“Are you capable of doing autopsies here?” she asked Arion as an afterthought.
“The medical programming is in existence, and at this very moment several medically trained robots are being turned out of our production facilities, along with diagnostic tables and a number of machines. Synthesized drugs and instruments are coming at a slower rate. So much of the city is geared toward building right now, and these considerations never became a problem for us until David’s death.”
“Done,” the utility robot said, the cut section falling to clang on the base disc.
“Witness!” Arion called, as Katherine hurried to the place and climbed through the hole.
The naked body lay, face down, in the middle of the floor. Katherine walked boldly toward it, then stopped, a hand going to her chest. She had been so intent upon fulfilling her mission that she had failed to consider that it was death-real death-she’d be dealing with. It horrified her. She began shaking, her heart rate increasing.
“Is something wrong?” Eve asked from the cut-out.
“N-no,” she replied, her eyes glued to the body, unable either to move forward or pull back.
“If there’s a problem,” she heard Arion say, “come out now. Don’t jeopardize yourself.”
Come on, old girl. Get yourself together.“I’m fine,” she said. You’ve got to do this. Don’t stop now.
She took a deep breath, then another, and continued her walk to the body. Bending, she touched it gingerly. The surface was cool, the muscles tight.
“Is everything all right?” Arion asked.
“Yes,” she said. Won’t they leave me alone?
There was no sign of decomposition, and she realized that it was because the room had been airless. At least that was something.
She examined the body from the back, her heart rate still up, her breath coming fast. Looking at the foot, she could see a small cut on the left instep and realized immediately what had caused it. Something stupid. Something she had done herself before. A misstep, perhaps a broken fall, and the bare feet came together, a too-long toenail on the other foot scraping the instep. It was nothing. There was some dried blood on the side and bottom of the foot, but that was it. She was going to have to roll the body over.
She moved to the side of the body, reaching out to try and turn it over, finding her hands shaking wildly. Will this be me soon-fifty kilos of dead meat? She tried to push the body onto its back, but there was no strength in her arms.
“Could you help me with this?” she called over her shoulder. Arion came through the cut-out to bend down beside her. She looked up at the nearly human-looking machine. “I want to roll it over.”
“Surely,” Arion said, reaching out with his pincers to push gently against the side of the body. It rolled over easily, dead eyes staring straight at Katherine.
She heard herself screaming from far away as the shock of recognition hit her. It was Derec! Derec!
The room began spinning as she felt it in her stomach and in her head. Then she felt the floor reach up and pull her down; everything else was lost in the numbing bliss of unconsciousness.
“Don’t try to leave without me to lead you!” Avernus called to Derec as the boy waded into the churning sea of robots. “You could become hopelessly lost in these tunnels.”
“Don’t worry!” Derec called back, thinking more about the danger of the main chamber than the labyrinthine caves.
He moved slowly through the throng, walking toward Rydberg. It was damp, musty in there, plus a bit claustrophobic, but Derec was so fascinated by the spectacle of the eleventh-hour plans that he never allowed his mind to dwell on the all-too-human problems of the location.
Rydberg saw him approaching, and turned to stare as Derec closed on him. He climbed atop the cart and joined the supervisor.
“What are you doing here?” Rydberg asked, the words crackling through the speaker atop his dome. “It is too dangerous underground for you.”
“I talked Avernus into bringing me down and protecting me,” Derec replied. “What’s going on here?”
“We’re trying to tunnel up to the reservoir,” Rydberg said. “We are trying to work out a way to drain off some of the reservoir into the deserted tunnels below to keep it from flooding.”
Derec felt an electric charge run through him. “That’s wonderful!” he yelled. “You’ve made a third-level connection-a creative leap!”
“It was only logical. Since the water was going to come into the mines anyway, it only made sense that we should try to direct it to parts of the mines that would cause the least amount of damage. Unfortunately, our estimates show such a move could only hold off the inevitable for a day or two longer. It may all be in vain.”
“Why are you digging by hand?” Derec asked. “Where are the machines?”
“They are tied up in the mining process,” Rydberg said. “The current rate of city-building must take precedence over all other activities.” The robot turned his dome to watch the excavations.
Derec put his hands on the robot’s arm. “But the city-building is what’s killing you!”
“It must be done.”
“Why?”
“I cannot answer that.”
Derec looked all around him, at the frantic rush of momentum, at a civilization trying to survive. No, they weren’t human, but it didn’t mean their lives weren’t worthwhile. What was the gauge? There was intelligence, and a concerted effort toward perfection of spirit. There was more worth, more human value here in the mines than in anything he had seen in his brief glimpse of humanity. And then it struck him, the reason for all of this and the reason for the state of emergency and security.
“It’s defensive, isn’t it?” he said. “The city-building is a way for the city to defend itself against alien invasion?”
Rydberg just stared at him.
He grabbed the robot’s arm again, tighter. “That is it, isn’t it?”
“I cannot answer that question.”
“Then tell me I am wrong!”
“I cannot answer that question.”
“I knew it,” he said, convinced now. “And if it coincided with David’s appearance in the city, then it is somehow tied to him. For once, Katherine’s in the right place.
“This whole thing is a central core program,” Derec said, “and obviously the program is in error. There must be some way you can circumvent it.”
“Robots do not make programs, Derec,” Rydberg said.
“Then let me into it!”
“I cannot,” Rydberg replied, then added softly. “I’m sorry.”
Derec just stared at him, wanting to argue him into compliance, and fearing that the argument would simply present the robot with a contradiction so vast it would freeze his mental facilities and lock him up beyond hope. He didn’t know where to go from here. He’d had a tantalizing glimpse of the problem, yet, like a holographic image, it still eluded his grasp.
“You still have not told me why you came down into the mines,” Rydberg said. “Humans have such a poor sense of personal danger that I fail to see how your species has survived to this point. If you cannot present me a compelling reason for your presence, I fear I must send you away now.”
“If humans have a poor sense of personal danger,” Derec said, angry at Robot City’s inability even to try to save itself, “then it has been justly inherited in your programming. I’ve come down to visit 1-1 on a matter not of your concern. Would you please point him out to me?”
“Our first citizen?” Rydberg said, and Derec could tell the robot wanted to say more. Instead, he turned up his volume. “WILL ROBOT 1-1 PLEASE COME FORWARD.”
Within a minute, a small, rather innocuous utility robot with large, powerful looking pincer grips moved up to the cart. “I am here, Supervisor Rydberg,” the robot said.
“Friend Derec wishes to speak with you on a personal matter,” the supervisor said. “Do as he asks, but do not take an excessive amount of time.”