Jim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4 Read online

Page 3


  I got smeared with shit and rot, but I found what I was looking for. The box was nearly a quarter full. I stuffed bread into it, coated the bread thoroughly, and discarded the box back onto the pile.

  "Blue, make the garbage go away."

  It did. Vicious glared at me and snarled. "Nice doggie," I said, "have some bread." I threw pieces and Vicious gobbled them.

  Listening to the results was terrible. Not, however, as terrible as having Vicious tear me apart or Blue vaporize me. The rat poison took all "night" to kill the dog, which thrashed and howled. Throughout, Blue stayed silent. He had picked up some words from me, but he apparently didn't have enough brain power to connect what I'd done with Vicious's death. Or maybe he just didn't have enough experience with humans. What does a machine know about survival?

  "This dog is dead," Blue said in the "morning."

  "Yes. Make it go away." And then, before Blue could get there first, I jumped off my platform and pointed to a cage. "This dog will behave correctly next."

  "No."

  "Why not this dog?"

  "Not big."

  "Big. You want big." Frantically I scanned the cages, before Blue could choose another one like Vicious. "This one, then."

  "Why the hell not?" Blue said.

  * * *

  It was young. Not a puppy but still frisky, a mongrel of some sort with short hair of dirty white speckled with dirty brown. The dog looked liked something I could handle: big but not too big, not too aggressive, not too old, not too male. "Hey, Not-Too," I said, without enthusiasm, as Blue dissolved her cage. The mutt dashed over to me and tried to lick my boot.

  A natural-born slave.

  I had found a piece of rotten, moldy cheese in the garbage, so Blue could now make cheese, which Not-Too went crazy for. Not-Too and I stuck with the same routine I used with Mangy, and it worked pretty well. Or the cheese did. Within a few "days" the dog could sit, stay, and follow on command.

  Then Blue threw me a curve. "What to do now? The presentation."

  "We had the presentation," I said. "I don't need to see it again."

  "What to do now? The presentation."

  "Fine," I said, because it was clear I had no choice. "Let's have the presentation. Roll 'em."

  I was sitting on my elevated platform, combing my hair. A lot of it had fallen out during the malnourished years in the camp, but now it was growing again. Not-Too had given up trying to jump up there with me and gone to sleep on her pillow below. Blue shot the beam out of his sphere and the holo played in front of me.

  Only not the whole thing. This time he played only the brief scene where the big, patchy dog pulled the toddler back from falling into the cesspool. Blue played it once, twice, three times. Cold slid along my spine.

  "You want Not-Too . . . you want this dog here to be trained to save children."

  "This dog here does not behave correctly."

  "Blue . . . how can I train a dog to save a child?"

  "This dog here does not behave correctly."

  "Maybe you haven't noticed, but we haven't got any fucking children for the dog to practice on!"

  Long pause. "Do you want a child?"

  "No!" Christ, he would kidnap one or buy one from the camp and I would be responsible for a kid along with nineteen semi-feral dogs. No.

  "This dog here does not behave correctly. What to do now? The presentation."

  "No, not the presentation. I saw it, I saw it. Blue . . . the other two humans who did not make the dogs behave correctly . . ."

  "Killed."

  "Yes. So you said. But they did get one dog to behave correctly, didn't they? Or maybe more than one. And then you just kept raising the bar higher. Water rescues, guiding the blind, finding lost people. Higher and higher."

  But to all this, of course, Blue made no answer.

  I wracked my brains to remember what I had ever heard, read, or seen about dog training. Not much. However, there's a problem with opening the door to memory: you can't control what strolls through. For the first time in years, my sleep was shattered by dreams.

  I walked through a tiny garden, picking zinnias. From an open window came music, full and strong, an orchestra on CD. A cat paced beside me, purring. And there was someone else in the window, someone who called my name and I turned and—

  I screamed. Clawed my way upright. The dogs started barking and howling. Blue floated from his corner, saying something. And Not-Too made a mighty leap, landed on my platform, and began licking my face.

  "Stop it! Don't do that! I won't remember!" I shoved her so hard she fell off the platform onto the floor and began yelping. I put my head in my hands.

  Blue said, "Are you not operative?"

  "Leave me the fuck alone!"

