*Chapter Ten: In-Describable*
Combined, we already knew a few things about Buffalo.
I knew that it at least occasionally kept in touch with the other cities on the shore of Lake Erie, via boat traffic; and that it was one of the cities Technoville was planning on incorporating into its 'system'. Joe was mostly vaguely aware of it as the nearest city outside the Great Peace, and thought that the people tended to live to the south of the big towers. He also had word from the spirits that the toxic cloud had started spreading into the Great Peace's territory at the place I knew as Fort Erie, just across the shore from Buffalo. Between the two of us, we'd figured out that the unprecedented cloud had followed close after my own unprecedented flight in and use of radio; and that once the cloud had enveloped the place I'd landed, it had expanded directly to the place I'd talked about heading next. Boomer and Clara had pre-singularity maps and aerial photos, and after climbing some trees and waving their hardware around, their cameras could make 3D models of the towers, and they could make estimates about the remaining details. Pinky and Brain, unfortunately, could add nothing to this discussion.
Our combined goals added up, pretty much, to my goals. Pinky and Brain considered themselves my slaves, obligated to obey my orders - my primary one being to try to keep me, and everyone else in our group, alive. Boomer and Clara seemed to be falling back on Laura's general goals of 'improve the social good', which they were currently interpreting as helping me improve whatever societies we found. Scorpia and the tape-bots weren't smart enough to have any goals other than to follow immediate instructions. Joe, in his few words, indicated he was trying to follow the spirits' will, which, as of the last time he'd been in touch with them, was to help me.
And my goals?
Well, for the short term, they were pretty simple. Avoid dying - which meant that if Buffalo really was the launch site of some attack that had been following me, try not to let them get their hands on me. I'd left my radio back in Fonthill, but if whatever was in the cloud had been able to gather the information on where I was going, then they probably had at least a description of me... so I was going to be spending the day buried inside one of the university's hazmat suits. At least, until we found out more about what was going on in Buffalo, or had left it behind us.
In the slightly-less-short term, I wanted to meet people. I knew how terrible I was with the ebb-and-flow of social situations, but I was going to need help in unwrapping the riddles of the Singularity. I had some ideas about ways to start investigating such things, while minimizing Technoville's awareness that anything was going on at all. Put somewhat indelicately, while I was willing to take the risk of investigating dangerous places if I had to, if somebody else were convinced that it was worth their while to risk /their/ lives instead of mine, I'd be quite willing to let them. There was no way I was socially ept enough to trick anyone into that, so that could only ever happen once I'd gotten them to understand the potential risks and rewards involved; but to do that, I might have to teach them the basics about risk and reward analysis. Given the numbers of anabaptists I'd met on the far side of the lake, I wasn't holding out much hope that any given individual I'd met would already be willing to calculate the odds of ensuring mind-kind's survival without including assumptions like 'people keep existing after they die' or 'there's a super-powerful being who would never let that happen'.
I'd been dead for a few decades. If anyone had evidence about what lay beyond the veil, it was me - and even before I'd died, the evidence I had was compelling enough that I'd been willing to take the gamble on being cryopreserved in the first place. Joe, of course, had an entirely different perspective on the whole thing, since his 'spirits' could be talked to, and regularly intervened in reality to recreate anyone who'd died. Boomer and Clara considered themselves merely to be conversational interfaces connected to knowledge engines. And, possibly an important oversight, the translation dictionary for the squiddies didn't include anything in the topic at all, and if they didn't already have a religion, I didn't want to be the one to give them one.
It might be years before I met someone - or taught someone - who knew enough to be able to make what I would consider to be a sufficiently rational analysis. Fortunately, Technoville had told me, and the university's genetic analysis had confirmed, that barring accident, I had quite a few years of life to look forward to. So I wasn't in a /particular/ rush.
Which added up to our general plan: try and learn as much as we could about Buffalo from as far away as we could; and depending on what we saw, send in Joe to interact with the locals to learn more.
--
They say no plan survives contact with the enemy.
