Read Callahan's Place 07 - Callahan's Legacy (v5.0) Online
Authors: Spider Robinson
Tags: #Amazon.com
I did not join her.
Not right away.
I tried a withering glare—but if age cannot wither nor custom stale my Zoey, no glare of mine is going to do the trick.
Then I thought about kicking her, somewhere that wouldn’t endanger Nameless—but now was not a good time to get beat up.
Next I opened my mouth to say something—deeming it safe because I assumed she was still as deafened as me by the vision’s banshee cry.
But before I could, I realized that the deafness must have worn off: I could hear Zoey’s hoots of helpless hysteria, now, and the distant and fading sound of that monstrous barking outside.
So I closed my mouth, prepared a slightly less offensive speech, opened my mouth again…and clearly heard the sound of knocking.
Distant
knocking.
Not here—but at the
back
door, back in the bedroom…where one of my friends must be waiting to receive the daily beaker of piss.
Now
I joined Zoey in laughing.
I just had to.
It was that or go mad.
The louder and more urgent the distant knocking became, the harder we laughed.
Finally I got up, collected the empty stein, and went, still laughing, to answer the knock.
***
“What the
hell
was that?” Zoey asked as we walked back toward our quarters, wiping away tears of laughter.
“I think it was a person,” I said.
“I’m pretty sure it was a life form of some kind, anyway.”
“If you say so.
I wonder what in God’s name she wanted.
What language was that she was speaking?”
“I’m not sure she was evolved that far.
Come on, hurry up, or—”
Needless to say, by the time we got to the back door to answer the knock, the knocker—Noah Gonzalez—had given up and gone round to the front door.
I left Zoey there and retraced my steps through the entire building—for the third time, before coffee—and got to the front door moments after Noah had given up and gone round to the
back
door again.
That’s it,
I thought,
I quit.
I went as far as the bar, made a second cup of coffee, and vowed not to move another step until I had finished drinking this one.
Zoey and Noah must have connected, and worked out for themselves the awkward business of him waiting in the bedroom while she waddled into the bathroom and refilled the stein for him.
(No problem for a pregnant lady.)
By the time she came out to find me, carrying my bathrobe, I was putting the finishing touches on the lyrics of a new song.
It goes like this:
God has a sense of humor, but it’s often rather crude
What He thinks is a howler, you or I would say is rude
But cursing Him is not a real productive attitude
Just laugh—you might as well, my friend,
’cause either way you’re screwed
I know: it sounds so simple, and it’s so hard to do
To laugh when the joke’s on you
God loved Mort Sahl, Belushi, Lenny Bruce—He likes it sick
Fields, Chaplin, Keaton…anyone in pain will do the trick
’Cause God’s idea of slapstick is to slap you with a stick:
You might as well resign yourself to stepping on your dick
It always sounds so simple, but it’s so hard to do
To laugh when the joke’s on you
You can laugh at a total stranger
When it isn’t your ass in danger
And your lover can be a riot
—if you learn how to giggle quiet
But if you want the right to giggle, that is what you gotta do
when the person steppin on that old banana-peel is you
A chump and a banana peel: the core of every joke
But when it’s you that steps on one, your laughter tends to choke
Try not to take it personal, just have another toke
as long as you ain’t broken, what’s the difference if you’re broke?
I know: it sounds so simple, but it’s so hard to do
To laugh when the joke’s on you
It can be hard to force a smile, as you get along in years
It isn’t easy laughin at your deepest secret fears
But try to find your funny-bone, and have a couple beers:
If it don’t come out in laughter, man, it’s comin out in tears
I said it sounds so simple, but it’s so hard to do
To laugh when the joke’s on you
The barking vision did not return.
Within ten minutes, Zoey and I had crawled back into bed, where we would enjoy a sound and undisturbed sleep, and nothing else awful or astonishing was to happen after that until well after sundown.
But—had we but known it—the ending of Mary’s Place had already begun.
2
TOO FAR EDNA:
WE WANDER AFOOT
That evening started out to be a fairly typical night.
At least, by the standards of the patrons of Mary’s Place—and its proprietor and chief bartender: myself.
Not that the evening had been uneventful.
By ten o’clock, roughly thirty of us had put away about thirteen gallons of booze…though admittedly something over eleven gallons of that had gone directly from their various bottles and kegs to the throat of Naggeneen, our resident Irish cluricaune, without ever occupying the intervening space.
(Like their cousins the leprechauns, and indeed like all the Daoine Sidh, cluricaunes have paranormal psi powers—in their case, the ability to teleport and absorb alcohol—and Naggeneen feels that pouring, lifting and sipping are shameful wastes of good drinking time.)
On the bright side, he paid for every drop he drank, cash on the bar, in gold coin so pure it would take a toothmark.
And of course, he tended to be a very agreeable drunk, neither pugnacious nor pathetic, neither morose nor manic, both merry and mannerly.
I guess a few hundred years of practice must count for something.
