23.10.17 / 25.10.19:
at the best of times, there seems to be something inherently false and artificial about Malaysian writing, something sickeningly aspirational, sophomoric, groping without success for an authentic voice and constantly seeking to impress.
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And before he knew it, Winter had come. The air's rough chill felt like an unsolicited, good-natured slap on the back. Aki stood dazed for a minute staring into the horizon's simpering blue grey excuse for a sunrise. He swallowed nervously and tried to blink back something that felt like excitement. This is it, he thought. This is winter. The sky has given up trying to be happy. Autumn's subtle melancholy felt like a distant memory now; this cold dark morning as hard and unremitting as his own ribs and breathing. He felt a prayer of thanks leave his lips. The leaves shivered as pedestrians politely scowled into the distance and headlights whispered past like memories in a dream.
"Hey what's up," There she is, beaming. Full of confidence, staring straight at him - full on eye contact.
"Oh hi - nothing much... sorry... do I know you?"
"No, but see... if we do this..." she extends her hand and he extends his hesitantly. She grips it and gives it a few shakes. "Hi, my name's April. And you are?"
"Aki."
"Nice to meet you Aki! See? And now we know each other. Magic."
He laughs.
"So now that we know each other, there's something I have to tell you."
"What's that?"
"I know what kind of person you are."
"What kind of person is that?"
"Kind of shy. Nostalgic in a big way. Really melancholic at times. You wish you weren't so shy so you'd be able to meet new people - you're envious of people who are effortlessly likeable. You're romantic and don't know how to show it. You blame yourself for a lot of things."
"Am I that easy to read?"
"No, you're actually very difficult to read to most people. But not to me."
"And why's that."
"Because I'm a figment of your imagination."
"I kind of got that vibe from you."
"No, that's just your imagination." She smirks.
Wow, he thinks. That was quick.
"But look at it this way, I'm literally everything you want in a woman. Playfully ironic. A real straight shooter when you least expect it. As intelligent as you are but not infatuated with my own intelligence."
"Wow."
"I'm also forward, so you don't have to make the first move. Unfortunately, I'm also coy, because you like a challenge. How am I doing?"
"You're not real, are you? "
"No man, I'm the real deal - if by real you mean completely imaginary. If we talked a little bit more you'd find out that I'm incredibly sentimental, that I love Mac Demarco in a non ironic way, that I have down days and listen to the same sad music that you do, and that I have a tender side I don't show anyone except those I'm closest to. By the way, there's something else I should mention."
"I'm listening."
"Because I'm your 100% ideal girl, I'm also 100% imaginary, which means there's no chance you and I will end up together. The idea of someone like me existing in the real world and being attracted to you is inconceivable, so you would rather believe that someone like me only exists in your head. Because you're most comfortable when you're in there. Because this way you're in control. This way if things don't work out between us, you can tell yourself it's because you chose this. Not because I didn't like you. You're so terrified of losing me, you'd rather I didn't exist."
A chime begins to sound, coming from everywhere at once. A xylophonic five note cycle. "Do you... do you hear that?"
"Hear what?" She says. As he turns to face her again, the bus stop and girl dissolve to black.
"So what did you think?" Quill asked, removing the wire mesh from Aki's head.
Aki rubbed his eyes. "I didn't expect her to be so... self aware."
"Mm, well... not all of them are like that." Quill turned around so his back was facing Aki. He tapped once or twice on his keypad. "That's probably a function of your matrix and also because you've been primed by all the tests you've done." He sounded nonplussed. A little defensive.
"Is there a way to keep her from breaking the 4th wall? It kind of messes with immersion..."
"Probably. I don't know. I'll look into it."
Aki busied himself examining his immediate surroundings. A mechanical watch on the bedside table. A potted plant in the corner. He took long measured breaths and rubbed his hand to his chest, just beneath his clavicle. Sensory anchoring was one of many techniques that helped the mind equilibriate and establish the user's reality. (The chime helped a lot as well. Episodes of spatiotemporal disorientation lasting up to 30 minutes often followed what was colloquially known as a 'hard-landing'. An article in the New England Journal of Subconsciousness describes a case of florid but short lasting psychosis in a 25 year old male who had experienced a theta disrupted sudden awakening in which he repeatedly attempted to wake himself up and refused to believe he was already awake. Following this, a number of users have reported to have experienced similar psychoses. It is now referred to as 'the bends' or 'going around the bend' in reference to decompression sickness. Both the professional diving and oneironautical community have attempted with very little success to discourage use of the term on grounds of it being sensationalist and unscientific. The article which first described the phenomenon is currently subject to review.)
"I'll say this though, she definitely made more of an impression than the others."
Quill turned around. "What else?"
"I don't know. It seemed like... she was more interesting. Like... it wasn't just user led. In fact, I hardly said a word."
"Interesting."
"How did you manage that?"
"Well, it sounds like I've finally figured out how to optimise for charisma."
"Do tell."
"So the first breakthrough was to use the user's own personality matrix to pull preference values, right? But the first gen neurobots, all they did was act as a mirror. They provided insight into the user's psyche, but nothing more. They were essentially an automated psychotherapy service. A blank canvas. Affinity was never a problem, but there was no excitement. Intimacy maybe, but users kept getting bored because the first gen bots lacked 'otherness'. That's the key to building organic attraction. The friction that creates a spark. What the bots lacked was a sense of wholeness. The impression that they existed as autonomous independent entities. Because self-sufficiency implies that they have something to offer us. Something that we feel is lacking in ourselves. If they can appear to disagree, if they can occasionally defy rather than constantly mirror the user, it will arouse in the user an eager want. And then voila, instant charisma."
"That... actually makes a lot of sense. And you managed to do this?"
"Well, what I did was I messed with a bunch of template variables. In the analysis it seems to work well enough with fixed randomised values, but it gets real interesting if the matrix stack is counterbalanced according to the user's stack i.e. if it personifies to a degree the user's inferior functions."
"So essentially what you're saying is that guys like me actually have a preference for loud, adventurous, outgoing girls."
"Yes and vice versa. Jocks go for goths. Cheerleaders go for nerds etc."
"Sounds a little reductive..."
Quill grinned. "Humans are only 46 lines of code, man. What do you expect?"
"One last thing... how did you overcome host rejection?"
Quill smile faded. "Well... I didn't. If the bot is too dissimilar it triggers rejection. I call it the dissonance threshold. "
"Because of the trust factor."
"Yeah." Quill grimaced.
"... That's fine. You'll find a way around it. You always do."
Quill willed his lips into a smile, aping Aki's hollow optimism.
"Take it easy man. I'll see you next week."
"See you."
After Quill left, Aki stared out of his hospital window into an endless summer and asked himself why, of all the seasons, he had dreamt of winter.