7.1
DataPacRat
Amateur Immortalist
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*Book Seven: Mis-*
*Chapter One: Mis-anthrope*
"Well, Doc?" Brenda chalked onto a lap-sized slate with one limb, as she squeezed the rest of her near-liquid form back into her griffon-shaped suit. "What's the verdict?"
"I may be a vet," Denise answered, "but even I know what patient privacy is."
"It's OK," Brenda wrote, sealing herself up. "I want Bunny to know."
Denise sighed, and flipped through her papers. "I can tell you more about what I can't find than what I can. Your cells seem to be undifferentiated - I can't find any that are even distinctly muscle or skin cells, let alone any actual organs. That includes a lack of nerve cells or a brain - I don't know how you're thinking, or what you're thinking with."
Brenda scribbled out, "What, no jokes?"
Denise glared. "This isn't a joking matter. You've been turned into a life-form even more alien than the squiddies. We don't know what might hurt you that the rest of us could just ignore. Maybe salt or vinegar is a deadly poison to you now."
Brenda wiped the chalk clear to make room for, "So take samples & test".
Denise shook her head. "I'm not comfortable with that. The samples I've already drawn held together for an hour, then the inter-cellular matrix dissolved, and the samples liquified into individual cells floating in water. Without knowing what you're using to think, any sample I take might be like scooping out a bit of your brain. And I'm not going to ask you to try splitting off larger pieces, given how much more likely part of your thinking is to end up in the wrong piece."
Brenda tilted her head - or, at least, shifted the part of herself in the head part of her suit to make it look like she did that. Then she shrugged (or at least imitated the gesture well enough), and added, "What do you know?"
Denise flipped a few more pages. "Well, for one, I figured out part of why everything looks weird to you. We can't see infrared; to you, it looks red. We can't see ultraviolet; to you, it looks blue. Almost all the colours of what we usually call 'visible' light look like green to you. I'm going to guess that's the best your brain can do to interpret the information your visual sense is giving you, and whatever you're thinking with is closely modeled on your original brain.
"Now, your problem with speaking doesn't seem to be creating hollow spaces that act like lungs, but with creating vocal cords to vibrate the air."
After a few more items, Brenda interrupted to ask about a particular detail. "Do you know what I eat? Do I need light like plants?"
Denise shrugged. "I haven't been able to get good observations about that yet. You can dissolve everything organic you've touched so far, and you can keep from dissolving it if you want. Beyond that, I think we mostly have to see what happens, if your body sends hunger or thirst signals to your mind, that sort of thing."
I finally spoke up. "Is she going to... be okay? Not suddenly melt?"
Denise shook her head, but not in an answer to my question. "There's no way to know. She could collapse any moment. She might be effectively immortal and outlive us all. If you're asking if she can leave the cargo bay... well, I'd /like/ to keep her confined indefinitely and keep running tests, but I've got no medical /reason/ to. Her newest Change doesn't seem to create any specifically identifiable danger to herself or others... so for now, I'm going to provisionally clear her from quarantine, as long as she keeps the suit sealed."
--
I dreamed I was swimming, floating in the water near the campground at Long Point.
I woke to a similar sensation... though with various exceptions that reminded me more of my time in the bimbo zone. I was surrounded in transparent /stuff/ that barely let me move - and which filled all my orifices. I couldn't inhale, but didn't seem to be suffering from a lack of oxygen. My breasts ached as if I hadn't been milked for many hours, and I had to pee.
I managed to tilt my head to look down at myself... my belly was inflated again.
I tried to scream.
One of the handheld AIs floated through the stuff, until it was almost touching my ear.
"Ooh, you're awake," a voice came from it - neither Alphie's nor Boomer's. "I figured out all /sorts/ of tricks I can do. Still can't make vocal cords worth a damn, but Alphie and I came up with a workaround."
I might have flailed and thrashed a bit.
"Oh, right. You still need air to talk. Hold on, this will be a bit tricky - I don't want to rupture your lungs as I pull out of them."
In a few moments, my head broke the surface of, well, Brenda, and I spent a few more moments gasping for breath.
While I was doing that, Alphie floated to the surface next to me, and said, "I figured out how to change my colour, too. Look!" The transparent goo turned to a see-through blue, and then became opaque.
"Brenda," I started to say, but she kept talking right over me.
"I moved almost all my thinky bits inside you. I can get rid of most of the rest, and just coat you, inside and out. I can be any outfit you want! I had to teach the cells in your gut not to try to digest me, of course, but that's sorted out. Uh, you may want to check if you're lactose intolerant now, but I'm pretty sure you can digest that on your own, right?"
"Brenda," I tried again.
"And if anyone tries to hurt you again I'll be right there to keep you in one piece, and even fix you up. Ooh, I bet I could even replace your organs with myself. Wouldn't that be nice? Bun-Bun could be your skeleton, and I could be your flesh, and you could be the brains, and Wagger could, uh, wag, and we'd all be happy together!"
I hurriedly stated, "Brenda, I don't want you replacing any of my organs."
"Even if you lose some?"
Since she was finally responding to my voice, I carefully said, "We can cross that bridge if we come to it. The bimbo zone took my organs apart, and I was very unhappy about it. Maybe you could practice on some lab animals before you try anything like that on a person - if you can't get vocal cords to work, you might have unexpected troubles with more complicated structures."
