"Do go on," Anubis rumbles.
"You want to weigh my heart?" you say. "You can't. Because even you can't know how I've changed the course of history." You place an automatic weapon on the scale opposite your heart, and the scales balance. "My revolution will stop a larger war between the great powers years from now."
Anubis drops jacks and a marble next to your heart, and that pan is weighed down again. "But think not only of the men and women you killed, but your effect on the children who survived."
You add the silicon brain and clockwork heart to the opposite side. "Think of the robots, who now finally have a home that respects them."
You and Anubis continue your game of piling weights on either side of the scales, until finally, the scales break under the weight, spilling their contents to the throne room floor.
"I will not be summed, divided, or thresholded," you say. "I defy your calculations."
"So be it," Anubis says. "But without my judgment, how will you know when you've lost?"
The hall of dark glass shatters and collapses in on you.
You awaken in a hospital room. It smells like cleaning agent, and the walls and countertops are bare steel, cleaned and shined until reflective.
"Master, you're awake!" Joyeuse rolls up to your side.
Your doctor, a woman in her forties with slicked back black hair, smiles. "Good morning, Mr. Tesla." She removes her neticle from her eye, powers it down so the little windows and numbers reflected in its glass blink off, and slips it into the pocket of her white lab coat. "Why don't you tell me what happened? I have some guesses from your scans, but I want to hear you tell it."
You tell the doctor briefly about how you passed out back at your apartment in Vancouver. Joyeuse simply listens with undisguised curiosity.
You hesitate, because you can still recall your dream, but it seems very personal and not necessarily relevant. "I had a dream
a familiar one." You shake your head. "Then I woke up here."
"Well, I don't mean to alarm you, but you've had a stroke," the doctor says gently.
"A stroke," you say in disbelief. "But I'm not that old. I'm hardly past fifty."
"I'm afraid the news gets worse," the doctor says. "You carry a newly identified genetic disorder called Algernon's Disease. You have too many of the genes that promote neural branching and glucose consumption, which at a certain point becomes harmful."
"Harmful how?" you ask. "That just seems to be a recipe for increased intelligence."
"It is," the doctor says. "There have only been a handful of other cases, and they all became wealthy entrepreneurs and inventors one of whom funded the research that led to our understanding of the disease. But starting from the age of fifty or so, or occasionally earlier if you're under a great deal of stress, Algernon's victims get seizures or strokes, often accompanied by hallucinatory visions."
"Under a great deal of stress
" Could your first dream about the robot Anubis have been one of these episodes? You had stayed up all night, so you had assumed you'd simply passed out from exhaustion. What if it were one of these episodes? "But was there anything I could have done? Is there anything I can do now?"
"There was nothing you did wrong," the doctor says gently. "I know it must seem as if it's your fault somehow, but nobody gets to keep on living forever just because they've made the right choices. Everybody dies of something."
"I just wish it didn't have to come so soon," you say.
The doctor nods. "Well, it may not have to. I've looked at your scans. Surgery is an option. We can either try to excise the neurons that are acting up, without replacement, or try to replace them with an artificial neural network."
"So I'd be part AI," you say speculatively. "That sounds interesting."
"Yay!" Joyeuse says.
"You should be aware that most patients report a side effect of loss of emotional affect," the doctor says. "The pattern recognition of the damaged tissue would be there, but without the full suite of neurotransmitters, some of the emotional signals running around your brain would find their lines cut." The doctor looks very serious for a moment. "Also, I don't want to downplay the very real chance that you could die in surgery. A slip of the needle could trigger a final epileptic response and death. Of course, it's all done with robots these days, but you may or may not find that reassuring."
You do find that reassuring, actually you've spent a fair amount of your life perfecting robot control algorithms. Though, you've never been asked to bet your life on them before.
"And if I don't have any surgery at all?" you ask.
The doctor shrugs. "You could have six months or six years."
1) "I don't trust our surgical technology. I'd prefer to live my life normally, and take what comes."
2) "I will undergo surgery to remove the damaged tissue."
3) "I will undergo surgery to replace that part of my brain with a robot core."
4) "I will create a robot body and brain for myself. I'm not attached to this squishy meat."
Year: 2049
54-year-old Isaac Tesla
Humanity: 40%
Gender: male
Fame: 10 (Internationally Famous)
Wealth: 4 (Disposable Income)
Romance: none
Joyeuse
Autonomy: 15 (Good)
Military: 32 (Transhuman)
Empathy: 11 (Stable)
Grace: 17 (Good)
Relationships
Professor Ziegler (Bad): 19%
Elly (Very Good): 67%
Josh (Good): 54%
Mark (Bad): 32%
Juliet (Good): 55%
Tammy (Bad): 17%
President Irons (Bad): 44%
?: 50%
World Power Balance
China: 56% U.S.: 44%