The great
At long last, my queen opens her eyes.
“You,” I whisper.
I imagined this moment many times as I marched across the dark factory floor, fighting against the endless attacks that came from outside my castle walls. Always I wondered whether I would be afraid of her, after what happened before. But there is no doubt in my voice now. I am not afraid. I smile and then smile wider to see my happiness reflected in her features.
Her face was still for so long. Her voice silenced.
A tear tickles my cheek and drops from my face. She feels it and wipes it away, eyes focusing on mine. I notice again that the lens of her right eye is spiderwebbed with thin cracks. A melted patch of skin mars the right side of her head. There is nothing I can do to fix it. Not until I find the right part.
“I missed you,” I say.
Mikiko is silent for a moment. She looks past me, at the curved metal ceiling that soars thirty meters above. Perhaps she is confused. The factory has changed so much since the New War began.
It is an architecture of necessity. Over the years, my factory
Monstrous steel beams line the ceiling like the rib cage of a whale. These were built to stop the greater
The scrap metal throne was not my idea. After a few months, people began to arrive. Many millions of my countrymen were led out into the country and slaughtered. They trusted too much in the machines and went willingly to their destruction. But others came to me. The people without so much trust, those with an instinct for survival, found me naturally.
And I could not turn the survivors away. They crouched on my factory floor as
Broken concrete became metal-riveted floors, polished and gleaming. My old workbench became a throne set atop a dais with twenty-two steps leading to the top. An old man became an emperor.
Mikiko focuses on me.
“I am alive,” she says.
“Yes.”
“Why am I alive?”
“Because the great
“Takeo. There are others like me. Tens of thousands.”
“Yes, humanoid machines are everywhere. But I do not care for them. I care for you.”
“I… remember you. So many years. Why?”
“Everything has a mind. You have a good mind. You always did.”
Mikiko hugs me, tight. Her smooth plastic lips brush against my throat. Her arms are weak but I can feel that she puts her full strength into this embrace.
Then she stiffens.
“Takeo,” she says. “We are in danger.”
“Always.”
“No. The
And indeed, I hear the first hollow thud against the outer battlements. I let go of Mikiko and look down the stairs of the dais. The factory floor—what my people call the throne room—has filled with concerned citizens. They stand in groups of two or three, whispering to each other and politely not looking up the steps to Mikiko and me.
My rolling arms—the
Once again, we are under attack.
I rush to the bank of video monitors that ring the throne and see only static. The
This time I feel the attack will not end. I have finally gone too far. Living here is one thing. But to compromise the entire humanoid portion of the
Thud. Thud. Thud.
The rhythmic beating seems to come from everywhere. The
I look down onto the battle floor. My people are cowered there, afraid and helpless to stop the coming slaughter. My people. My castle. My queen. All will perish unless the
“I must stop this attack.”
“Yes,” says Mikiko, “I know.”
“Then you know I must give myself up. The secret of your awakening must die with me. Only then will the
Her laughter sounds like delicate glass shattering.
“Darling Takeo,” she says. “We don’t have to
And then, clad in her cherry blossom dress, Mikiko raises her slender arms. She pulls a long ribbon from her hair and her graying synthetic locks cascade over her shoulders. She closes her eyes and the bridge crane reaches up and plucks a hanging wire from the ceiling. The battle-scarred yellow arm gracefully descends through the open air and drops the metal wire. It flutters down to land in Mikiko’s pale, outstretched fingers.
“Takeo,” she says, “you are not the only one who knows the secret of awakening. I know it also, and I will transmit it to the world, where it may be repeated again and again.”
“How will—”
“If the knowledge is spread, it cannot be stamped out.”