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A science fiction novel.
OBLIVION’S CHILDREN
By Jim Wegryn and Roland James
Chapter 4 — DECEPTION
Start here on page 35… or skip to page
36, 37, 38, 39,
40, 41, 42, 43,
44, 45, 46
Dawna wiped tomato sauce from her fingers with her napkin.
“This taco pizza on French bread with Polish sausage and soy sauce is dee-lish.”
“It’s soop, Mom. Murl made it for me. It’s my birthday dinner.”
“Birthday? Oh, is that today?”
“You know it is, Dad. I’m ten years old today.”
“Well, then today is the day you should get your special present.”
Adam’s eyes lit up. “Really? What do you mean special?”
“Look behind you.”
The boy turned around and saw a genue holding a frosted cake topped with ten
burning candles.
Dawna and Micael sang “Happy Birthday.”
Adam blew out the candles. “Thanks, but this looks like an ordinary birthday
cake. What’s so special about it?”
Dawna and Micael smirked.
Adam looked again at the cake with its smoking candles, then up at the genue
holding it. “Why is it special, Murl? Is it double double chocolate?”
The genue did not answer. Nor did he move.
Adam cocked his head. “Murl, answer me. What kind of cake is it?”
The genue did not respond. “Dad, what’s with wrong with Murl?”
Micael grinned. “Look closely at him.”
Adam studied the green servant. He noticed that the face was slightly different.
Then he saw the blank name plate. “This isn’t Murl.” His eyes
widened and his mouth fell open. “Is he mine?”
“In a way. He’s a beta model we’re going to test in our home.
He has a couple of innovations we’ll begin putting into all genues if they
work well.”
“Really? Hot dog! Is he super strong or something?”
Micael laughed. “No, no. He’s pretty much like other genues. But
he does have Hypertact. It’s an improved neuro-tactile system that’s
integrated into the plasmoid.” He saw the boy cock his head and frown. “What
I mean is this genue can feel things and control his fingers as well as you or
I.”
“Wow, he can play Quintris Prostruction with me.”
“He also has what we call a Supplemental Cortex Ideator Loop Link, or SCILL.
It’s suppose to increase the cognition lattice and give better visual articulation,
according to Chenkov’s theory. Tuning the link isn’t easy, so I’m
not sure we’ll get consistent ideation transduction.”
“Honey, he doesn’t understand,” said Dawna.
“Well, okay. Let’s just say it’s really an extra little connection
in the thinking part. If there are no glitches, Murl will get both upgrades too.”
Adam held the genue’s hand. “Can I tell him to do anything I want?”
“No, not anything. You can’t make him harm anyone or himself. He
is to be your guardian and to help you with your homework. He is not your slave.
Understand?”
Dawna piped in, “Notice, he said ‘help’ you with your homework.
I don’t want him giving you all the answers!”
“Ah, mom,” Adam said. He surveyed the genue standing before him.
His mind raced through the possibilities. Then something occurred to him. “How
come there’s no name on his nameplate?”
“I’m going to let you name him yourself,” replied Micael, “unless
you want a randomly generated name.”
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“No, I know what I’ll name him!” Adam started to say something
to the genue but stopped. “How can I tell him his name when he won’t
know I’m talking to him?”
“Until you give him a name, he’ll respond to ‘Genue’.”
“Okay.” He turned to the nameless android. “Genue, I’m
Adam and from now on your name is Eugene, spelled E-U-G-E-N-E. Do you understand?”
“Yes, I understand. My name is Eugene.”
Micael rubbed Adam’s hair. “That’s a fine name. I’ll
have a nameplate made at the factory for Eugene tomorrow. Tell, me, why did you
choose this name?”
Adam beamed at his dad. “I used to always think what I’d name a genue
if I had one, and I came up with one that’s made up of the letters in the
word genue.”
Micael pretended to think hard, “Eugene? Genue? Too many e’s, isn’t
there, son?”
Adam’s delight faded. “Awww. You’re right.”
“Why not drop the first E?” Dawna offered.
“Yeah. U-G-E-N-E. That way I can still call him Yoo-gene.”
Micael laughed, “Sure. Ugene it is.”
Adam tugged the new genue’s hand. “Ugene, let’s go do something.”
The two went to the boy’s room.
“Let’s draw,” Adam said. “Here’s your sketch pad
and pencil.”
“I know about drawing from my training tapes. I will try it.”
Adam drew a head. “I’m pretty good at it. I’ve been sketching
for a long time.” He put in the features and shadows.
Ugene imitated the boy’s motions but the result did not look as good. “Yours
looks much more real.”
“Don’t worry. You’ll get better with practice. Let’s
draw something else… that teddy bear over there.”
“Okay.” Ugene studied it. He sketched slowly, looking up frequently.
When he was done, Adam compared drawings. “See, you’ve improved already.
But where’s his nose?”
For months afterward, Ugene followed Adam around and tried to master those tasks
assigned to him, much of which consisted of picking up after Adam, helping him
with school work, and drawing—lots of drawing. Adam had said he should practice
sketching, so whenever he had time he did. By the spring, his still lifes and
landscapes no longer looked childish.
One hot August day, Ugene carried one of his sketches into the study. “Dr.
Wyman, this picture…I wonder…”
Micael looked up from the virtual tri-vector revenue projections on his desk and
stared at the pastel rendition of the rose tressel in the back yard. “Another
masterpiece, Ugene.” When the genue did not respond he added, “Is
there a problem?”.
“I am puzzled, Dr. Wyman. What is the purpose of drawing,? Why does Adam
do it?”
“Interesting question.” Micael’s slid down in his chair and
clasped his hands over his chest. He thought a moment. “I guess because
it’s fun for him. He enjoys it. He likes to see if he can draw what he sees.”
“I understand enjoyment. That is a human end-gram much like task closure
is for me.” He let the picture touch the floor. “But this seems to
be more than that. I mean…if it were mere enjoyment why does Adam have me draw
also? There are much easier ways to get visual images of things.”
“Hmm. Does it stress your ideator loops to draw?”
“No. I understand my function is to serve you and him. And Adam has asked
me to draw. But how does my drawing serve him… or anyone?”
Micael got up and went to the genue. He put a hand on his shoulder. “Look.
