Read But Thomas Aiken Is Dead - Part I Online
Authors: Alex McKechnie
The Breacher:
I am required at all interviews conducted involving a denizen prone to -
Atia:
Obfuscation and deception, all right.
Saahl:
I’m glad you understand. Had it been my decision, I would not have had him in attendance…
Atia:
Admirable. Who are you?
Saahl:
A friend of Tsun Uri’s, an old lover of his.
Atia:
I had no idea Tsun Uri took them.
Saahl:
You’re not the only true ningen-ersatz in Cadence Major, Atia. A number of us behave in the old ways. I am familiar with Tsun Uri’s work. They thought that might be helpful.
Atia:
Why haven’t I met you before?
Saahl:
Tsun Uri likes to keep his personal and academik life distinct.
Atia:
I can sympathise with that.
Saahl:
As can I. Sympathy is something the ningens excelled at; one of the many reasons I choose to present in the mode.
Atia:
Funny, they aren’t holding
you
for questioning.
Saahl:
There is nothing prohibited about behaving in the old ways. You are, as I’m sure you know, here because of your particular transgression.
Atia:
All right. What am I supposed to talk about?
Saahl:
They’re very interested to know why you disseminated the writings.
Atia:
Why were they out of bounds in the first place? I found nothing controversial in them.
Saahl:
Then why try to disseminate them?
Atia:
They had a certain merit.
Saahl:
Generalities may get boring quickly. We have a good deal of time to tease out specifics, as you may have noticed.
Atia:
Have you examined the writings?
Saahl:
No.
Atia:
Then it would be hard to explain. Read them.
Saahl:
I doubt I would be granted permission. They were removed from public access as soon as your transgression had been detected.
Atia:
Tell them it’s for research purposes.
Saahl:
I still doubt -
Atia:
Those are my conditions.
Saahl:
I see.
Atia:
You say you’re familiar with Tsun Uri’s project. You’re anti-mergerment then?
Saahl:
In as much as one can be. We’re quickly becoming an unfashionable lot though. In the time you have been incarcerated there has been a strong shift in public perception. A number of denizens now believe mergerment to be inevitable.
Atia:
Preposterous.
Saahl:
Do you think so?
Atia:
Of course. That’s the endpoint of Cadence life then, is it? Total uniformity, total homogeneity.
Saahl:
You need not try to convince me.
Atia:
I think they’re mad. All of them.
Saahl:
You won’t be surprised to hear they think they same of us.
Atia:
For retaining a few of the old quirks?
Saahl:
Naturally. They find it terribly archaic.
Atia:
Archaic
?
Saahl:
We are not so popular on Yellow Tier of late. A few denizens have tried to carry a motion to have us barred from the public forums until we revert to typical forms of eksist. My infants are being persecuted as a result of all this.
Atia:
They don’t even
have
infants, for Gnesha’s sake. What would they know about it?
Saahl:
To them it’s probably disgusting. Too sporadic, leaving it all up to chance like that. The records indicate you had an infant at one time?
Atia:
Yes.
Saahl:
A girl?
Atia:
She chose to present as female for a time, yes. Though she didn’t find ningen eksist much to her liking. Most of her time was spent on Indigo Tier.
Saahl:
The records also state that she was pro-mergement. Is that true?
Atia:
Yes.
Saahl:
How did you feel about that?
Atia:
Is this an interview or a pre-selfsense surgery consultation?
Saahl:
Forgive me. Only, I would be quite distraught in your position. I meant no offence.
Atia:
All right.
Saahl:
Would you tell me some more about your research?
Atia:
Which part?
Saahl:
Whatever interests you.
Atia:
If you were Tsun Uri’s lover then I assume you have full archive privileges.
Saahl:
I do.
Atia:
Well, I’ll admit then that I wasn’t interested in historiks for much of my time. I was brought up in the Echo Realms in a similar fashion to most denizens. I ate from the light spatters and experimented with many modes of eksist; an au as a spiral galaxy, as a caffeine molecule, even as Cadence Major itself. I saw a young denizen there who had taken ningen form. I was curious and so I tried the same, a female. There was something comforting about it. My appendages, my senses – located at specific points on the hull of my skin. There was a sensation of coming home.
Saahl:
Not unreasonable. Plenty of denizens share the same sentiment.
Atia:
It’s not the historiks. It’s the
ancestry
. There must still be ningen in us, something so deeply buried that it can’t be plundered or excised.
Saahl:
Perhaps so.
Atia:
There was no question after that. I committed myself to ningen historiks.
Saahl:
Which period?
Atia:
Dawn of Rekords, Fuedal, Kommunikative, and the early Neuro Years.
Saahl:
A disparate set of ages.
Atia:
Not as disparate as you think. They weren’t so dissimilar. Even the Dawn of Rekords ningens had some sense of morality. It’s a common misconception that they didn’t. There are a number of misconceptions, in fact. I expect you’re fairly conventional in your historik opinions and think early Neuro the beginning of kommunity.
Saahl:
I haven’t given it much thought, but yes, I would be that way inclined.
Atia:
Absolute nonsense. There was no fault with plain linguistiks.
Saahl:
There’s a certain charm to it, but you must admit the Neuro Years made things much easier.
Atia:
And considerably more boring yes.
Saahl:
This
argument. Yes, I’ve heard it before from the other ningen-ersatz.
Atia:
Ambiguity is practically heretikal around here. You’re wrong. There’s a beauty to it.
Saahl:
Well it isn’t dead. You were able to practice your precious linguistiks on Orange Tier, were you not?
Atia:
I was. Have you visited it?
Saahl:
No. Reports have been mixed.
Atia:
There was a growing belief at the time that all denizens would eventually form a single
conscious unity,
that it was a natural progression in the life of a system as complex as Cadence Major.
Saahl:
You’re implying that’s where the mergerment started?
Atia:
I am. Of course, they immediately protested at my new ningen mode of eksist. Had I remained there perhaps I would have witnessed the beginning of the merge. I fled instead to Tier Green where I discovered there were hundreds of thousands of ningen-ersatz.
Saahl: