126564.fb2 Sims - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 13

Sims - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 13

Harry Carstairs, chief of sim education, had trained more of the creatures than anyone else presently with the company; a big man, six-four at least, and probably weighing in at an eighth of a ton. He towered over the sim.

Ellis glanced down at his desktop memo screen. F27-63—yes, that was Seymour’s serial number. He had longer arms and looser lips than the average commercial sim. Smaller too.

“All right,” he said. “Let’s see what he can do.”

“Sit in the red chair, Seymour,” Harry said gently. He stood with his hands clasped in front of him, staring straight ahead as he spoke, allowing the sim no hints or cues from his body language.

The sim looked around, spotted the dark red leather chair against the wall, and loped over to seat himself.

“Good. Now turn on the lamp on the opposite side of the room.”

The sim rose, crossed in front of Ellis’s desk, and stopped before the lamp. He looked under the shade, found the switch, and turned it on.

“Very good,” Harry said. “Now—”

“I’m satisfied with his comprehension,” Ellis said. Comprehension had never been the problem; he was anxious to cut to the chase. “What about his speech?”

“It’s getting there.”

“Gettingthere?”

“He’s a great signer.”

“I’m sure he is.”

Sims started ASL lessons in infancy because signing stimulated development of the speech cortex; this helped enormously with vocalization later on.

“Want to see him sign?”

“No,” Ellis said, balling a fist in frustration. “I want to hear him speak.” He turned to the sim. “What is your name?”

The creature looked at Harry who nodded encouragement.

The sim’s thick pink tongue protruded between his yellow teeth as he said, “Thee…” in a low-pitched voice.

Ellis was about to say that “Thee” wasn’t a name when the sim continued, laboriously pronouncing, “Mmmm…mmmm…” And then he seemed to run out of gas.

He glanced uncertainly at Harry who smiled and nodded. “You’re doing good. Go on.”

“Mmmm…,” said Seymour, picking up where he’d left off. But he seemed stuck on the sound.

Ellis held up a hand. “All right. He can’t say his name. Whatcan he say?”

Harry turned to the sim. “Did you have breakfast?”

The sim nodded. “Eth.”

“Are you hungry now?”

A head shake. “Oh.”

Ellis waited but gathered from the look on Harry’s face that the show was over.

“That’s it? He’s your best and his entire vocabulary consists of two incomplete words and half his name?”

Ellis tried to keep the anger from his voice—none of this was Harry’s fault—but still he heard it slip through. Because damn it, hewas angry. When was he going to see some results? The sim sensed his emotion and shrank back a step.

Harry rested a reassuring hand on the creature’s shoulder. “Seymour’s doing the best that he can.”

Ellis wanted to beat his fists on his desk and scream,It’s not enough! Notnearly enough! Instead he sighed and leaned back in his swivel chair.

“You don’t work them hard enough.” Maybe Harry had been around sims too long. An inherently gentle man, maybe he was identifying with them too much, cutting them too much slack. And maybe Harry was thinking about another sim, a special long-ago sim who was gone. “You’re too easy on them.”

“What do you want me to do?” Harry said, his face darkening. “Whip them?”

“No, of course not.” What an awful thought.

“Not Seymour’s fault if his hyoid’s not up to par with the main breed’s.”

The hyoid—always the damn hyoid. The little arch of bone that supported the tongue and its muscles was crucial to human speech. Ellis’s new lines all lacked a fully developed hyoid bone.

That wasn’t the only thing not up to par. “Ever hear of evolutionary synergy, Harry?”

The big man’s brow furrowed. “I don’t recall…”

“You wouldn’t have. It’s a new theory I’ve developed as a result of my recent work. It’s the subtle, as yet unquantifiable cooperation between genes that have evolved together. It’s so subtle that I can’t prove it, but I know it’s there, I know it’s true.”

“What’s that got to do with Seymour?” Harry said.

“Everything.”

“I don’t understand.”

“I know.”

He saw Harry glance at the plastic pill organizer on his desk—three compartments labeledAM ,AFT, andPM . Ellis always left it in plain sight, to maintain his image as a heavily medicated eccentric. But the pills were for show. He’d been off medication for quite some time now.

Harry led the sim to the door, signaled for the handler, then closed it after them.

“Mr. Sinclair,” he said, approaching the desk. “I work your new breeds harder than the main breed, and—”

“I know you do, Harry.” Ellis stared at his hands, bunched into fists. “It’s just that it’s so damn frustrating.”

“Youthink it’s frustrating? How about for me and my staff? We slave with these new breeds day after day and get nowhere. And we keep asking ourselveswhy …why does the company keep developing breeds that are inferior to the one we already have?”

Not the company, Ellis thought. Me. Just me.

“I can’t go into that, Harry.”