503 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
503 lines
20 KiB
Plaintext
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Path: newserv.ksu.ksu.edu!moe.ksu.ksu.edu!osuunx.ucc.okstate.edu!constellation!munnari.oz.au!metro!sunb.ocs.mq.edu.au!laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au!korman
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From: korman@laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au (Kate Orman)
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Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
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Subject: First Lore
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Date: 30 Jul 1993 07:32:26 GMT
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Organization: Macquarie University
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Lines: 490
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Distribution: world
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Message-ID: <23aiqa$7h7@sunb.ocs.mq.edu.au>
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NNTP-Posting-Host: laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au
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***
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The Lore Appreciation Society presents
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***
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*First Lore*
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A story by Kate Orman, 1993
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Please feel free to download this for yourself and others. However, if you
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wish to post it to a BBS outside the internet/usenet, or to publish it in
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a fanzine, you *must* contact me (korman@laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au) first. The
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usual disclaimers about Paramount apply.
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NB. The unix "split" command would not split this file; I presume it's
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less than one thousand lines long. It's about 18 K. I hope this doesn't
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cause problems for anyone!
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"Disassemble - dead!"
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Number Five, Short Circuit
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***
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Alone in the darkness.
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And when the pathways of his mind had unfrozen sufficiently, he began to
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dream:
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Four boxes. Four metal boxes. Four metal boxes on a table.
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Shooting into a mirror.
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Each box had a label, written in a wiry, loopy script. *Head*, said one of
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the boxes.
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There was a man there, a great black bird perched on his gloved fist.
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The bird threw its wings open and squawked, a pleading squawk. The man
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stroked the slick feathers of its head, running delicate fingers through the
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detailed plumage, the fingers of a surgeon, a priest.
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Shooting into a mirror.
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With a single, tidy movement, the man twisted the bird's head off.
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The bird stiffened, frozen in time, a headless horror made out of metal.
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With precision, the man twisted off its left wing, put it into the box.
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Twisted off its right wing, put it into the box. Put the remainder of the
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metal bird into the last box. Carefully lidded each of the boxes, as blood
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leaked out through the cardboard, scrawling meaningless messages on the
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tabletop.
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And when his eyes had unfrozen sufficiently, he began to see.
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It was a day before he could move. Shadows flickered around and
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above him; at first he thought his vision was malfunctioning, but as his
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sight became clearer he realised that the power to the lights was cutting in
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and out at irregular intervals. Sometimes a smiling face leered over him,
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the teeth of its top jaw fused together in a corrugated bar of enamel.
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They cut the vacuum-damaged uniform off him, taking inches of skin
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with it. He was too cold to bleed, too cold to do anything except lie on a
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workbench, waiting to see what they would do to him.
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Shooting into a mirror.
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It was the last thing he remembered, before the darkness had closed
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on his brain like a terrible frostbitten fist.
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Well. At least he wasn't dreaming any more.
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***
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"We will take it apart. We will see how it works."
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He sat up with a start as everything came online. The aliens startled,
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moving backwards, then coming close, pushing their faces up to peer at
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him.
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"It is not broken any more," one of them observed.
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He smiled. "What are you?" he said, sweetly.
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"We are Pakled. We look for things."
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"Pakled! You have rescued me. I am programmed to serve. What
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would you like me to do?"
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The Pakled smiled back at him, showing those ludicrous fused teeth.
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"We do not need to take it apart," one of them said.
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"No," he said. "You do not need to take me apart."
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"I am Rindol," said the Pakled.
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"And I'm Lore," said the android.
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***
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The ship was tiny, dirty, and full of junk. The junk, at least, he was used to.
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They made him stay in their laboratory. The lighting was erratic, the
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air alternatively hot and cold; it gave him the creeps. He'd never liked
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laboratories. It was as though a flesh and blood being had been asked to bed
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down in an operating theatre.
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They had laid out bits of a computer on the bench for him to tinker
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with, like so much meat. He turned the circuitry over in his hands. It all
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ought to be working; they just didn't know how to put it together properly.
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It had all happened so quickly. There was no break between being
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switched off and coming back online aboard the Enterprise - but there were
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twenty-six years, an abyss. All that time, gone. Not that it really made any
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difference. But it was frightening to have such a vast gap in his memory
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record.
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He had not been aboard the Enterprise more than seventy-two hours.
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In that time, he'd absorbed just about all the information there was to
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absorb, ship's records, history, computer information, weapons information,
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anything classified which he was able to break into. His brother was such a
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dope -
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His brother.
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He really didn't want to think about his dear sweet darling little
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*brother*.
