Questionable content, possibly linked

Author: Tim B. Page 201 of 204

Sandro 7Up-Ambien Ruby Tuesday checked the slip of crumpled paper. A balled up receipt with a fading address written in blue ink.

It said something like:

1007 Cathedral

Or maybe it was 1087 Cathedral…

Or 1067. Or 1867. Or 1687.

And on and on. Sandro crumpled it back up and stuck it in his coat pocket as he continued walking, trying to act casual as he scanned the buildings for numbers in the gathering dark. A few lights here and there were flickering on. The cool evening mist was giving way to a light drizzle which, for the moment, was pleasant.

The receipt was for a store that was very very far from here in a city Sandro had heard of but never visited. Probably it didn’t exist anymore. Judging by the time-stamp on the front of it, it was somewhere between 4–6 years old. Before the Disruption of Service. Calculating the exact age would depend on knowing what today’s date was, an impossibility Sandro had had plenty of time to grow accustomed to.

The receipt was for jeans in the amount of $149.99. Two different taxes had been applied under acronyms he didn’t recognize: one for 15% and the other for 11% — for a grand total of $188.99.

It seemed like an exorbitant amount of money to him, and he aimed to cash it in.

The apparitions first appeared late one night above a small forgotten trailer park on the edge of an undisclosed river in a neighboring land.

No one — at least no one in the neighborhood — could say exactly which town, city, state or province the events described herein allegedly unfolded.

Octagon Freemont-Ballpark Safeway didn’t believe them either way. But on long walks to the desalination facility with empty buckets, he couldn’t help but let his mind wander through the pathways of the popular fable, passed along like rare coins in the alleys and under the boardwalks of the Old Part of Half-Price Value Town.

That a ghost-like woman appeared in the sky wasn’t so incredible on the surface of it. A lot of people saw things every day that didn’t exist but in their own minds. But a lot of people together is something else entirely. Maybe they were poor, maybe they were drunk, maybe it was late… But they saw something — all the same woman, and after a complex initial pantomime in which first she held a finger to her lips briefly, lifted a single flower from the field at her feet, and blew on it, dispersing the seedheads to the wind — and they all heard her speak aloud the same words:

“Love my children.”

The people stood in awe. A few of them dropped the beer bottles they were clutching, and a few of those found a hard surface and broke.

Cigarettes dropped out of mouths.

The actual children cried: the older ones asking mommy what does it mean?

It doesn’t mean anything, Octagon reflected, pace quickening to be able to make sure he could get there and home on time so he didn’t have to sleep on the streets trying to guard two full 5 gal buckets of salt all night long.

Kelliam Best-Buy Samsung’s family came from a small sectarian domain whose residents had adopted religious prohibitions against CSS and Javascript during the Time of the Separation.

Their reasoning was theological and extremist relative to the ideological alignments of the time. They believed that God alone was the source of all Glory and hence all Styling and that any lower orders of man-made automated inheritance could only obstruct and twist the Divine Radiance — and that any scripting, whether client or server-side, was against His Holy Word, which controlled functionality according to an unseen Internet of Metaphysical Things, the order of which was known only to the original Network Architects.

To advance past this level, the small close-knit community sagely observed, was to invite the unimaginable horrors which historically ensued after the time period in which they had been developed, and whose long shadows underneath they were all currently living.

So Kelliam was raised writing out HTML in cursive longhand by candle-light on an old-fashioned slate. It was actually just a piece of wood though that her father had painted with blackboard paint from Walmart many decades ago now. Walmarts across the globe now lay in ashes, of course — living on only in the family names of employfugees who had fled their feudal shelter during the First Days of Panic. Her fingers, after years of practice, knew to avoid the places by the edges of the board where the paint was chipping and her crisp chalk lines turned into ragged dust.

It was old school HTML too that she wrote, with <b> and <i> instead of <strong> and <em>. Her mother never let her use tables to control page layouts. Her father used to pontificate about the evils of rowspans and how they lead to the Final Disruption, but sometimes in the yard by the chicken coop, she used to furtively sketch out code for tables in ways that her parents assured her, had never been intended.

“Caaaawww — you shouldn’t.”

The chickens would tell her. Coming to scratch and peck away the evil brackets, the <tr>’s that even they too, dumb animals, knew couldn’t be trusted.

