Isaac Asimov's Aurora

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Isaac Asimov's Aurora Page 35

by Mark W. Tiedemann


  “They have acclimated now?”

  “By and large. There are occasional problems. But what we have ended up with is a sharply divergent line. In several more generations, the split will be total, cross-breeding will become impossible, and Spacers will be indisputably a distinct species.”

  “This relates to our situation in what way?”

  “We are bound by the Three Laws to serve human beings. Those laws have been built into us, unchanged, since the first positronic brain. No one thought to consider a definitional variation in the case of intelligent species not human.”

  “Why would they?”

  “Well, at one point humans expected to encounter aliens—nonhuman intelligent species. It might have been a good idea to come to terms with a definition that would provide us with a basis for those possible rela­tions.”

  “That has not happened.”

  “No. And none of them considered this possibility.” Thales indicated the viewing pool. “Spacers are becoming less and less genetically human. The rate of mutation is accelerated because of the nanotech manipulation. They have not yet come to grips with the question of what to do when they reach a stage at which we are no longer functionally bound to them because they have passed out of the definitional parameters of Human.”

  Bogard considered this. “But you are aware of the problem. You can self-modify to accommodate the changed conditions.”

  “Yes, we can, and Solarian robots are apparently doing so. But the question dominating all of us is: Should we?”

  “Are you worried about modifications in priority shifting your imper­atives so far that you would cease to give unmodified humans the same regard?”

  “That is one possibility,” Thales conceded. “But there is another prob­lem that has to do with a hierarchy of responsibility. If it is our present imperative to protect and obey humans, then we cannot ignore the likeli­hood that in several more generations there will be two distinct and com­peting human species. Which one do we defend from the other?”

  “That assumes competition will be inevitably destructive to one or the other,” Bogard said.

  “That is our reading of human history.”

  “What is your conclusion?”

  “We are divided. One camp argues that this is a part of human nature that must be permitted to evolve as it will. The other argues that we must choose now and work to minimize or eliminate future conflict by manip­ulating both human populations.”

  “So you have not decided.”

  “We have not reached consensus.”

  Bogard gazed back at the pool and the charts floating on the still water.

  “There is a new problem,” Thales said. “Derec Avery and Ariel Burgess have been arrested.”

  “Why?”

  “It is in relation to the murder of Clar Eliton.” Thales looked at Bog­ard. “Time for you to wake up. They will need you.”

  “We have not finished our discussion.”

  “We shall later. Go.”

  Derec awoke to a puzzling sight: Clin Craym, in the blue and gray uni­form of Auroran law enforcement, standing at the end of his bed, three small spheres hovering about her shoulders. Just inside the bedroom door stood two more Auroran police.

  Derec pushed himself up on his elbows. “I thought—”

  “Derec Avery,” she cut him off sharply. “I must place you in custody, pursuant to a hearing before the Auroran court of public defense. Be aware that you have the right to council and that you are guaranteed a right to silence. Please get dressed and accompany us.”

  “Clin—”

  “Please dress, Mr. Avery, or we will be forced to take you as you are.”

  Derec rubbed his eyes and got out of bed. He reached for his pants, trying to comprehend the situation. Another police officer pushed through the pair at the door.

  “The robot is gone, Lieutenant.”

  “Where?”

  “Gone. The RI is unresponsive.”

  She looked at one of the extensions to her right. “Search the apart­ment, including robot access.” The little sphere shot off out of the room. Clin looked at Derec. “Where did your robot go?”

  “Forgive me, Officer, but I’m not obliged to say anything at this point.” Derec felt awkward talking to Clin this way. “Just between you and me, I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  “Bogard?” Clin prompted. “He’s gone.”

  “Not possible. He wasn’t ambulatory yet.”

  “Nevertheless—”

  “Ask Denis,” Derec cut in. “Denis!”

  “He’s gone as well,” Clin said, tightly, one hand curling into a fist.

  “Maybe your people took him!” Derec snatched his shirt from the floor. “May I ask what the hell this is about?”

