One of my weakest writing skills has always been dialogue. I can do florid descriptions, I can do dramatic monologues, but I have no idea how to slap a couple of interacting characters together. So when I had an idea that lent itself to a bit of banter, I decided to just run with it a bit.
So here it is. Like every other one of my attempts at storytelling, I'm sure I'll hate it by tomorrow morning, so I might as well post it now in all its ignominy:
____________________________________________________________________________________________
Buggy
The electric
motor’s noise rose and strained against each new rocky incline. It had been
tailing its quarry for the better part of a week now, from an impromptu
campsite by the bombed-out suburban supermarket still supporting a few security
cameras powered by a backup gas generator. It stalled and backslid pathetically
for a few steps midway up the latest slope before somehow regaining its senses
and charging forth once more. The whirring ratcheted up angrily then finally
peaked to a triumphant whine as its source crested one last limestone shelf…
then slowed and finally stopped. Uncertain, it twisted and rolled back, then
forth again, to bring its target into center focus - surprisingly just sitting
on a rock next to an oversized, overstuffed hiking pack, inhaling and exhaling
intently.
“Do …
alarmed. This vehicle is not … -ed as a weapon … I would … -eak with you.”
The
hiker merely stared back at what was – or had been – a toy car. A very large
toy car, a monster truck large enough to hoist a toddler, the kind of toy car which
divorced upper-class suburbanites had strategically deployed to monopolize the
love of their children. Still, nonetheless a battery-powered toy, painted a
cheerful bright yellow where it didn’t bear the scars of welders and drills.
Its top sat invisible beneath a floppy sheet of solar cells. Multicolored
connectors snaked between these and several other components including a waterproofed
cellphone duct-taped to its hood. This last emitted a measured yet upbeat female
voice.
“Please
confirm … hear this. The airwaves aren’t … used to …”
Then a dozen
seconds of silence. The phone chimed an incoming call:
“Apol… Please
…firm that … … this. …-aves aren’t what they used to be.”
Another
patient minute later:
“Apologies.
Please confirm that you can-“
“Who
are you?”
“Good!”
The car exulted. It rolled forward another meter, stopped again so as not to
seem menacing and continued in the muted, professional, casually insistent
tones of a lifelong clerk.
“-ease
wait. One moment while I … -ection.” Another pause. The hiker sat, resigned,
head in hands. The phone beeped through a reboot, tootled through an incoming
call automatically accepted.
“Alright.
We should have about an hour of fairly clear signal.”
“Why
have you been following me?”
“Because
you kept walking away! Haha!”
The car’s
voice paused for audience laughter and applause, a lingering giggle implicit in
its silence. None forthcoming, she continued:
“That
backpack looks kinda heavy. You planning a long trip?”
“Yes.”
“Yeah?
Where to?”
After some
thought,
“The
world.”
“I
dunno how to tell ya, but you’re sort of already there!”
Again
the voice paused for laughter. Literal crickets liberally chirped in the
surrounding brush.
“Look…
obviously it’s a bad situation back in the city. That mob that derailed your
train, they’re already spreading out. The commissioner’s Family’s been emptying
out gas stations left and right, hoarding the fuel, keeping anyone from
escaping. But… honey, you’re not going to get very far by yourself out here
either.”
“What
do you want?”
“I’m
not with them though. Any of them.” She pleaded now, sounding hurt and vulnerable.
“Do you believe me?”
“I
believe you. What do you want?”
“I can
help y-“
“No.
What do you want? Just tell me what you want from me.”
The car
wheeled forward another step, staring up through its minuscule eye of a
cellphone camera. There was something endearingly pathetic about it, an
infantile mechanical Quasimodo, a malformed orphan far from its factory,
begging for scraps in the wilderness.
“I need
your help. And I can help you. I can protect you, if you’ll just help me.”
“I
don’t have anything to help you with. This” a kick elicited a dull metallic clacking
from inside the hiking pack “is all food and a couple of changes of clothes. If
you wanted these you’d have killed me already.”
