by Alex Scarrow
‘So why would the agency want us to save Chan?’ asked Sal. ‘I mean
… no Chan means no time travel, right? That means no more time problems.’
‘S’right.’ Liam raised a finger. ‘The message didn’t actually tell us to save him.’
Maddy leaned forward. ‘It was an incomplete message. Maybe that’s the bit we missed at the end?’
‘But we don’t know that for sure,’ replied Sal. ‘Maybe it was someone from the future letting us know that time up ahead was changing and that there was now no more need for the agency… for us?’
Maddy shook her head and pointed to the message printed out on paper. ‘Look… it begins with “contamination event”. I’d say that suggests they considered this to be a bad thing. And they’re not too happy about it.’
They were silent for a moment, all three of them staring at the printed words on the page, trying to determine the intent of the message.
‘Foster was very, very specific about this,’ said Maddy after a while. ‘History must go a certain way, for good or bad. Even if the history yet to happen features some kid called Chan who makes time travel possible… that’s the way it has to be. And if it changes from that, the agency has to fix it.’
Liam nodded after a few moments. ‘I suppose you’re right. So… do we know where his death is going to happen?’
‘The date in the message is August eighteenth. In our database it mentions Chan was one of a class of high-school students who were on a field trip to the Texas Advanced Energy Research Institute, on this date. This is biographical data on Chan taken from 2056. If this really is an assassination attempt by somebody, the chances are they have access to the same data as us. In other words, they looked at Chan’s biography and noted he was going to be at a particular place at a particular time…’
‘And sent themselves back in time to be there waiting with a gun,’ added Liam.
Maddy nodded. ‘Yup.’
‘Well…’ Liam bit his lip anxiously. ‘You can see now why I’m so bleedin’ keen to have big ol’ Bob by my side. Seems these bad guys have got guns with them and Bob’s a dab hand at dealing with people like that, so he is.’
Maddy glanced at her watch. ‘We should probably get back to the arch. The time bubble is due to flip over in a few hours and we could all do with some rest. Bob’s new body should be ready to birth tomorrow morning and then we’ll be ready to send you guys forward in time to see what’s what.’
Liam sighed. ‘Back in that ol’ bathtub for me.’
CHAPTER 13
2001, New York
Sal stared at the curled-up form in the growth tube in stunned silence for a good minute before she finally gasped. ‘Oh no.’
By the dim red light of the back room and the peach-coloured glow of the tube’s interior up-light she could see they’d really messed up with growing Bob’s body. Well, actually… it looked like she alone had messed things up.
They’re going to be mad at me.
Maddy’s voice echoed through the open door into the back room. ‘How’s he looking?’
Sal didn’t know what to say. So she said nothing.
‘Everything OK in there?’
They’ve got to find out sometime.
‘Uhh… no. Not really,’ she replied.
‘What’s the matter?’ Maddy’s head appeared in the doorway, squinting into the gloom of the hatchery. ‘Sal? What’s up?’
‘It’s uh… it’s Bob…’ she said.
‘Oh God, what now? It’s not a mis-growth, is it? We can’t afford to start off another one.’
Sal had caught a glimpse of the few mis-growths that had been floating in the tubes back here not long after Foster had recruited them; they’d looked like awful freakshow specimens in some carnival tent, contorted, with faces like gargoyles and demons and limbs twisted into impossible claw-like stumps. She thanked God it wasn’t something like that.
‘No, it’s grown just fine… it’s just…’
Maddy took a cautious step into the hatchery, her eyes yet to adjust to the dim red lighting. ‘Well, it looks OK from here. Two arms, two legs… nothing weird and gross sticking out,’ she said.
Sal studied the adult-sized form floating in the murky pink soup. ‘I think I must have put the wrong foetus in or something,’ she uttered.
Maddy took a few steps across the floor, careful not to hook her foot in a power cable and pull over one of the other tubes holding the other tiny foetuses in stasis.
‘Come on, Sal, what’s the prob-’ Maddy’s voice tailed away as she stood beside her. ‘Oh,’ she whispered. ‘I see now.’
