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SILICON KARMA
by
Tom Easton
For Betty Sue
My thanks to David Hartwell, Don Maass, Rebecca Ore, Mike Resnick, and
Stewart Wieck. Those defects of the tale that have survived their
helpful efforts are my fault alone.
An earlier version of this novel was published on disk in April 1995 by
Serendipity Systems P. O. Box 140 San Simeon, CA 93452
PROLOGUE: RUMORS OF HAZARD
The last thing Albert Pillock remembered was sitting in the crapper
behind the Mandelbrot Tap's tiny kitchen and thinking that it was about
time he B-cupped. That thought had been enough to materialize the
utility popup he needed. It looked like a small woman whose gray hair
was covered by a green kerchief. A coverall of the same color was
embroidered with the logo of Iron Lady B-Cup Security. It was sitting on
the edge of the sink, snapping gum, swinging its feet, tossing in one
hand a vial of large purple pills, and saying, "You'd think people would
remember to back up their memories in the kitchen or the living room,
but no, no. I've got to work in the toilet!" After a brief pause to give
him a chance to smile, it held up the pills and added, "You wanta do it
cold? Or do you want one of these horse chokers?"
He remembered shuddering. That was why he didn't B-cup as often he
should. That was why no one did. It took time, it produced a thundering
headache, and the pills that prevented the headache tasted like a
combination of bad breath and ear wax. He didn't know why, though he
could guess at a programmer with a sick sense of humor. He did know the
headache wasn't necessary, for the few times the power had failed and
the system's automatic B-cup had kicked in, there had been none. At
least the Albert Pillock who had experienced the headache hadn't
survived to remember it. Just as he didn't remember now. Not that
suicide seemed all that rational a way to avoid a headache, but it would
work. Now his hands were tight on the arms of a padded black leather
chair. He was facing a broad desk, and across that the heart-shaped face
and silvery hair of his host computer's persona. She was wearing a
sweatshirt decorated with an offcenter, multi-colored bullseye and the
words "Strange Attraction."
He had to swallow before he could manage to say, "What happened, Ada?"
"You got killed."
"Somehow that doesn't surprise me. Did you record it?"
"Of course. Though I couldn't move fast enough to B-cup you." Ada
gestured toward a wall covered with bookcases that were already fading
to a poster whose flashing neon letters said:
VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE MAURITS FINNEGAN FOR MAYOR VOTE VOTE VOTE VOTE Every
few seconds, the words in the center of the poster were replaced by a
squarish face, its eyes crinkled to suggest that Finnegan could see
further and clearer than his rivals. Albert shook his head. "That's an
old one," he said. The poster was surrounded by a stolid brick wall
topped with ornamental ironwork. Below it was a concrete sidewalk as
smooth and unblemished as the day it was made, a gutter that contained
no trace of litter or dead leaves, and a cobbled street. The view panned
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to show a cityscape, tall buildings of glass and gleaming metal, their
lines suggesting those of integrated circuit chips. There was no other
hint of what underlaid the perceptions that were all the reality the
residents of the virtual world--or any other--could know. The viewpoint
returned to the street just in time to catch Albert walking past the
poster. He was a tall man with a firm gait that belied the evidence of a
small paunch. His curly hair was dark, almost black, and he wore a
zippered shirt of checkered flannel. A crack appeared between two
cobblestones in the street behind him. It widened, and a small figure
clad in skin-tight black stepped silently onto the surface. In its hands
was a revolver nearly as long as it was tall. The Albert in the image on
the wall was oblivious to what was behind him. The one in the padded
office chair groaned as the pop-up spread its legs, braced its elbows
against its ribs, and leveled its gun at Albert's back. Its face was
twisted with the effort needed, but the gun's barrel never wavered, and
when the pop-up pulled the trigger, Albert went down as if he were a
doll a child had dropped. "Boom," said Albert. His tone was resigned. He
was only software, and so were both gun and bullet. Yet their effect was
real enough. Software could destroy software, he had learned long ago,
when he was meat. Viruses were one example, though they did their damage
by reproducing and preempting memory and storage space. At least they
could be stopped, unlike the more malicious data bombs, which sought out
and overwrote particular segments of memory or data in a computer file.
That was, in effect, just what the bullet did to him. Boom, and the
program which, while it ran within the computer, created him, maintained
him, was him, crashed. He had first run into data bombs when several
marketing firms had complained that their databases were crashing; the
cause had turned out to be a small program which would seek out and
remove a user's name and phone number from every database it could
access via the Internet; it had been very popular among people who did
not wish to be bothered by telemarketers and junk mailers. The solution
had been to isolate the databases from the Internet. And now he was the
victim, and isolation was not possible because both he and his killer
were residents of the system. He had been killed twice since the first
time he had accepted an assignment from the computer. "Third time. I'm
dead."