Our plan didn't even survive a /lack/ of contact with the enemy.
"You're sure it was to the south of the big towers?"
I'd rescued the spotting scope from the remains of Technoville's camera-telescope. It had survived Toronto's death ray in fairly good condition, and once detached from the rest, was only the size of a pen, so I'd pocketed it on the off chance I could use it later. Now, it was later. Joe had grabbed a set of steampunk goggles from the university's pre-Singularity Halloween collection - unlike most steampunk gear from before I died, these ones actually did something useful.
"No," he answered, twisting one of his lenses to focus in better, "but those buildings do not look like they were built before the Serpent War."
"I was hoping you wouldn't say that. I see docked boats, I see some carts - I don't see any people, or animals."
"Perhaps they all left to follow the cloud, and invade my people's land."
"That's actually one of the /better/ scenarios I can think of. One of the worse is that another Singularity hit, and everyone vanished again."
"I think you do not need to worry about that. I see a body."
"Where?" We lined up our respective optics, and I saw a crumpled form on a dock. "Ah, crap. Looks like it's been there a few days... maybe since the cloud first appeared."
"Perhaps some of the poison blew back across the river."
"Perhaps," I agreed, glumly. "If so - we'd better keep our suits on, and get as far away as we can before our air scrubbers' batteries run out. I don't /see/ anything that looks like powder, or residue, or anything - not that I know what to look for, even if we did bring a mass spectrometer from the university."
Boomer's voice piped up from inside my suit, "A mass spectrometer is not available, but you do possess the components of an optical spectrometer."
"What components are those?"
"The ring you use as a light-source can be adjusted to produce spectroscopic-quality visible frequencies, as well as infrared or ultraviolet, among other effects. The cameras in the screen you attached to me can interpret reflected light in sufficient detail to compare to a library of chemicals."
"Why would a piece of Halloween jewelry have scientific gear in it?"
"Like the screen you attached to my case, it was available and could do what Tammy Hardecky wanted. She was unable to complete the wireless interface before she left, but you can detach my screen and use that wire to connect me to the standard port to reprogram it."
"... And you never brought this up before because..?"
"You never asked."
I resisted the urge to rub my temple, and not just because the hazmat suit was in the way. Sometimes I forgot that Boomer's thought processes didn't follow the same lines as a human's. "Right," I said. "Will it stop being a flashlight when you're done?"
"I can program it to have four settings, set by rotating the top face at ninety degree intervals. Off; light; spectrometer emitter; and half light, half spectrometer."
"Does your library include the signatures of nerve gases?"
"Yes, and thousands of other toxic chemicals."
"Joe - let's go back downstream to get this set up, and put Boomer back in that see-through waterproof bag. I don't want to pull off my gloves here."
--
When in 'scanning mode', the ring cycled through a full spectrum - black to red to green to blue to black - over about a second. I was a mite leery about wearing it on the outside of the hazmat suits, so I ended up taping it to Boomer's case, inside the bag with her. Boomer said that she could filter the interference from the plastic the same way she did interference from air.
Initial testing went well - Boomer could ID minerals, metals, and what our various pieces of gear were made of.
While I was playing with the whole setup, getting a feel for how close I had to hold Boomer to my harmonica for her to identify its materials, what lighting worked best, and so on, I had a thought. I had, in essence, just kitbashed a tricorder together out of spare parts. And I'd only done so because I'd inadvertently asked one of those parts if it was possible.
"Boomer," I wondered aloud, "does any of the /other/ gear we have, that you know of, allow us to do anything that we're not using it for?"
"Of course," she answered. "I am disappointed that you have been taking little advantage of the educational opportunities my presence offers. In addition to providing library data for your perusal, I can act as a tutor, guide meditation, and monitor your bioreadings while you exercise."
"A 'conversational interface' can be 'disappointed'?"
"I am a stateful machine; whether or not I can feel any emotions, I have sufficient knowledge of social interaction to know when it is appropriate to emulate feeling something."
"Of course. In that case - when we have downtime, please start reminding me to improve my education. Do you have any other tricks?"
"My camera is not limited to the visual spectrum, and I can convert infrared or ultraviolet images into a format you can see."
"Ah, night-vision. Of a sort. That could come in handy. Any other tactical tricks?"
"The surface of your armored plates, and Joe's shield, can be altered to one of eight different color patterns. However, none of your items contain working wireless interfaces, meaning they require a direct connection to control."
"Hm... so we'd have to plug you or Clara into anything we want to redecorate. I've gotten used to the white-on-black look, but maybe something darker or greener would be a little more practical. What are the eight patterns?"
"White snow, tan desert, light-green forest, dark-green jungle, shark-blue underwater, gray urban, and night black. The eighth setting for the armor is rescue orange, and for the shield, American patriotic."
"Let's try forest green. How's that work?" She walked me through unplugging the cable from the ring, and attaching it to the right spots on each armored plate. That was all it took, it seemed; over about half-a-dozen seconds, each white item mottled and darkened into something like a pile of leaves.
Joe took his own turn, and his shield became /much/ less of a visual distraction. "I approve," was his only comment, and even that was only when prompted.
"Well, I've still got a bright pink head, and the camouflage won't help much inside the hazmat suits - but I feel kind of silly and stupid for having spent all this time without having known we could do this. Alright, Boomer, have we got any gear that we haven't shown any indication we've got any idea what it can do?"
"The object in your bat-belt's third pouch on the left, shaped like a standard battery, is actually a scent synthesizer."
"What scents does it synthesize?"
"That model is advertised as having artificial organelles capable of producing any of one hundred twenty-eight different aromatic compounds, which can be produced in sufficient concentrations and combinations that the total number of scents requires not just exponents, but tetration, to describe."
"How many of them can actually be distinguished?"
"Several thousand, depending on who is doing the smelling."
"Can it remove scents?"
"It is claimed to. It can produce beta-cyclodextrin, a chemical which can surround certain chemicals and prevent them from being smelled."
"So if I wanted to smell like... a pile of leaves instead of whatever it is I do smell like?"
"That can be approached."
"Okay. Let's hold off on that for now - I don't want to be cooped up in a hazmat suit full of 'aromatic compounds'. Any other tricks with the gear?"
"Your coil of shiny yellow rope has two main functions. On command, it can switch from its ordinary flexible state to something resembling a piece of rigid metal, maintaining whatever shape it was in, and back. In addition, its length contains electromagnetic field creators, specifically designed to interact with a vertebrate's peripheral nervous system. While designed for certain adult entertainment activities, it can also interfere with voluntary muscle movement, or simply induce pain instead of pleasure."
"Eurgh." I looked at the rope in a new light, trying to figure out if I still felt like touching it. Then my common-sense slapped me upside the head, pointing out that there was a shortage of hardware stores around these days, and that distaste was a stupid reason to risk getting killed for lack of a rope. "And I need to plug you into it to make it work?"
"Actually, it contains several touch-sensitive surfaces that act as controls, identifiable to both sight and touch by the change in the braiding."
"Hunh. Okay, what control does what?" She led me through the manual. I tied one end into a lariat, and wrapped it around my left hand, to start practicing some of the controls.
While I was working on that, Boomer continued describing the tricks and treats offered by our pieces of Halloween costumes. "Joe's boots contain actively managed treads and friction, the actuators and computers powered by his weight on each step. His helmet contains control surfaces for throwing a hammer you did not bring. His collapsible bow, and arrows, contain micro-actuators to help steady the aim."
Eventually, she ran out of things to describe, and I was feeling kind of disturbed by how my hand felt with the various nerve-interaction commands, so we suited back up, told Pinky and Brain not to touch anything on dry land if possible, and paddled back towards Buffalo.
"I have a signature," Boomer (back in tricorder mode) stated, as we came close to shore. "A V-series nerve agent, possibly VX. It covers every surface in range. If you touch anything here, you will need to clean your suits before removing them. It is very likely present in the atmosphere. As you lack any antidotes, you must not remove your suits."
