“I
“And you think I don’t know that,” I said after a moment.
He shrugged, disconcertingly human. “You ask.”
“Why am I here, Jukka? You want to teach me another
“To discuss our next move.”
“What move? We can’t even run away.”
“No.” He shook his head, baring filed teeth in something approaching regret.
“Why did we wait so long?” Suddenly my sullen defiance had evaporated. I sounded like a child, frightened and pleading. “Why didn’t we just take it on when we first got here, when it was
“We need to learn things. For next time.”
“Next time? I thought
“By chance. But every dandelion is a clone. Their seeds are legion.” Another smile, not remotely convincing — “And maybe it takes more than one try for the placental mammals to conquer Australia.”
“It’ll annihilate us. It doesn’t even need those spitballs, it could pulverize us with one of those scramjets. In an instant.”
“It doesn’t want to.”
“How do you
“They need to learn things too. They want us intact. Improves our odds.”
“Not enough. We can’t win.”
This was his cue. This was the point at which Uncle Predator would smile at my naiveté, and take me into his confidence.
It was his
“No,” he said. “We can’t win.”
“So we just sit here. We just wait to die for the next — the next sixty-eight minutes…”
Sarasti shook his head. “No.”
“But—” I began.
“Oh,” I finished.
Because of course, we had just topped up our antimatter reserves.
But we were going to take
Sarasti said nothing. I wondered what he saw, looking at me. I wondered if there actually
Whose side, I wondered, would an automaton take?
“You have other things to worry about,” he said.
He moved towards me; I swear, all those agonized faces followed him with their eyes. He studied me for a moment, the flesh crinkling around his eyes. Or maybe some mindless algorithm merely processed visual input, correlated aspect ratios and facial tics, fed everything to some output subroutine with no more awareness than a stats program. Maybe there was no more spark in this creature’s face than there was in all the others, silently screaming in his wake.
“Is Susan afraid of you?” the thing before me asked.
“Su — why should she be?”
“She has four conscious entities in her head. She’s four times more sentient than you. Doesn’t that make you a threat?”
“No, of course not.”
“Then why should you feel threatened by me?”
And suddenly I didn’t care any more. I laughed out loud, with minutes to live and nothing to lose. “
“I can imagine what it’s like,” he said quietly. “Please don’t make me do it again.”
I fell instantly silent.
“I know your race and mine are never on the best of terms.” There was a cold smile in his voice if not on his face. “But I do only what you force me to. You
“It served me well enough.” I wondered at the ease with which I had put my life into the past tense.
“Yes, if your purpose is only to
There were implications there I didn’t dare to hope for. “Are you saying—”