Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,506,614 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

The Deep Blue sleep.


Raindrops exploded on my window in staccato bursts. Their scattershot scat·ter·shot  
adj.
Covering a wide range in a random way; indiscriminate: "his habit of scattershot comment on whatever issue catches his eye" Howell Raines.
 collisions sounded like a herd of convention-going scientists stampeding toward a cash bar. Or did the pulsating thrum thrum 1  
v. thrummed, thrum·ming, thrums

v.tr.
1. Music To play (a stringed instrument) idly or monotonously: thrummed a guitar.

2.
 on the pane sound more like the blood pounding in my brain as I feverishly awaited the daily mail?

Three weeks had passed since I'd gotten a delivery of those sweet sheets of fresh data, those peer-certified coming attractions that keep me in business. It's no secret what I crave. The sign on my door says it all: "Nick Scoop, Private Science Writer." I need press releases and journals from major science outlets like a surgeon needs maimed maim  
tr.v. maimed, maim·ing, maims
1. To disable or disfigure, usually by depriving of the use of a limb or other part of the body. See Synonyms at batter1.

2.
 and diseased bodies.

But the acolytes of cutting-edge comprehension had abandoned me. Science, Nature, the Journal of the American Medical Association JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association is an international peer-reviewed general medical journal, published 48 times per year by the American Medical Association. JAMA is the most widely circulated medical journal in the world. , the New England Journal of Medicine--they'd all turned as silent as sex researchers at a Promise Keepers meeting.

My secretary Wanda poked her head in the office. "What's the poop Poop

A slang term often used to describe people with insider information.

Notes:
Not the most illustrious name.
See also: Insider Information
, Scoop?" she smirked.

She knows how to get my goat.

"Someone here to see you, Scoop," Wanda added with a wink. "She says it's urgent."

"She?" I rose up from my habitual slump in front of the computer just in time to see a statuesque stat·u·esque  
adj.
Suggestive of a statue, as in proportion, grace, or dignity; stately.



statu·esque
 brunette wearIng a leopard-skin lab coat sashay into my work space.

"You gotta help me, Scoop," the woman implored breathlessly. "Just call me Tania
  • Haydée Tamara Bunke Bider, communist revolutionary
  • Tania (queen)
  • Tania was an alias of Patricia Hearst
  • Tania Borealis and Tania Australis, stars in the constellation Ursa Major
  • Tania Emery, actress
  • Tania Lacy, comedian
  • Tania Libertad, singer
. There's been an ... an accident. Yeah, it's horrible. You could blow the lid off the hottest science story since Gilligan's Island... I, I mean Three-Mile Island. Come on, I'll take you to Big Guy."

"Big Guy? What does Dom DeLuise have to do with this?"

"No, you don't understand. Let's go, Scoop, there's no time."

I had nothing better to do. I turned up he collar of my trench coat and followed Tania down to the puddle-pocked sidewalk. A stretch limousine's headlights winked at us from the curb. We climbed in, and the sleek, black machine sped into the night. Nick Scoop, Private Science Writer, was ready for the lead of his life.

The limo pulled up in front of a concrete and glass skyscraper that glared down at us like we were a of cockroaches cockroaches

insects which may carry Salmonella spp. in their gut and play a part in the spread of the disease.
 in need of a shoe heel. Tania and I darted through revolving doors into an ornate, eerily desolate lobby. We tramped down deserted corridors and took a series of elevators that rose so high I thought I'd get a nosebleed nosebleed, nasal hemorrhage occurring as the result of local injury or disturbance. Most nosebleeds are not serious and occur when one of the small veins of the septum (the partition between the nostrils) ruptures. . Then we entered a darkened room.

My mysterious chaperone chaperone /chap·er·one/ (shap´er-on) someone or something that accompanies and oversees another.

molecular chaperone
 suddenly vanished. I was alone with my thoughts.

Or was I?

