Message-ID: <35085asstr$1012911012@assm.asstr-mirror.org> Return-Path: X-Original-Message-ID: <002601c1ae13$e87555e0$4967530c@dbarber01> From: "DB_Story" MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Priority: 3 X-MSMail-Priority: Normal X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V5.50.4807.1700 X-ASSTR-Original-Date: Tue, 5 Feb 2002 00:08:25 -0700 Subject: {ASSM} Rescuing Silver: Inspired by The Silver Metal Lover {DB_Story} (M/Fembot/M'bot/F, rom, ScFi) Date: Tue, 5 Feb 2002 07:10:12 -0500 Path: assm.asstr-mirror.org!not-for-mail Approved: Newsgroups: alt.sex.stories.moderated,alt.sex.stories Followup-To: alt.sex.stories.d X-Archived-At: X-Moderator-Contact: ASSTR ASSM moderation X-Story-Submission: X-Moderator-ID: gill-bates, dennyw Rescuing Silver: Inspired by The Silver Metal Lover By DB ( DB_Story@att.net / http://home.att.net/files/Authors/db_story/www/ ) Copyrightc 2002 by DB. ASSM/ASFR (M/Fembot/M'bot/F, rom, ScFi) (This story contains Constitutionally protected material intended for adults over 18 years of age in the United States of America, and whatever passes for adult status in other countries. If you are under legal age, acting under legal age, not allowed to view such material in your area, or easily offended, please do not continue. This is not for you. (The only rights granted are to view this story. You are not allowed to reproduce, post, or otherwise redistribute this story without permission, except for non-profit Usenet archiving sites. (This story is not for sale. To place on your web-site devoted to this style of fiction, or for permission to link to my posted material, please contact me first at the above email.) - - - Author's Note: This story takes place in the universe of Tanith Lee's "The Silver Metal Lover." I recommend her writing highly, and just felt there was a bit more of this story to tell. BTW, her book title has a marvelous double meaning to it. This story is eligible for the February 2002 Silver Clitorides award. Nominations are accepted at: SilverNominees@aol.com. It's requested that you include: the month, Title, and author. A link to the story is also appreciated. All this information is on this page. For more on the awards, go to: http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/gary/www/Clitorides/SilverC_FAQ.htm. A special thanks to Gorgo for his excellent and much appreciated proofreading. All remaining mistakes are mine. - - - LEGAL DISCLAIMER Concurrent with the United States Supreme Court decision regarding Campbell v. Acuff-Rose Music, Inc (1994) and the copyright laws of the United States, this is a work of parody. This work is posted freely without any request for remuneration; its only purpose is social commentary presented in an entertaining fashion. - - - When the Zansasi arrived on Earth, it wasn't an invasion from giant interstellar space ships. Nothing so noisy. Instead, they seemed to just walk out of thin air and quietly announce, "We're here." Tall, molted shades of green aliens with stalks on their heads. Somehow, they never inspired the much-anticipated fear of alien invasion that had long been dreaded. Instead, they kept to themselves, and soon people were seeking them out instead. They explained that the Multiverse was even more strange and interesting then we had imagined. Like a deck of cards, universes with different realities were stacked next to each other making journeys between them possible. (It wasn't actually as simple as a deck of cards, but the analogy worked.) Their technology opened the doors, making it possible to walk across entire universes in a day. Journeys to places that could only be imagined became possible. All one needed was entry to "The Highway", and a map. All the Zansasi wanted in return was rights to use a patch of land about a mile long by a half-mile wide to add as a link in their network. It had to be located at a specific location, which fortunately turned out to be entirely uninhabited for miles around. (The Indians that once lived in the area said that the area had been haunted for centuries, and no one wanted it.) They promised that no problems would occur from whatever creatures passed through on their travels to points unimaginable. It seems that their word is good. In a remarkably short time their wishes were granted. An immigration station was placed on the edge for any travelers who wished to stop off on our planet. (The Zansasi said this approach was quaint, as most other worlds never worried about the travelers since all had Zansasi approval, but to each their own.) The Zansasi also built a support building of their own on the other side from the immigration station. This strip of land quickly became known as "The Zansasi Highway," and the most popular show on cable was simply a camera aimed at The Highway, broadcasting live 24/7. Viewers never seemed to tire of watching the other, even stranger, races that now trod this small patch of our planet. The Zansasi said more to us that initial day, then in all the time since. They're not big on small talk. The Zansasi's word was good. Journeys were possible. But without their guidance, any such trips were, in a practical sense, impossible. You needed a map, and only the Zansasi could supply them. Soon there was a regular pilgrimage of people requesting such maps. They would come in, make their presentation to a silent Zansasi, then respectfully leave. Afterwards, and at no predictable interval, a map might arrive, for a lucky few. The rest were still waiting. Some maps were detailed with step-by-step instructions and a large amount of useful travel information. Others seemed simply directions. Even those people who received nothing more than the simplest maps, though, were ecstatic. And of the few who had received maps, not all took the journey afterwards. It was well known that the journeys were physically demanding, and not perfectly safe - though "user error" was the biggest problem travelers faced. And of those who did travel and return safely, few were willing to share the fruits of their efforts. Yeah, some took the trip only for adventure (and publicity), and wrote about their travels afterwards. Others went for treasure, and sometimes displayed it on their return (tax laws having yet to catch up to earnings from another universe, although the tax people kept trying). A few felt they had never belonged here in the first place, and left, never intending to return. And the vast majority went out, either found what they were looking for or not, and became very private upon their return. Nobody knew why the Zansasi granted some requests, and appeared to ignore so many others. A popular theory was that they took each request, went into a back room, and threw dice on whether to respond to it or not. If that's true, then I came up boxcars. I remember going to make my presentation. Some wag had scrawled the words on their door: "Abandon hope all ye who enter here." And below it, someone had stuck a piece of paper that read: "It doesn't matter who you are, or who you think you are, or who you know, or how much money you have." I don't know if the Zansasi even knew how their door had been graffitied. Or, if they did, what it meant. Or, if they knew what it meant, if they even cared. For me, that door was one of my most vivid memories of my presentation. As to the rest of it, I remember waiting while the five or so people ahead of me that day entered one-by-one, and the unreadable faces they had when they came back out. As for my presentation itself, it seemed so whiz by in only a couple minutes, and then I was finished and walking out the door myself. My face, too, must have been unreadable, since I had no idea if I had just accomplished anything at all. Four days later, an envelope arrived in the mail. Inside was a Zansasi map - and my dilemma. At age thirty-two, I was at loose ends. This was the age where you are supposed to be getting around to the business of settling down in life. Yet I still felt incomplete. Like something important was missing for me, and there was no likelihood of my finding it anywhere here. It was as if God had accidentally left out an important part of my life. Others may well be able to identify with me feelings, but I doubt many of them have held them so strongly. I envy the people who have known from a young age exactly what their life's course would be. I was never that lucky. My life needed something, but like a rudderless ship, my chances of finding it seemed nil. The one thing I was smart enough to know was that, if I didn't do something, years and decades could easily disappear from my life. Going to the Zansasi had been a maniac choice for me. The word had gotten around that on the highway, absolutely anything was possible. The Multiverse held within it every possibility. So in a frenzied moment, I had the inspiration that what I couldn't find here, I could find out there. Fortunately, it wasn't expensive choice for me. I lived only about three hours drive from The Highway. There is no charge to speak to the Zansasi. They listen, and then you leave. They don't answer questions. They don't help you format your request to them. They listen, and then you leave. So most of what we know are stories and rumors from others who may (or may not) have traveled on The Highway, and a very few aliens who have stopped to talk with people, before continuing their own journeys. One thing that all the accounts and stories agree on however is that every story you've ever read, every tale ever told, is actually happening somewhere out there in the Multiverse. And for that reason, can be reached by The Highway. I've read a lot, but there was one story I could never get out of my head. Probably, because I really had nothing better to do, I went and told it to the Zansasi. Four days later I got the map. The technology of the Zansasi is beyond comprehension. How they developed it, and why they use it the way they do, no one knows. The map was a small example of this. It arrived in a regular envelope, and looked like a folded, shiny piece of black plastic. On the front of it was a green dot, easily to understand graphic directions back to The Highway in yellow, a countdown clock indicating a little over three days in red, and a blue information symbol. Nothing else. No instructions or anything. Yet it seemed intuitive. The green dot was my current position on the map. The countdown clock indicated how long I had to get to The Highway. Touching the blue information button temporarily replaced the current display with graphic symbols for a backpack, hiking boots, certain amounts of food and water, a jacket, ice axe/walking stick, toiletry items, a hat, and sunglasses. An amount of currency was also indicated. Down in a little box that clearly indicated optional items, was the symbol for a camera. That doesn't begin to explain however how marvelous this map really is. It was folded to fit in the envelope. As I unfolded it, the display automatically resized to use the available surface. The larger it got, the more detailed the map information became. I also quickly discovered that I could draw my finger around an area, and that area would enlarge to encompass the entire map. Tapping the surface twice restored the original view. The map also seemed capable of near infinite foldings and unfoldings. At one point it was as big as the floor of my living room. At another point, I had it down to the size of a postage stamp. It was always the same weight and thickness, regardless of its size. There's no way I can explain this. My dilemma was on whether or not to take the journey. Sure I had asked for it. But deep down inside, I never actually expected to get it. I wondered if I had even asked for the right thing. It would be a great cosmic joke to send stupid people off after things they didn't even want once they found them. Too many people are stupid about knowing what it is they really want. I spent two days mostly believing that I wasn't going to go do this, and almost convinced myself. This couldn't possible work out the way I hoped. Really, it couldn't. No chance. None at all. Yes, I can be really stupid at times too. But I couldn't get the story out of my mind. In the end, I had to rush to get all the recommended items for my trip, and get to The Highway on time. I made it with five minutes to spare. It was quiet next to The Highway. There are times where there is no apparent activity for hours. Other times, it seems in constant use. Once an entire army marched through for two and a half straight days. Another time, what looked like an old west wagon train that extended for miles went the other direction. A favorite drinking bet is which end of The Highway will host the next arrival. There is a pack of junior reporters and other hangers-on that lay in wait by The Highway for anything interesting. The moment I got out with my map and backpack, they converged on me, some thrusting cameras and microphones into my face. "Who are you?" "Where are you going?" "What do you plan to find?" "What did you say to the Zansasi?" "What did the Zansasi say to you?" "Would you like me to go with you?" I ignored them all, although I had to push some of them out of the way. I wasn't here for their edification, and didn't really feel I had anything useful to say to them anyway. They may have felt otherwise, but I didn't plan to spend the effort to educate them on the error of their ways. They fell back as I approached the edge of The Highway. While there's no barrier to stop them, almost everybody reports a great uneasiness actually standing on The Highway. Maybe they fear being run over by some interstellar truck if they step out onto the road. That wasn't my concern however, and just as the map timer ticked down to zero, I stepped firmly onto the roadbed of The Zansasi Highway. Nothing happened. No intergalactic freight train ran me down. All that I noticed was that the map had changed its display, and there was a new timer counting down on it. The map now showed just this piece of The Highway, with the green dot showing my location in this section. There was a glowing green path leading to a green circle at one end. The timer was giving me fifteen minutes to reach it. A notation to one side said, "Earth - 0". On a line below it, it read, "0.002Km," and below that was in incrementing time value. Looked like the map was going to keep statistics for me. The far end was only about a quarter of a mile away, so I took a moment to look around. I spotted the TV camera up on a pole whose programming I had watched so often, and waved at it. It swung around to center on me, and zoomed in. As I turned to look around, I noticed that the map shifted its orientation as well, so that I always knew which way to walk. Very neat. I still didn't have to do this. I could just step back off of The Highway, and that would be that. But there was nothing behind for me if I didn't go, and this chance might never come again. I knew how much I'd regret it if I chickened out now. I swung around until the green line on the map stretched out ahead of me, and started walking. The route didn't run down the middle of The Highway, but instead led me precisely to one side of it. It appeared that there were a number of exit points at each end of this segment, and I had to hit the correct one. The clock also seemed to tell me when to take it. So as the clock ticked again down to zero, my green dot on the map merged with the green circle, and just as the Zansasi once appeared out of thin air, I disappeared into it. - - - They say it's not the goal, but the journey that matters. I have to agree. This journey was like nothing I could have ever imagined, and it changed me in more ways than two. I said that I'd never talk about this journey afterwards, because I couldn't understand it, and no one else would either. It would just be wasted effort. But I'll tell you what happened. With a sound like a soft pop, and the feeling that I might have dropped an unexpected inch, everything changed. Hot, sunny blue skies changed to cloudy gray. Wind appeared from nowhere. My path changed from sand to gravel. And the temperature jumped at least ten degrees. My map now displayed this new zone, showing me that I had about twenty minutes to travel to the far end. It called this world "Usonia - 1". I guessed that the digit was a counter of how many segments I had traveled from Earth. I shook my pack up higher up on my shoulders, and set off at a brisk pace. It would bore you to tears to give the details of every segment on The Highway that I traveled that day, but the overview of the trip is fascinating. As I said, each segment was different - often very different. The first few could have been somewhere on Earth, including one where I stepped out onto a snow and ice slide, and quickly had to use my ice axe to stabilize myself as I slid down towards my exit gate. Come to think of it, that couldn't have been like Earth at all. As I was sliding downhill to my gate, I saw other aliens sliding down the opposite direction to reach gates where I had just arrived. Both directions were down. This could only have been an Earth designed by Thomas Escher. On my third segment, I accidentally discovered a new property of the map. I slipped on some loose footing. As I threw my hands up for balance, when the map reached in front of my face, it suddenly turned a smoky transparent color. When I regained my balance and looked at the map, I discovered when I held it up in front of my face, it showed an actual view of the path ahead, with everything annotated. A real heads-up display. I could use it in either mode as I pleased. As the day wore on, things got stranger. On one segment, people in full bio-containment suits silently grabbed me as I emerged, and quickly dressed me in a suit like theirs. They pushed me through a disinfectant shower on the way out of the little tent they were working in. At the other end, another crew showered my suit again, before removing it and vaporizing it as they pushed me through my gate. On another world, I stepped out on very marshy ground, and my feet seemed to grow large and webbed to cover it. I say seemed, because I didn't really notice it at the time. Now how, your would ask, can your feet turn into something the size of snowshoes, and you not notice? All I can say is that what happened seemed natural for me while I was there, and I never thought to think of it otherwise. One place there was no ground at all. A machine garbed me in a spacesuit as I emerged, and I floated out under zero gravity when it released me. There were a series of large hoops at the far end, and the suit somehow