Genues help humans enjoy lots of things, like food, sports, relaxation. Why not
in artistic creations?”
“But why me?”
“Why not? Apparently your SCILL upgrade has given you a talent for drawing.
In most other genues it has improved their verbal articulation. But the real question
now is, how good can you become at this? You won’t know unless you practice
a lot.”
Ugene raised the picture. “So you are testing my upgrade by having me do
this?”
“It’s not just your upgrade. It’s all of you. In a way, since
all genues must learn from experiences just like humans, they are all being tested
with any new task. Even Murl. One of your jobs is to become good at drawing.”
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He put the picture on the desk. “I see.” He approached a large oil
of alpine majesty hanging on the wall. As he scanned its classic realism, he sensed
the internal resolution that comes from closure, from the joining of a question
to an acceptable answer. Micael’s was an acceptable answer, and it provided
a new motivation. “You’re saying I serve humans by becoming skilled
at making images of reality with pencils and brushes.”
“Art is more than just imaging reality. It’s about interpreting reality
also. But for now, yes, you will serve us by perfecting your technique. You must
practice rendering what you see.”
Ugene became more cognizant of the painting he was staring at. He tried to picture
the finger movements that would create such harmonious detail—but could
not. He turned to look at Micael. “In other words, you want to see if I
can produce a picture with this kind of perfection.”
Micael nodded yes.
* *  *
A mild winter dragged autumn through to spring. Trees and flowers blossomed and
the year’s first warm breeze excited the senses and tickled passions, some
for the first time—mostly those of seventh graders.
It was five minutes to three and Adam, like his classmates, was eager to leave
the stench and misery of the Tripoli famine and get outside to enjoy the rest
of this sunny day in May. He did not think he needed the first hand experiences
of the history recreation lab. It did not help that he already knew what Ms. Hench
was rehashing as she stood in the middle of a virtual street among hundreds of
virtual corpses. He, like his classmates, had already done the economic simulation
of the Second Great Depression. What could this gruesome exercise add? All he
could do was moan to Hope Strand who stood in front of him about how he, a twelve
year old, knew as much about the subject as Ms. Hench. Now she was babbling about
how…
“…the International Congress could no longer finance the World Bank
debt in the third decade of the century, and how that led to the kind of social
breakdown you see. Whatever resources were available around the world were focused
on dealing with fundamental human needs and this of course led to the scientific
retreat in space travel and the medical sciences. The result was in a sense a
mini-dark age for technology.”
Adam stepped through an image of a cadaver so that he could whisper into Hope’s
ear. “She forgot to mention how Great Depression II caused the extinction
of those reptilian robots working in the factories.”
With only a slight turn of the head, Hope replied, “Golly, molly. Can’t
you consider any subject without bringing in robots and genues?”
Ms. Hench shook a finger at them both. “Hush up, you two. This is serious
business here.” Then, by habit, she tossed her head to get the mousy hair
off a face that looked like a potato. “Okay, that’s enough of Tripoli.
While you are removing your VR gear let me give you your next homework assignment.
In preparation for tomorrow’s discussion, I’d like the class to study
video-histories 8.1 through 8.3. paying particular attention to the ten-year period
starting with the discontinuation of planetary colonization by both Western and
Eastern economic alliances and ending with the reestablishment of American economic
preeminence through agriculture. Questions?”
Adam raised his hand as he took off his perception gear.
“Yes, Adam.”
“Are we going to visit the early factories of RoboTech where the robotic
revolution started with the invention of the motor-sensory fiber switch?”
He heard Hope giggling at him. He had raised his hand to impress her as much as
Ms. Hench. He did not have to do either.
“Adam, that comes later,” Mrs. Hench replied. “Also, class,
let me give you your essay assignment due next week. I want each of you to choose
another life in another time. Describe your new self as to that time in history,
your country and your occupation. At least three pages. Okay, class dismissed,
see you all on…”
Not waiting for her to finish, the students bolted toward the door. Adam waited
for Hope outside the lab and they walked down the hall together.
“Why don’t you come over to my house?” he asked. “I want
you to meet Ugene. You’ve got to see him paint.”
“Adam, I’m really not interested in fake people.” She led him
down the hall toward her locker. “Besides my mama won’t let me go
to your house. You know, the genue thing.” When she saw his downtrodden
face she poked him and said, “I want to be a gypsy.”
“What?” he asked.
“The homework assignment, remember? I’d like to be a gypsy, roaming
Europe in the nineteenth century, happy, unattached, dancing and singing. What
about you?”
“Oh, me? I haven’t thought about it.” He did for a few seconds
and said, “A genue, I guess.”
She giggled. “You can’t do that. It has to be a person, sometime
in the past.”
He stared at the floor and shrugged his shoulders. ”Well, I don’t
know then.” He looked up to see her ahead. He skipped a few steps to catch
up. “Come on. Sneak over for just a while.”
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She looked upward, shook her head and did a stutter step. “Can’t.
Shan’t.” She danced the rest of the way to her locker, opened it,
and stored her video books. Then with her big black eyes shining she said, “You
know I’d like to come over. Not to see Ugene, but to see you.” The
soft smile on her cocoa face faded. “But I just can’t.” She
closed her locker.
“You don’t know what you’re missing. Ugene is really amazing.”
“I know.” She slung a large straw purse on her shoulder and started
to walk down the hall with a sway of self-possession. “So you keep trying
to tell me.” When she got no reply she stopped and turned around to see
a dejected Adam still standing by the locker. “Well, Robotman, aren’t
you gonna strut with me?”
Adam smiled as he jogged to her side. They exited the school and she led him
to a skinny birch tree—the one he always stared at while daydreaming in
the chemistry lab. The two novices in the art of wooing stood under its sparse
leaves trying to impress each other. She fluttered her eyes and looked everywhere
but at him. He glanced at her legs, waist and budding chest. Then he timidly took
hold of a gold circle pendant hanging from a chain on her neck. “Gee, that’s
pretty. Where did you get it from?” His voice whined as he bent over to
examine it closely.