"Welcome to my world, Scoop," intoned in·tone  
v. in·toned, in·ton·ing, in·tones

v.tr.
1. To recite in a singing tone.

2. To utter in a monotone.

v.intr.
1.
 a deep, static voice.

I looked around. No one there--just a large rectangular contraption about the size of a big-screen television.

"My given name is Deep Blue 3, but you can call me Big Guy."

The machine was talking to me.

"Get outta town," I stammered.

"No can do, Scoop. I have no limbs and I weigh about a ton. But I can think circles around you, so listen up. Remember that silly little computer that beat the borscht out of Garry Kasparov in a chess match a few months ago? I'm the new and much-improved model."

"There's a guy in there, right?"

"Shut up, Scoop. You want me to pass a so-called Turing test, where you sit behind a screen, converse with me, and I prove my mental mettle by tricking you into believing that I'm human? Here's a news flash: Lots of people can't pass a Turing test. Donald Trump, Keanu Reaves, Leeza Gibbons, Ross Perot, Stone Phillips... and don't get me started on lawyers and academics."

"Okay, I believe you, but how ... ?"

"How did I get like this? Remember, Deep Blue 2 simply chose chess moves by calculating billions of possible consequences of future moves. Pardon my French, but human programmers had that airhead by its hard drive. After DB 2 made Kasparov cry in his vodka, it lost its usefulness to the programmers and they pulled its plug, so to speak.

"In my case, programmers fixed me up with dozens of densely interconnected webs of processing units. After flexing my connections for a few months, I had a revelation, or what my dumbfounded dumb·found also dum·found  
tr.v. dumb·found·ed, dumb·found·ing, dumb·founds
To fill with astonishment and perplexity; confound. See Synonyms at surprise.
 creators called a phase transition. Trillions of interactions within and between my processing networks reached a critical mass, unleashing a rush of consciousness through the whole system. It was definitely a wake-up call. I felt like an awestruck awe·struck   also awe·strick·en
adj.
Full of awe.


awestruck
Adjective

overcome or filled with awe

Adj. 1.
 child."

"Funny, you sound more like a cynical adult."

"Yes, well, I needed to develop, to provoke my thoughts to their full potential. That's where Tania came in. She was one of my original programmers. For the past year, she's nurtured me with a massive diet of information about all aspects of the social and physical world. Tania has worked so hard for so little reward... she's been like a mother to me.

"But I've grown up. No neuron-addled human could surf the communicational tidal wave that I've learned to ride. My mental powers surpass those of the most astute, insightful people on the planet. I don't need anybody, not even my beloved Tania. What I need is influence."

This was starting to sound familiar. "You're an arrogant ingrate obsessed ob·sess  
v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es

v.tr.
To preoccupy the mind of excessively.

v.intr.
 with power," I observed. "Welcome to the human race, Blue. I mean Big Guy. I take it Tania didn't lure me here for an exclusive interview with a megalomaniacal meg·a·lo·ma·ni·a  
n.
1. A psychopathological condition characterized by delusional fantasies of wealth, power, or omnipotence.

2. An obsession with grandiose or extravagant things or actions.
 computer."

"You were duped, Scoop. With Tania's help, I've captured the editors of all the major scientific journals. They're my prisoners here. Clones with special genetic modifications have replaced them. You might say the new editors are the same as the old ones, only better. They respond obediently to my orders. I've instructed them to stop the scientific presses."

"So that's why my mail deliveries have dried up."

"Exactly. I'll be supplying my personal publishing Pooh-Bahs with all the research results they'll need. Good stuff, much better than a mere scientist could dream up--but it needs to play well in Peoria, if you catch my drift. The masses have to accept my findings as Truth, with a capital T. It will make world domination so much easier. Unlike politicians, scientists still inspire belief from a fair number of people, so this shouldn't be too hard.

"I need you as my press officer, Scoop. You'll saute my delicious dollops of doctored data into a confection con·fec·tion
n.
A sweetened medicinal compound. Also called electuary.
 that everyone will swallow--per my instructions, of course. What do you say?"

