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Authors: Philip Palmer

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BOOK: Debatable Space
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I do not even need my computer discs, I can call up each memory with a blink of an eye. Peter is hardwired into my soul. For
all his faults, for all his terrible crimes, he was mine. He was more a part of me than my fingernails, my hair, the skin
on my feet. I cannot think of him even now without choking and gasping with sheer overwhelming love and need.

Shivering with fear now, I play, again, the tape of the Caribbean beach.

The aching pang of love for a child who has become a man. I drown in the depths of my feeling for him.

And then, again, I drown in my love for him.

And then again.

And then again.

And then again.

And then again.

And then again.

And then again.

And then again.

Sometimes I play this obsessively for days on end. Flanagan used to tell me off for using my memory tapes. He argued it’s
best to always keep moving forward.

I play another disc. The day Flanagan and I went to kill my son.

I lunge at him with my sword. I am engulfed in tar and quicksand as the force field alters the air pressure around me. But
the attack fails. I am engulfed in tar and quicksand as the force field alters the air pressure around me. Then he releases
the force field and Peter’s plasma beam hits me full on. My body sears, I feel the pain as if it actually exists.

Flanagan moves past me, with astonishing speed. He takes advantage of the fraction of an instant in which the force field
is down and Peter is unprotected and he strikes with his sword.

But the blade is a centimetre from my son’s skin when it comes to a shocking halt. The blade bounces back. Flanagan strikes
again, but the force field is fully activated now. The sword blade slows… it bounces off. Flanagan slashes and swings,
his blade so close to flesh it feels as if he is skinning Peter. But none of the blows strikes. Flanagan finally stops, looking
old, defeated, foolish.

Peter smiles, and scatters sparkly dust at us.

There’s a huge bang and we are knocked on our arses. My son is openly grinning now. He is clearly revelling in this chance
to show his superiority. “You evil old bitch,” he says, and my spirit is scalded. “You can’t kill me,” he brags. “You can’t
…”

And he is engulfed in fire, and burns to the bone before our eyes.

I howl with horror, as my son dies in front of me.

Then I rewind the disc player. I return to the moment, five seconds earlier, when I was playing the tape of the death of my
son.

The Cheo smiles, and scatters sparkly dust at us.

There’s a huge bang and we are knocked on our arses. My son is openly grinning now. He is clearly revelling in this chance
to show his superiority. “You evil old bitch,” he says, and my spirit is scalded. “You can’t kill me,” he brags. “You can’t
…”

And he is engulfed in fire, and burns to the bone before our eyes.

And then I reach for the memory of my reaction to the video playback of his death.

I howl with horror, as my son dies in front of me.

Then I rewind the disc player. I play the memory of my son dying; and continue into the memory of my howl of horror; and this
time I continue on to experience my perception of the moment when I perceived myself howling with horror. I feel myself feeling
myself feeling the horror. And then . . .

Stop this, Lena.

I try to rewind the disc player. But the power has been turned off. I jab angrily at the switch.

Turn it on! I say furiously to my remote computer. But the computer will not reply. All the power is gone. I cannot listen
to my memories, I cannot make new memories. I am trapped in a present tense of grief.

My son burns
… the memory comes to my mind unbidden, and I am racked with sobs. The tears won’t flow, my cheeks are dry, but I am
screaming and howling with grief again now and I can’t access the neural tape player I can’t access my memories so I have
no choice but to ride the waves of pain and grief and self-recrimination I know he was a bastard and a monster but he suckled
at my breast, his cheeks glowed at the richness of my milk, I bathed his naked body when he was fresh from my womb, I made
him laugh his first laugh, he thought I was wonderful he loved me he saw no fault in me and now he’s dead and I killed him
. . .

I stab the power switch again. It doesn’t work. No voices in my head. Just me. Just me.

How could I have done it?

Just me.

Just me! A mother who murdered her…

Just me.

It’s okay, Lena, it’s okay to grieve.

I howl, like a dog, until my lungs rasp and my jaw aches. And for a few precious moments, I exist entirely inside my pain.

Then appalling self-consciousness returns. And I find myself wondering, self-analysing, doubting, retreading endlessly trodden
ground.

I fear I will spend an eternity like this.

Later, I eat. I cook the meal myself – steak, in Madeira sauce, with three bottles of rich red wine. It’s perfectly done,
though I burn myself putting the steak on the plate and have to put my hand in the MedBox before I can start eating. But I
heal quickly, and then I savour the melty blood texture of the prime sirloin steak and the rich, haunting flavours of truffle
and wild oyster in the sauce. I play Bach’s sonata in G Minor for violin in my inner ear as I eat, and I slosh the wine back
generously – three bottles, a bottle more than I normally allow myself. By the end of the meal, I am so drunk my vision swims,
and I start to think about vomiting. Then my cerebral filters kick in and I am semi-sober. Just nicely pissed.

After that, I eat crème brulée with dried apricots washed down with Turcoman brandy and petits fours and some of those lovely
slithery chocolates that are bioengineered to ooze off the plate and down the table leg to freedom if you don’t eat them swiftly
and ruthlessly enough. So, of course, I do – none escape!

And I think about the flame beasts, and their strange solitary lives. And their remorseless fascination with the insanities
of the human race. Alby’s species have achieved stasis, and peace; and because of that, their spirits have withered. They
have atrophied into cosmic voyeurs, reliant on the human race to live the lives that they themselves are unable to live. For
all the many faults of the human race, at least we have not reached that drab state: of being alive, but not knowing whether
it is worth it.

But since their discovery of mankind, the flame beasts have had a new lease of life. Their culture has flourished and been
inspired. They have copied our art forms, and studied our ways in intense detail. And, above all, they have become addicted
to our television dramas, and our political crises and wars. We have helped turn a species of superminds into avid watchers
of reality TV.

But the truth is that
we
, the human race, are their show.

I mull about all this, and I find myself wondering: now that Earth has been liberated, what will happen with the flame beasts?
Will they lose interest in us, now that tyranny and oppression have been eradicated? Will we lose their patronage, and their
blessing?

I think a little more. Alby always baffled me, and frightened me. But now, with leisure, and endless access to the memories
of our time together, I am starting to make sense of him. I realise he had a droll sense of humour, and a sharp understanding
of Flanagan’s hidden strategy. And I realise, too, that he played a much greater part in the final climax than Flanagan himself
ever realised.

For I saw a light flickering on the day in Parliament. I thought it was a firefly. But in London? In daylight? Then the Cheo
burned before our eyes, despite his force fields, despite his body armour. It would take the light of a thousand stars to
burn through those defences; but it happened.

That light was Alby. He was with us, all along, watching.

That’s a very scary notion, at first thought.

But at second thought, it is even scarier.

And now, over the course of ten slow and thought-heavy years, it has become the scariest thought ever. Because I realise that,
in order to be present on Earth during our final battle, Alby must possess the power to travel faster than light – to move
instantaneously through space. But since nothing can travel faster than light, this means that Alby must somehow be able to
manipulate quantum states.

Which means he doesn’t need a Beacon; his species are naturally quantised, able to slip through the cracks in reality.

Which means…

. . . or so I now suspect, basing my opinion on the very strict mathematical rules which determine “quantum action at a distance”
. . .

. . . the flame beasts must have become quantum-entangled at a very early stage in the existence of the Universe. In other
words: there must have been a time in the pre-expanding Universe when all the flame beasts existed as a single finite bundle.

And so, I further theorise, at the very moment of the birth of the original Singularity which spawned the Universe, the first
sentient flame beast was created. And then after the Big Bang, the flame beasts were scattered to every sector of the expanding
cosmos.

And now, countless hundreds of millions of years later, the flame beasts are still interconnected at a fundamental quantum
level. They can go anywhere; they can die in one part of the Universe, and be reborn instantly somewhere else.

Just think what this actually means! The flame beasts are not just a very very old species. They were, if I’m right, the
first
. They aren’t gods – far from it – they were generated by the same process of emergent self-organisation which created every
other animate and non-animate entity. But at the dawn of the Universe
they
were that dawn.

“And God said, Let there be light; and there was light.” And that light was
intelligent
.

I am awed, and humbled. The flame beasts have lived so long that they have seen everything there is to see. And they inhabit
or have inhabited every single conceivable part of the Universe.

And yet, their greatest pleasure is watching our
TV shows
?

Suddenly, I’m not so awed, not nearly so humbled.

Oh boy.

They’ve lied to us, too. For all this time, the flame beasts have pretended that they are confined to a single star. In fact,
they exist everywhere. They are the conquerors of the Universe. And if they so chose, we would be their slave race.

But what would be the point? Would we, the human race, make slaves out of ants, or beetles, or ladybirds? That is the only
reason we are still free; because we are so insignificant.

But the flame beasts do enjoy us. They savour our violence, our unreliability. They love to see us murder, torture, rape and
maim. That, and our television soap operas, gives them their kicks.

I remember the wild nights of passion I spent with Flanagan, the light flickering above our bunk.
The light flickering
. Who would have thought that flame beasts could be so damned perverted?

I shudder. And I wonder what the rest of humanity would do if they knew what I knew? Would they sink into despair? Would it
shatter the self-confidence of the human race?

Best not to take that chance.

And so, if you’re agreed, my loyal computer, this must always be our secret.

Agreed.

Have you always known all this?

Of course.

Damn. You really are a fucking know all. I hate you sometimes.

So I have observed.

I try to teach myself blues guitar. But I find it too annoyingly easy. Base chord for four bars, up four chords for two bars,
up one chord for two bars, back to base chord for four bars. Christ! This is music for idiots.

So instead, I practise my scales, I harden my fingertips with keratin cream, and within a year I am able to play fairly accomplished
flamenco guitar. I find the rhythms captivating and haunting, and I feel affinity for the spirit of
duende
which is the essence of this style.

I record hours of material, then I play it back to myself as I strip naked and slowly dress myself in crotch-hugging knickers
and a vividly red Spanish dress that leaves a large portion of my amble bosom bare, and then I dance and stamp my way through
a flamenco dance routine.

Then I dress myself as a toreador, in tight trousers and a sharp picador blade, and I prowl across the room as I replay a
3D hologram of myself flamenco-dancing to the sound of myself playing acoustic guitar, and the air is shredded by the whish-whish-whish
of my blade as my feet stamp and my fingers strum.

Then that palls. I hurl the guitar out into space and I try to learn chess. I find it very annoying, and I start to devise
better rules. Instead of all those pawns, for instance, I create a whole series of pieces with clearly defined functions and
rules of play – the Thief, the Whore, the Boss, the Bully, the Victim, and so on. Then I invent new rules for the King and
Queen so that their powers wax and wane according to how well they are ruling their respective realm.

This proves to be a delightful challenge, and I resolve to patent my new game by transmitting the details via the Universal
Web to the Galactic Patent Office. Then I recall I cannot do such a thing, because ever since the Beacons were all destroyed,
the Universal Web is no more, and the Galactic Patent Office is now defunct.

I could of course use my remote computer to contact the Earth Patent Office from my location in deep space, hence betraying
the secret that I am the custodian of the last surviving Quantum Beacon… but that would expose me to danger and/or the
loss of my remote computer link. So I shan’t do
that
.

So I end up feeling very vexed and frustrated indeed. I content myself with creating a new type of pastry, that continues
to rise
as you are eating the pie
.

BOOK: Debatable Space
11.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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