Read Islands in the Net Online
Authors: Bruce Sterling
Revolutions. New Orders. For Laura the words had the cobwebby taste of twentieth-century thinking. Visionary mass movements were all over the 1900s, and whenever they broke through, blood followed in buckets. Grenada could be 1920s Russia, 1940s Germany, 1980s Iran. All it would take was a war.
Of course it wouldn't be a big war, not nowadays. But even a little terror war could turn things septic in a little place like Grenada. Just enough killing to raise the level of hysteria and make every dissident a traitor. A little war, she thought, like the one beginning to seethe already.â¦
Andrei stopped. David smiled at him uneasily. “I can see you've given this speech before.”
“You are skeptical about talk,” Andrei said, throwing down his napkin. “That's only wise. But we can show you the facts and the practice.” He paused. “Unless you want to wait for dessert.”
David looked at Laura and Carlotta. “Let's go,” Laura said. Sweetened scop was nothing to linger for.
They nodded at the crew, thanked the captain politely, left the table. They exited the dining room by another hallway and stopped by a pair of elevators. Andrei punched a button and they stepped in; the doors slid shut behind them.
Static roared in Laura's head. “Jesus Christ!” David said, clutching his earpiece. “We just went offline!”
Andrei glanced once, over his shoulder, skeptically. “Relax, yes? It's only a moment. We can't wire everything.”
“Oh,” David said. He glanced at Laura. Laura stood clutching the tote as the elevator descended. Yeah, they'd lost the armor of television, and here they stood helpless: Andrei and Carlotta could jump them ⦠jab them with knockout needles.⦠They'd wake up somewhere strapped to tables with dope-crazed voodoo doctors sewing little poisoned time bombs into their brains.â¦
Andrei and Carlotta stood flat-footed, with the patient, bovine look of people in elevators. Nothing whatever happened.
The doors slid open. Laura and David rushed out into the corridor, clutching their headsets. Long, long seconds of crackling static. Then a quick staccato whine of datapulse. Finally, high-pitched anxious shouting in Spanish.
“We're fine, fine, just a little break,” Laura told Mrs. Rodriguez. David reassured her at length, in Spanish. Laura missed the words, but not the distant tone of voice: frantic little-old-lady fear, sounding weak and tremulous. Of course, good old Mrs. Rodriguez, she was only worried for them; but despite herself, Laura felt annoyed. She adjusted her glasses and straightened self-consciously.
Andrei was waiting for them, suffering fools gladly, holding a side door. Beyond it was a scrubbing room, with shower stalls and stainless-steel sinks under harsh blue light, and air that smelled of soap and ozone. Andrei yanked open a rubber-sealed locker. Its shelves were stacked with fresh-pressed scrub garments in surgical green: tunics, drawstring pants, hairnets and surgical masks, even little crinkly, tie-on galoshes.
“Mrs. Rodriguez,” David said, excited. “Looks like we need a Rizome bio-tech online.”
Andrei stretched over a sink, catching an automatic drip feed of pink disinfectant. He lathered up vigorously. Beside him, Carlotta caught water in a sterile paper cup. Laura saw her palm a red Romance pill from her purse. She knocked it back with the ease of long practice.
From within her tote, Loretta wrinkled up her little eyes. She didn't like the scrub room's light, or maybe it was the smell. She whimpered rhythmically, then began screaming. Her yells echoed harshly from the walls and scared her into new convulsions of effort. “Oh, Loretta,” Laura chided her. “And you've been so good lately, too.” She kicked down the tote's wire rocker stand and rocked it on the floor; but Loretta only turned tomato-red and flung her chubby arms wildly. Laura checked her diaper and sighed. “Can I change her in here, Andrei?”
Andrei was rinsing his neck; he pointed with his elbow at a disposal chute. Laura dug in the back of the tote and unrolled the changing pad from its tube. “That's cute,” Carlotta said, crowding up and peering over her shoulder. “Like a window shade.”
“Yeah,” Laura said. “See, you press this button on the side, and little bubble-cell padding pops up.” She spread the pad over a laminated counter and set Loretta on it. The baby wailed in existential terror.
Her little kicking rump was caked with shit. By this time, Laura had learned to look at it without really seeing it. She cleaned it deftly with an oiled napkin, not saying anything.