Sal bit her lip. ‘I… I must have… I’m sorry. I didn’t check it first. I… just didn’t see.’
Maddy looked at her. ‘You didn’t see?’
‘They all looked the same!’ Sal replied, her voice rising in pitch. ‘Look, I’m sorry!’
‘Oh, that’s just great, Sal. Just great! Now what are we going to do!’
‘I’m sorry, OK? Sorry. I didn’t see. I just — ’
‘Sorry… is that it? Sorry doesn’t help us. There’s no time to grow another one!’
Liam stepped into the back room. ‘Hey! Ladies, ladies! Whatever is the matter?’
‘Well, why don’t you come and look for yourself,’ snapped Maddy irritably.
Liam made his way cautiously forward until he was standing between them.
‘Meet your new support unit,’ she added sarcastically.
Liam frowned at the dim outline in the tube, then suddenly his eyebrows shot up into twin arches. ‘It’s a… it’s a… it’s a…’
‘Girl,’ said Sal helpfully.
‘Oh Jay-zus-’n’-Mother-Mary… I never knew we got baby boys and girls.’
Maddy reached down to the floor and picked up one of the empty glass containers the foetuses had come in. She held it close to the growth tube to take advantage of some of the softly glowing light coming from within.
‘There,’ she said after a while, her finger pointing at a small marking at the bottom of the glass.
Sal leaned closer, screwing her eyes up to see it better in the dim light.
‘It says XX… that’s all. What’s that supposed to mean?’
Maddy tutted and shook her head. ‘You don’t know?’
‘No.’
Liam shrugged. ‘Me neither,’ he said, his eyes still locked on the naked female form inside the tube.
‘It means female. And XY means male. You guys can be real morons! It’s to do with the chromosomes.’
Liam managed to drag his eyes away. ‘Cromer-what-a-ma-jinxie?’
Frustrated, Maddy banged the perspex tube with the palm of her hand. ‘Doesn’t matter. I’ll explain another time. The point is what are we gonna do?’
‘If we start another one off, it’ll be at least another thirty-six hours before we can send someone to investigate the Chan thing,’ said Sal.
‘That’s my point!’ replied Maddy, removing her glasses and rubbing her eyes. ‘The message sounded urgent. Right? God knows what damage is happening to the timeline ahead of us right now!’
‘We don’t have much choice,’ replied Sal. ‘Unless…’
Maddy nodded. ‘Unless you go check it out on your own, Liam.’
Liam looked at them both. ‘You’re joking, right?’
Neither said anything.
‘Right,’ he replied. ‘Well, the answer is… not on your nelly! No way! No sir! I’m not going into some spangly future place without a Bob — ’ he looked again at the female form inside the tube — ‘or a Roberta by my side. It’s been hard enough for me trying to get my head around 2001 and all your crazy modern ways. There’s no way that I’m doing 2015 all on my own, I’m tellin’ you.’
Maddy sighed. ‘All right, then.’ She looked at the shape floating in the goo. ‘That thing may not have the brute strength of the last one, but at least you’d have Bob’s AI and database along with you.’ Maddy turned to him. ‘And this i
s just a scouting mission anyway. Just a quick visit to see what happened to Chan.’
Liam’s face hardened. ‘That’s what Foster said to me the last time
… and look what happened. I got stuck in the middle of an invasion for six months.’
Maddy reached a hand out and touched his arm. ‘Well, this time we’ll just be more cautious.’
He chewed his lip in thought for a moment, then finally nodded. ‘Jeez… all right. I suppose if it’s just a quick look-see.’
Maddy gently slapped his shoulder. ‘Good. Sal?’
‘Yes?’
‘Let’s birth it.’
‘OK.’
Sal squatted down on her haunches to tap the command into the small control panel at the bottom of the cylinder.
‘Er… Liam?’ said Maddy.
‘Yes?’
‘Would you mind?’
‘Mind? Mind what?’
‘A little privacy?’
‘Uh?’
Maddy sighed. ‘It may just be a mindless blubbering clone right now… but it’s still a lady.’
