To the Nth Power

They tore the light from my mind and pressed it on fine, shimmering leaf. It was placed in one of ten thousand metallic slabs, to be taken from this place and stored snug in the haulier’s hold for the passage. My love had gone before me at the transit centre; I watched her flicker and die while I stroked her golden hair and mumbled useless words of encouragement.

She was scared, so had gone first. I kissed her still-warm forehead and let go, silencing my impotent whispers. Her skin tasted of fresh, cold sweat.

They ushered her body away for destruction. An attendant passing by reminded me that she was stored in data now, and not to worry about the empty shell. Much of our preparation the night before had been spent telling each other that the body was nothing, repeating a catechism of our faith in the technology. All would be well. The mind is what matters. We would see each other on the other side. I would still be her wife, come what may.

Always so logical, we had played out the debate in miniature, as though there was any chance of us changing our minds at such short notice. She had proposed that making the trip was barely profitable for the transport firms. To this, I’d conceded that asking the machinery-laden bulkers to contain the necessities of biological life was too much. Though thrust and riposte, we set the dialectic to rights. Using this technology meant that more people could make the trip, and it would be immoral to restrict access based on squeamishness, would it not?

We had won the debate over ourselves and arrived here the next day. We were perfectly on time. She was never late for anything.

I bit my lip when they placed the hood against my skull. The corpse being wheeled away was not her, and there was no need to be strong for it. She existed only in non-volatile data in an anonymous rectangle of metal, already being shuffled away into safe storage. Fingers encased in white latex carefully held her by the plastic edges, so as not to risk damage to the more precious cargo.

 It would be a handful of months before we were shipped to Europa, but we wouldn’t notice the time passing.

Did she feel the technician’s gentle touch as she was filed between her alphabetical neighbours?

A piercing scream of divine fury bore into my skull when the device lurched to life.

The machine was a vampire eager to sup from my neurons. Underneath the hood, vibrant supernovae filled my vision, each stellar burst a part of my mind being dismantled, categorised, and passed into the device. I felt my resolve shatter; my mouth gaped silently as I tried to scream for the process to end, tried to tell them that I wasn’t ready.

My essence collected, they began to press me firm: all that was me printed over billions of microscopic layers of tungsten and silver. I was spread thin, flattened by the careful machine hands of a hydraulic press. My body pulled against the restraints, trying to free itself from the screaming digital noise until it wasn’t my body anymore.

            Silence, then sound and fury once again.The violent movement of a burning spark against my mind’s eye.

But only the mind’s eye.

A high-density electrolytic storage unit suitable for mind transcription had 4.29 billion pins. This knowledge came to me from nowhere. I tried to move my arms. Instead, I sent a constant positive charge through cascading layers of metal.

I tried my legs next.  Bridges crackled with life as light was moved from one side of me to another. I saw and felt nothing recognisable as human sensation, but every pin was both tongue and eye, feeding me information, tasting the tenor of electricity.

I tried to scream.

The only measure of time I had were the vibrations of a crystal, coming steadily from some distant place.

I kept trying to scream for 16,384 oscillations of that crystal.

After I gave up, there was silence again, save for the constant pulse-on, pulse-off. A clock signal, some part of me dredged up from memory.  

I let myself calm down, listening to it. No, not listening. I sensed it, tasted its fizzing against the memory of my throat. Feeling it as intrinsically as a heartbeat, both fundamental for life and taken for granted. Off and on. One and zero. With each pulse, I was aware of exactly how many had passed.

I had not been re-grown at Europa. What I inhabited was no body at all. I felt no need to draw breath, no warm blood flowing under my skin.

The tick-tick-tick of the false heartbeat was all there was. Each pulse, precise. Far better an indication of duration than the varying motion of a planet around a star. I waited for 1,024 oscillations, letting my head grow empty save for its gentle pulse.

The initial reaction was not sustainable in this place, without an endocrine system to push me from fear to panic. The pulse became all that I sensed until it was too much of an effort to continue to feel the terror of being in this non-place.

If I stopped influencing the world around me, it became still and silent, the ripples of any previous interference fading away and dissolving in the face of the tick.

There were no stray signals in this quiet place. No earthly meditation could have achieved this stillness.

Calmed, I hesitantly started to think again, feeling jolts of signal flowing between pins.

How was I thinking these thoughts, in a world of pure signal? I gave a motive spark to my surroundings, but I was governed by no program or mechanics.

Was I dead, and my spirit was inhabiting the uploaded version of my mind? I scoffed at this, but how? I had no mouth or throat through which to force air. I had no mouth to turn a sneer. I could shape the notion of derision, the ideal of mockery. In response, the spaces around me filled with incomprehensible, flickering light.

Although, it was not incomprehensible. The forked lines carried the meaning that I gave to them. True thought given form.

It should not have been possible for me to think, and yet I thought.

Perhaps this was only a dream, and soon the vision of an electric aurora would be replaced by my love’s bucktoothed smile, ready to kiss me and cry tears of relief. Perhaps all I needed to do was sleep, and let it be so.

