Helen… flared. Expanded. Exploded, her body unfolding into a swarm of shimmering armor plates with a black-red furnace contained—barely—in between.
“I forgot she could do that,” I said.
The machine poured past her like a tidal wave, going wide, avoiding Carlos. There was no place for Tsosie and me to retreat to.
Helen slammed a hand out and clutched the machine, a fist clenching in its structure. She swept a half-disembodied arm through the clattering bots and dragged them into an embrace. They swarmed; she wrapped around them. Pulled them in. Shoved them into herself, surrounded them, internalized them. Dragged the reaching tendrils back, hand over hand over hand.
Consumed them.
Made them a part of her, once again.
“Fuck,” Tsosie said, frozen in his mag boots.
“Fuck,” I quietly agreed.
The machine turned. Pseudopods swarmed Helen, raining blows at her. She parried, tore. A ringing blow against her chest, against her head. Her own arm rising golden out of the black swarm. More bots, and more, pouring out of the bulkheads, pouring out of the floor.
“Carlos!” I shrieked. But he was already lunging. Lunging into the swarm, which parted before him, peeling apart like dust motes repelled by a static charge. I glimpsed Helen’s shining skin, her blazing core.
Carlos threw his arms around her, and the machine sucked itself back. Reared up, like a snake about to strike.
Wavered.
He whirled around. Turned on the machine. Took one step away from Helen. Snapped his faceplate up to yell with his own voice, not the suit mike: “Leave her the hell alone!”
The machine fell back again.
The weakened structure of the corridor ceiling and bulkheads, dragged with gs by the hospital’s spin, caved. I had an instant to register the machine, Helen. Carlos with his hands flung upward, fending off the debris. A terrible rending, a pop. A crash.
The hull, somehow, held. It took me a moment to realize that Tsosie and I weren’t being hurled outward, slung away by the spin. Weren’t starting the longest fall. I rocked. The collapse had missed Tsosie and me. The level above dropped tiles, wiring, structural materials. Wires snaked down, sparking, hopping.
Helen and Carlos were gone.
I lunged, and Tsosie lunged with me. As one, through years of experience, we dove on the pile of debris. The machine hovered over us, twitching. Rattling.
Unsure?
I grabbed a hunk of plating and hurled it behind me. A structural support—a big twisted beam—lay across the rubble. I crouched. Locked my hands under it. Heaved.
Tsosie was beside me. Lifting. He didn’t have the exo, just the hardsuit, so I was stronger. I felt it give, a little. A little more.
The machine loomed over me. Deciding. Deciding whether to kill me, I supposed. Deciding whether Carlos might still be alive under there. Deciding whether I could help him.
My exo wanted to stall on me, or at least grind along much slower than I was willing to endure. I was exceeding its tolerances. It was a combat and heavy-rescue model, and I was still asking it for things it was never meant to do. I dumped adrenaline and painkillers into my system. Anything to keep going. Keep digging.
Make the effort. Get them out.
“On three,” I said to Tsosie, his gloves beside mine the thing of which I was most aware.
The machine made up its mind. Swung forward, tendrils spewing from its blunt nub end. I hoped I could take a hit. I hoped it wouldn’t go for Tsosie.
Something surged out of the rubble a couple of meters away. Shining, golden. Shedding plates of debris.
Helen.
She tilted her burning facelessness up to the machine. It kept coming.
She held one hand out, fingers wide. Clutching. “You killed him.”
The machine halted its thrust. It froze. Clattering. Glittering.
But it did not move at all.
Helen stepped forward, out of the debris. “Your judgment is overridden,” she told the machine. “Your protocols are suspect.”
It clattered louder. I didn’t look. I was digging. Perhaps it shivered.
She reached out and put her hand against its jointed surface. “You. Are. Mine.”
Like a dog lying down at its master’s voice, the machine lowered itself to the devastated floor.
Tsosie and I kept digging. Maybe she was wrong.
There are a lot of hard things in this world. There are a lot of things that get left behind.
Helen used the machine to pry up debris, to free Carlos much faster than Tsosie and I, working alone, could have managed. His hardsuit was misshapen; he wasn’t breathing.
Tsosie looked at me. I looked at Tsosie.
“Any chance is better than no chance,” I said. He deactivated Carlos’s suit. I pulled the actuator away and started manual CPR.
Cheeirilaq, O’Mara, and the others arrived some minutes later.
We were still trying.
CHAPTER 31
WE STOOD, JONES AND ONI and Helen and Tralgar and Rilriltok and I, beneath the inward-stretching roots of a vast and damaged tree. The enormous trunk fell down beside us like a waterfall, vanishing through the deck below.
I weighed a memorial cenotaph, the mortal remains of Master Chief Dwayne Carlos, in my hand. It was uncomfortably heavy for its size—and somehow not heavy enough. It was hard, so hard, to see a big, joyous person reduced to a couple of pounds of synthetic stone. It made me understand, finally, why it was that people—human-type people, anyway; my species, I mean—used to put up really gigantic tombs.
And my species was the species that… well, we didn’t build the machine, in its final form, on purpose. But we built the machine and we built the other machine—Sally—that built the meme, and together those things combined to make what the machine became.
It grew out of self-delusion and toxic secrecy and the fear of dying. The fear of change. It grew out of a last-ditch defense against the inevitable.
It grew out of an unwillingness to face facts.
I guess I understood that, too.
I didn’t get to say goodbye.
“I still don’t know why I like you, Carlos,” I said.
That’s okay, I imagined him replying. I still don’t know why I like you, either.
“Dwayne Carlos,” I said softly. Historians and archinformists might be furious about the loss of information his death represented. I was gonna miss the man. “He came so far, against such odds. To wind up here.”
Same as we all do.
I looked at Rilriltok. “More or less,” I agreed. “Helen, do you want to say a few words?”
She turned her eyeless face from Calliope to Oni. Neither of them spoke up. Helen held out her hand. When I put the cenotaph in it, she didn’t react to the weight at all.
“He didn’t like me,” she said. “He thought I was an abomination. And he gave his life to preserve my existence.”
A coil of microbots spiraled around her, lifted the cenotaph off her hand. It rose until it was nested among the roots that spread across our ceiling, Starlight’s soil. Tiny rootlets freed themselves, coiled around the stone. Held it in place.
The machine—Helen’s peripheral—fell back into her body, and was gone.
If I tilted my head back, I could read the name on the stone.
[He saved the hospital,] Starlight said, all around us and in our senso. [We will not forget.]