Liam was still sulking at being kicked out of the back room when the metal door to the hatchery finally slid to one side with a shrill squeak of un-oiled rollers. Maddy and Sal emerged through the doorway first, beaming like a pair of proud midwives. They ushered a pale shuffling form wrapped in a long towel out into the light of the main arch.
Liam studied her; she was taller than the other two and, of course, as Bob had first been when he’d been dumped out of the bottom of his tube, she was completely bald. Yet, despite that, he realized she was — and he felt a little queasy admitting this to himself — quite beautiful.
‘Uh… hello,’ he said awkwardly.
The clone stared at him curiously as the girls led her across the arch towards the table and armchairs. Her pale skin glistened, wet with the goo she’d been floating in only moments ago, and the smell — like a rancid meat stew — wafted across to him, turning his stomach.
‘Hello there,’ said Liam again as they sat her down opposite him.
‘Flug herr gufff slurb,’ the clone replied, dark brown slime dribbling out of the side of her mouth and down her chin.
‘Right,’ said Maddy to Liam. ‘You can get acquainted while I sort out uploading Bob’s AI.’
He nodded, his eyes still locked on the clone. She seemed to have little of the bulging musculature of Bob… athletic, though, not bulky like he’d been last time.
Bob.
Bob? Liam, you idiot.
He realized that it was stupid to think of that first ape-like clone as Bob; it had merely been the organic vehicle that Bob’s AI code had first used. But still, he mused, Bob’s ‘personality’ — if he could actually use that word — had been formed inside that big brute. It was almost impossible not to think of him as a big, clumsy, Panzer tank of a man, with fuzzy coconut hair and a voice as deep and rumbling as one of the trains that regularly rattled over the Williamsburg Bridge above them.
During the six months he’d been stuck in the past with him he’d grown attached to the big lumbering ape; not just the code in his head, but that expressionless vapid face of his, those horribly awkward smiles — more like a horse baring its teeth. He’d even cried when those men had gunned Bob down, riddling him with enough bullets to ensure that even his robust body had no hope of recovery. Cried as Bob had ‘died’ in his arms and he’d had to perform an act of surgery that since then he’d done his very best to blank from his memory.
Cried for Bob, although he’d never admit that to the others because it seemed silly. All that made Bob Bob had survived, had come back from the past in his blood-covered hand: a wafer of silicon containing his AI, every memory he had, all the learning, all the adapting, all the growing up he’d done in those six months in the past. That was Bob, not the tattered bullet-riddled corpse he’d left behind in the blood-spattered snow of 1941.
Liam looked again at the young… woman… in front of him: lean and athletic, a porcelain beauty to her face.
Her? HER? It’s an IT, Liam. IT… get it? Not a ‘her’. Just an organic vehicle. A meat robot.
Almost as if the clone could read his mind, it drooled another long spittle string of gunk out of the side of its mouth and grunted something unintelligible.
Sal giggled. ‘So like Bob, isn’t she? She could be his twin sister.’
Maddy returned from the desk to sit beside the female clone. ‘OK, Bob’s preparing the download protocols. He needs to handshake with this support unit’s in-built operating system before he can upload a copy of his AI into it.’
‘Uh… how does Bob get into her… its head?’ asked Liam. ‘Don’t you need some sort of a cable or something?’
‘Bluetooth,’ she replied wearily. ‘Yes, I know, that means nothing to you.’ She sighed. ‘OK. It’s a broadband wireless data communication protocol designed for low-latency short-distance transmission.’ Liam was still staring at her, slack-jawed and bemused. Maddy sighed again. ‘Information will fly through the air from the computer and into its head.’
‘Oh… right.’ Liam smiled. ‘Why didn’t you just say that in the first place?’
They heard a beep coming from the computer desk.
‘Uploading is starting now,’ said Maddy.
The clone sitting opposite Liam suddenly jerked upright and cocked her head like a dog hearing a dog-whistle.