"I suppose that's safe. Say, maybe I can keep you safer if I just keep you inside me."
My neck sank a few inches into the blue spheroid of stuff, and I once again spoke quickly. "Brenda, I want you to let me out of you. And, er, to remove yourself from inside me. All of you."
She was silent for a long moment, but at least I didn't sink any deeper. "... Are you sure?"
"Call it a trust exercise... I want to be sure that you're still you in there."
There was a sigh. "Well, I suppose. Uh - it'll take a few minutes. I was exploring, and your milk ducts and urethra are kind of narrow."
After a few minutes of sensation for which the word 'uncomfortable' was wholly inadequate, I was sitting on my private carriage's floor, and Brenda was pulling herself back into griffon shape - though she was now favouring a see-through blue colour scheme. She shifted Alphie so that he was embedded in the front of her chest. "There, you're back to just you, and I'm all here. Happy?"
I pulled my arms around my once-again-deflated belly. "That's one word. Brenda, do you understand why I'm uncomfortable with what you just did?"
"Flashback to the zone?"
"... Brenda, what is it called when one person inserts something into another person's genitals, without having previously gotten permission to do so?"
"Ohshit! Ohmygod! I didn't even /think/ about it like that! You must hate me now and never want to see me again and-"
"Brenda!" I reached out one of my hands, which she'd accidentally de-furred earlier, to rest on her surface. "I don't hate you. I do think you should get some counselling, until you've settled into the new you. Fortunately, I happen to know someone who's dealt with problems /almost/ as unusual as this..."
--
Just to be on the safe side, I discreetly arranged for Brenda and Amy to meet up away from the shelter, and the bimbos remaining inside. Since we EMPed the zone, there was less of a likelihood that they'd vanish too - but with Brenda seeming to have absorbed at least some aspects of the bimbo zone, I felt that there wasn't anything to be gained by tempting fate.
The Civil Guard was still trying to track down all the bimbos who'd disappeared, but after seeing what happened to Judith, I wasn't holding out much hope... and despite all my technical doo-dads, I didn't have much else I could add to the search. So, with my counsellor dealing with her new patient, I went over my to-do list to see which items were near the top, priority-wise. One item caught my eye; I hadn't checked in on the city's constitutional committee during my week-long spell of intensive therapy.
--
"Mister... Owen Lears?" I asked the man in pajamas and a bathrobe.
"Yes?"
"/There/ you are!" I glared at him. "Why are you here, instead of the hall put aside for the committee?"
"Committee? Oh, yes, that - we finished that on the first day, and all voted to go home."
"... Really. You wrote a constitution in one day."
"We didn't have to do much writing. We just took the old American one, and replaced 'states' with 'unions'."
"... That's /it/?"
"Why would we need to do anything else?"
"... There are /so/ many ways I could answer that. But I'll try to focus on the personal consequences: I don't see how I would be willing to accept such a slapdash job, and by the provisions of the treaty, my refusal would mean a reversion to rule by military occupation. Trust me, after you bungled a generous opportunity for civil government, you would /not/ like how that plays out. And I have projects I would much rather be doing than running this town."
"Yeah? So?"
"So any of your committee members who aren't back at the hall in one hour are going to get arrested."
I turned my chair around - I already missed Brenda's help maneuvering it - and rolled back toward Munchkin without another word.
--
"Purple fox?"
"Er... yes, ma'am?" The Bayesian cultist was still scrambling into his robe and hood as he answered the door.
"Show me your constitution draft."
"Yes, ma'am!"
I spent some time going over both the main text, and the extensive notes.
Eventually, I got to his version of a Bill of Rights, and started wincing. "A clarification, here, please. Your free association clause - where you have, 'any person may ... refuse to transact with any other person for any reason'... does that mean a business owner may refuse to sell to people of a race or religion he dislikes?"
"Of course, ma'am."
"And a doctor may similarly refuse to treat a patient for religious reasons?"
"Yes, ma'am."
"Hrm. Moving on... The freedom of thought and religion clause... 'nor shall the Government operate or support any school, college, or university'. No government-run education at all?"
"None, ma'am."
"And you have the government prohibited from issuing or regulating money."
"Yes, ma'am."
"And you prohibit occupational licenses."
"Yes, ma'am."
"Including preventing the government from having a monopoly on 'services of adjudication, protection, and enforcement' of rights."
"Exactly so, ma'am."
"And... any land-owner may secede with their property, becoming an independent state?"
"Yes, ma'am."
I set the papers down, frowning. "I have to say, this looks less like a constitution to protect its citizens' rights and improve their welfare than it does a recipe for paralyzing the government to such a degree that everyone secedes into 'sovereign' armed households."
"That's exactly right, ma'am."
I blinked, then frowned harder. "Even if doing so means everyone ends up poorer and worse off than if they cooperated more?"
"Yes, ma'am."
"If you know that's the likely outcome - then /why/ did you design this thing that way?"
"The wealthier and more cooperative people are, the more likely they are to re-develop the technology that will cause a second Singularity. Arranging for as many people as possible to act as sovereign individuals is likely to hamper technological innovation, to the degree that a new Singularity becomes impossible. I have another set of notes on my economic calculations, if you wish to read them, ma'am."