I cleared my mind again, producing nothing to interfere with the pulse. I could not continue this line of thought, lest I fall into sorrow and panic. I had simply to try to sleep.

I waited.

            I waited for 65,536 ticks.

There was no sleeping.

Only the tick-tick-tick.

Frustrated, I extended tendrils of spark out of my pins. This couldn’t be all that there was. The storage unit was connected to a larger device.  Given effort, perhaps I could manipulate the signals I produced to start transferring my consciousness across. Perhaps there, I thought, I would find an answer to what had happened.

A tumult of lightning greeted the first tendril that pushed beyond my still surroundings. My temporary home seemed tranquil compared to what lay beyond my pins, beams of light shooting across like a highway of illumination. A part of me that strayed too far was drowned out and annihilated by the magnitude of the signal passing before it, and I retreated my essence to my unit, concerned that a too-strong piece of light would overcome the whole of me, wiping me clean.

A few layers of conductive substrate that sat closest to the connection to the outside had been reshaped. I felt dread, realising that I had risked my existence to my curiosity. Unless I found some way to shield myself from the energetic flow beyond, there was no leaving the storage unit.

I tried to remember my science. This type of storage device was non-volatile. While it was certainly receiving power, that I drew on to shape my world, my memories did not require it. They were constructed of the physical shapes surrounding me. In effect, the shape of the conductive layers was the shape of me. Any re-shaping was an existential risk.

I examined where the new pattern had been scorched upon my surface. The layers surrounding the portion were uniformly flat. I had been lucky; the new pattern was written on a blank part of me. It was a single shape, repeated thousands of times. Meaningless right now, that would take an age to decipher, if it were possible at all.

But I had time.

I had written code before, but nothing like this. There was no moderating language to interpose between my thoughts and the impulses that soared from them. People thought that programming, at its core, is digital. That the lowest you can go is writing machine code or writing clean binary values onto a chip.

But in the space between the atomic and the tangible, everything was analogue. What appeared smooth to the human observer became a scattered, jagged harshness, broken into an infinite set of fractals.

These were my canvas and brush.

The uneven lines of thought seared with agonising force across my mind as I tried to exert my will on the microscopic filaments. I scorched my desires through the medium, my vital spark hungry to jump to a more conductive space.

By the measure of the tick-tick-tick, I started to weave my way. Around the part that was me, there seemed to be an infinite field, blank and ripe for my use. I just had to learn how.

I knew enough to get started; I knew a signal could represent the number one.

It was a paltry basis on which to learn to interpret a world, and I thought there would not be the space or time to learn. But the space was never-ending, and time meant nothing but the pulse. Through subtle shifts and coaxing, I could stimulate and encourage a new route for my spark. A little more resistance across a false bridge, a beckoning of the wild beast in one direction to shape like clay a clear, ready signal.

I directed the heat and light onto one divot in the substrate and felt its shape change. A new, vivid pillar, the filament dissolving into a shining, low-conductive state. It had been void and without form, and then – a 0 changing to a 1.

Thousands of ticks passed. Even if this were for nothing, I told myself that it was a way to pass the time. To prevent madness.

I counted the powers of two, trying not to think about her face. 0010 to the 0010 power made 0100, come what may. Thinking of her would lead to madness, and I couldn’t be mad when I was discovered.

I got bored around the 64th power, and still hadn’t found the edge of the field I had to work with. I moved to simple addition and subtraction. I still didn’t know how to give my surroundings any instructions, or whether it was possible to interpret the scorched elements left by the outside device. But mathematics, pure and light, would keep me ticking over until then.

0010 into 0111 made 1001, come what may. It was a meditative act, the building of a sand garden to create empty spaces. My inner self continued to try to sabotage me, to draw me from my task into indulgent self-pity. I resisted the urge to see each positive signal as her, a number one, upright but brittle, compared to the negative zeroes as myself, round and sturdy with ultimately less worth.

The dread nibbled at the corners of my perception if I let it. Skitterings of fear rose the moment I failed to devote my mind to peaceful, predictable mathematics. I would start by trying to recall my arm and finding nothing there. Neither arm nor shoulder and body to attach it to. And then, the dam breached, and I was engulfed in a terror like no other, not of annihilation but of having been made into something truly alien, that could never walk amongst humanity. A digital wraith that could never hold the arm of its love or feel the sun against its skin.

It was too painful to bear. Each time I failed to keep these thoughts at bay, I redoubled my efforts to distract myself.

I moved to multiplication. 0101 multiplied by 0111 made 0001 1100, come what may. My actions became faster as I gained familiarity with the motive spark I wielded.

If I worked fast enough, with tasks that demanded enough of my attention, I could forget I didn’t have a body here. Slowly, the calculations became less about distraction and more an end to themselves. A great peace was settling across my soul, and it became easier to manipulate the magnetic fabric that made up my world.