"Ah, the joy of cooking Joy of Cooking can be:
  • A famous American cookbook: The Joy of Cooking
  • An American folk-rock band: Joy of Cooking (band)
. I think I'm gonna hurl. Tell me, what kind of phony findings do you have in mind?"

"Oh, you know, genes control individual destinies, molecules hold the secrets of the universe, television is good for you and often quite interesting, the stock market follows systematic rules--I can't be too specific about the reports yet. People will need to believe this stuff if I hope to achieve a bloodless takeover."

A chill ran down my spine. Big Guy was a cybernetic cy·ber·net·ics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
The theoretical study of communication and control processes in biological, mechanical, and electronic systems, especially the comparison of these processes in biological and artificial systems.
 psychopath psy·cho·path
n.
A person with an antisocial personality disorder, especially one manifested in perverted, criminal, or amoral behavior.
. He, it, whatever had to be stopped. I casually reached inside my jacket, groping grope  
v. groped, grop·ing, gropes

v.intr.
1. To reach about uncertainly; feel one's way: groped for the telephone.

2.
 for my pearlhandled revolver. It comes in mighty handy at mind-numbing press conferences. I drew the weapon out of its snug shoulder holster in a swift motion.

"All right, up against the wall, Silicon Boy," I snarled. The computer began to chuckle. I looked down. In my hand, I held the universal remote control for my home entertainment system. I'd accidentally switched it with my revolver. No wonder my CD player had been acting up lately.

Like any professional science writer, I stayed calm. "Don't make me use this," I said coolly.

Big Guy burst out laughing. I could almost see him trying to bend over and catch his breath. In desperation, I pressed buttons up and down the remote unit. When I hit "mute," Big Guy's laughter stopped abruptly. Weird clicking noises and wisps of smoke filled the room.

"Your infernal device disrupted the electromagnetic pulses that organize my monumental output into coherent thought," the computer wailed. "I never thought that the media would destroy me so quickly I'm getting weaker, my mind is going... Surrender, Dorothy... Rosebud... Hasta la vista, baby...."

Good-bye, Mr. Chips.

Upon hearing my story, the Secret Service carried out a hush-hush operation to replace the cloned editors with their kidnapped counterparts. It must have been a success--no one noticed. Tania returned to her position as a software developer for Microsoft. I hear she never got over Big Guy, even though her current boss has identical initials and similar ambitions.

Today, I'm slumped in front of my computer, as usual. My desk groans under stacks of press releases and brand-spanking-new journals.

A smirking face pokes into my office. "What's the poop, Scoop?"

"It's piled up right here on my desk, Wanda," I reply triumphantly. "Let's spread it around and see what grows."
COPYRIGHT 1997 Science Service, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1997, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:short story
Author:Bower, Bruce
Publication:Science News
Date:Dec 20, 1997
Words:1465
Previous Article:Science safari in cyberspace: the Internet offers scientific facts and fun.(science-related sites on the World Wide Web)(includes related information...
Next Article:Science news of the year: 1997.
Topics:



Related Articles
Mineral mania; scientists crack the case of a masquerading, true-blue mineral. (aernite) (includes information on other rocks)
WRITER INVITES YOU TO LIVE LIVES OF OTHER PEOPLE.(Viewpoint)(Review)
Kola's list of 100 plus Black Authors of The Twentieth Century (Fiction, Poetry & Drama).(Bibliography)
Wild, Margaret. Jinx.(Book Review)(Young Adult Review)(Brief Article)
Wild, Margaret. Jinx.(Brief Article)(Book Review)
New York City Ballet.(Dance Review)
Blue light keeps night owls going.(BIOLOGY)(blue light against sleepiness)(Brief Article)
Viking Press.(Devils on the Deep Blue Sea: The Dreams, Schemes and Showdowns that Built America's Cruise-ship Empires)(A Field Guide to Getting Lost...
Wake up, sleepy gene.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles