"Changeling" - читать интересную книгу автора (Leigh Stephen)Chapter 24. A Call ReceivedIt had to be one of the most frightening sounds he’d ever heard, those shivering howls coming from the throat of the huge black carrion bird. More than anything else, the fluidity of the rogue’s body was terrifying. It had seemed to simply Watching the rogue flyaway, Derec was suddenly very certain that this wasn’t going to be as easy as he’d thought it would be. Not at all. He took a deep breath of the cold night air. Cradling his arm, he went back inside. “Master Derec, are you hurt?” “Mostly my pride, Mandelbrot,” he answered. “I suspect it’ll heal slower than the rest of me.” Derec’s arm was throbbing again, and his head ached where he’d hit the railing as the rogue swept past him, but none of it was as serious as it could have been. He’d seen those teeth, those claws, and he’d seen how the rogue had flung Mandelbrot aside like a broken doll. A few scrapes and bruises were nothing. Nothing at all. Derec sat down on the couch and leaned his head back. “We need Wolruf,” he said. The city was still in an uproar. He could hear it all in his head. Supervisor Alpha was directing the Hunter-Seekers to try to track the rogue, but Derec knew that it would be hopeless. There were too many shapes it could have taken to avoid pursuit. “Wolruf?” Mandelbrot queried. “Yes. Think about it. She’d understand these creatures better than we can. At the very least she’d be dealing with a canine intelligence that is-maybe-more like her own in contrast to our apish thought patterns. That’s our problem. The rogue seems to believe it’s one of them; their leader, in fact. Which means it’s thinking like them. The rogue’s logic is utterly alien. It’s obvious that “It is still a positronic intelligence, Master Derec. It was built by a human, if not Dr. Avery himself. That much is certain. I observed it as closely as possible during the skirmish. The skin was definitely dianite, like the material of the city itself, and it spoke in Standard. There are certain givens with a positronic brain. It may even be that it will respond to the city’s orders, being made from the same substance.” “Yes, Mandelbrot. It follows the Laws, or should, at any rate. I just wonder how it might “We can’t understand these beings, not easily,” he continued. “Wolruf has a closer affinity to them than we ever will. Besides, “I agree with you, Master Derec. Send for Wolruf.” “Good.” Derec nodded. “It’s about time I made a decent decision.” Still holding the empty glass, he went out to the balcony again and stared out at the darkness into which the rogue had disappeared. The sound of the rogue’s howling still seemed to echo. He felt the skin of his back prickling at the memory. He didn’t mention all the other reasons for wanting to make the call, though he knew Mandelbrot would also be aware of them, if too concerned with causing a human pain to mention them. Wolruf’s outlook would help them, yes, but Wolruf would also bring a ship which would allow them to leave the world if they needed to. And Derec wanted very badly to call Ariel. He wanted Ariel more than Wolruf in many ways. Wolruf could also bring Ariel. He sighed again. Derec felt in his head for the chemfet channels and called: Beta responded immediately. Derec was certain of that much. The message arrived at Aurora as a highly compressed squirt emanating from the Aurora system’s wormhole, punched through the incredible distances and the space-time anomaly by the powerful transmitters in Robot City. The weakened signal was received by Aurora’s orbiting communications complex, the charges billed against Ariel’s family’s account, and transferred down to the planetary net decoded and strengthened. There it was posted to Derec and Ariel’s computer terminal. That was exactly as Derec had intended, except that Ariel was no longer there to receive it. Someone else was. “Wolruf? Who or what is Wolruf? You must answer me. It is extremely important.” The household robot didn’t seem inclined to answer the query. The inbuilt command against revealing an owner’s business was perhaps the most highly stressed program code in its memory, the Second Law priority reinforced to the best of factory’s technicians’ abilities. But there was one higher priority that could always be invoked, and the speaker was “It is very important that you tell me, Balzac. Mistress Ariel is not on Aurora, as you know. She has left this world and cannot help. Master Derec is in trouble; that is implied by the message. He needs this Wolruf to aid him. It took an hour of careful argument and resulted in a badly damaged robotic mind. Balzac would never be of much use to its owners again. But it |
||
|