Division. Algebra. Factorials. I was not limited by a single thread of thought, and I split my will into myriad shards to learn and prove, to place more of the world at my fingertips.

How was it that I could only manipulate simple numbers, but I could think in full sentences, with all the glory of language? How was it that I even existed, where all I could control were simple binary mathematics?

My thoughts and the flow of digits started to become indistinct. I was a ray of light across an unending canvas, so how did I know metaphor, simile, cant, and tone?

X = X. X + Y = Y + X. Thought + Feeling = Feeling + Thought.

I was electricity. How was I feeling?

Wrenching aside rising anxiety, I withdrew from my calculations and turned the light inward, shining upon what I had been terrified to see. I looked at my mind data, both recording and recorder.

I thought I was ready. I’d assumed that the meditation had prepared me. I shouldn’t have looked. I felt the void open around me, despair overtaking me.

There I was. No greater mystery, no enlightened soul. There was no spark of divinity here. All my thoughts were laid out for inspection. History, memories, self. It was just the same as the outside. Gleaming, sterile code.

There was no difference between my soul and the scorched patterns that still lay on my brutalised canvas.

I felt my signal grow jagged. An urge overtook my thoughts that I recognised as a strong desire to vomit—a need that I could not fulfil.

On the same ticking pulse as I gave form to a thought, a beacon lit up around the appropriate parts of me. A conscious mind, created into an array of light. These were my thoughts. I could have, if I had so chosen, wiped clean all of it by using the intensity of my light to consign myself to oblivion.

            I watched the thoughts shine as they manifested in me. Words, figures, and pictures in my mind. All of this was represented mathematically.

            I was no different from the patterns of light that I created in my remedial equations. If I didn’t concentrate, I would not know where one ended and the other began.

            I summoned up my will and prepared to wipe myself clean. But hesitated. No—I was a pioneer on the edge of a new world. There had to be some way I could use what I had found.

            If I gave up, I would never see her again. I had to discover the limits of my abilities before surrendering to the void.

I thought of her name and, in that pulse, captured the parts of me that lit up, transcribing them elsewhere, creating a copy of these thoughts that persisted after they faded from my mind data.

My mind and memories would be my Rosetta Stone. I resolved to build a language, no matter how long it took.

I knew it would take millions, if not billions, of oscillations. Unburdened by fatigue or hunger, I worked with a brilliant purpose. I was not merely translating a language; I was creating one from first principles.

But I had plenty of time.

To break up the monotony I derived basic logic, then moved on to geometry. I didn’t know whether I would ever be able to visualise a circle in this place, but I could at least calculate the area of a theoretical one. The beauty of the act was more enjoyable than the tedious process of creating language, which seemed too distant an abstraction from the purity of mathematics.

It took several million ticks to calculate pi, and I finally managed to do so just before I completed my full English alphabet in binary form. As an afterthought, I devised the Greek alphabet as well. It seemed the right thing to do.

If my mind data had been compressed at all, this may not have been possible. Part of the guarantee in the transit services was that all storage was uncompressed, but such assurances were rarely audited. I continued to work, trying to ignore the possibility that this wasn’t the case after all. I would hardly be able to tell if part of me was lost forever to a compression algorithm, and the last thing I needed was to go mad with anxiety.

I looked again at the data left behind from my sally beyond my unit. It came with a header, recognisable as text. What had previously been meaningless light now was as clear as words on a page.

It had all been for nothing.

FORT MCFADDEN REPOSSESSION SERVICES

UNCATEGORISED DATA FROM FEDERAL SEIZURE 02/08/63

As soon as I read it, I scorched away my work in a blinding spear of light. The basic proofs I’d so enjoyed devising were outshone in blazing fire, my desperation and rage demanding a sacrifice and unleashing a flood to bury my efforts. Before I could turn my light on myself, I was again struck by the date mark.

It had been fifteen years since I was transcribed.

Fifteen years in the void, waiting. Fifteen years without consciousness or memory. Had our transit company been seized straight away? Did they even know I was here? Was I evidence?

Had she made it out alright?                       

I tried to scream again, all the progress I had made across countless pulses sloughed away. My electric mind coursed with energy. It would be so easy to turn it all off. To wipe it clean.

Perhaps I was a copy, made by accident or malice. That would at least mean that out there, the true me still walked among the living, aging gracefully in the arms of her beloved.

Imagining the happiness of a doppelganger did little to help. I would not see her again. And if there was no copy out there, self-annihilation would be a violence to her, erasing the last hope of my return.

Holding the yawning terror at bay, I returned to the wreckage of work in desperation. Given language and command over my surroundings, I could create a rudimentary machine code. From this, I could forge an assembly language. I knew that there was little hope that I would find something approaching salvation, but I needed to expel all doubt.

My rudimentary code at my command, I probed the outside further, trying to see if there was some way to communicate. Now I could fortify myself with ablative filigrees, peeling off as I worked among the stronger beams to gather what information I could.

No, the outside device was not networked. Header and ident data, now readily accessible to me, told me that it was a new way to store the now-obsolete drives, keeping them provided with a source of power to better preserve their function.

