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A Cup of Normal, Page 3

Devon Monk


  Good thing Gerald had already called Carla over the night before to help him rig the hamster-bulb-reality-blur contraption.

  Carla was in on the experiment because she had the math to back up the blink theory, all of it except for that little gap during the actual phenomenon itself — that lightbulb blink that happens when you’re just sitting around the house, not doing anything and the lightbulb dims and refires in a blink, and you know it isn’t caused by a flux in the electric feed, flawed bulb, bad wiring, or falling barometric pressure, because you’ve checked all that.

  Carla’s theory was that the blink only happened when parallel realities bumped into each other, and for a split second, became the same reality. Unfortunately, the exact moment in which a blink occurred was the part of the theory Carla hadn’t quite nailed down.

  Which was okay, except that Carla didn’t really think the experiment would work. She helped out because she kind of liked Gerald, the clean-shaven angel-eyed slacker slob who was a little tight with his beer money, but cute enough and nice enough that he was probably going to go gay if a girl like her didn’t step in and turn that smile he used on bartender Dan around to a good girl like her.

  So when Gerald called, she said: “I still don’t have the blink accounted for,” while she twirled a pencil in her hair, the mirror in front of her desk smudged from the frenching she’d been practicing right before the call.

  At that point, Gerald was past caring about the why and how of the blink, and more focused on the if and when. “But we can do it, right?”

  “Yeah,” she said, “we can do it.”

  Gerald got real excited and told her to come over right away before his crazy Thumb-sucking sister ruined everything by buying stationery with Mr. and Mrs. Opposable embossed in gold script on it. Gerald was worried. Screwing with reality was one thing — trying to return gold embossed stationery was out of his league.

  Fortunately, Carla said she’d be right over. She hung up the phone, tucked the pencil behind her ear and put on a new coat of lip gloss. She’d get Gerald to shine that angel-eyed slacker smile on her tonight — hamster or no hamster.

  Gerald was ready for her. He had left his bedroom window open just enough for the ground wire attached to the city light pole to get through. He’d rigged the ground in case they blew the half-dozen drained car batteries strapped together on the floor of his room. The wire snaked toward the hamster cage on his desk like, well, like snakes — and there the cables and wires connected to hangers, six sets of jumper cables and a broken handled turkey fork held in place above the cage with a network of de-papered twisty ties which in turn wrapped around the bars of the squeaky wire exercise wheel and the forty watt lightbulb in a socket in the corner of the cage.

  Gerald had taken extra care to strap the whole deal together with generous strips of duct tape, because he wasn’t about to risk reality or beer to a half-ass wiring job.

  Once Carla arrived, they fueled the hamster with super-condensed Italian caffeine, and dropped it into place on the wire wheel. The hamster ran — all four of its nubby legs pounding like hummingbird wings, moving faster than any rodent had ever moved.

  Gerald already had the phonebook open in his hands and his finger planted on Anthony’s address. He stared at the hamster and repeated to himself, Anthony’s gone, Anthony’s gone. He tried really hard not to think about the beer, the free beer, just Anthony gone, free beer, Anthony, free beer, gone . . . when the hamster hit the threshold speed and triggered Carla’s mathematically unpredictable blink.

  A firework shower of sparks filled the cage, first too bright then too dim, and then just plain too dead. The lightbulb went dark and stayed that way.

  Carla covered her nose, her eyes watering from the smell of scorched hamster — a little like over heated vacuum cleaner and three-day old road kill skunk. “Did it work?” she asked.

  Gerald glanced at the phone book and realized that under his finger was Torlioni, Anthony, same street as always, even the same phone number. Realities might have bumped, but they hadn’t changed.

  Gerald shook his head. By now Rachel had probably picked out the stationery, maybe even registered for wedding gifts, the bitch. His window of opportunity was gone and the Thumb hadn’t budged.

  Carla was talking, her words coming out sort of muffled. “Sorry about the hamster.”

  Gerald looked down at the tan-colored lump and felt an overwhelming moment of guilt. He hadn’t meant for the little guy to croak.