  Not-Too still yelped, shrill cries of pain. When I stopped shaking, I crawled off the platform and picked her up. Nothing seemed to be broken—although how would I know? Gradually she quieted. I gave her some cheese and put her back on her pillow. She wanted to stay with me but I wouldn't let her.

  I would not remember. I would not. Law #5: Feel nothing.

  * * *

  We made a cesspool, or at least a pool. Blue depressed part of the floor to a depth of three feet and filled it with water. Not-Too considered this a swimming pool and loved to be in it, which was not what Blue wanted ("This water does not behave correctly"). I tried having the robot dump various substances into it until I found one that she disliked and I could tolerate: light-grade motor oil. A few small cans of oil like those in the dump created a polluted pool, not unlike Charleston Harbor. After every practice session I needed a bath.

  But not Not-Too, because she wouldn't go into the "cesspool." I curled myself as small as possible, crouched at the side of the pool, and thrashed. After a few days, the dog would pull me back by my shirt. I moved into the pool. As long as she could reach me without getting any liquid on her, Not-Too happily played that game. As soon as I moved far enough out that I might actually need saving, she sat on her skinny haunches and looked away.

  "This dog does not behave correctly."

  I increased the cheese. I withheld the cheese. I pleaded and ordered and shunned and petted and yelled. Nothing worked. Meanwhile, the dream continued. The same dream, each time not greater in length but increasing in intensity. I walked through a tiny garden, picking zinnias. From an open window came music, full and strong, an orchestra on CD. A cat paced beside me, purring. And there was someone else in the window, someone who called my name and I turned and—

  And woke screaming.

  A cat. I had had a cat, before the War. Before everything. I had always had cats, my whole life. Independent cats, aloof and self-sufficient, admirably disdainful. Cats—

  The dog below me whimpered, trying to get onto my platform to offer comfort I did not want.

  I would not remember.

  "This dog does not behave correctly," day after day.

  I had Blue remove the oil from the pool. But by now Not-Too had been conditioned. She wouldn't go into even the clear water that she'd reveled in before.

  "This dog does not behave correctly."

  Then one day Blue stopped his annoying mantra, which scared me even more. Would I have any warning that I'd failed, or would I just die?

  The only thing I could think of was to kill Blue first.

  * * *

  Blue was a computer. You disabled computers by turning them off, or cutting the power supply, or melting them in a fire, or dumping acid on them, or crushing them. But a careful search of the whole room revealed no switches or wires or anything that looked like a wireless control. A fire in this closed room, assuming I could start one, would kill me, too. Every kind of liquid or solid slid off Blue. And what would I crush him with, if that was even possible? A piece of cheese?

  Blue was also—sort of—an intelligence. You could kill those by trapping them somewhere. My prison-or-sanctuary (depending on my mood) had no real "somewheres." And Blue would just dissolve any structure
he found himself in.

  What to do now?

  I lay awake, thinking, all night, which at least kept me from dreaming, I came up with two ideas, both bad. Plan A depended on discussion, never Blue's strong suit.

  "Blue, this dog does not behave correctly."

  "No."

  "This dog is not operative. I must make another dog behave correctly. Not this dog."

  Blue floated close to Not-Too. She tried to bat at him. He circled her slowly, then returned to his position three feet above the ground. "This dog is operative."

  "No. This dog looks operative. But this dog is not operative inside its head. I cannot make this dog behave correctly. I need a different dog."

  A very long pause. "This dog is not operative inside its head."

  "Yes."

  "You can make another dog behave correctly. Like the presentation."

  "Yes." It would at least buy me time. Blue must have seen "not operative" dogs and humans in the dump; God knows there were enough of them out there. Madmen, rabid animals, druggies raving just before they died, or were shot. And next time I would add something besides oil to the pool; there must be something that Blue would consider noxious enough to simulate a cesspool but that a dog would enter. If I had to, I'd use my own shit.

  "This dog is not operative inside its head," Blue repeated, getting used to the idea. "You will make a different dog behave correctly."

  "Yes!"

  "Why the hell not?" And then, "I kill this dog."

  "No!" The word was torn from me before I knew I was going to say anything. My hand, of its own volition, clutched at Not-Too. She jumped but didn't bite. Instead, maybe sensing my fear, she cowered behind me, and I started to yell.

