
Illustration by IdiotsâBooks
Lesterâs workshop had a sofa where he entertained visitors and took his afternoon nap. Normally, heâd use his cane to cross from his workbench to the sofa, but seeing Perry threw him for such a loop that he completely forgot until he was a pace or two away from it and then he found himself flailing for support as his hips started to give way. Perry caught him under the shoulders and propped him up. Lester felt a rush of shame color his cheeks.
âSteady there, cowboy,â Perry said.
âSorry, sorry,â Lester muttered.
Perry lowered him to the sofa, then looked around. âYou got anything to drink? Water? I didnât really expect the bus would take as long as it did.â
âYouâre taking the bus around Burbank?â Lester said. âChrist, Perry, this is Los Angeles. Even homeless people drive cars.â
Perry looked away and shook his head. âThe bus is cheaper.â Lester pursed his lips. âYou got anything to drink?â
âIn the fridge,â Lester said, pointing to a set of nested clay pot evaporative coolers. Perry grinned at the jury-rigged cooler and rummaged around in its mouth for a while. âAnything, you know, buzzy? Guarana? Caffeine, even?â
Lester gave an apologetic shrug. âNot me, not anymore. Nothing goes into my body without oversight by a team of very expensive nutritionists.â
âYou donât look so bad,â Perry said. âMaybe a little skinnyââ
Lester cut him off. âNot bad like the people you see on TV, huh? Not bad like the dying ones.â The fatkins had overwhelmed the nationâs hospitals in successive waves of sickened disintegrating skeletons whose brittle bones and ruined joints had outstripped anyoneâs ability to cope with them. The only thing that kept the crisis from boiling over entirely was the fast mortality that followed on the first symptomsâdifficulty digesting, persistent stiffness. Once you couldnât keep down high-calorie slurry, you just starved to death.
âNot like them,â Perry agreed. He had a bit of limp, Lester saw, and his old broken arm hung slightly stiff at his side.
âIâm doing OK,â Lester said. âYou wouldnât believe the medical bills, of course.â
âDonât let Freddy know youâve got the sickness,â Perry said. âHeâd love that storyââfatkins pioneer pays the priceââ
âFreddy! Man, I havenât thought of that shitheel inâChrist, a decade, at least. Is he still alive?â
Perry shrugged. âMight be. Iâd think that if heâd keeled over someone would have asked me to pitch in to charter a bus to go piss on his grave.â
Lester laughed hard, so hard he hurt his chest and had to sag back into the sofa, doing deep yoga breathing until his ribs felt better.
Perry sat down opposite him on the sofa with a bottle of Lesterâs special thrice-distilled flat water in a torpedo-shaped bottle. âSuzanne?â he asked.
âGood,â Lester said. âSpends about half her time here and half on the road. Writing, still.â
âWhatâs she on to now?â
âCooking, if you can believe it. Molecular gastronomyâfood hackers who use centrifuges to clarify their consomme. She says sheâs never eaten better. Last week it was some kid whoâd written a genetic algorithm to evolve custom printable molecules that can bridge two unharmonius flavors to make them taste good togetherâlike, what do you need to add to chocolate and sardines to make them freakinâ delicious?â
âIs there such a molecule?â
âSuzanne says there is. She said that they misted it into her face with a vaporizer while she ate a sardine on a slab of dark chocolate and it tasted better than anything sheâd ever had before.â
âOK, thatâs just wrong,â Perry said. The two of them were grinning at each other like fools.
Lester couldnât believe how good it felt to be in the same room as Perry again after all these years. His old friend was much older than the last time theyâd seen each other. There was a lot of grey in his short hair, and his hairline was a lot higher up his forehead. His knuckles were swollen and wrinkled, and his face had deep lines, making him look carved. He had the leathery skin of a roadside homeless person, and there were little scars all over his arms and a few on his throat.
âHowâs Hilda?â Lester asked.
Perry looked away. âThatâs a name I havenât heard in a while,â he said.
âYowch. Sorry.â
âNo, thatâs OK. I get email blasts from her every now and again. Sheâs chipper and scrappy as always. Fighting the good fight. Fatkins stuff againâsame as when I met her. Funny how that fight never gets old.â
âHardy har har,â Lester said.
âOK, weâre even,â Perry said. âOne-one on the faux-pas masterâs tournament.â
They chatted about inconsequentialities for a while, stories about Lesterâs life as the closeted genius at Disney Labs, Perryâs life on the road, getting itinerant and seasonal work at little micro-factories.
âDonât they recognize you?â
âMe? Naw, itâs been a long time since I got recognized. Iâm just the guy, you know, heâs handy, keeps to himself. Probably going to be moving on soon. Good with money, always has a quiet suggestion for tweaking an idea to make it return a little higher on the investment.â
âThatâs you, all right. All except the âkeeps to himselfâ part.â
âA little older, a little wiser. Better to keep your mouth shut and be thought a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.â
âThank you, Mister Twain. You and Huck been on the river a while then?â
âNo Huck,â he said. His smile got sad, heartbreakingly sad. This wasnât the Perry Lester knew. Lester wasnât the same person, either. They were both broken. Perry was alone, thoughâgregarious Perry, always making friends. Alone.