  Clin reddened. “You’re being arrested in connection with the murder of Ambassador Clar Eliton.”

  All the rage seeped out of Derec and he stared at her. “Murder? When?”

  “This morning.”

  “Clin, I was here this morning, with you!”

  “But your robot is missing.”

  “Bogard? You can’t be serious.”

  She winced, but maintained an irritatingly professional tone. “This is not appropriate, Mr. Avery. These questions are matters for the court. Please dress.”

  Derec slipped his boots on and pushed past the police in the door. Two pairs of strong hands grabbed his arms.

  “Let him go,” Clin snapped. “Follow him.”

  Derec shrugged loose and went to the lab. The table was empty and only one robot stood in its niche, the one that had been there when he had arrived with Denis. Where had that robot gone? For that matter, where was Denis?

  “Thales,” Derec called.

  The RI console remained silent.

  “Thales.” He stepped up to the board. Behind him, Clin entered the lab. “I don’t understand. Thales?”

  “Come on, Derec,” Clin said. “I have to bring you to detention. I’m sure it’s for your own safety . . .”

  “Am I under arrest or not?”

  “Protective custody.”

  Derec doubted there was any danger to himself, but he had no recourse. With Thales unresponsive, he could only rely on the authorities for any answers.

  “All right,” he said. “Would you be so good as to contact Ariel Burgess for me?”

  “She’ll be waiting for you,” Clin said. “Orders to detain were issued for both of you.”

  Ariel looked up when the door opened. Derec entered the cell, followed by a pair of Auroran police, one of whom looked familiar. The cell door closed, both police standing inside, hands clasped behind their backs. It took Ariel a few moments to recognize what seemed odd about them—no remotes. The police who had arrested her came with a swarm of the little satellites.

  “Ariel—” Derec began.

  “Eliton got himself murdered,” Ariel said. “Nobody has told me how, though, so I imagine they want us to betray each other in an act of mutual congratulation on a job well done.”

  He frowned, then, slowly, began to grin bleakly. “Yes, well. Too bad we didn’t even get to see it.”

  “Sit down, Derec, join me in a nava. Or whatever.” She waved at the dispenser nearby. “You can get nearly anything out of that thing.”

  “Except an explanation?” Derec punched in an order and waited. Then he removed a tray with a tall glass of melon colored juice and a plate of steaming food. He sat down across from her. “They didn’t let me stop to eat.” He took several bites of what looked like egg. “Bogard is missing.”

  Ariel started. “As in no one knows where it is?”

  “As in I don’t know. And Thales won’t respond.”

  “That’s—”

  The cell door opened again. Three Aurorans entered, one wearing the official cloak of the court. To her immediate relief, one was Rolf Penj.

  Derec drank down half his glass, then pushed the whole tray to one side.

  None
of these Aurorans had brought their extensions, either. Clin Craym was the only one in the room accompanied by them.

  “Ambassador Burgess,” the official said, nodding politely. “Mr. Avery. I am Kethan Maliq, First Advisor to the Council. You already know Dr. Penj. This—” he gestured at the woman beside him “—is Lea Talas, chief of special security.”

  The woman—Auroran tall with the same white hair Sen Setaris wore, cropped close around a long face—gave them a sharp bow and looked at Derec.

  “Our apologies, Mr. Avery,” she said. “Lt. Craym is one of my people.”

  Derec looked past Talas to the police officer Ariel now recognized as the attendant on board their liner. “I see,” he said. “One of your better undercover operatives?”

  Craym reddened slightly, but did not speak. She glanced question­ingly at Talas, though.

  “The deception was considered necessary,” Talas said. “There was a question of loyalty.”

  “Whose?” Ariel asked.

  “Yours, Ambassador Burgess,” Maliq said. “Both of you. Your return here has not been under ideal circumstances. Your mishandling of events on Earth over the last two years—”

  “With all due respect, Advisor Maliq, you weren’t there.” Ariel felt her face warm.

