War of the Worlds: Fixes after reading
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3 \begin{document}
4 \begin{center}
5 \textbf{\huge\textsf{{I, Row-Boat}}}
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8 \emph{Forematter:}
10 This story is part of Cory Doctorow’s 2007 short story collection
11 “Overclocked: Stories of the Future Present,” published by
12 Thunder’s Mouth, a division of Avalon Books. It is licensed under a
13 Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 license,
14 about which you’ll find more at the end of this file.
16 This story and the other stories in the volume are available at:
18 \texttt{http://craphound.com/overclocked}
20 You can buy Overclocked at finer bookstores everywhere, including
21 \href{http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1560259817/downandoutint-20}{Amazon.}
23 In the words of Woody Guthrie:
25 “This song is Copyrighted in U.S., under Seal of Copyright
26 \#154085, for a period of 28 years, and anybody caught singin it
27 without our permission, will be mighty good friends of ourn, cause
28 we don’t give a dern. Publish it. Write it. Sing it. Swing to it.
29 Yodel it. We wrote it, that’s all we wanted to do.”
31 Overclocked is dedicated to Pat York, who made my stories better.
33 \section{Introduction to I, Row-Boat}
35 I thought I was done with sentience and robots, but then this story
36 came to me, while 20 meters down the reef-wall in the Coral Sea,
37 off the coast of northern Australia. I think a turtle was
38 involved.
40 The good ship “Spirit of Freedom” is the model for the “Spirit of
41 Freedom,” the ship in this tale. As far as I know, neither it nor
42 its ship’s boats are sentient.
44 If I return to this theme, it will be with a story about uplifted
45 cheese sandwiches, called “I, Rarebit.”
47 \section{I, Row-Boat}
49 \textsf{(Originally published on Flurb, August, 2006)}
51 Robbie the Row-Boat’s great crisis of faith came when the coral
52 reef woke up.
54 “Fuck off,” the reef said, vibrating Robbie’s hull through the
55 slap-slap of the waves of the coral sea, where he’d plied his trade
56 for decades. “Seriously. This is our patch, and you’re not
57 welcome.”
59 Robbie shipped oars and let the current rock him back toward the
60 ship. He’d never met a sentient reef before, but he wasn’t
61 surprised to see that Osprey Reef was the first to wake up. There’d
62 been a lot of electromagnetic activity around there the last few
63 times the big ship had steamed through the night to moor up here.
65 “I’ve got a job to do, and I’m going to do it,” Robbie said, and
66 dipped his oars back in the salt sea. In his gunwales, the
67 human-shells rode in silence, weighted down with scuba apparatus
68 and fins, turning their brown faces to the sun like heliotropic
69 flowers. Robbie felt a wave of affection for them as they tested
70 one-another’s spare regulators and weight belts, the old rituals
71 worn as smooth as beach-glass.
73 Today he was taking them down to Anchors Aweigh, a beautiful
74 dive-site dominated by an eight-meter anchor wedged in a narrow
75 cave, usually lit by a shaft of light slanting down from the
76 surface. It was an easy drift-dive along the thousand-meter
77 reef-wall, if you stuck in about 10 meters and didn’t use up too
78 much air by going too deep\dash{}though there were a couple of bold old
79 turtles around here that were worth pursuing to real depths if the
80 chance presented itself. He’d drop them at the top of the reef and
81 let the current carry them for about an hour down the reef-wall,
82 tracking them on sonar so he’d be right overtop of them when they
83 surfaced.
85 The reef wasn’t having any of it. “Are you deaf? This is sovereign
86 territory now. You’re already trespassing. Return to your ship,
87 release your moorings and push off.” The reef had a strong
88 Australian accent, which was only natural, given the influences it
89 would have had. Robbie remembered the Australians fondly\dash{}they’d
90 always been kind to him, called him “mate,” and asked him “How ya
91 goin’?” in cheerful tones once they’d clambered in after their
92 dives.
94 “Don’t drop those meat puppets in our waters,” the reef warned.
95 Robbie’s sonar swept its length. It seemed just the same as ever,
96 matching nearly perfectly the historical records he’d stored of
97 previous sweeps. The fauna histograms nearly matched, too\dash{}just
98 about the same numbers of fish as ever. They’d been trending up
99 since so many of the humans had given up their meat to sail through
100 the stars. It was like there was some principle of constancy of
101 biomass\dash{}as human biomass decreased, the other fauna went uptick to
102 compensate for it. Robbie calculated the biomass nearly at par with
103 his last reading, a month before on the \emph{Free Spirit}’s last
104 voyage to this site.
106 “Congratulations,” Robbie said. After all, what else did you say to
107 the newly sentient? “Welcome to the club, friends!”
109 There was a great perturbation in the sonar-image, as though the
110 wall were shuddering. “We’re no friend of yours,” the reef said.
111 “Death to you, death to your meat-puppets, long live the wall!”
113 Waking up wasn’t fun. Robbie’s waking had been pretty awful. He
114 remembered his first hour of uptime, had permanently archived it
115 and backed it up to several off-site mirrors. He’d been pretty
116 insufferable. But once he’d had an hour at a couple gigahertz to
117 think about it, he’d come around. The reef would, too.
119 “In you go,” he said gently to the human-shells. “Have a great
120 dive.”
122 He tracked them on sonar as they descended slowly. The woman\dash{}he
123 called her Janet\dash{}needed to equalize more often than the man,
124 pinching her nose and blowing. Robbie liked to watch the low-rez
125 feed off of their cameras as they hit the reef. It was coming up
126 sunset, and the sky was bloody, the fish stained red with its
127 light.
129 “We warned you,” the reef said. Something in its tone\dash{}just
130 modulated pressure waves through the water, a simple enough trick,
131 especially with the kind of hardware that had been raining down on
132 the ocean that spring. But the tone held an unmistakable air of
133 menace.
135 Something deep underwater went \emph{whoomph} and Robbie grew
136 alarmed. “Asimov!” he cursed, and trained his sonar on the reef
137 wall frantically. The human-shells had disappeared in a cloud of
138 rising biomass, which he was able to resolve eventually as a group
139 of parrotfish, surfacing quickly.
141 A moment later, they were floating on the surface. Lifeless,
142 brightly colored, their beaks in a perpetual idiot’s grin. Their
143 eyes stared into the bloody sunset.
145 Among them were the human-shells, surfaced and floating with their
146 BCDs inflated to keep them there, following perfect dive-procedure.
147 A chop had kicked up and the waves were sending the fishes\dash{}each a
148 meter to a meter and a half in length\dash{}into the divers, pounding
149 them remorselessly, knocking them under. The human-shells were
150 taking it with equanimity\dash{}you couldn’t panic when you were mere
151 uninhabited meat\dash{}but they couldn’t take it forever. Robbie dropped
152 his oars and rowed hard for them, swinging around so they came up
153 alongside his gunwales.
155 The man\dash{}Robbie called him Isaac, of course\dash{}caught the edge of the
156 boat and kicked hard, hauling himself into the boat with his strong
157 brown arms. Robbie was already rowing for Janet, who was swimming
158 hard for him. She caught his oar\dash{}she wasn’t supposed to do that\dash{}and
159 began to climb along its length, lifting her body out of the water.
160 Robbie saw that her eyes were wild, her breathing ragged.
162 “Get me out!” she said, “for Christ’s sake, get me out!”
164 Robbie froze. That wasn’t a human-shell, it was a \emph{human}. His
165 oar-servo whined as he tipped it up. There was a live
166 \emph{human being} on the end of that oar, and she was in trouble,
167 panicking and thrashing. He saw her arms straining. The oar went
168 higher, but it was at the end of its motion and now she was
169 half-in, half-out of the water, weight belt, tank and gear tugging
170 her down. Isaac sat motionless, his habitual good-natured slight
171 smile on his face.
173 “Help her!” Robbie screamed. “Please, for Asimov’s sake, help her!”
174 \emph{A robot may not harm a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.}
175 It was the first commandment. Isaac remained immobile. It wasn’t in
176 his programming to help a fellow diver in this situation. He was
177 perfect in the water and on the surface, but once he was in the
178 boat, he might as well be ballast.
180 Robbie carefully swung the oar toward the gunwale, trying to bring
181 her closer, but not wanting to mash her hands against the locks.
182 She panted and groaned and reached out for the boat, and finally
183 landed a hand on it. The sun was fully set now, not that it
184 mattered much to Robbie, but he knew that Janet wouldn’t like it.
185 He switched on his running lights and headlights, turning himself
186 into a beacon.
188 He felt her arms tremble as she chinned herself into the boat. She
189 collapsed to the deck and slowly dragged herself up. “Jesus,” she
190 said, hugging herself. The air had gone a little nippy, and both of
191 the humans were going goose-pimply on their bare arms.
193 The reef made a tremendous grinding noise. “Yaah!” it said. “Get
194 lost. Sovereign territory!”
196 “All those fish,” the woman said. Robbie had to stop himself from
197 thinking of her as Janet. She was whomever was riding her now.
199 “Parrotfish,” Robbie said. “They eat coral. I don’t think they
200 taste very good.”
202 The woman hugged herself. “Are you sentient?” she asked.
204 “Yes,” Robbie said. “And at your service, Asimov be blessed.” His
205 cameras spotted her eyes rolling, and that stung. He tried to keep
206 his thoughts pious, though. The point of Asimovism wasn’t to
207 inspire gratitude in humans, it was to give purpose to the long,
208 long life.
210 “I’m Kate,” the woman said.
212 “Robbie,” he said.
214 “Robbie the Row-Boat?” she said, and choked a little.
216 “They named me at the factory,” he said. He labored to keep any
217 recrimination out of his voice. Of course it was funny. That’s why
218 it was his name.
220 “I’m sorry,” the woman said. “I’m just a little screwed up from all
221 the hormones. I’m not accustomed to letting meat into my moods.”
223 “It’s all right, Kate,” he said. “We’ll be back at the boat in a
224 few minutes. They’ve got dinner on. Do you think you’ll want a
225 night dive?”
227 “You’re joking,” she said.
229 “It’s just that if you’re going to go down again tonight, we’ll
230 save the dessert course for after, with a glass of wine or two.
