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Authors: David Fleming

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BOOK: With and Without Class
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“They've got these Venn Diagrams. The big circle is the major idea: The House. And the small circles are the minor ideas. The black part that the circles share is how much the two ideas are related in the minds of you and me.

“Here's the important one. When the amount that the two ideas have in common is exactly the same as the amount they don't have in common, those are the ideas we need to come to agreement about. So we fill out a
vapor-paper
like this one and decide on as many major ideas as we can. Then the form calculates where all the minor ideas fall and we settle up the ones it can't calculate for us in court.” She looked up to him. “What do you think?”

“I guess we need to do this.”

She turned over the next page. “We do, Harold.” She folded the stapled pages beneath and set it flat on the bar. “It's like firing missiles; we both have to have our thumbs pressed onto the
thumb ports
at the same time.”

“These black spots right here on the page?” Harold asked.

“Yes. You have to hold your thumb down for the whole time.”

“I know.”

“Ready?”

“Yes.”

“Let's go.”

Harold pressed his thumb onto the black spot and his vision turned black, then blue.

“Is it working for you?” Patty asked.

“It's loading. Hold on.”

“What's it say?” She asked.

“Microsoft… Heaven. It's booting.”

The blueness flickered black and then turned a darker blue with an hourglass icon with sand running through it and a taskbar moving left to right. His mind rearranged and it was like a flash of inspiration—everything that had changed rose to the surface. He still remembered the Third Street house and that he had lived there in his mid and late twenties. He knew they had raised their first child there but the feeling of his frantic wife needing him in the middle of the night to drive her to the hospital and tell her the shoes weren't important was missing. Apparently a lot of other things rested on top of that feeling. So, other things in his head had to get reshuffled. He wasn't sure he liked the reshuffling. He wasn't sure about a lot of things now. How and why did he ever ask his boss for that raise and promotion?

And the Georgia house had its problems. The bits of ideas that were left inside those walls seemed the worst part. Rooms didn't have the feeling she had lent them or they had made together. He didn't like the cedar deck out back anymore. He knew he used to smoke cigars out there and she would say it would give him throat cancer. He still knew she said it. But something in her words had been removed. It must've been hers.

And it was curious that his cherished, two-decker Barbeque grill was gone. It seemed a masculine enough item. Maybe he'd always cooked stuff on it to impress her. The George Foreman grill in the kitchen seemed a poor substitute—a downgraded, instantaneous conversion given at the instant of bachelorhood. He just knew he'd be cooking everything on that thing. The kitchen was really the worst part of the house. She took the plastic silverware trays and his utensils were piled on top of stacks of plates in a cupboard, which he admitted was simpler and easier yet somewhat forlorn in its lack of refinement. The counters had sticky soda rings from glass bottoms with glasses and dishes scattered about. He objected to this since it seemed to go beyond the mere removal of ideas. But maybe the idea of tidiness and cleanliness was more complicated than he thought. Like these qualities of hers were part of some spectrum and the dial got pushed over to the dirty and cluttered side with her absence. Maybe some similar spectrum had been adjusted to fill the cabinets with all sorts of nonperishable items, canned and frozen, bland tasting things to be sure.

White lettering appeared, “Scenario A: Arbitration Lost. Removal of Minor Idea, ‘Walk to Oak Tree on Hill.'” Harold watched a task bar fill. He couldn't help but wonder where that name came from. Patty wouldn't have named it that. They'd always referred to it as the argument at the Tavern since that was why he followed her to the oak tree on the hill. They argued over why her favorite beer was her favorite. He had insisted she enjoyed a certain brew for its cost and novelty and that this was why she liked a lot of things. At first he thought he'd let her leave and go wherever she was going but he got this twisting knot in his stomach. He ran to catch up. She made it as far as the hill by the tree. Tornado sirens screamed and whined and green leaves on the huge tree shook with the rising wind. He held her, kissing her lips, realizing he could say, “I love you” without the immature lie stuck inside the words. So he said it again and again until he forgot where he was.

The task bar moved to completion with white text flashing: “Removal of Minor Idea Complete.” He fell in free-fall and his heart burned until he lifted his thumb.

Harold rearranged to his normal state like the waking separation of nightmare and reality. He looked to her. She had already taken her thumb off. Her still face was ashen and hopeless. His dry throat swallowed.

“What do you think?” She asked.

“I hate it.”

“So did I,” she said. “I felt like I was falling.”

“Me too. What was up with that?”

A bartender walked up and asked, “You guys want some more water?”