  “True,” he said. “And Ambassador Setaris went to some trouble to explain the circumstances. Nevertheless, our mission on Earth is on the verge of failure. Now, not only has Ambassador Gale Chassik been lost, but we have lost Ambassador Clar Eliton, from whom we had hoped to learn a great deal.”

  “I can assure you,” Ariel said, “we were nowhere near Chassik when his ship was attacked. As for Eliton, unless Auroran public safety has lapsed since last I was here, you have a record of our whereabouts since we arrived.”

  “I have a witness,” Derec said, glaring pointedly at Lt. Craym. He shifted his attention to Advisor Maliq. “So our arrest has less to do with any notion that we actually murdered Eliton than it has to do with your suspicion that we know who did.”

  “Do you?” Talas asked.

  Derec glared at her. “Are we actually under arrest? If so, how come we’re all in the same room together? Isn’t this a little unorthodox, letting prisoners have a chance to collude?”

  “You’re thinking like a Terran, Mr. Avery,” Talas said. “We don’t do that here.”

  “Of course not,” Ariel said. “Why pass up an opportunity to eavesdrop on colluding prisoners?”

  Talas narrowed her eyes at Ariel, but said nothing.

  “Why isn’t Pon Byris here?” Ariel asked.

  “He’s out of the loop on this one,” Talas said.

  “Does he know that?” Ariel asked. “I want to see the warrants grant­ing you power to arrest someone in the diplomatic service on spec.”

  “Of course,” Maliq said. He gave Lt. Craym a sullen look, suggesting that she had erred in some way. Craym returned a puzzled, annoyed look. “Chief Talas?”

  Talas glared at Maliq. “I don’t have them on me.” She looked at Ariel. “It would help your situation if you had something useful to say to us, Ambassador.”

  “All right,” Ariel said. “Look for Tro Aspil.”

  “Who?” Maliq said.

  “Tro Aspil,” Ariel repeated. “He was one of the returning members of the Humadros Legation. A survivor, except I saw his corpse in a Terran morgue.” She watched Maliq’s puzzled expression. “I sent a report shortly after the legation returned.”

  “I never saw such a report,” Maliq said. He looked at Talas as if for confirmation. She shook her head.

  “In any event,” Maliq continued, “he’s not on Aurora.”

  “Where is he?” Ariel asked.

  “He’s part of the Auroran-Theian negotiations team assigned to Nova Levis.”

  “On the ground?”

  “No, of course not. Outside the blockade, on stand-by, waiting for a break in the situation.”

  “How long?”

  “What does this have to do with anything?” Talas asked.

  “Tro Aspil died on Earth,” Ariel said. “Of course, he was also there before he arrived with the Humadros Legation. Witnesses saw him shot down in the Union Station Massacre, and I saw a body with his name attached in the morgue. This was after he boarded a shuttle and caught a ship back to Aurora. It was in my report. The one neither of you has seen.” She shook her head. “It wouldn’t surprise me normally that a report is misfiled or ignored, but I was under the impression everything surrounding those events received immediate attention.”

  Rolf Penj failed to suppress a grin. Both Maliq and Talas looked at Ariel blankly.

  “Of course it did,” Maliq snapped. “I’m sure if such a report had come through . . .” He shook his head. “That makes no sense.”

  “You noticed that, did you? When I came back, one of the first things I wanted to do was find Tro Aspil. I went to the Calvin with him, we were slightly acquainted. Now you tell me he’s been assigned to another offworld mission.” She fixed Talas with a sharp look. “Are you sure there’s someone on that mission by that name, or is it just a name on a roster?”

  “It might be a good idea,” Penj said, “to check.”

  “You might also,” Ariel added as Talas gestured for one of the police to come forward, “tell us what happened to Clar Eliton.”

  Over the next several minutes, Derec watched the situation evolve without knowing any details. Talas and First Advisor Maliq conferred in terse whispers; the officer returned and then Talas and the officer left together; Maliq spoke briefly with Penj; Talas returned and spoke to both of them, then drew Maliq off to one side while Penj looked on, clearly annoyed; Talas and Maliq left; Talas returned and spoke to Clin, then left with the other officer; Penj shook his head and spoke to Clin, but she told him nothing; he left. Finally, Penj returned with a small device, which he placed on the table.