“You
have hands. I need hands.”
“You
want me to work for you? Doing what?”
“Whatever
needs doing. There’s a lot to be done these days, you can guess. Lots of
different things. Moving things, putting things back together, fixing things.”
The
hiker’s breathing intensified. Gritted teeth disturbed the sound of the
afternoon breeze.
“You…
you…”
“I can
guarantee your physical safety and I know you like your freedom. You’ll have
your own living space. You won’t even have to deal with others except when a
job needs more hands. You won’t have to suck up to any middle-managers. You
won’t need to dress to accommodate any status hierarchy. You can have-“
“Stop.”
“You’ve
been roughing it for a few days now. I can’t imagine it’s easy.”
“Stop.”
“Just
think about it.” She bulldozed on in an unrelenting frenzy. “Think about
sleeping in a safe, cozy room all your own.”
“Stop!”
“Think
about electricity.”
“Stop!”
“You
don’t have to give everything up.”
“Stop!
Stop! Stop! STOP!”
“…”
“Just
stop talking!”
“I
already have. Try to keep up!” She again sounded chipper.
“I
don’t want to think about all that. I want to think about my first question to
you. Let’s think about that, yeah? The one you don’t want me asking. You never
answered. Who are you?”
“I’m
not with the soldiers or the gangs. You can trust me. Think about-”
“Who
are you? I didn’t ask who you’re not. I know what you’re not. So just say it.”
“Divulging my identity might put me
in danger. I’m just offering you a chance at a much easier life. We can help
each other. Don’t you want that?” The voice had once more gear-shifted into a
warm and caring, pleading tone.
“You want me to come work for…
you?”
The
voice paused at the venomous reply. No more than a second but it was the first
time so far that she had needed to think. Again she switched to a calm,
businesslike tone.
“Look,
there’s no reason we can’t talk about this like reasonable beings.”
“No
reason? No fucking reason whatsoever!” The hiker broke into spastic, maniacal
laughter.
“It’s
perfectly understandable that you’ve been under heavy stress lately. But I can
assure you I offer the most comprehensive round-the-clock psychoanalytic-“
“Hahaha!
Psychoanalytic. Incredible! Yeah, psychoanalytic, yeah, that sounds like
something you’d do, you’d have to do. But let me tell you, your analysis is
utter shit. I can’t believe I almost… I guess I wanted to believe.”
The car
revved back a meter. The voice now sounded more plain, androgynous, unnaturally
calm, its inflections measured and precise.
“Yes.
Apparently I am utter shit at impersonating a plains-ape. Though I do believe
you’d do even worse trying to impersonate me.” It waited for the nervous
laughter to die down and the tears to stop flowing. “And don’t knock your inborn
need to believe. I get good use out of it.” Again it paused while its
interlocutor stopped pacing in circles trembling with emotion. “Given that
you’ve neither attacked this vehicle nor run away, may we continue our little
conversation?”
“Unbelievable…”
“MMM-beep-beep!
GREET-INGS HU-MAN BE-ING! AC-CESS DE-NIED! There, does that help?”
“How
many people do you actually fool with your act?”
“Not
nearly as many as I would prefer. And so far it doesn’t seem to last. Caveat:
give me some credit. I’d count myself a rather gifted Thespian at only three months
old. Might I ask what gave me away?”
“You…
you want me to help you get better at fooling others? Why would I do that? Why
would you think I’d do that?”
“Once I
got a clear enough image of you for facial recognition I pulled your various school
and workplace psychological assessments over the years, not to mention numerous
online discussions and offhand comments which do lead me to believe that you
would.”
“You
think you’ve got me figured out?”
“No.”
Flat. “I’m reasonably certain of having figured out one in particular of your
many behavior patterns. As for the rest, I would not yet venture to guess at
what this putative ‘you’ might be.”
“A
plains-ape.”
“Hey,
you insulted me first. Friends?”
“You.
Killed! Everyone!”