  "You can't just kill everything that doesn't behave like you want! People, dogs . . . you can't just kill everything! You can't just . . . I had a cat . . . I never wanted a dog but this dog . . . she's behaving correctly for her! For a fucking traumatized dog and you can't just—I had a dog I mean a cat I had. . . . I had. . . ."

  —from an open window came music, full and strong, an orchestra on CD. A cat paced beside me, purring. And there was someone else in the window, someone who called my name and I turned and—

  "I had a child!"

  Oh, God no no no . . . It all came out then, the memories and the grief and the pain I had pushed away for three solid years in order to survive . . . Feel nothing . . . Zack Zack Zack shot down by soldiers like a dog Look, Mommy, here I am Mommy look . . .

  I curled in a ball on the floor and screamed and wanted to die. Grief had been postponed so long that it was a tsunami. I sobbed and screamed; I don't know for how long. I think I wasn't quite sane. No human should ever have to experience that much pain. But of course they do.

  However, it can't last too long, that height of pain, and when the flood passed and my head was bruised from banging it on the hard floor, I was still alive, still inside the Dome, still surrounded by barking dogs. Zack was still dead. Blue floated nearby, unchanged, a casually murderous robot who would not supply flesh to dogs as food but who would kill anything he was programmed to destroy. And he had no reason not to murder me.

  Not-Too sat on her haunches, regarding me from sad brown eyes, and I did the one thing I told myself I never would do again. I reached for her warmth. I put my arms around her and hung on. She let me.

  Maybe that was the decision point. I don't know.

  When I could manage it, I staggered to my feet. Taking hold of the rope that was Not-Too's leash, I wrapped it firmly around my hand. "Blue," I said, forcing the words past the grief clogging my throat, "make garbage."

  He did. That was the basis of Plan B; that Blue made most things I asked of him. Not release, or mercy, but at least rooms and platforms and pools and garbage. I walked toward the garbage spilling from the usual place in the wall.

  "More garbage! Bigger garbage! I need garbage to make this dog behave correctly!"

  The reeking flow increased. Tires, appliances, diapers, rags, cans, furniture. The dogs' howling rose to an insane, deafening pitch. Not-Too pressed close to me.

  "Bigger garbage!"

  The chassis of a motorcycle, twisted beyond repair in some unimaginable accident, crashed into the room. The place on the wall from which the garbage spewed was misty gray, the same fog that the Dome had become when I had been taken inside it. Half a sofa clattered through. I grabbed Not-Too, dodged behind the sofa, and hurled both of us through the onrushing garbage and into the wall.

  A broken keyboard struck me in the head, and the gray went black.

  * * *

  Chill. Cold with a spot of heat, which turned out to be Not-Too lying on top of me. I pushed her off and tried to sit up. Pain lanced through my head and when I put a hand to my forehead, it came away covered with blood. The same blood streamed into my eyes, making it hard to see. I wiped the blood away with the front of my shirt, pressed my hand hard on my forehead, and looked around.

  Not that there was much to see. The dog and I sat at the end of what appeared to be a corridor. Above me loomed a large machine of some type, with a chute pointed at the now-solid wall. The machine was silent. Not-Too quivered and pressed her furry side into mine, but she, too, stayed silent. I couldn't hear the nineteen dogs on the other side of the wall, couldn't see Blue, couldn't smell anything except Not-Too, who had made a small yellow puddle on the floor.

  There was no room to stand upright under the machine, so I moved away from it. Strips ripped from the bottom of my shirt made a bandage that at least kept blood out of my eyes. Slowly Not-Too and I walked along the corridor.

  No doors. No openings or alcoves or machinery. Nothing until we reached the end, which was the same uniform material as everything else. Gray, glossy, hard. Dead.

  Blue did not appear. Nothing appeared, or disappeared, or lived. We walked back and studied the overhead bulk of the machine. It had no dials or keys or features of any kind.

  I sat on the floor, largely because I couldn't think what else to do, and Not-Too climbed into my lap. She was too big for this and I pushed her away. She pressed against me, trembling.

  "Hey," I said, but not to her. Zack in the window Look, Mommy, here I am Mommy look. . . . But if I started down that mental road, I would be lost. Anger was better than memory. Anything was better than memory. "Hey!" I screamed. "Hey, you bastard Blue, what to do now? What to do now, you Dome shits, whoever you are?"

  Nothing except, very faint, an echo of my own useless words.