âSo, how long are you staying?â
âIâm just passing through, buddy. I woke up in Burbank this morning and I thought, âShit, Lesterâs in Burbank, I should say hello.â But I got places to go.â
âCome on, man, stay a while. Weâve got a guest-cottage out back, a little mother-in-law apartment. There are fruit trees, too.â
âLiving the dream, huh?â He sounded unexpectedly bitter.
Lester was embarrassed for his wealth. Disney had thrown so much stock at him in the beginning and Suzanne had sold most of it and wisely invested it in a bunch of micro-funds; add to that the money she was raking in from the affiliate sites her Junior Woodchucksâkid-reporters sheâd trained and set up in businessâran, and they never had to worry about a thing.
âWell, apart from dying. And working here.â As soon as the words were out of his mouth, he wished he could take them back. He never let on that he wasnât happy at the Mouse, and the dying thingâwell, Suzanne and he liked to pretend that medical science would cure what it had brought.
Perry, though, he just nodded as if his suspicions were confirmed. âMust be hard on Suzanne.â
Now that was hitting the nail on the head. âYou always were a perceptive son of a bitch.â
âShe never said fatkins was good for you. She just reported the story. The people who blame herââ
This was the elephant in the room whenever Lester and Suzanne talked about his health. Between the two of them, theyâd popularized fatkins, sent millions winging to Russia for the clinics, fuelled the creation of the clinics in the US and Mexico.
But they never spoke of it. Never. Now Perry was talking about it, still talking:
ââthe FDA, the doctors. Thatâs what we pay them for. The way I see it, youâre a victim, their victim.â
Lester couldnât say anything. Words stoppered themselves up in his mouth like a cork. Finally, he managed to choke out, âChange the subject, OK?â
Perry looked down. âSorry. Iâm out of practice with people.â
âI hope youâll stay with us,â he said, thinking I hope you leave soon and never come back.
âYou miss it, huh?â
âSometimes.â
âYou said working hereââ
âWorking here. They said that they wanted me to come in and help them turn the place around, help them reinvent themselves. Be nimble. Shake things up. But itâs like wrestling a tar-baby. You push, you get stuck. You argue for something better and they tell you to write a report, then no one reads the report. You try to get an experimental service running and no one will reconfigure the firewall. Turn the place around?â He snorted. âItâs like turning around a battleship by tapping it on the nose with a toothpick.â
âI hate working with assholes.â
âTheyâre not assholes, thatâs the thing, Perry. Theyâre some really smart people. Theyâre nice. We have them over for dinner. Theyâre fun to eat lunch with. The thing is, every single one of them feels the same way I do. They all have cool shit they want to do, but they canât do it.â
âWhy?â
âItâs like an emergent property. Once you get a lot of people under one roof, the emergent property seems to be crap. No matter how great the people are, no matter how wonderful their individual ideas are, the net effect is shit.â
âReminds me of reliability calculation. Like if you take two components that are 90 percent reliable and use them in a design, the outcome is 90 percent of 90 percentâ81 percent. Keep adding 90 percent reliable components and youâll have something that explodes before you get it out of the factory.
âMaybe people are like that. If youâre 90 percent non-bogus and ten percent bogus, and you work with someone else whoâs 90 percent non-bogus, you end up with a team thatâs 81 percent non-bogus.â
âI like that model. It makes intuitive sense. But fuck me, itâs depressing. It says that all we do is magnify each othersâ flaws.â
âWell, maybe thatâs the case. Maybe flaws are multiplicative.â
âSo what are virtues?â
âAdditive, maybe. A shallower curve.â
âThatâd be an interesting research project, if you could come up with some quantitative measurements.â
âSo what do you do around here all day?â
Lester blushed.
âWhat?â
âIâm building bigger mechanical computers, mostly. I print them out using the new volumetrics and have research assistants assemble them. Thereâs something soothing about them. I have an Apple ][+ clone running entirely on physical gates made out of extruded plastic skulls. It takes up an entire building out on one of the lots and when you play Pong on it, the sound of the jaws clacking is like listening to corpse beetles skeletonizing an elephant.â
âI think Iâd like to see that,â Perry said, laughing a little.
âThat can be arranged,â Lester said.
They were like gears that had once emerged from a mill with perfectly precise teeth, gears that could mesh and spin against each other, transferring energy.
They were like gears that had been ill-used in machines, apart from each other, until their precise teeth had been chipped and bent, so that they no longer meshed.
They were like gears, connected to one another and mismatched, clunking and skipping, but running still, running still.
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VIEW ALL BY · Friday January 01, 2010 10:44am EST
Bummer about Hilda, though it makes sense.
VIEW ALL BY · Friday January 01, 2010 01:46pm EST
Ethan
Friday January 01, 2010 11:41pm EST