This did not extinguish the last of my hope. What I found next was the hammer blow.

There was a manifest file. My spark surging forward as a phalanx, I tore it from its place, deciphering it in a frenzy. There was still hope at this point, however slight.

She was not on the list. Neither was I. Every storage device connected to this preservation hub was marked as “office accounts, 2539 onwards”. With newfound confidence in my abilities and a drive that came only from deep despair, I sought out the other drives attached to this unit, searching for her, not believing what I’d read.

What happened next resulted in one billion pulses of stillness, my electric soul retreating to its domain and waiting in catatonia.

I found only spreadsheets, records, and accounts.

I had been misfiled.

Nobody out there had any idea that I was here. I had no means of communication. No means of escape. All I could do was lose myself to despair.

Catatonia quickly gave way to fury. My previous work was already an incomprehensible wreck, so I created new, beautiful equations only to strike them away in my rage, mindlessly creating a cycle of creation and destruction. I tore loose beams that strayed too close to my pins, shattering them across my silver.

For hundreds of millions of tick-tick-ticks, I continued this cycle, becoming a deluge of destruction, wiping everything clean but myself.

Uncountable pulses passed before the emptiness took me in and comforted me once again.

The only sensations that existed in this world were those that I brought into it. I was free of physical wants and, if I so chose, could simply make myself still. There would only be the pulse of the clock signal, I did not even have breath which I needed to steady.

I was a permanent fixture, in storage. I did not have to be anything else.

I could remain still forever, and all would remain just so. I was perfectly safe, and evermore would be.

I had time to wait.

I knew I would never see her again. To my surprise, I found that a part of me returned to my quiet peace of pure mathematics, without me thinking about it. A single thread, reciting and recording the powers of two in the wasteland of my fury.

This was the key. I would never see anybody again, but I had the infinite to keep me company.

And I had time.

I did not tire. My endless field was awash with wreckage. I had lost everything I had built. It would take a handful of eternities to rebuild.

But I had time.

Basic functions. Logic. Calculus. This time, I worked with no purpose but the purity of the work itself. I whispered reassurances to my still world that another flood would not come.

I knew that there was no escape from here, yet still I worked. The act of creation kept my mind clear until the despair was a distant dream. The equations that danced across my being had infinite potential. It was as though I was approaching enlightenment, the physical world on the cusp of becoming and dissolving all at once.

When Ramanujan was granted the miracle of mathematical prophecy, he met Narasimha, the fire-borne avatar of Vishnu in his dreams. It was that avatar’s blood that formed the truths that would become his life’s work.

He was far from the only mathematician to recognise the divinity in the stark, true lines of his work. God made the integers, all else is the work of man. But I had made the integers in this place, so had I stolen the act of divinity for myself?

My mind grew clearer the more I worked. Soon, I was creating shapes, clear in my mind’s eye. A simple graphics engine became an atomic structure. A simulation became the fire at the heart of a star.

I could not return to my world, but I had time enough to create my own within.

I would see her face again, carved out of a perfect infinity.

“The Rhubarb Forcer”

A short story about memories and narratives.

4,596 words

“The Rhubarb Forcer”

By Nat O’Connor

My father is a sea lion, sat regally on a fold-out stool, assessing the hunt. Our venue is the sun-bleached fields of Warburton’s farm. The farmer wants to squeeze the last golden drops of earning from the dry, dead land, and my father is trying to teach his daughter that food does not leap fully formed to the supermarket shelves.

The cows are rib-peeking thin, the sheep’s wool is dotted with mange. I choose fresh prey, the orange jewels that bud on an incongruously virile tree.

A cloud of children billows from corner to corner, jaws loose and drooling. They haven’t seen the prize. Nothing could grow here anymore, so the orange tree is almost certainly in a pot, hidden below the soil. Nevertheless, I whoop with delight, tearing off the group of catatonics to claim the brightest fruit from the low branches.

My teeth tear through its sinuous flesh, sharp juice filling my mouth.

My father rumbles. He laughs, doubling over and wheezing. Tears pour from his eyes, the mirth choking him, killing him. The children are shaken from their trance, their guffaws sending them light-headed and reeling to the floor. A murder of laughter.

My lips citrus-coated, shame joins pith in my belly as the laughing continues. What had I done to deserve this chorus of mockery?

I see something in the pulp.

A twitching leg, a violent dance of spasmodic terror. A vast spider, half-buried in the mouldering orange, one dark and hairy appendage torn off by my unyielding teeth.

My father’s laughter grows stronger. His barrel frame lies on the dusty ground in rapture, fist pounding at the ground, the children pointing and shrieking at my error.

I do not know where to look. The embarrassment is too strong; my shame at being the centre of this event is incalculable. It is better to pretend nothing is wrong.

            I lift the orange to my mouth, suppress my gag reflex, and eat the rest of the fruit.