He watched with fascination as the support unit’s eyes blinked rapidly with the data flooding into the tiny computer system built into the middle of its cranium — computer technology that came from the 2050s, technology immensely more powerful than their array of linked PCs beneath the computer desk.
The download of information took about ten minutes, then finally the female clone closed her eyes.
‘Installing,’ explained Maddy. ‘Then it will boot up again.’
After a few moments the clone looked up at them with eyes that now seemed to faintly glint with intelligence.
‘Bob?’ said Maddy, ‘you OK?’
The clone nodded awkwardly. ‘Affirmative.’ The voice was a deep growl, almost as deep as Bob’s old voice had been.
‘Jay-zus!’ Liam lurched. ‘That’s… weird.’
Sal pulled a face. ‘Ewww… jahulla! That’s just so-o-o wrong!’
‘I will adjust the vocal register,’ Bob’s barrel-deep voice rumbled. The support unit cocked its head then spoke again. ‘Is this better?’ The voice now the smooth upper-register of a teenage girl’s.
Maddy nodded. ‘Much better. I think we can safely say you’re not an it… you’re a she now.’
Liam shook his head as he studied it… him… her… Bob. ‘I feel very strange about this,’ he finally muttered. ‘Very strange indeed.’
CHAPTER 14
2001, New York
‘Now, she’s had all the biographical information about Edward Chan and details of the layout of the Texas Advanced Energy Research Institute uploaded. Isn’t that right?’
The support unit nodded as she lowered herself into the water beside Liam, wearing underwear that Maddy had self-consciously pulled out from beneath the sheets of her bunk and donated.
‘Affirmative. I have all the data required for this mission,’ the support unit replied sweetly.
Liam shook his head. ‘This is so weird. I mean… it’s great to have you back an’ all, Bob, but you’re a… you’re a…’ His glance flickered involuntarily for a moment towards the clone’s chest. He clasped his eyes shut. ‘Oh Jeez… you’re a girl, so you are!’
‘Recommendation: suggest this copy of my AI be given an appropriate unique identifier.’
Maddy, sitting on the top step and looking down at them in the water, nodded. ‘That’s right. You can’t go round calling her Bob.’
‘Additional information: although the AI in my computer is a direct duplication, I am now interfaced with a different organic brain, and during the operational lifespan of this organic support frame, different data
will result in a different emergent AI.’
Liam looked up at Maddy. ‘What did she… it… Bob just say?’
‘That you should think of this support unit as someone brand new. As a different team member… because she’s going to develop a different personality. That’s right, isn’t it?’
The support unit nodded. ‘Affirmative. Consequently this AI should have its own identifying label.’
‘She needs a new name to avoid confusion with Bob,’ added Maddy, nodding towards the bank of monitors and computers on the desk. ‘Remember, Bob’s still in there.’ She grinned. ‘You’re best thinking of this support unit as… I dunno… his sister.’
Liam looked at the clone treading water beside him. She tried one of Bob’s reassuring horse smiles — just as clumsy and ill-fitting as her… brother. But, somehow, more appealing on her slim face.
‘Liam,’ she said softly, ‘please give me a name.’
‘Go on,’ said Maddy. ‘It’s your turn.’
He shook his head. ‘I… don’t know.’
‘OK, you think about it.’ She called across the archway to Sal. ‘What’s the countdown?’
‘Fifty seconds!’
She handed them a couple of sealed plastic bags. ‘Clothes for you in there. And a wig for her. Now, you’ll arrive at the institute just as a class of thirty children are being given a tour of the place. I’ve checked the floor plans and picked out what looks like an equipment storage room near to the institute’s main experimental chamber. That’s where we’ll send you. You can dry off and change in there, then join the school party.’
Liam nodded.
‘You’ll be there to observe how Edward Chan is assassinated, OK? Not to stop it… just watch. Then we’ll bring you back, you can tell us what happened, then we can work on what we need to do to prevent it happening. That’s the plan. Got it?’
‘Aye. And the return window?’
‘Is set for ten minutes after Edward Chan’s time of death. The usual failed-return protocols apply — if you miss that first window, we’ll open again an hour later… you know how it goes.’