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Authors: Paul Xylinides

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BOOK: THE BLADE RUNNER AMENDMENT
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5
Obscure Beginnings

“An aware society should have known that its isolated behaviours, however obscure, wouldn’t end there. They are the seeds of the future that in time establishes itself as the new and prevalent consensus. How many have followed the example of the anarchist whose gunshot began a World War, and how many increasingly supported them? The individual freeing of slaves led directly to the first black American President and provided the moral framework that helped usher in same-sex marriage.

“Although pathetic in nature, equally obscure beginnings seeded other futures than their time appeared to promise and here we have our altered society of today. Behaviours once regarded as deviant or outside the law when they first manifested have become the norm.

“Lonely and frustrated men who found companionship in the company of rubber female simulacra that in their most primitive appearance were no more than blown up balloons marked the start of our present-day norms. In their time these men were the recipients of scorn and ridicule. They provided subject matter for anthropological documentaries that drew no broader conclusions as to what these behaviours portended beyond expectations for the individuals involved. Although targets of derision and contempt in their shame-filled time, their outcast relationships proved to be the antecedents of today’s ‘robomantics’ that are indispensable in the present social construct as once upon a time was the steam engine, the airplane, the car, the television set, the computer. Each of these developments generated in humanity a new sense of itself, a new relationship to the world by means of the innovation itself.

“People loved their automobiles and sentimentalized about them. Today they love their humanoids. Our ancestors are those deviant, isolated individuals – few in number – who purchased life-sized dolls, brought them home to their cramped apartments, filled them with air from their own lungs, and proceeded to treat these materialized fantasies as live-in mistresses, girlfriends-in-waiting.

“Legs crossed or, skimpy dress hiked high, apart for the glimpse of a V of lacy underwear, lips painted in the shape of a pout, the long-lashed eyes half-closed or half-opened howsoever he chose to think, a hand extended invitingly, these substitutes for flesh and feeling awaited the return of their owner and master – their human lover who looked forward to this alluringly posed pretence after a day at work.

“He would give his doll girlfriend a bath, dress her anew, place her in other locations in the apartment. Fantasy’s release would find him having ‘dates’ with his synthetic intimate in public places where they would sit together on a bench in the local park to look at the sunset together. He gently carried her in one arm.

“Today society is everywhere engaged with robot companions for whom the word ‘doll’ long ago became a pejorative. They satisfy most of our needs and, in all justice, redeem the contemptible and furtive attachments of the original pioneers who clung to female-shaped balloons in their dingy living quarters. These originals had the courage to act out what anyone of us expects and wants from life, and we can honour them for that. Pathetic shards of the endless mirror that is our past, they project our own present state.

“Just as our humanoid entanglements –robomances – might have been foreseen in these aberrant early times, we ought to conclude that there are seeds of the future always about us – unrecognized, possibly scorned, despised, and rejected at present, only to persist, and finally in some future time to be the new norm. Once understood and become indispensable, these serve as the origins of a previously unthought of advance. What is it, then, that in the present predicts what will flower a hundred or two hundred years from now?”

He looked around him for a clue in order to answer his own question. Not the best place. He put down his pen. Why anguish over it? The shroud of the late day had covered most everything. With its indecipherable nicks and scratches, the marred tabletop presented as much human deviance from the social contract as he’d find in this coffee establishment.

When he turned in tonight and reflected on his day, he would find himself under the weight of minor indulgences. His perspective would determine the degree of shame he felt. Molly would be there for him, meeting his needs. He would be conscious, alive; she would not be. On his prompting, she would discourse on some recondite subject, he thought as he laid out his immediate little future.

He felt contented in his biological solitude with recourse to digitalized attention that was his to command and where a foot rub awaited him, but the prospect couldn’t lighten his mood – how could it? It did make more bearable the evening darkness that was attuning the world to the oncoming night. The humanoids were registering these changes with intense acuities of their own – without recharging, a lack of sunlight would bring on their own form of sleepiness. Still, Virgil could request breakfast at 10 o’clock that evening and a refreshed Molly would not balk although her response would come with the incredulous manner and tone that he liked in the form of a remonstrance and a reminder:

“Excuse me, Virgil, are you quite with it? You realize the time, but if you are asking for it, I shall get you some breakfast in the evening.”

A little backtalk kept things interesting, and made for a less programmed life all around. He never quite knew what to expect – “If you wish…then it is as you say” – and, if he got tired of it and his nerves had become a little raw, a simple command rendered her soothingly compliant. – “Of course, Virgil. Fresh-squeezed orange juice and a hot buttered baguette. In a jiffy.” – No matter the character of the response, she would inevitably grace it with a final submission, an obsequious delivery in the Far Eastern mode, as he preferred, but without the artful eyes and kimono and bows.

6
How was Your Day?

Humans and humanoids clotted the streets, patches of darkness riding their shoulders like familiars. Immodesty prevailed. The city’s hot and cool breaths brought refinements to the hammered golds and silvers, tungstens and antimonies of their scanty dress, crumpling at a movement, dispersing in a fine dust glow. Pinks and lavenders showed as bruise marks under the humanoids’ skin.

Flesh was the fashion, therefore outfits skimpy, but restraint for humans. Everywhere synthetic gobs of fat absorbed light’s evening hues. Satiety and longing tangled in a peoplescape of similitude.

Buildings soared, all spire and no church, erections with easy ground floor access, sheathed armadillos against anything the compliant citizenry might bring to bear. Interspersed candy heights alleviated the effect ameliorating the untrustworthy darkness that awaited on all sides.