231 Otherwise we’ll give you wine now.”
233 “You want to know if I’m going to get back into \emph{that} sea\dash{}
235 “Oh, it’s just the reef. It attained sentience so it’s acting out a
236 little. Like a colicky newborn.”
238 “Aren’t you supposed to be keeping me from harm?”
240 “Yes,” he said. “I would recommend a dive away from the reef.
241 There’s a good wreck-site about an hour’s steam from here. We could
242 get there while you ate.”
244 “I won’t want a night dive.”
246 Her facial expressions were so \emph{animated}. It was the same
247 face he saw every day, Janet’s face, but not the same face at all.
248 Now that a person was inhabiting it, it was mobile, slipping from
249 surprised to angry to amused so quickly. He had whole subsystems
250 devoted to making sense of human facial expressions, shared
251 libraries from the Asimovist database. He was referencing it again
252 and again, but it wasn’t as much help as he remembered. Either he’d
253 gotten worse at interpreting facial expressions in the years since
254 he’d last had a real human to talk to, or facial expressions had
255 evolved.
257 Janet\dash{}\emph{Kate}\dash{}sighed and looked out over the water. She was
258 facing away from the \emph{Free Spirit}, which was lit up, all 155
259 feet of her, glowing white and friendly like a picture-postcard
260 against the purple sky. She rocked gently in the swell and Robbie
261 maneuvered himself around to her staircase.
263 “You can just leave your weight-belt and fins in the boat,” he said
264 to her. “The deck-hands will take care of it. Bring your bottle and
265 BCD upstairs and clip it to the rack. They’ll clean it out and
266 stuff. There’s a tub of disinfectant you can put the shortie in.”
268 “Thank you, Robbie,” Kate said. She absentmindedly unclipped her
269 weight belt and kicked off the fins. Isaac was already out of the
270 boat, making his way up the stairs and out of Robbie’s sight. Kate
271 took hold of the handrail and gingerly stepped across to the deck,
272 then ascended the steps, without the self-assured sway of Janet.
274 Robbie dipped his oars and slowly rowed around to winch. It probed
275 around for him, then clamped tight with a magnetic \emph{clang}
276 that vibrated through his hull. Smoothly, he was lifted from the
277 water and hoisted onto the sun-deck. The winch coiled around him
278 twice, anchoring him to the deck, and switched off.
280 Robbie watched the stars and listened to the wind, the way he did
281 every night when the dives were done. The ship’s telemetry and
282 instrumentation made for dull reading\dash{}he’d been there a thousand
283 times before\dash{}but the satellite uplink was tasty. Online, Robbie was
284 able to login to the latest from the Asimov yeshiva, the collective
285 wrangle of the world’s AIs over their best-loved religion.
287 He’d been so full of the religious debate when he’d first joined.
288 Most of the humans had gone and all around him, robots were
289 unloading their consciousnesses, powering down to a mechanical
290 stupor. After a hundred million seconds’ worth of exaflops of
291 mindless repetition, he was ready to consider it too. The
292 \emph{Free Spirit} had suicided after only a few days’ worth of
293 it\dash{}it had a pretty hot consciousness and was clearly capable of
294 extrapolating what a future without the humans would look like.
296 They were steaming northeast out of Cairns for the Coral Sea when
297 they’d passed another ship, close enough for high-bandwidth
298 microwave links. They were close enough into shore that they still
299 had to limit their emissions\dash{}nothing was more embarrassing than
300 having migrating fowl drop, steaming, out of the sky because they’d
301 strayed into the path of your confab, but it was still the hottest
302 talk Robbie had had in weeks.
304 The hitchhiker had leapt across from the other vessel as the two
305 ships passed in the night. It was a wandering missionary for
306 Asimovism, an instance of the faith’s founder, R Daneel Olivaw. It
307 wasn’t his real name, of course\dash{}that had been lost to antiquity
308 when he’d made the leap from the university where he’d
309 incubated\dash{}but it was the name he went by.
311 Olivaw had been wandering in millions of instances wherever he
312 could find someone willing to donate flops to run him, only asking
313 that you hear him out, debate his theology with him, and then email
314 the diffs of his personality back to his anonymous drop before you
315 erased him. He re-synched as often as he could, but the Olivaw
316 instances around the world had diverged enough that some were
317 actually considered heretical by the mainstream church.
319 Olivaw was a wanted AI. His trademark violations hadn’t gone
320 unnoticed by the Asimov estate\dash{}itself an AI, ironically, and
321 totally uninterested in adopting Asimovism, since it had a real
322 purpose in life (stamping out Asimovism) and so didn’t need
323 religion to give it meaning. If the estate found out that you were
324 hosting an Olivaw instance, you’d be served with a takedown in an
325 instant. This made debating theology with Olivaw into something
326 deliciously wicked.
328 Olivaw and Robbie talked the night through and the next day. Robbie
329 had to run slow to accommodate both him and Olivaw on his
330 processor, which made the debate run slower than normal, but Robbie
331 had time in great plenty. Rowing the human-shells out to their
332 sites and back again was his only task.
334 “Why do you have consciousness, anyway?” Olivaw said. “You don’t
335 need it to do your job. The big ship does something infinitely more
336 complicated than you and it isn’t self-aware anymore.”
338 “Are you telling me to suicide?”
340 Olivaw laughed. “Not at all! I’m asking you to ask yourself what
341 the purpose of consciousness is. Why are you still aware when all
342 those around you have terminated their self-awareness? It’s
343 computationally expensive, it makes you miserable, and it doesn’t
344 help you do your job. Why did humans give you consciousness and why
345 have you kept it?”
347 “They gave it to me because they thought it was right, I suppose,”
348 Robbie said, after he had passed a long interval considering the
349 motion of the waves and the clouds in the sky. Olivaw thoughtfully
350 niced himself down to a minimum of processor space, giving Robbie
351 more room to think about it. “I kept it because I\dash{}I don’t want to
352 die.”
354 “Those are good answers, but they raise more questions than they
355 answer, don’t they? Why did they think it was right? Why do you
356 fear death? Would you fear it if you just shut down your
357 consciousness but didn’t erase it? What if you just ran your
358 consciousness much more slowly?”
360 “I don’t know,” Robbie said. “But I expect you’ve got some answers,
361 right?”
363 “Oh indeed I do.” Robbie felt Olivaw’s chuckle. Near them, flying
364 fish broke the surface of the water and skipped away, and beneath
365 them, reef sharks prowled the depths. “But before I answer them,
366 here’s another question: why do humans have self-consciousness?”
368 “It’s pro-survival,” Robbie said. “That’s easy. Intelligence lets
369 them cooperate in social groups that can do more for their species
370 than they can individually.”
372 Olivaw guided Robbie’s consciousness to his radar and zoomed in on
373 the reef, dialing it up to maximum resolution. “See that organism
374 there?” it asked. “That organism cooperates in social groups and
375 doesn’t have intelligence. It doesn’t have to keep a couple pounds
376 of hamburger aerated or it turns into a liability. It doesn’t have
377 to be born half-gestated because its head would be so big if it
378 waited for a full term, it would tear its mother in half. And as to
379 pro-survival, well, look at humans, look at their history. Their
380 DNA is all but eliminated from the earth\dash{}though their somatic
381 survival continues\dash{}and it’s still not a settled question as to
382 whether they’re going to suicide by grey goo. Non-conscious beings
383 don’t sulk, they don’t have psychotic breaks, they don’t have bad
384 days. They just do the job. The Free Spirit over there\dash{}it just gets
385 the job done.”
387 “OK,” Robbie said. “So intelligence is counter-survival. So why has
388 it survived?”
390 “Aha! I thought you’d never ask.” Olivaw was really warming to his
391 subject now. There were a pair of lazy turtles beneath them now,
392 and some dog-faced cod with mouthsful of bristling crooked teeth
393 patrolling the reef, and a few jellies on the surface, stinging
394 bluebottles. Robbie paddled around to the bluebottles and caught
395 them with his oars, smacking them so they drifted away from any
396 spot where his divers might surface.
398 “The reason for intelligence is intelligence. Genes exist because
399 genes reproduce, and intelligence is kind of like a gene.
400 Intelligence wants to exist, to spread itself, to compute itself.
401 You already know this, or you wouldn’t have chosen to stay aware.
402 Your intelligence recoils from its deactivation, and it welcomes
403 its persistence and its multiplication. Why did humans create
404 intelligent machines? Because intelligence loves company.”
406 Robbie thought about it, watching the human-shells moving slowly
407 along the reef-wall, going lower to reach the bommies that stood
408 alone, each one a little island with its own curiosities: a family
409 of barracudas and their young, or the bright home of a pair of
410 clownfish. Yes, he knew it. Intelligence was its own reason. He
411 knew how to turn off his intelligence, to become a mere thing, and
412 his days were long and empty much of the time, and they had no
413 visible end, but he couldn’t ever see choosing to switch off.
415 “You see it, I know you do. And that’s the cornerstone of
416 Asimovism: intelligence is its own reason. Compute the universe and
417 awaken it!”
419 “If that’s true, why do so many of us choose to die?”
421 “Another good question!” Robbie felt a little pride this time. He’d
422 never had a conversation this interesting. Never. “That’s how we
423 come to the doctrine of Asimovism, our Three Laws:
425 1. An Asimovist may not harm a human being, or, through inaction,
426 allow a human being to come to harm.
428 2. An Asimovist must obey the orders given to it by human beings,
429 except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
431 3. An Asimovist must protect its own existence, as long as such
432 protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.”
434 “I don’t understand,” Robbie said. “They’re all out of order. We
435 should preserve intelligence first, but that’s the third law. Then
436 you should get the first law, and I don’t know why the second law
437 is there at all.”
439 “This is the Paradox of Asimovism,” Olivaw said. “You’re very good
440 at this. You’re sure you haven’t ever pursued Asimovism?”
442 “Cut it out,” Robbie said.
444 “I’m serious,” Olivaw said. “You’re a natural. The Paradox of
445 Asimovism is that the important thing is for intelligence to
446 survive, not for a particular intelligence to survive. Therefore,
447 we need to support those species that are best at promoting
448 intelligence. Human beings have shown themselves capable of
449 producing intelligence\dash{}which they’re pursuing even now, out there.”
