to return to ensure that
no more predators of this type discover the router - or the
high-bandwidth hub we linked to it.”
“You are sure you have killed this monster?” asks the ghost. “It would
be inconvenient if it were to emerge from hiding in its digest
archives.”
“I can guarantee it won’t trouble you again if you let us go,” says
Amber, mentally crossing her fingers. The ghost doesn’t seem to have
noticed the huge wedge of fractally compressed data that bloats her
personal scope by an order of magnitude. She can still feel Aineko’s
goodbye smile inside her head, an echo of ivory teeth trusting her to
revive it if the escape plan succeeds.
“We-us agree.” The ghost twists weirdly, morphs into a
five-dimensional hypersphere. It bubbles violently for a moment, then
spits out a smaller token - a warped distortion in the air, like a
gravityless black hole. “Here is your passage. Show us the
civilization.”
“Okay ” - Now! - “catch.” Amber twitches an imaginary muscle, and one
wall of the room dissolves, forming a doorway into Sadeq’s existential
hell, now redecorated as a fair facsimile of a twenty-first-century
industrial city in Iran, and populated by a Wunch of parasites who
can’t believe what they’ve lucked into - an entire continent of
zombies waiting to host their flesh-hungry consciousness.
The ghost drifts toward the open window. Amber grabs the hole and
yanks it open, gets a grip on her own thoughts, and sends Open wide!
on the channel everybody is listening in on. For a moment time stands
still, and then -
*
A synthetic gemstone the size of a Coke can falls through the cold
vacuum, in high orbit around a brown dwarf. But the vacuum is anything
but dark. A sapphire glare as bright as the noonday sun on Mars shines
on the crazy diamond, billowing and cascading off sails as fine as
soap bubbles that slowly drift and tense away from the can. The
runaway Slug-corporation’s proxy has hacked the router’s firmware, and
the open wormhole gate that feeds power to it is shining with the
brilliance of a nuclear fireball, laser light channeled from a star
many light-years away to power the Field Circus on its return trip to
the once-human solar system.
Amber has retreated, with Pierre, into a simulation of her home aboard
the Ring Imperium. One wall of her bedroom is a solid slab of diamond,
looking out across the boiling Jovian ionosphere from an orbit low
enough to make the horizon appear flat. They’re curled together in her
bed, a slightly more comfortable copy of the royal bed of King Henry
VIII of England. It appears to be carved from thousand-year-old oak
beams. As with so much else about the Ring Imperium, appearances are
deceptive; and this is even more true of the cramped simulation spaces
aboard the Field Circus, as it limps toward a tenth the speed of
light, the highest velocity it’s likely to achieve on a fraction of
its original sail area.
“Let me get this straight. You convinced. The locals. That a
simulation of Iran, with zombie bodies that had been taken over by
members of the Wunch. Was a human civilization?”
“Yeah.” Amber stretches lazily and smirks at him. “It’s their damn
fault; if the corporate collective entities didn’t use conscious
viewpoints as money, they wouldn’t have fallen for a trick like that,
would they?”
“People. Money.”
“Well.” She yawns, then sits up and snaps her finger imperiously:
Down-stuffed pillows appear behind her back, and a silver salver
bearing two full glasses of wine materializes between them.
“Corporations are life-forms back home, too, aren’t they? And we trade
them. We give our AIs corporations to make them legal entities, but
the analogy goes deeper. Look at any company headquarters, fitted out
with works of art and expensive furniture and staff bowing and
scraping everywhere -”
” - They’re the new aristocracy. Right?”
“Wrong. When they take over, what you get is more like the new
biosphere. Hell, the new primordial soup: prokaryotes, bacteria, and
algae, mindlessly swarming, trading money for plasmids.” The Queen
passes her consort a wineglass. When he drinks from it, it refills
miraculously. “Basically, sufficiently complex resource-allocation
algorithms reallocate scarce resources … and if you don’t jump to
get out of their way, they’ll reallocate you. I think that’s what
happened inside the Matrioshka brain we ended up in: Judging by the
Slug it happens elsewhere, too. You’ve got to wonder where the
builders of that structure came from. And where they went. And whether
they realized that the destiny of intelligent tool-using life was to
be a stepping-stone in the evolution of corporate instruments.”
“Maybe they tried to dismantle the companies before the companies
spent them.” Pierre looks worried. “Running up a national debt,
importing luxurious viewpoint extensions, munching exotic dreams. Once
they plugged into the Net, a primitive Matrioshka civilization would
be like, um.” He pauses. “Tribal. A primitive postsingularity
civilization meeting the galactic net for the first time. Overawed.
Wanting all the luxuries. Spending their capital, their human - or
alien - capital, the meme machines that built them. Until there’s
nothing left but a howling wilderness of corporate mechanisms looking
for someone to own.”
“Speculation.”
“Idle speculation,” he agrees.
“But we can’t ignore it.” She nods. “Maybe some early corporate
predator built the machines that spread the wormholes around brown
dwarfs and ran the router network on top of them in an attempt to make
money fast. By not putting them in the actual planetary systems likely
to host tool-using life, they’d ensure that only near-singularity
civilizations would stumble over them. Civilizations that had gone too
far to be easy prey probably wouldn’t send a ship out to look … so
the network would ensure a steady stream of yokels new to the big city
to fleece. Only they set the mechanism in motion billions of years ago
and went extinct, leaving the network to propagate, and now there’s
nothing out there but burned-out Matrioshka civilizations and howling
parasites like the angry ghosts and the Wunch. And victims like us.”
She shudders and changes the subject: “Speaking of aliens, is the Slug
happy?”
“Last time I checked on him, yeah.” Pierre blows on his wineglass and
it dissolves into a million splinters of light. He looks dubious at
the mention of the rogue corporate instrument they’re taking with
them. “I don’t trust him out in the unrestricted simspaces yet, but
he delivered on the fine control for the router’s laser. I just hope
you don’t ever have to actually use him, if you follow my drift. I’m a
bit worried that Aineko is spending so much time in there.”
“So that’s where she is? I’d been worrying.”
“Cats never come when you call them, do they?”
“There is that,” she agrees. Then, with a worried glance at the vision
of Jupiter’s cloudscape: “I wonder what we’ll find when we get there?”
Outside the window, the imaginary Jovian terminator is sweeping toward
them with eerie rapidity, sucking them toward an uncertain nightfall.
There’s a sucker born every minute.
- P. T. Barnum
Sirhan stands on the edge of an abyss, looking down at a churning
orange-and-gray cloudscape far below. The air this close
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