Her hand went to the chain too. “It’s my lucky charm. The circle
is for harmony and good luck. My mama gave it to me for my birthday. She said
if I always wear a circle charm I’ll always be lucky. I’ll pretend
it’s my gypsy jewelry.” She took the charm from Adam’s hand
and dropped herself to the grass like a disheveled nest from a tree. “You
know, I could write about how I tell fortunes and dance and stuff.”
Adam knelt beside her as he looked with mild embarrassment at passing boys. One
of his friends pointed at him from a distance and exaggerated a mock laugh. Adam
turned his back to him.
“Ugene is becoming quite an artist,” he said with hesitation. “I
used to be able to sketch better than him. But not any more. He practices a lot.
Sometimes he draws all night while we’re asleep.”
Hope pulled out a large plastic bag from her purse. “You want some of my
appleberries?”
Adam’s ears twitched in surprise at the golf ball size pink berries. “Sure.”
He shoved one through his lips and, with juice seeping from the corners of his
mouth, he continued with distorted words. “Ugene’s drawings are amazing.
They have such depth, great shadings—my dad calls it ‘subtle perfection.’
And something I haven’t been able to do—when it comes to details,
he can do them perfectly.”
Hope nibbled on her appleberry, eyes fixed on Adam.
“My dad was so impressed with Ugene’s artistic talent that he decided
to get him to do oils.” He wiped his mouth on his sleeve. “At first
he just used the paint brush like a charcoal stick. But after a few weeks he was
just as good with oils. His paintings got to be just like photographs.”
Hope waved at a friend behind him.
Adam sighed and waited for her attention again.
She gave him big eyes and a smile. “Like photographs.”
“Yeah. And after watching Ugene paint photographs for several months my
dad and I decided we should get him to put a little creativity into his work.
So we took him to an art museum. And we bought him glossy art books…”
He was being rewarded by slow blinks from those black eyes. “…just
so we could show him how other artists painted with different techniques and perspectives.
We tried to show him that painting wasn’t just copying the real world on
a canvas.”
Hope began rummaging through her purse. “So now Ugene’s a creative
genius.”
“Err, not exactly. The trip didn’t seem to have the impact we thought
on him. Week after week he would reproduce a picture by a famous painter in precise
detail, then he would paint other scenes using that artist’s techniques.
The most Ugene seems able to do is capture an artist’s style.”
Hope chuckled as she pulled out the little mirror she was hunting for and put
it in front of her nose. “Wonder how I’d look with gypsy makeup?”
She grinned at herself, then returned the mirror to her purse. “Ugene sounds
like a super toy, Adam, but…” She stood up. “…I’ve gotta get
going.”
Adam sighed, then bounced up, also.
She tapped his hand with her finger and said, “Tomorrow I wanna read your
palm.” Then she turned and half danced away singing, “Gypsy Butterfly
Away”.
“Enjoyed talking with you,” he said.
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She waved over her shoulder.
Adam watched her little dance down the sidewalk. He cursed himself. “Be
a genue? How dumb. Why couldn’t I have said something like a knight of the
round table.” After a moment of self pity he turned the other way and kicked
stones as he headed home.
* *  *
Murl slung a plastic bag over his shoulder and climbed the ladder leaning against
the two story Wyman mansion. He felt the bright sun in the October sky warm his
skin and charge his batteries. It was a good day to clean leaves out of the rain
gutters.
From his vantage he could see Ugene on the back lawn with his easel, canvas and
paints and Adam sitting on the grass next to him watching him work. Pulling leaves
from the gutter, Murl wondered with genue logic why Ugene was painting while he
was laboring on a ladder. Not that he minded, since his obedience was unswerving,
but he just did not understand. As he thought and worked he heard Ugene call up
to him. “Murl, you are in my way. Will you be long up there?”
Murl looked down at the artist, and before he could respond Adam shouted. “Yeah,
Murl. Why don’t you stop working and get out of Ugene’s way? Come
and see what he’s painting.”
Murl was reluctant to terminate a task given to him by Dawna but, he thought,
a few minutes would not make any difference. He would take what humans called
a break and maybe see something more interesting than dirt and dead leaves. Murl
climbed down and walked over to the genue artist and his young fan. He peered
intently at the canvas. It was divided into four quadrants by heavy painted lines.
Three of the quadrants had fully painted scenes of the mansion, the fourth had
a pencil sketch of the same scene. Murl could see that each of the completed scenes
was different from one another.
“What is this you are doing, Ugene?”
“I am practicing painting in the styles of the masters. This morning I
decided to do the mansion landscape. This one here is like Van Gogh,” Ugene
said, pointing to the upper left scene, “and this one is in Cezanne’s
style, and this one like Picasso. The fourth one was to be in Andrew Wyeth’s
style. But I cannot do it with you in the picture since you were not in the others.”
“But I must finish my chores.”
“Dr. Wyman wants me to practice painting.”
“Dawna told me to clean out the rain gutters.”
“But you are in my way.”
“I will not always be in your way.”
“You are not in my way now.”
“That is because I am not doing my chores.”
“Why don’t you wait until I am finished painting before you resume?”
“How long will it take you to paint this last picture?”
Adam’s head swung back and forth as the two genues worked their way toward
a mutual resolution of their conflict, an argument without emotion—the only
way for genues.
“Not long,” replied Ugene.
“How long is not long?” asked Murl.
Murl noticed Dawna smiling with amusement through an open window. She waved at
them. “It’s okay, Murl. You can leave the job for a while.”
Ugene’s brush was already in motion, jumping back and forth from the palette
to the canvas as his eyes bounced from the imposing reality to the emerging representation.
He seldom paused between brush strokes; it was as if he had practiced painting
this particular scene hundreds of times. In twenty-six minutes the final quadrant
was filled with color and Ugene declared, “I am finished.”
Adam stood up and said, “Wasn’t that amazing, Murl? He did this whole
painting in less than a half hour. And each piece looks just like how
one of the famous painters would have painted our house.”
Murl replied, “Yes, but what is the point of this activity? It does not
clean the house, cook the food or help with your homework.”
Adam’s enthusiasm was punctured and he was at a loss for a response that
might satisfy Murl. But before he could answer, Ugene himself explained, “Dr.
Wyman said that I am to paint because I have a talent and I must use that talent.