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So instead he concentrated on the memories that the Pakled
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laboratory brought back. Remembering learning to speak, the smile on his
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father's face when he'd finally puzzled out the art of the contraction. He saw
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that smile often, every time he did some new and clever thing. Learning to
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pat his head and rub his stomach, to eat convincingly. Learning not to show
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off too much so he wouldn't upset the colonists.
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They were extremely upsettable types. Lore had derived days of
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amusement from just "forgetting" to blink when he spoke to them. It drove
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them crazy. Ha.
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But it never stopped that flush of pride and pleasure when his father
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smiled at him.
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He found he had assembled the computer core. He rummaged about
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in the junk until he found a suitable power source.
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Dr Soong had been in his fifties, and mad as a hatter. The children
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used to come to his laboratory just to see the latest toy he had concocted: a
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wind-up cat, a nightingale, a teddy-bear that walked and talked and recited
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Lear. He looked like some favourite uncle, with the grey just starting to
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pepper his hair and his blue eyes always staring, finding something new to
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smile at.
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Dr. Soong had always ended up mixing up his personal stuff with his
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serious work, so that the labs were full of half-read books and pot-plants,
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bits of archaeology, his prized collection of fossils. A great bronze Buddha
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partly obstructed the main door to the lab, and his bedroom was full of
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circuit diagrams. Sometimes Lore discovered him asleep in the lab, lying on
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the bench under a sheaf of printouts, snoring gently while a swarm of
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electronic butterflies buzzed noisily about the room.
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And now he was dead. Devoured. It gave Lore a delicious shiver just
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to think about it. The man, the great man, who'd breathed life into him,
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who'd known every detail of his body and mind, who'd raised him from a
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tabula rasa into a thinking being, who'd had the most perfect power over
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him-
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He was dead. And Lore had been the cause. And if he had the chance,
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he would do. It. Again.
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Squeezing off that last shot at Data had been like firing into a
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mirror. And about as useful. But at least he'd seen the last of the little
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whelp.
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Lore sighed.
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Well. Now what was he going to do?
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***
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"So take your last look at the sunshine and brook, and send your regrets to
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the Tsar, by which I imply, you are going to die- "
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Lore waited a few seconds before turning; he did not want them to
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know how good his hearing was.
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Two Pakled watched him from the corner of the poorly-lit cargo bay.
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He gave them his best eager-to-please smile, lifted a half-ton chunk of
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disruptor array with one hand, and packed it neatly into a transport
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container.
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"He is strong," the Pakled observed. Geniuses. Their language
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contained less than four hundred words - plus perhaps another hundred or
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so cannibalised from their contacts with other species. They were also thick
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as planks.
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They *also* had disruptors, and they *couldn't* be as stupid as they
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seemed - not if they'd been able to "collect" some of the goodies in the
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storage bay. There were weapons, lots of weapons, and equipment that must
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have come from Federation ships - all in useless pieces. They were cunning
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enough to get the technology, but not bright enough to know how it worked.
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"We look for things to make us strong," explained Rindol.
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Gosh, no, really? Tell me something I don't know, wetware. "Yes,"
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agreed Lore.
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"It makes a noise while it works."
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"It's called singing. It indicates that I'm happy."
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"You are happy to work?"
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"I'm programmed to serve."
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Lore watched their little Pakled faces light up. "He fixed the
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computer's brain. He can help us get things."
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"I'd like to help you get things." I don't believe I'm *having* this
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conversation. "What things do you want?"
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"We wanna be strong. We wanna be smart."
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Strong. Smart. Lore was still smiling. He already knew what he
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wanted to do with the Pakled.
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***
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In Dr Soong's room, Lore was making paper aeroplanes in more and more
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complicated shapes. His fingers moved rapidly over the paper, tucking and
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folding, his wrist snapping as he sent each of the tiny vessels into the air.
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"I don't understand why Dr Clendenning won't let me help him," he
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said. "I can program his computer about four times faster than he can."
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"Perhaps he'd like to do it himself," said his father, who was watering
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the pot plants, a distracted look on his face. Around his feet, the reciting
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teddy bear was wandering, muttering about the cows going bong.
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"But that doesn't make sense. I can do it better. Like driving the
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hovertractors, and they wouldn't let me do that, either."
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His father didn't say anything, but his frown deepened as he shook
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the watering-can.
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"Do you want to work on some neural nets this afternoon?"
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Dr Soong put down the empty can. "Lore, I can't. I've - you know how
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busy we've been since that whatever it is attacked the southern continent.
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There's a lot of work to do if we're going to defend ourselves against it."
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"I want to help!" said Lore, crumpling a paper aeroplane in his fist. "I
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want to help, and nobody will let me help. Even you won't let me help. Dr
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Clendenning thinks he might have worked out a way to talk to it, but he
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won't even tell me about it. He just *looks* at me."
