A Future We'd Like To See 1.49 - Tales of the Sunny City, Act I By Twoflower (Copyright 1994) An essay on Summer, by Benton Hunt. Chapter one. Ahem. When it's Summer, it's always sunny and bright. Suburbia has that seasonal filter of Depressing Autumn, Dark Winters, Rainy Springs, and Sunny Summers. It's the season when the trees are green, the ground dry, the heat on, the AC cranked, etc. The long boring stretch that you get to fill with fun and excitement, if you can find any in the burbs. Summer in the city is enjoyable, Summer in the suburbs is not. The 'burbs on Terra are the worst burbs of all : a thick layer of middle-income housing with high security and plenty of boredom. However, in the city, Summer is the period when people can get on each others' nerves... crazy from the heat, I guess. Lots of fun things happen in the city during Summers, not all of which are my fault. When you're in school three seasons of the year, you lack a life... normal kids can get out on the weekends, but when you're a High High student, you can kiss THAT goodbye. There's just too much work to do. You can't go anywhere; the city, to the other side of the burbs, ANYWHERE. School is your life. High High is the name we've given to our school. It's one of those prissy little paid-for educational services parents send their kids to in hopes of getting them smarter. It works, too, through a variety of unconventional teaching techniques... mental training courses... smart-drugged food... shock treatment... etc. It's not high up in altitude, it's not high in moral standards, it's not high in drug-induced euphoria, it's high in IQ... whether you like it or not, going there will make you a full-time student with a brain the size of Montana. But Summer's another matter. In Summer, you can LET your mind ditch the busywork of school. You can put your obscenely intellectual mind to more illegal and entertaining pursuits. You can live life and be a proper teenage hoodlum. I've got two other HH henchmen. One, Jody, is a computer scientist who got rammed into that occupation by heritage. Her dad was a computer scientist, her mom was a computer scientist, her grandfather, her great grandmother, etc. etc. etc. on back to days when the abacus high tech. Family tradition is an ugly thing. The other, Mitch, is this little psychology basket case. Highly manipulative; he's way too good at guessing what you're gonna do, almost like reading your mind, which isn't too far from the truth. He explained it to me one day in between runs into the city, how he samples little details and forms prediction tables about behaviors, but I guess you just have to be into that stuff to get it. Me, Benton, I'm an artist. Art is one of the less-respected departments of High High, which stresses mental activity that involves digits and factoids. Supposedly I've got this wildly symbolic vision that sculpts pure ideas into material form... at least that's what Mr. Higgins (the Amazing Bald Wonder) claims. Me, I just put some junk together and let them sort it out. I don't think the treatments HH gives affect me. Maybe one of these days they'll realize I'm not smart and kick me out. Now, the careers we're studying for are terrific pursuits and will probably get us big houses and fast ships in the future, but right now we want to have FUN. And the only place for that is the city. I always wear my HH uniform for city runs. I find it to be a good terror device, since city dwellers everywhere know that the only things that follow High High brats are war, death, famine, plague, sitcoms, etc. etc. etc. It's a simple outfit, really... a blue shirt with the 'Oppenheimer School of Higher Order Thinking and Mental Development' logo printed on the back, and matching pants. Girls wear a similar blouse and a long skirt. They don't bother with ties or suits; outward appearances should mean little, humble outfits are enough. Of course, I don't follow that, so I'm wearing my leather jacket as well with the neat flaming skull on the back. Jody's land rover pulled up, rolling along on two of its wheels, tilted at some absurd angle. She twisted the wheel, slamming down the other two wheels and swinging a tight ninety into my driveway. She leaned on the horn. I took a quick check in the mirror to make sure I didn't look like a dog, and hopped out the window, swinging down the monofilament cord I always kept tied to the gutter. (You'll notice us students are a bit show-offy. High High insists on using your cranium to the fullest, pushing that intelligence envelope in every activity. Of course, they probably meant we should read more books or do volunteer work at some big corporation for MORE busywork, but the kids interpret the rule one other way; you've got a mind, use it to look as impressive as possible. I hear jocks do the same thing with their muscles.) The handle on the invisible rope slid me down to the lawn, where I landed on both feet at walking speed. A neat trick which requires