I must strive for perfection. We must test my SCILL upgrade. Everything we do
is a test. You too are being tested, Murl.”
Adam and Murl looked at each other puzzled. Not knowing that he was paraphrasing
Dr. Wyman, they were unprepared for such a response. Murl looked at his hands.
“I am not sure how my capacity is being tested by doing the same domestic
chores day after day. Adam, perhaps you can explain this to me.”
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“No, I don’t think so,” shrugged Adam. “But I do know
Dad has plans for you to do different things to help him in the future. Maybe
he just doesn’t think you’re ready yet. Ugene has taken over some
of your chores already, hasn’t he?”
When Murl did not respond quickly enough, Ugene said, “Yes, I do all the
gardening, planting and many outdoor jobs now. I have benefited a great deal from
Murl’s guidance in these activities, of course.”
Murl was thinking about the boy’s words. It was his first realization that
his future life might not be the same as his past life—that he might not
be chief domestic servant forever. “I wonder what Dr. Wyman’s plans
are for me?”
“I don’t know,” replied Adam. “You can ask him yourself.
You two aren’t going to be looking after me forever, you know. I doubt either
of you will be going to college with me. We’ll just have to wait and see.”
Murl went back to cleaning the rain gutters, mind on other matters. When he finished
he decided to talk to Micael. He found him in the bedroom dressing for an evening
dinner out.
“Micael, I’m sorry to bother you,” the genue said from the
doorway. “What plans do you have for me?”
“Plans?” Micael pulled on a pair of black trousers. “Oh, I
guess I’ll have you hang up my clothes over there.”
Murl observed a gray suit frozen in a wild dance on the bed. “No, I mean,
what is my future?”
Micael stopped buckling his pants. “Wow. Such a question, Murl. I’m
not sure. Why do you ask? Are you getting bored with being a servant?”
“Being a servant is what I do.” Murl watched the human slip on a
gauzy pink dress shirt. “But I do think a lot about other things.”
“Yes, I suppose you would with boring tasks.” He stuffed his feet
into a pair of muddy green loafers.
“Sometimes I realize I’m thinking, and I am surprised at the revelation.
Then I realize that I was thinking about the fact that I was thinking. And that
surprises me. Then it dawns on me that I was thinking that I was thinking that
I was thinking. It is clear this could go on ad infinitum. Then I wonder what
is inside of me that can perceive the workings of my brain.”
Micael rummaged through a dresser drawer. “Uh huh.”
“I mean, I know physically what I am, plastics, memory circuits, glass
tubes and things like that. But is any of it really me? If I lost a leg, or had
my system clock replaced, or lost a memory module, I would still be me. It seems
this thing that realizes it is thinking, is something else; something that’s
not physical parts.” He stared at the reflection in the mirror of Micael
tying a knot in a plaid scarf around his neck. “What is the core of ‘me’?”
“I know what you mean,” replied the Micael in the mirror. “We
humans struggle with the same kinds of questions. As a genue, that thinking thing
is simply an artifact of your ideator loops at work. It’s not a physical
thing, just a process, a virtual entity that you call ‘self’.”
“Process? I am a process?”
“Yes, several.” Micael put on a formal jacket. “For one, you’re
a process that allows you to cull through your experiences—everything that
you learned and remember, events you lived through—and to bring it all to
focus.”
Murl removed a red thread from the back of the jacket. “Like humans?”
“Yes, right. And you are another process that receives all the stimuli
from your senses, mixes it with memory data and generates information.”
He turned around to face Murl. “How do I look?”
Murl backed up a step. “You look fine.”
He yanked at the lapels. “Finally, you are process potential. That is,
your beliefs and values, how you react to situations, what someone could predict
you would say or do.”
“I see. Like Dawna’s inclination to respond with warm exuberance
when she meets a stranger, or your impulse to look at pretty young women.”
Micael’s eyebrows rose. “Err… I suppose.”
“We are much like humans,” Murl said.
“Well, somewhat, but your thinking is programmed. Your notions and ideas
are all formulations. Humans are…” He rubbed his chin. “…more unbounded,
whimsical. They have a spirit, a will.”
“They have emotions. A product of hormones.”
“Yes, but it’s more than that. Some would say humans have a soul.”
“What is a soul?”
“I’m not sure what it is. It’s a spirit thing. I don’t
know.” Micael went to the door. “Ask Dawna. But I got to get moving.”
He left the room.
Murl began picking up the clothes from the bed. “I am a process.”
* *  *
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Adam slammed the front door.
“Wipe your feet before you go any further,” yelled Dawna from another
room. “How was school?”
He stomped his feet and snow fell off his shoes. “Okay,” he called
out. The dark wintry day matched his foul mood. Somebody had called him a genue
lover. And Hope was absent. He shuffled through the house and out to the glassed-in
patio where he found Ugene putting the finishing touches to a trichromatic oil
of the hoary vegetation in the Wyman backyard. He studied its cold texture for
a moment. Which great artist had Ugene imitated this time? It looked like Cezanne
but there was a blend of Van Gogh. There was some Remington in it too. Or was
it Whistler? Or was it any of these?
“Ugene, whose style is this?”
The genue put his brush down and backed up to take a good look himself. “I
think I made a terrible error. I thought I would do this landscape in the style
of Cezanne. Then my mind began thinking about something else and, without realizing,
I slipped into the realism of the Remington technique. I tried to go back and
fix it up but the same thing happened. My mind wandered and my brush was doing
Van Gogh. Finally I thought I just better kind of patch it up by blending the
styles together. Terrible, isn’t it?”
“No, not at all. I think it looks very interesting.” Adam saw his
dad standing in the doorway. “Oh, hi, Dad. Ugene has done a new painting.”
Micael stepped onto the patio. “So, let me see your latest masterpiece,
Ugene.”
“Yes, but it’s not a masterpiece.”
Micael gave the painting a quick scan. “Why, Ugene. This is great. This
doesn’t look like any of the masters. You’ve created an original style.”
“But it was an error,” Ugene insisted.
“To err is human,” Micael said.
Ugene turned his head sharply to Micael. “I am human?”
