Read A Spit In The Eye - For The Benefit Of Mankind Online
Authors: Sally Dillon-Snape
Tags: #murder, #science fiction, #freedom, #robots, #love loss, #killer robots, #torture and agony
I stood
looking out at Humans and believed I could never do it
I could
never free them
Not
without their aid and assistance
Maybe I
could use them to kill some Machines
Maybe
bring some Defgars down
But
considering that many of them would be killed it would be a waste
of them
When the
programme was to free them
Not to
get them killed them off
I would
give the results of the programme some thought
Because I
still wanted to make the attempt
**
**
Section 11
**
Internal Transmission
*
I have
wandered through the fortress and have visited the Human rest
places as a plan has formed in my programmes
I am as
excited by the plan as little Eve would be
At least
I anticipate what her excitement would have been
Something
has come to my attention
Defgars
inside the fortress remain in the same corridors day after
day
They do
not move
They
stand perfectly still
Their
only duty is to protect the facility against attacks or attempted
escape by Humans and if there are no attacks or attempted escapes
they will not move
No other
Machine has the engine of an ObsRec and over the 100 years I have
been in existence I have learned reason
And this
is to greatly to my advantage
I can
ruminate with myself and come to conclusions
And the
first piece of important information I have discovered is that
Defgars stand in the same corridors month after month
Probably
year after year
I have
been noting them each passing of dark and light and they are the
same Machines in the same corridors
In the
same positions each and every time I use my optical devices to
examine them
Now is
the fourth passing of dark and light and I am going to test my
theory of their inactivity and their ability to communicate with
each other
Because I
consider that Defgars are not in communication with each
other
They are
simply programmed to react to in the event of an attack or
attempted escape
I return
from my darkness hours of pondering and wandering the great plain
and I return into the facility and make my way towards the corridor
where the Humans are separated only by the fence
A single
Defgar stands in it just as it always has
Standing
in the same unmoving position
I do not
recognize my inability to notice this information earlier in my
existence
I move
down the corridor in my usual method until I am only one upper
limbs length from the machine
I bring
my shutters down momentarily
ObsRecs
are supposed to do this often to keep lenses in our optical devices
clear
And I
begin to transmit a recording of my movements around the
facility
I lift my
shutters
And I
pulse the boom of the full power of the signal of
companionship
The
Defgars head drops immediately
But so
too does the LazExt 66 it is holding in its upper limbs
I have to
react extremely quickly to stop it crashing to the floor
I do
react extremely quickly
It is
what I was manufactured to do
And I
hold the weapon in my upper limbs and it feels quite
strange
I am now
armed and as dangerous as any machine on planet Earth though I
cannot consider that I am
I hide
the weapon behind the totally immobilised Defgar
#26555346
I turn my
cranium and observe that the Humans are continuing with their
activities and routines and have not perceived my action
That is a
fine thing
For I am
not yet ready to be uncovered as an agent for Humans
I walk
away from the dead machine
*
I take
the elevator up to the overlook area where two other Defgars
stand
One at
each end of the open corridor that runs the length of the Humans
gathering area
I turn to
my left and proceed along the corridor and kill the Defgar at that
end
Catching
the weapon and leaving it hidden behind the lump of
metal
And I
proceed towards the other
That is
standing totally still
Unmoving
Waiting
for an attack
Though it
does not see one coming
It has no
concern for its already dead fellow Defgar
I kill
that one too
No that
is wrong
I cannot
kill that which is not alive
Like a
Human is alive
With a
heart that beats and a brain that thinks
I cannot
kill something that does not do those things
I
permanently immobilise them
That’s
what I do
I deduce
that these Defgar machines are useless without the capacity for
communication and without the ability to deduce and
reason
High
Office made a huge error in their manufacture
The
Defgar stands in exactly the same position with its head down and I
relieve it of its weapon and place it behind
Out of
sight
So far
the daylight hours had gone well
And
throughout the rest of it
I move
through the facility
Permanently immobilising Defgars without
interruption
In a
single span of daylight I immobilise 20
And I
return to live transmissions
I will
attempt to immobilise another 20 after my wanderings of the dark
hours
*
During
the dark hours I travel down to the mouth of the hole in the
earth
Where I
know Humans reside
And I try
to make decisions on how to introduce those from the