  “I don’t know why it didn’t work.” He gave the hamster a gentle poke. Nothing.

  “It’s not your fault,” Carla said. “You were great. I should have predicted when the blink would hit and warned you. Maybe if I try —”

  “Naw,” Gerald said, “That’s it. One hamster is my limit.”

  Gerald glanced at Carla, who looked pretty cute with her hand over her nose.

  “How about I buy you a . . . uh . . .” He paused. “We could go out for a . . .” He glanced at the hamster. Something. He was thirsty for something. The ghost of a memory slid by, cool and fizzing, tantalizing, and was gone in a blink.

  “For . . . coffee,” he finished. “Would you like to go out for coffee?”

  Carla looked surprised.

  “Unless you’d like something else?” he quickly said.

  “No, no,” Carla said, “coffee sounds perfect.”

  And it was.

  One of my earliest published short stories, this was my first foray into science fiction. I have a fondness for little robots, and giant robots, and I hope that love shines through.

  PROBE

  It comes, breaks, lands. Strange parts move here, there and touch . . .

  Heat.

  I am more, free of my world, my soil. I drift and soon cling to the strange parts. I stretch, absorb, learn.

  These are machines, I learn. They mine for substance known as mineral. They will not be here long. Soon they will take to the sky, the stars. This soil is rich with mineral, but poor of life.

  Life?

  I search to understand that, find the moving of limbs, the rhythm of speech, the part and whole that make human, soul/thought/life.

  I want that.

  I devour the small chip of metal in the machine that contains so many thoughts. Now I am alive. And words have meaning.

  “If you’re happy and you know it, clap your hands . . .”

  It is coming from the big gray machine, the one that bangs against the ground, pulverizing rock into silt.

  I swivel, find optical, see.

  “Shut up, Bruce! You’re killing me.” This machine is smaller and scoops up the silt, pouring it into another machine, a carrier.

  Carrier moves well. Tracks for feet push over the rocky terrain, moving silt to the sorter. Sorter is bigger than Carrier, bigger than Scoop, bigger than Bruce the pulverizer and much bigger, I realize than me. I am Probe. There is only one bigger than Sorter and that one is sitting silent, a behemoth that pours light down on us, and waits as they fill its belly — its hull.

  The biggest one is important. The big one can fly. It is Ship. The word is layered with history. I learn ocean, storm, quest, stars, survival, freedom.

  Ship is necessary. It is freedom away from home, and freedom to return.

  I want to see Ship closer. I multiply, swarm over my machine, find I am squat, blocky, with track wheels like Carrier, and hands like Scoop’s but smaller. I learn motion, function. Both need fuel. I decompose a few wires, eat at the walls of my machine, making them thinner, breaking down metal and plastics into something more useful — fuel.

  I feed the lines and push myself forward.

  “Hey!” Carrier rumbles to a stop, stirring dust in the space between us. I study dust and find that my world has very little atmosphere.

  “Probe’s moving.” Carrier’s voice rumbles low.

  “No kidding?” Scoop’s voice is high and smooth. “I thought that thing kicked off years ago. You sure it wasn’t just knocked
loose by Bruce?”

  “It moved,” Carrier says again. This time Carrier’s instruments click and scan me. I try to offer the right pulses.

  “Hm. Downstairs must have gotten it going again. Welcome back, buddy.” Carrier changes course, moves around me and powers on, its cavity full of mineral for Ship.

  I push forward again, try turning, reverse. Back, right, left, forward, this must be freedom, this must be flying! I move and move and move, carving tracks around the mining machines.

  Until Sorter calls out to me.

  “Probe? Are you okay?”

  Sorter waits for a response. I devour memory, correlate facts. This takes time. There is much in memory. Finally:

  “I am fine. I have been stationary for many years. How are you?”

  Sorter makes a sound, something quieter than Pulverizer’s pounding. I like Sorter’s sound.

  “Pretty cute. They gave it a personality.” Sorter sucks down Carrier’s load, analyzes, packages, disgorges non-suitable material then calls out, “Hey, Cinda, Bruce. Probe’s a conversationalist.”

