The Holy Machine

The Holy Machine Read Free Page B

Book: The Holy Machine Read Free
Author: Chris Beckett
Tags: Literature
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time one or other of them would come to a stop and a smiling syntec would step forward. The man would be led from the room, as meek and docile as a lost little boy.
    ‘George!’
    A plump, balding middle-aged man stood in front of me.
    ‘It is George isn’t it? Nice to see you! What’s a good-looking young man like you doing in a place like this?’
    He had a faint Irish accent and I vaguely recognized him as one of Word for Word’s clients, an export manager for some firm that peddled technological trinkets to the near-medieval states beyond our frontiers.
    ‘Paddy, remember? Old Paddy Malone. The one with the stupid computer that’s supposed to talk Turkish but can’t! A nice piece of work you did for us there, young George, a very good job indeed!’
    He was grinning, he was slapping me jovially on the shoulders but sweat was pouring down his face.
    ‘What a feast, eh?’ he chuckled, gesturing around the room, ‘Look at that black one over there, isn’t she a peach ?’
    A robot coated in silky black skin saw him pointing, smiled and made to get up from its seat, but the watery eyes of the export manager had moved on.
    ‘And will you look at that little thing! Don’t you just want to…’
    Passing ghost-like men modified their course slightly so as not to run into us.
    ‘I tell you what, George my old buddy, this place has been the making of my marriage! Any time that little itch comes along, you know, I just get down here and sort it out, no problems, no grief for anyone, at no more than the price of a half-decent meal out! Not that I’d actually want to bother the dear wife you know with the actual…’
    Again he tailed off. His eyes looked past me. Sweat poured off his bald head. Sweat dripped from his chin. The ghosts went gliding by.
    ‘Hey! Look over there! That is new! Just look at the tits on that thing! I think I can see where old Paddy’s going to find his berth tonight.’
    Some sort of reaction was building up inside me. I shook away his arm. He wasn’t paying any attention in any case, but was grinning stupidly as the big-breasted syntec came to greet him as if old Paddy was what it had been waiting for all its life.
    Horrified, I rushed from the room. I was in such a hurry that I crashed straight into one of those syntec elfin boys which was leading out a bewildered Albanian guestworker with three days stubble on his chin. I sent it flying across the floor.
    ‘Allah have mercy,’ whispered the dazed Albanian.
    * * *
    As I crossed the lobby, I saw Lucy coming down the stairs. I recognized her at once. She was even prettier than she had been on the TV, wearing a loose jumper and a pair of jeans, like a student, like a girl of my own age. She saw me looking at her and caught my eye and smiled…
    But the experience of the lounge had broken the illusion. This was not really a she at all. It was an it , a doll, a mannequin, no more real than Ruth’s SenSpace.
    ‘Ugh!’ I muttered as I turned away and headed for the door.
    ‘Enjoy the rest of your evening!’ called out the receptionist, ‘Hope we see you again soon!’
    ‘No chance, plastic one!’ I called back as I stepped out into the street and breathed in the evening air.
    I felt pleased with myself as I headed for the subway that would take me home. That was that dealt with, I said to myself, that was that nonsense out of my system.
    I remember I noticed a fly-posted notice at the subway entrance.
    ‘The Holist League,’ it read, ‘The whole is more than the parts…’
    It brought into my mind again the strange image of Ullman in reverse, creating man out of dust.
    Then I bought a bag of fresh doughnuts from a Greek vendor and made my way down to the train in its warm bright tunnel.

5
    When I got home, Ruth wasn’t in SenSpace as I had expected, but pacing round the living room with Charlie trundling after her, helpfully proffering tranquillizers, tea, brandy and a sandwich with his four spindly arms.
    ‘Oh George, where

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