The Circle
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Dave Eggers The Circle
An action shot, she typed. I did a facial-rec and it all connects.
Thank god, Annie wrote. But you’re a bitch. Gina, who had read the message, was visibly ustered. “Maybe we should do this later?” she said, her forehead suddenly glistening. “No, sorry,” Mae said. “Go on. I’ll turn the screen away.” Another message appeared from Annie. While turning the screen away, Mae glanced at it. Did you hear the fracturing of any bones while sitting on him? Older men have bird bones, and pressure like you’re talking about could be fatal. “Okay,” Gina said, swallowing hard, “for years lesser companies had been tracking, and trying to in uence, the connection between online mentions, reviews, comments, ratings, and actual purchases. Circle developers have gured out a way to measure the impact of these factors, of your participation, really, and articulate it with the Conversion Rate.” Another message appeared, but Mae ignored it, and Gina forged on, thrilled to have been deemed more important than Annie, even for a moment. “So every purchase initiated or prompted by a recommendation you make raises your Conversion Rate. If your purchase or recommendation spurs fty others to take the same action, then your CR is x50. There are Circlers with a conversion rate of x1,200. That means an average of 1,200 people buy whatever they buy. They’ve accumulated enough credibility that their followers trust their recommendations implicitly, and are deeply thankful for the surety in their shopping. Annie, of course, has one of the highest CRs in the Circle.” Just then, another droplet sounded. Gina blinked as if she’d been slapped, but continued. “Okay, so your average Conversion Rate so far has been x119. Not bad. But on a scale of 1 to 1,000, there’s a lot of room for improvement. Below the Conversion Rate is your Retail Raw, the total gross purchase price of recommended products. So let’s say you recommend a certain keychain, and 1,000 people take your recommendation, then those 1,000 keychains, priced at $4 each, bring your Retail Raw to $4,000. It’s just the gross retail price of the commerce you’ve stoked. Fun, right?” Mae nodded. She loved the notion of actually being able to track the e ect of her tastes and endorsements. Another droplet sounded. Gina seemed to be blinking back tears. She stood up. “Okay. I feel like I’m invading your lunch and your friendship. So that’s the Conversion Rate and Retail Raw. I know you understand it. There’ll be a new screen by the end of the day to measure these scores.” Gina tried to smile, but couldn’t seem to lift the sides of her mouth enough to seem convincing. “Oh, and the minimum expectation for high-functioning Circlers is a conversion rate of x250, and a weekly Retail Raw of $45,000, both of which are modest goals that most Circlers far exceed. And if you have questions, well,” she stopped, her eyes fragile. “I’m sure you can ask Annie.” She turned and left. A few nights later, on a cloudless Thursday, Mae drove home, her rst time since her father’s Circle insurance had taken e ect. She knew her father had been feeling far better, and she was looking forward to seeing him in person, hoping, ridiculously, for some miraculous change, but knowing she would see only minor improvements. Still, her parents’ voices, on the phone and in texts, had been ebullient. “Everything’s di erent now,” they’d been saying for weeks, and had been asking to have her come celebrate. And so, looking forward to the imminent gratitude, she drove east and south and when she arrived, her father greeted her at the door, looking far stronger and, more importantly, more con dent, more like a man—the man he once was. He held out his wrist monitor and arranged it parallel to Mae’s. “Look at us. We match. You want some vino?” Inside, the three of them arranged themselves as they always had, along the kitchen counter, and they diced, and breaded, and they talked about the various ways the health of Mae’s father had improved. Now he had his choice of doctors. Now he had no limitations on the medicines he could take; they were all covered, and there was no copay. Mae noticed, as they narrated the story of his recent health, that her mother was brighter, more buoyant. She was wearing short-shorts. “The best thing about it,” her father said, “is that now your mother has whole swaths of extra time. It’s all so simple. I see the doctor and the Circle takes care of the rest. No middleman. No discussion.” “Is that what I think it is?” Mae said. Over the dining room table, there was a silver chandelier, though upon closer inspection it seemed like one of Mercer’s. The silver arms were actually painted antlers. Mae had been only passingly enthusiastic about any of his work—when they were dating, she labored for kind things to say—but this one she genuinely liked. “It is,” her mother said. “Not bad,” Mae said. “Not bad?” her father said. “It’s his best work, and you know it. This thing would go for five grand in one of those San Francisco boutiques. He gave it to us for free.” Mae was impressed. “Why for free?” “Why for free?” her mother asked. “Because he’s our friend. Because he’s a nice young man. And wait before you roll your eyes or come back with some witty comment.” Mae did wait, and after she’d passed on a half-dozen unkind things she could say about Mercer and had chosen silence, she found herself feeling generous toward him. Because she no longer needed him, because she was now a crucial and measurable driver of world commerce, and because she had two men at the Circle to choose from—one of them a volcanic, calligraphic enigma who climbed walls to take her from behind—she could afford to be generous toward poor Mercer, his shaggy head