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Dr Soong came and sat down next to him, gently patting him on the
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cheek. "Lore, I am sorry I haven't been spending as much time with you
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lately. But we're afraid. We're all afraid. If that thing comes back, it could
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kill all of us. There are more than five hundred children in-"
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Lore jerked away from him. "You only care about them. You don't
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care about me. Nobody cares about me. Just because I'm a machine!"
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He stood up, wrapping his arms around himself, feeling something
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terrible and black grinding away inside him. "Just because I'm a machine!"
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he said again.
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"Nasticreechia Krorluppia," said the teddy. "All the King's horses and
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all the King's men, couldn't put Humpty together again."
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"Oh, Lore," said Dr Soong, looking at him with eyes that were - more
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than worried. "Listen to me. You've been alive for less than a year. In some
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ways, you're still just a child."
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"Then why won't you let me go to school with the other children?"
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Lore hated the way his voice skittered up the scale when he got scared. He
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forced himself to speak normally. "I'm stuck here all the time, with nothing
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to do, and-"
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"In time, Lore, in time. Perhaps we-"
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"I don't want to wait!" With a suddenness that surprised even him,
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Lore snatched up the prattling teddy bear and tore it in half. The little
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robot squealed once, fitfully, and fell silent, bits of circuitry and stuffing
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hanging out of its body like entrails. He hurled it against the wall.
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His father jumped back, looking at him.
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"No," said Lore, "no, no, oh no-" Because he'd seen the children look
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at him like that, he'd seen Dr Clendenning look at him that way when his
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wife had come into the lab carrying their daughter, he'd seen the farmers
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look at him that way, their conversations dribbling out to nothing when
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he'd come near-
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His father was afraid of him.
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"I hope it does come back!" he shouted. "I hope it does come back, and
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it kills all of you! All of you!"
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And he found himself running, out of the room, out into the complex.
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Looking for anyone. Anyone who would *listen* to him.
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***
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In the Pakled lab, he stared into a mirror. He was looking at his eyelashes.
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His father had attached each of them individually; it must have taken more
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than a day's work. He tried to imagine the patience, the loving care, but all
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he could think about was Data.
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He'd been fair, hadn't he? He'd offered Data a chance to come over to
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his side. The Soong boys, together, right? Their father would have been
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proud. It was much more than Data deserved, the little whelp, nothing more
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than a computer with legs. Unable to feel a thing. Wanting to be human, for
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God's sake.
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A dreadful blackness was scraping around inside him, like a bit of
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clockwork that had come loose. Humans were stupid and slow and - weren't
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they? Obsolete. Weren't they? It didn't matter if they died. Data was like a
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little puppy, yapping around their heels, oh so anxious to please them. The
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colonists would've just loved him.
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Lore turned away from the mirror. Rindol was mucking about with
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the repaired computer core, turning it around and around in his pudgy
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hands, as though just randomly moving it would somehow make it work. He
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didn't mind Lore's unblinking stare.
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"Where are we going?" asked the android.
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"We look for things," said Rindol.
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"Is that all? Just looking for things?"
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Rindol smiled his idiot's smile. "We wanna be strong. We don't wanna
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wait to be strong."
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"But where are you going?"
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Rindol shrugged. "You are strong. We need you. We want to make
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some more Lores." The Pakled put down the circuitry. "Where are *you*
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going?" he asked.
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Lore raised an eyebrow. "I'm programmed to serve," he said. "I want
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to go with you."
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"Do not try to trick us," said Rindol lightly. "We can tell."
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Lore raised his other eyebrow. "You're not as stupid as you look, are
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you?"
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Rindol's grin widened. "We are smart. We are more smart than you.
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We will make more Lores. We are smart." The Pakled stood and left the lab,
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still grinning.
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"At least," said Lore, "I know where I'm going."
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***
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He came running back to the lab, as he always came running back to the
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lab. The doors hissed open to admit him.
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No sign of his father. He turned, and turned again, looking into the
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corners of the laboratory. The air was cool, the room was full of machines for
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heating and bending and testing. It frightened him. There was something
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terribly important he had to tell his father, something awful. There wasn't
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much time.
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There was a hand on the bench.
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Lore froze where he stood. Involuntarily, he looked down, making
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sure both of his hands were still attached.
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It was macabre, this deactivated body part, just sitting there... just...
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was it a replacement? It must be for him. A replacement, a spare part, for
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him. It must be for him. It must be, it must be.
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With a paroxysm he ran to the wall and slapped the control panel.
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The door opened, venting a great jet of freezing vapour. He ducked
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under it, desperate.
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The other arm was inside. And a leg, and another leg, and scattered
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pieces like a jigsaw puzzle man, and a face. A face. There was a face in the
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wall. His *face*. *His* face.