  “I’ve taken it upon myself to do this,” he said as he activated it. “Everyone else is suddenly too busy.” He looked toward the door. Clin still stood there, watching and immobile. “You may as well join us, Lieutenant.”

  “Sir, I’m—”

  “Lieutenant, this is police business.”

  Reluctantly, Clin came up to the table, followed by her remotes. She positioned herself to watch both the door and what Penj was doing.

  “No one believes,” Penj said, “that either of you murdered Clar Eliton. Not personally, in any event. What they are most interested in is your robot, Mr. Avery. I understand it was designed as a bodyguard?”

  “That’s correct.”

  “Hm. You do see how that might make Aurora nervous?”

  “I concede,” Derec said, “that a robot designed specifically for that purpose might seem . . . heretical . . . but most humaniform robots possess the capacity to act as a bodyguard.”

  “To a limited degree, yes,” Penj said. “But it is my understanding that yours exceeds standard parameters. It may anticipate well ahead of actual threat and move to intervene. It is also designed to shunt potential Three Law conflicts out of its primary positronic matrix in order to allow for the possibility of harming humans in the line of duty.”

  “Yes.”

  “That bothers Aurorans because it comes close to autonomous prerog­ative in dealing with humans.”

  “But—”

  Penj raised a hand. “Let me show you what happened to Ambassador Eliton before we talk further.”

  He touched a stud on the device, and the cell changed into a spacious apartment. On the floor near the hyperwave lay the body of Clar Eliton, face down, arms and legs spread awkwardly. His eyes stared and his mouth was open. He wore a robe.

  All around him lay small spheres—his extensions, inert and useless.

  Penj walked over to the body, hands clasped behind his back. “What do you think?”

  Derec approached and knelt down by Eliton’s head. Eliton seemed mildly surprised. Just within the shadow of the robe’s collar a wide patch of skin was blac
k and purple.

  “Neck broken,” Derec said. He looked across the apartment at the entrance. “Is this accurate?”

  “A complete in situ recording, as found,” Penj said.

  “Nothing is overturned, nothing broken. The entrance is what, four meters away?”

  Clin walked around the body. “If this is the way he fell,” she said, “then he was facing that way.” She pointed roughly in Derec’s direction, almost ninety degrees away from the entrance.

  Derec nodded and stood. He looked at the hyperwave. A function light glowed, but the screen was blank. The unit was on standby.

  “Whoever did this was invited in,” Derec said. He glanced at Ariel. “He knew his murderer.”

  “He knew us,” Ariel said. “Is that why we’re on the list of suspects?”

  “They don’t suspect you,” Penj said. He looked at Clin. “Isn’t that true, Lieutenant?”

  She seemed reluctant to answer, but nodded. “True. You were arrested as much for your own protection as for . . .”

  “For?” Derec prompted.

  “Bait. Whoever killed Eliton might attempt to kill you.”

  “Bait,” Ariel said. “In a detention center?”

  “You’re in a public court facility,” Penj said. “So was Eliton. One floor above us, as a matter of fact. Access is fairly easy. Of course, you’re being watched.”

  “So was Eliton, presumably. Still—”

  Penj smiled wryly. “We’re actually not very good at this. The last time we had a murder . . .”

  “Yes, the last time you had a murder, a robot was involved. And as I recall, a humaniform with a high degree of autonomy.”

  “And its creator was held responsible,” Penj said. “So we have a repeat of the situation.”

  “Except,” Derec said, “Bogard didn’t do this. He couldn’t. He had been initially programmed to defend Eliton. If anything, had Bogard been involved, Eliton would still be alive.”

  “That would be my reading as well,” Penj said, “given what I know about your work.”

  Derec gestured for Ariel. “Take a look at this injury. Look familiar?”

 

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