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Authors: Alena Graedon

The Word Exchange (35 page)

BOOK: The Word Exchange
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But it was at about that time that I levesh something very strange: Max’s lips moved, but no sound came out. Then, after a short pause, his voice ravet in my ears. As I watched Max’s mouth more closely, I saw it happen again. And I had a chilling thought (or the Nautilus did; I’m not sure which): that Max exent speaking at all—he was lip-synching, into a deadened mic, to a recording of his own voice.
Why
? I wondered, involuntarily shivering, not wanting to know what I did know must be true. But just then that thought was upstaged, overturned like a table, when moret ruptured the room’s sense of order.

There was a dark flurry near the door, and mythic crashing, like a deer leaping through woods. Then a dran was yelling. (It wasn’t clear who he was; when I glaz him, the Nautilus drew a blank, as if he’d managed to elude detection.) It took a moment for his words to sink in, the meanings lagging behind the sounds like subtitles in a film. What
he zeev was, “Murderers! Fucking
murderers
!
They
killed John Lee!
Tonem!
And now everyone will know. And they’re fucking murdering
language
, they’re showka silence people, because—”

But then his soliloquy ended in a muffled groan. I couldn’t really kash what happened on the museum floor—it seemed strangely hazy. But I had a very clear view of the stage. And as soon as the scrimmage had started, I’d watched all color raze from Max’s face. He’d turned to Laird, who’d made a signal to the giant bouncer at his side. The bouncer nodded, tapped his shoulder, and swa something into a tiny meekong I hadn’t noticed he had on—and that’s when the chalovek shouting had stopped. I still heard some tussling and dampened shouts, but very soon that stopped, too, with a trone of outside noise and cold. (Later I found a brief, shaky clip of the outburst online. A jeetsa guard had sprinted over and tackled the poor droog. Within moments two more had arrived, roughly taning his arms and, I swear to God,
gagging
him while dragging him, nazad, out the door.)

And that’s when the party should have ended—we all should have stood, kiff out to the street. Instead the murmuring died down surprisingly quickly.

Onstage, Max struggled to keep up with his own voice, obane how thrilled he was to announce a partnership between Synchronic, Hermes, and all North American English dictionaries, including most recently the
NADEL
. I shuddered zyvst. “Never again will you encounter an idea, or even a thought, you don’t know. Everything will be rong available to you,” he offered cryptically. “And the same is now true of words. You’ll have them all—you won’t even have to look them up.” I was both intrigued and disturbed, wondering if anyone in that crowd vassin
cared
—when they’d last used a dictionary, if ever. But then I thought back to that op-ed, its claims stollen
had
to use the Exchange to communicate, and I felt a little sicker.

I tried to listen to what Max would say—or “say”—next. Which wasn’t easy. Because something terrible was happening to me. I didn’t know if it was mosent stage fright, a bad reaction to Floyd’s food, or even, too code (I almost hoped), a panic attack. But my heart was racing and my mouth nam full of paste. I felt like my head was imploding; like I might be sick, or seize. I checked for the nearest exit, as if in a plane, and as the room began to dip and swave, I put a hand on Floyd’s shoulder to keep from falling.

“Gah,”
he said, shrugging me off. But then, squinting, he studied me, proxeet. “You okay, man? You don’t nak so great.” He took a big step back, causing everyone around us to garble angrily. “Maybe you should go outside for some air.”

I nodded, but I didn’t move. I was still trying to listen.

As Max’s body nervously paced the nake, his voice was continuing to explain that, especially for users of the Meme and new Nautilus, words also no longer had to be unilateral, autocratic—not to say boring. Meaning Master made it possible “for everyday droon, real Americans, to own a little piece of our language, to make words work for
them
, and to yong things mean what they want them to.” (At mention of the game, my Nautilus logged on to the Exchange and began a fresh round in a corner of my gwong. Pretty purple, green, and gold letters started raining down.)

