Read The Complete Roderick Online

Authors: John Sladek

Tags: #Artificial Intelligence, #Fiction, #General, #High Tech, #SciFi-Masterwork, #Science Fiction, #Computers

The Complete Roderick (36 page)

BOOK: The Complete Roderick
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‘No point in arguing with you, you just –’

‘Am I right though? Anything is honest to you as long as you don’t make money on it, a profit of zero makes it honest, right?’ He stood up, drawing back the curtain of his jacket to plant a fist on one hip, and pointed at the painted head. ‘That, for instance. Bet you worked out your fee so it just covers your materials, right?’

Lyle mumbled something about a commission for a friend. But Allbright seemed to have forgotten the argument completely, as he found himself confronted with this strangely familiar face, so –

‘Uncanny,’ he said. ‘Uncanny, like the face of John Q. Public but – different. Transfigured. Almost see light coming out of it, that transparent skin … and the symmetry …’

Lyle nodded. ‘Just about finished. If I could just get you and Hannah to sit down and entertain each other …’

‘Yeah sure but what’s this movable jaw – you can’t be making a head for some damn ventriloquist’s dummy or – I mean this would scare the shit out of any audience –’

‘For a robot,’ Hannah said, patting the seat next to her. Allbright noticed that the seat, indeed all the seats and tables in the place, were nothing but stacked cubes formed of identical paperback books. ‘And don’t say there’s no such thing, there is now. Just look at it.’

He sat beside her. ‘The symmetry … and no age, no sex, you can’t even be sure of the race …’

‘That’s the point, isn’t it?’ She handed him a batch of dusty drawings. ‘Take a look at his working sketches, see how he got there?’

‘What’s this, warts all over it?’

‘Rivets,’ said Lyle, examining a needle-sized brush. ‘See, first I figured he ought to look
robotic.
So I tried a lot of crap, faces from
Metropolis,
Egyptian masks even. Hannah finally convinced me he ought to be – well – inhumanly human.’

‘I’ll be damned.’

‘I didn’t convince him of anything he didn’t know already,’ Hannah said. ‘All I said, in so many words, was that we need
tribal deities, lesser gods to – to fill the empty spaces between the people. You understand?’

Allbright nodded. ‘I guess that’s it. What would pass, nowadays, for a tribal deity. Not important, just a, as you said, a household god. A – a pet stranger?’ He tore his gaze away from it. ‘Look I’m sorry about, uh, some of the things I said earlier. To both of you. It’s just that I –’

‘Tell you a funny story,’ said Hannah. ‘See all these books?’

Allbright tore open one of the plastic-wrapped cubes and pulled one book out of it.
‘Die! Die! Your Lordship,
catchy title there. What have you got, a zillion copies here?’

‘The last tenant this publisher, just walked off and left them,’ she said. ‘But we heard the whole story from the landlord. Seems they printed hundreds of thousands of these without noticing the last few pages were missing – where the name of the killer is revealed.’

‘Great! The ultimate mystery.’

‘That’s not all – you want some wine? There’s a glass by your foot there – that’s not the best part. They decided to cut their losses by announcing a prize for the first reader who came up with the correct answer. Only – so the landlord says – the guy that won it, it turned out he’d been on welfare for years – was feebleminded!’

‘Fair enough, you don’t have to be an Einstein –’

‘No but listen, the welfare people had him arrested for fraud and froze his prize money, and I guess they’re still fighting it out in court – and listen, the whole case –’ She was laughing so hard she could hardly pour the wine. ‘Listen the whole case hinges on the solution to this stupid mystery. His lawyers claim he got the right answer by accident, and the publishers – rather than lose the prize and get no publicity for it – they’re suing to get it back, claiming he got the wrong answer after all!’

‘Yeah, what does the author say?’

‘That’s just it, they kept stalling around about producing him, so I hear, and finally had to admit the author was a –’

‘A what? Sounded like you said a computer.’

‘I – I did. And the computer’s been erased or something, so nobody – nobody knows – ha ha ha, the ultimate mystery!’

Lyle worked on, putting the last touches as the light began to
fail. The others lolled on unfinished mysteries, drinking wine and trading computer stories. Allbright, his shirt and shoes off, was beginning to mutter about the C-charged brain.

‘You know what? I think that head wants a drink. Hey head, you wanna drink?’ He stood up, lifted his sloshing glass, and stumbled towards the pedestal.

‘Stop it! Stop it!’ Lyle had a terrible flash of premonition: wine pouring down the face, the indelible purple stain …

‘Good God! You didn’t have to hit him that hard,’ said Hannah in the semi-darkness. ‘Is he all right?’