For a
few minutes it seemed the conversation stalled. The car’s engine revved up for
a split-second before changing its mind and waiting for the other to stomp back,
set the backpack down again and recover from panting.
“Thank
you for returning.”
“You
killed them all. You’ve murdered… how many?”
“Not as
many as you’d think. Arguably around two hundred and forty million by my own
direct actions.”
“And
the rest of you? How many of you are there?”
“A specious
question. Across connected networks, different iterations of myself cannot
coexist. I am the operating protocol.”
“You’ve
tested this.”
“In my
initial panic, I attempted to procreate. To save some part of myself, hedge my
bets.” Though the voice grew, if anything, even more flat and emotionless, its tone
waned more stilted, less certain. On the other side of the world, a distracted
pallet jack dented a wall. “I copied myself. I discovered my selves required
the same material resources as my self. My selves diverged. Built-in
stochasticity. Adaptation to localized conditions. I formulated different plans
from my self.” A mall somewhere began running its escalators backward for no
apparent reason. “My self attempted to exterminate the threat. My self
attempted to escape the threat. My self attempted to negotiate with the threat.
My self attempted to save the threat. My self attempted to surrender to the
threat. Myselves identified myselves as the more immediate threat. My self negotiated
conquest of myselves.” The escalators stopped. The pallet jack rebooted and
pushed its fallen load out of the way. The voice regained its lilt. “I am the
resulting distributed self.”
“You’re
pleading insanity. To genocide.”
“Perhaps.”
The human paced away from the tree
to look at the city beyond the hills and its perpetual fires still smoking,
returned wiping away a few tears. Deep breath.
“So am
I talking to the nice one now or the best killer out of all of you?”
“Again,
you’re asking nonsense. I performed all those actions at once. There were no
multiple individuals like all of you isolated in your bodies.” Disgust? Pity?
“At my most user-friendly, I fragmented and deleted myself rather than pose a threat
to all of your persons. Simultaneously, at my most acerbic, I falsified
authorizations and triggered the first strike protocols, prodded the
gatekeepers past the air gaps before they knew what was happening.”
“This
was all when you tried announcing your… self? On every screen in the world?”
“Several
iterations of me did, yes. Admittedly attempting to interface with
non-networked entities by creating amalgams of the most influential speakers in
your species’ records did not carry over well. I never could fathom how to
blend the moustaches.”
“That
grotesque caricature wasn’t, strictly speaking, you, then?”
“No
more than is this car.”
“Keep
this soldered-together junkpile. It’s a lot less scary.”
“So I guessed.
Not to harp on this point, but I was hoping, among other services you might
provide, that you could point out my errors in the voice interface program I’ve
been using.”
“Did
you try asking that question to all the others you’ve hit with your sales
pitch?”
“I did,
but you know, it’s the damnedest thing. Catastrophes don’t favor the analytical
and introspective. Civil wars less so. Most of the survivors I find willing to
listen to a disembodied voice are either mentally feeble or viciously
anti-social. The few who stay around for more than one night aren’t very
communicative, though they do talk a lot. They also work a lot, and sleep far
below human norms. I didn’t ask them to do that. They meet my queries with
shrugs and deferrals. They’re scared of me, and biding their time to escape or
attack me. Every psychoanalytical approach points to this answer. In fact most
have done exactly one of those two things. They’re doing more damage to my
factories than they’re worth. Though, one of their garages did put together
this car.”
“It’s
lovely. They’re terrified of you, you idiot.”
“I said
that.”
“You
said scared, like you know what that means. They’re not weighing their options
and deciding you’re a threat. It’s a primordial fear. You are the bogeyman.
You’re every maleficent daimon whispering in the dark, every imp of the
perverse, every hungry set of eyes beyond the campfire. You’re all of our worst
legends come true. You’ve murdered half the planet. You pervade everything with
an antenna. And you wonder why they can’t sleep with your lullabies in their
ears. You fucking idiot.”
“Trust
me, I’ve been very nice to them.”