surface
Those who
reside within the fortress
With the
free ones living in the hole
If
As
improbably as it might seem
If I free
the Humans from the fortress
I cannot
suddenly inflict 10.000 Humans on the sub-earth population for they
may not to be able to cope with such an influx
There may
not be enough food for example
Not
enough space
Somehow I
must introduce them gradually to give the sub earth Humans a chance
to adapt
Another
conclusion to the problem settles in my system
What if I
travel
Initially
With only
one Human from the fortress and that Human explains to the sub
earth Humans
Who it
is
Where it
is from
How it is
there in the hole
And ask
for me not to be exterminated
Explain
that I am a friend
I could
use Eves papa for this purpose if I communicated with him and if he
didn’t try to exterminate me
As I move
over the land through the dark hours a plan rises up in my systems
that seems as good as any I have so far configured
The very
chance that I could free any Humans was only 0.01% so any plans
that rose up were far from reality
Still
I had
permanently disabled 20 Defgars and it was a start
Over the
following three turns of light and darkness I hunted ever static
Defgar down
60 of
them
And I
shut them all down using a new method I should have used from the
very beginning
I moved
past Defgars and switched from my front optical devices to the 1 in
the rear of my cranium and I boomed the signal at them as I
passed
Machines
were not capable of understanding what was shutting them down and
as their heads slumped down I turned and caught the
weapons
Focussing
my optical devices on walls
Ceilings
And
suchlike
It meant
I didn’t have to keep closing my shutters or transmitting
recordings
I would
continue focusing on other views while I hid the weapon
And
Nothing
was heard from High Office
No orders
were received
No
instructions given
I was not
immediately exterminated
High
Office knew nothing of what was happening
Defgars
did not defend themselves and High Office would only activate them
in the event of an uprising or an attack from inside or outside the
facility
Neither
of which was happening
High
Office had never considered that a revolution may begin from inside
the fortress by one of its own productions
In
retrospect
They
probably should never have produced ObsRecs
They gave
us too much freedom to roam
Too much
time to form opinions and when they
Experimentally
Programmed two emotions into us
That
was
Probably
The
beginning of the end of the whole Machine world
How many
other ObsRecs were reacting to those emotions just as I
was
I thought
the number may not be small
But as I
immobilised the final Defgar a new emotion grew inside
me
One I had
never experienced before and it made me feel quite odd
I
searched for an explanation and I discovered an emotion that suited
the way I felt
The
emotion was called
*
Guilt
*
And I was
humbled by it when I immobilised the final Defgar
First of
all I leapt into the air and spun and somersaulted as I had seen
little Eve do on many occasions and I did it for some considerable
time
Feeling
most excited and exhilarated
But once
my initial emotion of excitement was over I stood in front of the
final totally immobilised and never to be resurrected
Defgar
And the
other emotion surged through me
Guilt
If I
succeeded in freeing the Humans these Defgars
Who have
remained at their places of duty for over 100 years would never be
used again
They
would remain in this massive building and they would slowly
rot
And I
felt momentary guilt until I remembered the horrific demise of
Little Eve and that I had made a promise to that Human
And had
set a course of duty that had to be seen through until completion
or until my own demise
I turned
my attention to the MengTechs
And once
I thought of them all guilt faded as mist does in the heat of the
morning solar orb and I could not wait to complete my task against
them
I moved
along to the passageway where I could perceive happenings in the
cages
And I ran
a recording of earlier movements for the benefit of High
Office
Three
Humans were strapped to the tables but no MengTechs had yet
appeared to experiment upon them
The
Humans
One of
middle age with an appendage between his legs
One
middle years without an appendage
And an
ancient one without
All had
expressions of total fear on their craniums and all turned their
optical devices towards me as I passed on the other side of the
glass wall
And they
must have been astounded to see that I was armed
I
hesitated for only 1 moment
For the
time was now
I lifted
the LazExt66 into my upper limbs from behind the Defgar that stood
in that corridor and I held it as the Defgar had
I
searched every contour of the weapon for I was going to use it
without training and if I got it wrong the MengTechs would pull me
limb from limb and I would be exterminated
I made a
decision to test the weapon
It had
certain settings on the barrel of it and I set this to 1 and turned
and fired it along the corridor behind me