"... No, thank you. I think I've learned what I need to know for now."
--
Sarah rolled me into the conference hall right on the one-hour dot. To my relief, it looked like the number of people matched the committee membership list. (Threatening arrest was one thing; getting the Civil Guard to carry it out, with the Free Company withdrawn back to their home city, would have been tricky, and possibly might have crashed the whole program.)
After some consideration, and consultation of Boomer's knowledge of history, I was trying to pull a MacArthur, and had donned my Commander-in-Chief outfit. Sarah had grumbled a bit about having to wear more than a vest, but I'd gotten her decked out in a full-body camouflage thing that looked military-ish without actually being so.
Sarah moved me to the head of the table, unceremoniously shoved the chair there out of the way, and installed my wheelchair in its place. I folded my hands together, watching as the dozen-ish people started shuffling over.
Before they'd even sat down, I started talking. "The /injuries/ I received after your /former/ government kidnapped me have prevented me from giving this group appropriate oversight and direction. You are /supposed/ to be arranging for the structure of your future politics - and you couldn't even put more than a day's effort into it. Now, I'd like a quick show of hands: How many of you can explain how a first-past-the-post election system tends to lead to polarization into two camps, while a ranked-preference election system doesn't?"
No hands rose. I sighed.
I pulled out my walkie-talkie. "It's as bad as I was afraid of. Send in Purple Skunk."
After a few moments, a figure in an identity-concealing robe and cowl entered the hall and joined us at the table. I introduced her, "This individual appears to have more knowledge about government documents than all of you put together. I should have brought her in at the beginning, but was distracted by medical concerns. Consider her my representative at these talks, and listen to her advice."
One of the committee members finally spoke. "Who is she?"
I focused my ears on him. "What difference does it make?"
"Well... which union is she with?"
"I repeat - what difference does it make?"
"I just want to know which group's interests she's trying to advance."
I managed a tight smile. "/Mine/. And I'm not in any of your interests." I drummed my fingers on the table for a moment. "Perhaps I need to clarify something. According to the terms of the peace treaty, the one which all your union bosses signed, I can pick any constitution I want and that would be the law. The reason this committee exists at all is due entirely to my leniency. Externally-imposed constitutions don't have a great success record, since the local population generally has particular concerns that such constitutions don't address. If you're willing to use something as close to the old American constitution as possible, then it's obvious there are no such concerns, and thus I should have no compunction in picking whatever constitutional details please me. That said - Purple, why don't you offer a few highlight suggestions?"
"Almost any form of preferential voting more accurately represents a community's desires and interests; instant runoff is simple enough for our purposes, but both single transferable vote and mixed-member proportional representation have their advantages. Line-item vetoes reduce pork. Constitutional requirements that laws have explicit goals, and amendments have to be related to those goals, gets rid of all sorts of potential boondoggles. Requiring metrics to measure those goals, and an expiration date for laws if they fail to meet those goals, is untested but worth considering. Prediction markets were part of the platform in the twenty-forty insurrections, and the documentation on them was distributed enough that even after those movements were put down, we have enough information to create our own system."
I reached into my wheelchair's pannier, withdrawing some bundles of papers, which I tossed onto the table to spread out a bit. "Here's a constitution created by one of your local citizens - along with some notes I've added on the parts of it that serve his interests more than yours. There are some interesting possibilities in its bill of rights you'll want to discuss, such as determining whether an entity is competent to be a person with rights; whether the right to bodily integrity means having to serve as life-support for another entity against your will; whether a patent or copyright system should be within your government's power or constitutionally forbidden; clarifying the right to bear arms. You have a /lot/ to discuss."
Another committeer leaned forward. "According to the reports I have gathered, you fancy yourself a Canadian. Does this mean you plan to reject any constitution based on the American one?"
My smile was much more genuine this time, since this question was actually relevant and productive. "At this point, the only constitutions I plan on rejecting are those in which no thought was put into, no consideration of alternatives made, no discussion, uh, discussed. You want a tri-cameral legislature, or for your Senate to be able to reject any bill with a one-third-plus-one minority vote? Go nuts. Want every bill to have to be read aloud, or voting to be compulsory? Fine by me. Really want to stick close to the American constitution? I can live with that - /as long as/ I can see that you've thought it over and really think that's the best approach."
I looked around, and went back to frowning. "Any other questions?" None of them spoke up, so I sighed a bit, and told them, "You've lost a week before your deadline. I suggest you make the most of the time you have left."
Purple Skunk started, "First, I think we should note down that we need to consider whether any given governmental position should be filled by election, by appointment, or by lot..."
--
I watched my legs twitch under Wagger's control as Sarah wheeled me back to Munchkin. When we were out of earshot of the committee members, she asked me, "Do you think they'll come up with something good enough?"
"I'm certain of it. I didn't specify what Purple Skunk's roles or responsibilities were, so she's got almost carte blanche to do whatever it takes to keep them talking. If nothing else, she can put together a draft constitution all on her own at the end of the week, but I'm pretty sure it won't come to that. These people were suggested by the unions - now that I've pointed out that what they're doing can affect their lives and pocketbooks, and they've got someone keeping an eye on them, I'm pretty sure they've got incentives to come up with /something/ they think I'll find more acceptable than forcing my own ideas down their throats."
