Ultimate Nyssa Glass H. Burke (bookstand for reading .txt) đ
- Author: H. Burke
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âEfficiency wasnât the end goal. The Creator programmed me to make interactions as much like dealing with a real person as possible. Wouldnât you rather deal with a person than a soulless machine?â
She dropped the first screw into her pocket and moved to the second. âSometimes. Other times people are annoying. I guess Iâm the minority there, though. Most people love to socialize. Still, itâs all fake: programming sending signals through circuits and wires.â
âHow is that fake? Human emotions are basically powered by chemical reactions. Just because mine are electronic rather than hormonal doesnât make them any less real.â
The second screw slipped out of her grasp and clattered to the floor. âI suppose.â With the next screw, the chest-plate swung to the side, allowing her to see the wires and wheels ⊠and bones. The blood drained from her face, leaving her lips numb.
âWhat is it? I donât like that look.â
She held the RAM up to show him. A full rib cage rested within the iron casing, wires twisted about it like vines around a ruined building.
âOh not again ⊠youâre right, sometimes these emotions donât help at all.â
She glanced down the line of knights. âDo you think they all âŠ?â
âI don't know. This is different from the maid, cruder. The maid's heart was beating, and there are no internal organs remaining this time. The maid's memories suggested she was converted near the end. Perhaps whoever did this hadn't perfected the system for keeping the organs 'alive' within the robotic shell yet.â
âBut why? What possible reason could there be to combine humans with mechanical elements? What was Dalhart trying to accomplish?â Nyssa stepped back, trying not to think of the decaying flesh this knight had once encapsulated.
âI donât know. Letâs see if we can get some more information out of this one.â
She threaded the handle of the RAM through the laces of her corset so that it rested against her chest, facing outward.
âI can see, but you still get the use of both your hands,â Hart said. âClever if somewhat inappropriate.â
âIf you were a man it might be inappropriate. I donât think one can make advances towards a computer.â She snorted.
âAnd here I thought I was so âhuman.â The memory wheels should be positioned similarly to the maid's, at least I hope. This system is obviously different than the last. Itâs like they built the robot around a manâs full body, rather than just incorporating certain organs. The skeleton appears to be fully intact.â
âCan we not talk about that while Iâm wrist deep inside it?â Nyssa moved aside some wires and found the programming box. The memory wheels slipped easily from their fastenings.
âThereâs a slot on top of the RAM. You can insert the wheel in that. If it is audio, do you want to hear it? It could be unnerving.â
Nyssa sat cross-legged and took the RAM from her laces. The memory wheel fit the slot perfectly. âI think Iâd rather be frightened but informed than blissfully ignorant. Let me have it.â
The RAM sucked in the wheel. Immediately lines of light began their dance across the mirrorâs surface, accompanied by a clicking noise.
âAll right. I have the files. Thereâs a lot more here, but it mostly involves security protocols, any time they were activated in the last few years ⊠Oh blast ⊠looks like they did take down an intruder at one point.â
Nyssaâs grip tightened on the RAMâs handle. One of Albrietâs agents? Or top-hat manâs? Either way, at least I know someone got this far before me.
âAny record of what happened to him?â
âDisposal records. Looks like he or she didnât make it.â
Nyssa took a moment to consider her own lack of reaction to this news. Am I growing jaded already? So much death ⊠how did I ever get mixed up in this? âAnything about ⊠who this was before?â She placed her hand on the suitâs leg. The knightâs victim might be unnamed and unknowable, but the knight himself had been a human too. He ⊠or she ⊠deserved some deference.
âNot a name, but Iâve got another audio file. Looks like something recorded pre-conversion. Are you sure you want to hear it?â
She nodded, her teeth clenched.
âAll right then.â
The RAM glowed blue and a deep voice rose from it. âWhereâs Master Ellis? Professor, no one has seen your son in days, and the staff is starting to worry, what with all these strange new systems youâve put in place. Some are contemplating quitting ⊠what? Me? No, sir, Iâve served you for nearly two decades. I will never leave you or your family, but where is Master Ellis? The staff would be greatly pacified if they could only speak with him ⊠what is that? Professor, put that syringe down. Stop!â
The voice fizzled out. Nyssaâs heart pounded.
âI think I know who he was,â Hart said. âThere werenât many staff members with that length of service. Yancy, the butler, and his wife, Mary, were the only two.â
Nyssa glanced up at the gray bones within the metal armor. Knowing the name didnât make it any less horrible. âSo you knew him?â
âYes, itâs hazy, but I have the face. I remember him being human and then just being gone. Why didn't I question that? How long were these conversions going on under my very nose?â
âYou donât have a nose.â She forced a smile.
âIâm not in the mood. And who is Master Ellis?â
Nyssa blinked. âWhat do you mean who is Master Ellis? Even I know that.â
âHeâs not in my records of the household staff,â Hart insisted.
âOf course not. Heâs Professor Dalhartâs son ⊠or was. Do you think ⊠Dalhart wouldnât have converted his own son into one of these monsters, would he?â
âI have a hard time contemplating him turning a house fly into a monster. This isnât right. Why donât I have any record of him?â
Something itched in the back of Nyssaâs brain, a half-formed thought that left her uneasy. All these converted creatures are basically bodies deprived of
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