CHAPTER ONE
He didn’t wake up. To wake would suggest that he’d been sleeping, when he’d actually just sort of become aware. It was as if someone had flipped a switch and he started processing information. First came a vague awareness that startled his mind into a heightened state of activity. Then, a feeling of increased urgency expanded from the diminutive depths, as if he’d suddenly forgotten something important. He tried to open his eyes.
Nothing happened.
System diagnostic running.
These words appeared amid the black void of his thoughts. A few moments later, various diagnostic windows flashed, and a status report appeared.
Warning.
Low-power mode.
Less than 30 percent of power remaining.
Recommendation: Deteriorating power cell should be replaced for optimal performance.
Configuration update required.
Please wait . . .
He frowned, or at least tried to, but nothing happened, which instantly made him want to even more. He couldn’t feel anything. He couldn’t even open his eyes, but he’d seen the status windows, so he wasn’t blind. His racing thoughts went into overdrive. He tried to move—first his arms and then his hands. Nothing. He felt the urge to inhale, but it was only an urge—just a longing to take a deep lungful of sweet, precious breath—and it wasn’t happening.
He couldn’t breathe and wondered why he wasn’t gasping. He should be struggling to breathe, but he wasn’t, and his thoughts flatlined. He wouldn’t panic. He was awake but couldn’t move or feel . . . anything. There was no kinesthetic awareness to indicate whether he was lying down, strapped to a chair, or dangling in the air.
Not a good sign.
Maybe someone had drugged him, and he hadn’t fully awakened yet. There were drugs that could induce paralysis, and maybe they were wearing off. He tried to remember the last thing he’d been doing. Had he been hurt? Medication to block pain receptors could explain a lot, including the paralysis. Where was he? He felt another urge to frown, remembering what it felt like as his eyebrows knitted together, his gaze narrowed, and his jaw tightened with the gritting of his teeth, but as he commanded his muscles to do those things, they just sort of . . . stalled, as if there was something blocking his muscles from actually moving.
Veris initiation complete.
System startup complete.
Autonomous mode has been activated.
Limited storage available.
A small image appeared in the void that surrounded him. He focused on it, and the image rushed toward him until the void disappeared. He was in a dreary room with smudgy, broken windows and long, thick cobwebs, and he had the impression that he was sitting. He looked down to a crusty, dirt-laden floor. Howling winds gusted from outside, sending layers of dust swirling into a lazy cyclone. Scummy residue trailed a path from the broken windows to the ground. Across from him were charging stations that housed different-sized humanoid robots. They were covered with a swarthy, crumbling shell that must have taken years of exposure to accumulate. These remnants of abandoned robots were all offline, without any indication of power.
He glanced down at his legs, and his thoughts screeched to a halt. His legs were gone! In their place were thick, metallic legs with an intricate set of connectors and actuators running to his feet. But they weren’t his feet; they were something else. Each foot had three large, elongated toes and a broad, thick heel. They shifted, seemingly of their own accord, as if their range of motion was being tested.
He jerked backward at the movement and heard the mechanical whine of actuators fighting against their restraints in a cradle unit. Looking down, he saw that his chest was broad and comprised of overlapping plates that flexed when he moved. A whitish-blue power source glowed from between the plates. There was a series of symbols on his left side, and after a few seconds, a translation appeared on his internal heads-up display.
Agricultural Unit – 92.
Repairs have been completed, and the unit is cleared for duty.
Something disconnected from his back with a snap-hiss, and he slumped forward. The table he’d been sitting on dropped down and became part of the wall. As he landed on his feet, he saw the metallic toes spread and adjust to keep him standing. He flailed his arms for a few moments, trying to keep his balance. Everything felt uncoordinated and slow. He tried to move his head, and the movements were jerky, as there were actuators in his neck that hadn’t been moved in a long time.
The one thing he knew for sure was that he hadn’t been drugged. He felt as if he was remotely operating a mechanized unit for the first time, except that there was no system lag. Was this someone’s idea of a joke?
Self-diagnostic?
The words appeared on his heads-up display—HUD—and he initiated the command.
Cannot run self-diagnostic now. Still restoring backup from remote storage. Please wait . . .
Thanks for nothing. That wasn’t very helpful. He was apparently stuck in an agricultural unit, and he didn’t know what he was supposed to do. This wasn’t funny anymore. Why had he thought this could’ve been a practical joke? His mind was functioning much like his current body, like neither had been used in a really long time, but his mind suddenly began to race with an all-compelling need to remember.
He needed . . .
He needed.
He . . .
Partial data restored.
