Authors: Brenda Cooper
When she got to the station, she might abandon the whole damned revolution and go somewhere and paint or garden.
Her husband spoke, his voice cool and measured. “You should be seen with us. Communications will be turned back on in an hour.”
She stared at the approaching station, chewing on her lip. She had loved Vadim fiercely for years. She still loved him. But Chrystal had been human. Maybe all of the Next were human, and the slogan a lie.
Vadim clapped the lights on. “Move.”
“I don't want to be a spokesman for murder,” she said through clenched teeth.
“We need you, and you will come. If not, Brea will lock you up until you cannot hurt us.”
She swallowed, shivering again. Brea.
“Get dressed,” he said. “And comb your hair.” He left, leaving the lights on and the door open behind her.
She took in a deep breath, blinking at the lights. Maybe being locked up would be fine.
It wasn't an idle threat.
Neither Brea nor Darnal allowed for any breach of protocol, any weakness. Nor did they let Vadim or Nayli or any others with power ever forget who was truly in charge. And now, now they were stronger than ever. She snapped the lights off and stalked out of the room.
By the time she strode into the large command room twenty minutes later, Nayli had donned her black uniform, rebraided her dark hair, and strung bone and precious jewel beads into it. The braid hung down over a real leather vest that she'd worn into black butter, which hung in turn over high black boots that matched it. Leather and beads and bone. Her signature look. The only thing missing was the bright blue feather she added when she was going to a party.
If she was about to be locked up for being late or for having a heart, she was going to do it in style.
Vadim's eyes widened when he saw her, and for just a moment a sultry look crossed his face. Almost an invitation, a look that melted her in spite of the distance between them. Nayli and Vadim, the most forward faces of the Shining Revolution. Its spokespeople. Before she had time to react, he turned, hiding his face and looking at the screen. “We've got news now,” he said.
A man and woman with white-blond hair had been sitting at a small table. They stood, flanking her so closely she could smell them. She kept her voice carefully neutral. “Hello Brea. Hello Darnal.”
Brea spoke in a voice of ice. “We will be broadcasting our re-emergence story. You have twenty minutes to tell me if you will be a part of that.”
“How generous.” They only wanted her because she'd been stupid enough to stand on stage right hereâright here in this big room, which had been set up for a mock trial thenâand rip apart another being for the misfortune of having been stuffed into a robotic body against her will. She struggled to hide her disgust.
Would the news still be about her? How had the Diamond Deep voted in the end? And how had the Next reacted?
Vadim turned up the volume, directing her attention to the image on the screen. A planetary surface. A great wall enclosed a small city, and here and there robots walked down corridors or across open spaces. The view was from above, probably a news drone. “Is that Mammot?” she asked.
Vadim shook his head. “The ticker says it's near Manna Springs. That's on Lym.”
“They took over Lym?” An unexpected move. Bold.
Vadim opened a fresh window and started searching for information. “They have permission to be there.”
Brea grunted. “Stupid people.”
Darnal said, “Request the top stories from the last two weeks.”
“Working on it.”
“Start with us,” Brea said. “I want to see what they said about us.”
Nayli forced her muscles not to twitch as three screens around the room started replaying her murder of Chrystal. Then the news made a great deal of the disappearance of the Shining Revolution ship, the
Free Men
, although not for long. Apparently going quietly didn't draw notice.
The Diamond Deep had caved and decided to help the Next.
“What are our numbers?” Brea demanded.
Vadim paused the news stream and queried. He came back with, “They're great. Two million seven hundred have sworn themselves to us since we killed the robot.”
Nayli was willing to bet that was why the Deep had voted to be helpful. It had the worst social structure in all of the vast Glitteringâanybody could be anything on the Deep. She said nothing, though.
At least five of her twenty minutes were up.
“Four thousand two hundred and seven people have been approved to become robots.”
Darnal pursed his lips. “How many have done it?”
Vadim shook his head. “I think it takes a few months. So no one knows how many succeeded. They don't all, you know. Some die.”
Why would people risk so much? The terminally ill or the really old? Understandable. Maybe. But a lot of the applicants were under a hundred. Young.
“Look,” Brea said. “There are your robots.”
Brea's tone drove Nayli to snap, “They're not
mine
.”
On the screen, the two men, Yi and Jason, stood in a circle of light at the Lym spaceport. “When is this?” Nayli asked.
Vadim remained silent for a moment, reading snippets of news articles that scrolled up one side of the screen. They would be from whenever the video shot had happened. “A few days after the vote. Not long. The first two Next ships had just landed on Lym.”
They were walking toward an open hangar. Jason had long hair streaked with purple, broad shoulders, and a really attractive, ready smile. Yi's hair was an untamable mop, shoulder length and dark, emphasizing his slender, bony build. They looked too human to be robots. They even walked like real people.
The camera view shifted to just behind them instead of above them. Jason had a nice butt, which made her smile in a sort of horrified fashion, a little guilty. Her body apparently didn't know the difference between robots and men.
Of course, he was as real as Chrystal had been, and he was surely hurting because she had killed Chrystal. They had been a human family before they became a robot family.
She swallowed, hoping it hadn't been too hard on him.
The close-in view followed the robots toward a hangar. Bright light spilled from the door as it slowly rolled up and then limned two female forms in a halo of light.
The men stopped, hesitated.
