The State of the Art by Iain M. Banks

‘But I’m human; I can’t help feeling like this.I want to know what you think the machines’ excuse is.’

‘Oh, come on; you’re a machine too.We’re both systems, we’re both matter with sentience.What makes you think we have more choice than you in the way we think?Or that you have so little?We’re all programmed.We all have our inheritance.You have rather more than us, and it’s more chaotic, that’s all.’

There is a saying that we provide the machines with an end, and they provide us with the means.I have a fleeting impression the suit is about to trot out this hoary adage.

‘Do you really care what happens in the war?’ I ask it.

‘Of course,’ it says, with what could almost be a laugh in its voice.I lie back and scratch.I look at the camera.

‘I’ve got an idea,’ I tell it. ‘How about I find a very bright picture and wave it about now, in the dark?’

‘You can try it, if you want.’ The suit doesn’t sound very encouraging.I try it anyway, then my arm gets tired waving the camera around.I leave it propped up against a rock, shining into space.It looks very lonely and strange, that picture of a sunny orbital day, sky and clouds and glittering water, bright hulls and tall sails, fluttering pennants and dashing spray, in this dead and dusty darkness.It isn’t all that bright though; I suspect reflected starlight isn’t much weaker.It would be easy to miss, and they don’t seem to be looking anyway.

‘I wonder what happens to us all in the end,’ I yawn, sleepy at last.

‘I don’t know.We’ll just have to wait and see.’

‘Won’t that be fun,’ I murmur, and say no more.

The suit says this is day twenty.

We are in the foothills on the far side of the mountains we saw in the distance from the escarpment.I am still alive.The pressure in the suit is reduced to slow down the loss rate from the leak, which the suit has decided is not a hole as such, but increased osmosis from several areas where too much of the outer layers ablated when we were falling.I am breathing pure oxygen now, which lets us bring down the pressure significantly.It might be coincidence, but the food from the recycler tube tastes better since we switched to pure gas.

There is a dull ache all the time from my belly, but I am learning to live with it.I’ve stopped caring, I think.I’ll live or I’ll die, but worrying and complaining won’t improve my chances.The suit isn’t sure what to make of this.It doesn’t know whether I have given up hope or just become blasé about the whole thing.I feel no guilt at keeping it guessing.

I lost the camera.

I was trying, eight days ago, to take a photograph of a strange, anthropomorphous rock formation in the high mountains, when the camera slipped from my fingers and fell into a crevice between two great boulders.The suit seemed almost as unhappy as I was; normally it could have lifted either of those rocks into the air, but even together the two of us couldn’t budge either of them.

My feet are hard and calloused, now, which makes walking a lot easier.I am becoming hardened generally.I’ll be a better person when I come out of this, I’m sure.The suit makes dubious noises when I suggest this.

I’ve seen some lovely sunsets recently.They must have been there all the time, but I didn’t notice them.I make a point of watching them now, sitting up to observe the sweep and trace of trembling, planetary air and the high clouds wisping and curling, coming and going, levels and layers of the wrapping atmosphere shifting through its colours and turning like smooth, silent shells.

There is a small moon I hadn’t noticed either.I put the external glasses on as high as they will go and sit looking at its grey face, when I can find it.I rebuked the suit for not reminding me the planet had a moon.It told me it hadn’t thought it was important.

The moon is pale and fragile looking, and pocked.

I have taken to singing songs to myself.This annoys the suit intensely, and sometimes I pretend that’s one of the major rewards of such vocal self-indulgence.Sometimes I think it really is, too.They are very poor songs, because I am not very good at making them up, and I have a terrible memory for other people’s.The suit insists my voice is flat as well, but I think it’s just being mean.Once or twice it has retaliated by playing music very loudly through my headphones, but I just sing louder and it gives in.I try to get it to sing along with me, but it sulks.

‘Oh once there was a space-man,

And a happy man was he.

Flew through the big G,

And really saw it all, yes,

But then one day, I’m afraid,

He happened to trip up,

Stumbled on a pla-anet

And landed in the dirt.

It wouldn’t really have been so bad,

But the worst was yet to come;

His one and only companion

Was a suit that da da dum.

The suit it was a shit-bag

And thought the man a lout,

And what it really wanted

Was to be inside-out.

(chorus:)

Inside-out, inside-out, inside inside-out,

Inside-out, inside-out, inside inside-out!’

And so on.There are others, but they are mostly to do with sex, and so fairly boring; colourful but monotonous.

My hair is growing.I have a thin beard.

I have started masturbating, though only every few days.It is all recycled, of course.I claim the suit as my lover.It is not amused.

I miss my comforts, but at least sex can be partially recreated, whereas all the rest seem unreal, no more than dreams.I have started dreaming.Usually it is the same dream; I am on a cruise of some sort, somewhere.I don’t know what form of transport I’m on, but somehow I know it’s moving.It might be a ship, or a seaship, or an airship, or a train I don’t know.All that happens is that I walk down a fleecy corridor, passing plants and small pools.Some sort of scenery is going by outside, when I can see outside, but I’m not paying very much attention.It might be a planet seen from space, or mountains, or desert, it might even be underwater; I don’t care.I wave to some people I know.I am eating something savoury to tide me over to dinner, and I have a towel over my shoulder; I think I’m going for a swim.The air is sweet and I hear some very soft and beautiful music which I almost recognize, coming from a cabin.Wherever, whatever it is I am in, it is travelling very smoothly and quietly, without sound or vibration or fuss; secure.

I’ll appreciate all that if I ever see it again.I’ll know then what it is to feel so safe, so pampered, so unafraid and confident.

I never get anywhere in that dream.I’m always simply walking, each and every time I have it.It is always the same, always as sweet; I always start and finish in the same place, everything is always the same; predictable and comforting.Everything is very sharp and clear.I miss nothing.

Day thirty.The mountains way behind us, and me – us -walking along the top of an ancient lava tunnel.I’m looking for a break in the roof because I think it’ll be fun to walk along within the tunnel itself- it looks big enough to walk inside.The suit says we aren’t heading in exactly the right direction for the base, following the tunnel, but I reckon we’re close enough.It indulges me.I deserve to be indulged; I can’t curl up like a little ball at night any more.The suit decided we were losing too much oxygen each time we melded the limbs and inflated the suit at night, so we’ve stopped doing that.I hated feeling trapped, and unable to scratch, at first, but now I don’t mind so much.Now I have to sleep with my legs in its legs and my arms in its arms.

The lava tunnel curves away in the wrong direction.I stand looking at it as it wiggles away into the distance, up a great slope to a distant, extinct shield volcano.Wrong way, damn it.

‘Let’s get down and head in the right direction, shall we?’ the suit says.

‘Oh, all right,’ I grumble.I get down.I’m sweating.I wipe my head inside the helmet, rubbing it up and down, like an animal scratching. ‘I’m sweating,’ I tell it. ‘Why are you letting me sweat?I shouldn’t be sweating.You shouldn’t be letting me sweat.You must be letting your attention wander.Come on; do your job.’

‘Sorry,’ the suit says, in an unpleasant tone.I think it should take my comfort a little more seriously.That’s what it’s there for, after all.

‘If you want me to get out and walk, I will,’ I tell it.

‘That won’t be necessary.’

I wish it would suggest a rest.I feel weak and dizzy again, and I could feel the suit doing most of the work as we got down from the roof of the lava tunnel.The pain in my guts is back.We start walking over the rubble-covered plain once more.I feel like talking.

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