respected her wishes. Left her alone when sheâd lobotomized her last victim, left her alone to tender her resignation. Heâd wanted to reach out when sheâd started eyeing Heaven, would have done anything to keep her on his side of the afterlife, but by then it was long past being about what he wanted. So heâd left her alone even when she leased out her brain to pay her rent in the Collective Conscious, withdrew from the outer world to the inner. Sheâd left a link behind, at least. He could always talk to her, there on Styxâs farthest shore. She always honored her obligations. But heâd known thatâs all it was, so even thenâafter sheâd stopped slaughtering artificial systems and started being oneâhe left her alone.
âShe was a cloud-killer,â Brüks said at last.
âHuh,â Moore grunted. Then, helping Brüksâs arms into their sleeves: âNot a very good one, I hope.â
âWhy?â
âLetâs just say that not every distributed AIâs emergent, and not every emergent AIâs rogue.â Moore handed over his gauntlets. âWe donât publicize it, but every now and then some of the better CKs have been known to pick targets weâd really rather they didnât.â
Brüks swallowed on a throat gone suddenly dry. âThe fucked-up thing is, she agreed with them. The AI Rights idiots, I mean. She quit because she got sick of killing conscious beings whose only crime wasââhow had she put it?ââ growing up too fast .â
Suit zipped up. Gauntlets clicked into place. A solid yank on the boa-cord and the suit squirmed around him, cinching from flaccid to skintight in a few disquieting seconds. Moore handed him the helmet: âSeat it facing your three, turn counterclockwise until it clicks. Keep the visor up until I say.â
âReally?â Brüks was starting to feel light-headed. âThe air seems a littleâthinâ¦â
âPlenty of time.â Moore grabbed another suit off the wall. âI donât want your hearing compromised.â He bounced off the deck, brought knees to chest and spread his suit open with both hands. With one fluid motion he kicked his legs straight back onto the deck, suited to the waist. He bounced lightly.
âSo she wasnât afraid of the conscious AIs.â Moore shrugged arms into sleeves. âHow about the smart ones?â
âW-what?â
âSmart AIs.â He clicked his own helmet into place. âWas she afraid of them?â
Brüks gulped oily alpine air and tried to concentrate. The smart ones. Past that minimum complexity threshold where networks wake up: past the Sapience Limit where they go to sleep again, where self-awareness dissolves in the vaster reaches of networks grown too large, in the signal lags that reduce synchrony to static. Up where intelligence continues to grow even though the self has been left behind.
âThose, sheâwas a little worried about,â he admitted, trying to ignore the faint roaring in his ears.
âSmart woman.â The Colonelâs voice was strangely tinny. He leaned over and checked Brüksâs seals and sockets with precise mechanical efficiency, nodded. âOkay, drop your visor,â he said, dropping his.
A louder hiss replaced the fainter one: a blessed wash of fresh air caressed Brüksâs face the moment his visor sealed. Relief flooded in a moment later. An arcane mosaic of icons and acronyms flickered to life across the crystal.
Mooreâs helmet bumped against his own, his voice buzzing distantly across the makeshift connection: âItâs a saccadal interface. Comm treeâs upper left.â Sure enough an amber star blinked there: a knock at the door. Brüks focused his gaze just so and accepted the call.
âThatâs better.â Suddenly it was as though Moore was speaking from right inside Brüksâs
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