“And you do this without any specialized knowledge at all.”
“I’m as much of a specialist as you. I specialize in processing informational topologies.”
“Without understanding their content.”
“Understanding the shapes is enough.”
Bates seemed to find some small imperfection in the battlebot under scrutiny, scratched at its shell with a fingernail. “Software couldn’t do that without your help?”
“Software can do a lot of things. We’ve chosen to do some for ourselves.” I nodded at the grunt. “Your visual inspections, for example.”
She smiled faintly, conceding the point.
“So I’d encourage you to speak freely. You know I’m sworn to confidentiality.”
“Thanks,” she said, meaning
“Well,” Bates said, sending one last grunt on its way. “Here we go.” She pushed off and sailed up the spine.
The newborn killing machines clicked at me. They smelled like new cars.
“By the way,” Bates called over her shoulder, “you missed the obvious one.”
“Sorry?”
She spun a hundred-eighty degrees at the end of the passageway, landed like an acrobat beside the drum hatch. “The reason. Why something would attack us even if we didn’t have anything it wanted.”
I read it off her: “If it wasn’t attacking at all. If it was defending itself.”
“You asked about Sarasti. Smart man. Strong Leader. Maybe could spend a little more time with the troops.”
I remembered transient killer whales. “Maybe he’s being considerate.”
“I’m sure that’s it,” Bates said.
It wasn’t just Sarasti. They
It started pretty much the same way it did for anything else; vampires were far from the first to learn the virtues of energy conservation. Shrews and hummingbirds, saddled with tiny bodies and overclocked metabolic engines, would have starved to death overnight if not for the torpor that overtook them at sundown. Comatose elephant seals lurked breathless at the bottom of the sea, rousing only for passing prey or redline lactate levels. Bears and chipmunks cut costs by sleeping away the impoverished winter months, and lungfish — Devonian black belts in the art of estivation — could curl up and die for years, waiting for the rains.
With vampires it was a little different. It wasn’t shortness of breath, or metabolic overdrive, or some blanket of snow that locked the pantry every winter. The problem wasn’t so much a lack of prey as a lack of
By the time they went extinct they’d learned to shut down for
It made two kinds of sense. It not only slashed their metabolic needs while prey bred itself back to harvestable levels, it gave us time to forget that we
It was murder on our ancestors, even if those same enemy genes — co-opted now — served us so well when we left the sun a half-million years later. But it was almost — heartening, I guess — to think that maybe Sarasti felt the tug of other genes, some aversion to prolonged visibility shaped by generations of natural selection. Maybe he spent every moment in our company fighting voices that urged him to
We could always hope.
Our final orbit combined discretion and valor in equal measure.