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Timestealer
By Steve
Stanton
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This story first appeared in 1990 in the 10th Anniversary
Issue of Rampike, and was later reprinted in Canada,
England, Greece and Romania.
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You never know what's going to
sell these days. It's a real problem for professional
timestealers like me. You can study cultural profiles, analyze
market trends, hire publicity shamans—and still have a sequence
on the skids. There are no guarantees and no explanations. You
just cannot tell in advance whose time will prove the most
valuable.
Not so in the old days. We had all those vicarious pleasures
to provide, all those users hungry for new experience.
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Athletes had
marketable time then, sky divers, mountain climbers at the
summit. Ever ride a luge down a glistening tunnel of ice? That
was one of my good ones back then. Ever run with the bulls at
Pamplona? Or wrestle anaconda in the Amazon rain forest? Those
were all big sellers in their day.
Porno was big too, an outrageous
thrill with no risk of disease. I did a lot of sleazoid synching
during my early apprenticeship—anything to fill my quota—and
long hard work it was too, you've no idea. Prostitutes were an
easy and obvious target, but if you knew what went on in their
heads it would drive you to chastity out of sheer boredom.
Supper for the children, laundry, is this guy going to have a
heart attack on top of me or what? How some of them make a show
of animation is beyond me. Most are not worth the computer time
to steal the sequence. It takes a real fanatic for even marginal
porn.
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And to give equal time on the other side of the
coin, let's recall the old evangel sequences. Remember Charismania?
Remember presiding over a rally of thousands, surrounded by a sea of
hands held aloft in prayer, the spirit of glory hovering above the
waters, moving in your heart, speaking with your lips—it was my first
million seller, one that confirmed my reputation as a timestealer par
excellence. Those were the good old days.
Now the public is satiated, and rightly so. Every
human act conceivable has been recorded. Enough time has been stolen to
stretch back to the Pleistocene. It is simply impossible to shock the
modern sophisticated user, to bring anything novel to his vast
experience. He's already won the World Series and been elected President
of the United States. He's already been weightless in outer space and
made it with Marilyn Monroe look alikes, possibly at the same time. What
can a timestealer add to that?
Concentrate on technique, I tell my best students
today. Timestealing is an art, the ultimate form of entertainment. We're
intelligent professionals stealing for intelligent users, and it's not
what we reveal but what we intimate that counts. The raw human
experience is only a base on which to build, the background harmonics to
an experiential symphony. With good technique a timestealer can make
Librarian at Rest a bestseller. What secret thoughts lay hidden
behind those affable eyes? What exotic imaginations? You can explore the
subconscious levels if you're properly tuned: you've got to use every
technological advance. I'm working now on a new generation of "superconscious"
sequences. The discriminating user today...
Where was I? Did you ever see my Hero
sequence? Sometimes you stumble onto a classic like that without a
moment's forethought. I was in my mobile unit that day, scanning the
streets for anything unusual to make my quota, when I happened upon the
burning building, a two‑storey brick house with flames roaring out the
front door and a smoky haze curling under the eaves. The building sucked
air with an audible whoof, chugging for oxygen like an overheated wood
stove. A crowd had gathered. The firemen were restraining the parents
from going back inside. You could actually hear the children screaming
through an upstairs window.
I activated my system and began visually scanning
the bystanders. I was looking for a particular emotive base, that horrid
bloodlust feeling you sometimes find in a death audience— just a crass
commercial flash‑in‑the‑pan sequence for the weeklies. I noticed a young
man gazing up with rapt attention, his face stony with tension, and I
thought I'd found a worthwhile target. I probed and found good emotive
content. I locked in on full cerebral and began widening my filters.
Horror, panic—an overwhelming signal. I finetuned visual to correct for
slight astigmatism and maximized the olfactory smoke signal. I boosted
amygdala and hippocampal levels for artistic effect and toned down
verbal cognitive, which seemed to be mired in a repetitive circular
routine having to do with supernatural agencies. I synched and began the
bypass sequence.
I/we were there, tasting smoke like hot acid,
hearing the children's cries above the chatter of the crowd, recoiling
inwardly and bouncing back to full surface awareness, bouncing back and
forth like a drumbeat, like a zoom lens focusing in and out on a scene
too grisly to behold. I/we could not accept the reality, the torture of
innocents.