and grotesque fatty back. “It’s really nice,” Mae said. “Glad you think so,” her mother said. “You can tell him yourself in a few minutes. He’s coming for dinner.” “No,” Mae said. “Please no.” “Mae,” her father said firmly, “he’s coming, okay?” And she knew she couldn’t argue. Instead, she poured herself a glass of red wine and, while setting the table, she downed half of it. By the time Mercer knocked and let himself in, her face was half-numb and her thoughts were vague. “Hey Mae,” he said, and gave her a tentative hug. “Your chandelier thing is really great,” she said, and even while saying the words, she saw their effect on him, so she went further. “It’s really beautiful.” “Thanks,” he said. He looked around to Mae’s parents, as if con rming they had heard the same thing. Mae poured herself more wine. “It really is,” Mae continued. “I mean, I know you do good work.” And when she said this, Mae made sure not to look at him, knowing his eyes would doubt her. “But this is the best one you’ve done yet. I’m so happy that you put this much into … I’m just happy that my favorite piece of yours is in my parents’ dining room.” Mae took out her camera and took a picture. “What’re you doing?” Mercer said, though he seemed pleased that she’d deem it worthy of a photograph. “I just wanted to take a picture. Look,” she said, and showed him. Now her parents had disappeared, no doubt thinking she wanted time alone with Mercer. They were hilarious and insane. “It looks good,” he said, staring at the photo a bit longer than Mae had expected. He was not, evidently, above taking pleasure, and pride, in his own work. “It looks incredible,” she said. The wine had sent her aloft. “That was very nice of you. And I know it means a lot to them, especially now. It adds something very important here.” Mae was euphoric, and it wasn’t just the wine. It was release. Her family had been released. “This place has been so dark,” she said. And for a brief moment, she and Mercer seemed to nd their former footing. Mae, who for years had thought about Mercer with a disappointment bordering on pity, remembered now that he was capable of great work. She knew he was compassionate, and very kind, even though his limited horizons had been exasperating. But now, seeing this—could she call it artwork? It was something like art—and the e ect it had on the house, her faith in him was rekindled. That gave Mae an idea. Under the pretense that she was going to her room to change, she excused herself and hurried upstairs. But instead, sitting on her old bed, in three minutes she’d posted her photo of the chandelier in two dozen design and home design feeds, linking to Mercer’s website—which featured just his phone number and a few pictures; he hadn’t updated it in years—and his email address. If he wasn’t smart enough to get business for himself, she would be happy to do it for him. When she was nished, Mercer was sitting with her parents at the kitchen table, which was crowded with salad and stir-fried chicken and vegetables. Their eyes followed her down the stairs. “I called up there,” her father said. “We like to eat when it’s hot,” her mother added. Mae hadn’t heard them. “Sorry. I was just—Wow, this looks good. Dad, don’t you think Mercer’s chandelier is awesome?” “I do. And I told you, and him, as much. We’ve been asking for one of his creations for a year now.” “I just needed the right antlers,” Mercer said. “I hadn’t gotten any really great ones in a while.” He went on to explain his sourcing, how he bought antlers only from trusted collaborators, people he knew hadn’t hunted the deer, or if they had, had been instructed to do so by Fish and Game to curb overcrowding. “That is fascinating,” her mother said. “Before I forget, I want to raise a toast … What’s that?” Mae’s phone had beeped. “Nothing,” she said. “But in a second I think I’ll have some good news to announce. Go on, Mom.” “I was just saying that I wanted to toast having us—” Now it was Mercer’s phone ringing. “Sorry,” he said, and maneuverered his hand outside his pants, finding the off button. “Everyone done?” her mother asked. “Sorry Mrs. Holland,” Mercer said. “Go on.” But at that moment, Mae’s phone buzzed loudly again, and when Mae looked to its screen, she saw that there were thirty-seven new zings and messages. “Something you have to attend to?” her father said. “No, not yet,” Mae said, though she was almost too excited to wait. She was proud of Mercer, and soon she’d be able to show him something about the audience he might have outside Long eld. If there were thirty-seven messages in the rst few minutes, in twenty minutes there would be a hundred. Her mother continued. “I was going to thank you, Mae, for all you’ve done to improve your father’s health, and my own sanity. And I wanted to toast Mercer, too, as part of our family, and to thank him for his beautiful work.” She paused, as if expecting a buzz to sound any moment. “Well, I’m just glad I got through that. Let’s eat. The food’s getting cold.” And they began to eat, but after a few minutes, Mae had heard so many dings, and she’d seen her phone screen update so many times, that she couldn’t wait. “Okay, I can’t stand it anymore. I posted that photo I took of your chandelier, Mercer, and people love it!” She beamed, and raised her glass. “That’s what we should toast.” Mercer didn’t look amused. “Wait. You posted them where?” “That’s great, Mercer,” her father said, and raised his own glass. Mercer’s glass was not raised. “Where’d you post them, Mae?” “Everywhere relevant,” she said, “and the comments are amazing.” She searched her screen. “Just let me read the rst one. And I quote: Wow, that is gorgeous. That’s from a pretty well-known industrial designer in Stockholm. 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