intuitively responded to my motions and translated them into the necessary flying commands to pass through the segment. I passed other travelers on some segments, while others were empty except for me. I learned, to my amazement, that I could understand what these other travelers were saying as long as both of us were on The Highway. (At one point I remember listening to an alien that had wheels instead of legs to get around on, speaking to another about his long journey today. The moment he wheeled off The Highway, its voice turned to hisses and toots. I realized that, marvelous as my map was, it couldn't hold a candle to the construction of The Highway itself. And for those of you who wonder about restrooms, such facilities were on most every segment of The Highway, clearly marked on the map. Though sometimes figuring out how to use them was a challenge.) My favorite segment had to be the most bizarre experience of the entire day - if not my entire life - and that's saying a lot. I stepped onto the segment (number 27, by the map's count) to the roar of the crowd. On both sides of The Highway were the tallest bleachers I have ever seen. They angled back and rose at least twenty stories. And The Highway running between them was lit by the biggest banks of stadium lights I have ever seen. These bleachers stretched the entire length of this segment - nearly a half mile - and every single seat was full. As whomever was sitting there left, others immediately took their places. Vendors moved continually through the stands as well. The crowd's roar started the moment I stepped out, and followed my as I started down The Highway. Now I don't know if you have ever seen an Olympic Torchbearer in person. I have. I don't know how much they pay for the privilege, but whatever it costs, it's worth it. This was like carrying the torch on the final leg into the biggest stadium ever built. Not only did they roar their approval, but they rose from their seats as I passed in a giant wave. I was the star of the biggest event on this world right at this moment. Even though I'd traveled miles already, I couldn't just walk through this. I started to jog, and the roar of approval increased over its already high pitch. Faster, and they stayed with me. Finally I put up my arm, holding that invisible torch. The crowd went to a fever pitch. Halfway down the segment, I heard a second roar coming from ahead of me, and saw a wave of whatever these people were rising again as another traveler approached me, also jogging. I high-fived him as we passed. He clearly understood my gesture, and responded in kind. The crowd went wild. At the end of the segment, I turned and bowed to my crowd, before diving through the gate. The end of the day came as I stepped out onto segment 42. The map timer jumped to indicate that I had a little over fourteen hours to spend here, before moving on. That was good, since it was the most beautiful place I have ever seen. I still dream about it to this day. As far as the eye could see, there were perfectly spaced thick-trunked shade trees spreading their deep green leaves out over a grass lawn so perfect that any golf course manager would have sold their soul to have it as their fairways. A couple hundred feet ahead, the grass ran down to meet the clear blue water of a thirty-foot wide river that was both lively, and peaceful, as it flowed past. The only sign of civilization was a well-camouflaged single user toilet that I would have walked right past without the map. The sun was low in the sky, and the temperature balmy. There were three crescent moons high in the sky. Walking down to the river showed me where stepping-stones would let me cross when necessary. The map marked several trees of special interest. Walking over to one, I saw that it had several types of large fruits hanging on it. Holding up and looking through the map, three of the types of fruit had green circles around them, while two other types had red X's. That wasn't hard to understand at all. One type tasted like the most perfect summer peach you will ever remember, only it was ten times larger. A second had a taste and consistency much like fresh baked bread. And the third, I kid you not, was full of liquid that tasted like a light, fruit wine. I ate my fill, and then went down to the riverbank. The map showed the water as safe, and I drank my fill. The map showed a curious marking a few dozen feet to one side and away from the river. I found it to be a large pool of water where both hot and cold springs fed opposite sides. By selecting the right position between them, you could have any temperature you desired. It was big enough to accommodate fifty of my closest friends, but I had it to myself. Deep currents soothed my tired muscles. The outflow ran away from the river, keeping it pure. Afterwards, I leaned against my backpack on the slope of the riverbank and looked at the map again to see that I had traveled a little over fifteen miles today (after mentally converting from metric, the only trick so far that the map didn't do for me). I hoped I wouldn't feel those miles too much tomorrow morning. As darkness fell, some sort of seedpod in the trees started to glow, providing a soft, yellow illumination to the entire grounds, though not one intrusive to sleeping. And as I lay there, I realized that there wasn't an insect to be found. Also, that no one else had come along. I had this piece of paradise entirely to myself. I found a particularly soft spot in the grass, and with my jacket for a pillow, easily drifted off to sleep. The only dream I remember was carrying my torch again down segment 27, except this time the crowds stretched off to the horizon, and a voice was telling me that I could have as much of this as I wanted. The next morning, I awoke to the sound of the wind in the trees. There was time for a leisurely breakfast and stroll, before I finally made my way across the river and the few hundred feet to my exit gate. I had no stiffness to speak of. At the gate, I took one last look back at a place too perfect to exist. The temptation to just stay here was strong, but in the end, not strong enough. Even as I left, not another soul was to be seen anywhere in this pristine parkland. - - - The second day's journeys were both the same, and different from the first day's. The same, in so much as I now had a general ideal how to use my map to navigate each segment. And different in that some of the worlds seemed to vary more widely from human, and my Universe, standards. Also, I saw much more traffic this day. In fact, it was a rare segment that I didn't encounter at least one other traveler. And in one block of five contiguous segments, there seemed to be a regular commute of traffic going in both directions. I kept carefully to the side to avoid unpleasant encounters with their overly large and fast vehicles. Three times, I stepped out into worlds with swirling greenish-yellow atmospheres. Whatever it was, The Highway seemed able to adapt my body to breathe it without difficulty, or even notice. One world was all water, and I seemed to have fins and flukes to travel through it. The most striking one appeared to be a huge bubble in the rock, maybe two miles across. This one was strange, since I could not determine where its even lighting was coming from. Maybe their entire universe was solid rock with bubbles up to planet-sized in it. Finally, after a total of thirty-seven more segments on the second day, I arrived at my destination. I knew I was here when the map changed to indicate directions away from The Highway for this world I was now on. It was late afternoon, and there was a mix of both some clouds and some industrial pollution over the city in the near distance. Looking left from the city, I saw what could only be Chez Stratos some miles in that other direction. Looking around, I seemed to be abandoned in the desert. This world seemed to treat this segment of The Highway with complete indifference. I might have felt that they didn't even know that it existed on their land, except that there was a one-lane dirt road leading away from it up ahead. But no vehicles to be seen. The map showed that I had five and a half days to spend here. Since no one seemed to care about my arrival, I went ahead and stepped off The Highway. A cold breeze bit against my shirt. I had been wearing my jacket for most of the segments since it insulated against both cold and heat. (One segment had led me on a circuitous route around open lava pits.) But I had taken it off after several quite pleasant segments in a row. I took it back out of my pack and put it back on. After some consideration, I also drank some water and ate a few bites of my now meager rations. I noted that my money seemed transformed into what I hoped was the local currency. Then I pulled my pack back onto my back and looked more closely at the map. Now that I was off The Highway, the green line of my route stretched away towards what looked like another highway a couple miles away, this one connecting to the city. Holding my map up and looking through it showed the same path. So I walked over to the dirt road and started trudging down it. In an hour I had reached the main highway, and been given a ride by a trucker heading into the city. He was a quiet man, who didn't show any curiosity about