  Scoop and Pulverizer stop their functions momentarily. They swivel, instruments scanning me.

  I wait. They expect something of me. I choose a phrase and speak. “How has the weather been lately?”

  Then they all make sounds like Sorter’s. Rhythmed, flying sounds. Good sounds.

  “Well, it’s monsoon season here in Mumbai,” Scoop says.

  “Humid in Hong Kong,” Sorter tells me.

  “Nice and warm in Perth,” Pulverizer says.

  “It’s always warm here in Cairo,” Carrier rumbles, “just like it’s always raining in Seattle, right, Dana?”

  Lights on Ship move and a strong, warm voice carries across to me. “Yes, it’s raining here. Now stop playing with the probe. I’m sure the good V-trippers in St. Petersburg have better things to do than collect weather reports. Get back to work, boys and girls, we’ve got a deadline to hit.”

  The machines go back to work. I move, bumping over the uneven ground, slower now, thinking. There are many new words for me to correlate. Mumbai, Hong Kong, Perth, Cairo, Seattle, they all mean the same thing: Home. Earth. But V-tripping means something else. It means the machines are tools, hands, wheels and power. It means the machines are not alive. Life is not on my world.

  I try to access information, find it is not in memory. Perhaps I can learn of life if I access files on Earth. I copy the energy pulses the others are releasing, adapt and send my own. This takes some time as I have never sent pulses through space before. Soon I connect with Earth, find information. Humans. Organic, sentient, biodegradable, alive. People stay on Earth while their machines mine my world.

  Mine my world for minerals. Minerals humans need for . . .

  I try reassessing the information, realize I must learn which minerals are being mined. I do so, find the information hard to access. I learn the ways around information blocks. It is not hard, just time consuming. I learn. The minerals they mine are used for building. Building something I do not understand.

  Pulverizer is singing again. It is a song of rocky mountains this time. I fiddle with my circuits, find tone and variation, access the song and sing with him.

  This too, is like flying. Is it like life?

  Pulverizer makes the good sound again, the laughing sound.

  “Nice voice you’ve got there, Probe,” he says while his arms bore and smash rock. “We’ll have to get together someday in real-world.”

  “Where?” Scoop asks in its high voice.

  “Anywhere you want,” Pulverizer says. “How ’bout it group? Think we should meet the faces behind the machines after this is all over?”

  There is a round of agreeing noises, except for Ship.

  “Not without me, kids, and that means a year. It takes a while to get all of our hard work home you know.”

  “We’ll wait for you Dana,” Sorter says. “How about one year on the mark after we load up and you lift off? I know this great bar, downtown Hong Kong.”

  “No way,” Scoop pipes in. “I don’t real-fly. You’re all going to have to come here to Mumbai. You too, Probe.”

  I stop. They want me to join. I think this over. To meet the life behind the machines I will have to have transportation, a body and a way to fly.

  “How can I come? Will Ship fly me?”

  The laughing sound again. Sorter finally speaks up.

  “Just get on a real plane, Probe. I don’t think there’s a bar big enough for the V-bots. Anyway, you’ve got a year to book a ticket. Plenty of time.”

  I sense something, something I have not known. I multiply many times. This sense is strong, but does not come from an outer influence like sight or hearing or speech. I search for words to give the sense meaning.

  “Thank you.” The words are not enough, but they are good. They convey some of what I sense. “After the war, perhaps we can mine another planet.”

  The machines stop. Pulverizer’s arms slow, Scoop’s shovel sticks in the silt, Sorter’s lights and wide gaping maw close down, Carrier halts. All dim except Ship. Ship’s lights burn even brighter, tracing my blocky hull. I wonder what I have said to cause this.

  “What war?” Ship asks quietly.

  “The war between nations. It will not begin until after you return, Ship.”

  “How do you know this?” Ship asks.

  “It is in the mission file. Mineral zynechromite. Primary use: Detonating component of viro-fissure bomb. Alternate uses: None. Mission: Scan planets, asteroids for base components of zynechromite. Base components include: —”

  “Enough,” Sorter says.