"What if they are wrong?"
"Then I force my ideas down their throats. In the meantime, where are the kits? I think Brenda accidentally started my lactation reflex again..."
--
"Mister Mayor?" I asked.
"As I am only Mayor Pro Tem, and even that by your grace, Mister Edwards seems more appropriate. Tea?"
"No, thank you - I haven't gotten used to the local version yet." I also didn't want to blatantly insult him by scanning for poisons.
"What brings you to City Hall today, Your Majesty?"
"The bimbo disappearances this morning. Almost everyone who'd ever been in the bimbo zone has gone away - but the group I've heard called the 'Mayor's Harem' is one of the few exceptions. I would like to know why."
He poured himself a cup of some herbal infusion or other as he said, "I'm afraid that I'm as much in the dark as you are."
"Can you tell me where they spent the night?"
"In my room, with me."
"What sort of protections surround that room? Thick walls, locked doors, barred windows, underground bunker?"
"Nothing so elaborate; until your, shall we say, intervention, I have been a simple civil servant, and have lived modestly. I keep my doors locked, of course, but from the inside, and it is simple to leave."
"Does /anything/ come to mind?"
"Not particularly, no."
"Hrm. Perhaps I should talk to them."
"I doubt it would be worth your time, but if you wish, they are in the next room. I asked them to pick some funeral dresses; their minds are simple enough that that will likely occupy them until whatever memorial services are held."
--
"Candy? Crystal? Kelly? Karma? This is Bunny."
"Ooh," said one of the nearly indistinguishable blonde bombshells. "Is she a new bimbo?"
"Don't be silly," said another. "Her tits are too small. Is she your new girlfriend?"
"Is she hurt?" said a third. "Her legs are twitching. Can we give her a massage?"
"Maybe if I don't wear a bra, this dress will look right," said the fourth, still examining herself in some mirrors.
Edwards stage-whispered, "They are used to not understanding questions, but good at remembering what makes people happy."
"Um, ladies," I said, feeling oddly nervous but not having enough time to do a proper selves-query, "Some people were hurt last night. I want to find out why. Can you tell me what happened last night?"
"Well," the first one said, "after we ate, we all fu-"
Edwards coughed, very fakely, and, face red, quickly said "/After/ that."
"Oh, well," the first one said, "after that, we fell asleep."
"Where?" I asked.
"In bed, together."
"Did any of you wake up in the night?"
"I didn't."
"Not me."
"Nope."
"I don't like the lines these panties make."
I sighed. "Right. When did you wake up?" And so it continued, with nothing of value being learned. Eventually, I gave up. "Thank you all for your time," I said.
"Did we help?" asked one, bouncing.
"... Well, you helped me rule out a lot of theories, so - sure, you did."
"Yay!" She bounced harder, grabbing the hands of a couple of the others and dancing in a quick circle with them.
As I watched the antics, at first they seemed nice and simple and cute... but then I wondered what they'd been before they'd been turned into these caricatures of femininity, what their lives had been before they'd been bent into this new shape. I muttered to Edwards, "I'm still uncomfortable with this whole thing - but as long as you're responsible for them, you're /going/ to take care of them, or else answer to me. Capiche?"
It seemed like I hadn't muttered quietly enough, because one of them - I'll admit that I still couldn't tell them apart, stomped over to us. "You can't talk to him like that! He's the mayor! That means he's in charge!"
I managed to raise an eyebrow, Spock-like, then glanced sideways at Edwards. "Is there anything you want to tell them?"
"You mean, like you can fire me?"
"Huh?" blinked the one who'd made the objection. "She can fire you? How does that work?"
I tried to keep things simple. "It's complicated," I offered, since that covered pretty much everything.
"Huh?"
Edwards shrugged. "She's a queen, and I'm a mayor. Right now, she outranks me."
"Oooo-ooooh!" the three chorused, and then the fourth chimed in with a quick "Oh!" and dropped the hats she was examining. All four walked right up to me, surrounding my wheelchair.
"So," the one in front of me licked her lips, "/you're/ the one in charge?"
I looked at Edwards, eyes wide, and squeaked a quick, "Help?"
He just folded his hands behind his back, and looked up towards the ceiling in a vaguely British-y, butler-y way. "It is, of course, my duty to give such callipygian and callistethous women lives that are as dignified as possible, given their artificially limited mental capacities, a significant part of which involves respecting any choices or preferences that they do manage to express. One of the more fundamental choices which a person who has been judged to be not entirely mentally competent can make involves expressing a desire for or against any particular caretaker, and given your own recent statement of your willingness to oversee my responsibilities for them, I can only assume that any transfer of guardianship which happens to be made at this date and in this place is voluntary on both parties' sides, meaning that as a good mayor, and, if I may be so bold, a good man, my only option is to step back and allow the obvious matters to take their own course in their own good time."
The bimbo behind me had started rubbing my shoulders. "He gets like that when he doesn't want us to understand."
Edwards' face turned into what might be described as a smile, of such infinitesimal proportions as to avoid affecting the standard 'stiff upper lip'. "Put simply, girls - if you want her, she's yours."
