Dienstag, 4. Dezember 2012

Vertrauen Sie mir - Ich weiß, was ich tue!

Der erste Entwurf zu einer Kurzgeschichte steht. Inspiriert wurde ich durch eine Kolumne von Ron Johnson. Johnson beschäftigt sich mit Vorliebe mit den verschrobeneren Zeitgenossen unter uns und ähnlich Louis Theroux tritt er mit seinem Gegenüber in einen Dialog, der diesem Raum gibt, sich in seiner ganzen Absonderlicheit zu erklären. Dabei hinterfragt er durchaus kritisch, überläßt es aber ZuhörerInen, sich eine Meinung zu bilden.

In seinem neuen Buch "Lost at Sea: The Jon Ronson Mysteries", einer Zusammenstellung diverser Kolumnen (u.a. wie er mit Robbie Williams auf einer UFO Konferenz landet und was es mit Indigo Kinder auf sich hat), findet sich auch eine Kolumne über künstliche Intelligenz bzw. Bina48. Bina48 ist ein intelligenter Roboter, dem Menschen nach empfunden und sowas wie state of the art. Aber lest selber, wo mich Entwurf hingeführt hat. Es fehlen noch rund 2000 Worte, zum großen Finale.




The Importance of Being Gertrude Gage


"So you are specialised in anthropomorphised computers?", Albert enquired of the young man standing in front of him.
 "Yep. Imagine it a little bit like Terminator. But obviously with a little less ‘hasta la vista baby’. We at RoMan, or to be precise, Robot Humanoid Technology, have one dream - we want to create the perfect partner robot, one which could be used by anyone and everyone. It will revolutionise humanity just like the Internet did. Think about all the new possibilities. Let me give you an example mate. Let's say your mum died. But, before she had passed away we were able to manufacture a replica of her. Then, whilst Mother is pushing up the daisies, you could meet with her new simulated self and have a chat about the past, a chance to ask all those burning questions you never got to whilst she was alive. No missed chances, never again. No regrets or remorse. Believe me, there's a whole market for it."
"Very interesting Dr. Phoenix. Do you have a card for me?"




***
Gertrude had lost the fight against cancer four months ago and yet here Albert was standing in their dining room, waiting for her return. He stared at the collection of Meissen porcelain on the mahogany cabinet in front of him. His finger tips sliding over the surface of the cabinet, smiling when he found himself writing Gerti in the dust, drawing a heart around her name.  He stared at it for a moment, then swept it away in a single movement, annoyed that the cabinet looked even untidier now than it had before.
He gazed upon the small figurine of the Dancing Harlequin he had bought on one of his myriad business trips to make up for their lost time together. His appeasement politics often failed and Gertrude would ignore him for hours until he could finally smell the sweetest scent of cinnamon wafting in from the back of the house. And he would know that his Gerti was in the kitchen making his next-to-favourite dish, Moroccan tagine, cutting the ingredients harshly. Later they would sit opposite of each other on the dining table and he would toast to their love. And Gerti would give him a forgiving smile.
Albert sighed, looked at the watch, another 30 minutes to go. He strolled to the mirror, just to check if his tie was still done up neatly. For seconds he fiddled around the double Windsor, then reached out to tuck back a stubborn grey strand of hair. He gave his reflection an encouraging grin but he couldn't help it, he still felt tense just like the night before he had married Gertrude.


