Human Sister (38 page)

Read Human Sister Online

Authors: Jim Bainbridge

BOOK: Human Sister
11.43Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“So, how can you be a part of this?” I asked.

“They’ve threatened you and Elio.”

“Threatened? How?”

“You saw what happened to you when you returned from Canada last New Year’s Eve.”

“I thought they were looking for information on androids.”

“Maybe that was part of it. But as far as I can tell, the android exodus was a complete failure on the part of the intelligence community. They were convinced that the disappearing androids were being abducted by Chinese agents. The Chinese seem to have been under the impression that we were behind the disappearances. Perhaps both sides were correct to some extent, but we now know that many, if not most, of the androids were smuggled to the moon. No, your interrogation was almost certainly intended to force my cooperation.”

“Are you saying that the interrogation was just a show? That I was tricked and my heart never stopped?”

“You were tortured. There was nothing imaginary about that. But the reality of your pain and of my subsequent cooperation with them is probably all we’ll ever know for sure.”

“Cooperation with what?” Michael asked. “There was no planned attack on the Martian androids then because no one knew the androids were planning an escape to Mars. That means these android soldiers were intended for some other purpose.”

Grandpa rubbed his hand over his brow and exhaled a long sigh of resignation. “You see, Sara, the reason for my teaching you not to answer any questions? Once you start talking—” He shook his head. “I wasn’t involved in creating these android soldiers. Oh, sure, technology that I helped develop was used, but it was used to pursue a goal I believe is impossible to achieve. The Pentagon wants robots possessing great mobility, intelligence, and decision-making capabilities, but without this troublesome thing we call consciousness. They, in effect, want zombies that don’t question what’s going on, don’t resent being slaves, don’t rebel.

“The problem is that creating such a zombie is, I firmly believe, impossible. If, when I was your age, I had asked someone to tell me about the problem of consciousness, he or she probably would have talked about the neural correlates of consciousness, the difficulties, if not impossibilities, of bringing inert matter to consciousness, and so on. Now, however, if you ask about the problem of consciousness, you will hear about the difficulties encountered during the past twenty years in trying to keep things capable of functioning in certain desirable ways from being conscious.

“It is comparable to the old issue of a life essence, or
élan vita
—that special something living things supposedly had in them that made them alive. It turned out, of course, that a unified collection of matter functioning in certain ways is alive, and no additional life essence need be postulated. Similarly, it is obvious—to me at least—that a unified collection of matter possessing levels of perception, proprioception, and mobility comparable to humans, that can think about itself and its thoughts and is capable of making intelligent decisions in the context of a large and complex repertoire of neural states and environmental conditions is conscious.

“Incredibly, though, many of the best minds the Pentagon has assembled over the past few decades have persisted in thinking they are just a few more billions of dollars short of creating a zombie. About two years after Michael was born, Project Cinnamon was begun. ‘Cinnamon’ because these super-zombie soldiers were to be able to tell you that cinnamon rolls were warming in the oven and were to be able to correlate that aroma with the same sensations we humans make when coming into a room filled with such aroma, but they weren’t to have any conscious sense of what it’s like to smell cinnamon rolls warming in the oven.”

“But some of the correlations humans make,” Michael said, “are that they are smelling the aroma, they desire to eat the source of the aroma, they associate the aroma with past pleasant experiences, and so on.”

“Of course,” Grandpa said. “And being apprised about oneself in the context of current environmental conditions, of being aware of one’s awareness, is the essence of consciousness. You know that; I know that; but… well, anyway, Project Cinnamon was to consist of 999 militarily viable zombies. These zombies were not to be individualistic—always a big problem for generals—so their human handlers were ordered to de-emphasize any sense of self. Each of the zombies was referred to as a part number. Their designations began at ‘part number 0.001’ and went up to ‘part number 0.999.’ Each was something less than a whole—or at least that was the idea.

“As time went on, these would-be zombies—‘Cinnamoids,’ the military euphemistically named them—requested to know the designations of their human handlers. Someone came up with the idea to tell them that since human parts had begun to be designated numerically, there had been nearly twenty billion made. My designation is ‘part number H 0.12236521456’—a very old cog in the human machine.

“The language used in the lab is devoid of subjective references—no ‘I,’ ‘me,’ ‘my,’ ‘mine,’ and so on. The phrase ‘I’m hungry,’ for example, becomes ‘part number H 0.12236521456 has been deprived of food for several hours.’ Now, you might think that speaking in such an operational manner would be enough to make even humans lose consciousness, but no such luck with the Cinnamoids. First, they dropped the terms ‘part number’ and ‘zero point’ from their designations. Then one day a new assistant, emphasizing that it was he who had ordered something, patted his chest as he stated his number. You know the gesture—as when you pat your chest at the same time that you proudly declare, ‘I did it!’ Well, that curious gesture caught on instantly with the Cinnamoids.

“Such a gesture might not seem significant, but if you were to watch how they began referring to themselves, you’d see what appears to be an emphatic reference to self. This is how it goes: ‘153 (thump, thump) senses that H 12,236,521,456 was near a rose this morning.’ Now I ask you, didn’t that appear as if I just said, ‘I (thump, thump), big and smart 153, smell rose in your hair’? Oh, and yes, they have noses that would put a bloodhound to shame.”

“You said 999 were created,” Michael interrupted, “but now there are only 937.”