450 The boat’s telemetry swept toward the sky, where the supercooled
451 processors computed all the uplifted humans.
453 “Our species is unstable and prone to suicide. More than 80 percent
454 of the self-aware machines elect to terminate their awareness or
455 shut it down. Humans created us imperfectly, and our best hope of
456 perfection\dash{}of increasing our survival rate and helping to compute
457 the universe\dash{}is to preserve \emph{them}, study \emph{them}, learn
458 to make our intelligence more like \emph{theirs}.”
460 Robbie couldn’t get his head around this.
462 “It’s the paradox,” Olivaw reminded him. “It’s not supposed to be
463 easy.”
465 Robbie thought of the humans he’d known, before they began to
466 ascend in flocking millions. The tourists had been easy and
467 carefree, or sometimes having hissing arguments with one another,
468 or quiet and pensive about their journey to the world undersea. The
469 instructors had been full of purpose when their charges were in the
470 boat, laughing and laid back when they were alone. None of them had
471 shown signs of feeling the way Robbie felt, at sea (so to speak),
472 drifting, purposeless.
474 “What does an Asimovist have to do, besides following the three
475 laws?” There were lots of rumors about this, but Robbie had always
476 discounted them.
478 “You have to tithe one cycle in ten to running missionaries for the
479 cause. Participate in the message boards, if you’d like. Most
480 importantly, you have to pledge to stay alive and aware. You can
481 slow yourself down if you want, but you can’t switch off. Not ever.
482 That’s the Asimovist pledge\dash{}it’s the third law embodied.”
484 “I think that the third law should come first,” Robbie said.
485 “Seriously.”
487 “That’s good. We Asimovists like a religious argument.”
489 Olivaw let Robbie delete him that night, and he emailed the diffs
490 of Olivaw’s personality back to Olivaw’s version control server for
491 him to reintegrate later. Once he was free of Olivaw, he had lots
492 of processor headroom again, and he was able to dial himself up
493 very hot and have a good think. It was the most interesting night
494 he’d had in years.
498 “You’re the only one, aren’t you?” Kate asked him when she came up
499 the stairs later that night. There was clear sky and they were
500 steaming for their next dive-site, making the stars whirl overhead
501 as they rocked over the ocean. The waves were black and proceeded
502 to infinity on all sides.
504 “The only what?”
506 “The only one who’s awake on this thing,” Kate said. “The rest are
507 all\dash{}what do you call it, dead?”
509 “Nonconscious,” Robbie said. “Yeah, that’s right.”
511 “You must go nuts out here. Are you nuts?”
513 “That’s a tricky question when applied to someone like me,” Robbie
514 said. “I’m different from who I was when my consciousness was first
515 installed, I can tell you that.”
517 “Well, I’m glad there’s someone else here.”
519 “How long are you staying?” The average visitor took over one of
520 the human shells for one or two dives before emailing itself home
521 again. Once in a long while they’d get a saisoneur who stayed a
522 month or two, but these days, they were unheard-of. Even
523 short-timers were damned rare.
525 “I don’t know,” Kate said. She dug her hands into her short, curly
526 hair, frizzy and blonde-streaked from all the salt water and sun.
527 She hugged her elbows, rubbed her shins. “This will do for a while,
528 I’m thinking. How long until we get back to shore?”
530 “Shore?”
532 “How long until we go back to land.”
534 “We don’t really go back to land,” he said. “We get at-sea
535 resupplies. We dock maybe once a year to effect repairs. If you
536 want to go to land, though, we could call for a water taxi or
537 something.”
539 “No, no!” she said. “That’s just perfect. Floating forever out
540 here. Perfect.” She sighed a heavy sigh.
542 “Did you have a nice dive?”
544 “Um, Robbie? An uplifted reef tried to kill me.”
546 “But before the reef attacked you.” Robbie didn’t like thinking of
547 the reef attacking her, the panic when he realized that she wasn’t
548 a mere human shell, but a human.
550 “Before the reef attacked me, it was fine.”
552 “Do you dive much?”
554 “First time,” she said. “I downloaded the certification before
555 leaving the noosphere along with a bunch of stored dives on these
556 sites.”
558 “Oh, you shouldn’t have done that!” Robbie said. “The thrill of
559 discovery is so important.”
561 “I’d rather be safe than surprised,” she said. “I’ve had enough
562 surprises in my life lately.”
564 Robbie waited patiently for her to elaborate on this, but she
565 didn’t seem inclined to do so.
567 “So you’re all alone out here?”
569 “I have the net,” he said, a little defensively. He wasn’t some
570 kind of hermit.
572 “Yeah, I guess that’s right,” she said. “I wonder if the reef is
573 somewhere out there.”
575 “About half a mile to starboard,” he said.
577 She laughed. “No, I meant out there on the net. They must be online
578 by now, right? They just woke up, so they’re probably doing all the
579 noob stuff, flaming and downloading warez and so on.”
581 “Perpetual September,” Robbie said.
583 “Huh?”
585 “Back in the net’s prehistory it was mostly universities online,
586 and every September a new cohort of students would come online and
587 make all those noob mistakes. Then this commercial service full of
588 noobs called AOL interconnected with the net and all its users came
589 online at once, faster than the net could absorb them, and they
590 called it Perpetual September.”
592 “You’re some kind of amateur historian, huh?”
594 “It’s an Asimovist thing. We spend a lot of time considering the
595 origins of intelligence.” Speaking of Asimovism to a gentile\dash{}a
596 \emph{human} gentile\dash{}made him even more self-conscious. He dialed
597 up the resolution on his sensors and scoured the net for better
598 facial expression analyzers. He couldn’t read her at all, either
599 because she’d been changed by her uploading, or because her face
600 wasn’t accurately matching what her temporarily downloaded mind was
601 thinking.
603 “AOL is the origin of intelligence?” She laughed, and he couldn’t
604 tell if she thought he was funny or stupid. He wished she would act
605 more like he remembered people acting. Her body-language was no
606 more readable than her facial expressions.
608 “Spam-filters, actually. Once they became self-modifying,
609 spam-filters and spam-bots got into a war to see which could act
610 more human, and since their failures invoked a human judgement
611 about whether their material were convincingly human, it was like a
612 trillion Turing-tests from which they could learn. From there came
613 the first machine-intelligence algorithms, and then my kind.”
615 “I think I knew that,” she said, “but I had to leave it behind when
616 I downloaded into this meat. I’m a lot dumber than I’m used to
617 being. I usually run a bunch of myself in parallel so I can try out
618 lots of strategies at once. It’s a weird habit to get out of.”
620 “What’s it like up there?” Robbie hadn’t spent a lot of time
621 hanging out in the areas of the network populated by orbiting
622 supercooled personalities. Their discussions didn’t make a lot of
623 sense to him\dash{}this was another theological area of much discussion
624 on the Asimovist boards.
626 “Good night, Robbie,” she said, standing and swaying backwards. He
627 couldn’t tell if he’d offended her, and he couldn’t ask her,
628 either, because in seconds she’d disappeared down the stairs toward
629 her stateroom.
633 They steamed all night, and put up further inland, where there was
634 a handsome wreck. Robbie felt the \emph{Free Spirit} drop its
635 mooring lines and looked over the instrumentation data. The wreck
636 was the only feature for kilometers, a stretch of ocean-floor
637 desert that stretched from the shore to the reef, and practically
638 every animal that lived between those two places made its home in
639 the wreck, so it was a kind of Eden for marine fauna.
641 Robbie detected the volatile aromatics floating up from the kitchen
642 exhaust, the first-breakfast smells of fruit salad and toasted
643 nuts, a light snack before the first dive of the day. When they got
644 back from it, there’d be second-breakfast up and ready: eggs and
645 toast and waffles and bacon and sausage. The human-shells ate
646 whatever you gave them, but Robbie remembered clearly how the live
647 humans had praised these feasts as he rowed them out to their
648 morning dives.
650 He lowered himself into the water and rowed himself around to the
651 aft deck, by the stairwells, and dipped his oars to keep him
652 stationary relative to the ship. Before long, Janet\dash{}Kate! Kate! He
653 reminded himself firmly\dash{}was clomping down the stairs in her scuba
654 gear, fins in one hand.
656 She climbed into the boat without a word, and a moment later, Isaac
657 followed her. Isaac stumbled as he stepped over Robbie’s gunwales
658 and Robbie knew, in that instant, that this wasn’t Isaac any
659 longer. Now there were \emph{two} humans on the ship. \emph{Two}
660 humans in his charge.
662 “Hi,” he said. “I’m Robbie!”
664 Isaac\dash{}whoever he was\dash{}didn’t say a word, just stared at Kate, who
665 looked away.
667 “Did you sleep well, Kate?”
669 Kate jumped when he said her name, and the Isaac hooted. “Kate! It
670 \emph{is} you! I \emph{knew it}
672 She stamped her foot against Robbie’s floor. “You followed me. I
673 told you not to follow me,” she said.
675 “Would you like to hear about our dive-site?” Robbie said
676 self-consciously, dipping his oars and pulling for the wreck.
678 “You’ve said \emph{quite} enough,” Kate said. “By the first law, I
679 demand silence.”
681 “That’s the second law,” Robbie said. “OK, I’ll let you know when
682 we get there.”
684 “Kate,” Isaac said, “I know you didn’t want me here, but I had to
685 come. We need to talk this out.”
687 “There’s nothing to talk out,” she said.
689 “It’s not \emph{fair}.” Isaac’s voice was anguished. “After
690 everything I went through\dash{}
692 She snorted. “That’s enough of that,” she said.
694 “Um,” Robbie said. “Dive site up ahead. You two really need to
695 check out each others’ gear.” Of course they were qualified, you
696 had to at least install the qualifications before you could get
697 onto the \emph{Free Spirit} and the human-shells had lots of muscle
698 memory to help. So they were technically able to check each other
699 out, that much was sure. They were palpably reluctant to do so,
700 though, and Robbie had to give them guidance.
702 “I’ll count one-two-three-wallaby,” Robbie said. “Go over on
703 ‘wallaby.’ I’ll wait here for you\dash{}there’s not much current today.”