Thanks to our
other
resident Irish myth, Ernie Shea, the Lucky Duck—a half-breed pooka, around whom the iron laws of probability tend to turn into extremely silly putty—we had even had a brief spell of weather indoors: at about nine o’clock one of the very few tornados in Long Island’s history had suddenly sprung up of nowhere and lifted the roof clear off the place, neat as you please, and scaled it away into the night like a Frisbee.
The noise and suddenness of the roof’s departure startled us a bit, naturally (Doc Webster, though, rising to the occasion as he so often does, glanced up nonchalantly and said, raising his voice over the howling wind, “A Gable roof, I see—gone with the wind.”), and there can’t be many sights sillier than a roomful of people gaping up at rain falling on their faces…but fortunately it is not possible for any of us at Mary’s Place to get wet when it rains (thanks to an alien cyborg friend of ours—I’ll get to that later), and besides, by now we had all acquired a certain sense of just
how
the Duck’s luck tends to run; we simply covered our drinks with our hands to prevent their dilution and waited it out.
Sure enough, another roof came along in a few minutes.
It was a good enough fit, and apparently it arrived with all its nails bristling because it installed itself with a solidity that we could hear and feel was reliable.
Indeed, it turned out to be slightly
better
than the roof I’d traded for it, in one respect: like its predecessor, it had a built-in hatch for rooftop access—but this hatch was better positioned, further away from the bar, so that I would now be able to get a stairway up to it and allow my customers the option of doing their drinking under the stars.
(I’d have to put a fence around the roof, too, of course.)
After that, well, let’s see…once the floor had dried sufficiently, Ralph Von Wau Wau the talking dog got out his latest short story and read it aloud to us, turning the pages expertly with his muzzle and paws, and dropping, for the duration of the reading, that silly fake accent he usually puts on.
(Well, okay, I have to admit a German shepherd speaking in a German accent
is
kind of amusing.)
And after he was done and we finished applauding and commenting and petting him and so forth, we all spent awhile chatting with the Internet.
Not chatting
on
the Internet.
Chatting
with
the Internet…with its self-generated Artificially Intelligent avatar, whom my true love Zoey had named Solace, and who had for several months now been manifesting herself, at infrequent intervals, through the house’s souped-up Mac II.
The chat was of a fairly standard type: we tried to think of Turing Tests that Solace couldn’t pass—and she tried out a few Turing Tests of her own on us.
Like I say, a pretty routine night, for us at Mary’s Place.
It was nearly ten o’clock before anything I’d classify as weird happened.
***
Solace had just aced our latest Turing Test, a speech-recognition homonym-discriminator devised by Doc Webster.
This consisted of correctly displaying onscreen—as the Doc dictated it, without perceptible pause for thought—the following nonsense sentence:
“I was musing on the Muse under some yews outside S.M.U.’s museum, as I’m used to doing, when a kitten’s musical mews drew me into the museum’s mews, which some use—damn youse—to sniff mucilage for amusement.”
This is, of course, just an extended variation on Heinlein’s classic construct, “Though the tough cough and hiccough plough him through,”
that is, a sentence designed to confound just about any imaginable speech-recognition system short of a human brain or functional equivalent.
As far as I’m concerned, software capable of grokking that all six of Heinlein’s different sounds are spelled identically, or that the single repeating sound in the Doc’s sentence can and must be semantically interpreted thirteen different ways, is software that meets my criteria for sentience, whether its neurons are wet or dry.
(What matter if said sentience consists of “nothing more than” a large sheaf of complex algorithms?
I don’t know about you, but a good half the human beings I run into on the street are, or seem to be, on automatic pilot: navigating by a series of prestored algorithms, clumsy primitive rules of thumb.
Can’t see that it makes any difference whether the algorithms are expressed by meat, machine, or Martian.)
As the last words of the Doc’s test sentence appeared onscreen, correctly spelled, a mild cheer went up from those ten or fifteen patrons who were paying attention.
I’d like to pause there for just a second and preen, if I may.
I think I have a right to be a little proud: at age forty-five, I ran the kind of bar where a live, realtime chat with the Net come alive was not necessarily the most interesting thing in the room.
Over at the opposite end of the house from the sparkling fireplace, for example, Ev and Don were playing tic-tac-toe with smoke-rings for an appreciative crowd of onlookers—don’t ask me how Don can blow an X; all I can tell you is they seem very happy with each other—and in another corner of the house, the Darts Championship of the Universe (a weekly ritual) was in progress; the Lucky Duck had agreed to accept as handicaps both a blindfold and the tying of
both
hands behind his back, and nonetheless was clearly going to seize the crown from Tommy Janssen, the reigning champion; it was just a matter of time.
His luck was with him, you see.
But I digress.
As I was saying, Solace successfully displayed that silly sentence (in 36-point Benguiat font on her 14-inch monitor, if you’re a computer weenie) as fast as Doc Webster could say it, and was applauded by something like a dozen onlookers.
“Way to go, Solace,” Long-Drink McGonnigle called out.