why I had been walking along the road so far out of town. As twilight fell, he took me halfway into the city, until my map showed a divergence from his route. I was then dropped off without comment, and only my thanks to offer in return. As darkness was falling, I didn't see much of the city. I had folded up the map to the size of a playing card, and mostly had my head down as I carefully followed the twists and turns it showed me. At one point I skirted a lively nighttime entertainment district, but my route took me around, rather than through it. Finally I neared a river, in what was obviously a nicer area. There my route took an abrupt left-hand turn into the entrance of a residential building. Beside the door, was a row of buttons and a speaker grill. Holding up my map showed a green circle around #402. Below it, the nametag just said: "J & S". I pushed the button, not quite knowing what to expect. After a few moments, a voice said, "Hallo?" It was a smiling, musical male voice that brought a strong tingle suddenly to my whole body. It was what I had waited so long to hear. For a moment, I was at a loss for words. Then I just said the first thing that came into my mind. "Hallo. I'm David West. I've been directed here to meet you." "Yes," came that marvelous voice back again. "We've been expecting you. Come on up. Four-oh-two." Then the door buzzed to let me know it was open to me. Inside it was a nice building, and I took the lift up four floors, and walked the short hall to 402. I'd barely knocked, before the door was opened by Jane. "Come on in," she said, as if greeting a long lost friend. "We're glad you finally made it." - - - Now is the time to clear up some misconceptions about Jane and Silver. The end of the book had some bad things happening in quite a rush of unlikely circumstances. That was for dramatic effect. Story ideas seem to leak well across the universes, but editing is always done locally. Some editor apparently felt that the real story didn't have enough impact, so you can pretty easily tell where the grafted-on ending happened. It is not the first book to ever suffer this fate, and unfortunately will not be the last. Everything up to the last day did happen pretty much as recorded. But in the end, Jane had gained enough independence and intestinal fortitude to standup to the bullies when they came for her lover. When the showdown arrived, and she was essentially told, "Get out of the way, little girl," she stood up to them, and waived both her valid bill of sale, and her mother's not inconsiderable name (Demeta's name carries incredible weight) at them in return. After making clear to them just what enormity of bad karma would immediately descend upon them if they tried to break a valid sales contract, they folded like the craven cowards they were. They offered compromises. She never budged. In the end, they went away and left her and Silver alone. So rather than abruptly being thrown into the responsibilities of adult womanhood by tragic circumstances, she grew into them with the loving support of her best and most dependable friend - someone I couldn't wait to meet. - - - The Jane who met me at the door is a twenty-five year old, Venus Media type, who has lost her baby fat and grown into a lovely young woman. She reached five feet six inches, and her lush figure remained, made ever more beautiful by the surprising self-assurance she radiated. She is so different from the awkward, shy eighteen-year-old whose innermost thoughts had been revealed in the past. But really, this was to be expected. She had not yet moved back to Chez Stratos, though probably would some day. When she did, she'd appreciate it a lot more than ever as a child. For now, she lived in a light, airy apartment with large rooms and huge rectangular windows on two sides overlooking the New River, that she and Silver paid for out of their own earnings. Her mother had taught her well when she had said to do creative work; that never goes out of style. I walked in, set my backpack down, and looked around. Jane knew exactly what I was looking for. "He'll be out in a moment," she said. "He's been repainting the bedroom for the new season. He redecorates at least one room a month. Just then, Silver walked in. S.I.L.V.E.R. Silver Ionized Locomotive Verisimulated Electronic Robot. Silver to his friends. After all the anticipation, it was like being punched in the stomach. Let me tell you from the outset that I am not Mirror- Biased. I did not come all this distance looking for companionship from my own sex. What Silver's very existence confirmed for me however, was the possibility of my own success on this mission. Silver first gave Jane a quick peck on the cheek, which she happily returned, then walked over to shake my hand. His motion was completely natural. His flowing red hair was dramatic against the plain tan painter's smock. (He wore nothing else, so there was no clothing to have get paint spattered.) His silver skin matched his name. When he took my hand, I felt cool, smooth, microscopically porous skin, with exactly the right amount of give. Even up close, he was what I'd hoped for. Seemingly a man in silver makeup. "Welcome to our house," he said, in the marvelously flexible voice of his. "Thank you," I replied, realizing that I was still holding his hand. I released it, so he could step back again. Now Jane, as I've already said, is an exceptionally attractive young woman with the body type to attract any male's attention. Yet I couldn't take my eyes off Silver. Fortunately, they both seemed to understand my interest. They stood and let me look, until Jane finally said, "Why not show him the whole package?" In an easy gesture, that showed not one whit of concern for modesty, Silver pulled off his smock, making even that gesture graceful. He seemed a man both of about my own age, and ageless at the same time. Anatomically Correct does not do him justice. Anatomically Perfect was more like it. As I said, I'm not MB. (Though if I ever did decide to cross that fence, he's the one I'd cross it for.) Fortunately, I'm also not in competition with him for women. The word on him from the beginning was that, after having him as a lover, a regular man could not compete. I hoped it was true. It lifted my spirits to see his perfection. I wanted so very badly for artists who had created him, to have performed equally excellent magic on the rest of their work. "Beautiful," I finally said. "Thank you," he replied, without a trace of arrogance. Jane finally broke the moment by asking, "We only got the message to expect you, and that we'd be glad to meet you. The Zansasi are so low-key on our world that ninety-nine percent of the people don't even know they're here." "But you do?" Jane and Silver looked at each other. "We had once planned to escape using them," she said. "Until we realized we didn't have to," Silver added, taking Jane's hand in his. There was no doubt about it. These two make a fantastic couple. "So what brought you here?" Jane asked. "I came to rescue Silver's sister," I replied. "Count us in," they both replied together. There were lots of questions after that. Jane and Silver had not known just when I'd arrive, so they hadn't made any plans. We obviously were hitting it off quite well from the beginning, and they said the first order of business was going out for some food. Not because Silver couldn't cook, but they wanted to show their new guest a bit of the nightlife, if he was up to it. I most certainly was. They took me out to the district where they had originally busked for their meals and living money. (Now-a-days they ran a creative design firm that made the most of both their talents, and brought in quite a nice living. And they paid for all their own expenses.) It was a fantastic maze of small, sidewalk cafes, open-fronted stores, and crowds of young people. The streets were well lit, and the energy level was exhilarating. Though they hadn't had to make their living here for years now, every other person seemed to know them. We must have said hallo to a hundred people on the way to the particular small caf, they had choosen for this evening. Locally, it was Friday evening, and the crowds were so colorful in their attire and makeup, I could easily see how Silver was never out of place here. It made the Marti Gras on Earth seem monochrome in comparison. Several times we paused to watch street performers earn their livings here. One time Silver stepped in and sang a duet with a thin, young woman who had a high, clear voice. Jane always left a generous handful of coins with each performer. At the caf,, we were greeted as long lost friends, and given a table up front. There was a small stage, and while waiting for our food, Silver and Jane stepped up on it and gave an impromptu performance. It was clearly out of their memories for past years when this had been their only profession. Somehow Silver seemed able to sing with two voices at once. And when someone handed him an unfamiliar musical instrument, he played it as if born with it. The food was great, and the conversation turned to me. They both wanted to know every detail of my trip - and I do mean every detail. By the time we were finished with our meal, I was only through the first dozen segments. It seems they wanted to enjoy the journey in real-time. I