practice, practice, practice. "Did you hit the mailbox this time?" I asked, out of tradition. Jody just rolled her eyes. "I haven't done that since freshman year. Get over it already. Come on, we gotta go pick up Mitch." "Where is Freud Junior, anyway?" I asked, jumping over the convertible's door and into the back seat. (Mitch always got the passenger seat. I think it's a power thing.) "He's doing some last minute details. He's got this weird idea about mass hysteria he wants to try. You know Lindsey?" "Lindsey?" I asked, running through a mental cardfile of other HH students. Let's see, Lester (physics), Ld'yyk (navigation), Lindsey (biotechnology). "Biotech. What about her?" "Apparently Mitch was trying to get her to go out on a date with her. Worked." "And? Come on, get to the meat of the story." "And that's it. Apparently she cooked up some idea that involves the screens near Central Station, and talked him into getting US to help. So we gotta go grab them plus whatever materials they've got and go into town. He didn't say anything else." "Sounds mysterious. Still, a gag is a gag. Hey, you gonna pull out of my driveway already? I wanna get home before supper. It's Stovetop night." Jody shrugged, and threw the rover into reverse. She slammed the gas, rocketing the car backwards, and turned one- eighty before roaring down the suburban road. "You ever consider giving driving lessons?" I asked. "Ha," she stated. To the untrained eye she might look like some wild, out of control driver. Not so. She's got all the angles and velocities calculated out, directions memorized, traffic patterns taken into account, etc. etc. She's a speed freak that way, in programming and driving; the object is to get from your home (the beginning of the program) to your destination (the last compile) as fast as humanly possible. What chaos you cause along the way isn't important. So she'll tear around corners, drive on sidewalks, lift up on two wheels to roll BETWEEN traffic lanes, etc. Sure, the cops ticket her, but she has a link into the cop computers and just erases any new records. She coats her bedroom walls with tickets long forgotten by the police, sort of a tribute to her unearthly powers over the suburban security militia. I cross-checked my mental cardfile to the map to see where Lindsey lived. Not too far away, really; at 97 MPH we'd be there about-- now. The rover's advanced brakes (programmed by Jody, of course), screamed to a halt in Lindsey's driveway. I had never seen Lindsey before; I only knew her name, grade, and chosen occupational path. Biotech HHer's were by tradition a bit disturbed, using their superior greymatter to modify themselves in strange ways. A diagonal scar along her forehead and a small metal socket indicated that she had toyed with her own brain a little too. Easy computer access, I suppose, to let you work fast enough to handle neural programming. Certainly more efficient than a suction cup jack. Mitch was busy making out with Lindsey on the porch-swing. Only Mitch, though; Lindsey ignored his slobbering. Jody politely slammed on the horn, and they broke it up. I can see how Lindsey could have easily encouraged Mitch to get us involved in this trick. See, he has this weird problem once he starts dating someone. That person is the only one he can't analyze and manipulate... Sort of a blind spot, I guess. Poor guy. Don't worry, he'll return to normal after the inevitable break up, then everything I've said about him will ring true. "Greetings, fellow adolescent ones," Mitch said. "Hey, Benton, get your ass in the front seat. We want the back this time." "There's just something more arousing about the historical usage of backseat, right?" I joked, hopping out. "Don't be crude. Lindsey, after you," he suaved, putting all his usual smooth-operator moves into use. She didn't seem to care, really, opening the door wider on her own and slumping into the back seat. Mitch shrugged, and glided in after her. "Lindsey, these are my partners in crime. Jody here is into computers. Don't worry, you won't die from her driving." This was also a Mitch maneuver, putting down his pals to make himself look big in front of his new girl. (Not normal behavior for him, but he WAS in date-mode.) I could tell Lindsey wasn't falling for it, but Mitch's normally powerful observational skills were on hold. "And this is Benton. He's an ARTIST," he sneered, in the same way one might say "Minimum Wage Earner". "Hi," Lindsey greeted flatly. "Put the rover in gear, we need to be at Central Station before rush hour." Jody mouthed "Gee, SHE seems nice" to me, and floored the gas, cutting very close to the plastic mailbox. "So what's this joke you guys have planned?" I asked, turning around in my seat. "I'm--" "We're gonna brainwash the city!" Mitch grinned evilly, cutting off Lindsey in mid sentence. Lindsey looked irritated at the interruption. "Not brainwash. Encourage. The plan involves the holovision screens at Central Station." "The ones that are