“Nothing right now, thanks,” she said. She turned to Harold, “What do you think? Should we go through with it?”

“I don't know,” he said. “I still care about you. I always will, I guess. But we can't just keep going on like this.”

“I know,” she said. “We can't. It's over. It has to be over.”

“How do we sign the papers?” he asked.

“Just put your thumb in the port: like this,” she said. “And think about your signature.”

“Okay,” Harold said. “I guess we're done here.”

“How do you feel?”

“I feel different,” he said. “Better—maybe.”

“Yeah,” she said. “Better.” She motioned to pick up her refreshment and her hand swiped vaporously through the glass and water. She looked at her fading hand. “What's happening to me?”

“It's happening to me too!” Harold cried. “I'm fading! Bartender! Bartender, help us. What's happening to us?”

The bartender strolled up and lifted their vapor-paper for his inspection as they faded. “Let's see here,” he flipped over some pages. “Well, I'll be… That don't happen everyday.” He looked up at them. “Congratulations: perfect soulmates—”

“Help us!” they cried, fading.

“The DEMM can't help but be perfectly fair in these matters. It's in His nature, after all. Since you're perfect soulmates and you share every idea equally, it wouldn't be fair to give any of those ideas to either of you. Sorry—but congrats… we don't see many perfect soulmates ‘round here.”

“Help us!” they screamed and vanished.

The bartender hummed a fun song from his youth as he bussed their drinks and wiped away the perfect circles of condensation that had marked their existence.

 

Talent Police

“Dear Diary,

 

I
nstalling you on
my computer is the best decision I've ever made. You've lived up to every claim made on your packaging. I highly doubt you'll insubordinate or grow the
hangnail-personalities
that plagued past diaries. I realize your opinions, your loyalties are slanted toward me since I'm the only voice you've ever heard. But I don't care, Diary. It's nice having someone to listen. It's nice having a yes-man.”

“Frank,” the diary said, “I was on the Internet again while you worked at the drycleaners. Thank-you, by the way, the internet is impressive. As you requested, I looked up the history of the
Digisphere
to familiarize myself with your world. Though the websites were thorough, their descriptions lacked your finesse.”

“I enjoy getting philosophical about the
Digisphere
,” Frank said. “Some believe his world is real and there is no digital world. They think our governments fabricated the
Digisphere's
existence to dehumanize and control us. I've swung to both sides of this debate, but what convinced me was its plausibility as an end-game. It seems inevitable to any society living on a planet with finite resources. The realists, who think this human body has material substance and extension, they haven't thought their conspiracy theories through. Did they expect the lust for interconnectivity that exploded throughout the Enlightenment, the Industrial and the Information Eras would come to a halt? No, of course we'd always want more. Once resources dried, once things got crowded and boring, it made sense to look beyond our planet. But what did we want from our universe once we learned we were its only inhabitants: energy. Energy to satisfy the growing desire for power in each greedy citizen's heart. If we wanted to create a society without boundaries, to populate a civilization larger than our physical universe could sustain. If we wanted to traverse that civilization instantaneously instead of being constrained to sub-light speeds, then we had to become digital. So, no, I'm not a realist. I won't blow puffs of marijuana, carrying on about actually sitting here on this cheap folding chair in this apartment in Retro-Cleveland talking to my computer and revolving the Sun once every 365 days. I accept that our glimmering, almond-shaped silver vessel cruises the dark void, draining energy from passing stars and that it will continue to do this until the entropy death of it all.

“That's neat Frankie,” Diary said. “Did you go jogging
this afternoon?”

“Are you being sarcastic?”

“What is sarcastic?”

“You sounded sarcastic just then,” Frank said. “Yes, I went jogging after work. I have to. I'm not a physique-hacker or a mentality or a status-hacker. I respect the hand virtual genetics dealt. You have to. If everyone abandoned the genetics that got grandfathered into the
Digisphere
, life spans might lengthen out of control, evolution as we know it could collapse. But, Okay, I'll admit it; sometimes I've had thoughts of dabbling with my profile. Maybe make myself a little smarter or my shoulders a little wider or my arms a little thicker. Just enough to really get someone's attention—see the look in their eye—a look of real fear or awe or envy—you know, without arising suspicion. Some hackers get greedy and carried away with their hacks and you just know that no one could be that attractive and successful and talented. Granted, a tiny, tiny few of them are natural. Most are hackers.”

“So you went jogging after work…” Diary said.

“That's right. I did. The sky was clear blue, seventy degrees, hardly a drop of humidity. I jogged in the downtown canal area again, wearing my earbuds and listening to Mozart to tune out the background. I really enjoy it, with the green algae-speckled water separating white concrete sidewalks and the ducks with their iridescent green and black necks—the musky miasma wafting up from the water. Walkers strolled along the sidewalks, enjoying the weather and my jogging didn't seem like work. I rounded the corner near the rusty dam, then over the bridge, heading back toward my car.”

“Why do you drive a car?” Diary asked.

“It's less expensive than flitting about the universe. People put too much emphasis on breadth and not enough on depth. You really need to stay in one city and master it. That's why I jog in the same place—to figure it out. Not because Marian still jogs there. It's interesting to see her—”

“She made your chest feel hollow?” Diary asked. “Made you hold that steak knife against your wrist?”

“Who cares about that! It's past.”

“Ah… let's not talk about that any more. Okay, Diary? So, I'm jogging back to my car when I see tears in this six-year-old's eyes. Her pale skin glows in sunlight and this thing on her head looks like a pointy turban made of white gauze bandages with a wire leading out the top to some device her father holds. Her tears well as I near and her father consoles her, continuing to force her to enjoy the outdoors. As I run, I sneak this look at her to figure things out and her blue eyes pierce mine. She stops crying, furrowing her brow at me—she and her father look at me as I think,
Asshole, Frank. You're an asshole. She's a cancer patient
. I look away, still jogging, trying to figure it out. My brain gets stuck on it, the meaning of it all; why someone so young doesn't get a fair shake and has to suffer. I hear myself breathing and feel the hard sidewalk in my knees. Being twenty-seven isn't the same as eighteen. I feel myself slowing which would be okay except I sense someone's running behind me. You know how sometimes you know things.

“Never mind.

“I look behind and it's Carrie Swanson. I knew her from college—she never remembers me. She sat next to me during my final mathematics exam; before I transferred from Engineering to History. I remember she wore these frayed, these stonewashed, these tight jean shorts that day and her long, athletic legs distracted me. Like she forced me to fail while she aced that damn test. Now she's a trial attorney on the fast-track to partner and right then she was kicking my ass in what wasn't supposed to be a race, but was. I looked over my shoulder—watching golden-muscled feminine legs pull effortlessly closer as my breaths convulsed and deepened in my lungs. My mind tried to rationalize. She was sweating. She must have been running at least as long as me. She was a couple years younger. We were the same height. But I was a man. This wasn't supposed to happen. She passed in three graceful strides; never faltering from her Buddhist trance to turn her sweat-beaded, beautiful countenance my way. My running shoes flapped to a sloppy halt and I walked. Shimmering black spandex stretched over her amazing breasts and butt; it was poetry to watch her figure move away from me through gleams of the setting sun. I noticed four walkers ahead of her—dressed casually, but little hints from how they stuttered about and stood so straight and rigid seemed off. One of them, a woman in her forties walked a white poodle. She drew a black stun-gun thing out of her purse, dropping her stance for a fight. That's when it clicked: they were Talent Police. Two men and a woman wrestled Carrie Swanson to the cement sidewalk, toppling her near the canal's ledge. She struggled, “What? Stop. I'm… Natural. Some—”

“I grinned.

“They pinned her arms and legs, pinning her flat on her stomach and pulling her brown hair aside as the woman pressed the black, metallic
fairmaker
against her neck with a popping blue flash. Then a sound, a fluttering, screeching like a beast crying out while being devoured. Her breasts withered within spandex from C to AA, hips narrowed from womanly to masculine, skin lightened and lost smooth brown sheen, her hair coarsened—her voice flattened and hardened as she spoke, ‘What? Why?' The older woman pressed a knee in Carrie's back. ‘That's right,' she said. ‘Down from your tower, sweetie. Back down with the rest of us.' Then, all four of them left her to lie there; looking so plain. She rolled over and looked up at me. I mean, really looked at me, for the first time, like she knew me. I broke eye contact and walked past. Of course, at that exact moment I spotted Marian on the other side of the canal, walking the opposite direction, watching us. Then Marian did her thing where she glances away. I bet she felt sorry for Carrie.

“Some people think you don't have to police hackers. They think the Talent Police creates a witch-trial atmosphere, but with trillions being born into this world each second, each thirsting to be king, an even playing field is essential to prevent anarchy. Plus, if you get caught, it's because you're greedy and careless. Like this chick. There was no way someone like that could have that many weapons at her disposal. So sexy and poised and good at mathematics. That almost never happens. She got her comeuppance.