All four of them ran toward each other, two women and two men.
Nayli squinted, uncertain what was happening.
The robots came together, linked arms, a group hug. She saw Jason's face, ecstatic with happiness.
She stiffened and swallowed, stepped toward the screen. The resolution was good enough that when the light was right she saw Chrystal's face, whole and happy.
She hadn't killed Chrystal after all.
It hadn't been possible to kill her.
She stared, unwilling to turn and face the others. Relief and anger and shame all raced through her, warm and cold and hot in turn.
When she had herself back under perfect control, Nayli turned to Brea and met her eyes. Brea's eyes were pale blue, like water but steely. They showed nothing more than patience. Waiting.
“I'm in,” she said. “I'm in.”
She glanced at the time. It had only taken fifteen minutes.
Damn.
CHAPTER FOUR
YI
Yi's new feet carried him around the vast track at least twice as fast as he could have ever run before, and much more smoothly. A piece of his attention focused on each bend of an ankle, on the angle of elbows, on the cant of his head. He heard the touch of every step on the smooth running surface, felt the wind that he himself created, and smelled the salt-sweet sea.
The subtleties of his design amazed him afresh, over and over. He did not hear his breath. He had no lungs. Even though it took power to run with such abandon, such love, movement gave him more power than it spent. Excess heat from running became more energy to help him run farther, made him feel better, lighter.
At this time of the afternoon, the silver walls of Nexity didn't cast a shadow across the town inside the walls the way they did in the morning. The western side of the town was open to the sea. The edges of bridgework could be seen, implying that the top of the Wall would become a large circle while the bottom of the city would remain open. A clear field extended out into the ocean, a force more than an actual barrier. He had never touched it, but he had been told that if he tried to walk through it he would feel it like a slight resistance but be able to pass. He had also been told it would solidify into a barrier for an enemy.
From time to time other robots ran past him, only a few even looking close to human. Nexity was already far more diverse than the ships he had been on. He'd met at least a hundred differently named individuals, and many of those were human and multiple, like the Colorimas or the Jhailings. He would grow to be like them, to be able to move from one body to another, to alter his own body, to copy himself into more than one individual entity.
There were more of him now, but that had been done by the Next, done to them. But surely the more advanced multiples made their own choices?
An expanse of sand spread out beyond the city at ground level. After the sand, sea. One and two foot waves with crashing curls of briny foam that smelled of salt and seaweed.
There was only the faintest shimmer to suggest the barrier existed. It was wholly unlike the wall that blocked his view of the spaceport and Manna Springs beyond it.
The shield, the city, and the easy transformation of matter all amazed him even more than his own body amazed him. The Next themselves had never been on a planet, except perhaps a few who had visited Lym before they became robots in the long ago, and a few who had paved the way.
Nexity rose and changed around him so fast he found it delightfully dizzying, a constant source of amazement. He had seen this very spotâemptyâonly months before when he flew down with Charlie and Jason.
The rhythmic thump of footsteps came up behind him. Yi slowed to allow Yi Two to catch up with him. Their long lanky bodies matched perfectly, the mirror image no longer a shocking surprise. Chrystal and Katherine had convinced the dual Yis and the dual Jasons that they should identify themselves with color. So Yi Two wore blues and greens and blacks, and Yi One wore yellows and purples and reds.
Yi Two looked disturbed.
Something's wrong,
Yi observed. He and his mirror almost never used audible conversation between each other anymore. Silent sharing felt more complete, more nuanced.
Katherine has been listening to media around Manna Springs. She's detected an attack starting there. Everyone who was part of negotiating the deal with the Next is being threatened.
That means Charlie.
As they rounded the corner, they began running along the inside of the Wall. A pair of bigger robots who had long ago abandoned human form raced past them, and for a moment Yi sensed their joy in movement, marveling again that life as a machine was about movement and exploration, about joy and learning. After the bigger machines rounded the next corner, Yi asked,
Is Charlie okay?
We don't know where he is. Or Nona. Manny's home is surrounded, and there have been reports of fighting at Ice Fall Valley.
Yi felt fear for his friends and the weight of obligation. Before he ever walked on the surface of Lym, he had promised to tell Charlie of dangers. They had been speaking of dangers
from
the Next, and this was, at best, caused
by
the Next's arrival. Still, he owed Charlie.
There were thousands of people on Lym, and more coming now with the influx of Next. Many of them hated the Next and might kill any of them on sight. Others had been kind. He had met Charlie's uncle Manny, who ran the town and by default the planet. He had never been to his house, so he couldn't calculate its defensibility. But he had been watching when he flew into the spaceport with Charlie, and the town was a sprawling thing with open spaces and wide streets. The architecture varied widely, built up over hundreds of years, all of it natural and fragile. It would be very hard to defend.
Manny's troubles were real.
If Charlie's at Wilding Station, he's probably safe.
It was on Goland across the sea from Gyr Island, far enough away for safety and a good vantage point where Charlie would be able to see any ships coming in. The Next had access to the spaceport's records, so Yi requested information and continued.
Ice Fall Valley is dangerous. The caves are safe; they have doors. But the gleaners aren't warriors, not as far as I know.
As if he'd waited for Yi to come to the same conclusion, and known when he did, Yi Two suggested,
We should stop and ask a Jhailing
.
Yes. Soon
.
Yi Two smiled.
Choose the place.