Tor appreciated the lack of pain receptors inside a human brain. Or so assured the doctors, in tinny voices that crackled down the remnants of her auditory system-those portions that had not been seared away by the zeppelin explosion. In fact, the creeping nano-robots should not trigger any conspicuous reaction at all, as they made their way to preplanned positions in the visual cortex, the cerebellum, the anterior cingulate, the left temporal lobe… and a host of other crucial nexi, scattered through Tor’s intricately folded cerebrum. That is, not until they were ready to start their real work-probing and testing, mapping old connections and creating new ones that might-possibly-let her see again, and hear and speak after a fashion.
And perhaps… science willing… even move and walk and…
But it seemed better not to dwell too much on hope. So instead, Tor clinically envisioned what was going on inside her head. Imagination perceived the machine incursion as a benign army of penetrating needles-or invading mites-crawling inexorably inward, forcing their way past all barriers of decency, into a sanctum that had once been ultimately private. Or, as private as anything could be, in this modern world.
Then, upon arriving at its destined station, each little robot began
Reacting with disorientation, even nausea, Tor soon felt warm countercurrents flow-undoubtedly drugs meant to keep her body calm and mind alert-as the doctors began to make demands upon her, asking about each sensorimotor effect.
Irritated by their yattering, for a brief time she considered withholding cooperation. But that impulse didn’t last.
So, Tor clicked her canines and bicuspids, in order to answer simple questions-such as identifying “left” and “right,” “up” and “down,” when bright smudges began to appear, triggered by probes that stimulated different parts of her visual cortex. And soon, what had started as gross blobs began resolving into ever smaller pixel-like points, or slender rays, or slanting bars that crossed from one side to another… as some computer gradually learned the cipher of her own, unique way of seeing.
Tor realized she was reciting, as if for her vraudience! Parsing clear sentences, even though there was-so far- no subvocal transceiver to convey her words around the world. Or even across the room. It seemed that habit, sometimes a dear friend, was drawing her back into the role of reporter and
Not that Tor was ever entirely alone. There were the human specialists and computer-voiced aidviser programs hired by MediaCorp to take care of their superstar. And, ensuring that she never felt abandoned in the darkness, there was the voice of the mob-the smart-mob she had called up, aboard the
And so, between medical sessions, when her tooth ached from tapping a million yes and no answers-helping identify the scattered and minute segments of her rebuilding brain-she was also fed a steady description of each day’s news. Naturally, that included the planetary fascination with a stone from interstellar space-the Livingstone Object. But there were also reports on a hard-pressed search for the zeppelin saboteurs. Those who murdered poor Warren and left her in this state, encased in a life-sustaining cocoon.
Tor’s direct recollections of that episode were a bit murky-trauma often prevented the firm anchoring of memories of some shattering event. She did remember Warren as a set of clipped impressions… along with images of a
In fact, the earliest clear image to take shape within her visual cortex-the first one consisting of more than simple geometric forms-rippled and finally resolved into a wavering headline from the top-ranked MediaCorp virpaper,
There was something else, next to that brief animation. Without eyes to physically turn, it took some effort for Tor to divert her cone of attention toward what lay to the right… and another few seconds of concentration before it clarified and meaning sank in. Then, abruptly, she recognized a picture of her own face.
The picture’s caption swam into focus, and then stayed there, clear as day.
HERO WHO SAVED HUNDREDS.
A sense of joy filled Tor, briefly.
Not all patients who regained vision in this way recovered their full suite of abilities. It was one thing to stimulate an array of pixel dots to form images. It was quite another to connect them to
Hence, her feeling of almost overwhelming relief. She had both recognized a face and deciphered a string of letters, first try! Tor laboriously tapped out the news, sharing this milestone.
Then it was back to work. Tor even began to enjoy the process a bit, plumbing intricacies of her own nervous system, helping to guide an inside-out self-examination, unlike anything her ancestors could have imagined, picking at the bits and pieces of a mechanism that nearly everybody took for granted-the most complex machine ever known.
To her surprise, it also meant reliving memories that flared suddenly, as the ignition spark from one probe briefly relit a particular bright autumn day, when she was six years old, sneaking up behind her brother with a water balloon dripping in both hands, only to have her footsteps betrayed by the crackling of dying kudzu leaves-a moment that came rushing back in such rich detail that it felt intensely real. Certainly more real than this muffled, drug-