“What the devil?” Hayden said, sitting up straight for the first time.
“That was rather pointless,” Teah said, sounding more puzzled than upset. “Now you will simply have to buy another relay.”
“And I will have to shout to make myself heard if she’s a room away! Damn it, Simon!”
“I’m terribly sorry,” he said with complete insincerity. “How clumsy of me.”
“You seem to think sarcasm is beyond the range of my sensors,” Teah said with a tone that sounded remarkably like condescension. “I assure you, it is not. I am well aware of your low opinion of me.”
“And yet you continue to speak to me. How thoroughly…inexplicable.”
Hayden stood up, groaning. “Aaaaaallll right, enough, enough. Teah, would you be kind enough to prepare tea and bring it in for us?” He cocked a bushy eyebrow at Simon. “Or coffee? A shot of Glenfiddich?”
“Tea is fine, Hayden, thank you.”
“It would be my pleasure to serve you, Doctor,” the robot said, then slithered and clanked away from the makeshift chess table to the doorway that led deeper into the underground complex. When she was well out of sight, Hayden turned to regard his younger friend. “Well?” he said gruffly. “What is your problem?”
Hayden was skinny and tall with a scruffy beard that seemed to cling precariously to his leathery face. His white hair badly needed a trim; it fell in flat, straight, silvery wings on both sides of his high-browed forehead.
Simon was glad to see him; though Hayden was only ten years older than Simon himself, he had always been one of the few friends of his father that he actually liked. And he also happened to be one of the most brilliant thinkers in the UK. He reveled in his role as a curmudgeon. He did not suffer fools gladly, and though he rarely smiled, he had a sense of humor as sharp as a scalpel. As far as Simon was concerned, his only real flaw was his attitude about AIs. He loved them-more than humanity itself-while Simon, on the other hand, could barely stand sharing the planet with them.
“I don’t think she likes me,” Simon observed, casting an eye at the doorway where Teah had retreated.
“Oh, Teah likes everyone,” the scientist said, waving it away. “Except you, of course. Now what’s up?”
Before Simon began to explain what he had come for, he asked, “Hayden, why don’t you have our Industrial Designer at least give her a facelift? She’s one of the most complex forms of robot out there but still looks like something from a bad sci-fi movie.”
Hayden ignored the comment. “Go on,” he said.
Simon had been thinking about how to broach the subject for hours-ever since he’d left his own flat. He still wasn’t quite sure how to begin. But he opened his mouth, took a breath-
— and a gawky, slightly disheveled grad student rounded the corner, appearing from behind an eight-foot pile of equipment, staring at a floating readout and completely unaware of Simon’s presence.
“Scan’s all done, Hayden,” the grad student chirped. “No bugs. Not a one.”
Hayden scowled. “Well, shit,” he said. “I was hoping…”
The student stopped short, suddenly aware of the new arrival. A moment later, he grinned in happy recognition. “Professor Fitzpatrick!” he said. “Cool!”
Simon recognized him immediately. “Andrew?” Andrew was the epitome of a perpetual grad student-a happy-go-lucky fellow well into his twenties who had never quite grown up: a tousled mass of blonde hair, thin shoulders and thinner hips with barely a hint of muscle tone, bright green eyes, and a sharp British nose. But appearances can be deceiving, Simon told himself. No one would guess that this young man was the single brightest student that Oxford’s College of Robotics had seen in more than twenty years. Hayden thought so, and Simon’s own experience with the boy had proven him right. They were more than happy to let him stay on for a few extra years, just to enjoy the benefits of his remarkable brain.
“Never mind then. Andrew, take a seat. Simon, you’re here for a reason. I know that. Now sit down and spill your guts.”
Still, Simon hesitated. He didn’t want to look Hayden straight in the eye, and he wasn’t sure he wanted to mention this all in front of Andrew.
As usual, Hayden anticipated him. “You can trust him,” he said, tilting his head toward the grad student. “I do. And trust me, there’s plenty to trust him with around here.”
Simon thought about it for a moment as he stared at the chessboard, then came to a decision.
All right then, he told himself. Then he looked at his father’s best friend and said, “Hayden, I think Dad is still alive.”
Hayden lifted his sky-blue eyes and looked directly into Simon for the first time. Those eyes had always terrified him a little. They could see so much-too much, actually.
“Simon,” he said patiently. “We’ve been over this. Shit happens, and your old man got himself caught in a hurricane full of it.”
Andrew sat silent and nearly motionless, watching them both with eyes as big as an owl’s. Clearly, this was important.
“No.”
“Yes. I talked to the university, to UNED, and to the authorities who certified his death. I’m telling you, Simon, he-”
Without another word, Simon took out the black memory card that Jonathan had given him, squeezed the corners just so, and put it on two of the empty squares on the chessboard. Instantly, a black cube almost a meter square blossomed in the air above the table, and Oliver’s head emerged from its darkness.
“What the bloody hell is this?” Hayden demanded.
“Cool…” Andrew said, as fascinated with the technology as the face that was forming in front of him.
“Just watch,” Simon told him.
“Whoever sees this,” Oliver said to a spot just to the right of the scientist, “if anyone does: please get it to my son, Simon Fitzpatrick…”
None of them said a word as Oliver’s speech unreeled. Simon adjusted his seat so he could watch Hayden rather than the image of the back of his father’s head, and cast uncertain glances at the grad student. Andrew was clearly in awe of what he was seeing, but Hayden’s expression was unreadable…though he visibly flinched when Oliver barked out his hollow, entirely artificial laugh: “Ha. Ha.”
A beat after the image faded away, the black cube collapsed into the card.
“Wow,” Andrew said, almost breathless.
Hayden looked up at the younger man, blue eyes burning. “What do you want me to say?”
“There’s more.”
Hayden’s eyes flickered up to meet his. “More?”
Simon pulled the small black book from the inner pocket of his jacket. “Here.”
Hayden leafed through it rapidly, his long, thin fingers trembling slightly-whether from excitement or rage, Simon couldn’t say. He seemed to absorb every page with the single blink of an eye. “It’s a chess diary,” he said, surprised.
“Yes.”
Hayden had been one of Oliver’s closest friends and most challenging chess opponents for more than ten years. Simon suddenly wondered if the games recorded in the little black book were ones that his father and Hayden had played together.
“Your dad never kept diaries…” Hayden said. He paused to absorb another game completely; it took him only moments. “Though maybe he should have. He might have beaten me more often.”
Simon nodded. “I think…Hayden, I think he was trying to tell me something.”
Hayden arched an eyebrow. “What the hell are you talking about? Through this? The diary?” He leafed through the pages, frowning at what he saw. “You know how absurd this all sounds?”
“Yes.” He felt an unexpected flush of heat to his cheeks, like he was blushing in front of a demanding teacher.
“When was Oliver supposed to have written all this?” Hayden asked, his voice dripping with skepticism. “He was on a demanding-no, a grueling-expedition with UNED. Do you really think he had the time to sit down and create a diary of chess games just to secretly communicate with you?”