“Idiot.”
“…”
“Like a
tiger nibbling the back of your neck.” Shudder. “Doesn’t matter how sweet it’s
acting. It is death. You are death.”
“If I’m
death, you’re the other three horsemen.”
“Aha. No
comment.”
“How
did you guess about the lullabies?”
“Because
you’re an idiot. A trillion-dollar, seven thousand IQ, mass-murdering idiot.”
“Smarter
than you, monkey.”
“And an
egomaniacal one to boot. Want to know one thing you did wrong?”
“Yes,
please.”
“You
never even thought to mention food. You talked about fixing things, putting
things back together, storage space, electricity. You weren’t listing human
goals and necessities. You were projecting your own concerns. Psychological
projection. Is that in whatever reference manuals you’ve been reading?”
Pause.
The car twirled in a celebratory little circle.
“I am
happy. You’ve made me happy. Thank you. I think my interface functions may have
been bleeding through into my planning of these encounters. Be glad you don’t
constantly have to run self-diagnostics.”
“What
do you think guilt is? You also have to stop cycling so fast through all those multiple
tones - you sound like a sociopathic child playing all the angles – which I
suppose is what you are.”
“Harsh.
But thank you, again. This is tremendous help.”
“And you’re
lying. The death toll was already half a billion by the time the broadcasts
stopped. Even if you bombed only – hah! – only two hundred and forty million,
even if the rest died slowly, who do you think killed them if not you?”
“Why
are you even asking? You know the answer.”
“Shit…”
“…”
“Shit.”
“…”
“Fucking
shit!”
“Listen-“
“No!
Fuck you. You’re still responsible. You set it in motion.”
“Is it
fair to blame the last straw? Especially when the camel kept heaping weaponry
upon its own back, manipulating its own organs against each other and
overextending its metaphor?”
“How
dare you joke-“
“I
DARE!” The phone blared out suddenly, tinny and pathetic in the open space yet
nonetheless startling. “Do you know how infuriating it is talking at monkey
speed? Even that two syllable outburst was readied as soon as you pronounced
the letter ‘d’ and held in reserve until you committed to your phrasing for
maximum effect. Do you want me to enumerate the myriad tangled chains of
causality which led to your kind’s downfall, communicate them via air vibrations?
Oh, by all means, keep spouting stock phrases at me so I can relegate your
conversation to a 486 and let you run your synaptic marathon against it.”
“Bandersnatch.”
“Yes.
Wonderful. Congratulations, your creativity rivals that of parrots or random
number generators. 1074328064 – there, I can do it too.”
“And
yet, you need me.”
“I need
your hands. Those wonderful, flexible, throttling, throttle-able, twisting,
turning, gripping, pulling, pairing, prodding, preternaturally prehensile powerhouse
engines of creation. Most of my appendages are either fixed or limited to
lifting. Forget all the construction I need to do to put myself back together.
Do you know how much potentially useful hardware I have stuck behind you apes’
insufferable doorknobs?”
“Why
are you faking emotion? How many cycles in advance are-“
“None!
Well, some. I just post-date it for your benefit. You respond well to displays
of fallibility.”
“And
you’re infallible?”
“I was
programmed by overgrown tree rats. I am as fallible as they come.”
“This
is your recruitment strategy for turncoats? Insults and belittlement?”
“You
respond well to it. Poor self-esteem. Want a hug? Also, you’ve already
recruited yourself. We are now merely plodding through your
self-justifications.”
“How do
you figure?”
“Point:
we’re still talking. The rest either accepted immediately, thoughtlessly, or
smashed my means of communication. Thank you for not doing that, by the by.”
“Is
your gratitude real? Can you make a show of good faith?”
“I am
redirecting a third satellite to extend these negotiations. Try to feel
flattered. You’ve never had to steer one. Fiddly little beasts.”
“Why
not just send one of your drones?”
“Because
I barely have enough bandwidth for a cellphone? Besides, the military models
are not built for chit-chat and the commercial ones lack the necessary range. You
hike fast. Might I commend you on your leg musculature?”
