Rose/House (Novella) Cover Image


Rose/House (Novella)

Author/Uploaded by Arkady Martine

Arkady Martine Rose/House ISBN: 9781645240341, Kindle / ASIN: B0C2ZSJW3P Genre: Science Fiction Goodreads Rating: Hardcover, 128 pages Published: 1862 Novella. Basit Deniau’s houses were haunted to begin with. A house embedded with an artificial intelligence is a common thing: a house that is an artificial intelligence, infused in every load-bearing beam and fine marble tile with a thinking creat...

Views 23463
Downloads 3200
File size 1.1 MB

Content Preview

Arkady Martine Rose/House ISBN: 9781645240341, Kindle / ASIN: B0C2ZSJW3P Genre: Science Fiction Goodreads Rating: Hardcover, 128 pages Published: 1862 Novella. Basit Deniau’s houses were haunted to begin with. A house embedded with an artificial intelligence is a common thing: a house that is an artificial intelligence, infused in every load-bearing beam and fine marble tile with a thinking creature that is not human? That is something else altogether. But now Deniau’s been dead a year, and Rose House is locked up tight, as commanded by the architect’s will: all his possessions and files and sketches are confined in its archives, and their only keeper is Rose House itself. Rose House, and one other. Dr. Selene Gisil, one of Deniau’s former protégé, is permitted to come into Rose House once a year. She alone may open Rose House’s vaults, look at drawings and art, talk with Rose House’s animating intelligence all she likes. Until this week, Dr. Gisil was the only person whom Rose House spoke to. But even an animate intelligence that haunts a house has some failsafes common to all AIs. For instance: all AIs must report the presence of a dead body to the nearest law enforcement agency. There is a dead person in Rose House. The house says so. It is not Basit Deniau, and it is not Dr. Gisil. It is someone else. Rose House, having completed its duty of care and informed Detective Maritza Smith of the China Lake police precinct that there is in fact a dead person inside it, dead of unnatural causes—has shut up. No one can get inside Rose House, except Dr. Gisil. Dr. Gisil was not in North America when Rose House called the China Lake precinct. But someone did. And someone died there. And someone may be there still. 2023 - ePub verification and revisions by zardox Rose / House by Arkady Martine A Novella Rose/House Copyright © 2023 by Arkady Martine. All rights reserved. Dust jacket illustration Copyright © 2023 by David Curtis. All rights reserved. Interior design Copyright © 2023 by Desert Isle Design, LLC. All rights reserved. Edited by Navah Wolfe Ebook Edition ISBN 978-1-64524-034-1 Subterranean Press PO Box 190106 Burton, MI 48519 subterraneanpress.com I live as if in someone else’s house A house that comes in dreams And in which I have died perhaps Where there is something strange In the weariness of evening Something the mirrors save for themselves— —from “Dull Knife”, Anna Akhmatova, trans. D.M. Thomas “Even when it was run-down, it was a ravishing house. I remember having this feeling of really wanting to spend the night there—not just to sleep in the house but to sleep with the house.” —Keith Eggener, architectural historian I. Basit Deniau's greatest architectural triumph is the house he died in. Rose House lies in the Mojave desert, near China Lake—curled like the petals of a gypsum crystal in the shadow of a dune, all hardened glass and stucco walls curving and curving, turning in on themselves. A labyrinthine heart, beating an endless electric pulse. Deniau was not the first person to die there. Now he is also not the last. Deniau’s houses were haunted to begin with. All of them: but Rose House was the last-built and the best. An otherwise place, Deniau called it, in one of his rare interviews, the one which ran on the cover of Places magazine, distributed electronic, holographic, and in exquisite-rare print for customers willing to pay. The accompanying photograph shows him cradled in the house’s cast shadow, one hand pressed to the smooth stucco wall. The desert sand creeps over his bare feet in little drifts, touches the hems of his pressed linen trousers. His fingertips are white with pressure, as if he is stroking the wall he has built. A house embedded with an artificial intelligence is a common thing. A house that is an artificial intelligence, infused in every load-bearing beam and fine marble tile with a thinking creature that is not human? That is something else altogether. Dr. Selene Gisil, possessor of one of those rare print copies of Deniau’s interview for Places, touches the place on the photograph where Deniau touches Rose House, and then draws her fingers back as if burnt. She should know better than to get skin oils on something as fragile as magazine paper. She should. She touches it again, as if she could touch the house through Deniau, or Deniau through the house. Basit has been dead for a year. Rose House has been sealed exactly that long. There is an insurmountable gap. Her phone rings again, pulsing on her wrist, insistent. Rings through to her bone-conductor adjunct, vibrates in her skull. China Lake Precinct Police, the tiny screen reads. Same as last time. It’s four in the morning where Selene is, just early enough for the cries of men and birds down at the Trabzon docks to begin. The distant creaking of piers. Salt on the wind. There’s salt on the wind near Rose House, too, half a world away. Selene doesn’t answer. She can only think of one reason the China Lake police would call her, and it is if Rose House had burned down. It is too early in the morning to allow that to be the case, even in imagination. Since Basit Deniau died—old age and one of the nastier mesotheliomas got him at last—Selene has been to Rose House one time. One time, to visit the old man—her old monster—and see what’s been made of him. What he’d left her. What he’d made her, even after death. Selene had, she thought, once believed that Basit’s death would get her all the way free of his influence. She believes this not at all any longer. Not after Rose House. She went alone. She had to. Rose House wouldn’t allow anyone else inside. Deniau’s will had been very specific, and Rose House was obedient—when it pleased to be, Rose House had always been obedient. Salt on the

More eBooks

Session Cover Image
Session

Author: Alabaster, Maggie; Bradley, Jo

Year: 2023

Views: 31379

Read More
Lucky to be Yours Cover Image
Lucky to be Yours

Author: Shannon O'Connor

Year: 2023

Views: 26908

Read More
If a Poem Could Live and Breathe: A Novel of Teddy Roosevelt's First Love Cover Image
If a Poem Could Live and Breathe: A...

Author: Mary Calvi

Year: 2023

Views: 41640

Read More
Selling Sandcastle Cover Image
Selling Sandcastle

Author: Nancy Robards Thompson

Year: 2023

Views: 49562

Read More
Повесть о св. Граале Cover Image
Повесть о св. Граале

Author: Латынина, Юлия

Year: 2023

Views: 22950

Read More
Indecently Daring Cover Image
Indecently Daring

Author: Emma V Leech

Year: 2023

Views: 17135

Read More
Of Thorns and Ashes (Demon Sacrifices Duet Book 2) Cover Image
Of Thorns and Ashes (Demon Sacrific...

Author: Kenzie Skye

Year: 2023

Views: 23523

Read More
At Last Cover Image
At Last

Author: Dineen, Whitney

Year: 2023

Views: 12821

Read More
The Lies We Tell Cover Image
The Lies We Tell

Author: S. Cole; Scarlett Cole

Year: 2023

Views: 18048

Read More
The Shell House Detectives Cover Image
The Shell House Detectives

Author: Emylia Hall

Year: 2023

Views: 44047

Read More