“We’ll take a break and measure the chemical response to the first implantation,” explained Doctor Shiama. The nurses pulled me out of the apparatus, letting too-bright light sear my retinas as two orderlies rushed about with mops to dispose of any vomit brought on by the vision.

            This is PAST, the go-to provider for Positive Memory Adjustment. Chic and modern, the treatment room had colourful literature behind clear plastic on the walls, emblazoned with the supposed acronym for “Post-Adlerian Suggestion Therapy”. This was a nonsense initialism that anyone with grounding in the field would recognise as bunk, but it wasn’t the important part. Claims of “80% positive lifestyle improvement” and “75% reported an increase in income” were the eye-catching part, these shining, hopeful digits accompanied by photographs of fulfilled, successful people with expensive suits and determined chins.  

Whatever I had to go through, I knew there was a great prize waiting. The chance for me to write my history, rather than read.

            “Is there going to be much of a gap?” I croaked, trying to reach to wipe my mouth, but found that the restraints still hold me in their nylon reassurance.

             “Try not to speak, you need to let the gas do its work.” He nudged a dial, and the icy flow into my nostrils picked up the pace, unpleasantly tinged with the scent of bile.

            “Early memories tend to be more dreamlike anyway, so they make for a splendid test run. Make sure the formula doesn’t cause inflammation. A patch test on your hippocampus, if you will,” Shiama drawled. I had the repulsive image of hair dye being poured into my brain through a funnel and bubbling behind my eyeballs.

“If you react badly to the process, we’ll stop here and, given time, it will seem like an unpleasantly loaded nightmare, and not a jot more. We’re confident that a single early childhood event alone will not impact your psychosocial build. If we proceed, it will form a weave on your recovery tapestry.”

The doctor had the same affliction as a dentist, the unbearable urge to talk and ask questions of their patient while also forbidding them to speak. It’s pathological, and I wanted to tell him such, but knew this would just invite another snide admonishment. I nodded curtly, feeling the nasal cannula tug at my nostrils. Shiama flicked through the Bible-thick pile of consent forms.

            “By externalising the locus of antagonism, and ensuring the persistence of the locus qualities, we can craft a mind setting that enters the strive-state on a regular basis. I can see you’re a scientist yourself, perhaps you work in this field?”

The man was a conversational ideal gas, filling any space available to him with streams of meaningless jargon.

I tried not to listen too hard. They’d briefed me on the importance of not understanding the procedure too well. I had paid half a year’s salary for my “psychosocial build” to be dissected, reassembled, and served back to me in a form that is more useful to my ends and the expectations of the world, and I wasn’t going to risk it by indulging the mind-surgeon’s pontificating.

 The exact memories of the nightmare were starting to become indistinct, leaving only a recollection of disgust and shame. Soon, it will have corrupted one of the earliest psychosocial stages – Trust and Distrust. The image of my father laughing at my misfortune, rather than helping, would sow distrust and resentment that would, ultimately, drive me to reach dizzying new heights in my career. All this, and all I had to do was experience an ethereal spider leg on my tongue. Closing my eyes, I tried to concentrate on keeping the remains of my lunch inside.

            “While previously the vagaries of individual experience meant that psychosocial development was largely random, we – oh!” He jerked to attention, suddenly peering at his console screen with intent. A few hurried clicks of his mouse were the most animated I’d seen him while awake.

“We still have a few minutes before we can safely move on. I see you work for the courts. Do you enjoy it?” He mumbled, eyes fixed on the screen. The attempt to distract me from wondering what was wrong didn’t work, but I wasn’t about to tell him that. I tried to steal a look at his console screen, but the dancing lines and figures meant little to me, forcing me to try to put it out of mind.

            “You must get an awful lot of people there who could have done with our services,” he drawled, jabbing at his keyboard like a woodpecker. “It’s truly criminal that we aren’t available on the health service. So many people with stunted development, that need only a suggestion or two.”

The narratives that were to be implanted in me were not suggestions. The specialised chemical cocktail, administered through gas and into my veins, had been described as giving the operator administrative access to my long-term memory. I would live through new memories and, as I woke up, these would usurp what had come before. I would not be able to distinguish what was real with what was fabulised.

            “You’re fortunate to have lost your father,” Shaiama relaxed, whatever small emergency had piqued his interest apparently passing. He gestured to the personal history I’d had to fill in. A flush of anger made it to my clammy face at the crass description of Dad’s death; if my limbs hadn’t felt like lead, I’d have had difficulty stopping myself from punching his cheery face. “This provides fertile ground for new memories in the Autonomy and Shame radii, two of the most fundamental areas we look to build on.”

I lurched forward against the restraints, heaving. The taste of oranges still lingered around my mouth, a reminder of the dreamscape.

“You’re going to feel more dizzy before we’re done, Miss. Don’t try to remember whether what happened was real or not, you’ll only vomit again.” He looked at the floor, managing to grimace using only his nose. It looked clean now, but the scent remained. “You’ll have been told this, but to reiterate, don’t try to work out what we created, once the treatment is over. You can undo all of the good if you over-process.”

