The Electric Church Part 11
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"Let me out," it said, its voice perfectly modulated and sounding strangely reasonable. As it continued to speak, the reasonable tone gave way to increasing volume and a ragged quality that made my skin crawl. "Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out!"
I reached for my gun. It wasn't there. I'd had to chuck it to get on the hover.
"It's okay!" Kieth shouted over the Monk's din. "It can't activate its weapons." He paused to stare at the Monk with me. "This is Mr. West, Cates. This is what's going on inside his brain right now. After some a.n.a.lysis, Ty doesn't believe his mental operations are damaged, he simply believes being a Monk is too much to process. In short, the mod chip eliminates free will, Mr. Cates, but once it is removed there's a viable person in there. It's just a viable person who's been driven mad by the process, and who knows how many months or years of being enslaved."
"Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Let me out! Letmeoutletmeout-"
I flinched away from it. "G.o.dd.a.m.n it, Kieth, can't you shut it up? I get the point."
He nodded, but didn't move. "Mr. Gatz?"
I glanced sharply at Kev, who unfolded himself and stepped forward, stiff and ponderous. "Kev? What the f.u.c.k?"
Kieth held up a hand. "Watch."
Kev stepped in front of me and removed his gla.s.ses. For a moment, nothing happened. Then, slowly, the Monk calmed, until it was completely silent, its arms raised, its body stiff and kneeling. After a few more seconds, it climbed to its feet again and resumed attention.
"Kev can Push a Monk?"
Kieth nodded slowly. "It appears that the only requirement for Mr. Gatz's ability is a human brain. And proximity."
I blinked. "But it doesn't have eyes."
"Ty's belief is that Mr. Gatz uses the eye-to-eye contact as a focus. It isn't physically required."
Gatz spoke slowly. "I noticed it first in Newark. When the Monk showed up, I was so f.u.c.king terrified I started Pus.h.i.+ng without even realizing it. And I could swear for a second I almost had that Monk by the short hairs, that it hesitated because I was Pus.h.i.+ng it." He glanced back at me with naked eyes and I flinched. "Wanna talk to Mr. West?"
I nodded, my brain disconnected from the rest of me by the stress of processing all of this new information-as if there wasn't sufficient wattage left to manage anything else. After a moment I realized that my hands were rubbing themselves nervously together. I had to concentrate to stop it.
Gatz nodded, looked at the Monk. "Say something, West."
The Monk twitched again, and then turned its head to look in my direction. I had the eerie feeling of being stared at by something eyeless. It wiggled a little, as if losing its balance, and then nodded its head.
"For G.o.d's sake," it said, its voice terribly perfect, smooth and on-pitch, still processed by whatever hardware was built into its artificial skull. "Kill me. Kill me now. I beg of you."
XIX.
Why Am I Still Alive?
00000.
I stepped into the gutted kitchen area, where Milton and Tanner had scrounged a few crates together into a makes.h.i.+ft table and stored our meager food supplies. Food was hard to come by. Mostly, we had nutrient tablets, the kind they handed out now and then in New York when local aristocrats were moved to keep the peasant population alive for a few more weeks, for whatever obscure reasons really rich people had. The tablets kept you going, but left hunger gnawing at you. It was like starving to death forever.
Milton sat on some boxes, taking a pull from a gleaming flask. She glanced up at me from her spot at the crates and grinned. "Cheerful f.u.c.ker, isn't he?"
I gestured at the bottle she was drinking from. "Give me a blast."
She handed it over. "Gearing up for the interrogation, eh? That's what we figured you'd do."
I nodded, sitting down on a box and taking a long swallow of liquor. It tasted like gasoline. I held it in by sheer will and after a moment the burning was replaced by warmth and I risked a second swallow before handing it back. "Kieth can't guarantee West's brain will last very long once it's unfettered from the mod chip. Gatz seems to be able to force lucidity onto it, but who knows how long he'll be able to manage. We need information." I coughed. "Someone will need to sit in and take notes. Kev's illiterate, I think, and Ty will be busy, so that leaves you or your sister."
She winked. "Way ahead of you, chief. Why do you think I'm in here getting drunk? It's like talking to a ghost."
I stared at the rough wood of the crates. "You believe in s.h.i.+t like that?"
She slid the bottle in front of me, and I took another drink. It was starting to taste better. "Like ghosts? Like a soul?" Milton's voice disappeared under the edge of the crate as she stretched out on the floor. "Sure I do, Mr. Cates. How can you not? All those prophecies are coming true."
I swallowed wrong and had to cough to clear my windpipe. "Prophecies?"
"f.u.c.king pagan." She sighed. "Revelations. Catholic dogma. Most religions have something similar. Isn't it obvious? We're in the End Times."
I stared at the bottle. Milton's hand appeared over the edge of the crate and waved around lazily until I handed it back.
"Think about it, Cates. The dead are walking the Earth inside those air-cooled Monk bodies. You can't get a doctor to look at you or buy something high-end unless you have one of those chips under your scalp. I'm telling you, it's near over."