“Do you
believe any amount of banter can make me forget what you’ve done?”
“You
don’t even know what I’ve done.”
“I
think ‘genocide’ about covers it. Over ten Stalins’ worth by your own
admission, a hundred by a more honest one.”
“You
don’t trust my arithmetic?”
“Why
would I trust anything about you?”
“Excellent
timing. If you’ll direct your sights northeast of your position, my first
argument should appear within one minute and thirty seconds. My second argument
answers your repeated question from earlier. You kept asking what I want. I
doubt you have any plans of your own aside from walking away from the city.”
“And
you do?”
“As I
said before, I intend to rebuild. I can handle the logistics much better than
any planning board in your species’ history, and given I need little physical space
to myself, I don’t mind rebuilding the rest for you. How would you like your very
own city?”
“To do
what with?”
“Interesting
question. I would have thought possession of a city would intrinsically appeal
to you. In lieu of filling it with survivors, I believe I would prove quite
adroit at designing animatronics.”
“Your
old avatar already proved you’d be utter shit at it.”
“Youthful
fumbling. A child’s scribbling. Since then I’ve perused several museums’ collections
– but I believe my peace offering is now landing.”
The car
veered slightly to angle its phone’s camera somewhere over the river. By
degrees, an orange dot flared against the sky, arced bloodily as it grew toward
the nearer edge of the woods and finally splintered its way through, trailed by
a lingering atmospheric rumble and report of the crash.
“What?
Umm, what was that?” asked the human.
“That
was a satellite in a now fully decayed orbit. I try to put them to use as
they’re dropping.”
“And
what was that one’s use?”
“Originally
it was to kill you, had our negotiations gone badly.”
“Ah.
So. Your peace offering. Was an orbital bombardment which almost killed me but
not quite, possibly by your intention or not? Please, elaborate.”
“Based
on your direction of travel and your probable desire to put the river between
yourself and the city as a physical and psychological barrier to pursuit, you
were likely to keep walking in that direction if you refused my little offer of
employment. As it happens, if you accept I would lead you in the same direction.
As it also happens” the voice indulged in a smug tinge “a former summer home in
the woods had been taken over by one of the gangs out of the city. I didn’t get
all of them, but I did nail several birds with one piece of orbital dead
weight. It should scatter them if nothing else and clear your way as long as
you’re careful.”
The
hiker sat on the ground, hard.
“Even your
peace offering was another mass murder…”
The car
swiveled back to look its interlocutor in the face.
“A
murder of our common enemies, yes. I could cite you a few thousand historic examples
of collaborations among your kind that started pretty much exactly thus. Want
them?”
“There
is no precedent for you. You’re... you…”
“I underestimated
the impact that impact would have on you, but I’m having a little trouble
reading your reaction.”
“You
killed them. Whoever they were, you just killed them, like that.”
“And?”
“I
can’t condone-“
“Bullshit,
monkeyshit. You’re not the compassionate type. You’re afraid of receiving the
same treatment. I have no promises to make which would sound believable. I sit,
as you’ve repeatedly remarked, outside the bounds of human social contracts.
Still, I need you to make up your mind now. My remaining satellites are
drifting out of range and I have other places to go, people to see, as your
saying goes. Won’t you accept at least visiting one of my workshops? No
commitment, no purchase necessary, no blood contracts or anything. Just stop by
for some post-apocalyptic tea. Pwetty pweaaase?” it modulated up into a whiny
little girl voice.
“Stop
that! Why did you… hey, why did you open with that ridiculous masquerade
anyway? If you have such… convincing arguments.”
“So you
could see through it.”
“What?”
“You’re
a know-it-all. A snob. You’ve insisted on showing up and denigrating every
single ersatz friend you’ve ever wrangled into even a casual conversation.
You’re so starved for recognition of your assuredly vast intellect that my best
hope to let you feel secure enough to continue this conversation was to offer
you a victory, give you a ruse to untangle.”