Something snapped—that' s still how I describe it
to this day. A total conceptual reorganization. Out of chaos came fixed
determination, out of horror a grim resolve. I/we ran into the fire, up
the blackened stairs, smoke‑blind and gasping, never fearing death. I/we
were invincible, superhuman. I/we followed the cries, kicked open
burning doors, crawled over smoking carpet. Two children under a bed and
a babe unconscious in a crib. I/we gathered them like sacks of laundry,
rolled them in blankets and hoisted them aloft. I/we noticed pain then,
dizziness, weakness. I/we retched out smoke and bile and stumbled
forward.
You've experienced the sequence; you know the
peculiar timelessness of the hero's escape. Even now in retrospect I
wonder how I retained enough professional acumen to signal the computer
for overtime. Legal eagles are quick to criticize such action, as is
their right, but dedicated users understand why I went overtime on
Hero. I had to get it all, statutory amendments or not. I was there
the first time, I suffered the unedited version; don't tell me my job.
The hero's hands and feet were permanently
mutilated, face disfigured, lungs seared and blackened. The children
were treated in hospital for smoke inhalation and released. The parents
converted to Christianity. The hero later told reporters he didn’t
remember a thing about what happened. Of course not—I’d stolen the
entire episode. I sent the hero a prepublication run and offered him ten
percent as an out-of-court settlement for the extra time stolen. (Final
editing left the sequence at seven and change, as you know.) He is a
rich man today.
I am constantly asked whether I influenced the hero
in some way to undertake his daring rescue, whether my synching and
stealing his cerebral activity in some way manufactured the sequence,
which, of course, is absurd. Timestealing is purely passive,
unnoticeable and untraceable by the subject. A two-way communication has
never been attempted outside the lab, and the results are not worthy of
publication—glorified telephone conversations. The hero would have
plunged into those flames with or without me, and he can thank his lucky
stars and garters...
Where was I? All right, let's deal with
questionable ethics. First tell me who really is going to miss five
minutes of mental process? People waste more than that standing at a
transit stop or meditating on the toilet. Some people are so drugged
they forego higher cerebral functions for most of the day. A culture
with no respect for time can well afford to lose an inconsequential
fraction to timestealers like me. If god had meant our thoughts and
feelings to be private he would not have allowed the monitoring
technology to develop—and I'm not just trying to be funny; I've seen too
many strange things to deny his existence outright. I'll confess my
worst and let you be the judge. Remember Virgin Bride? Now this
young woman may have had some cause for complaint. Those crucial four
minutes and fifty‑five seconds may indeed have had a certain sentimental
importance—as a male, I can only guess to what extent—but think of the
vicarious gratification she provided for millions, male and female,
virgin or otherwise. She has contributed to the social gestalt, she has
influenced the contemporary milieu. She can always buy the sequence; I'm
sure it's gone mass-market by now. In any case...
Damn, that's disconcerting. Where was I? Quality is
the key word these days. A good quality product will never be out of
style. It is nowhere chiseled in granite that the commercial market will
not accept the subtleties of artistic expression. Any timestealer can
master technical accuracy, and many can learn to break standard rules to
good effect, but only the best students show that spark of originality,
that love of theme and format necessary for a classic sequence. The rest
will follow the fads and fashions of their day; they'll supply good work
to the weeklies and maybe make the charts now and again with supreme
effort and a little luck. And no one will be safe from their spotlight.
When royalty piques some interest they'll descend like herd animals on
kings and queens throughout the world; when a new pope is elected
they'll swarm like flies after sugar donuts. I followed the trends for
most of my own career, so don't misinterpret my criticism. I’m merely
pointing out that the search for novelty has to end somewhere, sometime.
User have stood on the Sea of Tranquility and
watched the Earth hover above a craggy lunar landscape. Users have
danced to tribal drums on a fire-lit African plain. Users have borrowed
the brain of a subatomic physicist to ponder the first few nanoseconds
of creation, when the universe itself was no bigger than a hydrogen
atom. Yet even after all these years, the search for the ultimate
sequence shows no evidence of slackening, the weeklies scream for more,
the public swallows it up, critical, demanding, and now attention seems
to have focused on the timestealers themselves. Sometimes I wish...
Where was I?
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