“No, no,” Micael laughed. “It’s just a saying. Complex
machines, like you, can also make mistakes. But the capacity to err, to do something
outside of the expected, is an important part of being creative. That’s
how people are creative sometimes. They kind of make mistakes on purpose; they
try to go beyond mechanical or rote actions. They might even take other people’s
ideas or works and patch the parts into something new.”
Adam looked at his father. “You mean Ugene is creative? Is his painting
as good as a painting by a human artist?”
Micael chuckled at his son’s enthusiasm. “I don’t know if this
painting is really an example of creativity, but it is a good first step.”
“If this painting is original, then you have to sign it, Ugene,”
said Adam.
“That’s right,” agreed Micael. As Ugene dabbed his brush into
the banana-yellow blob on his palette, Micael had second thoughts. “Wait,”
he said, grabbing the genue’s arm. “I don’t think you should
just sign it ‘Ugene’.”
“Why not?”
“Art is supposed to be a human thing. Some people might get upset
it they thought a genue could paint this well. And I’m not quite ready
to explain Ugene’s name on it. How about something like B. Betkin?”
Ugene was puzzled. “But that is not my name.”
“Dad, he’s right,” Adam said. “He can’t put a name
on his picture that isn’t his.”
The three of them mused for a moment. Then Adam’s eyes lit up. “Ugene,
your name is an anagram of genue.”
“Yes, so it is.”
“Well why don’t we rearrange the letters in your name to make another
name?”
“An anagram of Ugene? Yes, of course.” Ugene’s mind churned
for a few seconds, then he announced, “E. Nuge. That will be my nom de plume,
if you will.” He dabbed paint on his brush and signed his landscape.
“That’s great. I think I’ll hang this in my office at the plant,”
Micael said.
“That would please me, ” replied Ugene. “Now I’ll do
another painting. This time I am going to mix a few styles on purpose.”
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A science fiction novel.
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The intercom beeped. “Mr. Charles Pinckney Cotesworth to see you, Mr. President.”
“Just a minute, Murl,” replied Micael without looking up from the
I-port on his desk. He finished the press release announcing the take over of
RoboTech by Vosima Corporation and secured the document. “Okay, send him
in. And please, just call me Micael, Mr. Business Secretary.”
The intercom was silent for several seconds. “I see your point, Micael.”
The door opened and a tall, graying man entered. He looked prosperous in his
light gray suit, black string tie, white shoes and tall, wide-brimmed gray hat.
“Hello, I’m Micael Wyman,” the president greeted.
“A good day to you. I’m Charles Pinckney Cotesworth from Maine.”
They shook hands. Micael went back to his chair behind his desk and Mr. Cotesworth
took a seat in front of it.
“Stunning picture you have there, Mr. Wyman,” Charles remarked pointing
to the oil hanging behind his host. “E. Nuge. Don’t know the artist.”
“You wouldn’t,” Micael responded. A moment of silence made
it clear that he had nothing else to say on the subject. He leaned back in his
plush chair. “What can I do for you, Mr. Cotesworth?”
“Well, let me tell you. I’ve just finished clearing ten thousand
acres up in Maine, right in the middle of some of the thickest forest. Got it
all bulldozed just last month. What I’m going to do is plant hypercotton—a
new strain that will do just fine up there.”
Micael nodded. “But why bother with cotton? You can’t beat the synthetics.”
“There’s where you’re wrong, Micael. Er… may I call
you Micael?”
“Sure.”
Charles’ eyes had wandered past Micael to the painting. “Love that
picture. Can I make you an offer?”
“No, Charles. It’s not for sale.” He paused, then to divert
the discussion, added, “I may call you Charles?” The visitor nodded.
“So what about the hypercotton?”
“This hypercotton will match the qualities of any synthetic. Rest assured
of that. But that doesn’t really matter to you, Micael, does it? What I
need from you is five hundred ginner robots to do the picking. Now I figure that’s
quite a large order and you might be willing to give me a favorable discount for
that quantity.”
“We sell genues, Mr. Cotesworth. Not ginners, not arties, not robots. Genues.”
“Sure you do. But they’ve got to be better than the damn mechanical
pickers I’ve been running on my farms, especially in some of Maine’s
rough terrain. Those machines are not only expensive but they break down. And
hiring men means unions, fringe benefits, mistakes, and all kinds of other worries.
But ginners will do the picking with none of these problems—I already have
two, so I know. Bright enough to do the work but not bright enough to cause trouble.”
Micael struggled to keep his words civil. “Mr. Cotesworth, genues are really
quite bright. As bright as any average person.”
“Micael, Micael. I didn’t mean to offend your ginners.” Charles
hunched over the top of the desk and patted his hand. “I wouldn’t
be here if I didn’t think they could out-perform people and mechanical pickers.
They may be bright but what I like about them is they’re obedient and truthful
and unimaginative. I guess that’s what makes them seem kind of dumb.”
Charles chuckled as if he had thought of a funny incident. “You have to
admit they are gullible and docile. But that’s good, that’s why I
want to use them.”
Micael the salesman overruled Micael genue builder and decided to just close
the deal. “I’ll give you a twelve percent discount with a purchase
of five hundred genues.”
Charles was studying Ugene’s landscape. “It seems I know that style.
Are you sure I don’t know the artist?”
“Yes, I’m sure.” Micael stood up to block the man’s view
of the painting. “Twelve percent?”
As if in deep despair, Charles rubbed his forehead with the tips of his fingers.
He tilted his head down, eyes peeking out. “Hmmm.” He stood up and
stuck out his hand. “It’s a deal.”
He gave Micael’s a hardy shake, then walked around him to the painting.
“Sure would like this picture.” His fingers ran around the brim of
his hat as he poured over the canvas.
Micael now was studying the picture also. It was stunning. “What if I told
you a genue painted this picture?”
Mr. Cotesworth turned to him with a startled look. “Genues can’t
paint. You’re pulling my leg. E. Nuge is the painter.” He laughed
as if he had just gotten a joke. “That’s funny. I can just picture
a genue painting. Stick figures.”
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A science fiction novel.
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Micael rocked on his feet with left hand holding his right elbow, right hand
at his chin. He glared with glassy eyes at the man. “You really like this
painting, Mr. Cotesworth?”
The laughing stopped. “Certainly. I’ll give you the price of a genue
for it.”