Carlotta was squeamish and looked away, at the tote. “Wow! This thing is really intricate! Hey look, these flaps pop out and you can make it into a baby bath ⦔
“Hand me the powder, Carlotta.” Laura puffed dry spray on the baby's rump and sealed her in a new diaper. Loretta howled like a lost soul.
David came up. “You get scrubbed, I'll take her.” Loretta had one look at her father's surgical mask and screamed in anguish. “For heaven's sake,” David said.
[“You shouldn't take your baby into a bio-hazard zone,”] said a new voice online.
“You don't think so?” David shouted. “She won't like wearing the mask, that's for sure.”
Carlotta looked up. “I could take her,” she said meekly.
[“Don't trust her,”] online said at once.
“We can't let the baby out of our sight,” David told Carlotta. “You understand.”
“Well,” Carlotta said practically, “I could wear Laura's headset. And that way, Atlanta could watch everything I did. And meanwhile Laura would be safe with you.”
Laura hesitated. “My earplug's custom-made.”
“It's flexible, I could wear it for a while. C'mon, I can do it, I'd like to.”
“What do you think, online?” David said.
[“It's me, Millie Syers, from Raleigh,”] online told them. [“You remember. John and I and our boys were in your Lodge, last May.”]
“Oh, hello,” Laura said. “How are you, Professor Syers?”
[“Well, I got over my sunburn.”] Millie Syers laughed. [“And please don't call me Professor, it's very non-R. Anyway, if you want my advice, I wouldn't leave any baby of mine with some data pirate dressed like a hooker.”]
“She
is
a hooker,” David said. Carlotta smiled.
[“Well! I guess that explains it. Must not see many babies in her line of work.⦠Hmmm, if she wore Laura's rig, I suppose I could watch what she did, and if she tries anything I could scream. But what's to keep her from dropping the glasses and running off with the baby?”]
“We're in the middle of a supertanker, Millie,” David said. “We got about three thousand Grenadians all around us.”
Andrei looked up from tying his galoshes. “Five thousand, David,” he said, over the baby's piercing sobs. “Are you not sure you are both carrying this a bit far? All these little quibbles of security?”
“I promise she'll be all right,” Carlotta said. She raised her right hand, with the center finger bent down into the palm. “I swear it by the Goddess.”
[“Good heavens, she's one ofâ”] said Millie Syers, but Laura lost the rest as she stripped off her rig. It felt glorious to have it out of her head. She felt free and clean for the first time in ages; a weird feeling, with the sudden strange urge to jump in a shower stall and soap down.
She locked eyes with Carlotta. “All right, Carlotta. I'm trusting you, with what I love best in the world. You understand that, don't you? I don't have to say anything more.”
Carlotta nodded soberly, then shook her head.
Laura scrubbed and got quickly into the gear. The baby's howling was driving them out of the room.
Andrei ushered them to another elevator, at the back of the scrub room. She looked back one last time at the door and saw Carlotta walking back and forth with the baby, singing.
Andrei stepped in after them, turned his back, and pushed the button. “We're losing the signal again,” David warned. The steel doors slid shut.
They descended slowly. Suddenly Laura was shocked to feel David tenderly pat her ass. She jumped and stared at him.
“Hey, babe,” he murmured. “We're offline. Wow.”
He was starved for privacy.
And here they had almost thirty seconds of it. As long as Andrei didn't turn and look.
She glanced at David in frustration, wanting to tell him ⦠what? To reassure him that it wasn't so bad. And that she felt it, too. And that they could tough it out together, but he'd better behave himself. And yeah, that it was a funny thing to do, and she was sorry she was jumpy.
But absolutely none of it could get across to him. With the surgical mask and the gold-etched glasses, David's face had turned totally alien. No human contact.
The doors opened; there was a sudden rush of air and their ears popped. They turned left into another hall. “It's okay, Millie,” David said distractedly. “We're fine, leave Carlotta alone.⦔
He kept mumbling from behind his mask, shaking his head and talking into the air. Like a madman. It was odd how peculiar it looked when you weren't doing it yourself. This hall looked peculiar, too: strangely funky and makeshift, the ceiling tilted, the walls out of true. It was
cardboard
, that was itâbrown cardboard and thin wire mesh, but all of it lacquered over with a thick, steel-hard ooze of translucent plastic. The lights overhead were wired with extension cord, cheap old household extension cord, all stapled to the ceiling and sealed under thick lacquered gunk. It was all stapled, there wasn't a nail in it anywhere. Laura touched the wall, wondering. It was quality plastic, slick and hard as porcelain, and she knew from the feel of it that a strong man couldn't dent it with an axe.