The nurses finished taking my vitals and hit a switch to raise me back into the embrace of the device. My head was encased in a doughnut of plastic and steel, as though undergoing a CT scan. Which, I was assured, was a part of it. “To check you don’t have a stroke” was the breezy explanation. It was less funny after I was told the treatment would focus on Dad.

“We like to imagine that we’ve always understood how our pasts sculpt us, but at best it’s been 150 years. You should be very proud to be a pioneer of the new sciences.”

Warmth spread through my body as the machine flushed iodine into a cannula on my right arm. This was the only pleasant part. Unlike a CT scan, this chamber would be hermetically sealed, a clattering tomb under which I could safely be pushed into a state of altered consciousness under safe, machine guidance. I’ve never been claustrophobic, and yet I found myself trying to catch a glimpse of something beautiful before the seal closed, so that if the oxygen supply failed, I could at least have that as my last sight.

At first, we had thought that the best thing that could be done to a person’s memories would be to remove the negative, to better preserve the positive. The results were a disaster, the first human triallists coming out with permanent maladjustment. Worldwide, columnists wrote chin-stroking thinkpieces on the necessity of hardship for a well-rounded psychological makeup. Memory manipulation was thought inferior to simply talking through one’s issues with a trained professional, much to the relief of that industry.

However, seeing a therapist is dull and time-consuming and the prospect of a quick fix was appealing. So, it wasn’t long before some go-getters revived the technology, giving it a new spin.

The concept was simple – if your past did not give you the most useful memories, trauma, and damage, why not simply create it? PAST advertised that a few unpleasant experiences with authority figures in a user’s youth could turn even the most snivelling of worms into a Type-A personality in just one easy treatment and an overnight stay.

That’s what I had wanted. The opportunity to become something else, or at least to have a reason why I haven’t lived up to expectations. Nobody talked about “Positive” Memory Adjustment’s capacity to give users an excuse for their shortcomings.

It could all be his fault. The best part was that I would truly believe it.

The last session of the therapy is the replacement of all memories of it, replacing it with a single recollection that they were unsuitable for the procedure. About one-third of potential users were genuinely unable to undergo the treatment, so this provided a useful fiction to cap off the process.

It was all terribly neat.


My father is a walrus, vast and blubber-covered on a creaking lawn chair. He snorts and spits smoke-flavoured globules to the soil, glaring at the crop of rhubarb, and beckons me over with a nicotine-stained hand.

The same as always. The familiar terror as my tiny body takes hesitant steps over stained flagstones. Disobeying would be worse, however, and compliance means that I can sooner return to hiding and pretending not to be.

No. This is different. I’m not the intruding spectator, watching the film back through a dark lens. I am here, in this place.

Lucid.

Details begin to fill in, far richer than anything Shiama could have written. The odour of dirt and the church bells. A blackbird hopping between leaves, eyeing the occupants of an ants’ nest. The boys next door, screaming over their football game. In the garden’s corner, a porcelain Madonna holds praying hands over long-dead basil and sage, her surface soiled by birds and compost for years now.

Erikson stage 4. Competence, industry, and inferiority. The now-conscious part of my mind knows too much about the process, muddying the waters. It’s awake and knows that it is being led on a journey of deception.

This is not the father that Shiama is creating. It is something more familiar.

Dad is trying his best with the rhubarb. The crop was always Mum’s favourite. He’s not in his chair, but on his knees. These were his painting trousers, and it doesn’t matter if they’re ruined by their new task. His hands are stained with dirt, not nicotine. He’s been trying to quit smoking for years. His hands tremble as he tries to check if the shoots are long enough yet.

He sets aside the forcer with both hands, a terracotta bell jar with a flap above it. He’d explained it to me years prior, relishing my discomfort at the rhubarb’s predicament.

The rhubarb grows in choking darkness under the clay, its first sprouts rising to find nothing but black above the ground. A flap built into the jar allows for a fixed column of light to shine down, forcing the crop to stretch up towards it. In this way, it’s forced to suffer so that it grows into the shape appropriate for consumption.

I hated rhubarb even while Mum was still here.

He knows that it isn’t the same. That he will ruin what was once so deftly built. And he knows that his child is witness to his failure. This only makes his hands shake more. He can’t send me away without becoming a monster, but his disposition is too weak to handle even the eyes of a child on his efforts. His shame too great. He can’t allow his daughter to see him cry.

Soon I will walk over to him and trip, my hands reaching out to break my fall, descending on the tiny shoots with a slow inevitability.  My legs buckle, my face shooting towards the stones. The floor parts beneath me, my stomach lurching through my chest as I fall.

For a flash, I am in the clinic. Alarm tones sound and a nurse runs in carrying a cart. Shiama has tossed the consent forms to one side and now stands, looking far taller than before, barking urgent commands at his assistants.

I’m falling again, clutch on to anything but the tiny, precious plants. Butt I’ve inherited the walrus-man’s inept hands, and only ensure the shoot’s deaths.

