Burning Chrome

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Book by William Gibson - Burning Chrome, page 25

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brick building. Deke found Best Buy War Surplus first,
then a broken neon sign over an unlit lobby. The
sidewalk out front was littered with another kind of
surplus damaged vets, some of them dating back to
Indochina. Old men who'd left their eyes under Asian
suns squatted beside twitching boys who'd inhaled
mycotoxins in Chile. Deke was glad to have the battered
elevator doors sigh shut behind him.
A dusty Dr. Pepper clock at the far side of the long,
spectral room told him it was a quarter to eight. Jack-
man's had been embalmed twenty years before he was
born, sealed away behind a yellowish film of nicotine,
of polish and hair oil. Directly beneath the clock, the
flat eyes of somebody's grandpappy's prize buck
regarded Deke from a framed, blown-up snapshot gone
the slick sepia of cockroach wings. There was the click
and whisper of pool, the squeak of a work boot twisting
on linoleum as a player leaned in for a shot. Somewhere
high above the green-shaded lamps hung a string of
crepe-paper Christmas bells faded to dead rose. Deke
looked from one cluttered wall to the next. No
facilitator.
"Bring one in, should we need it," someone said.
He turned, meeting the mild eyes of a bald man with
steel-rimmed glasses. "My name's Cline. Bobby Earl.
You don't look like you shoot pool, mister." But there
was nothing threatening in Bobby Earl's voice or stance.
He pinched the steel frames from his nose and polished
the thick lenses with a fold of tissue. He reminded Deke
of a shop instructor who'd patiently tried to teach him
retrograde biochip installation. "I'm a gambler," he
said, smiling. His teeth were white plastic. "I know I
don't much look it."
"I'm looking for Tiny," Deke said.
"Well," replacing the glasses, "you're not going to
find him. He's gone up to Bethesda to let the V.A. clean
his plumbing for him. He wouldn't fly against you any
how."
"Why not?"
"Well, because you're not on the circuit or I'd
know your face. You any good?" When Deke nodded,
Bobby Earl called down the length of Jackman's, "Yo,
Clarence! You bring out that facilitator. We got us a
flyboy."
Twenty minutes later, having lost his remote and
what cash he had left, Deke was striding past the bi
soldiers of Best Buy.
"Now you let me tell you, boy," Bobby Earl had
said in a fatherly tone as, hand on shoulder, he led Deke
back to the elevator, "You're not going to win against a
combat vet you listening to me? I'm not even espe-
cially good, just an old grunt who was on hype fifteen.
maybe twenty times. 01' Tiny, he was a pilot. Spent
entire enlistment hyped to the gills. He's got memb
attenuation real bad . . . you ain't never going to
him."
It was a cool night. But Deke burned with anger
and humiliation.

"Jesus, that's crude," Nance said as the Spad str
mounds of pink underwear. Deke, hunched up on
couch, yanked her flashy little Braun remote from
behind his ear.
"Now don't you get on my case too, Miss rich-
bitch gonna-have-a-job "
"Hey, lighten up! It's nothing to do with you it's
just tech. That's a really primitive wafer you got there. I
mean, on the street maybe it's fine. But compared to the
work I do at school, it's hey. You ought to let me re-
write it for you.''
"Say what?"
"Lemme beef it up. These suckers are all written in
hexadecimal, see, `cause the industry programmers are
all washed-out computer hacks. That's how they think.
But let me take it to the reader-analyzer at the depart-
ment, run a few changes on it, translate it into a modern
wetlanguage. Edit out all the redundant intermediaries.
That'll goose up your reaction time, cut the feedback
loop in half. So you'll fly faster and better. Turn you
into a real pro, Ace!" She took a hit off her bong, then
doubled over laughing and choking.
"Is that legit?" Deke asked dubiously.
"Hey, why do you think people buy gold-wire re-
motes? For the prestige? Shit. Conductivity's better,
cuts a few nanoseconds off the reaction time. And reac-
tion time is the name of the game, kiddo."
"No," Deke said. "If it were that easy, people'd
already have it. Tiny Montgomery would have it. He'd
have the best."
"Don't you ever listen?" Nance set down the bong;
brown water slopped onto the floor. "The stuff I'm
working with is three years ahead of anything you'll
find on the street."
"No shit," Deke said after a long pause. "I mean,
you can do that?"

It was like graduating from a Model T to a ninety-three
Lotus. The Spad handled like a dream, responsive to
Deke's slightest thought. For weeks he played the ar-
cades, with not a nibble. He flew against the local teens
and by ones and threes shot down their planes. He took
chances, played flash. And the planes tumbled....
Until one day Deke was tucking his seed money
away, and a lanky black straightened up from the wall.
He eyed the laminateds in Deke's hand and grinned. A
ruby tooth gleamed. "You know," the man said, "I
heard there was a casper who could fly, going up against
the kiddies."

"Jesus," Deke said, spreading Danish butter on a kelp
stick. "I wiped the floor with those spades. They were
good, too."
"That's nice, honey," Nance mumbled. She was
working on her finals project, sweating data into a
machine.
"You know, I think what's happening is I got real
talent for this kind of shit. You know? I mean, the pro-
gram gives me an edge, but I got the stuff to take ad-
vantage of it. I'm really getting a rep out there, you
know?" Impulsively, he snapped on the radio. Scratchy
Dixieland brass blared.
"Hey," Nance said. "Do you mind?"
"No, I'm just " He fiddled with the knobs, came
up with some slow, romantic bullshit. "There. Come
on, stand up. Let's dance."
"Hey, you know I can't "
"Sure you can, sugarcakes." He threw her the huge
teddy bear and snatched up a patchwork cotton dress
from the floor. He held it by the waist and sleeve, tuck-
ing the collar under his chin. It smelled of patchouli,
more faintly of sweat. "See, I stand over here, you
stand over there. We dance. Get it?"
Blinking softly, Nance stood and clutched the bear
tightly. They danced then, slowly, staring into each
other's eyes. After a while, she began to cry. But still,
she was smiling.
* *
Deke was daydreaming, imagining he was Tiny Mont-
gomery wired into his jumpjet. Imagined the machine
responding to his slightest neural twitch, reflexes
cranked way up, hype flowing steadily into his veins.
Nance's floor became jungle, her bed a plateau in
the Andean foothills, and Deke flew his Spad at forced
speed, as if it were a full-wired interactive combat
machine. Computerized hypos fed a slow trickle of
high-performance enhancement melange into his
bloodstream. Sensors were wired directly into his skull
pulling a supersonic snapturn in the green-blue bowl
of sky over Bolivian rain forest. Tiny would have felt
the airflow over control surfaces.
Below, grunts hacked through the jungle with
hype-pumps strapped above elbows to give them that
little extra death-dance fury in combat, a shot of liquid
hell in a blue plastic vial. Maybe they got ten minutes'
worth in a week. But coming in at treetop level, reflexes
cranked to the max, flying so low the ground troops
never spotted you until you were on them, phosgene
agents released, away and gone before they could draw
a bead . . . it took a constant trickle of hype just to
maintain. And the direct neuron interface with the
jumpjet was a two-way street. The onboard computers
monitored biochemistry and decided when to open the
sluice gates and give the human component a killer jolt
of combat edge.
Dosages like that ate you up. Ate you good and
slow and constant, etching the brain surfaces, eroding
away the brain-cell membranes. If you weren't yanked
from the air promptly enough, you ended up with brain-
cell attenuation with reflexes too fast for your body to
handle and your fight-or-flight reflexes fucked real
good....
"I aced it, proleboy!"
"Hah?" Deke looked up, startled, as Nance
slammed in, tossing books and bag onto the nearest
heap.

"My finals project I got exempted from exams.
The prof said he'd never seen anything like it. Uh, hey,
dim the lights, wouldja? The colors are weird on my
eyes.~~
He obliged. "So show me. Show me this wunnerful
thing."
"Yeah, okay." She snatched up his remote, kicked
clear standing space atop the bed, and struck a pose. A
spark flared into flame in her hand. It spread in a
quicksilver line up her arm, around her neck, and it was
a snake, with triangular head and flickering tongue.
Molten colors, oranges and reds. It slithered between
her breasts. "I call it a firesnake," she said proudly.
Deke leaned close, and she jerked back.
"Sorry. It's like your flame, huh? I mean, I can see
these tiny little fuckers in it."
"Sort of." The firesnake flowed down her stom-
ach. "Next month I'm going to splice two hundred
separate flame programs together with meld justifica-
tion in between to get the visuals. Then I'll tap the
mind's body image to make it self-orienting. So it can
crawl all over your body without your having to mind it.
You could wear it dancing."
"Maybe I'm dumb. But if you haven't done the

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   Thursday 20 November, 2008