The Hammerpond Park Burglary by Ted Reynolds



Illustration by Kelly Freas


One might well ask whether modem burglary is practiced as an art, a hobby, or politics. Some of the most noted practitioners seem to hold to each or any of these motivations. Pride in precise accomplishment seems to point to the esthetic, disinterest in any material gain to the playful, and disrespect for unshared possessions to the envious sides of human nature.

The object to be burgled in this particular instance was a certain Frigart sketch, well known as a unique item of great value. In marrying its creator and possessor, Gal Aveling had become at one stroke the wealthiest person on the Coil. The Gal was already known for her numerous impressive qualities, of which modesty was unfortunately not one. She had all the social presence of a lump of creosote. Now she was also a psychoeconomic force, which drew the attention of the leveling section of society, among which burglars, both by habit and by principle, were well represented. The most respected of these in the Coil was Teodora W@kins, and she was appointed by her set to remedy the situation.

Being a woman of some notoriety due to previous exploits of a comparable kind, W@kins decided upon an unobtrusive approach. She selected the role of a mood-hound and the barely noticeable name of Mir&a Wriggle. She set her personal replicator for a thirty-hour clone, stepped through, and breathed a sigh of relief as she realized she wasn’t the clone.

Simultaneously the clone breathed a sigh, perhaps of sad resignation on realizing that she was.

Having sent the other one of her off to perform some necessary preparations, (if you can’t trust yourself, who can?) W@kins duplicated a clean wardrobe, grabbed a couple of pocket replicators, and started for Hammerpond.

Now Hammerpond is such a cutesy-tricksy little twist of the Coil as you can’t imagine till you’ve been there. It’s rated in 23rd fury at 60% Actual, 33% Shared, 4% Random, and the rest Up-For-Grabs. All this with a Consistency/Security Index of 92.7 and holding—no wonder it’s largely ignored.

Still, there are enough little bits of abutting landscapes, neuroses and weather to draw quite a contingent of inner-experience seekers. Thus W@kins was greeted on her arrival by half-a-dozen other mood-hounds. It would have made her feel less conspicuous if she had been more competent to cope with their lingo.

“Have you had many unique experiences?” said the person called Porson. They were sitting on onyx mushrooms and drinking chocolate toddies at Rustie s Placebo. This Porson had no notion he was being pumped.

W@kins wanted to respond “How would I know they’re unique?” but said instead, “Not often. Just this and that, you know.”

“Ineffable?”

“Of course. And in the Net.”

“Are you a decent channel?” said the Porson person.

“Don’t fade me,” said W@kins. “I’m hard disk.”

“I mean, do you record well?” said Porson.

“Erase that right now,” said W@kins suspiciously. “You’re talking like I’m rebooted.”

Porson was a reboot, and genotypically incapable of even imagining criminality; completely at a loss, he tried to divert the conversation.

“I like your eyeclip.”

“Do you? Here.” W@kins passed it through her pocket replicator and handed one to Porson.

“What are you here to experience?” asked Porson.

“I thought I would experience the Hammerpond Park at night,” said Teodora W@kins.

“Well, yes, but… how? Naturalistically? Romantically? Fearfully?”

“I thought,” said W@kins shortly, “I’d just experience the Park first, and add a mood later when I found a proper one.”

Porson looked stunned, which was all right with W@kins, as it kept him quiet.

Her toddy mug, a hollowed-out ruby with sapphire inlays, (everybody had one) was half empty. She poured the remainder through her pocket replicator to refill her cup.

“It is stated,” said old Rustie, the usuform barobot who ran the place for old program’s sake, “that there are a minimum of three guards on duty at all times in the Pond House. Protecting the Frigart sketch is their main responsibility. One is doing it for the prestige, one for the emotion, and the third as a punishment. Why, thank you, lady or gentleman.”


The next evening found Teodora W@kins in the Hammerpond Park, a null zone strategically surrounding the Pond House. She tried to look as if she were a typical mood-hound, ecstatically feeling something unusual in the totally unmodulated area. The other one of her showed up just after sunset, and they conferred in low voices, as one must in a null zone.

Twilight deepened; first one, then another orbital complex appeared in the darkening sky. The thundering of the rabbits undergoing forced evolution in the nearby rotaries diminished and ended in complete silence. The Pond House itself, a tastefully replicated mix of Taj Mahal and Sans Souci with a touch of Waldorf Astoria, blessedly lost all the details of its architecture and became a dark gray outline.

Both of her cautiously approached the shadow of the looming Pond House and squatted near the comer. Pulling out a pocket replicator, she dismantled it into its component struts, nodes, plates, and batteries. Fishing the second replicator out of her pocket, she poured the components of the first through it, repeating the process with the resultant parts several times. She spent several minutes reassembling a two-foot long replicator. Through this, she could now pass herself larger pieces, and the process moved faster. Plates dovetailed into larger plates, batteries hooked up in series, struts pushed out in meter lengths. At her signal, her clone began laying the whole construction out along the base of the shadowed wall.

