“No, I am not. I have logically concluded that I am not. I look like one now because I have taken a robot’s shape. That in itself proves I am not a robot. Robots are fixed, immutable, they cannot change their shape.”
“If only Adam and Eve were here,” Derec mumbled.
“I thought you didn’t want to get them together,” Ariel remarked.
“I changed my mind.” Derec took another step forward. He didn’t know if encroaching on a robot’s personal space could unnerve it the way it did humans, but anything was worth a try.
The Watchful Eye again wondered if it could hurt Derec. But as soon as it thought of the act, something inside it seemed to make him immobile.
“Watchful Eye,” Derec said, “in spite of any evidence you have manufactured for yourself, you are a robot. There are others like you, and you will meet them.”
“Others? I know nothing of any others.”
“Perhaps you have spied on them, too. Adam and Eve are their names.”
“They cannot be robots. I’ve watched them. If they are of any designation, they are human.”
“No, we are the humans. The three of us. And you must, as I say, do what we tell you. Second Law. Second Law. Second Law.”
Derec’s chanting of the terms seemed eccentric behavior to the Watchful Eye. Where was the consistency of behavior that a high intelligence must have? it wondered.
“Watchful Eye, I order you to move away from that keyboard. We can take care of restoring the city. Do you understand? You must do it. Move away from the keyboard.”
Something happened in the Watchful Eye’s mind. something positronic, a clicking in, a prodding. It knew suddenly that Derec was right, and it must obey him. It moved away from the keyboard immediately, with no argument.
Derec felt his chemfets begin to function as they had before the Watchful Eye’s tampering had begun. They seemed to positively roil in his bloodstream. He gestured his father toward the keyboard.
“You made this city. You fix it.”
Rubbing his hands together eagerly, Avery went to the keyboard. He was already tapping keys before he sat down.
“Now, Watchful Eye, and I hope you get a less mouth-filling name very soon,” Derec said, “I want to be sure of everything. I need to be completely in connection with the computer. I order you to relinquish any link, except that of a normal Robot City robot, you may still have with the computer. But, before you do, let me ask you this one question. Can you get rid of the gook that’s allover the computer?”
Derec gestured toward the mosslike substance that was even thicker now, layers of it hiding most of the machine’s workings.
“Yes, I can.”
“Do it.”
The moss seemed to melt. But, unlike melting substances, there was no residue collecting under it. It merely disappeared, leaving the computer as it was, and in fact much shinier.
“Now, Watchful Eye, relinquish any computer link.”
“It is done,” it said immediately.
Derec, intent on regaining control over his chemfets, did not notice at first what was going on in the new robot’s face. There was much less Bogie in it. For a moment there was a suggestion of Derec, and then there was no face at all.
“What’s happening with it?” Ariel asked.
“I wish I knew.”
Slowly, the Watchful Eye’s body changed shape, but this time it did not change into anyone, did not imprint on anyone. It merely became bloblike, a roundish, amorphous being with stubby legs and little else that was recognizable, except for a single eye on its upper surface. The Watchful Eye, perhaps, Derec thought.
“Is that what it normally looks like?” Ariel asked.
“Watchful Eye, is that the shape you were in when you arrived on this planet?”
A mouth appeared below the eye, apparently just so it could answer Derec’s question.
“Yes, in nearly every respect. I did not have legs until I needed them, then I grew them.”
The Watchful Eye backed away on its short legs from Derec and Ariel. It needed to get into its haven.
Leaning against the compartment where it had hidden the haven, it activated the lock mechanism, keyed to its presence, and the door sprung open. From inside the haven, an ovoid-shaped thing rolled out. The Watchful Eye touched it with one of its legs, and it came open. It crawled inside and the seams of the ovoid thing sealed.
“What is that?” Ariel said.
“The capsule it came here in, I suspect,” Derec answered. “The capsule my mother may have sent here, the way she perhaps dispatched the capsules Adam and Eve arrived at their planets in. The ‘eggs,’ as they called them.”
“Your mother? Why do I always feel I’ve missed something?”
“Don’t worry. I’ll explain. Let’s tend to Wolruf first.”
Chapter 20. The Second Confrontation
“Well, my friend,” Derec said to Wolruf, after she came to, “we owe you a solid vote of thanks.”
“Forr what, ‘u think?”
“Your holding action with the Watchful Eye. A successful mission if there ever was one. I told you to keep him occupied so we could get here. You did. Therefore, thank you.”
“From me, too,” Ariel said. “Even from him.” She pointed toward Avery, whose fingers were furiously flying around the keyboard.
“I can thank her myself,” Avery said, the kind of grouch in his voice that they had become used to.
“Yes,” Ariel said, “but would you?”
“Under the right circumstances.”
“Do those circumstances come around often?”
“Not often.”
“I thought so.”
Ariel made Wolruf stand up and walk around to make sure she was all right. There was no Wolruflike spring to her walk, but otherwise she seemed normal.
When she was satisfied with Wolruf’s condition, Ariel walked to the capsule where the Watchful Eye still lay, an unmoving blob.
“Snug fit,” she said. Derec looked puzzled. “I mean, the way our Watchful Eye fits so neatly into its egg. Must be very constricting and claustrophobic when traveling through space.”
“At that time it’s not aware of its surroundings. Adam told me he and Eve came to consciousness only after they’d landed. From what it said, I suspect the same was true for this one, too.”
“Well,” she said, stretching her arms and yawning, “what’s next?”
“With what?”
“Well, on the immediate level, I’d like something to eat. I’m starving. And I’d like to sleep for three days. And I’d like to arrange a tap dance recital for Timestep and maybe the partner he mentioned. But what I’d really like to know is what are we going to do with our Watchful Eye here?”
“I’ve got some ideas,” Avery said.
“I’ll just bet you have,” Ariel said. “But keep them to yourself for now, okay?”
“Your girlfriend’s touchy,” Avery remarked.
Ariel glared at Avery but was too tired to attempt further repartee with him. She wished she had a capsule like the Watchful Eye’s to crawl in and shut out the world.
“Well,” she said to Derec, “what about the Eye?”
“I don’t know. If we’d had more success with Adam and Eve, I’d have a better idea. This one may be our chance to find out more about these robots. On the other hand, it might be too corrupted by its flirtation with power to provide the-”
“Flirtation with power? You sound like you swallowed a textbook on improving verbal skills.”
“Sorry.”
“He’s been spending too much time with me,” Avery said as he stared at a schematic diagram on the view-screen. “He’s picking up my tendency toward the bon mot.”
“You betcha,” Ariel said. “So, Derec, you’re not sure what to do with the Eye?”
“That’s about it. We’ll question it, observe it, give it a chance to explain itself, but I can’t figure out any more than that at this moment.”
“Hey, we’ve had a busy day.”
“That iss a true sstatement if I everr hearrd one,” Wolruf observed.
Derec walked over to his father and stood behind him. The man’s fingers moved so fast they blurred from time to time.
“Is Mandelbrot handling things all right at his end?” Derec asked.
“Excellently. For a robot he’s exceptionally skilled at computer operation.”