was going to pay for the meal, as partial recompense for their hospitality, but no bill ever came. It seemed this meal only cost a song, or two. As we returned to their apartment, they continued to hang on my every word. They are both such creative people - with storytelling high among their talents - that it was clear my telling of this incredible journey was worth more than gold to them. We talked late into the night. Better put, I talked late into the night, to a rapt audience of two. Finally though, I was yawning more than talking. They looked at each other, then back at me. There was an unspoken invitation to share their bed that night. But I come from good old anal America when it comes to sex (there's another favorite book that points out this American curiosity in excruciatingly detail), and indicated that I would be quite happy on that old couch over in the corner. I fell asleep easily and dreamed of a world full of Silvers. I slept in late the next morning, finally awaking to the smells of breakfast. They took me out afterwards to show me some of the city. I was fascinated. Particularly the Grand Stairway, and life along the New River. Jane promised me a Chez Stratos tour before I left, and I told her I'd hold her to it. The dialogue picked up where it had left off last night about my trip here. I would soon find out just how well Silver had listened. That afternoon a minor earthquake rumbled through. I had lived many years in California, so this was no big deal to me. But it did remind me how this world had suffered in the recent past. According to the plan my map displayed to me, and which Silver and Jane confirmed, we couldn't do anything until 11:30pm tonight anyway, so there was no rush. Early that evening, they took me out to a much more upscale restaurant. One with thin black round tables and chairs on silver legs, and polished dark mirrored walls reflecting a burnished sliver floor. Again Silver easily walked onto their stage and played the several instruments there, while singing an improvised ballad about a man who had walked across the universe for love. I realized he was singing about me. The day, that had seemed to go so slowly, reached 9:30pm, and suddenly seemed to start racing. We had only two hours to go back and dressed for our late night excursion, and then get over to Electronic Metals Ltd. We were tired, but running on adrenaline by the time we stood outside the big metal barred gate at 2<< East Arbor. It was in the industrial area of the city where it was mostly dark and deserted on a late Saturday night. The sparse streetlights cast the only pools of light, which we avoided. Across the street, we watched the gate. "The truck arrives at a mean time of 11:35," Silver commented. The time that had so raced these last couple hours, had again slowed down to sludge in winter. Each moment ticked by slower than the last. Finally at 11:37, headlights, and the dark shape of a truck arrived in front of the gate. The gate creaked open, and we three shadows slipped in with the truck. "We have thirty-five minutes, no more," Silver cautioned, as we let him take the lead. After all, this had been his home, and he knew it best. We slipped down the side of a tall building wall in the shadow of an overhang, and through a loose door at the end. Silver did something to the doorframe on the way in, and no alarms sounded. Quickly through this building and into an adjoining one, then downstairs and through a tunnel to more stairs down. The very catacombs of this building were our destination. Several more short hallways, dust indicating their lack of use, and past a couple open doors to rooms filled with old parts, brought us finally to a simple wooden door. It was either here, or we weren't going to find it tonight. They gave me the honor. After a moment to calm myself and set my emotions in place, I turned the handle and pulled opened the door to a small closet. Inside, standing as though she was an ancient artifact unchanged from the beginning of time who had been brought here and forgotten ages ago, was Silver's sister robot. Silver skin, covered in dust. Auburn hair, with tattered blue carnations. Even her original snow trimmed with blood gown was there, with shapely legs below it, and high breasts pushing out against it. She looked twenty-five years old, a woman just entering her prime. More like a statue, than woman, in her prime, however. Her stiff posture and flat, lifeless eyes were such a departure from the fluid Sliver next to me. "Is she okay?" I asked, wondering if she had stood here so long that she had just rundown. "Not to worry," Silver said, moving off. "I'll be back in a minute." It was more like five minutes though, before he returned carrying a box with buttons on it. "They moved it," he apologized. Then he told Jane, "Please stand back, so she'll only see David." Jane moved to the side, while I positioned myself directly in front of the motionless robot woman. I heard Silver press some buttons, and suddenly life flowed into the figure in front of me. Her eyes brightened, and I could see her skin ripple from her head down to her toes. Her nipples started to rise and press against her outfit, and she blinked a couple times (no doubt to remove the dust from her eye lenses), moistened her lips with the tip of her tongue, and announced, "I'm S.I.L.V.E.R. Silver Ionized Locomotive Verisimulated Electronic Robot. I'm manufactured by Electronic Metals Ltd. at 2<< East Arbor. I..." At that point I heard Silver press one final button. The robot woman in front of me stopped her speech in mid- syllable, focused her vision on me, and asked, "Are you my new owner?" I have to admit that I was trembling when I answered her with, "Yes." As this female self-motivating robot now stepped out of her closet tomb, she asked, "How may I serve you?" This was unexpected, given how direct and autonomous Silver had been from the beginning. I looked over to Silver and Jane with the obvious question in my eyes. Silver answered, "Women want their men to take command of the lovemaking, and give them what they won't ask for themselves. Men want their women to be submissive and willing. I cannot explain why such a difference exists." He then darted off again. Moments later he was back with the first of three loads of spare parts from the junk rooms we had passed. After the third load arrived, the artist in him rapidly constructed a fair simulation of my silver lady from non-working parts. Even though he had started life only creative in music, it was clear that, over time, his sheer talent had expanded into many of the other arts. Soon there was a second figure there. The main difference being that this second figure could never come to life. But it was unlikely that anyone would ever ask that of it. Electronic Metals had buried their most brilliant project, never again to be revisited. I would have paid the price for Silver's sister if they would have sold her to me. But we all knew better than to have even asked. Silver moved over and plucked the faded carnations out of my new lady's hair, putting them in the hair he had found somewhere for his creation. Ever a perfectionist. Then he came back to her and said, "Give me your dress." In a moment she slipped out of it, and I had to catch my breath. She was of a height that seemed neither tall, nor short, and neither fat, nor thin. Nude however, her perfection matched Silver's own. Her skin was composed of many overlapping curves. Her high breasts, which seemed neither too big, nor too small, were not as large as Jane's, but showed not a micrometer of droop. Overly large nipples reacted, as any woman's would, to the chill down here, and expanded to fully present themselves to my view. But the most amazing part was how naturally she stood there. Not a trace of modesty or concern over her lack of clothes. From her head right down to feet that begged to be shod in heels, her sheer unconcern was manifest as she waited for me to tell her what was wanted of her next. It made her ethereal. "Silver," I said, and both she and Silver looked immediately to me. I could see we were going to have a name problem here. Looking directly at my robot I said, "From now on, your name is...Sylvia." "Thank you, sir," she said in a warm contralto, as Jane and Silver nodded at my choice. "This is Jane, and Silver," I introduced. "You need to come with me now, and follow Silver's directions to get us out of here." She nodded in assent. I was concerned about her nakedness however, when Jane stepped forward, taking off her outer coat. "Put this on," Jane said. Sylvia looked at me, and I nodded. She donned it, and then went back and pulled some slippers out from her closet, which she also donned. Now she looked suitable to travel. The path out seemed longer than coming in, but we moved swiftly and got out the door a couple minutes before the delivery truck was ready to depart. Four shadows slipped out next to it, and forty minutes later we were safely back in Jane and Silver's apartment. I must admit to being bushed by that time. The emotional drain had been overwhelming. In unspoken agreement, Jane ushered Sylvia and I into her bedroom, and shushed me when I tried to protest. I saw Silver pulling out a soft floor mat before she shut the door. I was tired enough that I wasn't willing to