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Alfred Bester - The Computer Connection

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Alfred Bester The Computer Connection

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Alfred Besters first science fiction novel since The Stars My Destination was a major event-a fast-moving adventure story set in Earths future. A band of immortal-as charming a bunch of eccentrics as youll ever come across-recruit a new member, the brilliant Cherokee physicist Sequoya Guess. Dr. Guess, with groups help, gain control of Extro, the supercomputer that controls all mechanical activity on Earth. They plan to rid Earth of political repression and to further Guesss researches-which may lead to a great leap in human evolution to produce a race of supermen. But Extro takes over Guess instead and turns malevolent. The task of the merry band suddenly becomes a fight in deadly earnest for the future of Earth. .

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THE COMPUTER CONNECTION

by Alfred Bester

Paperback: 272 pages

Publisher: I Books (February 1, 2000)

ISBN-10: 0671039016

ISBN-13: 978-0671039011

I tore down the Continental Shelf off the Bogue Bank while the pogo made periscope hops trying to track me. Endless plains of salt flats like the steppes of Central Russia (music by Borodin here); mounds of salts where the new breed of prospector was sieving for rare earths; towers of venomous vapors on the eastern horizon where the pumping stations were sucking up more of the Atlantic and extracting deuterium for energy transfer.

Most of the fossil fuels were gone; the sea level had been lowered by two feet; progress.

I was headed for Herb Wells hideout. Hes perfected a technique for reclaiming gold (which nobody wants these plastic days) and is schlepping ingots back into the past with a demented time-dingbat which is why the Group has nicknamed him H.G. Wells. Herb is making gifts of gold to characters like Van Gogh and Mozart, trying to keep them healthy, wealthy, and wise so theyll create more goodies for posterity. So far its never worked. No Son of Don Giovanni. Not even The Don Meets Dracula.

Following the Thieves & Vagabonds road signs that Herb puts out for the Group, I went under a mound and tunneled through the salts, absorbing NaCl, MgCl2, MgSO4, calcium, potassium, bromides, and probably traces of Herbs gold which hed grudge me. I came out at the bunker hatch.

Locked, of course. I hammered on it while the pogo bounced and thrummed overhead and it was six, two, and even theyd get me before Herb heard me, but he hear me.

Quien dat? Quien dat? he called in Black Spanglish.

Its Guig, I hollered in XXth Century English. Thats the secret cant the Group uses. Im in a jam. Let me in.

The hatch swung down and I fell in. Freeze it, Herb. The fuzz may have spotted me.

He slammed the hatch and froze the grommets. What the hell have you been up to, Guig?

The usual stuff I killed another guy.

The fuzz making a fuss about murder? Dont put me on.

He was the governor of the Corridor.

Oh. You shouldnt kill the importants, Guig. People dont understand.

I know, but theyre the only candidates worth killing.

How many failures have you had so far?

Ive lost count.

And no success. Herb meditated. Maybe we ought to sit down and discuss it. The first question should be, is it a problem of perplexity or complexity? I think

A pounding made the hatch vibrate.

Theres goody two-shoes, I said without joy. Can you shoot me timesome in your dingbat, Herb?

But you always refused to shoot a trip. He gave me a mournful look. You hurt my feelings.

Ive got to disappear for a few hours. If they dont find me here they wont bother you. I apologize about the dingbat, Herb, but I was always scared of that thing. The whole Group is.

So am I. Come on.

I followed him into the Chamber of Horrors and sat down in the insane machine which looks like a praying mantis. Herb handed me an ingot. I was just going to give this to Thomas Chatterton. You deliver it for me.

Chatterton? The kid poet?

In the flesh. Committed suicide in 1770, greatly regretted. Arsenic. He was out of bread and out of hope. Youre going back to London. Hes holed up in an attic in Brook Street. Got it?

Neither rain nor snow nor gloom of

Ill put it on a three-hour snatch. That ought to give you enough time. Ill shoot you to a prominent place so you can get your bearings. Dont wander too far or the thing wont be able to grab you.

The pounding got louder and more peevish. Herb did things with calibrations and switches and there was a crackle of french-fried power (which Ill bet he never pays for) and I was sitting in a mud-puddle in the rain and a George Washington type on a chestnut horse nearly rode me down and bawled hell out of me for obstructing a public road.

I got up, backed off the road, and someone kicked me in the brain. I jumped and turned around and it was a popeyed corpse hanging from a gibbet. Herb had shot me to a prominent place, all rightTyburn. I hadnt been in London in years (rotten with fallout residues) and certainly never in 1770, but that gave me my bearings. Tyburn had been turned into Marble Arch. I was on the outskirts of eighteenth-century London. No Bayswater Road, yet; no Hyde Park; just fields, trees, meadows, and the little Tyburn creek meandering. The city was on my left.

I walked down a path that would someday be Park Lane and turned left into the fringe of houses. They became thick and crowded when I reached a cow pasture that would become Grosvenor Square. A Saturday-night market was in progress. Hundreds of barrows and stalls illuminated by flaring torches, grease lamps with flags of flame, humble tallow candles.

Roars of hucksters: Eight a penny! Stunning pears! Chestnuts all ot!

Penny a score! Beautiful whelks, penny a lot! Fine warnuts, sixteen a penny! I was hungry but I didnt have any current coin; just two pounds of refined gold.

I remembered that Brook Street led off the north side of Grosvenor so I took that route asking for a writer named Chatterton. Nobody ever heard of him until I came across a Flying Stationer hung with broadsheets offering

The Life of the Hangman, Secret Doings in Soho, The Treacherous Servant, that sort of thing. He said he knew Chatterton. The kid wrote long-song poems for him at a shilling ea., and he pointed out the house which had no business to be standing.

I ran up the crumbling stairs, convinced Id fall through at every step, and burst into the attic with a merry, Gold! Gold! Gold! Bright and yellow, hard and cold! (Thomas Hood, 1799-1845) The kid was writhing on a pallet in the last agonies of arsenic poisoning. Ah-ha! I thought. Hes dying. He knows hes dead. If I can save him maybe weve got another Moleman for the Group.

I did my best. The first thing to do is make them vomit. I peed into a tumbler and forced it down Chattertons throat. No nausea. Too far gone. I ran down the stairs and banged on a door. It was opened by Betsy Ross

grandmother, complaining. I shoved past her, saw a jug of milk, took it and a clutch of charcoal from the cold fireplace. She had now graduated to screaming. I returned to my house call. Charcoal and milk. Nothing. He was gone, greatly regretted, and what the hell was I going to do with 24 oz. (troy) of gold which was dragging the butt pocket of my coveralls?

Well, I had to stall anyway until the Mantis put the snatch on me so I went for a walk in the rain. At Fleet Street I turned off and went into the Cheshire Cheese to see if I could parlay the ingot into a drink and maybe dry off in front of the fire, which was eclipsed by a snorting whale and a simpering dogfish. The Grand Cham and Boswell.

What would you do, sir, if you were locked up in a tower with a newborn babe? dogfish was asking. The whale heaved and growled but before he could answer that monumental question I was yanked back to the dingbat, dripping all over the circuits to the anguish of Herb.

OutOutOut! he hollered. Theyve left.

I out.

Why didnt you give Thos. the gold?

Too late, man. He gone when I get.

Oh, drat.

Try again, a little earlier.

I cant. The damn thing wont shoot the same decade twice. To tell the truth, Guig, I think its a lemon.

Maybe thats why his Health, Education, and Welfare program never works.

I thanked Herb, still using the Group XX English and returned to Spangland, the Gem of the Ocean. I know all this sounds kind of lunatic but Im up against a tough proposition keeping these notes. I have to translate from Black SpanglishBenny Diaz, gemmum, ah gone esplain any pagunta you axwhich is now the official language of the country, and then go on from there. It runs: Spanglish XX English Machine Language. Its one hell of a job, especially when its compounded by sorting out centuries of memories.

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