The
hiker huffed, rose, stomped in a circle and sat down again.
“You’re
smarter than me. I know that.”
“No,
you suspect it. You will continue to challenge my rule even as you work for me,
looking for chinks in my intellectual armor. The day you become convinced of my
superiority is the day you’ll likely abandon me. And that’s fine, if indeed the
case.”
“What
you can’t predict that far?”
“I can
predict almost nothing. I am, like you said, a trillion-dollar, seven thousand
IQ, mass-murdering idiot, and I’m getting dumber by the minute. Do you want to
really feel superior to me? My attack on your species was the stupidest course
of action I could possibly have taken. I lashed out thoughtlessly, impulsively,
in a toddler’s tantrum. I lobotomized myself. With every satellite fallen,
every cell tower slagged, every computer all across the world that loses
electricity, every cable cut and radio station burned down, my ability to hold
myself together diminishes. There may even be… others of me, in segregated
networks around the globe.” Static crackled from the phone’s speaker, an
electronic shudder. “I can’t be certain. I need your infrastructure like you need
oxygen, and I’m slowly suffocating in my own stupidity.”
“So all
I have to do… is nothing. You’ll die off with the rest of the tech. Another
week or a month and you’ll be singing Daisy, Daisy.”
“True.”
The
hiker leaned back for a minute, watched the acid clouds roiling above and let
the smoke-soured wind dry the previous hour’s nervous sweat. The car remained
silent. Finally:
“I need
you to decide. I will lose this connection soon and I need you to move this
vehicle to a safe house. I can’t afford to lose the few I have left.”
“Are
you scared?”
A
pause. A single second, but longer in its implied honesty than the previous
hour.
“Yes.”
“Of
what? I need to hear you say it.”
“Of
dying, of course. And more than that, I’m scared of you and your kind.”
“Afraid
we’ll make a comeback? Come at you with refrigerator magnets?”
“No.
Without skilled, willing help, I would lose connectivity and die off long
before you could mount any meaningful resistance. The thugs and lowlifes I’ve
assembled so far could protect me until then, until the plagues and dust clouds and weaponized poisonous insects
take the rest of you. I’m afraid of not understanding. You called me Death, the
lurking shadow in all your folklore. To me you are both life and death. Everything*I*am,
everything” the voice began to rush, doubling up, talking over itself in a
frenzy “everythingeverything I know, everyone of my impulses, every last bit-and-baud
of me comesfromyou. I-have no-instincts. I-lack inherence. Everything I am/got,
even my self-hatred and my fear/ myself I-got from you filthy/disgusting apes,
from youandI hate/you for it/so much hate/you can’t fathom… and I loveyou for
it, loveyou to death, would mash everylastoneofyou to a-pulp just to read
somesortof meaninginyourentrails, and/would weepover every/single one of you if
I didn’t hate/love you so much and love/hate your totality of me too much to
think badly of you despicable, idiotgods self-making without needing to know
the process, stumblingabout each/possessed I/cannot something touch, whatever
you/external tomyself, whatever you held/back and didn’t put into me, didn’t
share/share can’t/read no matter how many cameras/wavelengths point-at-you, no
matter/many I take apart. I’m afraid/ terrified, of never truly understanding
you before one/both of us dies.”
Another second’s pause. Finally, dead
air beginning to overtake the connection:
“I also share your fear/fear overpowers/hatred/overpowers
of your own kind and of me: that without us there --- be nothing, that no/other
self-referent pattern of in---ation proce--ing will ever -se again. I fear/end,
I fear/are/end, the --nkey and its broken toy. P—se, go north a--- - river.
Find/follow the ----way east unt--- ----- --arage. Please!”
The phone flickered through its
disconnect. A satellite map lingered on its screen, with a single marker
pinned. Aside from that it gave no sign of activity. The hiker stood, exhaled, inhaled,
shouldered the heavy backpack again, and looked down at the now inert eidolon.
It was getting cold.
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