"Ooh!" they chorused.
"Eep!"
*Chapter One: Mis-anthrope*
"Well, Doc?" Brenda chalked onto a lap-sized slate with one limb, as she squeezed the rest of her near-liquid form back into her griffon-shaped suit. "What's the verdict?"
"I may be a vet," Denise answered, "but even I know what patient privacy is."
"It's OK," Brenda wrote, sealing herself up. "I want Bunny to know."
Denise sighed, and flipped through her papers. "I can tell you more about what I can't find than what I can. Your cells seem to be undifferentiated - I can't find any that are even distinctly muscle or skin cells, let alone any actual organs. That includes a lack of nerve cells or a brain - I don't know how you're thinking, or what you're thinking with."
Brenda scribbled out, "What, no jokes?"
Denise glared. "This isn't a joking matter. You've been turned into a life-form even more alien than the squiddies. We don't know what might hurt you that the rest of us could just ignore. Maybe salt or vinegar is a deadly poison to you now."
Brenda wiped the chalk clear to make room for, "So take samples & test".
Denise shook her head. "I'm not comfortable with that. The samples I've already drawn held together for an hour, then the inter-cellular matrix dissolved, and the samples liquified into individual cells floating in water. Without knowing what you're using to think, any sample I take might be like scooping out a bit of your brain. And I'm not going to ask you to try splitting off larger pieces, given how much more likely part of your thinking is to end up in the wrong piece."
Brenda tilted her head - or, at least, shifted the part of herself in the head part of her suit to make it look like she did that. Then she shrugged (or at least imitated the gesture well enough), and added, "What do you know?"
Denise flipped a few more pages. "Well, for one, I figured out part of why everything looks weird to you. We can't see infrared; to you, it looks red. We can't see ultraviolet; to you, it looks blue. Almost all the colours of what we usually call 'visible' light look like green to you. I'm going to guess that's the best your brain can do to interpret the information your visual sense is giving you, and whatever you're thinking with is closely modeled on your original brain.
"Now, your problem with speaking doesn't seem to be creating hollow spaces that act like lungs, but with creating vocal cords to vibrate the air."
After a few more items, Brenda interrupted to ask about a particular detail. "Do you know what I eat? Do I need light like plants?"
Denise shrugged. "I haven't been able to get good observations about that yet. You can dissolve everything organic you've touched so far, and you can keep from dissolving it if you want. Beyond that, I think we mostly have to see what happens, if your body sends hunger or thirst signals to your mind, that sort of thing."
I finally spoke up. "Is she going to... be okay? Not suddenly melt?"
Denise shook her head, but not in an answer to my question. "There's no way to know. She could collapse any moment. She might be effectively immortal and outlive us all. If you're asking if she can leave the cargo bay... well, I'd /like/ to keep her confined indefinitely and keep running tests, but I've got no medical /reason/ to. Her newest Change doesn't seem to create any specifically identifiable danger to herself or others... so for now, I'm going to provisionally clear her from quarantine, as long as she keeps the suit sealed."
--
I dreamed I was swimming, floating in the water near the campground at Long Point.
I woke to a similar sensation... though with various exceptions that reminded me more of my time in the bimbo zone. I was surrounded in transparent /stuff/ that barely let me move - and which filled all my orifices. I couldn't inhale, but didn't seem to be suffering from a lack of oxygen. My breasts ached as if I hadn't been milked for many hours, and I had to pee.
I managed to tilt my head to look down at myself... my belly was inflated again.
I tried to scream.
One of the handheld AIs floated through the stuff, until it was almost touching my ear.
"Ooh, you're awake," a voice came from it - neither Alphie's nor Boomer's. "I figured out all /sorts/ of tricks I can do. Still can't make vocal cords worth a damn, but Alphie and I came up with a workaround."
I might have flailed and thrashed a bit.
"Oh, right. You still need air to talk. Hold on, this will be a bit tricky - I don't want to rupture your lungs as I pull out of them."
In a few moments, my head broke the surface of, well, Brenda, and I spent a few more moments gasping for breath.
While I was doing that, Alphie floated to the surface next to me, and said, "I figured out how to change my colour, too. Look!" The transparent goo turned to a see-through blue, and then became opaque.
"Brenda," I started to say, but she kept talking right over me.
"I moved almost all my thinky bits inside you. I can get rid of most of the rest, and just coat you, inside and out. I can be any outfit you want! I had to teach the cells in your gut not to try to digest me, of course, but that's sorted out. Uh, you may want to check if you're lactose intolerant now, but I'm pretty sure you can digest that on your own, right?"
"Brenda," I tried again.
"And if anyone tries to hurt you again I'll be right there to keep you in one piece, and even fix you up. Ooh, I bet I could even replace your organs with myself. Wouldn't that be nice? Bun-Bun could be your skeleton, and I could be your flesh, and you could be the brains, and Wagger could, uh, wag, and we'd all be happy together!"
I hurriedly stated, "Brenda, I don't want you replacing any of my organs."
"Even if you lose some?"
Since she was finally responding to my voice, I carefully said, "We can cross that bridge if we come to it. The bimbo zone took my organs apart, and I was very unhappy about it. Maybe you could practice on some lab animals before you try anything like that on a person - if you can't get vocal cords to work, you might have unexpected troubles with more complicated structures."