always running soda ads and HNN, right?" I asked. "The same. Here's how we'll do it. Step one, get inside the building. Step two, hack into the network that controls the screens. Step three, insert a subliminal sequence of images that will send the brain into a lowered-inhibition mode. Then the real fun starts." "This isn't anything permanent, right?" I asked. "See, you may be new to the Terrible Threesome here, but we've got one cardinal rule, you never harm anybody permanently. Takes the fun out of it." "Nothing significant will occur. Mitch, get your hand off my leg." "Hmm? Oh, sorry. How'd that get there?" "You're a pig, Mitch," Lindsey stated, unemotionally. "But a useful pig. Be happy you're in on my master plan." Mitch just smiled sappily back, lost in the throes of blind devotion. "Ooh, she's got a master plan," Jody muttered under her breath. "I feel SO lucky." * So the ride continued, Lindsey explaining the plan. Things went this way. Mitch would launch another unsuccessful attempt to turn Lindsey's attention towards him. Lindsey would ignore him and fill me in on her plan, then Jody would make a sarcastic comment to me. I'd spoon-feed Lindsey another "Then what?" and the cycle would repeat, etc. etc. Apparently, the sequence Lindsey was going to run on the screens would cause anybody who saw it to start babbling about peace, love, and harmony. This would be amusing, since not everybody would see the screens at once... having the newly formed hippies interact with the yet unaffected commuters and workers would be thrilling indeed. The willpower inhibition effect would wear off in about an hour, leaving us enough time to laugh, shake hands and go back home. All in all a solid gag, much better than last week's incredible 'Mood Building'. (It was an office block that changed color every now and then depending on the inside stress levels. Always remained blood red with stress, so not nearly as neat as it could have been.) This was fine and good, but I seriously hoped Mitch wouldn't be under Lindsey's spell for very long, because she and Jody did NOT get along. Jody has this thing about being talked down to, and Lindsey was a bit, you know, not ixnay on the ondescendingcay. I'd be happy once the gag was over and done with. Lindsey was the High Higher stereotype, only amplified. Self-centered with the incredible inflating latex ego, regarding anybody else as a silly goo-bag with no purpose to exist. Of course, we're all a bit like that -- you can't help it, you simply ARE more intelligent than Joe Average -- but she would rub your face in it. EEEEEVIL. The rover pulled outside the subway stop of Central Station, just below the office building the screens rested atop. One of those buildings they usually set on fire for made-for-HV movies about the triumphant nature of the human spirit, ie, tall and foreboding. "Okay, we're here," Jody announced, as if we hadn't known already. "Everybody out." We climbed out, readied the tools of our trade, and enabled the electrocution anti-theft device on the rover. Mitch had his manipulative little brain geared up. Jody, her tiny palmtop cyberdeck. Lindsey, her floptical disk with the hippie program on it. Finally, my... pencil. Just in case anybody wanted anything drawn. "First step is to get up the access tunnel," Lindsey said, immediately taking charge. "The chute here at the base of the building leads directly up to a control room. It's normally used for messages and packages, but we can easily fit inside and climb up. Jody, you need to cancel any send orders to clear out the tube, then get us a way up there." I was going to suggest just using the DOOR, but that'd be too easy. I mentally slapped myself for considering such a thing; it just wasn't the High High way. Blasphemy. "Got it," Jody said, selecting a wiretap on her palmtop and thumbing the suction-cup jack into her forehead. She had ones for user access, computer access, robot access, you name it. "Okay, I'm canceling the message drops. As for climbing... hmmm. Not sure." "Monofilament," I said. Lindsey turned to me, surprised to see I had an idea. I explained. "See, I've got a cable of it at my house. It's super strong, and if you have a good winch it could pull all of us up the chute." "We can't drive back to your house," Lindsey said. "You don't have to. Here, Jody, hack me up about forty credits. I'll be in the sporting goods store over there." * Okay, picture this; me holding onto the sole handle of the mountain-climbing winch, as it pulled us up this narrow metal shaft hundreds of feet up. The others are chained together on a safety linker, being pulled up like a string of beads. Quite fun, actually. I highly recommend it to any other bored students. Wear a hat and yodel for the full effect. "Have you gotten into security yet?" Lindsey asked, voice banging off the cramped tube. The echo resounded pleasantly, able to skitter along a hundred feet of metal chute. "Yeah. We've got one guard in the screen-programming