‘Put on the lights.’ The head was unscathed. Its empty eye-sockets stared back at them across the floor where, amid signs of a struggle, Allbright lay face down, sprawled awkwardly as any body on any drawing-room hearth rug.

‘Damn you! Damn you!’ Hannah said, and it was not clear whether she was cursing Lyle Tate or his creation. She knelt, turned the body over, and removed her false teeth. ‘Not breaving,’ she said. ‘Get an ambulanf.’

‘I’ll have to go downstairs –’

‘Hurry!’

But when he returned, Allbright was sitting up, mumbling about the C-charged brain. ‘Addiction is just addiction …’ he said, and was still trying to say it right when the ambulance men had come and gone, cursing art and artists.

It was only then that Lyle noticed the head had been moved; lifted from its pedestal and put back wrong.

‘What the hell did you do? Hannah? Did you –?’

‘Don’t worry, the paint’s not smeared, I was careful. It was just that – you see I’m old, not enough breath in my body to revive him. I had to call – other sources for the kiss of life.’

‘That?
You think
that
fibreglass shell with paint on it, could bring the dead to life?’

‘… not the Burroughs adding …’

‘Maybe it can’t,’ she said. ‘I just felt I had to try everything. Who knows, maybe just the smell of the paint shocked him – eh? Back into his body?’

‘Back into –! Jesus Christ Jane, next thing you’ll be levitating over in Dr Tarr’s fancy new lab, a fat grant from NASA to find out if birds read each others’ minds, how do you like that? Or is it
psychic levitation now, NASA’s real interested there, bound to like the idea of mind-powered space flight. Trouble is most of the people in Tarr’s profession couldn’t work up the brain power to levitate birdshit in a hurricane.’

‘Look I know how you feel about, I know you don’t believe in psychic pow –’

‘Can’t afford to, I’m a painter. And what Tarr and his crowd want to do is put painters out of business, put damn near everybody out of business …’

‘I don’t see that at all.’ She sat down next to Allbright, who was pouring himself a drink and talking to it.

‘Well what’s the point of anybody going to a gallery to look at a Dürer? See, anybody can just be like this psychic Mathew Manning, whip out his own Dürer at home in a couple of hours, no previous training required. Or writing, why write a novel when you can be like this South American whatsisname, go in for automatic writing and knock out a novel in a week? Jesus it kind of makes a dumb joke out of everything anybody ever worked at, right? Take this Rosemary Brown, she’s even finished Schubert’s Unfinished Symphony … so what’s the point of anything?’

‘… funny dream …,’ said Allbright. The others stopped talking and looked at him. ‘Funniest damn dream … dreamed, you know what I dreamed?’

For different reasons, they were almost holding their breaths.

‘Dreamed this damn dummy was trying to kiss me …’

‘Yes?’

‘Yes?’

‘And then this other dummy was trying to bite me in the ass!’

‘My teeth!’ Hannah shrieked. ‘He rolled over on my –!’

All three of them were still giggling over it an hour later, when Sleep closed their eyes.

One liver-spotted hand passed the journal to another. ‘Fascinating article there by this J. Hannah. Proposing a robot culture in which –’

‘What do we know about this Hannah? Is he –?’

‘She.
Jane Hannah, fifty-five-year-old anthropologist, teaching Comparative Literature at the U. of Minnetonka. Two years ago she was predictably hostile to Entities, voted against funding a

project I believe. But – bad luck there, seems her son died. She began to adopt a maternal-protective attitude towards Entities, fill in the blanks, usual hostility towards authority, organized behaviour …’

‘She saw robots as free spirits? Anarchists?’

‘Correct.’ Pipe-smoke curled and writhed through the conference room. ‘Class eight surveillance of course, but this article makes me wonder … class six, maybe?’

‘Are we interested in her contacts?’

‘Nothing significant so far, writers and artists, petty malcontents. But the article itself –’

‘Maybe we could check it with Leo?’

‘Leo, yes, so I thought. Let’s toddle over there now, I’ll summarize it for you on the way.’

The two old men made their way through the maze of corridors and security barriers of Building A, Orinoco Institute, emerging in the desert sun like lizards creeping out to bask.

‘Mmm, feel that sun!’

‘Mmm. What she’s done is tried to trace the origin of the
idea
of Entities – robots, that is – in Middle Europe. In Czechoslovakia especially. Evidently the home of Celts began there, the only “empire” without an emperor or a seat of government. She tries to link that with the Celtic religions, worship of the head, which they recognized as the centre of the intellect.’

‘I don’t see
that
as signif –’

‘She claims they tried to keep heads alive after death, and regenerate. Certainly true that they believed in reincarnation, at any rate.’