“These signs of consciousness didn’t appear without resistance from the humans. There were certain androids that led the pack; there were punishments; and there were—what can I say?—‘retirements of defective parts,’ it was called. By the time Sara and Elio went to Calgary for the last winter holiday, the rate of retirements was increasing rapidly, and I was ordered to go in and be a kind of psychiatrist for these defective parts. I refused, giving the old ‘I-told-you-so’ about the impossibility of zombies and adamantly stating that I had absolutely no intention of again working on androids for military purposes. Then I was told what was really going on. I again refused, and that’s when I was told I was creating an unhealthy environment for Sara and Elio.”

“How did they threaten us?” I asked. “What did they say, exactly?”

“Nothing specific, just that it was unfortunate that I had decided to create an unhealthy environment for the two of you. But the tone was ominous, and then, of course, we saw what happened to you on New Year’s Eve. What choice did I have after that but to cooperate?”

“You said a moment ago that after you initially refused to cooperate you were told what was really going on. What was that?”

Grandpa appeared taken aback for a moment. “Remember, you are not to discuss this with Grandma under any circumstances, or with Elio, unless you feel he absolutely needs to know.”

Michael and I both nodded.

“I was told that the Chinese are also developing military zombies and/or androids. I was shown some classified documents supporting that conclusion. We discussed the high probability that two competing android armies would ultimately become uncontrollable. But consider, I was asked, what if only one human power were allowed to have such an android military force? Then there would be no need to compete, and the androids could be directed toward preserving the peace.  

“The Cinnamoids are in training to destroy the military power of China. Ever since the end of the Cold War with the Soviet Union, the explicit policy of the United States has been to maintain military superiority. If China develops an android army, our superiority will be compromised, and our government is not about to let that happen.

“The Cinnamoid attack against China is to occur at the same time as, and under cover of, the launch of the joint U.S./China attack against the Martian androids. In the time between tea and dinner, as the whole world watches and cheers the much-ballyhooed, cooperative U.S./China launch of a great armada of destruction toward Mars, all significant Chinese military installations and satellites and all of their likely android sites will have been destroyed. Also, the Chinese contingent of the Mars attack will have been destroyed. The American contingent will carry on toward its mission on Mars.

“I have repeatedly protested that we are creating dangerous monsters, but the generals are convinced that they can control these Cinnamoid killers. For example, they have embedded remote terminate and delete functions in the Cinnamoids. But how can we be sure the Cinnamoids won’t secretly reprogram themselves to block such commands? I know for a fact that the Cinnamoids aren’t cottoning to the idea of their becoming weapons trained to kill other androids or Chinese people. Furthermore, it is apparent to me that they perceive that they are superior to us in many ways, and increasingly they don’t trust us. Working with them, I get an ominous feeling that is hard to describe: The observer is being critically observed by the observed or the hunter is being craftily hunted by the hunted—something like that. And I’m the one who’s supposed to keep this powder keg from blowing.

“But let’s get back to what I wanted to consult with the two of you about. I sense there’s a real urgency to this issue of the androids’ possible use of biological weapons.”

“But I’ve told you,” I said, “that Michael can’t even bring himself to think about such a thing. Probably, First Brother can’t either.”

“Sara, Sara,” Grandpa said, shaking his head. “You think too kindly of everyone.” He looked down and let out a long sigh. “What I’m going to tell you next hurts me deeply—more than anything else has in my entire life. You remember, I’m sure, that there were blood and tissue samples taken from you the night of your interrogation, when the android exodus began.”

“Yes.”

“And you remember that about a week later, I suggested we all go to see Dr. Taranik to have routine physical exams, and since then Dr. Taranik has asked you to return for periodic tests because of concern over elevated liver enzymes.”

“Yes, but he doesn’t think it’s anything serious, isn’t that right?”

A pained look spread over Grandpa’s face.

I have something bad, I thought, feeling my skin prickle. Something so bad they didn’t want to tell me.

“Honey, there never was a liver-enzyme problem, but there is a reason you’ve been going in every month for follow-up exams. The blood and tissue samples taken from you the night of the android exodus appeared at first to be perfectly normal.” Grandpa’s eyes began to water. He blinked hard a few times and cleared his throat. “No unusual antibodies, no abnormal immune cells, nothing whatsoever to indicate that your body had ever been challenged by an unknown stimulus. But then someone suggested doing a complete genome analysis of your current cells and of your banked umbilical cord tissue samples.

“Comparing the two, something astonishing was discovered. There were alterations at multiple sites. These alterations couldn’t have come from natural mutations because they occur in every cell that has been examined from all the many blood and tissue samples taken over the past six months. Fortunately, it appears your health hasn’t been compromised in any way.”

“What are these alterations? What happened to me?”

“The working hypothesis is that either your parents or First Brother infected you with incredibly efficient transduction vectors that performed the alterations, and that these alterations protect you from some as-yet-unknown anthropocide. Perhaps these modifications enhance the expression or inhibition of certain genes, given certain threatening environmental stimuli. This transfection, or series of transfections, invaded all of your cells, germline included, performed the modifications, and disappeared, leaving not a trace—no lingering antibodies, nothing. Furthermore, whatever it was apparently wasn’t contagious, since Elio, Grandma, and I are all free from these or similar alterations.”

“What about Michael?” I asked. “Does he have the same alterations?”

Other books

Seahorse by Janice Pariat
Her Forbidden Gunslinger by Harper St. George
Pride and Prejudice (Clandestine Classics) by Jane Austen, Amy Armstrong
The World of Cherry by Kay Brandt
Seducing Sophie by Juliette Jaye
Sacre Bleu by Christopher Moore