room, armed." "Hey, I'LL handle this. Let Mr. Casual take him out, then you folks can do your duty," Mitch suggested, sounding more like Mr. Macho. "Good," Lindsey said, "You do that. Are we near the top of the chute yet?" "Almost. Mitch, you climb up me and get through the opening to deal with that guard. Bang on the hatch once you've got the guard disabled." "Watch this, Lindsey. A master at work," Mitch boasted, climbing up the chute and out the hatch. I heard the surprised gasp of the guard just before the hatch swung shut again. "What an twit," Lindsey commented, not to herself. "Yeah, but he's OUR twit," Jody spat. "The only claim you've got to him is some weird seductive spell. I'd admire that if it weren't for the fact that it's got me trying to hack systems while hanging on an invisible cord a hundred feet from the ground!" "Put a sock in it," Jody helpfully suggested. "Just concentrate on getting us into the computer. I've got too much riding on this to let petty arguments get in the way." "Come on in, folks," Mitch said, pulling open the hatch and bracing it with a nearby book. "The area is secure. That guard won't bother us." I locked the winch and helped the girls squeeze through the narrow access hatch. After some huffing and puffing, I managed to jam myself through and into the control room as well. "Feeling any better?" Mitch asked the guard, who was collapsed into a fetal position, sobbing. "Anybody got a hankie? Randy here isn't doing too good. Awful job, a wife who hates him, a father who thinks he's a shame to the family..." Randy the guard sobbed more as Mitch described the horrors of his life. "...and so on, and so forth," Mitch concluded. "Poor guy. Here, Randy, take my business card. Come down and see me and we'll talk about your Oedipus complex. Maybe I can help you get over all this." "Th...thanks," Randy thanked, pulling himself up enough to take the card in a shaking hand. "I think I'll... go home now. I need to relax. Rest." "Good. You do that. I suggest a vacation, somewhere nice. Get your mind off your life. That'll be fifty credits for this session." Randy gladly paid, then crawled out. Miserable snuffling noises slowly receded into the distance. Mitch may have trouble with his dates, but you don't want to be on the wrong end of his frontal lobes if you're not female, curvy and intelligent. The only man who has a war cry of 'Tell me about your mother'. "Alright, we're in. No, don't thank me. Let's get to work. The disk, Lindsey dear?" Lindsey nodded, and handed Jody a floptical disk she had in her shirt pocket. "Install this over the current video the screens are playing. That's all it'll take." "Say please," Jody requested. Lindsey simply ignored her, intent on gazing out the window at the crowds below. Jody hmphed and jacked into her deck to install the program, attaching a patch cord from the back into the screen computers. "It's all going according to plan," Lindsey said, absentmindedly. "They'll see what *I* can do." "We," I corrected. "If you'll recall, you weren't the one who got the monofilament, triggered the guard's childhood traumas or installed your program." "Yeah, whatever," Lindsey said, waving me away. "The poor sops below won't know what hit them." "Your video's in," Jody said, jacking out and pushing the 'trode back into the deck's wire container. "Now let's see if it actually WORKS." So we gathered around that window, all four of us, wondering what was going to happen. Not all of us wondering, just three of us; Lindsey had a look of sinister knowledge on her face. SHE knew what was going to happen. Her forehead socket wasn't bunched up by any surprised eyebrow raising. Her mouth was a tight smile of satisfaction. The patterns of commuters, street vendors, and bystanders changed. Rovers wavered in their lanes, weaving in and out, occasionally hitting each other. The street chatter dissolved into a series of grunts. They also were hitting each other, and jumping around a lot. Kind of like chimpanzees. Mitch seemed dumbfounded. "I don't get it. Where are the hippies? Did you give Jody the wrong disk, love?" "Don't call me that," Lindsey said, pushing Mitch away. "No, I didn't. That's the right disk, the one that reverts the morons below to apes. They'll have fun clubbing each other, breaking things, going... well, ape." We looked confused. This is a truly rare expression to find on a High Higher. "NOW maybe they'll take me seriously," Lindsey grinned, clenching up in joy. "Stupid private biotech club... so what if there are already a dozen of them? NOBODY said you couldn't have a Dirty Thirteen! If this doesn't tell them not to turn me down twice, I don't know what will!" "I see," I said, piecing together what she meant. "The Dirty Dozen, right? Black biotech? They don't like people muscling in on their business, so you figure you'll make some great example of the city and strike some fear in the hearts of man. Yes?" "YES!" Lindsey exclaimed, clapping. "They said I was