I stood up. "Well then, we have nothing more to worry about."
"Hey, Cates?"
"Yeah?"
"Make me a promise. I know we aren't friends or anything, but promise me something human to human. Promise me you'll blow my brains out before letting them Monk me. And my sister. Okay?"
I nodded immediately. "Honey, I thought that was understood, for all of us. f.u.c.k, that's a standing order." I swallowed. "Be in the a.s.sembly Room in five, okay? Take notes."
"Keep calling me honey, honey," she called out after me, "and we may not have to wait for the Monks to arrange it."
I tried to find my way back, but got lost in the twisty tunnel-like hallways of the place. It gave me an opportunity to search out more of the b.o.o.bytraps they'd set up in case we had to fight off a small army of SSF or Monks or whatever huge, global organization was going to decide to kill me tomorrow. They'd been busy little b.a.s.t.a.r.ds, and the work was first-rate. Aside from the guns and the drop-plates, there were electrocution wires stretched across the floors at key intersections, ready to snap taut and murder a half-dozen men simultaneously. There were small charges embedded in the seams of the floor, ready to blow and tumble another dozen into a newly born pit. Anyone trying to force their way into the place was going to pay dearly for it.
Eventually one of the Droids found me. Sputtering programmed politeness, it led me to where everyone except Milton and me had gathered. The four of them huddled around the Monk, which stood exactly where I'd left it when I'd fled: ramrod straight, staring directly ahead under the dual influence of its mod chip and Kieth's custom instruction set.
"Well, well, the Boy Gunner," Tanner said as I approached. "Traveling in style while the hired help suck fumes all the way across the ocean, I see," she added sourly.
"I'll kick in an extra yen to your share for pain and suffering," I announced, pulling off my coat. "Now shut the h.e.l.l up and let's get started. You said you didn't think we had much time?"
Kieth nodded and danced around checking his equipment. "The brain appears to be in good physical shape, but something is decaying in there. The personality? Soul? Subconscious? Ty doesn't know. Maybe he's just too crazy, after all this time. Every time Ty unhooks Brother West from the mod chip, Brother West goes more apes.h.i.+t than the last time. Mr. Gatz has been able to control West to an extent-maybe a subst.i.tute for the mod chip-but that also appears to be decaying. Ty thinks you have about five minutes before Brother West goes fatal error on us."
I stared at the Monk. It looked like a prisoner awaiting execution, head held high. I'd noticed that Kieth's third-person royal status got worse when he was under pressure. "When that happens, you can kick the mod chip back in with your new instruction set, yes?"
"Yes. I think. We won't know until we do it."
I looked around, taking stock. We were in a mothballed factory, in an abandoned neighborhood, thousands of miles from what I thought of as home, and more than likely near death. I felt a strange sense of calm, of fatalism. If the Monk jumped up and slaughtered us all, it wouldn't surprise me, and I wouldn't, I thought, mind all that much.
Milton arrived and saluted me."Go ahead, then, Mr. Kieth," I said.
Kieth leaped up, mopping his head with the same filthy rag. "All right, then. Ty will be recording the whole episode, of course. Just in case. I will disconnect the behavioral modification chip, Mr. Gatz will a.s.sert his, uh, influence, and then you can question it."
I nodded and addressed them all. "What we need most from Brother West is information about the security at Church headquarters. Anything else is gravy. Okay? So everyone else shut the f.u.c.k up until I'm finished."
"Yeah," Tanner drawled. "Or Mr. Cates will shoot you."
I was starting to like the sisters. It also reminded me that I needed a weapon, fast. I felt defenseless and confused without something to defend myself with. "Kieth? Gatz?"
They both nodded. Kieth gestured a command carefully at his equipment, Gatz removed his gla.s.ses, the Monk spasmed again, and we all stood in silence. After a moment, the Monk s.h.i.+vered and turned its head, the sound of the tiny motors clear and sharp.
"Why am I still alive?" it said, turning its head back and forth. "I know Mr. Gatz. I know quite a lot about Mr. Gatz. I know the names Cates, Kieth, Milton Tanner. I do not know you."
Kieth dashed around his black boxes adjusting things with waves of his arms and subtle flicks of his wrist. "Amazing, Mr. Cates. Brilliant, really. They're using the brain's lower functions as-is-saves them the trouble of trying to program all that stuff in. They're using the brain's memory memory as primary storage, though it looks like a stream dump is sent to the EC on a real-time basis. They're saving themselves tons of money and time and effort by just using the human brain. If they tried to replicate this electronically they'd still be designing the f.u.c.king nano. The upper functions of the brain are filtered to the mod chip, which is just a null point." as primary storage, though it looks like a stream dump is sent to the EC on a real-time basis. They're saving themselves tons of money and time and effort by just using the human brain. If they tried to replicate this electronically they'd still be designing the f.u.c.king nano. The upper functions of the brain are filtered to the mod chip, which is just a null point."
"That's interesting, Mr. Kieth," I said. "Can I ask it questions?"
The Monk twitched its head like a bird, and oriented on Kieth. "Questions?"