37 years ago they had met in a student bar. Small and crowded; the music always too loud for any long discussion. Amos, his friend, had introduced them to each other: "You have met Gertrude before Albert, haven't you?"
Albert quickly found out that Amos and Gertrude had been from the same village. She was charming, speaking of her studies – French and Anthropology – did he know who Gautier was? Albert shook his head; he had been dismissive of the subject. At this point in his life, Albert’s research was based around the topic of body topography as well as the less audacious subject of economics. But of course the next day he would go into a second hand book shop and look for a copy of Gautier's novel. Maybe she “would like to come along and make some other recommendations?”.
Although Albert went home alone that night, he still felt Gertrude's presence around him: Her black hair cropped back in that pixie style, her eyes green as kelp. When she laughed everyone would turn their head, searching for the shameless intruder of private conversations. Her skirt was short, her legs seemed endless. How in God's name could he not fall for a girl like that?
Two months after that night they were married. A year later Gertrude was pregnant. Suddenly baby magazines had piled up in their apartment flat and Gerti asked Albert what he had thought in regards to breast feeding. He needed to admit that this hadn't come to his mind yet. Scrupulous, Gerti was preparing herself for her new role. Finding cheap baby clothes and debating with her friends if house birth was an option. There was no time for Gerti to go back to her courses at university. Meanwhile Albert worked hard for his new life, he graduated cum laude in economics, a very different career ahead of him.
"Why did you marry Mum anyway?", their son Amos had asked him once while they were sitting opposite of each other at a restaurant table. Presumably Gertrude had phoned him and complained about Albert's overtime and business trips again? By that point Amos was already a grown man and Gerti and Albert had had the house to themselves. Albert was amazed by the fact that he seemed to know more about his secretary – Linda, 38, a good size 8, two twin daughters and nails always polished in mint green - than about Amos' life which had turned into a great mystery Albert had given up on solving way back when Amos had become a teenager.
 "Why?" Albert responded defensibly, "I think it is pretty obvious that we were in love." Albert still couldn't get used to it that Amos had his own opinion and would question his actions. It irritated him just like an alarm that was never turned off, snoozing in the back ground, perpetual torture.
"That is exactly the thing Dad, you are talking about it in the past. You just said 'we were in love'."
"Amos, I still love Gerti. A relationship just changes over time. I mean, I can still remember the first night we met in a bar. She looked stunning, like Twiggy with black hair. It was a mutual friend, Amos, who introduced your mother and I to each other. But you know this, don't you?"
"Yes, Dad. I do know the story. That's why I ended up with this stupid name."
"Please Amos. What don't you like about your name? It's a wonderful name, your Mum and I really like it."
Amos didn't look as though that made it any better for him and obviously he didn't want to talk about aesthetic differences with his father, rather he insisted on answers to his questions: "But Dad, really, why did you never get a divorce?"
Albert couldn't really tell why. Of course, he had thought about it during the last year or so. Things had changed, he had spent most of his time out of the house, attention shifting to other subjects, other people, other women. There were moments he thought Gerti would be better off without him. But still, she was his steamer, slightly outdated but doing her job quite gracefully. She never complained when he was out the whole day and came back late at night; she would already be tucked away under the sheets in the double bed, facing the wall. He would guiltily slide in next to her, waiting for questions that never came whilst he stared into the darkness.
She was the one he had decided to explore life with, together. He admired the fact that she had given up nearly everything to follow him and help him to become a successful investor. Albert had the feeling he needed to pay the price for his choices and he was willing to do so because he had gotten out of his adventure nearly everything he had wanted. It seemed unfair to him to leave someone like Gerti. Also it seemed more convenient to him. And Gerti? She never said anything to him. And in the end Albert thought there were always other options: "Amos, I really do love her. Only in a different way now."
New arrangements were put in place by the couple over time and both adjusted them carefully to their needs, which to some extent allowed them to live happily ever after. Or at least until Gerti had been diagnosed with cancer.
The cancer contaminated Albert as well. He saw the life shrinking away from her. And now, at 63 years old, Albert knew he needed to grow once more. He stopped going to work and started to spend his time with Gertrud. He found his fears mirrored in Gerti's. When she talked about what she hadn't achieved, a PhD in French literature or an expedition into the Tristes Tropiques, Albert felt how the thought nagged at him, had he reached his full potential? And was potential measurable in being successful? When she talked about the fear of dying, how death was growing in her and about a Greek philosopher who said something along the lines of ‘death wasn't anything to bother you until you are in a coffin’, Albert could do nothing but admire her strength. He saw her crying, exposing her in a way that nakedness never could, talking about how she never wanted to die alone. And while Gerti was irrevocably dying, he would feel how he was falling in love with her all over again. It was a different feeling than the one he had had years ago, it wasn't adventurous, excitingly breathtaking. No, this feeling was deep and as old as the oceans.