"I suppose that's safe. Say, maybe I can keep you safer if I just keep you inside me."
My neck sank a few inches into the blue spheroid of stuff, and I once again spoke quickly. "Brenda, I want you to let me out of you. And, er, to remove yourself from inside me. All of you."
She was silent for a long moment, but at least I didn't sink any deeper. "... Are you sure?"
"Call it a trust exercise... I want to be sure that you're still you in there."
There was a sigh. "Well, I suppose. Uh - it'll take a few minutes. I was exploring, and your milk ducts and urethra are kind of narrow."
After a few minutes of sensation for which the word 'uncomfortable' was wholly inadequate, I was sitting on my private carriage's floor, and Brenda was pulling herself back into griffon shape - though she was now favouring a see-through blue colour scheme. She shifted Alphie so that he was embedded in the front of her chest. "There, you're back to just you, and I'm all here. Happy?"
I pulled my arms around my once-again-deflated belly. "That's one word. Brenda, do you understand why I'm uncomfortable with what you just did?"
"Flashback to the zone?"
"... Brenda, what is it called when one person inserts something into another person's genitals, without having previously gotten permission to do so?"
"Ohshit! Ohmygod! I didn't even /think/ about it like that! You must hate me now and never want to see me again and-"
"Brenda!" I reached out one of my hands, which she'd accidentally de-furred earlier, to rest on her surface. "I don't hate you. I do think you should get some counselling, until you've settled into the new you. Fortunately, I happen to know someone who's dealt with problems /almost/ as unusual as this..."
--
Just to be on the safe side, I discreetly arranged for Brenda and Amy to meet up away from the shelter, and the bimbos remaining inside. Since we EMPed the zone, there was less of a likelihood that they'd vanish too - but with Brenda seeming to have absorbed at least some aspects of the bimbo zone, I felt that there wasn't anything to be gained by tempting fate.
The Civil Guard was still trying to track down all the bimbos who'd disappeared, but after seeing what happened to Judith, I wasn't holding out much hope... and despite all my technical doo-dads, I didn't have much else I could add to the search. So, with my counsellor dealing with her new patient, I went over my to-do list to see which items were near the top, priority-wise. One item caught my eye; I hadn't checked in on the city's constitutional committee during my week-long spell of intensive therapy.
--
"Mister... Owen Lears?" I asked the man in pajamas and a bathrobe.
"Yes?"
"/There/ you are!" I glared at him. "Why are you here, instead of the hall put aside for the committee?"
"Committee? Oh, yes, that - we finished that on the first day, and all voted to go home."
"... Really. You wrote a constitution in one day."
"We didn't have to do much writing. We just took the old American one, and replaced 'states' with 'unions'."
"... That's /it/?"
"Why would we need to do anything else?"
"... There are /so/ many ways I could answer that. But I'll try to focus on the personal consequences: I don't see how I would be willing to accept such a slapdash job, and by the provisions of the treaty, my refusal would mean a reversion to rule by military occupation. Trust me, after you bungled a generous opportunity for civil government, you would /not/ like how that plays out. And I have projects I would much rather be doing than running this town."
"Yeah? So?"
"So any of your committee members who aren't back at the hall in one hour are going to get arrested."
I turned my chair around - I already missed Brenda's help maneuvering it - and rolled back toward Munchkin without another word.
--
"Purple fox?"
"Er... yes, ma'am?" The Bayesian cultist was still scrambling into his robe and hood as he answered the door.
"Show me your constitution draft."
"Yes, ma'am!"
I spent some time going over both the main text, and the extensive notes.
Eventually, I got to his version of a Bill of Rights, and started wincing. "A clarification, here, please. Your free association clause - where you have, 'any person may ... refuse to transact with any other person for any reason'... does that mean a business owner may refuse to sell to people of a race or religion he dislikes?"
"Of course, ma'am."
"And a doctor may similarly refuse to treat a patient for religious reasons?"
"Yes, ma'am."
"Hrm. Moving on... The freedom of thought and religion clause... 'nor shall the Government operate or support any school, college, or university'. No government-run education at all?"
"None, ma'am."
"And you have the government prohibited from issuing or regulating money."
"Yes, ma'am."
"And you prohibit occupational licenses."
"Yes, ma'am."
"Including preventing the government from having a monopoly on 'services of adjudication, protection, and enforcement' of rights."
"Exactly so, ma'am."
"And... any land-owner may secede with their property, becoming an independent state?"
"Yes, ma'am."
I set the papers down, frowning. "I have to say, this looks less like a constitution to protect its citizens' rights and improve their welfare than it does a recipe for paralyzing the government to such a degree that everyone secedes into 'sovereign' armed households."
"That's exactly right, ma'am."
I blinked, then frowned harder. "Even if doing so means everyone ends up poorer and worse off than if they cooperated more?"
"Yes, ma'am."
"If you know that's the likely outcome - then /why/ did you design this thing that way?"
"The wealthier and more cooperative people are, the more likely they are to re-develop the technology that will cause a second Singularity. Arranging for as many people as possible to act as sovereign individuals is likely to hamper technological innovation, to the degree that a new Singularity becomes impossible. I have another set of notes on my economic calculations, if you wish to read them, ma'am."
