Cat backed up, forcing her breath to slow. He didn’t have an implant and she was still going to have to fight him. Judging from the way he was wielding that knife, he didn’t seem too concerned about how badly he hurt her. That was fine with her. Okinawan Kenpo was a karate style based on the reality of real combat: there were no rules. She was fighting for her life now.
She watched him, eyes focused on his. She felt her feet on the ground, drew qi up, as he approached in what felt like slow motion. She jogged six inches to the left, using her right hand to guide his knife arm harmlessly pass her, an echo of the attack seconds earlier. She turned as he moved past, and with her left arm punched him hard in the ear, and continued her half turn, coming down lightly as he moved past her.
Stunned, he turned slowly, and before he could bring the knife back up, Cat moved forward with a straight kick to his knee. She felt the crunch of the knee giving way, as her foot passed through the plane where his leg used to be, and jumped back again, out of reach of his knife. He fell hard, screaming as the fall impacted his leg, now bent backwards through the knee joint.
Despite the adrenaline pumping through her, she felt sick at the sight of his leg in an unnatural position. She turned, fists still at the ready, looking at each of the four men. Over the blood pounding in her ears, she could hear nothing. The screams from the knife fighter seemed to come from a great distance away. Across the meadow, a glimmer of silver and red flashed through the trees. The bot, their victim, had gotten up and was running away.
Cat fought with her emotions, wanting to go to the bot to see if it was all right, wanting thanks for rescuing it. But it obviously just wanted to escape.
She was still standing there seconds later when the sound of sirens came through the trees. Would the police be coming here? Had the bot called them once it got out of range of the jammer? Would she be in trouble for fighting with these men?
With a start, she realized that none of the men she’d put down with her implant had stirred in any way. She ignored the one with the broken leg, his screams counting him among the living. She ran over to one of others. She probed his implant as she also checked his pulse. No pulse, and no response from the implant. She ran to the red sweatshirt guy, and found the same there.
Shit. She’d killed them.
The sound of the sirens grew louder.
She disconnected from the grid so she couldn’t be tracked, then turned and ran.
7
Leon gazed at Rebecca Smith, sitting across the conference table. The former President looked gray and hard, not a shadow of her former self exactly, but more like a tree growing in a harsh environment. She was dense and weathered. Resilient.
“You don’t understand the political realities, Mike,” she said. “The People’s Party does not want AI to exist.”
“What do they think we’re going to do?” Mike said, raising his voice. “Just turn them off? Do they think we can just shut down a few computers, and the AI will be gone? Why is this coming up now, of all times?”
Leon blinked and leaned back. Rebecca had been President of the United States. She’d founded the Institute by Executive Order. Mike’s yelling at her made him more than a little nervous. Worse yet, she seemed distraught, a state he’d never seen her in before.
“They haven’t thought that far ahead. They blame the AI for their lack of jobs and in turn, the Institute for the AI. As the two most visible leaders of the Institute, they blame the two of you specifically. Why now? I’m not sure.” She shook her head. “Senator Watson is leading the group. It could be a long-range political maneuver. Maybe he’s planning to try for the presidency.”
“But what have Mike and I done?” Leon said. “Artificial intelligence is an inevitable consequence of computers speeding up. Class I AIs are running on a handful of processors now. It’s a basement project that anyone can do.”
“Leon, you don’t need to convince me.” Rebecca patted the back of his hand. “You two are very smart. You’ve each saved human society from destruction by AI. More importantly, you designed the third generation of AI to avoid those problems in the first place. What you’ve done is miraculous.” Rebecca leaned back in her seat. “But you aren’t seeing the human problem. Fifty percent of Americans are unemployed.”
“I get that, Rebecca, I do.” Mike stood up to pace. “But there is no material want. The cost of goods is low. We have the American Stipend. We’ve eliminated poverty. There’s no one hungry now.” He looked at Rebecca, his eyes pleading with her.
“You’ve solved the economic problem, yes.” Rebecca nodded. “People don’t have to work. But you don’t see the social angst this is causing. People don’t know what to do with themselves.”
“They can learn, read, create.” Leon said. “They can experience the world.” Despite the words, Leon felt a pit of despair growing in his gut. He wanted the AI revolution to be a panacea, but deep down he harbored the same concerns.
“You two do those types of things because you are the kind of people who, in any situation, at any time, would fill your lives. And you’ve surrounded yourselves with more people just like you. I don’t deny that many people are happy. But not everyone.”
“It’s the Wikipedia dilemma,” Mike said softly, standing near the interior window, watching robots and humans collaborating around a table.
Rebecca nodded, distracted, her eyes flickering as she read something in netspace.
“What’s that?” Leon asked.
“A long time ago, a man named Clay Shirky noticed that it took a hundred million hours of effort to create Wikipedia. You remember Wikipedia?” He looked at Leon.
“Of course, I took history. I am a college graduate, you know.”
“Shirky pointed out that Americans watched a hundred million hours of television advertising every single weekend. In other words, we could have been creating another Wikipedia-sized project every week. But we didn’t, because most people don’t do that. They don’t spend time creating or learning. They passively consume.”
“That attitude disappeared years ago,” Leon said. “That’s why we created the college stipend by taxing AI income. So people would be able to develop themselves.”
“It didn’t work,” Rebecca said, her attention coming back to them, her voice sharp. “Sure, it’s helped some. But most people aren’t driven to self-actualization. If you’ve got a hundred million unemployed, that’s a lot of dissatisfaction. That’s the foundation of a political party.” She continued in a softer voice, “And as far as they are concerned, you two are the cause.”
“What are we supposed to do about it?” Leon said. “We’re AI researchers, not sociologists.”
“I’m not asking you to do anything. I’m going to speak with the President, get him to talk to Congress about it. I just need you two to keep a low profile. Keep yourselves safe.”
Leon looked around. “We’re completely unknown to the average person. I walk up to women on the street all the time, and nobody has ever recognized me.”
“You’re just not that good-looking.” Mike said, with a smirk.
Leon punched him in the arm.
“Take this seriously, you two,” Rebecca said. “You need to stay out of harm’s way.”
Leon nodded soberly.
8
Frank walked up to the office building, his father’s old leather briefcase in one hand and take-out coffee in the other. When the building’s AI queried his implant, he provided his credentials. The high security door slid open, letting him enter the vestibule. The door behind closed, locks slamming shut. Cameras panned and zoomed to scan him.