And now just a couple of minutes were left till he would see Gerti again. Maybe he could put on some music, but all of a sudden he wasn't so sure what her favourite song had been. "Well, I guess she liked Haydn's symphony No. 94 as much as I do", he mumbled to himself while sliding the vinyl out of its sleeve. He had just set the needle onto the record – he didn't even care to put it right onto the start - when the doorbell rang which redeemed him from any guilt. That must be her. Her and Dr. Trevor Phoenix. He straightened his spine and once more made a hasty gesture towards his tie.
Albert heard Dr. Phoenix before he even saw him.
 "Hi Mr Gage. It's damn hot outside, I have been sweating waterfalls in that car. Air con is broke. Have you slept well? I have her in the back of the van. Should I get her out for you? She looks absolutely fantastic, the wig we found, just like your lady..." Phoenix chattered before Albert had even finished opening the door.
"Good afternoon Dr. Phoenix," Albert responded. The first time he had met Phoenix was at a science fair. The idea RoMan Technology had presented, Albert immediately recognised as a brave concept for the future. He definitely hadn't considered becoming a test pilot for the project when he had taken the business card from the doctor. But with Gerti having had but a few more months to live, the clock had been ticking. The only issue he had with Phoenix was his informal manners, which saw the doctor present himself as more of a washed up Californian beach boy than the leading bio-technician that he was. He reminded Albert of a hyperactive Jack Russell, never bored of chasing a ball and always lacking the elegance of a Dalmatian.
"Oh... of course she isn't here with you. Silly me, what had I thought? Should I come with you and help her out of the car?"
"Ah, don't worry mate, it isn't necessary. Why don't you just take a seat in your lounge and I will bring her in? Gertrude and I sat in there while I was recording her gestures and memories. I know the way just fine. Damn, I cannot wait to show her features to you, you really must see what this Gerti-bot can do." and with that Trevor Phoenix was tip tapping off to the van.
As there was nothing for him to do, Albert just followed the suggestion of the Doctor and made his way back into the house. But there was no way on Earth he could sit down now. This moment was the prelude to a second chance, a chance to correct all of the disharmony married life had brought him the first time around, and one which had led him to this, to the grand finale.
"Fucking shit...", Haydn couldn't have timed it better, Albert heard Phoenix's swearing intermingled at the very point of Hayden's drum stroke. He winced. "Everything okay Dr. Phoenix", Albert shouted, already on his feet hurtling towards the main entrance.
Abruptly, he stopped. On the floor he saw a torso attached to a familiar face. A wig lay just next to it. And there was a voice, one he could not fail to recognise; the softness of Gerti's vowels over and over again: "I am able to converse with you but I am having a bit of a bad software day today. I am able to converse with you but..."
Loose wires dangling where the rest of Gerti should be, Dr. Phoenix was on his knees, frantically poking and prodding at bits of the torso.
"Fuck knows what has happened. I must have slipped. Sorry, I'm really sorry about it. But I am sure I can fix it, I mean fix her, just a second. No worries, she will be alright" Albert heard Phoenix’s panic stricken utterances from the depth of the floor.
"She?", Albert echoed and for the first time he understood there was no Gerti. There was just a robot – a simulacrum. He felt embarrassed, had he really thought there were second chances? In front of him lay the testimony of a failed experiment: a nest of wires, fake skin and stolen memories. He needed a drink. Wordless he left the scenario, rather than embracing Gerti he would kiss a bottle of scotch.
(2303)
                                      

Four weeks later. Albert sat on the living room couch again, this time far more casually dressed. Once more he was waiting for Dr. Phoenix, who had promised to deliver a better Gerti, a complete Gerti. This time Albert had called Phoenix a couple of times to ask about the process, to make sure everything would happen to fulfil his satisfaction. He absorbed articles about mind uploading and made himself familiar with h+, which apparently was short for transhumanism. And some thoughts appeared in Albert for the very first time as he delved into the subject. He felt how Gertrude’s death had paralysed him, how only the wish to get her back and make things right had dominated. But now, finally, he could envision the future.
 Before he would die, he could simply upload his mind to his robotic doppelganger as Gerti had done. He recalled how Dr. Phonix had come for weeks to their house, carrying not much more than a computer pad and an mp3 player, how he had conducted intensive interviews with Gertrude. How they took the car, if Gerti’s condition allowed it, to go to some meaningful places and how they had sat together, sifting through photo albums and how all too often Albert had heard Gertrude crying. Quickly, Albert suppressed the memory. Rather he imagined how Gerti and he would become the celebrity human+ couple, a role model for a future generation. Eventually Dr. Phoenix would get the recognition in his field and would be idolised by the masses.   
Gerti and Albert wouldn’t even need to stay in an old body they could return in a more youthful form, there would be no more crowded waiting rooms and late appointments at the doctors, all they would need was a good technician and some oil.   And another thought shot through his neurotransmitters; when robot life seemed so much better, wasn’t now the time to get rid of his body shell? For a short moment Albert shivered and quickly stood up to get a drink, just in case.
(2645)