fight any further. They have a very large bed, and Sylvia was standing next to it waiting for me. "What do you wish?" she asked me. I wished a lot of things, to be sure. Just not all right at this moment. One thing, however, I wasn't willing to wait for. "Undress please," I said. "Then come over and make love to me." She disrobed, and touched the control to dim the lights to just short of extinguished. Then she came over and gently undressed me as well. My clothes folded neatly beside the bed faster than I could tell her not to go to the trouble. Then she was guiding me into the bed. I tried to get on top, but she could sense how tired I was, and softly pushed me down instead. Then positioning herself over me, she guided my very interested male organ within her, where it found she was already warm and soft and very moist. She moved her hips in a rhythm that was exactly right to bring me to a peak and hold there for as long as possible. Finally though, even her careful ministrations couldn't hold me any longer. I grabbed her, to pull her tight, as I bucked hard against her. She expertly rode me until I had given all I had to give, then pulled me over onto my side, as she moved there to lay against me - her firm nipples pressing into my bare chest. It had been a technically outstanding performance on her part. "Good night," I mumbled, as I fell over the cliff into a deep sleep. I dreamed that night that each time we tried to break into Electronic Metals, that we had been discovered and chased off. Then we'd try again with the same result. Somehow though, I didn't find this dream as upsetting as it should have been. I think at some deepest level, I knew she was safely there beside me, holding me in her lovely arms. I awoke the next morning to bright light - and music. The New River glittered outside the bedroom windows. It was beautiful to behold. But it was the music that drew me to the living room. Silver had his guitar, and Sylvia sat at their piano keyboard. Jane stood nearby entranced, as was I. Syliva looked beautiful in the morning light. Jane had given her some clothing, and despite the differences in their bodies, somehow it looked tailored for Sylvia. A swath of light lime green, sheer fabric, cinched at the waist by a golden belt. Emerald slippers to match. The music followed no particular tune. Silver would start a riff, and Sylvia would pick it up on the piano. He would change it in mid-chord, and she would effortlessly follow. I stood in the doorway, unnoticed, for minutes. Finally I entered. Sylvia stopped in mid-note to jump up and come over to me. She gave me a hug and tilted up her face for a kiss, which I was happy to give her. Then she said, "I'm sorry. I didn't mean to leave you for so long. How may I serve you today?" "Please keep playing," I said. With that direction, she resumed her place at the piano, and for the next forty-five minutes, there was absolute enchantment in the apartment. Finally though, we broke for breakfast. Sylvia sat quietly as we ate, while the other three of us chatted. And that was the difference between Silver and Sylvia. While Silver initiated conversations, as had led the music explorations, Sylvia sat quietly, waiting until her systems would identify a situation that she had programmed responses for. Rescuing Sylvia had been only half the task. The rest was going to be in finding her soul. This task might have been just short of impossible, and filled with many missteps, if Silver hadn't already made the journey himself. While not easy, we at least had a roadmap to follow. After breakfast was over, we sat Sylvia down on a chair, with the three of us facing her. While so far she her techniques and willingness to please were technically excellent in both music, and as I was more than willing to attest, lovemaking, there was so much more that she could be. We started peppering her with questions, all to force her to think in ways never intended by her designers. "Your music was terrible. Why do you play the piano?" "Why do you think that was the proper way to make love?" "Do you think you look beautiful in that dress? It's horrid." "Your voice is terrible. I can't stand to hear it." "Silver is the worst color you can be. Why have you kept this color?" "How can you be a good lover, when you don't feel anything yourself?" "How do you feel about your role as a robot?" "Don't tell me what you are programmed to think. Tell me what you really feel." "How do you feel right now?" I know it sounds cruel, but what has to happen is to force Sylvia to solve problems in ways that open up new pathways in her mind. She has to be taken out of her comfort zone, and taken to a point of questioning her previous programming as inadequate for her to perform her functions. And cruel as it sounds, Jane had been much harder on Silver in the first stages of their relationship - although Jane had done it by accident, as a result of her own inadequacies. We were trying to replicate the results. "Hug me. No, that was terrible. Hug me better. That's even worse. Hug me better. Try harder." Initially, there seemed little effect. Sylvia seemed confused, but we weren't seeing the reaction we hoped for. Although she offered a couple times to return to the factory if her service wasn't satisfactory, we weren't going to let her off the hook that way. Then it started to happen. Her lively eyes would go flat, and her movements pause, as she devoted all her efforts to answering a question never anticipated by her programming. Over time, the three of us bored in on those areas that triggered this reaction. Things went slower and slower as her flatness became more frequent and longer lasting. Finally Silver called a halt. "That's enough, for now," he announced, to Jane's and my immense relief. "She needs time for her new pathways to settle, and for her system to rebalance to its new state. If the change is to come, it will arrive on its own schedule." "I'm hungry," Jane announced. "I am too," I replied, "For food and love." Jane and Silver both laughed, and after a moment Sylvia joined in. The Sophisticated Format robots already had a great capacity for independent action. I didn't have to say anything more for Sylvia to come over to me and gently lead me back into the bedroom, while Jane and Silver were preparing a light lunch. Sylvia slipped effortlessly out of her new outfit, and started to guide me back down onto the bed for a repeat performance of last night. Instead, however, I resisted her touch. She immediately stopped, and then let me guide her onto the bed first. As I quickly removed my shorts, she opened her legs and welcomed me onto, and into, her body. With no foreplay necessary, she used one hand to guide me into her, and immediately began squeezing me within her. I was quickly as hard as it was possible for me to be, and in my impatience, it was only a couple minutes before the pressure I felt could not be contained any longer. Rather than try to delay my reaction for her pleasure, Sylvia moved in ways that I could not resist, and again I exhausted myself within her. When I was completely spent, she reached up one hand to pull my head down for a deep kiss, just as a real woman might have done, though I suspect a real woman would have been disappointed at my brief performance. But I have an excuse. Sylvia's technique and perfection are hard to resist. It was another technically masterful performance on her part. Jane and Silver smiled at me when we returned to the kitchen. Silver had his hand down inside Jane's blouse rubbing her large breasts, and neither saw any reason to stop just because we had entered the room. They had certainly had hundreds of encounters like the one Sylvia and I had just finished over the course of their years together now, and knew well how these worked. After lunch, we went out walking, to relax from the strenuous morning we had spent working on Sylvia. They took Sylvia and I to a couple museums that covered subjects far away from those of interest on Earth. One talked about the aftereffects of the asteroid. Another covered sciences Earth has done little with yet. Later we went back to the nightlife district again, which frankly I find the most fascinating place to spend time on this version of Earth. Again Jane and Silver were greeted by many people, but it was still early for the big crowds. They walked me through the entire district, noting my reactions for places I'd like to come back to later. As the sun finally set, we walked by a particularly energetic place. Silver looked at Jane, showing some particularly shared memory, and she nodded. Silver then looked to me and asked, "May I borrow Sylvia?" Without knowing what he had in mind, I nodded yes. Silver took Silver's hand and led her to the stage, which seemed a fixture of every restaurant here. It cleared itself of people at his approach, faster than Tony Manero could clear a dance floor (an obscure reference from my youth). The stage was cluttered with all manner of musical instruments. Using many of them, Silver and Sylvia performed a duet that brought down the house. By the time they were done, people were standing on their chairs throwing money and other valuables at the stage. Over to the side, Jane and I were being served complementary- everything by a grateful management. And as wonderful as Jane will