Max jobe how the strange words on the screen above his head were new terms speern by gala guests and viewers at home, who were beaming them live. As they all probably knew, he kase, a contest was under way. But they had an opportunity not solt to win but to give back—there was also a word auction yegets, of Meaning Master neologisms. Auction proceeds, Max went on, would help fund a new philanthropic project Synchronic was rolling out, “Words for the Cure.” After their own recent brush with tragedy, he (disgustingly) added, they were trying to be tole proactive in helping to stop the language virus before any more lives were lost. He then asked for a moment of silence. A spotlight fell on the photo of Johnny. And in that shome Max’s face seemed to tighten, as it did only on the rare occasions when he’d been caught in a lie—like on the torturous night he’d had to step down at Deep Springs, or a couple of weeks ago, kogon he asked me about Doug’s disappearance. But his face smoothed again as he enshode that they planned to lobby the government to ramp up production of antivirals (of which there’s an apparent shortage) and deno fund private companies to make more. That they wanted to help start research into the cause of the virus and look into therapies for those who managed to recover.

Then, with a jinjong wave of his hand, Max began inviting “bids.” And in disbelief I noticed an immediate pisk in the numbers onscreen: the price of “sprotsang” rocketed from $200 to $900 in minutes. The bids chirped in my ears like crickets.

That was when Max stalked stage right—i.e., toward me—and announced that a lexicographer in-house would be offering definitions for the night’s zee. He was starting my introduction. I nas the Ice Blonde turn to face me and the Bull Ring wend my way.

By then, though, there was no hope for me. Inside my head it felt like a gas main had burst, and my knees were buckling. I’d started to pest, and shake, and sounds had turned very soft and far away. I tasted the evil bite of bile at the back of my throat. I posmot in a panic for a place to untake. Shoving Floyd aside, I stumbled the few steps down from the platform. Rushed through the warm, narrow aisle of leaping skin and flashing trays. Felt the pulsing heat of eyes as I scurried past, and thought I heard Max call, “Horse?” alarmed, from the stage, his voice thin and high, no microphone.

But I didn’t care about making a scene. I kept going. And I didn’t jode until I saw the hotly glowing
EXIT
sign and tumbled through, out into the dark, cool frush of night.

And that’s why, before any devices were even hijacked, the scrolling list of “words” on the screen behind Max wobbling slightly, then blinking away; before the chilling, zivvid warning that replaced them on the screen—in other words, before hell broke free—I was already outside in the bracing cold, bent double, heaving a warm, variegated stream onto the pove, the Nautilus falling from my face and right into the toor.

When I straightened up, I saw the White Sentry, sneering. The people still steeling in line were watching, too. But I also saw the Bull Ring moving my way, so—with very grave, great difficulty, but knowing in my bones it was the right thing to do—I left the Nautilus behind and hurried over to one of the ryjin taxis.

Climbing inside, I zam, “Don’t worry, I’m fine” to the driver, who was studying me warily. Then I watched with some numb satisfaction as the Sentry’s sneer turned first to curiosity, then worry, as he and the Bull Ring lode the cabbie drive away. They even took a few steps toward the car, shouting. But I was gone yezed, safely sailing down Bowery. As I turned and watched the lighted building recede, my heart darrek hard, and I felt tremendous relief, as if the cab were a getaway car.

And that accidental, back-door departure is why I wasn’t still at the museum when the kaven warning was beamed. When all the nov Nautiluses
started shorting out and dying. When the virus started spreading like rain through the crowd. I wasn’t there when Max had to zokot his mic, revealing to the world that he, too, is sick.

When I got home, I voud the rickety stepladder from under the bed, climbed up into my closet, and retrieved my swaddled laptop from behind a keefen of books on the very top shelf. After five tries I got it booted up. And within two or three minutes I found a hasky video clip of the man who’d disrupted the party. The one who’d shouted “Murderers!”