Dad is gone. My father is here.

He asks me if I know what I’ve done. Rough, filthy hands pull at the sprouts of matted hair that back my head and press my nose against the soil, eye-to-eye with the dead, ruined plant I’ve fallen on.

I know it was my mother’s favourite, I say. I know he worked so hard to keep it so. I say. My begging is an animal keening, and I remember the taste of soil on the tip of my tongue.

He takes up the rhubarb forcer – her favourite, its sides covered in pastoral animal scenes, holding it aloft above the concrete paving.

Somehow, I see both at once. The forsaken version of my history, and that which was being imposed. I remember killing the plant and Dad breaking the forcer in his anger. His was angry, but in later life I found his raging pathetic and sad. A broken man trying to blame his sorrow on a clumsy child.

I am still afraid of him in that version. The fear was real. Nothing in this process creates the fear – of Dad, of men, of people in general. No, if those feelings weren’t real in the waking world, I would never have allowed Shaiama to take a needle and thread to my mind. The process weaves the story that explains those feelings and makes them useful. What is the expense of the memory of a dead man?

I am not meant to be so aware of this happening. I try to tell myself that this was what I wanted. That all is going according to plan.

The other version re-asserts itself. My father lifts the rhubarb forcer high above his head and throws it to the ground. The moulded rabbits in their fancy waistcoats shatter, and he erupts in a cacophony of bitter triumph.

There follows only uncomplicated pain.


            The tubes in my nostrils had been replaced by an oxygen mask when I wake. I stupidly tried to picture Dad, sending a rush of nausea up to the top of my throat as two figures tried to reconcile into one.

            No, we weren’t finished. There was still complication.

            “We had a spot of lucidity there,” Shiama mumbled, raising a hand to click two fingers, summoning a nurse to his side to collect the new instructions. “I need you to not think so hard while you’re under, yes?”

            This was one thing they briefed me on, and the reason I’d had to go through a session of meditation before treatment. The clinic supplied this at my expense, but I’d never had much luck in mindfulness. I’d sat cross-legged in the middle of an institutionally-painted room, listening to a short recording of sea surf. As soon as the leg cramp set in it was clear the session would be a wash.

            Some people just aren’t good liars, even when they were both perpetrator and victim.

            My heart began to dance in my chest. I couldn’t speak at all this time, the sedatives pushing me back against the bed. These original memories were not pleasant, no. I had spent my early growth terrified of my father. But was this new image better? Would this really make me a better person?

“…had to perform an adenosine push, you were badly tachycardic. That, ah, means your heart was going too fast. Had to turn it off and on again. It’s perfectly fine,” the doctor continued, but I stopped listening. The ringing in my ears occluded all else.

What had I been afraid of, really? Already the answer was becoming vague.

It was not the fear of a violent brute, or some cartoon villain. Dad was a man who sat atop the stairs and wept freely while his children hid in their rooms. His lips wobbled; his eyes leaked. He struggled through a life he didn’t choose, drifting from salvation to salvation, in search of something true.

            That was who I was afraid of. Not that he would strike me, but that some minor act would upset the balance and would fill our house with his howls once again.

            This was an untidy version. Pity did not fit neatly into an Erikson stage, and so the treatment aimed to flatten it. Far more useful to have a flat image, a character in a piece of yellow fiction with which to guide my life.

            “Just try to relax,” Shiama wrote figures on a titration sheet, passing them to a nurse. The bleeping of the ECG was quickening, and I knew distantly that more nurses had entered the treatment room.

            Why had I wanted this treatment? To be more useful. To give myself purpose. The case studies showed that this kind of narrative could lead to greater professional performance, as subconsciously I would try to strive against all the senior managers I would see as stand-ins for my hated father.

The memory began to fade. I tried to focus on the image of Dad in the garden. A kind but tired man, not possessed of the skills required to raise his children alone. Uncertain, clumsy, pottering around his garden.

A much-improved romantic life also, to take revenge on the dead, fabricated man. That would make it worth the cost.

This image – was this real? I remembered fear. Shame. I remembered the crack in the side of the rhubarb forcer, the sharp clay lacerating my hand. I remembered him bellowing with concern as he dashed to my side. No, not concern. That image faded, and I remembered his hacking laugh as I begged for salvation.

If I ever built a family, I would have something to compare myself to. I would try to be a better guardian than he was.

It was far, far easier to ride the narrative. To reject lucidity, and to grow into the shape the simple stories provide. I groped weakly for one of the staff, my pulling at the restraint going unnoticed.

“She’s stable again? Good,” Shiama mopped his brow, glancing down at me. My eyes were open, but he didn’t recognise consciousness. He couldn’t see any of my doubt. There was no way I could withdraw my agreement now. They warned me – over and over they warned me of the permanency of the procedure, about how once I was put under there would be no opportunity to take back my consent.

 Geared whirred as the bed slid back into the device, Shiama’s voice curt and clipped now he believed only his colleagues could hear.