always be performing with Silver on stage, I could see how much he enjoyed performing with his sister again after such a long time. And more than a couple times between songs that I saw Sylvia's eyes momentarily go flat, as she worked out how to cope with this overwhelming response. Eventually they came down off stage, and as we left, some of the crowd, including many that couldn't even get seats during the performance, followed us down the street. Seeing the response, Jane led the group to another old haunt of theirs. Again Silver and Sylvia performed to an even bigger crowd, which then followed us again. That became the pattern for the night, as Silver and Sylvia, and eventually Jane too, performed to ever-larger crowds. I could see how much this meant to all of them. And was I left out? I don't think so. I can sing a mean Karaoke, but never considered myself a performer. Instead, I had a front row seat for some of the best performances of my life. When we finally returned back to the apartment, Jane again insisted that we take the bedroom. Sylvia and I again made love in her technically excellent way. On the third day, Egyptia and Clovis dropped by. I was surprised at the openness of their friendship with Jane and Silver. But it seems that their history together has evolved as they have all grown up. Not that Egyptia and Clovis are involved with each other. At the moment, they are with each other to each stay uninvolved. Egyptia went over and hugged Silver. "Hallo, lover," she told him. Clovis also hugged Silver with the same greeting, and then gave Jane the hug of a good friend as well. If either of them regretted giving Silver away when they had a chance to have owned him, neither gave any such indication. They enjoyed hearing a much briefer version of my trip here. Their foremost reaction was one of: "Why has no one thought of this before?" Afterwards, Silver and Sylvia gave them a private performance that had them and Jane and I dancing together in the apartment. And while Egyptia is as beautiful as was ever described, she left me cold in an emotional sense. She can be Ms. Right for someone else, and that's fine with me. After they left, Jane got a VLO to take us out to Chez Stratos. Up close, it was exactly as I pictured it. The day was perfect, meaning that its tall metal legs extended right up into the bottom of the clouds. The voice at the entrance even said, "Hallo, Jane," exactly as I imagined it would. Demeta was there, and spent a whole five minutes getting acquainted with us, before she retreated back to her office on the far side. We didn't care. Jane showed me the room where she and Silver had first made love, and then we explored all the views from the balcony balloons. The "spacemen" who took care of the place brought us refreshments while we watched the bottoms of the clouds blow past only feet above our heads. When we returned to the apartment, Silver brought out their current projects for my opinion. They were beautiful designs, intended for an office building and a couple homes. There was little I could do except praise them all. Sylvia sat next to me, but was contributing little to this discussion. Finally I asked her which was better, between two different pieces on display. She said they were both aesthetically appealing. "But which is better?" I commanded of her to answer. "I cannot say," she replied sweetly. I tried another tact. "Which would you rather have decorating your room?" "Either would be fine." "Art is not about fine. Art is about feeling," I told her. "Now which makes you feel better?" Silver had told me before that robots like him weren't equipped for self-analysis. This seemed to fall into that category. Sylvia's eyes went flat, and even when she came back out of it, she didn't really answer. But she did go over and look through all the pieces of art again afterwards. For a "different" experience, as Jane put it, we went that night across the city to a place near the Old River. Not so close that we couldn't breathe at all, but still near enough that we wouldn't dawdle around after the meal was over. It was a fascinating journey into a place where too many people are trapped, living their whole lives where you are advised to not leave your window open for more than ten minutes a day. I'm glad we did it, but when we got back, everyone wanted a shower. Since the shower was huge, a modification Silver had made long ago to make bathing more interesting, with many shower heads that made music as they operated, the four of us somehow ended up in it together. Neither Jane, nor I, had seen the other nude up to this point. Let me tell you that Jane is an exceptionally attractive and appealing woman, despite all her self-loathing earlier in her life, which seems to have evaporated since then. As we all got soaped up, I felt someone washing my back. I thought it was Sylvia, or maybe Silver. But it turned out to be Jane. I returned the favor afterwards. Then both of us washed our robots down. And although it was earlier than on previous nights, I took Sylvia into the bedroom anyway. She started making love to me again, on top as she had the first night. But I wasn't responding well to it. I reached up and rubbed her ideal breasts, but she still felt artificial. At that moment, I knew her to be just the glorified sex toy her designers had intended, and never admitted to. Sex toy or not however, she was very sensitive to the signs of whomever she was with. Her attention never wavered from me, and she knew tonight that she was not succeeding at her function. Her hips slowed down, finally coming almost to a stop, as she eventually asked, "What is wrong?" "You are wrong," I said flatly. Her eyes unfocused for long moments, before she returned to me and said in a strangely flat voice herself, as if all the artistry heaped upon her persona had been stripped away, "How?" "You are not enjoying yourself in this relationship. And I don't know how you can expect me to enjoy your company, when you can't enjoy mine." "That is technically impossible," she said, still flatly. "No it's not," I said with great firmness. "Silver has done it. And so can you." Again her eyes unfocused. This time, for nearly a minute. And when she finally did seem to come back, she didn't seem to be paying attention to me, even though my half-soft penis was still inside her. As if in a dream, she again started cycling her hips slowly. Her vagina is a marvelous instrument, as much as any other part of her. This new movement rapidly hardened me again, as I continued to watch her. Her pace picked up slowly, and I could feel her contractions running the length of my organ now. But she still seemed distracted. Almost without thought on her part, her left hand came up to stroke, then squeeze her left breast and nipple. As I watched, her nipple hardened and extended more than I'd ever seen it do. And a small smile came to her face. I reached my hand up to her other breast, and repeated what she was doing to herself on the first one. In return, I felt her grip me even more tightly inside. As I pinched and twisted her hard nipple, I suddenly felt her start to spasm where she gripped me inside her. She then started to breathe hard, and pumped her hips harder against mine. Only because she was so slippery inside did I feel safe with her doing this. Then she suddenly sat up, threw her head back, and used her now free other hand to grab her other breast over my hand and squeeze it even harder. Her body suddenly seemed to freeze everywhere, except inside her vagina, which ran continuous rolling contractions down its full length. She held this position for nearly thirty seconds, before finally relaxing. Only then did her eyes finally came into focus, and she looked down to find me. There were tears at the edges of them, as she said, "Thank you - for everything." Rather than reply, I reached up and pulled her head down for a long, passionate kiss. We made love again softly after that, side-by-side, and she easily orgasmed again. Then she bent down and gave me the most loving oral encounter that any man can imagine. And then, lest there be any question about what had changed, and what had not, she looked at me out of her lovely eyes and said, "And how may I now serve you next." I just hugged her for that, before saying, "Let's go get Jane and Silver." The other couple was cuddled together in a corner of the couch when we walked in. They both knew instantly that Sylvia had made the transition. Jane ran over with a squeal to hug her, while Silver shook my hand in congratulations, before going over to hug Sylvia as well. After that, we started to sit down and actually have a four-way conversation for the first time, but somehow ended up back in the bedroom all sharing that big bed instead. There was something I knew I was very curious to see, but could not bring myself to ask. Somehow the other three knew exactly what was on my mind. With Jane and I sitting on the edge of the bed, legs folded while facing in, Silver took Sylvia into his arms and proceeded show us a robot seduction that doesn't have words to describe. There was artistry, impossible positions, and perfect timing between perfect bodies, that choreographed love into pure art. Their final, simultaneous climax seemed endless, and burned an image into my mind that I'll never