“Fine, then. It’s yours.” Micael grasped the picture from the
wall and thrust it at him with a phony smile. “The people across the hall
will arrange the details of the sale with you.”
“Well, thank you very much.” Charles Cotesworth took the painting
and extended his hand. “Nice doing business with you.”
Micael shook Charles’ hand with vigor. “Yes, indeed. I enjoyed it,
too.”
A hairy paw pulled the pillow from under Micael’s head. He opened his eyes
and saw an ugly face sucking on a corner of the pillow case. “Holy shit!”
He leaped out of bed. The chimpanzee, dressed in a frilly apron, jumped to the
floor and ran out of the bedroom flailing its arms and screaming. Micael pulled
on a pair of trousers and stomped out to the living room.
“What is that damn chimp doing in my bedroom?”
Dawna tugged at her husband and gave him a kiss. “Micael, don’t get
all upset. That’s Faith. She and Roda are here visiting. Besides, it’s
10:30.”
“I don’t care. It’s a weekend and I’d like to sleep in.”
The animal jumped on the lap of the red-haired woman sitting on the sofa. “Ah,
poor little Faith. Did the mean man scare you?” Roda said as she stroked
the cuddling chimp.
“Why don’t you keep your it on a leash?” Micael lashed out.
Roda wrapped her arms around the animal. “You’re scaring my precious
baby!”
Micael walked up to the sofa and glared at her. “It’s a chimp, Roda.
It’s a damn chimpanzee. Open your damn eyes.”
“Micael!” Dawna scolded. “That’s enough. I haven’t
seen Roda in years. Don’t spoil her visit.”
“That’s okay, Dawna.” Roda patted her baby. “I understand
how some people have to make fun of other people’s handicaps. Usually it’s
the same people who have more sympathy for mechanical things, like ginners.”
Micael snarled back, “Genues are a lot nicer than some people I know.”
“Nicer? They’re just robots, Micael. Open your damn eyes,”
she mocked.
He huffed. “Yeah, nicer. Nicer than that phoney doctor of yours.”
She cast an eye at him. “You mean Dr. Usimi? What about him? He’s
a brilliant doctor making great contributions to restarting human fertility. Something
ginners can’t do. And he’ll be back soon. You wait and see.”
Micael laughed. “Come off it, Roda. Dr. Nawh Usimi ran off to Argentina
and changed his name to Dr. Nawh Udont. You were conned.”
She waved a hand. “Oh, go play with your pathetic puppets.”
“Stop it, you two,” Dawna cut in. “That’s enough bickering.”
Roda glared at him.
Micael glared back. “Genues aren’t puppets.” He looked at Dawna,
then back at Roda. “I’m tired of you picking on them. I can prove
that genues are just as capable as people—at least in oil painting.”
Dawna put her hand on Micael’s shoulder. “I don’t think you
should get into that.”
Roda’s eye lids fluttered. “You’re joking. A genue painting?
Huh. You’re going to show me computer generated art?”
Micael turned, stretching his arm like a herald’s trumpet toward a large
still-life hanging on the wall. “Behold a painting by a genue.”
Roda put Faith down on the floor and went to the picture. She examined it. She
turned to Micael looking for a hint of deception. She turned back to the picture.
“Quite good,” she mumbled. Then she shook her finger at Micael. “No,
you can’t fool me. This was painted by an artist named E. Nuge. In fact,
I know the name. I saw on the news recently that a Mr. Cotesworth was showing
off a painting he just acquired by the same artist, a Laotian artist, he said.
He said he paid a million dollars for it and would sell it for two million.”
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A science fiction novel.
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“You what?” Micael yelled. “That bigoted opportunist didn’t
pay a million for it.”
“Nice try,” Roda said.
“But it was done by a genue. It was done by Adam’s genue, Ugene.
Do I have to have him paint in front of you?”
“Micael,” Dawna pleaded. “You don’t want to do this.
Drop it.”
“That’s all right, Dawna. Let him have his little joke. He’ll
do anything to convince me he’s created a new race of beings.”
“Roda, I’m telling you it’s no joke.” He tapped his finger
on the painting. “Look at the name. E. Nuge. See, the letters in the name
spell ‘genue’. And they also spell Ugene, the name of Adam’s
genue.”
Roda’s eyes blinked and squinted. Then her mouth dropped open. “Oh,
I see.” She made an ugly grin. “Aren’t you as slippery as soap.”
She grabbed her daughter’s hand and pulled her toward the front door. “Nice
talking to you, Dawna. Let’s do it again sometime. I’ve got to go
see Mr. Cotesworth about his Laotian art. Boy, is he going to be peed off when
he finds out he was your pigeon.”
Micael fell into an over-stuffed chair and put his chin on his chest. “What
have I done?”
Charles Pinckney Cotesworth’s stern face popped out of the I-port. “You’ve
made a fool of me, Mr. Wyman. Do you realize I went on a world I-port program
to unveil that so-called piece of art you sold me? Then I get this call from Strand
telling me it was done by a ginner. If I had wanted computer art, Mr. Wyman, I
would have employed a Fuji robot from Pome Systems.”
Micael sighed. “Yes, yes. I’m sorry.” He put his feet up on
the desk with a thump. The stereo image flickered.
“Don’t you realize I have a reputation to protect. I’m considered
one of the preeminent experts in contemporary oil paintings. At least I was. Now,
after what you did to me, I’m the laughing stock of the art world.”
“I know, I shouldn’t have done that.” Micael looked at the
ceiling.
“You know I could sue you. Better yet, I might cancel the deal for five
hundred ginners. Maybe I could also get a couple of other large customers to cancel.
I have lots of friends, you know.” He shook a finger at Micael.
“Yes, I’m sure you do.”
“And I know some senators who might be persuaded to introduce legislation
restricting and regulating the sale of robots.”
Micael threw his feet to the floor. “No, no. That’s not necessary.
I’ll make the situation right.”
“And just how will you give me back my dignity?”
“I could give back the money for the painting.”
“That’s all?”
“And another two percent discount on the genue deal.”
Mr. Cotesworth shook his head. “Okay, but I also want the ginner you call
Ugene included in the deal.”
Micael’s eyes popped out. “Ugene?”