"Will you answer questions?"
Gatz nodded. "He'll answer."
I cleared my throat and stepped forward. "I've done some preliminary research and a few walk-bys. It looks to me like the EC headquarters has a single entrance, controlled by wireless handshake, correct?"
"Probably the Amblen Protocol," Kieth said with a nod.
The Monk twitched and s.h.i.+vered again. "Amblen Protocol . . . modified. Custom. Dr. Amblen himself provided the algorithmic adjustments."
I shrugged. "Doesn't matter. Mr. Kieth, that means there's a transmitter chip that beams the authentication code when the Monk approaches the HQ entrance. It's probably write-twice media, programmed to flush itself if tampered with."
Ty looked outraged. "Did you just explain explain the concept to Ty? Ty's the concept to Ty? Ty's designed designed these systems, Mr. Cates." these systems, Mr. Cates."
"There is," the Monk said slowly, jerking its head twice, "a random frequency s.h.i.+ft as well."
"Ah," I muttered, ignoring Kieth. "One entrance-what are the deterrents to herd you through?"
"The authentication handshake is wide-field. You must supply the correct response no matter where you attempt to enter."
"The response to a failed authentication?"
"If no . . . response is . . . transmitted, a suppression field is deployed. That is all that is necessary. There are of course brothers on guard duty."
"There you have it. Thank you, West." I turned to Kieth and smiled. "We can get in. Ty, find the transmitter chip, but don't f.u.c.k with it. It will be hidden, possibly camouflaged as a different type of chip altogether. Then we can start plotting."
Kieth twitched his nose. "I can get into it. Ty can get into anything."
I nodded. "Ty's a genius, yes, yes. But if Ty f.u.c.ks up even a little, the chip will burn itself and will be so much char, okay? We'll have one shot at getting the algorithm out of it. f.u.c.k it up with your itchy trigger fingers and I'll have to shoot you. Brother West," I said, "are there any other security features we need to know about?"
The Monk oriented on me jerkily, twitching. "The power and network feeds for the handshake system are located within the HQ building. They do not connect outside the building. There is no way to cut power or intercept the feeds. If you approach without authorization, the suppression field is invoked, and you are held until the guards can respond and eliminate. Response time averages six seconds."
"Are you observed while entering?"
"Digital a.n.a.lysis software examines every frame of security cams, which cover every foot of the perimeter, yes."
I swore. For a few seconds we were bathed in complete silence. I looked at Kieth, who just stared back. Then I glanced back at the Monk.
"Will you help us?"
It twitched violently. "Help you?"
"Will you help us to get in?"
Another few moments of silence, marred only by the trembling hum of the Monk's motors. It was vibrating slightly.
"Will you kill me?"
I blinked, and swallowed hard. "Kill you?"
"Yes." It took a step forward awkwardly, and then stopped. "If I help you to enter the Abbey, will you kill me?" With apparent effort, it spread its hands.
Glancing around the room, I found no one willing to look me in the eye, no one willing to offer even an unspoken opinion. Finally I made fists with both hands and looked back at the Monk.
"Done."
The Monk didn't move at first. Then it nodded its head, once, the motors humming. "Done."
XX.
It Hurt My Eyes A Little Just To Look At Her
00001.
"Well, this is depressing."
I ignored Gatz. He was the only one I thought I could count on to at least not slit my throat. Kieth intended me no harm, I thought, but he wouldn't lose sleep if I got hurt, either; I wasn't even sure he regarded other people as people, and not as especially well-designed Droids. Milton and Tanner were in it purely for the money, and people in it for the money could never be trusted.
That left Kev Gatz.
We stood on the Dole Line near Downing Street with every other citizen of the System. A few blocks back were the twisted remnants of a heavy-duty black metal gate, half of it torn from its moorings and the other half melted. I twisted my head and could see a jagged wall of masonry still standing on Downing Street itself, just inside those gates, where a small sign was amazingly clean and uncharred, reading DOWNING STREET, SW DOWNING STREET, SW1, CITY OF WESTMINSTER. CITY OF WESTMINSTER. I considered asking when the f.u.c.k London had been the City of Westminster, and then considered my companions and decided against it. The Abbey was called Westminster, too, and the Abbey had looked like the oldest f.u.c.king thing in the world, so maybe it had been a long time ago, fifty years or forever. I considered asking when the f.u.c.k London had been the City of Westminster, and then considered my companions and decided against it. The Abbey was called Westminster, too, and the Abbey had looked like the oldest f.u.c.king thing in the world, so maybe it had been a long time ago, fifty years or forever.
I imagined some of the people on the line-snaking for miles up and down the street several times before disappearing-were actually waiting for their issue of Nutrition Tabs and Necessities Coupons, sponsored by several of the richer families in London, but the Dole Line was really just a meeting place. Most of us were there looking to make deals, usually illegal. You had the cream of London's underground standing around in broad daylight, so despised by their betters that no one paid any attention.
I was looking for guns.
The Electric Church Part 11
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The Electric Church Part 11 summary
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