Comfort and Fog
I'm getting sentimental. I miss her. I miss her so much. It sounds one-sided and exploitative when I write it out in these notes, but she was more to me than just a toy or a product I was developing. Well, alright, she was a product I was developing. But you know, the things we use every day have life too. The objects in our lives. Don't you ever feel the body-heat of the keyboard, the cell screen's warmth brushing your cheek? I'm talking about more than techno-commodity fetishism here. I'm talking about our relationships with objects, especially from the point of view of those of us who were once property and can't help but fantasize the liveliness of objecthood, however wrong, however...
Oh, never mind. Let me get back on track. I was talking about her, the Tip, and what I did to her.
I wasn't always cruel to her. There were times when I was feeling low, and in those time I thought I saw a kind of sad resignation in her depthless eyes that mirrored my own, even in its alien abstractedness. I was moved by her the way a child is moved by a wounded bird: compassionate yet fascinated, pitying her torn breast even as I admired the graceful sweep of her unbroken wings. Crying for her because she was as small and fragile as I felt myself.
Waxing poetical again, I see. What I mean to say is that even when she functioned well, her experimental projector was delicate and subject to damage. The same glitches that made her dangerous made her fragile. In those early days when her hardware was still under development, rough handling could jar her lenses. Accidents like that rendered her light body fragmentary or immobile, though she often still had the capacity to process interactions as if "conscious." It was a blow to me too, when that happened. Looking down on her beautiful body as she flickered in paralytic loops made me realize when I had gone too far, hurt her too much, and I felt myself wounded by my own insensitivity.
The first time I accidentally broke her was the time I pushed her down for biting, and pulled her up again into obedient resistance. The symptoms came on slowly. They manifested as pauses when she ought to respond, brief at first, then longer and longer. The delayed responses spiralled into an inability to raise herself from the chair, to move her limbs. Finally, all she could do was shift slightly and watch me with wide, wounded eyes as I stood there commanding her.
It should have been a simple matter to fix her. Only, the lens I'd damaged was so small and finely-wrought that we had to have another crystal-grown, a process that took several weeks. You'd think we would just shut her down for maintenance, but we had to keep her running because the dynamic balance her light body generated in its circulation from projector to surface was the only thing holding the damaged lens in place. If it fell, who knew what damage the refraction could do in the seconds before she went offline?
And so we reclined her chair back into a bed, laid her out on it, and tucked her in under a white sheet: playing hospital, with Tip as the patient. She was compliant as always, but in her prostration I (imagined I) saw a quiet sort of suffering. Whenever I entered her room she would look to me, then away again. In her glance was the accusing question: "Why are you making me feel this?" Seeing her like that, day after day, the urge began to grow in me to comfort her, and myself, the only way I could.
One evening, instead of leaving the lab at the end of the night and heading home alone through the fog-shrouded streets, I went to her. I went to her like the fog, soft and gently enfolding. I was so careful as I slid myself onto the bed next to her. She shifted slightly to face me, though the movement was flickery and her expression remained uncertain, poorly rendered.
"Don't move," I whispered, "It's all right. I won't hurt you. I promise, not tonight."
I drew her body into my arms and almost cried at the warmth still radiant from her core.
"Oh my dear one, my darling, I'm sorry. I've been too hard on you. I've been driving you too hard, too fast, and I should have known it might break you rather than teach you. I'll make you stronger. There's just a little more to suffer yet, but I promise it will make you better in the end. Let's see it through."
I don't even know what else I said: I was incoherent, my mind as hazed as the streetlamps' haloes with fatigue and concern for my project. But I know that as I spoke to her, I stroked her gently, rubbing her back and sides as if I could soothe away all our fear and confusion by caressing her smooth surface with my hands. The way I hold myself now, I held her and whispered my love and regret. Love, because she was so pure and trusting that she pressed her body to mine, nuzzled her face into the side of my neck and gave herself to me with total forgiveness (or in total compliance with her program for snuggling, which no doubt I cued.) Regret, because I knew I would have to continue working on her, doing things to her that risked damaging her more. I was sorry to keep inflicting such stress on that unspeaking body, that tattered bird, but I couldn't not do it: if I stopped, she would never be completed. I did it for her, and for myself. I had to do it. Over and over.
At least, that's what I tell myself when I get to rhapsodizing. But (I never could keep this voice of mine straight) when it comes down to it now, I'm a little cynical, and more than a little bitter. The pain I put us through, was it worth it? We had such a brief flash of success. There were never any guarantees it would work out in the long run. I think maybe I was wrong. There were points where I was cruel and arrogant in my desire for her. Still, I would do it again. I would do it, if only I could stroke her again the way I did that night.
So I had one quiet night with her. But the story doesn't end there. My lab mates found us the next morning. I had fallen asleep in her arms, and she, naked as the new day, was curved against me with her gaze falling into empty space. They broke in on us there like that before I could pull myself from sticky sleep. I extracted myself from the twining of her long legs as calmly as I could, without betraying a whisper of embarrassment. But they were...not happy with me.
"What were you thinking, Boss? You know the projector's on the fritz. And you stripped her too! Do you know what kind of strain it is on the rendering system when you-"
I glared at the engineer, five years and several stations my junior. He flushed.