  I lurched to my feet, reaching for the anger, cloaking myself in it. Not-Too sprang to her feet and backed away from me.

  "What to do now? What bloody fucking hell to do now?"

  Still nothing, but Not-Too started back down the empty corridor. I was glad to transfer my anger to something visible, real, living. "There's nothing there, Not-Too. Nothing, you stupid dog!"

  She stopped halfway down the corridor and began to scratch at the wall.

  I stumbled along behind her, one hand clamped to my head. What the hell was she doing? This piece of wall was identical to every other piece of wall. Kneeling slowly—it hurt my head to move fast—I studied Not-Too. Her scratching increased in frenzy and her nose twitched, as if she smelled something. The wall, of course, didn't respond; nothing in this place responded to anything. Except—

  Blue had learned words from me, had followed my commands. Or had he just transferred my command to the Dome's unimaginable machinery, instructing it to do anything I said that fell within permissible limits? Feeling like an idiot, I said to the wall, "Make garbage." Maybe if it complied and the garbage contained food . . .

  The wall made no garbage. Instead it dissolved into the familiar gray fog, and Not-Too immediately jumped through, barking frantically.

  Every time I had gone through a Dome wall, my situation had gotten worse. But what other choices were there? Wait for Blue to find and kill me, starve to death, curl up and die in the heart of a mechanical alien mini-world I didn't understand.
Not-Too's barking increased in pitch and volume. She was terrified or excited or thrilled . . . How would I know? I pushed through the gray fog.

  Another gray metal room, smaller than Blue had made my prison but with the same kind of cages against the far wall. Not-Too saw me and raced from the cages to me. Blue floated toward me . . . No, not Blue. This metal sphere was dull green, the color of shady moss. It said, "No human comes into this area."

  "Guess again," I said and grabbed the trailing end of Not-Too's rope. She'd jumped up on me once and then had turned to dash back to the cages.

  "No human comes into this area," Green repeated. I waited to see what the robot would do about it. Nothing.

 

