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From: korman@laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au (Kate Orman)
Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
Subject: First Lore
Date: 30 Jul 1993 07:32:26 GMT
Organization: Macquarie University
Lines: 490
Distribution: world
Message-ID: <23aiqa$7h7@sunb.ocs.mq.edu.au>
NNTP-Posting-Host: laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au


The Lore Appreciation Society presents





A story by Kate Orman, 1993

Please feel free to download this for yourself and others. However, if you
wish to post it to a BBS outside the internet/usenet, or to publish it in
a fanzine, you *must* contact me (korman@laurel.ocs.mq.edu.au) first. The
usual disclaimers about Paramount apply.

NB. The unix "split" command would not split this file; I presume it's
less than one thousand lines long. It's about 18 K. I hope this doesn't
cause problems for anyone!



"Disassemble - dead!"
Number Five, Short Circuit



Alone in the darkness.

And when the pathways of his mind had unfrozen sufficiently, he began to 
dream:

Four boxes. Four metal boxes. Four metal boxes on a table.

Shooting into a mirror.

Each box had a label, written in a wiry, loopy script. *Head*, said one of 
the boxes.

There was a man there, a great black bird perched on his gloved fist. 
The bird threw its wings open and squawked, a pleading squawk. The man 
stroked the slick feathers of its head, running delicate fingers through the 
detailed plumage, the fingers of a surgeon, a priest.

Shooting into a mirror.

With a single, tidy movement, the man twisted the bird's head off. 
The bird stiffened, frozen in time, a headless horror made out of metal.
With precision, the man twisted off its left wing, put it into the box. 
Twisted off its right wing, put it into the box. Put the remainder of the 
metal bird into the last box. Carefully lidded each of the boxes, as blood 
leaked out through the cardboard, scrawling meaningless messages on the 
tabletop.

And when his eyes had unfrozen sufficiently, he began to see.

It was a day before he could move. Shadows flickered around and 
above him; at first he thought his vision was malfunctioning, but as his 
sight became clearer he realised that the power to the lights was cutting in 
and out at irregular intervals. Sometimes a smiling face leered over him, 
the teeth of its top jaw fused together in a corrugated bar of enamel.

They cut the vacuum-damaged uniform off him, taking inches of skin 
with it. He was too cold to bleed, too cold to do anything except lie on a 
workbench, waiting to see what they would do to him.

Shooting into a mirror.

It was the last thing he remembered, before the darkness had closed 
on his brain like a terrible frostbitten fist.

Well. At least he wasn't dreaming any more.



"We will take it apart. We will see how it works."

He sat up with a start as everything came online. The aliens startled, 
moving backwards, then coming close, pushing their faces up to peer at 
him.

"It is not broken any more," one of them observed.

He smiled. "What are you?" he said, sweetly.

"We are Pakled. We look for things."

"Pakled! You have rescued me. I am programmed to serve. What 
would you like me to do?"

The Pakled smiled back at him, showing those ludicrous fused teeth. 
"We do not need to take it apart," one of them said.

"No," he said. "You do not need to take me apart."

"I am Rindol," said the Pakled.

"And I'm Lore," said the android.



The ship was tiny, dirty, and full of junk. The junk, at least, he was used to.

They made him stay in their laboratory. The lighting was erratic, the 
air alternatively hot and cold; it gave him the creeps. He'd never liked 
laboratories. It was as though a flesh and blood being had been asked to bed 
down in an operating theatre.

They had laid out bits of a computer on the bench for him to tinker 
with, like so much meat. He turned the circuitry over in his hands. It all 
ought to be working; they just didn't know how to put it together properly.

It had all happened so quickly. There was no break between being 
switched off and coming back online aboard the Enterprise - but there were 
twenty-six years, an abyss. All that time, gone. Not that it really made any 
difference. But it was frightening to have such a vast gap in his memory 
record.

He had not been aboard the Enterprise more than seventy-two hours. 
In that time, he'd absorbed just about all the information there was to 
absorb, ship's records, history, computer information, weapons information, 
anything classified which he was able to break into. His brother was such a 
dope -

His brother.

He really didn't want to think about his dear sweet darling little 


So instead he concentrated on the memories that the Pakled 
laboratory brought back. Remembering learning to speak, the smile on his 
father's face when he'd finally puzzled out the art of the contraction. He saw 
that smile often, every time he did some new and clever thing. Learning to 
pat his head and rub his stomach, to eat convincingly. Learning not to show 
off too much so he wouldn't upset the colonists.

They were extremely upsettable types. Lore had derived days of 
amusement from just "forgetting" to blink when he spoke to them. It drove 
them crazy. Ha.

But it never stopped that flush of pride and pleasure when his father 
smiled at him.