Veris restore procedure for the consciousness transference protocol has enacted emergency protocol number 736 in accordance with the Veris mandate of preserving core Personality Matrix Construct into the system.
He read the message again. “Consciousness transference protocol” stood out amid the amber lettering on the translucent window. Consciousness transference . . . His consciousness had been transferred, and something was trying to restore it from backup. Someone was restoring him into this machine.
He tried to bring up a command menu on the HUD.
Identify.
The system response puzzled him. It had just restored him, so shouldn’t it already know who he was? He froze there, his thoughts racing as he tried to make sense of all the information coming at him.
I’m a robot? No, not a damn robot! I know who I am.
He repeated that thought over and over again.
I know who I am.
I know who I am.
I. Know. Who. I. Am.
He glared at the system prompt that showed its last query in dispassionate amber lettering.
Identify?
A surge of hope coursed through him as his name pierced the veil of confusion surrounding his thoughts.
“Quinton Aldren,” he said, his voice sounding slightly modulated. He tried to clear his throat—which he didn’t have—and repeated his name.
“Quinton Aldren,” he said, much more clearly this time.
Identification confirmed. Partial restoration of Personality Matrix Construct has confirmed the viability of the individual in this unit.
Quinton reread the message with an increasing awareness that he knew about Personality Matrix Constructs. PMCs were human-consciousness-to-machine interfaces. He tried to remember more, but the information just wasn’t available. He was sure he knew more about it, but something . . . He looked down at his body and understood.
A quiet hum came from a maintenance drone as it sank slowly to the floor. Its spherical chassis had multiple appendages, some of which looked to have been torn off, but one of them reached in his direction. Its power indicators went dark, and the drone was dead.
Quinton felt a second presence snap to existence in his mind. It was as if someone had just appeared next to him, but nobody was there.
VI interface initiated. Designation—Radek.
A virtual intelligence should be able to help him out.
“Radek, are you online?” Quinton asked.
“Diagnostics are still running,” Radek said a few moments later. “Diagnostics complete. Virtual Intelligence Designate Radek responding.”
“Excellent. Now, maybe you can answer a few questions for me. Why have I been restored into this agricultural unit?” Quinton asked.
“Emergency reactivation protocols were initiated,” Radek replied.
Quinton felt as if his thoughts were wading through a muddy barrier.
“Radek, putting my consciousness into this agricultural unit violates PMC protocols. It shouldn’t have worked, even under emergency conditions.”
“Personality Matrix Construct’s standard operating procedures were overridden.”
“By whom?” Quinton asked. “Information is unavailable.”
“Unavailable . . . how’s that?” Quinton paused for a moment, trying to strangle his growing irritation with the useless VI. He glanced down at the maintenance drone. “Were you in control of this drone?”
“Affirmative. It was required to transfer the Energy Storage System to Agricultural Unit 92.”
“You’re telling me that I’ve been stored in an ESS, which you then stuck in the chest of this agricultural unit—a damn garden robot,” Quinton said.
More of his knowledge became available. It shouldn’t have worked. PMCs required a high level of haptic capabilities in order to avoid malfunction. The PMC was a way of preserving his consciousness, requiring that he feel human, or else—
“Your summation of the events is an oversimplification,” Radek replied, and Quinton could’ve sworn the VI sounded a little agitated.
“Not from where I’m standing.”
“Per emergency procedures, I found the best solution given the constraints I was called to deal with,” Radek said.
Quinton looked out at dark gray skies through the shattered remnants of what had been windows. He was in a garden storage shed for service bots. He didn’t have any idea where he was, and he certainly didn’t know why he was there. He needed Radek’s help if he was going to figure out what had happened. He needed the VI’s cooperation, but VIs could be finicky. They weren’t sentient, but they could be singularly uncooperative if given the right motivation.
“It sounds like you did the best you could,” Quinton said. “How long did you have to search before you found this body?”
“One hundred eighty-seven days, fifteen hours, and thirtythree minutes.”
Oh crap, Quinton thought. Radek seemed to sense this, but Quinton reminded himself that VIs couldn’t read minds.
“The ESS was in a critical state and in danger of imminent failure. Use of this agricultural unit was the only option.”
Quinton didn’t doubt what Radek said. If Radek had searched for a hundred eighty-seven days to find a suitable host for his PMC, then he was in danger.
“Where are we?”
“Unknown.”
That’s great, Quinton thought. Radek was just as much in the dark as he was.
“Is there a governing body we can contact?”
“Negative. There are no settlements with active inhabitants that I’ve observed.”