forget. Sometime during the long performance, I felt Jane's hand start rubbing my bare back. Later along, I started stroking her equally bare leg. When Silver and Silvia finished, and moved to mirror us sitting on the opposite side of the bed, it seemed only natural to hear Silver say, "And now it's your turn." I was amazed by the audacity of his suggestion, until I looked over to see a smiling, willing Jane waiting for me. Well, I'd come a long way from Earth. Further than most people can ever imagine. Maybe it was finally time to leave some parochial attitudes behind too. There was never a moment of doubt about Jane's desirability. Or that the performance we had just seen hadn't left us more turned-on then you could believe. While I'm sure our performance did not come close to matching the perfection of Silver and Sylvia, it was very tender, very loving, and very human. And very, very satisfying. Afterwards, we ended up all sleeping in a tangle that didn't know who was next to whom. Somehow that was all just fine. The next morning I found myself rubbing my hands over Silver's entire body, just marveling at the touch and sensations. Then Silver and I gave massages to both our women. Nobody got up too early that day. I'm still not MB, but I've come to appreciate beauty in all bodies. Besides, as another man, I knew ways to touch Silver that Jane had never discovered. We spent the fourth day out, mostly shopping for things for Sylvia. We probably could have accomplished it all in an hour, but took the whole afternoon. The joy for me was in watching Sylvia, trying on outfits, walking down the street, and just seeing the world through new eyes. From that dusty, forgotten closet, she had come out to found her soul, and her awareness of self. Watching how much she enjoyed every minute of discovery was enough to make one feel faint. A quiet dinner at another elegant restaurant Jane and Silver knew (no performing this evening) was a joy, and I enjoyed watching how people were reacting to Sylvia in a long white gown, slit nearly to the waist, with a low front and bare back, and elegant tall heels. We walked for a long distance through this neighborhood after leaving the restaurant, with Jane and Silver showing me things I hadn't seen yet. When we finally got home, sleeping together wasn't even a discussion item. Everyone knew it was going to happen, and it did. We made love in many various combinations. The fifth morning would be my last full day. Everyone knew my map indicated a departure mid-tomorrow morning. Yet we all felt lazy, and just lay together in bed for the longest time. Finally Silver and Sylvia got up and brought some musical instruments back into the bedroom. Jane and I worked on our singing voices, and everyone said mine was much better than I had ever thought. (I think it was just in having such quality backup that let me dare heights I never would have attempted otherwise.) We shared a late brunch, and I was told there were big plans for tonight. What I was told turned out to be correct. The sun was setting when we finally got a cab and set off for Babylon. We were all dressed at our most flamboyant. Now there's always one or more parties in the Hanging Gardens. You rent your spot, based on the size of your expected crowds (and the size of your pocketbook). Jane and Silver didn't rent any spot of their own, but seemed welcomed by everyone else there. Even riding in on the moving stair that flows into Babylon (and which, if you don't get off, will take you on a full circuit of the entire place), the invitations to visit this canopy first came fast and furious. It was a monthly gathering, Jane told me quietly, where everyone she knows comes out to be seen. Jane and I were again in silver makeup; a salute to our wonderful companions. And something I knew I'd probably never have such an opportunity to wear again. Jane had soon introduced me to several other names that I recognized from her writing, and a lot more that I did not. There was food and drink and music everywhere. But wherever Silver went, the music receded before him to provide space for him to create his own. And he did, with Sylvia, Jane - and me. We performed in every pavilion, and ate and drank some of everything available as well. I expected to be overlooked among this crowd, but somehow they knew that I was the exotic stranger who had traveled so far to get here, and I was mobbed the entire evening. I danced, when the crowd thinned enough to allow for it, with Sylvia, and Jane, and more other women than I can count. I sang more songs than I can remember afterwards. And I had an evening I'll never forget. In truth, it wasn't quite as beautiful as that perfect spot where I spent my first night on The Highway, but it was certainly the very next best thing. Silver made sure we got home at an almost reasonable hour, and that night when we slept together, that's exactly all that we did. We awoke early the next morning and packed. Most of Sylvia's clothes were so light and filmy, that her pack was lighter than my own. I topped off on supplies for the return trip, before we went to the roof to meet the VLO. The flight back to The Highway was uneventful, except for another small earthquake just after we landed. The good-byes were tearful, and might have run overly long, except that the map reminded us that we had a schedule to keep. We each promised to come and visit the others again soon. And then Sylvia and I stepped onto The Highway. Jane and Silver walked alongside the boundary, waiving to us right up to the moment before we stepped through the first gateway. I hated leaving. To my surprise, the journey back did not retrace my steps coming here. I don't know why. It just didn't. Instead we moved through a whole new set of segments that seemed both similar to my previous experiences, and yet different every one. I guess when you travel The Highway for awhile, you become acclimated to differences that somehow seem the same. It was like the feeling I've had, after traveling through many different international airports back home, that after awhile, navigating them becomes automatic, even when each is very different. It's just that you've learned the system. Unlike the trip out however, my attention was no longer on The Highway itself. My thoughts were both on Sylvia, and on how much I had changed. That doesn't mean I didn't notice some unique experiences. On one segment, we emerged at the top of a solid canopy of trees, and walked over swinging bridges hundreds of feet above the forest floor, and only a few hundreds of feet below low hanging clouds. In some others we were both transformed (accommodated?) into forms that could traverse otherwise impassible terrain. In one, immense herds of dinosaurs roamed next to The Highway. In my favorite, we stepped out on a platform to find what looked like bicycles with wings, and pedals that drove large propellers behind the seats. We had over an hour to fly across to the exit gateway, and spent it flying wide circles over the land and animals below. Forty-seven segments after our departure from Jane and Silver, we reached Earth. It was late, 10:30 at night, and no one seemed to notice us as we quietly exited The Highway and made our weary way over to my car. With so much to digest from this day's incredible journey, we made the three-hour trip back to my place in virtual silence. On arrival, it was enough to just drop our packs inside the door, fall into bed, and fall asleep in each other's arms. I awoke the next morning, in my own bed, wondering if I had just had the most incredible dream of my life. For long moments I was afraid to move, fearing to discover it had all been only a dream. Then there was some stirring in the bed beside me, and I turned to see a transformed Sylvia. She was just as beautiful as I remember her to be, but The Highway had transformed her for Earth. Instead of her lovely silver skin, it was now pale alabaster, with red, full lips and dark shadowed eyes. For a moment, I wondered what else might have changed. Then she opened her eyes, looked over at me and said, in the same voice I remember so well, "I love you, David. Now how may I serve you today?" Postscript: I never used the camera I packed. All the pictures and experiences I brought back, I brought back inside me, where they're safe forever. I also never gave interviews about my trip. If someone wants to know what it's like, then let take the journey themselves. When we unpacked Sylvia's bag, I found it contained full identification for her as a person on Earth. Somehow The Highway always seems to know what's needed. And the map. Well it reset itself, and is now counting down from a value of several thousand hours. That's only a few months however. And while I have no clue what it's trying to tell me at the moment, I suspect I'll figure it out by the time I need to. --End-- -- Pursuant to the Berne Convention, this work is copyright with all rights reserved by its author unless explicitly indicated. +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | alt.sex.stories.moderated ----- send stories to: | | FAQ: Moderator: | +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+ |Archive: Hosted by Alt.Sex.Stories Text Repository | |, an entity supported entirely by donations. | +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+