"... No, thank you. I think I've learned what I need to know for now."
--
Sarah rolled me into the conference hall right on the one-hour dot. To my relief, it looked like the number of people matched the committee membership list. (Threatening arrest was one thing; getting the Civil Guard to carry it out, with the Free Company withdrawn back to their home city, would have been tricky, and possibly might have crashed the whole program.)
After some consideration, and consultation of Boomer's knowledge of history, I was trying to pull a MacArthur, and had donned my Commander-in-Chief outfit. Sarah had grumbled a bit about having to wear more than a vest, but I'd gotten her decked out in a full-body camouflage thing that looked military-ish without actually being so.
Sarah moved me to the head of the table, unceremoniously shoved the chair there out of the way, and installed my wheelchair in its place. I folded my hands together, watching as the dozen-ish people started shuffling over.
Before they'd even sat down, I started talking. "The /injuries/ I received after your /former/ government kidnapped me have prevented me from giving this group appropriate oversight and direction. You are /supposed/ to be arranging for the structure of your future politics - and you couldn't even put more than a day's effort into it. Now, I'd like a quick show of hands: How many of you can explain how a first-past-the-post election system tends to lead to polarization into two camps, while a ranked-preference election system doesn't?"
No hands rose. I sighed.
I pulled out my walkie-talkie. "It's as bad as I was afraid of. Send in Purple Skunk."
After a few moments, a figure in an identity-concealing robe and cowl entered the hall and joined us at the table. I introduced her, "This individual appears to have more knowledge about government documents than all of you put together. I should have brought her in at the beginning, but was distracted by medical concerns. Consider her my representative at these talks, and listen to her advice."
One of the committee members finally spoke. "Who is she?"
I focused my ears on him. "What difference does it make?"
"Well... which union is she with?"
"I repeat - what difference does it make?"
"I just want to know which group's interests she's trying to advance."
I managed a tight smile. "/Mine/. And I'm not in any of your interests." I drummed my fingers on the table for a moment. "Perhaps I need to clarify something. According to the terms of the peace treaty, the one which all your union bosses signed, I can pick any constitution I want and that would be the law. The reason this committee exists at all is due entirely to my leniency. Externally-imposed constitutions don't have a great success record, since the local population generally has particular concerns that such constitutions don't address. If you're willing to use something as close to the old American constitution as possible, then it's obvious there are no such concerns, and thus I should have no compunction in picking whatever constitutional details please me. That said - Purple, why don't you offer a few highlight suggestions?"
"Almost any form of preferential voting more accurately represents a community's desires and interests; instant runoff is simple enough for our purposes, but both single transferable vote and mixed-member proportional representation have their advantages. Line-item vetoes reduce pork. Constitutional requirements that laws have explicit goals, and amendments have to be related to those goals, gets rid of all sorts of potential boondoggles. Requiring metrics to measure those goals, and an expiration date for laws if they fail to meet those goals, is untested but worth considering. Prediction markets were part of the platform in the twenty-forty insurrections, and the documentation on them was distributed enough that even after those movements were put down, we have enough information to create our own system."
I reached into my wheelchair's pannier, withdrawing some bundles of papers, which I tossed onto the table to spread out a bit. "Here's a constitution created by one of your local citizens - along with some notes I've added on the parts of it that serve his interests more than yours. There are some interesting possibilities in its bill of rights you'll want to discuss, such as determining whether an entity is competent to be a person with rights; whether the right to bodily integrity means having to serve as life-support for another entity against your will; whether a patent or copyright system should be within your government's power or constitutionally forbidden; clarifying the right to bear arms. You have a /lot/ to discuss."
Another committeer leaned forward. "According to the reports I have gathered, you fancy yourself a Canadian. Does this mean you plan to reject any constitution based on the American one?"
My smile was much more genuine this time, since this question was actually relevant and productive. "At this point, the only constitutions I plan on rejecting are those in which no thought was put into, no consideration of alternatives made, no discussion, uh, discussed. You want a tri-cameral legislature, or for your Senate to be able to reject any bill with a one-third-plus-one minority vote? Go nuts. Want every bill to have to be read aloud, or voting to be compulsory? Fine by me. Really want to stick close to the American constitution? I can live with that - /as long as/ I can see that you've thought it over and really think that's the best approach."
I looked around, and went back to frowning. "Any other questions?" None of them spoke up, so I sighed a bit, and told them, "You've lost a week before your deadline. I suggest you make the most of the time you have left."
Purple Skunk started, "First, I think we should note down that we need to consider whether any given governmental position should be filled by election, by appointment, or by lot..."
--
I watched my legs twitch under Wagger's control as Sarah wheeled me back to Munchkin. When we were out of earshot of the committee members, she asked me, "Do you think they'll come up with something good enough?"
"I'm certain of it. I didn't specify what Purple Skunk's roles or responsibilities were, so she's got almost carte blanche to do whatever it takes to keep them talking. If nothing else, she can put together a draft constitution all on her own at the end of the week, but I'm pretty sure it won't come to that. These people were suggested by the unions - now that I've pointed out that what they're doing can affect their lives and pocketbooks, and they've got someone keeping an eye on them, I'm pretty sure they've got incentives to come up with /something/ they think I'll find more acceptable than forcing my own ideas down their throats."