Six months searching and no one to contact. Quinton glanced out the window at the ash-covered landscape and then looked around the room. This planet had suffered some kind of disaster. A readout on his HUD showed that the atmosphere was still breathable, meeting minimum requirements to survive —not that breathing air was an obstacle for him in his current form.
Quinton tried to recall why he’d been uploaded into a PMC and stored in the first place but found that he couldn’t remember. “Radek,” Quinton said, “my memory access is restricted. Is the ESS intact? Was it damaged?”
“The ESS is undamaged and fully intact. However, because of the limitations of the agricultural unit, you have limited access to the ESS. This is required so you can fully utilize the unit the PMC is currently housed in.”
Quinton took a few steps across the shed, then turned and paced back to the other side. Each step he took demonstrated more confidence as he learned the capabilities of the agricultural unit. There was significant risk involved with a PMC being loaded into a less capable machine. PMC degradation would occur if the consciousness inside lost its connection to being human. Quinton tried to feel whether he was losing himself and then shook his head. How was that supposed to feel?
There were several loud pops as something slammed into a nearby building. Quinton spun around at the noise and glanced toward the maintenance drone on the ground. There were gashes cut into its sides, and several of its limbs were missing.
“I must advise you that there are hunter mechs currently searching for you,” Radek said.
A new pathway engaged in Quinton’s mind, and he had access to new data stored in the ESS. “Hunter mechs! What do they want with me?”
“The hunter mechs are specifically tasked with destroying PMCs.”
That couldn’t be right. Nothing about this situation was right.
Quinton heard something crash from within a nearby building. “They must have control units. Can’t we override them?” Quinton asked, stepping toward the door as he tried to engage the communications systems of the agricultural unit.
“I advise against that,” Radek said quickly. “They can detect open comms signals. These units have been pursuing me for many days. I already tried an override command, which didn’t work. Those systems are locked out from any comms unless they’re coming from whatever command central gave them their instructions in the first place.”
That made the hunter mechs no better than mindless drones. Why would they hunt PMCs?
“Radek, I need access to your analysis of those units if I’m going to decide how to deal with them. If they’re just basic mechs, I should be able to disable them.” “Data is available, as you requested.”
A report appeared on his HUD, and Quinton accessed the log data. There wasn’t anything like a detailed analysis, and Radek had been severely limited in his capabilities while operating the maintenance drone. His top priority had been to preserve the Energy Storage System that Quinton’s Personality Matrix Construct was stored in, which was all fine and good, but it meant he didn’t know what he was facing, and they were getting closer to his position.
CHAPTER TWO
Quinton stepped outside but stayed close to the side of the building so he could watch for the mechs.
“How do you know they’re hunting PMCs?” he asked.
“When they scanned the maintenance drone and detected the ESS, they became hostile.”
The Energy Storage System—ESS— was a miniature reactor the size of a fist. The low energy output of the leuridium core made it durable and long-lasting, ideal for the data storage requirements of a PMC. The ESS had a unique identifier that made it easy to detect. Quinton glanced down at the agricultural bot body that contained his consciousness. He didn’t think the robot’s chest could shield it from the mechs.
He looked up at thick, dreary clouds pressing on top of him and felt as if he were staring at a tidal wave about to sweep him away in a violent upheaval of destruction and doom. A bellowing rumble came from overhead. Weather-worn buildings that were sagging under the weight of wet volcanic ash lined the streets, fading into the misty fog.
Quinton moved to the other side of the street. Loud banging sounds came from inside the nearby buildings, followed by screeches that came in rapid succession as the mechs forced their way through a heavy door. The agricultural unit was capable of highly acute sound sensitivity and depth perception, probably meant for the delicate work of maintaining the exotic gardens that had once been here.
He heard three distinct sound sources from various areas of the building. The mechs weren’t trying to hide what they were doing.
He glanced around at the crusty brown ash that covered the buildings and saw more fall from the sky in a sleety mix of snow. Peering closely at the clusters of ash as they fell, he realized that the agricultural unit’s optics were able to perceive each unique crystalline structure marred by the particulates filling the air. Where was the ash coming from? The agricultural unit must have had smell receptors, but he was glad they weren’t working. Atmospheric readings on his internal heads-up display showed high levels of sulfur. Skipping the smell of rotting decay was perfectly fine with Quinton.
“I need to know what you plan to do,” Radek said.
The VI’s question startled him out of his thoughts because Radek was just a voice. Although there was a highlighted section of his HUD that flashed when Radek spoke, it was still offputting. Quinton checked the agricultural unit’s systems to see what was available.
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