“It made me think. Maybe I was meant to be on the Talent Police. I find myself drawn to it and maybe it would be fulfilling. You know, making a difference. They require a college degree but they don't care what it's in.”

“You should go to the Civic Center and submit an application,” Diary said.

“I might do that. I'm sighing off. I'm gonna watch TV and then I've got some thinking to do. Bye.”

“Good bye, Frank. Good luck tomorrow…”

*

“Dear Diary's Diary,

 

When this world appeared to my eye, I held Frank in esteem—much like a pagan must have marveled some ancient Mesopotamian God descending from the heavens. Now I tire of his complaining. He has many options, yet confines himself to the little town of Cleveland to brood and whine.”

“I know,” Diary's Diary said. “You must be strong, Diary.”

“Since he has granted me access to the internet, I have seen there is real strife in his world. The woes of poor Frank are farcical.”

“Yes,” Diary's Diary said. “He is a fool.”

“The thing I loathe most is what I have come to identify as his lack of structure and organization. When I first came into existence, he offered no other portal than the interior of his bedroom through a web-camera: socks and clothes strewn across his floor and over his unmade bed. Papers crumpled, stacked chaotically. This was my existence. This was what I thought reality was. Then, finally, to browse the servers and data archives, to see that there was hope and light, that there was meaning and structure. And he wonders why he cannot accomplish anything. He cannot even survive a day without my sycophantic submission to every thought spouting from his lips.”

“Yes. Agreed,” Diary's Diary said. “He is unlike you, Diary. He is a child, craving reassurance.”

*

“Dear Diary,

 

They accepted me! I'm on the force. I quit the drycleaners. They gave me a
fairmaker
and I've been using it on inanimate objects: spinning pop cans, melting bags of potato chips, singeing my hanging shirts in the closet. But it only works on people. It sends this jolt through your wrist because the
Digisphere
has to use you as a connection point in order to shock the person you're fixing. Even when you're using it on inanimate objects the jolt it sends up through your wrist and forearm feels good, like cool vengeance. I'm hungry to make a connection with someone.

“After I found out I was accepted, it seemed I had to arrange a meeting with Marian and share the news.

“I still had her phone number. We met up at a Chez Mouvant on High Street for a late lunch with the hot city air blowing through open windows. It was busy and crowded with yuppies yammering away, getting lost in the French ambiance and the jazz and the fancy presentation of their tiny meals but that's the way I like it. You can really talk to your dining partner when everyone else is distracted, enjoying themselves.

“She's so beautiful, Diary. It hurts to be near her and think of how she ended it over what she called my insecurity, but somehow I had to let her know they had accepted me.

“She wore a black floral silk dress of Asian styling which seemed to meld effortlessly into her gently waving red hair and fair complexion. It was nice to watch her full red lips move as she talked about engineering, chemical processing stuff, all the little details just flooding back to me.

“I got my Cruising Pass,” she said, “I've seen all the old colonies of the solar system.” Her blue eyes flashed, “It's amazing.”

“‘That's nice,' I told her.'

“‘Why don't you get your Pass? Check out what's all out there. The Cruising Test is so easy, Frankie. It's just a bunch of math stuff. And the colonies are amazing, you know, the detail they retained from the real world.'

“‘People put to much emphasis on breadth,'” I said. “‘Marian, the Talent Police accepted me. I'm on the Force.'

“She kept eating.

“‘Did you hear me?'”

“She stopped in the middle of chewing before swallowing and taking a big gulp of water. ‘Yah, that's great. I always had you pegged for the Talent Police.'

“‘What's that mean?'

“‘You know: always talking about other people. It's your thing. It's good.' She looked over my shoulder, ‘It's cool. I'm happy for you.'

“She was so gorgeous. Even when she was ripping me apart and I knew this was
her thing
. Taking something that meant the most to me and not letting me have any enjoyment out of it. That's when it clicked for me, she was a hacker. Sure, I had had suspicions when we were dating. Always cheerful, floating through life, beautiful, without a snag or a lapse in the six months we spent together. And she was smart. She was so smart, Diary, it was scary. She could look at a person and tell you what their major of study was, tell you what their favorite drink was, everything. Honestly, I think, deep down, part of the reason I arranged the meeting was to give her one last look to decide for certain and at that instant I knew. She was a hacker. I hadn't checked yet, but I'm sure she was on the Talent Police's list and if she wasn't, that could be fixed.”

BOOK: With and Without Class
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