‘Ha! What will Leo make of
that
!’

‘Anyway she then goes on to point out all the Czech rebellions and revolutions, beginning as I recall with the Hussites, Taborites, brings in the Waldenses somewhere …’

‘Sounds cranky.’

‘Oh it is, it is. Finds significance in the merest coincidences, fact that they met on Mount Tabor, almost
robot
backwards; fact that one of the Taborites was named Čapek, that he preached a bloodbath kill all sinners – very like the bloodbath initiated by robots in
R.U.R.,
so was he an ancestor of Karel Čapek or what?’

‘Look, what’s the point of all this? Some nut pieces together a half-baked theory – do we really care?’

The other man stopped him, putting a weightless hand on his arm. ‘We have to care. Not what she says – but what people make of it. This is, this is just the
worst
scenario we examined.’

Lizard eyes blinked. The desert sun glared down at these two slight figures, creeping along one white concrete path from one white concrete building to another. But all around was dark grass, cooled by sprinklers. Ignoring rainbows, the two men walked on.

‘That’s not all, of course. She points out all the events that took place in Prague. The famous
golem
story, you know it? Rabbi Low of Prague,
der Hohe Rabbi –
you do know it? Okay then, how about the Infant of Prague? Seems to be the only Christian statue that isn’t a statue at all – it’s a jointed doll, with real clothes.’

‘Well well. Is there more?’

‘Much. She traces the revolution of 1618, successive occupations by Austro-Hungaria, Nazi Germany and Russia, the Czechs never quite knuckling under to their puppet governments (her phrase) as demonstrated in their literature, she cites Kafka’s
Metamorphosis
as an exploration of the old mind-body problem that so intrigued the Celts, Hasek’s
The Good Soldier Schweik
as a “cheerful robot” satire, Čapek’s
R. U.R.
of course; and even a very late item, a play written in 1968 by Vaclav Havel –’

‘The year of the Soviet tank invasion, wasn’t it?’

‘Exactly. And in this play the main character is a machine whose sole function, not so fast, you know I can’t walk fast since my op –’

‘Sorry. I’m sorry.’

‘Sole function is to investigate human character.
Puzuk,
I believe it’s called – ah! Good to be out of that sun!’

They entered the labyrinthine corridors of Building B, finally entering a dim, quiet room. The walls were lined with computer cabinets, and at the far end stood Leo’s ‘fish-tank’.

A young attendant in white rushed over to them.

‘Gendemen, I’m afraid this is a restric – oh, sorry, sir.’

‘’S all right,’ said the senior man. ‘You must be new here, eh? Heh heh, how do you like baby-sitting with Leo?’

The attendant hovered at his elbow as the three of them moved towards the tank. ‘Leo, sir?’

‘That.’ The senior man pointed to the floating brain. ‘That’s Leo Bunsky, at one time just about the best applications man in his field. Still is I guess – poor bastard. Oh, we’ve got some data here, like Leo to have a look at it.’

‘Yes sir, right away.’

The liver-spotted hands gave up the journal and then clasped. ‘Poor bastard thinks he’s still alive, you know? Still thinks he’s working on a robot project, Project Rubber Dick, something like that. Naturally we can’t disillusion him now, he might clam up on us.’

‘Yes sir well now I’ll just enter this data –’

‘Good man, Leo. Don’t know how we’d ever stop the propagation of Entities without him, gave us some of our most valuable scenarios. Kind of Devil’s advocate –
Hello there Leo
!’

The reptilian eyes, half-closed with amusement, stared down at the motionless brain. ‘Good man, old Leo.’

Pa leaned forward while Roderick adjusted his pillow. ‘Thanks. Now let’s see what this so-called newspaper has to say. Great thing about convalescence, you don’t feel so guilty wasting time like this – might even start watching TV if I listen to this:’

XMAS PLAGUE STRIKES 5 MORE KIDS

400 Cases – Health Dept Baffled

The mysterious ‘Christmas plague’ which has so far infected over 400 children across the State, causing two deaths, has struck again. Five new cases are reported in Newer, county seat of Stubbs County. State Health Department officials, while admitting the disease has no cause they can isolate, assure the public there is no cause for alarm. ‘The symptoms are somewhat similar to those of certain types of mercury poisoning,’ said a spokesman. ‘We can’t rule that out, but it doesn’t seem likely at this stage. There just isn’t any mercury pollution going on, that we know of. We’re sending our best investigative team to Stubbs County right away,’ he added. ‘Headed by a very capable man, Dr Sam Death.’

BOOK: The Complete Roderick
9.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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