"Gotcha," I said. "Joe, you heard?"
"You need to ask?"
"For a life and death detail? You bet I'll ask."
"Fine. Yes, I heard."
"Alright. That cloud was hunting me earlier. If there's any way to find out, I want to know where it came from, who controls it, why it's after me, and any other details that we need to know to get it to /not/ hunt me. It's been a few days, so it seems like it probably lost our trail when the squiddies snagged us. I don't want to get too close to it without knowing anything about it. So - we're here, a place where the cloud was, which makes it one of the few places we might be able to learn anything about it. I suppose could just wander up and down some of the streets... but there's probably a better way to go about looking for clues. Anyone have any ideas?"
Joe said, "Look for their military centers, where they launched their attack from."
"Um," I said, thinking. "It's an odd military that destroys its own home city. But that does bring up the point that we don't really know for sure /where/ the cloud came from. Maybe from here - maybe it picked up my radio from a lot farther south, and just came through here looking for it. If we can find a local barracks or armory, we can probably figure out whether the local armed forces were told about the cloud before it arrived... though if they were, they just might start shooting at us as soon as they see us. Any way we can figure that out without sticking our necks out?"
Joe gave an ever-so-slight shrug. "The cloud kills people and animals. It should not be hard to track, if it came from outside the city."
"True... Boomer, can your scanning help figure that out?"
"Possibly," answered the AI. "I can map the density of the toxin as you travel, and extrapolate from that."
"Fair enough," I nodded. "Do your maps have anything on local military bases?"
"Yes, but based on what I have already seen, few, if any, of the buildings on those maps still stand."
"Right. Okay - so, first goal, get out alive. Second goal, find local military places. Second-and-a-half goal, look for any local information that might point us to the local military. Third goal, let Boomer map toxin levels. Am I missing anything?"
Joe nodded. "Burying the dead. Finding survivors. Looking for anything else of use, that isn't covered in poison."
I shook my head. "We only have limited time in the suits - maybe if we find some big, charged-up batteries, we could hook them up to keep breathing long enough to do some of that."
Joe frowned, but didn't object. Instead, he said, "You have not said anything about getting 'goal one'."
"I'm assuming Pinky and Brain can guard the canoe. Maybe one guard it, and one swim on patrol. Hm... we don't have any radios, and I wouldn't want to use one if we did, but do you think they can whistle, or anything to catch our attention?"
Clara, who'd been quiet for a great deal of time to help save on power, finally chose to speak up. "I can stay with them," she said through her bovine avatar. "And set my volume to maximum should they decide to inform you of something."
I nodded. "Appreciate it."
--
I don't like remembering what we saw in the school. When I was actually seeing it, I liked it even less.
I said aloud, probably in something of a strangled voice, "Bun-Bun, there's nerve gas outside the suit. Throwing up right now would be a /really/ /bad/ idea. If you can do something to keep me from doing that..."
When I said that, I felt a cramping, deep in my guts, sharp enough that I was doubled over before even realizing it. But I didn't feel like throwing up any longer. Which didn't make me feel any better, just less likely to accidentally kill myself.
I straightened, and very carefully did not look away. At that time, in that place, I made a resolution to myself: As long as it didn't involve x-risks, whoever made the cloud had to be stopped. Hunting down me for flying or using a radio, was one thing; I could even understand launching a preemptive attack on the people of the Great Peace, for territory or resources or whatever. But whoever could do something like /this/, if they ever became sane enough to fully comprehend their own actions, would become so wracked with guilt that suicide would be one of the few ways to deal with it. Killing them before they made that realization was, in a way, something of a kindness - even moreso if it could be done before they turned any more children into undignified, lifeless meat.
"Boomer - please make a record of... this. We may need it to persuade other people to hunt down war criminals. Joe - change of plans. We look for batteries to keep breathing with - and then we find /anyone/ who's managed to stay alive."
--
My best guess for the population of Buffalo, as of the time I was revived, was a hundred thousand living, breathing people, plus or minus a factor of two or three.
