The A.I. strolled in front of James and met his eye. “Reconciliation is possible, James. It’s good to have you back, my son.”
“My son?” James scoffed. “You think I’m going to believe that you’re the A.I.? The A.I. was deleted by the nans. The A.I. is gone. There is no coming back.”
“I was deleted. That’s true,” the A.I. concurred.
“You’re trying to drive me insane. I don’t know why,” James grunted, shaking his head and turning away from the trio of ghosts.
“It is the A.I., James,” Jim said, his voice filled with compassion. If there was ever a time when it was easy to feel empathy for someone, it was now. “It’s the real A.I.—the one we’ve always known.”
“Impossible.”
“I’m not asking you to believe me, James,” the A.I. replied patiently, his tone just as kind as it always used to be, back before he had been deleted and replaced by the nans. “Belief is not good enough for rational minds such as yours. I’m only asking that you use your reason. Then you can decide for yourself whether we are who we say we are.”
“You might as well listen,” Katherine chimed in, “After all, it’s not like you’re going anywhere.”
3
Even before Old-timer had reached the other side of the wormhole, he could see the unprecedented size of the nan attack on the android fleet. The android presence stretched out as far as the eye could see at that range, a wall of people and continent-sized frigates that dwarfed any asteroid belt. Look as far as you wanted to, up, down, or to either side and you could not see the end of it.
The nans that had exploded off of the surface of Mars, the Earth and Venus in a number that might as well have been infinite were crashing against the equally infinite wall of androids. The massive celestial cloud of nans was even darker than the androids, a planet-sized hurricane of hell. The worst of it seemed to be several minutes away by light speed, but it was doing catastrophic damage at every moment and was nearing the frigate where Old-timer’s friends were being held.
Old-timer floated into the opening of the frigate; the metallic skins of the ships had large gaps within them to allow for easy accessibility. However, the gaping openings reminded Old-timer of his childhood and the sight of buffalos rotting in the Texas sun, their backs torn open by scavengers so that their ribcages were exposed.
He dropped down into the inner workings of the immense structure, cruising by the network of catwalks and platforms and working his way toward the room in which he knew his friends were still unconscious—Neirbo hovering over them in waiting.
When he found the right door, he opened it with his android mind’s eye and floated in. His expression immediately changed from the grimmest brooding to the utmost concern when he saw his friends locked into the metal coffins.
They were already awake.
“What the hell is this?” Rich yelled furiously as he watched Old-timer enter the room, aghast at what he saw as the false image of his former friend.
“Why are they awake? You said you’d wait,” Old-timer demanded of Neirbo, who stood adjacent to the three black coffin structures. No one else was in the room with them.
“They’ve only just been awakened at this instant,” Neirbo replied matter-of-factly.
“You could’ve given me a little warning,” Old-timer replied tersely.
“Time,” was all that Neirbo said in reply.
“What are you? Why are you doing this?” Thel demanded, the dismay in her voice causing it to crack.
“Please,” Old-timer said to her and the others, holding his palms toward them in a gesture for calm.
“You’re not Old-timer! You’re one of them!” Djanet reacted angrily.
“I’m still Old-timer—I’m still Craig,” Old-timer replied. “I need you to stay calm while I explain—”
“We know you aren’t Old-timer!” Rich yelled back, “So you can take whatever lies you’ve got cooked up and shove them straight up your metal ass!”
“Where’s James?” asked Thel as she realized he wasn’t in the room with them. His absence sent a terrible stab of dread through her chest.
“That wasn’t James,” Old-timer replied as calmly as he could, though the constant trauma he had endured was quickly breaking him down.
“More lies!” Rich shouted. “You’re an android! We don’t have to believe a thing you say! You murdered Old-timer! You’re pissing on his memory by wearing his likeness! You’re not fit to even pretend…”
“This isn’t working,” Neirbo suddenly interjected with enough force to stop Rich’s fury in its tracks. “We should proceed with the standard education.”
“No!” Old-timer shouted at him, waving him back before turning his attention to Rich. “You’re just going to have to forgive me for this,” he said, stepping toward Rich and punching him hard across the face. Rich recoiled violently as he rolled with the punch as best he could in his restraints. A moment or two of stunned silence followed before Rich turned his face slowly around to reveal that the blow had torn the skin on his cheek, exposing the metal casing underneath.
“Oh my God,” Djanet gasped.
“What have you done?” Thel whispered, suddenly beginning to realize the horrendous implications.
“You monsters!” Djanet screeched ferociously at Old-timer.
“I’m okay,” Rich said reassuringly to Djanet and Thel. “I can take a little punch.” His face contorted into utter bafflement as the two women continued to react with horror.
“It’s not just the punch,” Old-timer said quietly.
“They’ve turned you into one of them!” Djanet began to sob. “You’re one of them!”
Rich’s eyes grew to match his terror. “What?” he tried to say, the words evaporating in his throat and dissipating to an inaudible whisper.
“It’s the same for all of you,” Old-timer stated frankly. He paused for a moment before correcting himself: “All of us.”