"But not for long, and not for good. That wasn't ten minutes ago. I
rebooted you right away."
"So who killed me?"
The host shrugged. "It wasn't a real pop-up. I can check what all my
subroutines are doing, and none of them were in the neighborhood."
"Another resident, then. In disguise." Albert made a face and wished,
not for the first time, that the virtual world did not make disguise so
easy. Where everything was data, a wish and a suitable subroutine were
all one needed to reprogram appearance or to materialize a gun. Or a cup
of coffee. He sipped at the mug that now occupied his hand. "I wish you
could do these jobs yourself. It would be easier." He made a face. "And
safer."
"You know why I can't. The company wrote it into my software. No spying.
No eavesdropping, except accidentally, and even then, even if I learn
about a crime, I can't use the knowledge. The idea is to protect your
privacy and keep me from becoming a tyrant."
"And I'm your loophole."
The computer's persona chuckled. "I've got to have a cop, they said.
It's a cumbersome requirement, but I can't do a thing until you catch
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whatever thieves and rapists and whatnots show up within me."
Albert was silent while he wondered whether murder was truly a crime in
the virtual world. Indeed, he thought, it couldn't be. Since the victim
could be promptly rebooted, the deed hardly existed except as theft. The
victim necessarily lost all memory of events since the last B-cup.
Finally, he said, "So we both want to know who shot me." Then he added,
"I'd like to know why too."
"You must have annoyed someone."
He looked disgusted. Of course he had annoyed someone. "But my last
B-cup was three days ago. I haven't got the faintest ..."
"You were working for me."
"I know that much." It had been over a week since Ada had appeared in
his apartment to say she needed his help. The currency of the virtual
world was the raw material of computerized imagination. Every resident
had the same basic ration of memory and processing capacity, just enough
to let them restore their youth and imagine the necessary paraphernalia
of daily life. If they wanted more--larger quarters, private worlds,
elaborate self-transformations--they had to earn more memory and
processing capacity, or "data energy." Most just called it money. To
earn what they needed to fuel their imaginations, some pretended to be
artificially intelligent software for an outside world that preferred to
have no overt contact with the ghosts in the Coleridge machine. Some
sold their imaginings of food or sex or fashion to their fellow
residents. One popular product for those with programming skills was the
image-transformation routines necessary to strip the years away from
one's age of entry, or to grow fur or tails, or to make other changes.
And some cheated. "I have heard," Ada had said. "That some of my guests
have disappeared."
"Why don't you just reboot them?"
The computer's representation shook her head. "They're not dead. They
haven't really vanished. They're still around. That much I know. But
none of their friends have seen them, and they don't answer calls."
"If they're still around, you could force them to answer. Or pick them
up and drop them in the same room as those friends."
"You know I can't do that. I can't interfere." He had sighed, and when
she had added, "Would you look into it?" he had agreed. Now he could
only shrug. "I must have been close, but ..."
The memory just wasn't there. "Then you'll have to start over."
"Not quite." His memory was fine, up to his last B-cup three days
before. He had only three days of investigation to repeat. And then, if
whatever he had found before could still be found, if it had not been
hidden or destroyed, he would know why he had been murdered. He
suspected that he would also have fulfilled the mission Ada had handed
him. "Did they have anything in common?"
"Several of them had recently bought custom image transformation
routines from the Image Shop."
"Then there's a place to start." # The Coleridge Corporation occupied
the twenty-sixth through the thirty-first floors of the forty-story
building it owned in the heart of the city. The executive boardroom was
on the uppermost of these floors, its broad expanse of glass looking out
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over sun-sparkled ocean, distant freighters, and closer sailboats, a
ferry, a snow-white cruise ship. The foreground was filled with the
roofs of lower buildings, fragments of street, a green scrap of
waterfront park. Swimmers could not be seen because the water was toxic
with sewage and chemical wastes. The only persons who entered the water
in the flesh were those who did not intend to return. The four people
sitting at the boardroom's long table were paying no attention to the
view. They were there to discuss certain difficulties the Corporation
was encountering, fully aware that if they could find no solution ...
Well, each of them had enough in investments and savings to live out
their lives in comfort. They were not about to go down to the beach.