But there was so much of itâand it cost so much to make! Yeah, but maybe not so muchâif you didn't pay insurance, or worker's comp, and never shut down for safety inspections, and didn't build failsafes and crashproof control systems and log every modification in triplicate. Sure; even nuclear power was cheap if you played fast and loose.
But bio-safety rules were ten times as strict, or supposed to be. Maybe plutonium was bad, but at least it couldn't jump out of a tank and grow by itself.
“This hall is made of
cardboard
!” David said.
“No, it's thermal epoxy over cardboard,” Andrei told him. “You see that plug? Live steam. We can boil this entire hall at any moment. Not that we would need to, of course.”
At the hall's end, they stopped by a tall sealed hatchway. It had the international symbol of bio-hazard: the black-and-yellow, triple-horned circle. Good graphic design, Laura thought as Andrei worked the hatch wheel; as frightening in its elegant way as a skull and crossbones.
They stepped through.
They emerged on a landing of lacquered bamboo. It stood forty feet in the air, overlooking a steel cavern the size of an aircraft hangar. They'd reached a section of the supertanker's hold; its floorâthe steel hullâwas gently curved. And littered with surreal machinery, like the careless toys of some giant ten-year-old with a taste for chemistry sets.
The cardboard corridor, and their bamboo landing, and its sloping, spidery catwalks, were all bolted to a monster bulkhead at their backs. The hangar's far bulkhead rose in the distance, a great gray wall of girder-stiffened steelâthis one spread with a giant polychrome mural. A mural of men and women in berets and fatigue shirts, marching under banners, their pie-cut painted eyes as big as basketballs, fixed in midair ⦠their brown arms rounded and monolithic, gleaming like wax in a strange underwater glare.
The hangar's eerie lighting flowed from liquid chandeliers. They were glass-bottomed steel tubs, big as children's wading pools, full of cool and oozy radiance. Thick, white, luminescent goo. It threw weird shadows on the dents and ripples of the cardboard ceiling.
It was loud here: industrial chugging and gurgling, with the busy whir of loaded motors and the thrum and squeal of plumbing. The warm, moist air smelled bland and pleasant, like boiled rice. With strange reeks cutting throughâthe chemical tang of acid, a chalk-dust whiff of lime. A plumber's dope dream: great towers of ribbed stainless steel, jutting three stories tall, their knobby bases snaked with tubing. Indicator lights in Christmas-tree red and green, glossy readout panels shining like cheap jewelry.⦠Scores of crew people in white paper overallsâchecking readouts, leaning over long, glass-topped troughs full of steamy, roiling oatmeal â¦
They followed Andrei down the stairs, David carefully scanning everything and mumbling into his set. “Why aren't they wearing scrub gear?” Laura asked.
“
We
wear the scrub gear,” Andrei said. “It's clean down here. But we have wild bugs on our skin.” He laughed. “Don't sneeze or touch things.”
Three flights down, still above the hull, they detoured onto a catwalk. It led to glass-fronted offices, which overlooked the plant from a bamboo pier.
Andrei led them inside. It was quiet and cool in the offices, with filtered air and electric lights. There were desks, phones, office calendars, a fridge beside stacked cartons of canned Pepsi-Cola. Like an office back in the States, Laura thought, looking around. Maybe twenty years behind the times â¦
A door marked
“PRIVATE”
opened suddenly, and an Anglo man backed through it. He was working a pump-piston aerosol spray. He turned and noticed them. “Oh! Hi, uh, Andrei.⦔
“Hello,” Laura said. “I'm Laura Webster, this is David, my husband.⦔
“Oh, it's you folks! Where's your baby?” Unlike everyone they'd seen so far, the stranger wore a suit and tie. It was an old suit, in the flashy “Taipan” style that had been all the rage, ten years ago. “Didn't want to bring the little guy down here, huh? Well it's perfectly safe, you needn't have worried.” He peered at them; light gleamed from his glasses. “You can take off those masks, it's okay inside here.⦠You don't have, like, flu or anything?”