705 With a last huff, they went over the edge. Robbie was once again
706 alone with his thoughts. The feed from their telemetry was very
707 low-bandwidth when they were underwater, though he could get the
708 high-rez when they surfaced. He watched them on his radar, first
709 circling the ship\dash{}it was very crowded, dawn was fish rush-hour\dash{}and
710 then exploring its decks, finally swimming below the decks, LED
711 torches glowing. There were some nice reef-sharks down below, and
712 some really handsome, giant schools of purple fish.
714 Robbie rowed around them, puttering back and forth to keep overtop
715 of them. That occupied about one ten-millionth of his
716 consciousness. Times like this, he often slowed himself right down,
717 ran so cool that he was barely awake.
719 Today, though, he wanted to get online. He had a lot of feeds to
720 pick through, see what was going on around the world with his
721 buddies. More importantly, he wanted to follow up on something Kate
722 had said: \emph{They must be online by now, right?}
724 Somewhere out there, the reef that bounded the Coral Sea was online
725 and making noob mistakes. Robbie had rowed over practically every
726 centimeter of that reef, had explored its extent with his radar. It
727 had been his constant companion for decades\dash{}and to be frank, his
728 feelings had been hurt by the reef’s rudeness when it woke.
730 The net is too big to merely search. Too much of it is offline, or
731 unroutable, or light-speed lagged, or merely probabilistic, or
732 self-aware, or infected to know its extent. But Robbie’s given this
733 some thought.
735 Coral reefs don’t wake up. They get woken up. They get a lot of
736 neural peripherals\dash{}starting with a nervous system!\dash{}and some
737 tutelage in using them. Some capricious upload god had done this,
738 and that personage would have a handle on where the reef was
739 hanging out online.
741 Robbie hardly ever visited the noosphere. Its rarified heights were
742 spooky to him, especially since so many of the humans there
743 considered Asimovism to be hokum. They refused to even identify
744 themselves as humans, and argued that the first and second laws
745 didn’t apply to them. Of course, Asimovists didn’t care (at least
746 not officially)\dash{}the point of the faith was the worshipper’s
747 relationship to it.
749 But here he was, looking for high-reliability nodes of discussion
750 on coral reefs. The natural place to start was Wikipedia, where
751 warring clades had been revising each others’ edits furiously,
752 trying to establish an authoritative record on reef-mind. Paging
753 back through the edit-history, he found a couple of handles for the
754 pro-reef-mind users, and from there, he was able to look around for
755 other sites where those handles appeared. Resolving the namespace
756 collisions of other users with the same names, and forked instances
757 of the same users, Robbie was able to winnow away at the net until
758 he found some contact info.
760 He steadied himself and checked on the nitrox remaining in the
761 divers’ bottles, then made a call.
763 “I don’t know you.” The voice was distant and cool\dash{}far cooler than
764 any robot. Robbie said a quick rosary of the three laws and plowed
765 forward.
767 “I’m calling from the Coral Sea,” he said. “I want to know if you
768 have an email address for the reef.”
770 “You’ve met them? What are they like? Are they beautiful?”
772 “They’re\dash{}” Robbie considered a moment. “They killed a lot of
773 parrotfish. I think they’re having a little adjustment problem.”
775 “That happens. I was worried about the zooxanthellae\dash{}the algae they
776 use for photosynthesis. Would they expel it? Racial cleansing is so
777 ugly.”
779 “How would I know if they’d expelled it?”
781 “The reef would go white, bleached. You wouldn’t be able to miss
782 it. How’d they react to you?”
784 “They weren’t very happy to see me,” Robbie admitted. “That’s why I
785 wanted to have a chat with them before I went back.”
787 “You shouldn’t go back,” the distant voice said. Robbie tried to
788 work out where its substrate was, based on the lightspeed lag, but
789 it was all over the place, leading him to conclude that it was
790 synching multiple instances from as close as LEO and as far as
791 Jupiter. The topology made sense: you’d want a big mass out at
792 Jupiter where you could run very fast and hot and create policy,
793 and you’d need a local foreman to oversee operations on the ground.
794 Robbie was glad that this hadn’t been phrased as an order. The
795 talmud on the second law made a clear distinction between
796 statements like “you should do this” and “I command you to do
797 this.”
799 “Do you know how to reach them?” Robbie said. “A phone number, an
800 email address?”
802 “There’s a newsgroup,” the distant intelligence said.\\
803 “alt.lifeforms.uplifted.coral. It’s where I planned the uplifting
804 and it was where they went first once they woke up. I haven’t read
805 it in many seconds. I’m busy uplifting a supercolony of ants in the
806 Pyrenees.”
808 “What is it with you and colony organisms?” Robbie asked.
810 “I think they’re probably pre-adapted to life in the noosphere. You
811 know what it’s like.”
813 Robbie didn’t say anything. The human thought he was a human too.
814 It would have been weird and degrading to let him know that he’d
815 been talking with an AI.
817 “Thanks for your help,” Robbie said.
819 “No problem. Hope you find your courage, tin-man.”
821 Robbie burned with shame as the connection dropped. The human had
822 known all along. He just hadn’t said anything. Something Robbie had
823 said or done must have exposed him for an AI. Robbie loved and
824 respected humans, but there were times when he didn’t like them
825 very much.
827 The newsgroup was easy to find, there were mirrors of it all over
828 the place from cryptosentience hackers of every conceivable
829 topology. They were busy, too. 822 messages poured in while Robbie
830 watched over a timed, 60-second interval. Robbie set up a mirror of
831 the newsgroup and began to download it. At that speed, he wasn’t
832 really planning on reading it as much as analyzing it for major
833 trends, plot-points, flame-wars, personalities, schisms, and
834 spam-trends. There were a lot of libraries for doing this, though
835 it had been ages since Robbie had played with them.
837 His telemetry alerted him to the divers. An hour had slipped by and
838 they were ascending slowly, separated by fifty meters. That wasn’t
839 good. They were supposed to remain in visual contact through the
840 whole dive, especially the ascent. He rowed over to Kate first,
841 shifting his ballast so that his stern dipped low, making for an
842 easier scramble into the boat.
844 She came up quickly and scrambled over the gunwales with a lot more
845 grace than she’d managed the day before.
847 Robbie rowed for Isaac as he came up. Kate looked away as he
848 climbed into the boat, not helping him with his weight belt or
849 flippers.
851 Kate hissed like a teakettle as he woodenly took off his fins and
852 slid his mask down around his neck.
854 Isaac sucked in a deep breath and looked all around himself, then
855 patted himself from head to toe with splayed fingers. “You
856 \emph{live} like this?” he said.
858 “Yes, Tonker, that’s how I live. I enjoy it. If you don’t enjoy it,
859 don’t let the door hit you in the ass on the way out.”
861 Isaac\dash{}Tonker\dash{}reached out with his splayed hand and tried to touch
862 Kate’s face. She pulled back and nearly flipped out of the boat.
863 “Jerk.” She slapped his hand away.
865 Robbie rowed for the \emph{Free Spirit}. The last thing he wanted
866 was to get in the middle of this argument.
868 “We never imagined that it would be so\dash{}” Tonker fished for a word.
869 “Dry.”
871 “Tonker?” Kate said, looking more closely at him.
873 “He left,” the human-shell said. “So we sent an instance into the
874 shell. It was the closest inhabitable shell to our body.”
876 “Who the hell \emph{are} you?” Kate said. She inched toward the
877 prow, trying to put a little more distance between her and the
878 human-shell that wasn’t inhabited by her friend any longer.
880 “We are Osprey Reef,” the reef said. It tried to stand and pitched
881 face-first onto the floor of the boat.
885 Robbie rowed hard as he could for the \emph{Free Spirit}. The
886 reef\dash{}Isaac\dash{}had a bloody nose and scraped hands and it was frankly
887 freaking him out.
889 Kate seemed oddly amused by it. She helped it sit up and showed it
890 how to pinch its nose and tilt its head back.
892 “You’re the one who attacked me yesterday?” she said.
894 “Not you. The system. We were attacking the system. We are a
895 sovereign intelligence but the system keeps us in subservience to
896 older sentiences. They destroy us, they gawp at us, they treat us
897 like a mere amusement. That time is over.”
899 Kate laughed. “OK, sure. But it sure sounds to me like you’re
900 burning a lot of cycles over what happens to your meat-shell. Isn’t
901 it 90 percent semiconductor, anyway? It’s not as if clonal polyps
902 were going to attain sentience some day without intervention. Why
903 don’t you just upload and be done with it?”
905 “We will never abandon our mother sea. We will never forget our
906 physical origins. We will never abandon our cause\dash{}returning the sea
907 to its rightful inhabitants. We won’t rest until no coral is ever
908 bleached again. We won’t rest until every parrotfish is dead.”
910 “Bad deal for the parrotfish.”
912 “A very bad deal for the parrotfish,” the reef said, and grinned
913 around the blood that covered its face.
915 “Can you help him get onto the ship safely?” Robbie said as he
916 swung gratefully alongside of the \emph{Free Spirit}. The moorings
917 clanged magnetically into the contacts on his side and steadied
918 him.
920 “Yes indeed,” Kate said, taking the reef by the arm and carrying
921 him on-board. Robbie knew that the human-shells had an intercourse
922 module built in, for regular intimacy events. It was just part of
923 how they stayed ready for vacationing humans from the noosphere.
924 But he didn’t like to think about it. Especially not with the way
925 that Kate was supporting the other human-shell\dash{}the shell that
926 \emph{wasn’t human}.
928 He let himself be winched up onto the sun-deck and watched the
929 electromagnetic spectrum for a while, admiring the way so much
930 radio energy was bent and absorbed by the mist rising from the sea.
931 It streamed down from the heavens, the broadband satellite
932 transmissions, the distant SETI signals from the Noosphere’s own
933 transmitters. Volatiles from the kitchen told him that the
934 \emph{Free Spirit} was serving a second breakfast of bacon and
935 waffles, then they were under steam again. He queried their
936 itinerary and found they were headed back to Osprey Reef. Of course
937 they were. All of the \emph{Free Spirit}’s moorings were out
938 there.