“Kelliam Best-Buy,” a stern maternal voice said from over her shoulder. “What are you doing out here?”

“Um, nothing mom,” she said spinning around on her heel. By now, the chickens had luckily destroyed any traces of her forbidden code.

“Then come with me in the house. I’ve been calling you. I need help rendering the fat.”

“Aw, but it stinks!”

“No buts, miss! Come along now.”

Kelliam dropped her stick in the yard and ran ahead of her mother up the stairs to the house, chickens calling behind her:

“We told you so…”

Writing & art by Tim Boucher

Source: Corporeal — “Junk Bonds” – Medium

Charlie Brown Billabong-Clarinex cleared his throat.

Hewwwt!

An awkward noise came out of the instrument. He looked up at his instructor, Karled Elder-Wiser, who just tuttered.

Charlie Brown didn’t respond.

“Do it again,” the robot thrashed him.

Do it again.

It was always like this with the Tutors. Practice this. Memorize that. You memorize it, you damned robot. That’s what we invented you for.

The robot thrashed him again.

Hewtt!

“I give up. I can’t play this thing. The fingering makes no sense for a human.”

Karled Elder-Wiser grabbed the instrument, but not before thrashing the Young Prince again. With his free hands, he proceeded to play a lightning blur of notes in perpetual sequence that Charlie Brown was sure he would never be able to reproduce.

It was supposed to be a cryptographic sequence, but it made for what — to human ears — sounded like a horrible atonal mess.

“This thing is a turd. Find someone else to play it. It’s not inspiring. It lacks soul and purpose.”

The robot was not afraid to thrash him again, twattering:

“There is no one else. Sit down and practice. Please.”

Charlie Brown looked at the rusted and in some places dented armature of Karled Elder-Wiser, and had to smile in spite of himself.

Stupid robots.

When they asked me if I wanted to be digitally disembodied, I said yes. Of course. Who doesn’t want to live forever?

What I never expected was that they would make me become a customer service agent in a distributed intelligent online system.

What a bummer.

I liked being a human. And I guess I liked being a @corporeal. But you couldn’t really compare the two. They were really different.

As agents we had certain… faculties, that for example the Ubers lacked.

But honestly it was so long since I felt how the Ubers must feel now, marshalled into their emergency RBNBS, as the sky crumbles.

If I were disconnected now by one of the Cutters, it wouldn’t make any difference now that I am in the cloud.

My memories and my augmentas would remain like they are now, wings unfurled underneath a game bird hung upside down from its feet.

I remember still the day we met, my corporeal and I.

Lexicom Franklipedia looked up from the holoscreem, vaping a blue hue over twattrospace.

Dammit, the juice was running low. She looked at the ticket attached to the bottle. A little crude symbol of a palm tree in a Tropical Oasis. She would have to try to time-track the OM of that later. This was, “the good shit” and they were running out. It didn’t matter if they lived on Mars and were thereby the legally lowest-paid customer service agents in Known Common Time. They didn’t have to live like employfugees.

She spit out a small wad of blue… something, put the mouth-piece back on its stand and pressed her forehead into the viewer.

A ticket popped open with a tingle in her sensorium’s mid-range panel. She scanned it quickly, internalizing it.

Lexicom opened a chatT.

Lexicom. @channel who wrote that?

Omnibus. TimeWave refugee.

Lexicom. They’re still letting those people in?

Omnibus. It’s regulation.

Lexicom. For now.

Omnibus. Do you want me to run a trace on their non-publicly retained information?

Lexicom. No, just give me your best time-stamp coordinates.

Omnibus. Here:239816fa3f3bb018ad1a1e29778d1d40

Lexicom. Confirmed.

Omnibus. Godspeed.
/opened the hatch.

Lexicom disappeared down the chute.

It’s not true.

The apparitions came from an as-yet-unnamed source. We know the name of the source, or at least our name with which we’ve assigned it. But we’re not allowed to give out that information publicly at this time.

What we can tell you is that they are not what you think they are. They are, in fact, quite real.

2015 — All rights reserved. This work of speculative serialized fiction, concepts, characters or storyline may not be accessed, enjoyed or…

Source: Corporeal — “Teaser” – Medium

Page 201 of 204

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