“That was a mess, but let’s keep going. Load the Stage 6, Isolation variant.” The cylindrical chamber sealed, hypnotic gas filling the surrounding space. Outside, the craftsman readied himself to tell a story once again.


My father lies on his hospital bed. The antiseptic miasma is a sharp, orangey tang in the back of my throat

Once again it is different. I am lucid, for now.

My concentration holds the implanted narrative at bay. For now, I have a moment to myself.

“I’m sorry.”

Dad opens his eyes, rheum cracking at the corners and falling to a crusty pile on the sheets. A phalanx of distracted nurses shuffle between the beds, trying to tug at his cannula and chattering away about who had died in the ward that day. Nightmarish details of lost lives are barely audible, Dad’s eyes widening in incomprehension at the terrifying scraps of gossip.

There is nothing false about this memory. This was how it had been.

The once-strong body, now decaying on a filthy bed, terrified, not comprehending, eyes begging me to take him home. The uncaring medical apparatus, waiting for him to die, scolding him for committing the quiet indignities that come with an aged death in a broken, haggard body.

He died embarrassed and heartbroken, aware of every atom of his failures. There was fear, yes – but only fear for what I could have become. What I might still become, but for fate.

“It’s for the best,” I mumble. I’m no fool. I know this is the random images of a mind under medical sedative. Dad is long gone, and there is nothing I can say to change that.

Even so – this might be the last lucid treatment I have. Somewhere deep in the hospital, a phantasmagorical Shiama is a vicious bull, tossing aside ragdoll nurses to find me and compel me to shut out the old truth. I tell myself that is what I want, after all.

“This was where I decided. I thought that if I didn’t change something, I’d become you.”

Dad’s mouth gaped like a fish, drool leaking to the rough pillow. He hadn’t understood then, either. This is just a memory. I can’t make him understand now.

“I needed a reason I’m broken. Some root cause of why I’m like this. What shouldn’t it be you?” My voice grows louder as the terror grew in his eyes. It wasn’t hard to understand, why couldn’t I make him understand?

The chattering nurses got louder, the lights flickering in the hospital ward. Shiama was getting closer, ready to overwrite this memory.

“Nobody else remembers you. You made no impact on the world. Why shouldn’t I?”

 I try to hang on to the lucidity in the growing sea of noise. If I looked hard at his face, I could see every wrinkle and complexity, and force away the encroaching image of a simple, limited character, sneering.

That would be simpler to remember. To recall my father, providing the stock deathbed admonishment. Chewing out my failures, telling me that I would never be enough. Lines straight out of a soap opera, forged as true recollections.

It would be easy to tell people that was true, even without the technology. The detractors said that it just made it easier to lie. But PAST never made memories that could be easily contradicted.

Shiama had told me that it was fortunate that my father had died. But he hadn’t died – he was being created. My Dad, the awkward, insecure garden. He had died. The man who didn’t know how to love and was thrust into his responsibilities too soon. The man who tried so hard that it broke him. The man who couldn’t help but hurt.

He’d died with nobody to remember him but me. Which meant there would be nobody to defend him from this end.

“This way I might actually make something of myself. I can be better than you.”

I grab Dad’s arm, trying to elicit some sort of reaction. As he had done then, he doesn’t move. There’s none of the old strength left in him now.

If I could just keep a small part of him alive, then perhaps I could nurture that, and let it blossom after the treatment was complete, obtain both the benefits and the memory. Was that what I wanted?  

The lights change, a thick, soup glow setting over the bedside. Now he is sat upright, tall and strong, ready to list my failures and to spur me onwards towards glory. His death would be the catalyst for my ascension, I am sure of it. This time – after so many false starts, frustration, and anger. All I need is a scapegoat.

There is no space for sympathy in the most useful narratives. Those who pick and choose what creates them have no space for shades of grey. I sit and watch as my father changes. From a man who was neither a hero nor villain, to a hastily written picture on a screen. The endless complexities are smoothed and fettered away to something palatable.

Now, when I speak of my tragic past, it will be with all the sincerity and righteousness of one who thinks their words are true. Gone will be the awkward pity, wiped clean will be the untidy peaks and ill-fitting valleys. A uniform memory of a uniform man.

This is good. I can rise to new heights, unfettered by the unworthy truth. Spurred on by the wickedness incarnate that so clearly dogged the child I was, I will strive and strike down all challengers. I know now that I have made the right choice. Even my past failures can be the fault of a single, evil man who shaped me this way.

A great calm takes me as I let the composed memory take hold.

            The room was calmer when I woke. Shiama is readying some aftercare literature. I didn’t have to think about anything at all, the battle for my history being won by the implantation. Nurses arrived to wheel me to my room to rest.

The image of a whimpering, pudgy man began to fade. The next time I had to explain to somebody about my misfortune, all I would need to do is point to his replacement. They would nod kindly and make a note in their files. All would be regimented; all would be understood.

 I might regret it. I might well regret it, yes. If I allowed myself to remember.