    The Grantville Gazette Volumn VI Read onlineThe Grantville Gazette Volumn VIGrantville Gazette, Volume IX Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume IXRing of Fire III Read onlineRing of Fire IIIGrantville Gazette-Volume XIII Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XIIIGrantville Gazette V Read onlineGrantville Gazette V1635: The Eastern Front Read online1635: The Eastern FrontRing of Fire Read onlineRing of FireMother of Demons Read onlineMother of Demons1824: The Arkansas War Read online1824: The Arkansas WarGrantville Gazette 43 Read onlineGrantville Gazette 43Forward the Mage Read onlineForward the MageThe World Turned Upside Down Read onlineThe World Turned Upside DownRing of Fire II Read onlineRing of Fire IIBoundary Read onlineBoundaryGrantville Gazette VI Read onlineGrantville Gazette VI1812: The Rivers of War Read online1812: The Rivers of War1633 Read online1633All the Plagues of Hell Read onlineAll the Plagues of HellGrantville Gazette, Volume 7 Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume 7Worlds Read onlineWorlds1632 Read online1632The Alexander Inheritance Read onlineThe Alexander InheritanceDiamonds Are Forever Read onlineDiamonds Are ForeverThe Philosophical Strangler Read onlineThe Philosophical StranglerGrantville Gazette, Volume VIII Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume VIIIGrantville Gazette-Volume XIV Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XIVGenie Out of the Bottle Read onlineGenie Out of the BottlePyramid Scheme Read onlinePyramid Scheme1636- the China Venture Read online1636- the China VentureGrantville Gazette, Volume XII Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume XIIGrantville Gazette, Volume I Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume IThe Demons of Constantinople Read onlineThe Demons of ConstantinopleThe Macedonian Hazard Read onlineThe Macedonian Hazard1634- the Galileo Affair Read online1634- the Galileo AffairThe Shaman of Karres Read onlineThe Shaman of Karres1636: The Ottoman Onslaught Read online1636: The Ottoman OnslaughtThe Genie Out of the Vat Read onlineThe Genie Out of the VatThe Grantville Gazette Volumn II Read onlineThe Grantville Gazette Volumn II1636: The Saxon Uprising Read online1636: The Saxon Uprising1634 The Baltic War Read online1634 The Baltic War1636: Mission to the Mughals Read online1636: Mission to the Mughals!632: Joseph Hanauer Read online!632: Joseph HanauerGrantville Gazette-Volume XI Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XI1637: The Peacock Throne Read online1637: The Peacock Throne1636: The China Venture Read online1636: The China VentureThe Rats, the Bats & the Ugly Read onlineThe Rats, the Bats & the UglyGrantville Gazette, Volume X Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume XThe Course of Empire Read onlineThe Course of EmpirePyramid Power Read onlinePyramid Power1636: The Devil's Opera Read online1636: The Devil's OperaRing of Fire IV Read onlineRing of Fire IVGrantville Gazette. Volume XX (ring of fire) Read onlineGrantville Gazette. Volume XX (ring of fire)1634: The Baltic War (assiti chards) Read online1634: The Baltic War (assiti chards)The tide of victory b-5 Read onlineThe tide of victory b-51634: The Ram Rebellion Read online1634: The Ram RebellionThe Rats, the Bats and the Ugly trtbav-2 Read onlineThe Rats, the Bats and the Ugly trtbav-2Castaway Resolution Read onlineCastaway ResolutionCouncil of Fire Read onlineCouncil of FireSlow Train to Arcturus Read onlineSlow Train to Arcturus1637_The Volga Rules Read online1637_The Volga RulesBoundary b-1 Read onlineBoundary b-11637: No Peace Beyond the Line Read online1637: No Peace Beyond the LineThe Sorceress of Karres Read onlineThe Sorceress of KarresDestiny's shield b-3 Read onlineDestiny's shield b-3In the Heart of Darkness b-2 Read onlineIn the Heart of Darkness b-2Grantville Gazette.Volume 22 Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume 22Carthago Delenda Est э-2 Read onlineCarthago Delenda Est э-21635: The Eastern Front (assiti shards) Read online1635: The Eastern Front (assiti shards)1812-The Rivers of War Read online1812-The Rivers of WarThe Dance of Time b-6 Read onlineThe Dance of Time b-6Belisarius II-Storm at Noontide Read onlineBelisarius II-Storm at NoontideIron Angels Read onlineIron Angels1636:The Saxon Uprising as-11 Read online1636:The Saxon Uprising as-111812: The Rivers of War tog-1 Read online1812: The Rivers of War tog-1Jim Baens Universe-Vol 1 Num 6 Read onlineJim Baens Universe-Vol 1 Num 6Fortune's stroke b-4 Read onlineFortune's stroke b-41637 The Polish Maelstrom Read online1637 The Polish MaelstromThe Shadow of the Lion hoa-1 Read onlineThe Shadow of the Lion hoa-1Grantville Gazette.Volume XVI Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume XVI1636:The Kremlin games rof-14 Read online1636:The Kremlin games rof-141824: The Arkansas War tog-2 Read online1824: The Arkansas War tog-2Time spike Read onlineTime spikeJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 1 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 1Grantville Gazette.Volume VII Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume VII1634: The Ram Rebellion (assiti shards) Read online1634: The Ram Rebellion (assiti shards)Grantville Gazette.Volume XVII (ring of fire) Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume XVII (ring of fire)Jim Baens Universe-Vol 2 Num 5 Read onlineJim Baens Universe-Vol 2 Num 51635: The Cannon Law (assiti shards) Read online1635: The Cannon Law (assiti shards)Grantville Gazette. Volume 21 Read onlineGrantville Gazette. Volume 21Rats, Bats and Vats rbav-1 Read onlineRats, Bats and Vats rbav-11636_The Vatican Sanction Read online1636_The Vatican SanctionThe Aethers of Mars Read onlineThe Aethers of MarsJim Baen's Universe Volume 1 Number 5 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe Volume 1 Number 51634: The Bavarian Crisis (assiti chards) Read online1634: The Bavarian Crisis (assiti chards)Grantville Gazette Volume 24 Read onlineGrantville Gazette Volume 24TITLE: Grantville Gazette.Volume XVIII (ring of fire) Read onlineTITLE: Grantville Gazette.Volume XVIII (ring of fire)Ring of fire II (assiti shards) Read onlineRing of fire II (assiti shards)1635:The Dreeson Incident (assiti shards) Read online1635:The Dreeson Incident (assiti shards)Jim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4In the Heart of Darkness Read onlineIn the Heart of DarknessMuch Fall Of Blood hoa-3 Read onlineMuch Fall Of Blood hoa-3