That was why she'd worked so hard to get
Nishide and Buzzo she'd dealt with in person.
And I'd just destroyed every chance of trust, every chance of friendship, every chance of love I might have found with Akili. I'd beaten it all into the ground. I covered my face with my hands, and stood there wrapped in the darkness of solitude, ignoring her commands. I didn't care what she did; I had no reason to go on.
Akili said, "Andrew. Do as she says. It'll be okay."
I looked at Sarah. She had the gun raised, and she was repeating angrily, "Call DeGroot!"
I took out my notepad and made the call. I swept the camera around, to illustrate the situation. Sarah gave detailed instructions to De Groot, a procedure for transferring authority over Mosala's supercomputer account.
De Groot seemed to be in shock at first, stunned to learn of Sarah's allegiance; she complied with barely a word. Then her anger boiled to the surface, and she interjected sardonically, "All your resources and expertise, and you couldn't even have an
Sarah was almost apologetic. "Not for lack of trying. But Violet was paranoid, she had good protection."
De Groot was incredulous. "Better than Thought Craft's?"
"What?"
De Groot addressed me. "They pulled a childish stunt, when Wendy was in Toronto. They hacked into Kaspar
and had it spouting their stupid theories. All for the sake of what?I heard Akili, still on the floor at my feet, inhale sharply. And then I understood, too.
Sarah frowned, irritated by the distraction. "She's lying." She took out her own notepad and checked something, still holding the gun on me. "Break the connection, Andrew." I did.
Akili said, "Sarah? Have you been following Distress?"
"No. I've been busy." She examined her notepad warily, as if it were a bomb that needed defusing. Mosala's work was all there in her hands now, and she had to be sure she destroyed it, thoroughly and irrevocably, without letting it taint her.
Akili persisted. "You've lost, Sarah. The Aleph moment has passed."
She glanced up from the screen at me. "Would you shut ver up? I don't want to hurt ver, but—"
I said, "Distress is a plague of mixing with information. I thought it was an organic virus, but Kaspar
proves that it can't be."Sarah scowled. "What are you saying? You think De Groot read the finished TOE paper, and became the Keystone?" She held up her notepad triumphantly, with an audit trail displayed. "Nobody's read the paper. Nobody's accessed the final results."
"Except the author. Wendy sent Violet a Kaspar
clonelet. It wrote the paper, it pulled all the calculations together. And it's become the Keystone."Sarah was incredulous. "A piece
Akili said, "Scan the nets for lucid Distress victims. Hear what they have to say."
"If this is some kind of ridiculous bluff, you're wasting—"
Sisyphus
interrupted cheerfully, "This pattern of information requires itself to be encoded in germanium phosphide crystals, in an artifact designed in collaboration with organic—"Sarah screamed at me wordlessly, waving the gun above her head, casting wild belligerent shadows on the walls of the tent. I hit the MUTE button and killed the audio; the declaration continued silently, in text flowing across the screen. My mind was reeling at the implications—but I'd lost my death wish, and Sarah had my full attention.
Akili spoke calmly but urgently. "Listen to me. Distress numbers must be exploding already. And with a software Keystone—a machine world view—the mixing's going to keep wrecking people's minds
Sarah was unmoved. "You're wrong. There is no Keystone. We've won: we've left the last question unanswered." She smiled at me suddenly, radiantly, lost in some private apotheosis. "It doesn't matter how small the loophole is, the residue of uncertainty; in the future, we'll know how to enlarge it. And we'll never be brute machines, we'll never be mere physical beings… so long as there's still that hope of
I kept my expression deadpan. The music swelled. The two tall Polynesian women—militia members?—creeping in behind her raised their truncheons and struck together; she went down cold.
One of them dropped to her knees to inspect Sarah; the other eyed me curiously. "So what was her problem?"
"She was high on something." Akili climbed to vis feet beside me.
I said, "She came in here ranting, stole vis notepad. We couldn't get any sense out of her."
"Is that true?"