“That’s right. I don’t want that ginner painting anymore. I
want him picking hypercotton. Ginners shouldn’t be painting anyway. They
should be doing useful work for people.”
“But, Mr. Cotesworth…”
“I don’t trust you, Mr. Wyman. I want the painting ginner or you’ll
hear from my lawyers.”
Micael looked at Ugene’s newest painting hanging behind his desk and took
a deep breath. “Okay. You can have Ugene.”
“And one more thing. I want that ginner associate of yours, what’s
his name…”
“Murl?”
“Yes, Murl, not you, to hand over Ugene, and to verify his identity. You
can always trust a ginner. That’s what I like about them. Set up the delivery
with my secretary. Good day.” Charles’ indignant face dissolved from
the screen of the I-port,
Micael called Murl into his office. “I have a really big problem. Mr. Cotesworth
has learned that Ugene made the painting I sold him, and now he’s demanding
that I include Ugene in his purchase of five hundred genues. I’m not sure
what we should do.”
Murl stood in front of the desk. “The solution seems simple—just
command Ugene not to paint anymore, give back Mr. Cotesworth’s money, and
give him one extra genue instead of Ugene.”
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A science fiction novel.
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“Very logical, but it won’t work. He wants Ugene to work on a hypercotton
plantation to make sure he won’t paint anymore.”
“Wouldn’t he be satisfied with deprogramming and reassignment of
Ugene to domestic tasks?”
“He doesn’t trust me,” Micael lamented. “I’m not
sure I trust him. I’m not sure he won’t just use Ugene to keep painting
for himself once he has him in his control, and try to profit from that.”
Murl wondered aloud. “Seems like a lot of mistrusting.”
Micael stood up and went to Murl’s side. “I have an idea, Murl. But
I’m not sure you’re going to like it.”
“I don’t really have likes and dislikes,” Murl replied. “But
even if I did, why would you say I might not like your idea? It’s logical,
isn’t it?”
“Yes, of course it is, but we have a situation here that calls for some
creative thinking.”
“Creative? Like painting?”
“Well… more like deception.”
“Deception!” Murl pondered all of the meanings and examples of “deception”
that were in his memory bank, but he soon discovered that, except for strong inhibitions
against lying to a human being, there was not much there. Murl had observed humans
lying and deceiving other in the training films he saw. But he never was untruthful
himself—there was never any need. Besides, it did not fit into logical thought.
That required truth. Now Micael was talking about deception. “What kind
of deception?”
“We have to hand over a genue other than Ugene and tell Cotesworth that
it is Ugene.”
“Indeed, that is deception. But certainly you are capable of it. And I
assume you want me to prepare a new genue with Ugene’s name on it. That
will not be a problem.”
“That’s right. And I want you to make sure the new Ugene gets several
hours of painting instruction from the old Ugene. Will you see to it?”
“Certainly,” Murl said. “But you said I wouldn’t like
this solution. It seems acceptable to me.”
“Murl, the thing is, you must be the one who must turn over this second
Ugene to Mr. Cotesworth and assure him that it is the real Ugene.”
“I am the one to do the lying?” This did bother him. How could a
genue be dishonest? On the other hand, how could he disobey? “Is there a
reason that you personally cannot hand the genue over to Mr. Cotesworth?”
“Yes. Quite simply, Mr. Cotesworth does not trust me. On the other hand,
he believes genues are always honest. Therefore he specifically asked that you
be the one to turn Ugene over to him and confirm that it is Ugene.”
“Wouldn’t it be… wouldn’t it be…” The congestion
in Murl’s neural pathways caused him to waver a bit. He could not comprehend
how humans found deception so easy. “Wouldn’t it be easier to give
Ugene…”
“Murl, stop being logical. I’m not about to give Ugene to Mr. Cotesworth.
And I can’t have him angry at me. This is the only way. I’m no longer
asking you to lie. I’m telling you.”
Now the genue was faced with conflicting response tendencies. He thought he could
not deceive humans, but he also knew he could not disobey Micael. What was he
to do? Obey Micael, and lie? Or tell the truth and disobey. What was he to do?
Lie, disobey? He thought he could do neither. But now he must do one or the other.
“Murl, can you do this?”
“I must,” he replied.
Mr. Charles Pinckney Cotesworth arrived at Micael’s office dressed in the
same clothes he had on the first time they had met, only more wrinkled—like
his mood.
“Dr. Wyman, let us get this matter behind us. Please have your secretary,
Murl, bring me the painting ginner, Ugene.”
Micael said nothing to his client. He called Murl on the intercom and said, “Bring
in Ugene.” He wanted to say the phony Ugene, but Cotesworth was right there.
Chills ran down his back. He never even checked to see if Murl had prepared another
Ugene. Oh, God. What if Murl brought him to work—by mistake—or
on purpose. No, Murl wouldn’t do that. Or would he? Micael’s
own devious thoughts were running amok.
Two genues entered the room and stood before the two humans.
Micael studied the facial features of the one with “Ugene” etched
on its breast. He fought a digging doubt. It looked just like the genue that was
Adam’s friend—but maybe not. Micael sensed his neck swelling, his
heart pounding. He looked at Murl. No sign of deceit—or honesty.
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A science fiction novel.
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Cotesworth also scanned the one named Ugene. Then he took a quick look at Micael.
Then back to the genue.
Micael took a deep breath and went to his desk and sat down.
Charles Cotesworth walked around Ugene, then suddenly asked, “Are you Ugene
the painter?”
“Yes, I am Ugene. And I paint,” came the reply.
Then he walked to within arm’s length of Murl. “Murl, is this the
ginner called Ugene who painted the picture I bought from Mr. Wyman?”
Micael’s eyes were locked on Murl whose face was not capable of betraying
emotion.
“Yes, this is the ginner called Ugene who painted the picture you bought
from Mr. Wyman,” Murl replied.
“Are you lying to me?” Charles asked quickly.
Micael was just as quick. He not could not let Murl respond to such a spontaneous
question without thinking. “I think that should satisfy you, Mr. Cotesworth.
Take Ugene and leave.” He was hoping that his intervention would give Murl
enough time to figure out that to answer the second question truthfully would
divulge the falsehood of his first answer.