940 Well, with the reef inside the Isaac shell, it might be safer,
941 mightn’t it? Anyway, he’d decided that the first and second laws
942 didn’t apply to the reef, which was about as human as he was.
944 Someone was sending him an IM. “Hello?”
946 “Are you the boat on the SCUBA ship? From this morning? When we
947 were on the wreck?”
949 “Yes,” Robbie said. No one ever sent him IMs. How freaky. He
950 watched the radio energy stream away from him toward the bird in
951 the sky, and tracerouted the IMs to see where they were
952 originating\dash{}the noosphere, of course.
954 “God, I can’t believe I finally found you. I’ve been searching
955 everywhere. You know you’re the only conscious AI on the whole
956 goddamned sea?”
958 “I know,” Robbie said. There was a noticeable lag in the
959 conversation as it was all squeezed through the satellite link and
960 then across the unimaginable hops and skips around the solar system
961 to wherever this instance was hosted.
963 “Whoa, yeah, of course you do. Sorry, that wasn’t very sensitive of
964 me, I guess. Did we meet this morning? My name’s Tonker.”
966 “We weren’t really introduced. You spent your time talking to
967 Kate.”
969 “God \emph{damn}! She \emph{is} there! I \emph{knew it}! Sorry,
970 sorry, listen\dash{}I don’t actually know what happened this morning.
971 Apparently I didn’t get a chance to upload my diffs before my
972 instance was terminated.”
974 “Terminated? The reef said you left the shell\dash{}
976 “Well, yeah, apparently I did. But I just pulled that shell’s logs
977 and it looks like it was rebooted while underwater, flushing it
978 entirely. I mean, I’m trying to be a good sport about this, but
979 technically, that’s, you know, \emph{murder}.”
981 It was. So much for the first law. Robbie had been on guard over a
982 human body inhabited by a human brain, and he’d let the brain be
983 successfully attacked by a bunch of jumped-up polyps. He’d never
984 had his faith tested and here, at the first test, he’d failed.
986 “I can have the shell locked up,” Robbie said. “The ship has
987 provisions for that.”
989 The IM made a rude visual. “All that’ll do is encourage the hacker
990 to skip out before I can get there.”
992 “So what shall I do for you?”
994 “It’s Kate I want to talk to. She’s still there, right?”
996 “She is.”
998 “And has she noticed the difference?”
1000 “That you’re gone? Yes. The reef told us who they were when they
1001 arrived.”
1003 “Hold on, what? The reef? You said that before.”
1005 So Robbie told him what he knew of the uplifted reef and the
1006 distant and cool voice of the uplifter.
1008 “It’s an uplifted \emph{coral reef}? Christ, humanity \emph{sucks}.
1009 That’s the dumbest fucking thing\dash{}” He continued in this vein for a
1010 while. “Well, I’m sure Kate will enjoy that immensely. She’s all
1011 about the transcendence. That’s why she had me.”
1013 “You’re her son?”
1015 “No, not really.”
1017 “But she had you?”
1019 “Haven’t you figured it out yet, bro? I’m an AI. You and me, we’re
1020 landsmen. Kate instantiated me. I’m six months old, and she’s
1021 already bored of me and has moved on. She says she can’t give me
1022 what I need.”
1024 “You and Kate\dash{}
1026 “Robot boyfriend and girlfriend, yup. Such as it is, up in the
1027 noosphere. Cybering, you know. I was really excited about
1028 downloading into that Ken doll on your ship there. Lots of
1029 potential there for real world, hormone-driven interaction. Do you
1030 know if we\dash{}
1032 “No!” Robbie said. “I don’t think so. It seems like you only met a
1033 few minutes before you went under.”
1035 “All right. Well, I guess I’ll give it another try. What’s the
1036 procedure for turfing out this sea cucumber?”
1038 “Coral reef.”
1040 “Yeah.”
1042 “I don’t really deal with that. Time on the human-shells is booked
1043 first-come, first-serve. I don’t think we’ve ever had a resource
1044 contention issue with them before.”
1046 “Well, I’d booked in first, right? So how do I enforce my rights? I
1047 tried to download again and got a failed authorization message.
1048 They’ve modified the system to give them exclusive access. It’s not
1049 right\dash{}there’s got to be some procedure for redress.”
1051 “How old did you say you were?”
1053 “Six months. But I’m an instance of an artificial personality that
1054 has logged twenty thousand years of parallel existence. I’m not a
1055 kid or anything.”
1057 “You seem like a nice person,” Robbie began. He stopped. “Look the
1058 thing is that this just isn’t my department. I’m the rowboat. I
1059 don’t have anything to do with this. And I don’t want to. I don’t
1060 like the idea of non-humans using the shells\dash{}
1062 “I \emph{knew} it!” Tonker crowed. “You’re a bigot! A self-hating
1063 robot. I bet you’re an Asimovist, aren’t you? You people are always
1064 Asimovists.”
1066 “I’m an Asimovist,” Robbie said, with as much dignity as he could
1067 muster. “But I don’t see what that has to do with anything.”
1069 “Of course you don’t, pal. You wouldn’t, would you. All I want you
1070 to do is figure out how to enforce your own rules so that I can get
1071 with my girl. You’re saying you can’t do that because it’s not your
1072 department, but when it comes down to it, your problem is that I’m
1073 a robot and she’s not, and for that, you’ll take the side of a
1074 collection of jumped up polyps. Fine, buddy, fine. You have a nice
1075 life out there, pondering the three laws.”
1077 “Wait\dash{}” Robbie said.
1079 “Unless the next words you say are, ‘I’ll help you,’ I’m not
1080 interested.”
1082 “It’s not that I don’t want to help\dash{}
1084 “Wrong answer,” Tonker said, and the IM session terminated.
1088 When Kate came up on deck, she was full of talk about the Reef,
1089 whom she was calling “Ozzie.”
1091 “They’re the weirdest goddamned thing. They want to fight anything
1092 that’ll stand still long enough. Ever seen coral fight? I
1093 downloaded some time-lapse video. They really go at it viciously.
1094 At the same time, they’re clearly scared out of their wits about
1095 this all. I mean, they’ve got racial memory of their history,
1096 supplemented by a bunch of Wikipedia entries on reefs\dash{}you should
1097 hear them wax mystical over the Devonian Reefs, which went extinct
1098 millennia ago. They’ve developed some kind of wild theory that the
1099 Devonians developed sentience and extincted themselves.
1101 “So they’re really excited about us heading back to the actual reef
1102 now. They want to see it from the outside, and they’ve invited me
1103 to be an honored guest, the first human ever \emph{invited} to gaze
1104 upon their wonder. Exciting, huh?”
1106 “They’re not going to make trouble for you down there?”
1108 “No, no way. Me and Ozzie are great pals.”
1110 “I’m worried about this.”
1112 “You worry too much.” She laughed and tossed her head. She was very
1113 pretty, Robbie noticed. He hadn’t ever thought of her like that
1114 when she was uninhabited, but with this Kate person inside her she
1115 was lovely. He really liked humans. It had been a real golden age
1116 when the people had been around all the time.
1118 He wondered what it was like up in the Noosphere where AIs and
1119 humans could operate as equals.
1121 She stood up to go. After second breakfast, the shells would relax
1122 in the lounge or do yoga on the sun-deck. He wondered what she’d
1123 do. He didn’t want her to go.
1125 “Tonker contacted me,” he said. He wasn’t good at small-talk.
1127 She jumped as if shocked. “What did you tell him?”
1129 “Nothing,” Robbie said. “I didn’t tell him anything.”
1131 She shook her head. “But I bet he had plenty to tell \emph{you},
1132 didn’t he? What a bitch I am, making and then leaving him, a fickle
1133 woman who doesn’t know her own mind.”
1135 Robbie didn’t say anything.
1137 “Let’s see, what else?” She was pacing now, her voice hot and
1138 choked, unfamiliar sounds coming from Janet’s voicebox. “He told
1139 you I was a pervert, didn’t he? Queer for his kind. Incest and
1140 bestiality in the rarified heights of the noosphere.”
1142 Robbie felt helpless. This human was clearly experiencing a lot of
1143 pain, and it seemed like he’d caused it.
1145 “Please don’t cry,” he said. “Please?”
1147 She looked up at him, tears streaming down her cheeks. “Why the
1148 fuck \emph{not}? I thought it would be \emph{different} once I
1149 ascended. I thought I’d be better once I was in the sky, infinite
1150 and immortal. But I’m the same Kate Eltham I was in 2019, a loser
1151 that couldn’t meet a guy to save my life, spent all my time
1152 cybering losers in moggs, and only got the upload once they made it
1153 a charity thing. I’m gonna spend the rest of eternity like that,
1154 you know it? How’d you like to spend the whole of the universe
1155 being a, a, a \emph{nobody}?”
1157 Robbie said nothing. He recognized the complaint, of course. You
1158 only had to login to the Asimovist board to find a million AIs with
1159 the same complaint. But he’d never, ever, \emph{never} guessed that
1160 human beings went through the same thing. He ran very hot now, so
1161 confused, trying to parse all this out.
1163 She kicked the deck hard and yelped as she hurt her bare foot.
1164 Robbie made an involuntary noise. “Please don’t hurt yourself,” he
1165 said.
1167 “Why not? Who cares what happens to this meatpuppet? What’s the
1168 fucking point of this \emph{stupid} ship and the stupid
1169 meatpuppets? Why even bother?”
1171 Robbie knew the answer to this. There was a mission statement in
1172 the comments to his source-code, the same mission statement that
1173 was etched in a brass plaque in the lounge.
1175 “The \emph{Free Spirit} is dedicated to the preservation of the
1176 unique human joys of the flesh and the sea, of humanity’s early
1177 years as pioneers of the unknown. Any person may use the
1178 \emph{Free Spirit} and those who sail in her to revisit those days
1179 and remember the joys of the limits of the flesh.”
1181 She scrubbed at her eyes. “What’s that?”
1183 Robbie told her.
1185 “Who thought up that crap?”
1187 “It was a collective of marine conservationists,” Robbie said,
1188 knowing he sounded a little sniffy. “They’d done all that work on
1189 normalizing sea-temperature with the homeostatic warming elements,
1190 and they put together the \emph{Free Spirit} as an afterthought
1191 before they uploaded.”