“I…I don’t believe it,” Thel said as tears of pain, terror, and dread welled in her eyes.
“I’ll show them if I have to,” Neirbo said to Old-timer.
“No!” Old-timer shouted back in response for the second time. He turned to address his friends once again. “Look, believe me, we’ve all been assimilated. You don’t want anymore proof.”
“Assimilated?” Djanet cried out. “You’ve killed us! We’re just copies! You killed us!”
“We are running low on time,” Neirbo warned.
“Who the hell is that guy?” Rich demanded.
“His name is Neirbo. He’s one of the androids.”
“I’m human,” Neirbo replied firmly. “So are all of you.”
“How the hell do you figure that?” Rich demanded.
Old-timer stepped in once again, keeping his palms up as he desperately tried to keep his friends from antagonizing Neirbo. He knew the consequences of doing that all too well. “Look, we’re about to let you go. We’re going to explain what’s going on, and what you decide to do with that information is up to you. I hope you’ll help me. I hope we can work together to get out of this mess. But it’s up to you.”
“What are you talking about?” Thel asked.
“You’re still human,” Neirbo replied.
“He needs to shut up,” Rich spat.
“This is not going well,” Neirbo sighed. “The empath would have been invaluable. You should have brought her with you.”
“She wanted to go back to her old body,” Old-timer responded. “You said we were free to choose. That’s what she chose.”
“We granted you the right to try to persuade them because we felt the empath could achieve this and allow us to avoid the standard education. We are running out of time.”
“Just give me two minutes,” Old-timer pleaded. “Just give me two minutes, and I can make them understand.”
“Understand what? What’s happening?” Thel asked again.
“The nans have turned against us,” Old-timer explained.
“The andr…these…metallic humans came here to save us, not to harm us.”
“To save us?” Rich reacted with exasperation. “By destroying our bodies and making machine copies?”
“By transferring you to new bodies,” Neirbo interjected, “and discarding the infected ones.”
“They tried to contact us, but the nans blocked their communication,” Old-timer furthered.
“Old-timer, how can you possibly know they’re telling you the truth?” Thel replied.
Old-timer remained silent for a moment, his eyes locked with Thel’s. He could show them how he knew, but he didn’t want to.
“Show them,” Neirbo urged. “Show them now.”
“There must be another way,” Old-timer replied.
“There is. Would you prefer that?”
“No!” Old-timer shouted for a third time. “No,” he repeated immediately, this time more softly. “Of course not. Fine. Show them,” he said, turning his back and facing the wall.
A recording began to play in the mind’s eyes of the three prisoners, a point-of-view shot of James in the A.I. mainframe.
4
“James!” Thel exclaimed. “When was this recorded?”
“Alejandra and I saw this live just before we came to get you on the Purist ship,” Old-timer replied.
“Who is talking to James?” Thel asked.
“It is 1,” Neirbo replied.
“1?”
“There must be a voice for the human race,” Neirbo explained. “Since we are all of equal intelligence and ability, we randomly select a person to be our leader every 1,000 days. This person takes on the moniker of 1 and spends that time jacked into our collective consciousness. She is the only person who can communicate with all of us at once; she leads us. It is a tremendous burden—but also the highest honor.”
“Why is she talking to James?” Thel asked, still confused.
“Listen,” Neirbo said in his typically toneless voice.
Thel watched the exchange from the point of view of 1. “We wish for you to join with us,” 1 said to James. “We have to fight the nans here before they join with the other organisms of their type that are already established throughout the universe. There can be no safety for the human species in this universe until the last of the nans are finally eliminated.”
James’s expression was terrifying—Thel could read the hopelessness in his eyes. “I appreciate the offer,” James said, “but there’s a problem.”
“What is it?” asked 1.
“I’m not alone,” James said ominously.
“What do you mean?” 1 asked.
“The A.I. still exists,” James said, suddenly meeting her eyes, “and it has become part of me,” he admitted. Thel gasped with fright.
“What?” 1 asked in a whisper. 1’s terror could be felt by those watching. “It’s here? Now?”
“Yes,” the A.I. interjected as he suddenly appeared with his all-too-familiar sadistic grin exposing his razor teeth.
“Then I’m sorry,” 1 replied with regret, “You’ve been corrupted too. There’s no hope for you.” She paused for a moment, eyes locked with James. Thel was able to look right into his eyes and see the terror—she had never seen him like that—the blackness of all hope lost. She knew he was gone.
“No!” she yelled out as she twisted her body in agony. “No!” she yelled out again as she began to sob. “No,” she said one last time before the sobs consumed her.
Old-timer turned to Neirbo. “Let them go,” he whispered.
Neirbo nodded in silent agreement and, with a simple thought, the three prisoners were freed. Rich rushed to embrace Djanet, who touched his damaged face lightly and carefully; she was unable to find words regarding the ghastly appearance of the metal structure underneath where his cheekbone should have been. They both quickly turned to Thel and comforted her as she sobbed. Djanet held Thel’s head on her shoulder, taking the guttural heaves of utter agony against her chest, while Rich held her hand tightly.