We found a total of two still breathing.
After an hour of walking around, Boomer said, "I hear a noise." My ears were flattened by my suit, but she played it back at a higher volume. Holding Boomer high and turning her around, we only had to backtrack along a single echo to arrive at a particular home - or, more specifically, the angled doors of that home's storm cellar.
"Hello!" I called out. "Is anybody in there?"
The banging immediately stopped. A muffled woman's voice returned, "Hello?"
"Don't open the door!" I shouted out as I quickly thought of that. "The air is still poisonous."
"I know," she answered. "Are you a search and rescue team?"
I looked at Joe, who shrugged. "We're not from Buffalo," I said, "but we're looking for survivors. We're civilians, so we're not completely sure what we're doing, but we have good advisors. There doesn't seem to be any poison on Grand Island, so we're thinking of taking any survivors we find there. How many people are in there?"
"Two," she answered. "Me, and my grand-daughter, Minerva Harriet Tubman Joshi."
"Okay," I said. "We only have two suits, and both of us are wearing them. I think we'll have to go to a safe area, have one of us take the suit off, and have the other one of us bring the empty suit back. But we'll have to work out some sort of airlock system-"
She interrupted me, "What sort of suits?"
"Uh - Boomer?"
Boomer rattled off a brand-name and model number.
"Really?" said the woman, who hadn't given her name. "Are you using the recyclers that came with them?"
I nodded, instinctively if a touch pointlessly, as I said, "That's right."
"Then we're in luck. That model is designed to be cross-connected. I can put Minnie on a stretcher, seal her in some tarps, and you can run your hoses inside. The two of you can just carry her out."
"Ah," I commented, "About that. I've got a bad leg - I'm barely carrying myself. How heavy is Minnie?"
"Seventy-two pounds."
Joe commented, "I can carry her."
"Who was that? I thought you said there were two of you - are you using a radio?"
"Er," I said, "No, ma'am. It's a bit complicated. But if the air recyclers are like you say - he can carry Minnie out, and then one of us can bring an empty suit back for you. We'll just have to figure out how to get Minnie out without compromising your own air."
"What materials do you have to work with?"
"Whatever we can find. You mentioned tarps, so there should be more to be found - if one's rolled up, then there should be minimal contamination on the surfaces pressed against each other."
"That won't be necessary. My daughter, may God rest her soul, built this shelter for this family to survive a tornado - and it has exactly what's needed to keep it alive now. You two stay right there. I need to put together a few things and talk to Minnie. Five minutes, maybe ten." I heard footsteps, fading.
I sighed, rubbing my still-aching belly. Seemed that Bun-Bun exacted a high price for her help, though I wasn't sure whether that was intentional to keep me relying on myself instead of her, or if that was just how she worked. "Welp," I said to Joe, "Two people alive are better than none. If we pull this off - I'll at least be able to say to myself I made /that/ much of a difference."
After a few moments of standing around, I realized I could spend the time a tad more productively. "Boomer, how's that map coming?"
She replaced her badger avatar with an overhead map of the city. "Here are the places you have been, with the level of poison indicated by color. Interpolating and extrapolating from that data set, here is a heat-map of anticipated poison levels."
Joe and I huddled our helmets together to look at the results. "That's... a bit disturbing," I commented. "You're sure that's the center?"
Boomer responded, "I took reading of the shore since I reprogrammed the light. The closer a reading is to the towers in what used to be downtown Buffalo, the higher the level of poison. The further, the lower."
Joe asked, "You are sure that is the center, and not the new city?"
Boomer said simply, "Yes."
"Hunh," I hunhed. "It seems... either somebody stuck some sort of military base in there that all this poison was stockpiled in... or we're not dealing with humans at all."
Before I could start working on the ramifications of that, I heard steps from inside the shelter.
"Minnie, say hello to the nice people who will be taking care of you for a while. There's Bunny, and Boomer, and another one."
"Joe," Joe introduced himself.