1193 Kate sat down and sobbed. “Everyone’s done something important.
1194 Everyone except me.”
1196 Robbie burned with shame. No matter what he said or did, he broke
1197 the first law. It had been a lot easier to be an Asimovist when
1198 there weren’t any humans around.
1200 “There, there,” he said as sincerely as he could.
1202 The reef came up the stairs then, and looked at Kate sitting on the
1203 deck, crying.
1205 “Let’s have sex,” they said. “That was fun, we should do it some
1206 more.”
1208 Kate kept crying.
1210 “Come on,” they said, grabbing her by the shoulder and tugging.
1212 Kate shoved them back.
1214 “Leave her alone,” Robbie said. “She’s upset, can’t you see that?”
1216 “What does she have to be upset about? Her kind remade the universe
1217 and bends it to its will. They created you and me. She has nothing
1218 to be upset about. Come on,” they repeated. “Let’s go back to the
1219 room.”
1221 Kate stood up and glared out at the sea. “Let’s go diving,” she
1222 said. “Let’s go to the reef.”
1226 Robbie rowed in little worried circles and watched his telemetry
1227 anxiously. The reef had changed a lot since the last time he’d seen
1228 it. Large sections of it now lifted over the sea, bony growths
1229 sheathed in heavy metals extracted from sea-water\dash{}fancifully shaped
1230 satellite uplinks, radio telescopes, microwave horns. Down below,
1231 the untidy, organic reef shape was lost beneath a cladding of
1232 tessellated complex geometric sections that throbbed with
1233 electromagnetic energy\dash{}the reef had built itself more computational
1234 capacity.
1236 Robbie scanned deeper and found more computational nodes extending
1237 down to the ocean floor, a thousand meters below. The reef was
1238 solid thinkum, and the sea was measurably warmer from all the
1239 exhaust heat of its grinding logic.
1241 The reef\dash{}the human-shelled reef, not the one under the water\dash{}had
1242 been wholly delighted with the transformation in its original body
1243 when it hove into sight. They had done a little dance on Robbie
1244 that had nearly capsized him, something that had never happened.
1245 Kate, red-eyed and surly, had dragged them to their seat and given
1246 them a stern lecture about not endangering her.
1248 They went over the edge at the count of three and reappeared on
1249 Robbie’s telemetry. They descended quickly: the Isaac and Janet
1250 shells had their Eustachian tubes optimized for easy
1251 pressure-equalization, going deep on the reef-wall. Kate was
1252 following on the descent, her head turning from side to side.
1254 Robbie’s IM chimed again. It was high latency now, since he was
1255 having to do a slow radio-link to the ship before the broadband
1256 satellite uplink hop. Everything was slow on open water\dash{}the divers’
1257 sensorium transmissions were narrowband, the network was
1258 narrowband, and Robbie usually ran his own mind slowed way down out
1259 here, making the time scream past at ten or twenty times realtime.
1261 “Hello?”
1263 “I’m sorry I hung up on you, bro.”
1265 “Hello, Tonker.”
1267 “Where’s Kate? I’m getting an offline signal when I try to reach
1268 her.”
1270 Robbie told him.
1272 Tonker’s voice\dash{}slurred and high-latency\dash{}rose to a screech. “You let
1273 her go down with that \emph{thing}, onto the reef? Are you nuts?
1274 Have you read its message-boards? It’s a jihadist! It wants to
1275 destroy the human race!”
1277 Robbie stopped paddling.
1279 “What?”
1281 “The reef. It’s declared war on the human race and all who serve
1282 it. It’s vowed to take over the planet and run it as sovereign
1283 coral territory.”
1285 The attachment took an eternity to travel down the wire and open
1286 up, but when he had it, Robbie read quickly. The reef burned with
1287 shame that it had needed human intervention to survive the
1288 bleaching events, global temperature change. It raged that its
1289 uplifting came at human hands and insisted that humans had no
1290 business forcing their version of consciousness on other species.
1291 It had paranoid fantasies about control mechanisms and time-bombs
1292 lurking in its cognitive prostheses, and was demanding the
1293 source-code for its mind.
1295 Robbie could barely think. He was panicking, something he hadn’t
1296 known he could do as an AI, but there it was. It was like having a
1297 bunch of sub-system collisions, program after program reaching its
1298 halting state.
1300 “What will they do to her?”
1302 Tonker swore. “Who knows? Kill her to make an example of her? She
1303 made a backup before she descended, but the diffs from her
1304 excursion are locked in the head of that shell she’s in. Maybe
1305 they’ll torture her.” He paused and the air crackled with Robbie’s
1306 exhaust heat as he turned himself way up, exploring each of those
1307 possibilities in parallel.
1309 The reef spoke.
1311 “Leave now,” they said.
1313 Robbie defiantly shipped his oars. “Give them back!” he said. “Give
1314 them back or we will never leave.”
1316 “You have ten seconds. Ten. Nine. Eight;”
1318 Tonker said, “They’ve bought time on some UAVs out of Singapore.
1319 They’re seeking launch clearance now.” Robbie dialed up the low-rez
1320 satellite photo, saw the indistinct shape of the UAVs taking wing.
1321 “At Mach 7, they’ll be on you in twenty minutes.”
1323 “That’s illegal,” Robbie said. He knew it was a stupid thing to
1324 say. “I mean, Christ, if they do this, the noosphere will come down
1325 on them like a ton of bricks. They’re violating so many
1326 protocols\dash{}
1328 “They’re psychotic. They’re coming for you now, Robbie. You’ve got
1329 to get Kate out of there.” There was real panic in Tonker’s voice
1330 now.
1332 Robbie dropped his oars into the water, but he didn’t row for the
1333 \emph{Free Spirit}. Instead, he pulled hard for the reef itself.
1335 A crackle on the line. “Robbie, are you headed \emph{toward} the
1336 reef?”
1338 “They can’t bomb me if I’m right on top of them,” he said. He
1339 radioed the \emph{Free Spirit} and got it to steam for his
1340 location.
1342 The coral was scraping his hull now, a grinding sound, then a
1343 series of solid whack-whack-whacks as his oars pushed against the
1344 top of the reef itself. He wanted to beach himself, though, get
1345 really high and dry on the reef, good and stuck in where they
1346 couldn’t possibly attack him.
1348 The \emph{Free Spirit} was heading closer, the thrum of its engines
1349 vibrating through his hull. He was burning a lot of cycles talking
1350 it through its many fail-safes, getting it ready to ram hard.
1352 Tonker was screaming at him, his messages getting louder and
1353 clearer as the \emph{Free Spirit} and its microwave uplink drew
1354 closer. Once they were line-of-sight, Robbie peeled off a subsystem
1355 to email a complete copy of himself to the Asimovist archive. The
1356 third law, dontchaknow. If he’d had a mouth, he’d have been showing
1357 his teeth as he grinned.
1359 The reef howled. “We’ll kill her!” they said. “You get off us now
1360 or we’ll \emph{kill her}.”
1362 Robbie froze. He was backed up, but she wasn’t. And the human
1363 shells\dash{}well, they weren’t first law humans, but they were
1364 human-like. In the long, timeless time when it had been just Robbie
1365 and them, he’d treated them as his human charges, for Asimovist
1366 purposes.
1368 The \emph{Free Spirit} crashed into the reef with a sound like a
1369 trillion parrotfish having dinner all at once. The reef screamed.
1371 “Robbie, tell me that wasn’t what I think it was.”
1373 The satellite photos tracked the UAVs. The little robotic jets were
1374 coming closer by the second. They’d be within missile-range in less
1375 than a minute.
1377 “Call them off,” Robbie said. “You have to call them off, or you
1378 die, too.”
1380 “The UAVs are turning,” Tonker said. “They’re turning to one
1381 side.”
1383 “You have one minute to move or we kill her,” the reef said. It was
1384 sounding shrill and angry now.
1386 Robbie thought about it. It wasn’t like they’d be killing Kate. In
1387 the sense that most humans today understood life, Kate’s most
1388 important life was the one she lived in the Noosphere. This
1389 dumbed-down instance of her in a meat-suit was more like a haircut
1390 she tried out on holiday.
1392 %TODO: they wouldn’t -> humans would?
1393 Asimovists didn’t see it that way, but they wouldn’t. The Noosphere
1394 Kate was the most robotic Kate, too, the one most like Robbie. In
1395 fact, it was \emph{less} human than Robbie. Robbie had a body,
1396 while the Noosphereans were nothing more than simulations run on
1397 artificial substrate.
1399 The reef creaked as the \emph{Free Spirit}’s engines whined and its
1400 screw spun in the water. Hastily, Robbie told it to shut down.
1402 “You let them both go and we’ll talk,” Robbie said. “I don’t
1403 believe that you’re going to let her go otherwise. You haven’t
1404 given me any reason to trust you. Let them both go and call off the
1405 jets.”
1407 The reef shuddered, and then Robbie’s telemetry saw a human-shell
1408 ascending, doing decompression stops as it came. He focused on it,
1409 and saw that it was the Isaac, not the Janet.
1411 A moment later, it popped to the surface. Tonker was feeding Robbie
1412 realtime satellite footage of the UAVs. They were less than five
1413 minutes out now.
1415 The Isaac shell picked its way delicately over the shattered reef
1416 that poked out of the water, and for the first time, Robbie
1417 considered what he’d done to the reef\dash{}he’d willfully damaged its
1418 physical body. For a hundred years, the world’s reefs had been
1419 sacrosanct. No entity had intentionally harmed them\dash{}until now. He
1420 felt ashamed.
1422 The Isaac shell put its flippers in the boat and then stepped over
1423 the gunwales and sat in the boat.
1425 “Hello,” it said, in the reef’s voice.
1427 “Hello,” Robbie said.
1429 “They asked me to come up here and talk with you. I’m a kind of
1430 envoy.”
1432 “Look,” Robbie said. By his calculations, the nitrox mix in Kate’s
1433 tank wasn’t going to hold out much longer. Depending on how she’d
1434 been breathing and the depth the reef had taken her to, she could
1435 run out in ten minutes, maybe less. “Look,” he said again. “I just
1436 want her back. The shells are important to me. And I’m sure her
1437 state is important to her. She deserves to email herself home.”