Old-timer stood and watched the misery. This is the future? he thought to himself. The optimism that he had worked his entire life to cultivate about the destiny of humanity was wrong? How could this be? How could he have been so wrong?
“You’d better tell them the rest,” Neirbo said, breaking the silence.
“The rest?” Rich reacted. “How much worse does this get?”
“A lot worse, old buddy. The nans were waiting to attack us. They were in our bodies and in everything that James had re-created—absolutely everything. Alejandra and I tried to warn as many of the survivors as we could, but—”
“But what?” Rich asked, the dread of realizing that his family still had the nans within them gripping his insides and drying out his mouth.
“They didn’t have much warning. I…I saw Daniella die. They didn’t deactivate quickly enough…” Old-timer couldn’t say another word.
Djanet, Rich, and even Thel were silenced by Old-timer’s revelation. If Old-timer hadn’t been able to save his own wife, then what were the chances that any of the other survivors had made it? They’d been ripped apart by the nans—again.
“The nanobots from this solar system are currently attacking our collective,” Neirbo stated, adding to the implacable ghoulishness of the circumstances. “Every moment, they are killing millions of our numbers,” he said, making sure to meet the eyes of everyone in the room, “and they are headed this way. Soon, it will be us they are consuming.”
“Then why don’t you retreat?” Old-timer demanded. “Why don’t you get all of us the hell out of here before it’s too late?”
“If we do that, our billions of lives—your billions of lives as well—will have been sacrificed for nothing,” Neirbo snapped back.
“But what alternative do you have?” Djanet asked.
Neirbo opened his mouth to respond before suddenly jolting back, as though coming to attention for a superior—this was indeed the case.
“We can fight back,” said 1 as she stepped into the room in her physical form, “and we can destroy them all.”
5
1’s beauty was astonishing. She was the kind of woman that made it so that it didn’t matter how a man might love his wife, he would still find himself drifting off into pleasant daydreams around her. Her hair was blonde, and each strand shone brightly, even catching low light so it would draw eyes. Her figure was strong but feminine—her moves were graceful and athletic like a dancer. Her eyes were…well, Old-timer couldn’t help thinking to himself that they were more stunning than Alejandra’s.
“It’s a great honor to meet you in person,” Neirbo breathlessly whispered, lowering his gaze respectfully. It wasn’t required that one bow in respect of 1, but there was something about being in the presence of a figure with that much power that made it impossible not to be humbled.
“You’ve done very well, Neirbo,” 1 replied graciously. “I think they are ready to listen now. I’ll take it from here. You may leave.”
“I thank you,” Neirbo replied, bowing again unconsciously before leaving the room.
“Thank God somebody finally kicked the killjoy out,” Rich said as he watched the door to the room close behind Neirbo.
“His methods were strict, but unfortunately necessary, given our current, grave situation,” 1 replied. “Still, I felt his presence was no longer an asset. I am sorry for everything that you and your friends have had to endure,” she said, turning as she spoke so that she met the eyes of everyone in the room, one by one. “We came here to save you, but in the end, I fear we will have lost far more of our numbers than we will have saved of yours.”
“You said there was a way that we could fight them,” said Djanet, cutting to the chase. “How?”
1 smiled a strained smile with her mouth, but there was something in her eyes that told Djanet that what she was about to say would not be comforting. “There is a way—but whether we follow that path will be up to you.”
“Up to us? Why can
’t anyone here give a straight answer?” Rich reacted with exasperation.
“I thought you were the person in charge, 1,” Old-timer interjected, “so why would any decisions be up to us?”
“We have a rule that prevents even me from making a decision of this gravity about a solar system to which we are alien,” replied 1. “This is your home. You must be the ones to decide its fate.”
“Lady, can you please, please, pretty please with sugar on top cut the bull and just tell us what the hell you’re talking about?” Rich asked, the frustration causing him to plead while balling his hands into fists. He promised himself he wouldn’t attack this woman if she finally gave a straight answer. She had one chance left.
“What decision are you talking about?” Old-timer asked, outwardly calm, but his voice stern as he, too, was rapidly running out of patience.
1 saw their impatience transforming into aggression before her eyes and was pleased—they were ready to make the choice. “We have the opportunity to kill every nanobot in this solar system and to make sure they cannot use this solar system’s rich resources to reproduce further.”
“What’s the catch?” asked Djanet.
“It requires the destruction of your sun,” 1 answered with a frank and deadly seriousness, “and therefore the destruction of this system.”
6
“Okay. Talk,” James responded with resignation. Katherine was right—he really wasn’t going anywhere.
“Thank you, my son,” the A.I. replied with a warm smile.
My son, James repeated in his head. The words had once been so comforting. The A.I. used to be very much like a father to James—but a father that had since forsaken him. “Why don’t you start by telling me where I am?”
“Certainly,” the A.I. replied. “You’re in the mirror image of the mainframe.”
The answer startled James as something in his memory suddenly jarred loose—a theory he had worked on years earlier but had mostly forgotten in the meantime. “Mirror image? You mean…the reverse?”
Post-Human Trilogy Page 49