That, or its equivalent, would be for the Corporation. One of the chairs
of polished wood and thick leather upholstery creaked discreetly. "It's
gobbling memory," said Jonathon Spander. The official head of the
division, he had thinning hair, a round nose, and bad teeth that he
sucked noisily and often. He did so now. "Just in this one box. Using it
much too fast. There's a lot of demand on the processor too."
"Is this really the problem?" asked Leah Kymon. Tall, lean, and gray
from hair to skirt, she was a special assistant to the corporation's
president and the division's actual manager. Usually, she deferred to
the specialists. "After all, you can just plug in more chips and boards,
another processing unit. Unless it's money?"
"No," said Spander. "Not that. The residents are productive enough to
pay for all the chips and processors they want. But ..."
"The rumors," said Eric Minckton of PR. His blond hair had been
carefully cut not to hide the pair of diamond studs that adorned his
left ear. "Crime waves! The whole virtual world is about to collapse!"
"That's nonsense, of course."
"It's still hurting sales." The fourth person at the table was
Marketing's Manora Day, a short woman with skin like fine leather and
hair as black as night. "Right across the board. Not just in this
computer, but also in the corporate retirement machines, the Heavens,
the ..."
"I'd like to know who leaked," said Kymon. "And how they knew anything
at all was going on. We can't watch or eavesdrop, after all, and the box
doesn't give us reports."
"It isn't supposed to," said Spander. "There should be a back door."
He shook his head. "If they caught us ... Besides, that's what we sell,
privacy, no interference, ever since the government ..."
"Can't you just ask the machine?"
"We tried. All it says is that the problem is internal, it's working on
it, and we're forgetting privacy."
"Then it has to involve the residents," said Manora Day. Spander nodded
as Kymon said, "And someone knows regardless."
"My department squashed the collapsing-world story. It was easy to make
it seem just too ridiculous. But the crime wave ..." Minckton gestured
with one hand. "We know people are getting killed," said Spander. "Not
many, and we don't know who. But we can see the reboots."
"It's too bad we don't have more access to what's going on."
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"At least we've managed to keep it off the front pages."
Kymon made a face at Spander. "There isn't supposed to be any crime at
all in the box. Did your screening let in a mobster?"
"Not as far as we can tell. But the residents are human. They had to
have enough money to pay the bill. And to get that money ..."
Now Kymon laughed. "A poor man's prejudice, Jon! Or do you think we're
all unprincipled?"
Spander did not answer in words, though his expression and the sound
that escaped between his teeth suggested that he sometimes wondered. "We
tried lowering the price," said Day. "As soon as the sales fell off. It
helped a little, but not enough."
"And we didn't find any more crooks than ever," said Spander. "We think
it's just one person, or maybe a few. Running wild. Trying to take
over."
"Can't we do anything?"
He shook his head. "We promised our customers a world of their own, to
run by themselves. We programmed the machine so that short of unplugging
it we couldn't interfere even if we wanted to. Even the machine itself
has severe limits on what it can do."
"That's been a good selling point," said Manora Day. "But I can't use it
now," said Minckton. "I'll have to tell the press something soon, and
I'll have to say we're doing something. If I can't ..." He shrugged
heavily, held one hand out, palm up, and turned it over. "Maybe it's
just one of the hazards of life? In the box or out of it."
Kymon barked the briefest of laughs. "We can't say that. It's what many
of our customers are dying to escape."
"Can we talk to anybody in the box?" asked Day. Spander shook his head.
"Not unless they call us."
"Set it up before they go in?" asked Minckton. ""Your mission, if you
choose to accept it ... '" Day laughed. He winked at her. Kymon said,
"We need one with some loyalty to the Corporation. We don't want her
talking to anyone else."
"Like the Enquirer."
Spander looked thoughtful for a moment. "There's Durgov. He's due to go
in soon." Then he shook his head and sucked his teeth again. "We forced
him to retire after the stroke. He hates our guts."
"Talk to him anyway."
CHAPTER 1.
"There," said the technician as he withdrew the needle from her arm.
Rose Pillock blinked. She could already feel the drug wrapping her
consciousness in layers of cotton wool. She turned her head to one side
and there, in the polished stainless steel of an equipment casing, she
saw herself. Thin, gray hair, almost white, straggling across her scalp.
A face seamed by time and illness, the flesh worn so thin that the bone
of her skull threatened to burst free. An arm, a sleeve pushed up to
expose the crook of her elbow for the technician's coolly professional
hands, the skin wrinkled and spotted, the meat reduced to flaccid
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