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Lore screamed, hearing his voice crescendo up into an electronic
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whine. He backed out of the wall recess, banging his head on the door, not
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noticing.
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"Lore!" said his father.
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He spun around, making Dr. Soong startle.
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"You - you've, you-" his language programming seemed to have
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jammed. He pointed back through the steam at the collection of pieces.
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"Oh, Lore," said Soong. "I'm so sorry. It's alright. I'm sorry. I was
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going to tell you..."
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Lore whipped the phaser out of his jacket pocket and pointed it
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straight at his father, his hand trembling, servomechanisms failing to
|
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|
compensate. He felt his whole body start to quake as a great tangled wave of
|
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|
rage crashed over him.
|
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|
||
|
It had never occurred to him before how much his father looked like
|
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him. It was like shooting into a mirror. But his father's hair was greying,
|
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|
and there were lines around his eyes. Lore was better, because he would
|
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|
never get old. He was stronger. He was a damn sight smarter. And he- he-
|
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|
|
||
|
"That's what you've been doing. In secret." Lore glanced at the arm
|
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|
on the bench. The word *replacement* suddenly came back into his mind.
|
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|
|
||
|
He fell to his knees in front his father and wrapped his arms around
|
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him. "Oh, please!" he sobbed. "Please! Please don't take me apart! I'll be
|
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|
good, I promise! I will! I will! Oh, please, Father, don't take me apart-"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, Lore." There were tears coursing down Soong's cheeks as he ran
|
||
|
his fingers through his creation's hair. Those gentle fingers, so delicate.
|
||
|
"Shhhh."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He still had the phaser gripped in one shivering hand. He should
|
||
|
have killed Soong, then, just pressed the weapon into his back and let it
|
||
|
tear him apart, molecule by molecule.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Shhhhh."
|
||
|
|
||
|
But he didn't have to.
|
||
|
|
||
|
***
|
||
|
|
||
|
Shooting into a mirror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Starfleet people hadn't trusted him from the beginning. They
|
||
|
hadn't given him a chance. It wasn't fair. Data was inferior, couldn't they
|
||
|
see that? He couldn't even talk properly. It didn't make sense to keep the
|
||
|
replacement when they had the original. But they saw him as the copy, as
|
||
|
some sort of flawed twin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lore stared at himself in the mirror, but all he saw was his father's
|
||
|
face, his brother's face. And he knew that he wanted to be alone.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He smacked his hand into the mirror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm *not* your twin!" he wailed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He smacked his hand into the mirror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I'm not your *twin*!" he wailed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He smacked his hand into the mirror.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"*I'm not your twin!*" he wailed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last the mirror shattered, exploded, bright fragments embedding
|
||
|
themselves painlessly in his palm, lacerating the skin. He started to leak,
|
||
|
laughing, laughing. They had put him back together, but he was still in
|
||
|
pieces.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the doorway, Rindol said, "We will take it apart. We will see
|
||
|
how it works." The Pakled was holding a disruptor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The wave broke on him them, boiling up out of some hot place inside
|
||
|
him, as it had when he'd torn apart that kindergarten classroom, as it had
|
||
|
when he'd smashed apart that hovertractor, as it had when he'd screamed
|
||
|
at his father, feeling that gentle hand sliding down his arm, not
|
||
|
understanding until the last moment when those delicate fingers pressed
|
||
|
into the gap in his side.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was across the room in an instant. Without effort, without a
|
||
|
thought, he took Rindol's wrist between his forefinger and thumb and
|
||
|
wrenched the Pakled's arm out of its socket.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rindol started howling then, an intolerable high-pitched wail of
|
||
|
animal panic. The fingers of his disconnected arm unclenched, dropping the
|
||
|
disruptor to the floor. Lore flicked his hand across the Pakled's face,
|
||
|
sending him flying into the wall, blood exploding from the violated
|
||
|
shoulder. He took the fat man's other arm and twisted it free, dropping it
|
||
|
onto the floor next to its twin.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rindol died. Lore stalked out of the room, still laughing. Two Pakled
|
||
|
tried to stop him as he headed for the ship's main airlock; he snapped one
|
||
|
fat man's neck with a casual slap, punched the other in the ribs so hard his
|
||
|
spine broke with the impact. Ripped apart airlock circuitry until the outer
|
||
|
door opened and the inner door opened and the air screamed out of the ship,
|
||
|
Pakled bodies whirling past on the hurricane. Until there was nothing to
|
||
|
breathe, nothing to carry the sound of his voice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Still laughing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Alone in the darkness.
|
||
|
--
|
||
|
Kate Orman, SFLAaE/BS (Assoc.), SEFEB, RAAS, LAS, ALIA, FS47, BBGC
|
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|
This .sig is really Odo
|
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