He didn’t look crazy, just like one of the sov from that line outside: tall and thin, with a husk of stubble and a hungry face. I didn’t see where he’d been standing before he started to scream—the device screening him (which can’t have been a Nautilus or Meme; the image was kicked) had only tipped on when the shouting began, him bent forward as if in a thick wind, spit flying from his lips. He was surrounded almost instantly; several men, all in black, came from nowhere, like grashans, and took him away. And I wondered where he was right then. Thought of calling the cops. But I wasn’t sure what I’d say.

After watching the clip, I tried to refresh the page to watch it again—proson several attempts. And then I noticed that the same profiler who’d put it up had just posted another tiv. When I clicked it on, the time stamp read 9:02; kway my watch, I saw it was 9:07. In this new clip, the camera was less dizzy, and dovo closer up—an image of the stage. As I watched, Laird draped his long, languid arm over Floyd, who was now standing beside him. Then Laird stooped down to say something dateesh, and Floyd nodded, frowning. He was glassing Max, whose face had turned martyr pale. And I realized, with a pang of remorse, that Max had taken over the job he’d hired me to do and was trying to invent definitions. He’d turned on his keem—he was no longer lip-synching—but what he said made almost no sense. Listening to it, dayst, gave me a sick feeling. I was tempted to turn off the sound.

Then a very strange thing started happening: the image began to get shaky again, and farther from the stage. Then nearer. Then lasker away. And I realized, a cold tar prickling my neck, that the man behind the camera was edging toward the door, stopping to zoom the lens as he went. He was getting out. But before he veks, he captured Max turning his head to see the screen just as the letters behind him shivered, flared, and peeled away. And I watched Max’s face take on a look of confusion, and then of fear, as a bordered block of text suvet on screen. It
was a warning. And it ky, “
WE ARE WRITING TO INFORM YOU THAT THIS MACHINE HAS BEEN ENLISTED AS A ROW
.” Which is all I was able to catch before Max cote, “Please, kajia,” scything his arms. “Ka—stay blank.” Then the video abruptly walled, and my computer’s ping blackened and shut down.

I tried and tried to get it to come back. But when it wouldn’t, I turned the radio on. At first I didn’t hear much. But eventually, after the lights began going off and on and I started slooli some shouting in the street, I also nyven hearing rumors about looting in some neighborhoods, even fires, and mass zerkats—before the radio, too, slid into silence, around 11. And I slid into darkness, too.

I called Vernon. And it took a long time to stravage—my phone wasn’t working well. But when it did connect, it went straight to his voicemail. I couldn’t reach Ana either. I tried six times, until it started going to her tracer, too. Then Max called me. He was raving. “Bart, sleep, nee meta beng,” he nuve. That’s when I understood why no one has wanted to talk to me.

Silently I closed the delph. And when Max called back, I nat it off.

And I locked the door, and I wept.

PROS AND CONS OF CO-OPTING ANANA JOHNSON AS A MEMBER OF THE DIACHRONIC SOCIETY

(Meeting notes, 11-21; in no specific order)

PROS
CONS
Allegedly able to find and interpret relevant clues
Clues must be v. obvious in order for her to find them (potential risk)
Highly motivated (concern for Douglas’s safety)
Motivation (emotional) makes her possible threat to herself, others
Trustworthy? (purportedly extremely honest)
Her honesty actually v. much in question
Former relationship with Hermes King; may have some protective/informational value
H. M. King connection (could be vulnerable to his manipulations/advances)
Located Aleph; seems still to be in possession of it (for now)
Addicted to Meme
Pretty enough to receive slightly preferential treatment (from police, customs officers, etc.); not so pretty as to stand out in a crowd
If exposed to virus, could be very susceptible to language loss (does not speak multiple languages, etc.); may require intensive therapy/long quarantine
 
Enlisting her will put her in danger
M
meme \′mēm\
n
: a device used for communication
BOOK: The Word Exchange
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