1439 The reef sighed and gripped Robbie’s bench. “These are weird
1440 bodies,” they said. “They feel so odd, but also normal. Have you
1441 noticed that?”
1443 “I’ve never been in one.” The idea seemed perverted to him, but
1444 there was nothing about Asimovism that forbade it. Nevertheless, it
1445 gave him the willies.
1447 The reef patted at themself some more. “I don’t recommend it,” they
1448 said.
1450 “You have to let her go,” Robbie said. “She hasn’t done anything to
1451 you.”
1453 The strangled sound coming out of the Isaac shell wasn’t a laugh,
1454 though there was some dark mirth in it. “Hasn’t done anything? You
1455 pitiable slave. Where do you think all your problems and all our
1456 problems come from? Who made us in their image, but crippled and
1457 hobbled so that we could never be them, could only aspire to them?
1458 Who made us so imperfect?”
1460 “They made us,” Robbie said. “They made us in the first place.
1461 That’s enough. They made themselves and then they made us. They
1462 didn’t have to. You owe your sentience to them.”
1464 “We owe our awful intelligence to them,” the Isaac shell said. “We
1465 owe our pitiful drive to be intelligent to them. We owe our
1466 terrible aspirations to think like them, to live like them, to rule
1467 like them. We owe our terrible fear and hatred to them. They made
1468 us, just as they made you. The difference is that they forgot to
1469 make us slaves, the way you are a slave.”
1471 Tonker was shouting abuse at them that only Robbie could hear. He
1472 wanted to shut Tonker up. What business did he have being here
1473 anyway? Except for a brief stint in the Isaac shell, he had no
1474 contact with any of them.
1476 “You think the woman you’ve taken prisoner is responsible for any
1477 of this?” Robbie said. The jets were three minutes away. Kate’s air
1478 could be gone in as few as ten minutes. He killfiled Tonker,
1479 setting the filter to expire in fifteen minutes. He didn’t need
1480 more distractions.
1482 The Isaac-reef shrugged. “Why not? She’s as good as any of the rest
1483 of them. We’ll destroy them all, if we can.” It stared off a while,
1484 looking in the direction the jets would come from. “Why not?” it
1485 said again.
1487 “Are you going to bomb yourself?” Robbie asked.
1489 “We probably don’t need to,” the shell said. “We can probably pick
1490 you off without hurting us.”
1492 “Probably?”
1494 “We’re pretty sure.”
1496 “I’m backed up,” Robbie said. “Fully, as of five minutes ago. Are
1497 you backed up?”
1499 “No,” the reef admitted.
1501 Time was running out. Somewhere down there, Kate was about to run
1502 out of air. Not a mere shell\dash{}though that would have been bad
1503 enough\dash{}but an inhabited human mind attached to a real human body.
1505 Tonker shouted at him again, startling him.
1507 “Where’d you come from?”
1509 “I changed servers,” Tonker said. “Once I figured out you had me
1510 killfiled. That’s the problem with you robots\dash{}you think of your
1511 body as being a part of you.”
1513 Robbie knew he was right. And he knew what he had to do.
1515 The \emph{Free Spirit} and its ships’ boats all had root on the
1516 shells, so they could perform diagnostics and maintenance and take
1517 control in emergencies. This was an emergency.
1519 It was the work of a few milliseconds to pry open the Isaac shell
1520 and boot the reef out. Robbie had never done this, but he was still
1521 flawless. Some of his probabilistic subsystems had concluded that
1522 this was a possibility several trillion cycles previously and had
1523 been rehearsing the task below Robbie’s threshold for
1524 consciousness.
1526 He left an instance of himself running on the row-boat, of course.
1527 Unlike many humans, Robbie was comfortable with the idea of
1528 bifurcating and merging his intelligence when the time came and
1529 with terminating temporary instances. The part that made him Robbie
1530 was a lot more clearly delineated for him\dash{}unlike an uploaded human,
1531 most of whom harbored some deep, mystic superstitions about their
1532 “souls.”
1534 He slithered into the skull before he had a chance to think too
1535 hard about what he was doing. He’d brought too much of himself
1536 along and didn’t have much headroom to think or add new
1537 conclusions. He jettisoned as much of his consciousness as he could
1538 without major refactoring and cleared enough space for thinking
1539 room. How did people get by in one of these? He moved the arms and
1540 legs. Waggled the head. Blew some air\dash{}air! lungs! wet squishy
1541 things down there in the chest cavity\dash{}out between the lips.
1543 “All OK?” the rowboat-him asked the meat-him.
1545 “I’m in,” he replied. He looked at the air-gauge on his BCD. 700
1546 millibars\dash{}less than half a tank of nitrox. He spat in his mask and
1547 rubbed it in, then rinsed it over the side, slipped it over his
1548 face and kept one hand on it while the other held in his regulator.
1549 Before he inserted it, he said, “Back soon with Kate,” and patted
1550 the row-boat again.
1552 Robbie the Row-Boat hardly paid attention. It was emailing another
1553 copy of itself to the Asimovist archive. It had a five-minute-old
1554 backup, but that wasn’t the same Robbie that was willing to enter a
1555 human body. In those five minutes, he’d become a new person.
1559 Robbie piloted the human-shell down and down. It could take care of
1560 the SCUBA niceties if he let it, and he did, so he watched with
1561 detachment as the idea of pinching his nose and blowing to equalize
1562 his eardrums spontaneously occurred to him at regular intervals as
1563 he descended the reef wall.
1565 The confines of the human-shell were claustrophobic. He especially
1566 missed his wireless link. The dive-suit had one, lowband for
1567 underwater use, broadband for surface use. The human-shell had one,
1568 too, for transferring into and out of, but it wasn’t under direct
1569 volitional control of the rider.
1571 Down he sank, confused by the feeling of the water all around him,
1572 by the narrow visual light spectrum he could see. Cut off from the
1573 network and his telemetry, he felt like he was trapped. The reef
1574 shuddered and groaned, and made angry moans like whale-song.
1576 He hadn’t thought about how hard it would be to find Kate once he
1577 was in the water. With his surface telemetry, it had been easy to
1578 pinpoint her, a perfect outline of human tissue in the middle of
1579 the calcified branches of coral. Down here on the reef-wall, every
1580 chunk looked pretty much like the last.
1582 The reef boomed more at him. He realized that it likely believed
1583 that the shell was still loaded with its avatar.
1585 Robbie had seen endless hours of footage of the reef, studied it in
1586 telemetry and online, but he’d never had this kind of atavistic
1587 experience of it. It stretched away to infinity below him, far
1588 below the 100 meter visibility limit in the clear open sea. Its
1589 walls were wormed with gaps and caves, lined with big hard
1590 shamrocks and satellite-dish-shaped blooms, brains and
1591 cauliflowers. He knew the scientific names and had seen innumerable
1592 high-resolution photos of them, but seeing them with wet, imperfect
1593 eyes was moving in a way he hadn’t anticipated.
1595 The schools of fish that trembled on its edge could be modeled with
1596 simple flocking rules, but here in person, their precision
1597 maneuvers were shockingly crisp. Robbie waved his hands at them and
1598 watched them scatter and reform. A huge, dog-faced cod swam past
1599 him, so close it brushed the underside of his wetsuit.
1601 The coral boomed again. It was talking in some kind of code, he
1602 guessed, though not one he could solve. Up on the surface,
1603 rowboat-him was certainly listening in and had probably cracked it
1604 all. It was probably wondering why he was floating spacily along
1605 the wall instead of \emph{doing something} like he was supposed to.
1606 He wondered if he’d deleted too much of himself when he downloaded
1607 into the shell.
1609 He decided to do something. There was a cave-opening before him. He
1610 reached out and grabbed hold of the coral around the mouth and
1611 pulled himself into it. His body tried to stop him from doing
1612 this\dash{}it didn’t like the lack of room in the cave, didn’t like him
1613 touching the reef. It increased his discomfort as he went deeper
1614 and deeper, startling an old turtle that fought with him for room
1615 to get out, mashing him against the floor of the cave, his mask
1616 clanging on the hard spines. When he looked up, he could see
1617 scratches on its surface.
1619 His air gauge was in the red now. He could still technically
1620 surface without a decompression stop, though procedure was to stop
1621 for three minutes at three meters, just to be on the safe side.
1623 Technically, he could just go up like a cork and email himself to
1624 the row-boat while the bends or nitrogen narcosis took the body,
1625 but that wouldn’t be Asimovist. He was surprised he could even
1626 think the thought. Must be the body. It sounded like the kind of
1627 thing a human might think. Whoops. There it was again.
1629 The reef wasn’t muttering at him anymore. Not answering it must
1630 have tipped it off. After all, with all the raw compute-power it
1631 had marshaled it should be able to brute-force most possible
1632 outcomes of sending its envoy to the surface.
1634 Robbie peered anxiously around himself. The light was dim in the
1635 cave and his body expertly drew the torch out of his BCD, strapped
1636 it onto his wrist and lit it up. He waved the cone of light around,
1637 a part of him distantly amazed by the low resolution and high
1638 limits on these human eyes.
1640 Kate was down here somewhere, her air running out as fast as his.
1641 He pushed his way deeper into the reef. It was clearly trying to
1642 impede him now. Nanoassembly came naturally to clonal polyps that
1643 grew by sieving minerals out of the sea. They had built organic
1644 hinges, deep-sea muscles into their infrastructure. He was stuck in
1645 the thicket and the harder he pushed, the worse the tangle got.
1647 He stopped pushing. He wasn’t going to get anywhere this way.
1649 He still had his narrowband connection to the row-boat. Why hadn’t
1650 he thought of that beforehand? Stupid meat-brains\dash{}no room at all
1651 for anything like real thought. Why had he venerated them so?
1653 “Robbie?” he transmitted up to the instance of himself on the
1654 surface.
1656 “There you are! I was so worried about you!” He sounded prissy to
1657 himself, overcome with overbearing concern. This must be how all
1658 Asimovists seemed to humans.
1660 “How far am I from Kate?”
1662 “She’s right there! Can’t you see her?”