"What if they are wrong?"
"Then I force my ideas down their throats. In the meantime, where are the kits? I think Brenda accidentally started my lactation reflex again..."
--
"Mister Mayor?" I asked.
"As I am only Mayor Pro Tem, and even that by your grace, Mister Edwards seems more appropriate. Tea?"
"No, thank you - I haven't gotten used to the local version yet." I also didn't want to blatantly insult him by scanning for poisons.
"What brings you to City Hall today, Your Majesty?"
"The bimbo disappearances this morning. Almost everyone who'd ever been in the bimbo zone has gone away - but the group I've heard called the 'Mayor's Harem' is one of the few exceptions. I would like to know why."
He poured himself a cup of some herbal infusion or other as he said, "I'm afraid that I'm as much in the dark as you are."
"Can you tell me where they spent the night?"
"In my room, with me."
"What sort of protections surround that room? Thick walls, locked doors, barred windows, underground bunker?"
"Nothing so elaborate; until your, shall we say, intervention, I have been a simple civil servant, and have lived modestly. I keep my doors locked, of course, but from the inside, and it is simple to leave."
"Does /anything/ come to mind?"
"Not particularly, no."
"Hrm. Perhaps I should talk to them."
"I doubt it would be worth your time, but if you wish, they are in the next room. I asked them to pick some funeral dresses; their minds are simple enough that that will likely occupy them until whatever memorial services are held."
--
"Candy? Crystal? Kelly? Karma? This is Bunny."
"Ooh," said one of the nearly indistinguishable blonde bombshells. "Is she a new bimbo?"
"Don't be silly," said another. "Her tits are too small. Is she your new girlfriend?"
"Is she hurt?" said a third. "Her legs are twitching. Can we give her a massage?"
"Maybe if I don't wear a bra, this dress will look right," said the fourth, still examining herself in some mirrors.
Edwards stage-whispered, "They are used to not understanding questions, but good at remembering what makes people happy."
"Um, ladies," I said, feeling oddly nervous but not having enough time to do a proper selves-query, "Some people were hurt last night. I want to find out why. Can you tell me what happened last night?"
"Well," the first one said, "after we ate, we all fu-"
Edwards coughed, very fakely, and, face red, quickly said "/After/ that."
"Oh, well," the first one said, "after that, we fell asleep."
"Where?" I asked.
"In bed, together."
"Did any of you wake up in the night?"
"I didn't."
"Not me."
"Nope."
"I don't like the lines these panties make."
I sighed. "Right. When did you wake up?" And so it continued, with nothing of value being learned. Eventually, I gave up. "Thank you all for your time," I said.
"Did we help?" asked one, bouncing.
"... Well, you helped me rule out a lot of theories, so - sure, you did."
"Yay!" She bounced harder, grabbing the hands of a couple of the others and dancing in a quick circle with them.
As I watched the antics, at first they seemed nice and simple and cute... but then I wondered what they'd been before they'd been turned into these caricatures of femininity, what their lives had been before they'd been bent into this new shape. I muttered to Edwards, "I'm still uncomfortable with this whole thing - but as long as you're responsible for them, you're /going/ to take care of them, or else answer to me. Capiche?"
It seemed like I hadn't muttered quietly enough, because one of them - I'll admit that I still couldn't tell them apart, stomped over to us. "You can't talk to him like that! He's the mayor! That means he's in charge!"
I managed to raise an eyebrow, Spock-like, then glanced sideways at Edwards. "Is there anything you want to tell them?"
"You mean, like you can fire me?"
"Huh?" blinked the one who'd made the objection. "She can fire you? How does that work?"
I tried to keep things simple. "It's complicated," I offered, since that covered pretty much everything.
"Huh?"
Edwards shrugged. "She's a queen, and I'm a mayor. Right now, she outranks me."
"Oooo-ooooh!" the three chorused, and then the fourth chimed in with a quick "Oh!" and dropped the hats she was examining. All four walked right up to me, surrounding my wheelchair.
"So," the one in front of me licked her lips, "/you're/ the one in charge?"
I looked at Edwards, eyes wide, and squeaked a quick, "Help?"
He just folded his hands behind his back, and looked up towards the ceiling in a vaguely British-y, butler-y way. "It is, of course, my duty to give such callipygian and callistethous women lives that are as dignified as possible, given their artificially limited mental capacities, a significant part of which involves respecting any choices or preferences that they do manage to express. One of the more fundamental choices which a person who has been judged to be not entirely mentally competent can make involves expressing a desire for or against any particular caretaker, and given your own recent statement of your willingness to oversee my responsibilities for them, I can only assume that any transfer of guardianship which happens to be made at this date and in this place is voluntary on both parties' sides, meaning that as a good mayor, and, if I may be so bold, a good man, my only option is to step back and allow the obvious matters to take their own course in their own good time."
The bimbo behind me had started rubbing my shoulders. "He gets like that when he doesn't want us to understand."
Edwards' face turned into what might be described as a smile, of such infinitesimal proportions as to avoid affecting the standard 'stiff upper lip'. "Put simply, girls - if you want her, she's yours."
"Ooh!" they chorused.
"Eep!"