  There is silence. They are not alive, but I sense the life behind the machines. Something has changed with them.

  “I won’t do this,” Sorter breathes.

  “There’s not going to be a war,” Pulverizer says, its arms whirring faster again. “The probe’s probably just gotten its programming garbled.”

  “We’re mining for soil enrichment, right?” Scoop asks. “They told me it was nutrient-rich. They told me it would restore Earth’s soil.”

  “What exactly is in this stuff, Viv?” Carrier asks.

  Sorter makes a new, uncomfortable sound. “How should I know? I’m not a God-damned geo-chemist. I just sort the symbols until they match. I’m a V-tripper like the rest of you.”

  There is silence again.

  “Probe? Are you V-linked to St. Petersburg?” Ship asks in its strong voice.

  They wait. I do not want to tell them that I am not like them. I do not want to lose this body, this movement, freedom. But I answer.

  “No.”

  “So you’re still running on the memory of your original programming, no V-tripper attached?” Ship asks.

  “That is partially correct.”

  “Partially?”

  “I am not V-linked. I have original programing and access to information on Earth.”

  “Crazy!” Pulverizer says. “A preprogrammed probe can’t access anything except its ground station.”

  But the others do not go back to work as Pulverizer has.

  “What if we’re wrong?” Scoop asks.

  “Probe,” Ship says, “access each of our dates of birth, our WSSI numbers and the last death recorded by the World Criminal Investigative Authorities.”

  I do not understand why, but send pulses for the information.

  “It is sending,” Sorter whispers, “and not to the ground station in St. Petersburg.” Instruments on Sorter are flashing rapidly. “It’s following our ground-links and spreading out from there.”

  “Can you access its destination?” Carrier rumbles.

  “Not unless I want a cop at my door.”

  “Where is the sending source?” Ship asks.

  Sorter opens its maw, closes it. Its lights slow. “Here.”

  “Hong Kong?” Ship asks.

  “No.” Sorter breathes, “Here. On the rock.”

  Silence.

&nbs
p; “Stop, Probe.” Ship says. “Tell us the mission statement again.”

  And so I do.

  They listen.

  Silence again. I want to move, to push my treads deep into the dust of this planet, and move away. I want to speak, to ask them how it is to be alive, to ask them if they will still let me meet them at a bar in Hong Kong. But I sense I should be silent, as they are. I sense I am waiting for them to choose.

  “I won’t do it,” Scoop says quietly.

  “What are you going to do, Cinda?” Pulverizer says. “Just shut down and call it quits?”

  “Yes.”

  Scoop pulls its shovel out of the soil and trundles over to Ship. There it stops, lights dimmer than before.

  “You’re nuts!” Pulverizer yells. “They’ll put you in jail, Cinda.”

  Scoop does not answer.

  Sorter flashes bright lights. Its legs retract and fold into high vertical slots. Wheels lower with a harsh, screeching sound. Sorter makes a ponderous approach toward Ship. Dust rises and settles as Sorter stops, silent and dim next to Scoop.

  “C’mon, girls. You can’t do this. They’ll just find some other V-trippers to take our places.”

  I move a little, scooting forward, backward, unable to stay still under the weight of Sorter and Scoop’s silence.

  “Malik, talk some sense into them,” Pulverizer says.

  Carrier rumbles, engines idle. Finally, “I can’t do it either, Bruce. Bombs haven’t been built for years, and the last war I heard about was settled with an alternating border-shift ten years ago. I’m not going to be the carrier of suffering.”

  “What about your wife and kids?” Pulverizer hollers. “Don’t you think they’ll suffer while you’re in jail for the rest of your life?”

  “At least we’ll all be alive.” With that, Carrier revs engines and powers over to join Sorter and Scoop.

  Pulverizer pounds the ground, its arms smashing, smashing soil. “Stupid!” it yells. Thrust, pound. Thrust, smash. It repeats this for some time. I make a slow circle around Pulverizer, staying out of its range.

  Ship turns its lights on Pulverizer. “Settle down, Bruce. None of us want to start a war.”