Rewired_ The Post-Cyberpunk Anthology - James Patrick Kelly [159]
Bash set his phone on the ground. “Tito, I’m going in alone. Call the cops if I’m not out in half an hour.”
“Uptaken and bound, fizz!”
Rather vengefully, Bash smashed his fist through the disguising pape, then scrambled inside.
Dagny had hotwired electricity from somewhere. The Paramount was well lit, although the illumination did nothing to dispel a moldy atmosphere from years of inoccupancy. Bash moved cautiously from the debris-strewn backstage area out into the general seating.
A flying disc whizzed past his ear like a suicidal mirror-finished bat. It hit a wall and shattered.
Dagny stood above him at the rail of the mezzanine with an armful of antique DVDS. The platters for the digital projectors must have been left behind when the Paramount ceased operations. The writing on a shard at Bash’s feet read: The Silmarillion.
Dagny frisbee’d another old movie at Bash. He ducked just in time to avoid getting decapitated.
“Quit it, Dagny! Act like an adult, for Christ’s sake! We have to talk!”
Dagny pushed her clunky eyeglasses back up her nose. “We’ve got nothing to talk about! You’ve proven you’re a narrow-minded slave to old hierarchies, without an ounce of imagination left in your shriveled brainpan. And you insulted my art!”
“I’m sorry! I didn’t mean to, honest. Jesus, even you said that the Woodies were a big joke.”
“Don’t try putting words in my mouth! Anyway, that was before I won one.”
Bash stepped forward into an aisle. “I’m coming up there, Dagny, and you can’t stop me.”
A withering fusillade of discs forced Bash to eat his words and run for cover into an alcove.
Frustrated beyond endurance, Bash racked his wits for some means of overcoming the demented auteur.
A decade of neglect had begun to have its effects on the very structure of the theater. The alcove where Bash stood was littered with fragments of concrete. Bash snatched up one as big as his fist. From his pocket he dug the sheet of proteopape that had blinded him, and wrapped it around the heavy chunk. He stepped forward.
“Dagny, let’s call a truce. I’ve got something here you need to read. It puts everything into a new light.” Bash came within a few meters of the lower edge of the balcony before Dagny motioned him to stop. He offered the ball of pape on his upturned palm.
“I don’t see what could possibly change things—”
“Just take a look, okay?”
“All right. Toss it up here.”
Dagny set her ammunition down to free both hands and leaned over the railing to receive the supposedly featherweight pape.
Bash concentrated all his anger and resolve into his right arm. He made a motion as if to toss underhand. But at the last minute he swiftly wound up and unleashed a mighty overhand pitch.
Dagny did not react swiftly enough to the deceit. The missile conked her on the head and she went over backwards into the mezzanine seats.
Never before had Bash moved so fast. He found Dagny hovering murmurously on the interface between consciousness and oblivion. Reassured that she wasn’t seriously injured, Bash arrowed toward her nest of pillows. He snatched up the sheet of proteopape that displayed his familiar toolkit for accessing the trapdoor features of his invention. With a few commands he had long ago memorized as a vital failsafe, he initiated the shutdown of the hidden override aspects of proteopape.
From one interlinked sheet of proteopape to the next the commands raced, propagating exponentially around the globe like history’s most efficient cyber-worm, a spark that extinguished its very means of propagation as it raced along. Within mere minutes, the world was made safe and secure again for Immanent Information.
Bash returned to Dagny, who was struggling to sit up.
“You—you haven’t beaten me. I’ll find some way to show you—”
The joyful noises from the continuing parade outside insinuated themselves into Bash’s relieved mind. He felt happy and inspired. Looking down at Dagny, he knew just what to say.
“Forget it, Jake. It’s Chinatown.”
The Voluntary State
Christopher Rowe
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