file:///F|/rah/Walter%20Jon%20Williams/Williams,%20Walter%20Jon%20-%20Hardwired.txt
is the Ukraine from Peru. Every so often one of Cowboy's family would shoulder a rifle and march
off to fight for the United States, but they concentrated most of their energies on fighting the
state of Texas. The Texans were water-hungry, consuming more than they could ever replenish,
building at the finish vast pumps just a few inches over the Texas side of the border, sucking the
alkaline New Mexico water across the line, stealing what others had so carefully preserved.
Cowboy's people fought them, holding on to what they could until the last pump rattled dry and the
dusty red earth rose on the wind and turned the world into a sandblasting hurricane.
Cowboy remembers his days in the dust bowl, living at his uncle's ranch after his father
broke himself trying to hang on. Existing inside a gray assortment of bleached planks on the edge
of the desert the Texans had made a place where red earth drifted inches deep behind the door
whenever the wind blew, and days passed without seeing the sun as anything brighter than a ruddy
warm vagueness behind the scouring sand. Farming was impossible, and the family ran cattle
instead, an occupation only slightly less precarious. The nearest town bragged about the number of
churches it had and Cowboy was raised in one of them, watching the congregation grow bleaker week
by week, their skin turning gray, their eyes ever more desperate as they asked the Lord to forgive
whatever sin had led them to this cleansing. Texans, once the enemy, wandered through on their way
to somewhere else, living in cardboard boxes, in old automobiles that sat on blocks and had long
ago lost their paint to the sand. The Rock War came and went, and things got harder. Hymns
continued to be sung, liquor and cards foresworn, and notices of farm auctions continued to be
posted at the courthouse.
The Dodger was an older man who had moved to Colorado. When he came home he drove a shiny
automobile, and he didn't go to church. He chewed tobacco because chewing didn't interfere with
his picking when, in his free time, he played left-handed mandolin with a jug band. The gray
people in the church didn't like to talk about how he'd made his money. And one day the Dodger saw
Cowboy riding in a rodeo.
The Dodger visited Uncle's ranch and arranged to borrow Cowboy for a while, even paid for
his time. He got Cowboy some practice time on a flight simulator and then made a call to a
thirdman he knew. The rest, as the Dodger would say, is history.
Cowboy was sixteen when he took up flying. In his cracked old leather boots he already
stood three inches over six feet, and soon he stood miles taller, an atmosphere jock who spread
his contrails from one coast to the other, delivering the mail, mail being whatever it was that
came his way. The Orbitals and the customs people in the Midwest were just another kind of Texan-
someone who wants to rape away the things that keep you alive, replacing nothing, leaving only
desert. When the air defenses across the Line got too strong, the jocks switched to panzer-and the
mail still got through. The new system had its challenges, but had it been up to Cowboy he would
never have left the skies.
Now Cowboy is twenty-five, getting a little old for this job, approaching the time when
even hardwired neural reflexes begin to slacken. He disdains the use of headsets; his skull bears
five sockets for plugging the peripherals directly into his brain, saving milliseconds when it
counts. Most people wear their hair long to cover the sockets, afraid of being called buttonheads
or worse, but Cowboy disdains that practice, too; his fair hair is cropped close to the skull and
his black ceramic sockets are decorated with silver wire and turquoise chips. Here in the West,
where people have an idea of what these things mean, he is regarded with a kind of awe.
He has his nerves hardwired to the max, and Kikuyu Optics eyes with all the available
options. He has a house in Santa Fe and a ranch in Montana that his uncle runs for him, and he
owns the family property in New Mexico and pays taxes on it like it was worth something. He has
the Maserati and a personal aircraft-a "business jet"-and a stock portfolio and caches of gold.
He's also got this place, this little meadow in the Colorado mountains; another cache,
this one for memories that won't go away: And a discontent, formless but growing, that has led him
here.
He parks by the big camouflaged concrete hangar and unfaces the Maserati before the engine
gives its final whimper. In the silence he can hear the sound of a steel guitar from somewhere in
the hangar and a stirring in the grass that is the first directionless movements of the
afternoon's thermals. He walks to the hangar, unreels a jack from the lock, studs it into his
head, and gives it the code.
Past the heavy metal door there is a Wurlitzer, shiny chrome and bright fluorescent
plastic, venting some old Woody Guthrie song into the huge cathedral space. Looming above are the
matte black shapes of three deltas, their rounded forms obscure in the dim light but giving an
impression of massive power and appalling speed. Obsolete now, Cowboy bought them for little more
than the price of their engines when the face riders started using panzers.
Warren stands at his workbench in a pool of light, tinkering with a piece of a fuel pump.
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