I meet Hsien-Ku 432nd Generation, Early Renaissance Quintic Equations Branch, in a Viennese cafe in the 1990s. True to my nature and role, I don’t touch my Black Forest gateau, even though it looks delicious. Instead, I maintain the stern businesslike visage of the sumanguru.
She, on the other hand, eats hers with relish: a short plain woman in a period dress, a faint smile on her round face, making appreciative noises as she spoons in the chocolate. I wait for her to finish. She wipes her mouth with a napkin.
‘Coffee?’ she asks.
‘I’d rather stay focused on the matter at hand,’ I say.
‘Very well. Lord Sumanguru, in all honesty, I took the time to speak to you since your visit is somewhat irregular. We have not received any updates to the Plan that would necessitate a review of our operation.’
I pick up a spoon in my large, black hands and bend it slightly. The hsien-ku winces.
‘The Plan can’t prepare for all the enemies of the Great Common Task.’ The soft metal twists, no doubt faithfully modelled by the ancestor sim’s physics engine.
I hold up the spoon. ‘It’s a good vir. Down to the quantum level, is that right?’
There is a sudden panic in the hsien-ku’s eyes.
‘We simplify things wherever possible,’ she says hastily. ‘There are no unnecessary quantum elements. All the minds are strictly classical. Whenever we have to make quantum corrections, it is only in the experiments of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and then we ensure we carefully run all quantum aspects classically, in sandboxed virtual machines. I assure you, Lord Sumanguru, there is no contamination here.’
‘You misunderstand me.’ I place the twisted spoon on the table. ‘My brothers and I commend you. We find embodiment . . . useful for questioning the enemies of the Task.’
A faint look of fear flickers across her eyes. It is easy to see why I chose this disguise last time. My greatest concern was that the chen would have notified the others that this particular Founder code was compromised – but that would have harmed the carefully maintained illusion of Founder infallibility.
‘And surely you do not expect to find any such here?’ she asks.
‘There is a concern that your operation has gotten too close to the flesh; that much of it has to do with matter.’
‘That is not by choice,’ the hsien-ku says. ‘Our interpretation of the Task is as valid as that of the other Founders – and it demands us to recover the lost souls of Earth.’
‘Then why have you not already done so?’
‘There
‘Absurd. Why should a planetary environment like that pose any problems? Especially given the kinds of resources the Plan has deployed here.’
‘Wildcode,’ the hsien-ku says, embarrassed. ‘Something happened there after the Collapse. A mini-Singularity of sorts. Not on the scale of the Spike, but a merging of the noosphere with the native biosphere. It resulted in something the natives call wildcode, complex self-modifying code. It permeates Earth’s matter and it’s a pain to get rid of. While our imagers are capable of partial reconstructions, most of the key minds are in the upload heavens.’
‘Which you have access to through
‘Broadly speaking, yes. We trade with the natives. It’s a slow process, but we are archaeologists. It has proven more effective than our previous attempts.’
‘Soft. Your copyclan lives up to its reputation,’ I say.
‘We will find a way to counteract the wildcode effects. If the Plan was to grant us more resources—’
‘—you would find another way to waste them. Already, our conversation has given me enough to raise this matter with the Prime. However, perhaps there is something you can do to help us both. I understand you have . . . detailed records of our glorious past.’
‘As our interpretation of the Task dictates, our aim is to give life to all those who lived on Earth before the rise of Fedorovism. It requires a detailed study of matter and historical records, as well as mind archeology.’
‘I don’t care about your interpretation of the Task. I require access to the ancestor virs. Full access.’
‘Surely, you understand that I need to follow the Plan to get you anything of the sort. Otherwise, where would we be?’
‘Your . . . rigour is admirable. But not wise.’ I give her a sumanguru smile, a tiger grin.
‘What do you mean?’
‘Scholarship can distract you from important events. Pellegrinis and vasilevs. There are serious tensions. Serious enough for us to take notice.’
She places her own spoon on her plate with a nervous clink. She is probably searching her Library for moments of greater self-confidence.
‘There were also some . . . irregularities with the Experiment I am looking into.’
‘That was centuries ago in our frame,’ she protests.
‘Crimes against the Task do not get old.’
‘I understand,’ she says. ‘Perhaps a limited period of access could be arranged.’
‘Good.’ I try the gateau. It is excellent, but I force myself to make a face. ‘It would be a shame to feed such a wonderful creation to the Dragons.’
The ancestor vir of the Gourd, where the hsien-kus of Sobornost make history. It is a giant puzzle, fragments of the past glued together with simulation. The hsien-kus observe and measure, search the memories of gogols bought from the soul merchants of Sirr, or stolen from the Oubliette – and run ensembles of simulations to find histories that match the observations. Averages over possible event sequences instantiated, culled and tweaked until they conform with what the hsien-kus think history should be.
The interface is overwhelming at first. I am a bodiless ghost in a four-dimensional world. A god-view and a new sense that allows me to step backwards and forwards in time. I hate the incorporeal aspect of it – I need to
What do the gogols here think of their existence? Whole worlds spawned and wiped away and rewritten, just to fit a newly discovered fact of history. Only those who really existed have the right to live. The others are just sketches, erased when they are no longer needed. Poor bastards.
To avoid attention, I go all the way back to an obscure corner of seventh-century Britain – a muddy field shrouded in rain – before I let Josephine out. She hacks the physics engine with the practised ease of a Founder and makes herself a face out of the raindrops.
‘Well, Jean,’ she says. ‘Now you know the plan. I would have given it back to you eventually. But a part of me likes it when you make me mad. The question is, do you have the balls to go through with it this time?’
‘You never did give me the
She smiles. ‘Don’t we all want to be children again?’
‘I have no problem being a grown-up. Tell me.’
The rain woman laughs. ‘You’ll need a few more centuries before you are a grown-up.’
Then she tells me what she saw in Matjek Chen’s vir, on a beach.
‘So. Innocence,’ I say when she is finished.
‘That’s what you have to steal, and not the way you usually do it,’ she says.
I swallow. A part of me is rationalising already: it’s Matjek Chen, the great monster lord of the System, there is nothing I can do that he has not already done a thousand times.
And I want to be free.
‘Are we talking,’ I say, ‘or are we stealing?’
She gives me a wet kiss on the cheek. Then she vanishes into the rain like the Cheshire Cat, off to make mischief for the hsien-kus, to take over the systems of the Gourd.
I look at my reflection in the puddle at my feet. It gazes back at me, and there is an accusation in its eyes.