Robot 287 was edging closer. I could hear the faint hum of Raymo moving in, as well. The voices surrounded me, soft, so very soft. “Join with us.” Lights began to coalesce in 287’s tank, all the colors of the starbow that had accompanied my ship on its long, lonely voyage. Swirling, dancing colors. I pivoted. Raymo was a dozen meters away, its tank dark and charred. I exploded down the corridor, legs pounding, pounding, pounding. I crouched low and leapt. Up, up, and over top of Raymo, my boot crashing through the jagged glass wall of the tank’s tar side. I ran back into the starport’s lobby.
“Listen to us, Carl Hunt.” Voices, like those the robots had spoken with, but clearer, more resonant, coming from nowhere, coming from everywhere. I halted, spreads my hands. “What do you want from me?”
“We want…you. Join us!”
I found myself shouting. “Who are you?”
“You wouldn’t believe me if I told you,” said the voices. I ran through the lobby, swinging my right hand up to rub sweat from my forehead. Blood splattered across my face. My hand was more seriously hurt than I’d thought. A bloody archipelago of splotches trailed behind me across the lobby floor.
The voices again: “We’re human, Hunt. A lot has happened since you left.” I burst through a double doorway into the deserted press gallery. “We are the TerraComp Web. We are the sum of humanity.” I ran past the tiered seating to the door at the other end. Locked. Breathing raggedly, I beat my hands against the mahogany, the injured one leaving a bloody mark each time it hit. “Think of it,” said all the voices. “By joining with the global computer system, humankind has achieved everything it could ever want.”
A woman’s voice separated from the vocal melee. “Unlimited knowledge! Any fact instantly available. Any question instantly answered.”
A man’s voice followed, deep and hearty. “Immortality! Each of us lives forever as a free-floating consciousness in the memory banks.”
And a child’s voice: “Freedom from hunger and pain!”
Then, in unison, plus a hundred more voices on top: “Join with us!”
I slumped to the floor, my back against the door. I tried to shout but the words came out as hoarse whispers. “Leave me alone.”
“We only want what’s best for you.”
“Go away, then! Just leave me the hell alone.”
The lights in the gallery began to slowly dim. I lay back, too tired to even look to my slashed hand. Another robot, different in structure, rolled up quietly next to me. It was a long flatbed with forklift arms and lenses on a darting gooseneck. It spoke in the same whispering multitude. “Join with us.”
I rallied some strength. “You’re… not… human—”
“Yes, we are. In every way that counts.”
“What… What about individuality?”
“There is no more loneliness. We are one.”
I shook my head. “A man has to be himself; make his own mistakes.”
“Individuality is childhood.” The robot edged closer. “Community is adulthood.”
With much effort, I managed to pull myself to my feet. “Can you love?”
“We have infinite intimacy. Each mind mingling—solute and solvent—into a collective consciousness. Join us!”
“And—sex?”
“We are immortal. There is no need.”
I pushed off the wall and hobbled back the way I’d come. “Count me out!” I fell through the doors into the lobby. There had to be a way outside.
I turned into a darkened hallway. Bracing against a wall, I caught my breath. Suddenly, I became aware of a faint phosphorescent glow at the other end of the hall. It was another information robot, like Raymo, with the number 28 on its sides. I held my arm out in front of my body. “Stay back, demon.”
“But you’re hurt, Carl.”
I looked at my mangled hand. “What’s that to you?”
“Asimov’s First Law of Robotics: ‘A robot may not injure a human being, or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.’ ” As the voices spoke, the words materialized in glowing amber within 28’s tank. “If I do not tend to your hand, it may become infected. Indeed, if the bleeding is not stanched soon, you may suffer shock due to blood loss.”
“So you respond like a classical robot?” My tone grew sharp. “I order you not to come any closer.”