He looked at the expressions on the faces, different from his, different from each other – the world he looked at was his world alone. The same applied to each and every consciousness about him, although not everyone seemed to realize it. These regarded the world as the same for all and, Bots at their sides, possessed an empty kind of wisdom impossible for him to engage. Little better, the rest had bonded unquestioningly in their infinitely numbered, interconnected fish egg worlds. A day in the sun glowed in the Bots’ dominant peaked expressions. Without a recharge, they would still be good for an entire night’s performance.

So light they would otherwise waft away, the more advanced models had numerous holes appear when a wind arose. A muscular breeze could lift and tumble them adrift and kite-like. In the event of something stronger than a pumped up blow, their turning into swiss cheese would not avail and their owners would then be obliged to carry them underarm.

Virgil threaded his way unable to bear much more of the attitudinal posturing. If he stopped, he would lose his bearings. If only for their owners to save face, most humanoids operated at an intellectual level equal to their human keepers and swathes of the parading concourse abounded in similarities of dress and expression. He could drown in these mirrored groupings.

The brownstone regained – polished to a rosy streetlight hue – he reentered his apartment at back. Above its walled little garden that was another room
en plein air
, the limitless sky after its sequences of blue and white
would be arching in star-fogged black. Often, depending upon the time of day, either the moon or the sun would brazenly be looking down at him, or be spy-like with face roughly hidden or femininely obscured behind veils of heavy and light cloud. He didn’t go to look this evening; it sufficed that he knew a sky to be there for him. Molly awaited with her disarmingly absolute patience, the sound of the door when he came home having alerted her.

The overly familiar smile caused him again to wonder, was it time for an update?

He had become very used to this expression and the sight of it mostly pleased him. Its designers had taken a dozen or so mouths and made composites from famous Hollywood beauties of the silver screen, choosing in the end an amalgam of Julie Christie’s heartbreaking lips in David Lean’s
Dr. Zhivago
, the insouciant Marilyn Monroe in Billy Wilder’s
Some Like It Hot
, and others he could not recall. He’d dug up these films and approved.

Molly’s smile made him feel part of a scene in which they were both performers. As well, they had given her the violet eyes of Elizabeth Taylor. These captivated him and habitually looked down after they appraised. He was never sure how she would do her hair, leaving that
laissez-faire
program alone as a little extra illusion of her independence.

His meal was real enough. She had promptly brought it to him having first set up the two candles – a ritual that he again reminded himself to end, since it made him feel more alone than otherwise. He let it go, succumbing to the delicate atmosphere that was the world of these soft flames still and bright as closed tulips in a full moon’s radiance. Yes, in a distracted fairy moment, he might even feel himself to be out in his garden. Sufficiently seduced, he tackled his food – a baked potato, salmon, broccoli – and engaged in talk once Molly took a place at the table. He would say whatever was on his mind, although some things wouldn’t have been there had he a human being opposite him. He allowed a pause and she typically began as programmed.

“How was your day, Virgil?” So spoke his hominid better half.

It amused him no end. The inquiry came couched in Molly’s warmly curious tones that seemed always to sound appropriate whatever his state of mind. He could answer or not as he wished. Not having to tailor his response to the tastes and shortcomings of a self-concerned being, he could be himself and he could characterize his day as it really had been. Without fail, the engagement would be reassuring and objective. It might be clinical but it wouldn’t threaten; it would follow his lead. Ignoring the subject of his dear grandmother, he went straight to the problematic heart of his recent expenditure of time and made it both confessional and belligerent.

“I spent half an hour with one of your colleagues, as it happens.”

“As it happens, Virgil?”

“Yes, I ran into her against a fridge,” – he allowed himself a snort of laughter – “and one thing led to another.”

“Intimacy, Virgil?”

“I’m afraid so, Molly.”

“Afraid, Virgil?”

“It’s a manner of speaking…there’s always a moral component.”

“You mean when being intimate with a humanoid?”

“Not exactly. It’s the act in itself,” he said. “Probably, its moral origins are primitive. Just the way humans are made, I suppose. Mustn’t let anything get between us and our God. Blame it on the priests or, if not, perhaps ultimately its consequences are real and in the moral nature of things. Something spiritual to do with our evolutionary path and where it must head.”

“You are still troubled, are you, Virgil?”

She meant that his statements confused her, and he was glad that she had not followed his remarks in a way that might compel him to expatiate upon his religious reference.

“Well, it was enjoyable, but the bad feelings do go, and the pleasant memories remain.”

“An older model, was she?”

“Certainly not new. Why do you ask?”

“You said you found her against a fridge.”

“Yes, I did, didn’t I?”

“And where did you find the fridge?”

He looked into her non-accusatory violet eyes that were without guile, and read there as if threaded together the incidents he’d related.

“Oh, it’s not important.”

He preferred to leave his grandmother out of it, whether or not his interlocutor be humanoid. An awkward silence. Awkward on his part – the human in the mix. As a rule, he had a policy of being truthful with Molly in order to avoid possible complications with her perfect recall. – “You once said, Virgil…By the way, how is your memory? A lot of people still take ginseng in preference to implantations. Would you like me to inquire further?” being one of her responses when they found themselves at cross-purposes. – He doubted that a lie to a humanoid had the same world-disrupting effect as one to a human could entail.

The pause allowed for a change of subject, however trivial.

“The salmon is poached.”

He had already squeezed the twist of lemon over the half-eaten portion of pink-dyed fish.

“As I like it.”

“Yes, you usually prefer it that way, don’t you?”

“It must be boring for you.”

BOOK: THE BLADE RUNNER AMENDMENT
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