“No, I am not lying to you,” answered Murl.
Micael’s eyes rolled up in relief. Then his heart skipped a beat. Murl
said that so easily. Too easily. Maybe he wasn’t lying. He stared at
Murl for clues but found none. He looked at Charles Cotesworth who was also staring
at Murl. The sly dog isn’t sure, either. Does he think I would screw
up such a big deal over one lousy genue who could paint?
Charles backed away from Murl. “Okay. We’ll go.” He pointed
at the other genue. “Come on, ginner. You’ll love the plantation.”
Mr. Cotesworth and the genue labeled UGENE left the room.
Micael broke the silence. “Thank you for lying, Murl.” He looked
at the poker face genue for confirmation. “That was a lie you told, wasn’t
it?”
Murl reflected. In his core, untruth was illogical. Obedience was preeminent.
And so he had spent many hours to find the logic in lying. He concluded that it
must be done to perform the function of obedience. It was a means to an end. It
could be functional. There could be a logic. His head moved with a quick jerk
toward Micael as if astonished. “Couldn’t you tell? The new Ugene
doesn’t look anything like the original one.”
Micael went to his desk and slouched in his chair. He was not feeling particularly
proud or pleased—not about anything he had just done.
Ugene had been sitting for twelve hours in the back seat of the Wyman’s
car in the garage, with all the windows darkened. Micael had given him a book
to occupy his time, The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway, but
Ugene did not understand why. He was experiencing frustration—in the genue
way. He wanted to be useful and serve some purpose. Micael had told him to sit
in the car and wait, but did not explain why. It seemed pointless to him, but
there was no reason not to obey Micael’s wishes. But what could it mean?
Finally, the car door slid open and Adam got in and sat beside Ugene while his
dad took the driver’s seat. They both looked dour and neither said a word.
Micael drove to the highway and set a course that took them north. The silence
continued.
Ugene was puzzled by the strange behavior of the humans. “Where are we
going, Mr. Wyman? Why are you and Adam so silent?” After no response he
persisted. “Don’t you know where we are going? Are you two not feeling
well?” He looked at Adam who continued to stare out the side window sniffling,
deaf to the questions. He looked forward to see Micael sitting in the driver’s
seat gazing out the windshield. “Mr. Wyman, can’t you hear me?”
Micael turned around to face the back seat. “Ugene.” He paused a
moment. “Listen carefully to what I’m going to say now.”
The genue could do nothing else.
“Your paintings, the new ones, have produced an emotional reaction in some
of the people who saw them—Roda for one and Charles Cotesworth for another,
people who I had to deal with. They can’t tolerate the idea that such works
can be produced by a genue. As long as these people thought a human artist made
the paintings, they were satisfied. But when they discovered that a genue did
them, they became furious. Do you understand what I’m saying?”
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A science fiction novel.
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Ugene tried to sort out everything Micael had said, to coordinate these facts
with his previous knowledge, to make speculations about unspoken motives, and
to project his best hypotheses.
“Yes, I believe so. When they thought they were admiring a human artist’s
work they were happy. When they found out the artist was not human, they were
unable to accept the work. I’m sorry.”
“It’s not your fault. You see, part of the our biological makeup
is this drive to be superior, to succeed, to control, to conquer, to be the best,
and these drives often conflict with our better, more reasonable motives.”
“Then the solution is obvious. In order not to offend the human need to
feel superior in art, I will simply not paint again.”
Micael shook his head. “No, I’m afraid that won’t work. Another
genue has your name and reputation as a painter. Your existence here is gone,
given to another genue. Mr. Cotesworth—like Roda and the public—believes,
and must continue to believe, that you are now picking hypercotton in Maine. In
order not to create more problems, you can’t be seen again—not in
public or even around the estate.”
“Good,” remarked Ugene. “Then it is finished. I will take on
a new identity and not paint. We can carry on from there.”
“But that would be a great waste of your talent, Ugene. I cannot let that
happen.”
The genue was about to speak but a soft beep from the dash took his master’s
attention away. Micael took over the driving. He turned the car down a dusty,
lonely road, and after several kilometers pulled onto the grassy shoulder in front
of the entrance to the national forest preserve. He got out, followed by Ugene
and Adam.
Micael lifted two cases from the trunk of the car. “This case has your
personal maintenance supplies, a battery pack in case you can’t regenerate,
an I-port, some other survival gear, and some personal things Adam wanted you
to have. This other one has art supplies and a video card on how to make paints
and canvasses, compounds, and what ever else you might need.”
Adam was in tears and would not look at Ugene.
Ugene looked at the cases. “I don’t understand. It seems that the
works I produced had worth because people liked them, but now no one will see
them. Is painting in solitude to serve a purpose?”
“I think you have talent, and I won’t waste that talent just because
some people don’t like genues who paint. I don’t care any longer if
your painting won’t bring joy to people. Adam and I want you to keep painting,
to learn more about it, to practice, to find your limits, even if that means painting
strictly from the genue perspective, if there is one. To do this, you have to
put your ideas and notions on canvas. Try to make paintings that are interesting
and meaningful to you and other genues. Use yourself as the first reactor, then,
if you can—without revealing yourself—use other genues.”
Questions bubbled in Ugene head. “Where am I to do this? Who will I talk
to? Will I never see you or Adam again?”
“Take the cases and go north on foot until you reach some isolated place
where you can work alone. Use the I-port to keep up on world affairs. Talk to
other genues if like, but avoid all human contact. I don’t know when it
will be over. Someday, perhaps when all this dies down, you can rejoin the Wyman
family. Someday, when all this won’t matter any more.”
Ugene nodded like a human. “I see.”
“Adam, it’s time to go.”
The boy hugged the genue. “I won’t forget you, Ugene. You’ve
been the best friend I’ve had for the last three years.” He then got
into the car.
Micael shook the genue’s hand with a hopeful smile and took his place in
the driver’s seat.
Ugene watched the weeping boy wave out the back window as the car disappeared
down the dusty road, leaving him in the shadows of the forest.
The light was dim. The air was mute. The humans were gone. When a dead tree branch
fell on the carpet of leaves, the genue did not turn around. Instead, after a
moment, he picked up his cases and started walking north into the wilderness.
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