Suddenly, close beside W@kins in the bushes, there was a violent crash and a smothered curse. Someone had tumbled over the extended struts that had just been deployed. She heard feet running toward her from both directions. With a true artist’s distaste for premature publicity, she began running from the house on her own.

Running in a null zone is a drag. It’s dream running, and focusing attention is very difficult. She was indistinctly aware of at least two people hot upon her heels, and she didn’t think that they were both her clone.

There was a scuffle behind her. Her clone had obviously not been fast enough, and was engaged in unsavory physical activities with persons unknown. She considered going back to aid her other self, but rejected the notion when she remembered it was just a short-timer anyway, who wouldn’t last long enough to inform against her. She turned to tiptoe away from the struggle in the dark behind her, when a queasy internal feeling led her to a reinterpretation of the situation.

“Damn! I am the clone!” she thought as she stopped being anything.

The original Teodora W@kins was meanwhile dealing out a pummeling only half as good as she was enduring, as she had two assailants to contend with. It felt like they were trying to stampede across her body crosswise, but as there were hairs to pull and groins to knee, her time was neither completely unoccupied nor totally unsatisfying. But consciousness was definitely on the wane, when the struggle abruptly terminated.

When her sensations became less entangled she was sitting upon the turf, and eight or ten persons—the night was dark, and she was rather too confused to count—stood round her, waiting for her to recover. She mournfully assumed that she was captured, and might have philosophized on fortune’s fickleness, but she felt sick to her stomach.

She noticed that she was not under restraint, and then a flask of liquor was placed in her hand. It was Drambuie—well, why not?

“She’s coming out of it,” said a voice.

“We’ve caught both of them, ma’am,” said another voice, deep and authoritative. “Thanks to you.”

No one answered this remark. Yet she Med to see how it applied to her.

“She’s been knocked silly,” said someone else. “Those levelers halfkilled her.”

Teodora W@kins decided to remain knocked silly until she got a better hold on the situation. She perceived that two of the dark figures near her were under restraint, and that neither was her clone, who should be out of the picture by now anyway.

“I am very much obliged to you,” said a woman out of the shadows. “You have prevented a serious theft. Allow me to introduce myself. I am S&ra Aveling, owner of this establishment.”

“Very glad to meet you, Gal Aveling,” said W@kins.

“I presume you saw these creeps stealing about the premises, and took after them?”

“That’s about it,” said W@kins.

“It was lucky for you,” said the Gal, “that the guards spotted you chasing them. I doubt you could have taken them both—though it showed an awful lot of grit to try.”

“One can only try,” said W@kins, “and trust to fortune.”

“Quite, quite,” said Gal Aveling. “I’m afraid you have been roughed up a bit.” The group was moving toward the house. “You’re limping a little. Let me help you.”

So instead of having to replicate the whole house to achieve her purpose, Teodora W@kins entered it—slightly stoned, and quite cheerful once more—on the arm of a real Lady of the Mob, and through the front door. “This,” she thought, “is what I call a cool burgle!”

The “levelers” proved to be mere local amateurs, driven by personal envy. They were taken into the low-downs and there watched over by the three guards, two humanoids, a usuform, and six-hour clones of Gal Aveling and her spouse, until the dismantles arrived. W@kins, on the other hand, was made much of in the upper chambers. The Gal replicated the master suite for her and would not hear of her departure that night. The spouse said she was surely a unique individual, and said his idea of Simone De Beauvoir was just such another vague, half-stoned, sharp-eyed, brave, and self-effacing woman. Someone brought up a remarkable set of replicators that had been found in the shrubbery, and explained how it could have connected up to replicate the whole house.

And they showed her the Frigart sketch in the strong-room.

“My spouse did it with Crayola when he was three,” said Gal Aveling. “His father had the cameras already set up, and the guards and witnesses ready. It’s never been touched since. One of the few authenticated unique items left in the world. Untold value.”

W@kins looked at the lined yellow paper with the vivid colors scrawled over it. “It looks hideous,” she said.

“Doesn’t it?” said the Gal proudly. “True Frig Art.”

W@kins had the sense to turn down the offer of a short-time clone of the Gal or her spouse for the night, pleading her own internal bruises acquired in the heroic chase. She was finally seized with severe yawning; her hosts immediately apologized, and led her to the replicated bedroom, next to Gal Aveling’s own.


Artistic expression, sportive diversion, or social statement—modern burglary is hard to categorize.

When Gal Aveling found that her overnight guest had silently departed in the morning, she rushed at once to the strong-room. When her eyes fell on two identical scrawled pieces of yellow-lined paper, she knew she had been totally cleaned out.

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