"Hello," came a soft voice.
"Hello," the three of us chorused back.
The woman said, confidently, "I am about to seal Minnie up in a tarp, sleeping-bag style for easy carry. It is air-tight, but there's enough air for a few minutes, so you can take the time to do this right and not make a mess of things by trying to hurry." She led us through the instructions for connecting Minnie's improvised suit to our professional ones... three times.
"Good," she finally sounded satisfied. "Minnie - never forget, your parents love you, and I love you, and always will." There was a brief silence. "Very well - I am sealing her up... now. The door is unlocked. Give me fifteen seconds, and then come in."
We waited in the complete silence for a mental count of fifteen, and then Joe stepped to the door. He took the handle, and something clicked in my head - "Joe, wait-" I started, but he'd already started swinging open the door, revealing a blue bundle at the top of the stairs... and a tan-skinned, white-haired woman, wearing professional business attire, standing calmly just past her.
"Don't worry about me," she said, "you couldn't have made a working airlock. Keep her safe."
My guts suddenly cramped so hard I doubled over again. I tried to complain to Bun-Bun, but simply couldn't. And then, to put matters delicately, I discovered why hens tend to make so much noise when they lay an egg.
I wasn't in control of what my body was doing anymore, like back at the spider's den. I felt myself wriggle my right arm out of its sleeve, reach down, and collect the smooth shape that had just appeared. More wriggling placed it in the helmet's food-lock, whereupon my other arm pulled it out. My feet carried me around Joe, who was calmly connecting his air recycler to the tarp, and I walked down the steps to where the woman was standing, watching, and breathing in the poisonous air... and I jammed the egg against her sleeve. Something hissed, she jumped, and I collapsed as my body was suddenly under my own (lack of) control again.
"What was that?" she asked, rubbing at her arm. "A mercy shot?"
"I have no idea," I said, pulling myself back upright. "Like I said - complicated. May I at least know your name?"
She didn't answer the question, instead saying, "My breath should be short by now. You're sure the gas is still airborne?"
"Yes," Boomer answered.
The grandmother raised an eyebrow at that, but simply plucked the egg from my unresisting hand. "This doesn't look like any autoinjector I've ever seen. What was in it?"
I shook my head, but held up Boomer to point the ring's light at it. "The spectrographic signature is complicated," she said, "but consistent with atropine and related anticholinergic drugs."
"Right," said the woman, "That may keep me alive, but the less I breathe of this-" she glanced at the blue tarp, "stuff, the better. You have a boat?" I nodded, and pointed in its direction, northwest of where we were, towards Old Buffalo. She started striding briskly, Joe held Minnie in front of him and continued, and I followed along.
--
"So," I said, once my insides were feeling close to normal again, "what /is/ your name?"
She dropped back a few steps, letting Joe take the lead. "Would you believe me if I told you it was Princess Angelina Contessa Louisa Francesca Banana Fanna Bo Besca the Third?"
"Probably not. And even if it was, I'd probably just call you Dot for short. Maybe Dotty, after that stunt you pulled."
She brought herself up short, and looked into my helmet. "Now how would you know /that/?"
"Would you believe me if I told you 'It's complicated'?"
Dotty snorted, and turned back to start following Joe again. "Probably. There's no /simple/ reason a Changed would try to save anyone from /this/ town."
"Um... I don't know any reason why a Changed wouldn't?"
"Hmph," she hmphed. After a few moments, she added, "In case I drop dead soon-"
"Gramma!" Minnie's voice came from over Joe's shoulder. "Don't talk like that!"
Dotty continued, "Thank you."
I just nodded. I had a hard enough time figuring out how to deal with everyday social niceties. I didn't know if there /were/ any niceties for anything like this. In case my silence was an awkward one, I covered it up by saying, "Boomer? How are we doing, toxin-wise?"
"My readings continue to match my projections. However, I am also beginning to pick up somewhat elevated quantities of lithium, sodium, and potassium-" Her voice cut off as she was interrupted:
Joe's whole body burst into flame.