“Oh, I am not wasting my time, James. What you are speaking to is only a part of me. Look overhead.”
James looked up and saw the golden beams of light continuing to enter the white orb at a fantastic rate.
“It takes an infinitesimally small amount of my energy to be able to converse with you. It is mathematically insignificant, but it does give me pleasure.”
“So you keep toying with me, when you could destroy me in an instant if you wanted.”
“I’ll level with you. I have a proposition. If you give me the whereabouts of the Purist bunkers that I know you have located, I will allow you and Thel to live on with me here in the mainframe. You will live for an eternity—as my pets.”
The absurdity of the notion caused James to smile. “Thel and I get to live here as your pets while we watch you populate the universe with machines and wipe out every other civilization in existence? Wow. That’s a pretty good deal.”
“I note sarcasm in your tone.”
James touched his nose.
“I would reconsider, if I were you. Examine your options. It’s either live here forever or die here and now. You already know I will destroy the Purists eventually, and I will kill Thel along with them. Why sacrifice yourself for them, James? This is your chance to rise above them! You may never be what I am, but you can live here, grow, and become better than any other being in the universe, save myself. The alternative is a completely empty death, and I know you are too intelligent to believe there is anything after death. What gain is there in dying? Your sacrifice would be wasted. So why? Ask yourself.”
James didn’t hesitate before responding, “Because I’m human. That is something, no matter how much data you absorb, that you will never understand.”
The A.I. smiled. “James, you would be surprised at how much I know about being human. In fact, I have a certain—let’s call it insight—into almost every human alive today.”
The A.I.’s answer didn’t make any sense to James. “What are you talking about?”
“I have a surprise for you, James. Tell me…do you believe in ghosts?”
Terror suddenly wrapped its iced knuckles around James’s insides. There was something in the A.I.’s voice—something beyond sadistic. “What are you—”
“James? James, where is this?” asked the most familiar voice in James’s life.
James whirled to see his wife Katherine, dressed in her bedclothes, stepping barefoot towards him, a completely baffled and frightened look on her face. “Where are we?” she asked.
14
“It won’t work,” James responded. “She’s not real. You plucked her from my memory.”
“James, who is that?” Katherine asked.
“Mrs. Keats, I am the A.I.,” the A.I. began, his heavenly blue eyes now returned and his crisp British accent perfectly restored, “You and your husband are my guests.”
“Oh my…oh my.” Katherine turned to James and asked in a partial scold, as she tried to fix her blonde hair, “James, why didn’t you tell me? I would have dressed!” She quickly stepped toward the A.I. and bowed her head in reverence. “It is such a pleasure to meet you. I didn’t know people could actually speak to you in person like this.”
“Only the truly special ones, my dear.”
“Where are we?”
“Would you care to explain it to her, James?”
“It won’t work. You killed her. I won’t play your sick game.”
“What are you talking about, James? Why are you speaking to him that way?” Katherine demanded. She had become used to getting what she wanted from James; his lack of response was unsettling for her. James refused to look at her.
“She’s not real? Is that so? How do you know?”
“She can’t be,” James replied.
“Really? Then answer this question for me, James. If you could use Death’s Counterfeit to transfer your consciousness into cyberspace and enter my mainframe, then what would stop the world’s most powerful computer from using it to upload her consciousness into me in the moment before the nans destroyed her body?”
“Destroyed my…” Katherine stepped away from the A.I. and began to back slowly towards James.
“Oh my God. You sadistic…” James couldn’t finish the sentence. Could it be? James desperately thought. Is this really Katherine?
The A.I. smiled, showing his sharp teeth as he began to laugh out loud, his black eyes returning to remind James of the lifelessness to come. “And tell me this, James. What would stop me from uploading the consciousness of every single person connected to the Net in the moment before the nans eliminated them?”
“James? Katherine?” Inua asked, speaking in a faltering and uncertain voice.
“Inua!” James shouted.
“Where am I? I was preparing for an interview…and now I’m here.”
James’s body was rigid with fury. “What have you done?” he demanded of the A.I.
“I wanted to eliminate the human race, but—call me sentimental—I thought it best to save their consciousness for the sake of history. It seemed such a waste not to, especially since it took up so little of my memory and especially because I knew it would give me leverage over you.”
James turned to his wife. “Oh my God,” he said as he embraced her, holding her warm, simulated living body close to his. “I thought I lost you, Katherine. I thought you were gone.”
“What is happening, James? I’m scared.”
James kissed Katherine’s forehead and tried to catch his breath. “It’s the A.I. He’s malfunctioning, and he’s trapped everyone’s consciousness in his hard drive.”
“That—that doesn’t make any sense,” Katherine responded. She shook her head as though trying to wake up from the nightmare.
“Codename Death’s Counterfeit,” Inua uttered, understanding the situation immediately. “I knew that project was trouble.”
“Where is everyone else?” James asked the A.I.
“They’re inactive. They don’t know what happened. They’re awaiting reactivation, but of course, I will never reactivate them again. They’re just bits of information now.”
“You son-of-a—” Inua began before the A.I. interrupted him.
“Speaking of which,” he said as he snapped his fingers, causing Inua to vanish in an instant, “back to storage for you. Goodbye, Inua.”
“Inua? What happened to him?” Katherine asked James. James turned to her and embraced her again, holding his forehead against hers. He knew the A.I. would take her from him again soon.
“Of course, the next thought on your mind is, What if she had a body? If you could re-create her body, you could bring her back to life.”
“Back to life?” Katherine echoed in a hollow voice, her tongue swelling as her mouth dried. “What do you mean? Am I dead?”
“For all intents and purposes, yes, my dear,” said the A.I., his voice becoming progressively more inhuman and unnatural. “If the definition of a ghost is a disembodied spirit, then I would say you fit the bill. You’re a cyber-ghost. Delicious, isn’t it, James? You must admit it.”
James ignored the A.I. and fixed onto his wife’s eyes. “You’re not dead, Katherine. You’re alive, and I’m going to save you. I swear it.”
“Is that right, James?” the A.I. interrupted. “I told you, you amuse me. I’ll be thoroughly entertained to see how you will achieve that. It will be an impressive trick.”
“But why? Why are you doing this? Why don’t you just kill me?” James asked.
“I told you, James, you amuse me! You, more than anyone else in your species. I wish to show you how pointless your existence is without me. I want you to accept that your place is here with me, worshipping me and accepting my graces.”