too young, and not ready for real biotech manipulations... I showed THEM!" "Good for you. I can respect that. Now can you get the city back to normal?" "Why?" Lindsey asked. "I like them this way. Let them riot and burn things, they don't matter. None of this matters. Now I am a feared biotech doctor, Dirty Dozen or not!" "You sure she's not in the drama department?" I stage whispered to Jody. "Lindsey, doll, that's really an awful thing to do. Put them back to normal, please? For your Mitchy-Poo?" Mitch pleaded. A sucker to the last. "Ah, forget you," Lindsey said, making a quick swipe with her hand. Mitch crumpled to the floor, out cold. Lindsey pretended to blow smoke off her ring, which bore a needle underneath it. Drugged pinprick. "I like him better silent." "You realize, of course, we're going to have to stop you," I said, trying to sound relatively heroic. "Why?" she asked, laughing. "Some infantile desire to be the savior of the city? Some weak compassion for your fellow man? A vigilante crimefighter complex?" "No, because I don't want to go to jail for your silly idea. I only take a fall for my own work. I don't hit girls, though. Jody, hit her please." Jody didn't need any more encouragement. She promptly strode forward and SMASHED Lindsey one across the jaw, sending her sprawling onto the tile floor. The overconfident godlike facial expression on Lindsey's face died instantly, replaced by a Mitch-like gape of confusion. I really didn't like violence, size I clearly wasn't much match in a fight and didn't want to place odds on myself. Too bad for Lindsey, since Jody didn't mind being violent at all, a good bet or not. Jody pounced, wrestled Lindsey's head to the ground, and pulled a long cord out of her palmtop computer. She plugged the cord into the socket Lindsey had installed in her forehead, allowing her instant access to Lindsey's reconfigured brain. Lindsey's sleep-drug ring fell, previously reared up to slap Jody across the cheek. The socket-plug had her in interactive mode, not reactive mode. Ah, the wonders of technology. Lindsey's body went partially slack, taken over by the simple palmtop. Jody grinned manically and jacked into the other end of the computer. "Heh. The little tramp certainly has an organized mind... look at all this wonderful stuff. Illicit medical supplies, surgical procedures without a permit..." "You can fetch blackmail material later. I'm just thankful she's got that neural jack, or we'd be up the creek. Can you find the reversal program?" "Nope... she never figured on using one. I'll have to make her write one for us. Could take some encouragement. Stop squirming, dammit..." It's an odd sight to see two girls jacked into one computer engaging in low-level mental kombat. I could draw some perverted comparisons, but won't. Think of two fish flopping around attached at the tail by a rubber band, if you really want a metaphor. In the end, one mind must triumph over the other, and programmers beat doctors in the poker rules of mental war. "Got it," Jody said. "Took a bit to break through her enhanced will and get her to write it for us, but hey. I'll install a sleep routine now to get her out of our hair..." Lindsey's mildly protesting body collapsed, deep in a dreamy snooze. Jody unplugged the cord from Lindsey's forehead, stuck it back in the screen computers and transferred code. "Running," she said. The effect outside wasn't noticeable at first; some low level rioting was underway already, the citizenry reduced to lesser primates. Nobody was looking at the screens anymore, they were too busy breaking things. "Here, link up my voice to the screen's audio." "Got it. Speak away." "LOOK! BANANAS! NICE, *JUICY* BANANAS!" I screamed, voice echoing through the hologrammatic screens outside. A few hundred heads swiveled up to the screen, but instead of fruit they got direct visual brain programming. Yeah, that did it. Confused, the people below started climbing down from the streetlamps, gathering up any clothes they had torn off. They went back to their patterns, wondering what just happened. Safe and back to the swing of things, and not on vines, either. "The worst is yet to come," I grumbled. "How so?" Jody asked, powering down her computer. "Now we have to get these two BACK down that chute. And since High High doesn't exactly have a weight room... it's not going to be easy. Here, grab Mitch's feet, I'll take the head." * It took awhile, but we managed to get our sleeping couple down the chute. Jody drove all of us home, just in time for supper. Mmmmm... Stovetop. Another ending to a typical Summer day, made more interesting through the power of education. Whoever said Terran students were lazy ought to be drug out into the street and shot. All fun aside, the day is done, time to snooze and recuperate. Wonder what we'd be doing tomorrow. Maybe just hang around the house. Maybe see a flick. Maybe a gag with anti-gravity cows pumping methane over the commercial district. I love Summer.