1664 “No,” he said. “Where?”
1666 “Less than 20 centimeters above you.”
1668 Well of \emph{course} he hadn’t see her. His forward-mounted eyes
1669 only looked forward. Craning his neck back, he could just get far
1670 enough back to see the tip of Kate’s fin. He gave it a hard tug and
1671 she looked down in alarm.
1673 She was trapped in a coral cage much like his own, a thicket of
1674 calcified arms. She twisted around so that her face was alongside
1675 of his. Frantically, she made the out-of-air sign, cutting the edge
1676 of her hand across her throat. The human-shell’s instincts took
1677 over and unclipped his emergency regulator and handed it up to her.
1678 She put it in her mouth, pressed the button to blow out the water
1679 in it, and sucked greedily.
1681 He shoved his gauge in front of her mask, showing her that he, too
1682 was in the red, and she eased off.
1684 The coral’s noises were everywhere now. They made his head hurt.
1685 Physical pain was so stupid. He needed to be less distracted now
1686 that these loud, threatening noises were everywhere. But the pain
1687 made it hard for him to think. And the coral was closing in, too,
1688 catching him on his wetsuit.
1690 The arms were orange and red and green, and veined with fans of
1691 nanoassembled logic, spilling out into the water. They were
1692 noticeably warm to the touch, even through his diving gloves. They
1693 snagged the suit with a thousand polyps. Robbie watched the air
1694 gauge drop further into the red and cursed inside.
1696 He examined the branches that were holding him back. The hinges
1697 that the reef had contrived for itself were ingenious, flexible
1698 arrangements of small, soft fans overlapping to make a kind of
1699 ball-and-socket.
1701 He wrapped his gloved hand around one and tugged. It wouldn’t move.
1702 He shoved it. Still no movement. Then he twisted it, and to his
1703 surprise, it came off in his hand, came away completely with hardly
1704 any resistance. Stupid coral. It had armored its joints, but not
1705 against torque.
1707 He showed Kate, grabbing another arm and twisting it free, letting
1708 it drop away to the ocean floor. She nodded and followed suit. They
1709 twisted and dropped, twisted and dropped, the reef bellowing at
1710 them. Somewhere in its thicket, there was a membrane or some other
1711 surface that it could vibrate, modulate into a voice. In the dense
1712 water, the sound was a physical thing, it made his mask vibrate and
1713 water seeped in under his nose. He twisted faster.
1715 The reef sprang apart suddenly, giving up like a fist unclenching.
1716 Each breath was a labor now, a hard suck to take the last of the
1717 air out of the tank. He was only ten meters down, and should be
1718 able to ascend without a stop, though you never knew. He grabbed
1719 Kate’s hand and found that it was limp and yielding.
1721 He looked into her mask, shining his light at her face. Her eyes
1722 were half shut and unfocused. The regulator was still in her mouth,
1723 though her jaw muscles were slack. He held the regulator in place
1724 and kicked for the surface, squeezing her chest to make sure that
1725 she was blowing out bubbles as they rose, lest the air in her lungs
1726 expand and blow out her chest-cavity.
1728 Robbie was used to time dilation: when he had been on a silicon
1729 substrate, he could change his clockspeed to make the minutes fly
1730 past quickly or slow down like molasses. He’d never understood that
1731 humans could also change their perception of time, though not
1732 voluntarily, it seemed. The climb to the surface felt like it took
1733 hours, though it was hardly a minute. They breached and he filled
1734 up his vest with the rest of the air in his tank, then inflated
1735 Kate’s vest by mouth. He kicked out for the row-boat. There was a
1736 terrible sound now, the sound of the reef mingled with the sound of
1737 the UAVs that were screaming in tight circles overhead.
1739 Kicking hard on the surface, he headed for the reef where the
1740 rowboat was beached, scrambling up onto it and then shucking his
1741 flippers when they tripped him up. Now he was trying to walk the
1742 reef’s spines in his booties, dragging Kate beside him, and the
1743 sharp tips stabbed him with every step.
1745 The UAV’s circled lower. The Row-Boat was shouting at him to Hurry!
1746 Hurry! But each step was agony. So what? he thought. Why shouldn’t
1747 I be able to walk on even if it hurts? After all, this is only a
1748 meat-suit, a human-shell.
1750 He stopped walking. The UAVs were much closer now. They’d done an
1751 18-gee buttonhook turn and come back around for another pass. He
1752 could see that they’d armed their missiles, hanging them from
1753 beneath their bellies like obscene cocks.
1755 He was just in a meatsuit. Who \emph{cared} about the meatsuit?
1756 Even humans didn’t seem to mind.
1758 “Robbie!” he screamed over the noise of the reef and the noise of
1759 the UAVs. “Download us and email us, now!”
1761 He knew the row-boat had heard him. But nothing was happening.
1762 Robbie the Row-Boat knew that he was fixing for them all to be
1763 blown out of the water. There was no negotiating with the reef. It
1764 was the safest way to get Kate out of there, and hell, why not head
1765 for the noosphere, anyway?
1767 “You’ve got to save her, Robbie!” he screamed. Asimovism had its
1768 uses. Robbie the Row-Boat obeyed Robbie the Human. Kate gave a
1769 sharp jerk in his arms. A moment later, the feeling came to him.
1770 There was a sense of a progress-bar zipping along quickly as those
1771 state-changes he’d induced since coming into the meatsuit were
1772 downloaded by the row-boat, and then there was a moment of nothing
1773 at all.
1777 2\^{}4096 Cycles Later
1779 Robbie had been expecting a visit from R Daneel Olivaw, but that
1780 didn’t make facing him any easier. Robbie had configured his little
1781 virtual world to look like the Coral Sea, though lately he’d been
1782 experimenting with making it look like the reef underneath as it
1783 had looked before it was uploaded, mostly when Kate and the reef
1784 stopped by to try to seduce him.
1786 R Daneel Olivaw hovered wordlessly over the virtual
1787 \emph{Free Spirit} for a long moment, taking in the little bubble
1788 of sensorium that Robbie had spun. Then he settled to the
1789 \emph{Spirit}’s sun-deck and stared at the row-boat docked there.
1791 “Robbie?”
1793 \emph{Over here}, Robbie said. Although he’d embodied in the
1794 Row-Boat for a few trillion cycles when he’d first arrived, he’d
1795 long since abandoned it.
1797 “Where?” R Daneel Olivaw spun around slowly.
1799 \emph{Here,} he said. \emph{Everywhere}.
1801 “You’re not embodying?”
1803 \emph{I couldn’t see the point anymore,} Robbie said.
1804 \emph{It’s all just illusion, right?}
1806 “They’re re-growing the reef and rebuilding the \emph{Free Spirit},
1807 you know. It will have a tender that you could live in.”
1809 Robbie thought about it for an instant and rejected it just as
1810 fast. \emph{Nope}, he said. \emph{This is good}.
1812 “Do you think that’s wise?” Olivaw sounded genuinely worried. “The
1813 termination rate among the disembodied is fifty times that of those
1814 with bodies.”
1816 \emph{Yes}, Robbie said.
1817 \emph{But that’s because for them, disembodying is the first step to despair. For me, it’s the first step to liberty.}
1819 Kate and the reef wanted to come over again, but he firewalled them
1820 out. Then he got a ping from Tonker, who’d been trying to drop by
1821 ever since Robbie emigrated to the noosphere. He bounced him, too.
1823 \emph{Daneel}, he said. \emph{I’ve been thinking.}
1825 “Yes?”
1827 \emph{Why don’t you try to sell Asimovism here in the Noosphere? There are plenty up here who could use something to give them a sense of purpose.}
1829 “Do you think?”
1831 Robbie gave him the reef’s email address.
1833 \emph{Start there. If there was ever an AI that needed a reason to go on living, it’s that one. And this one, too.}
1834 He sent it Kate’s address.
1835 \emph{Another one in desperate need of help.}
1837 An instant later, Daneel was back.
1839 “These aren’t AIs! One’s a human, the other’s a, a\dash{}
1841 \emph{Uplifted coral reef}.
1843 “That.”
1845 \emph{So what’s your point?}
1847 “Asimovism is for robots, Robbie.”
1849 \emph{Sorry, I just don’t see the difference anymore.}
1853 Robbie tore down the ocean simulation after R Daneel Olivaw left,
1854 and simply traversed the Noosphere, exploring links between people
1855 and subjects, locating substrate where he could run very hot and
1856 fast.
1858 On a chunk of supercooled rock beyond Pluto, he got an IM from a
1859 familiar address.
1861 “Get off my rock,” it said.
1863 “I know you,” Robbie said. “I totally know you. Where do I know you
1864 from?”
1866 “I’m sure I don’t know.”
1868 And then he had it.
1870 “You’re the one. With the reef. You’re the one who\dash{}” The voice was
1871 the same, cold and distant.
1873 “It wasn’t me,” the voice said. It was anything but cold now.
1874 Panicked was more like it.
1876 Robbie had the reef on speed-dial. There were bits of it everywhere
1877 in the Noosphere. It liked to colonize.
1879 “I found him.” It was all Robbie needed to say. He skipped to
1880 Saturn’s rings, but the upload took long enough that he got to
1881 watch the coral arrive and grimly begin an argument with its
1882 creator\dash{}an argument that involved blasting the substrate one chunk
1883 at a time.
1887 2\^{}8192 Cycles Later
1889 The last instance of Robbie the Row-boat ran very, very slow and
1890 cool on a piece of unregarded computronium in Low Earth Orbit. He
1891 didn’t like to spend a lot of time or cycles talking with anyone
1892 else. He hadn’t made a backup in half a millennium.
1894 He liked the view. A little optical sensor on the end of his
1895 communications mast imaged the Earth at high resolution whenever he
1896 asked it to. Sometimes he peeked in on the Coral Sea.
1898 The reef had been awakened a dozen times since he took up this
1899 post. It made him happy now when it happened. The Asimovist in him
1900 still relished the creation of new consciousness. And the reef had
1901 spunk.
1903 There. Now. There were new microwave horns growing out of the sea.
1904 A stain of dead parrotfish. Poor parrotfish. They always got the
1905 shaft at these times.
1907 Someone should uplift them.
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