He found he had assembled the computer core. He rummaged about 
in the junk until he found a suitable power source.

Dr Soong had been in his fifties, and mad as a hatter. The children 
used to come to his laboratory just to see the latest toy he had concocted: a 
wind-up cat, a nightingale, a teddy-bear that walked and talked and recited 
Lear. He looked like some favourite uncle, with the grey just starting to 
pepper his hair and his blue eyes always staring, finding something new to 
smile at.

Dr. Soong had always ended up mixing up his personal stuff with his 
serious work, so that the labs were full of half-read books and pot-plants, 
bits of archaeology, his prized collection of fossils. A great bronze Buddha 
partly obstructed the main door to the lab, and his bedroom was full of 
circuit diagrams. Sometimes Lore discovered him asleep in the lab, lying on 
the bench under a sheaf of printouts, snoring gently while a swarm of 
electronic butterflies buzzed noisily about the room.

And now he was dead. Devoured. It gave Lore a delicious shiver just 
to think about it. The man, the great man, who'd breathed life into him, 
who'd known every detail of his body and mind, who'd raised him from a 
tabula rasa into a thinking being, who'd had the most perfect power over 
him-

He was dead. And Lore had been the cause. And if he had the chance, 
he would do. It. Again.

Squeezing off that last shot at Data had been like firing into a 
mirror. And about as useful. But at least he'd seen the last of the little 
whelp.

Lore sighed.

Well. Now what was he going to do?



"So take your last look at the sunshine and brook, and send your regrets to 
the Tsar, by which I imply, you are going to die- "

Lore waited a few seconds before turning; he did not want them to 
know how good his hearing was.

Two Pakled watched him from the corner of the poorly-lit cargo bay. 
He gave them his best eager-to-please smile, lifted a half-ton chunk of 
disruptor array with one hand, and packed it neatly into a transport 
container.

"He is strong," the Pakled observed. Geniuses. Their language 
contained less than four hundred words - plus perhaps another hundred or 
so cannibalised from their contacts with other species. They were also thick 
as planks.

They *also* had disruptors, and they *couldn't* be as stupid as they 
seemed - not if they'd been able to "collect" some of the goodies in the 
storage bay. There were weapons, lots of weapons, and equipment that must 
have come from Federation ships - all in useless pieces. They were cunning 
enough to get the technology, but not bright enough to know how it worked.

"We look for things to make us strong," explained Rindol.

Gosh, no, really? Tell me something I don't know, wetware. "Yes," 
agreed Lore.

"It makes a noise while it works."

"It's called singing. It indicates that I'm happy."

"You are happy to work?"

"I'm programmed to serve."

Lore watched their little Pakled faces light up. "He fixed the 
computer's brain. He can help us get things."

"I'd like to help you get things." I don't believe I'm *having* this 
conversation. "What things do you want?"

"We wanna be strong. We wanna be smart."

Strong. Smart. Lore was still smiling. He already knew what he 
wanted to do with the Pakled.



In Dr Soong's room, Lore was making paper aeroplanes in more and more 
complicated shapes. His fingers moved rapidly over the paper, tucking and 
folding, his wrist snapping as he sent each of the tiny vessels into the air.

"I don't understand why Dr Clendenning won't let me help him," he 
said. "I can program his computer about four times faster than he can."

"Perhaps he'd like to do it himself," said his father, who was watering 
the pot plants, a distracted look on his face. Around his feet, the reciting 
teddy bear was wandering, muttering about the cows going bong.

"But that doesn't make sense. I can do it better. Like driving the 
hovertractors, and they wouldn't let me do that, either."

His father didn't say anything, but his frown deepened as he shook 
the watering-can.

"Do you want to work on some neural nets this afternoon?"

Dr Soong put down the empty can. "Lore, I can't. I've - you know how 
busy we've been since that whatever it is attacked the southern continent. 
There's a lot of work to do if we're going to defend ourselves against it."

"I want to help!" said Lore, crumpling a paper aeroplane in his fist. "I 
want to help, and nobody will let me help. Even you won't let me help. Dr 
Clendenning thinks he might have worked out a way to talk to it, but he 
won't even tell me about it. He just *looks* at me."

Dr Soong came and sat down next to him, gently patting him on the 
cheek. "Lore, I am sorry I haven't been spending as much time with you 
lately. But we're afraid. We're all afraid. If that thing comes back, it could 
kill all of us. There are more than five hundred children in-"

Lore jerked away from him. "You only care about them. You don't 
care about me. Nobody cares about me. Just because I'm a machine!"

He stood up, wrapping his arms around himself, feeling something 
terrible and black grinding away inside him. "Just because I'm a machine!" 
he said again.

"Nasticreechia Krorluppia," said the teddy. "All the King's horses and 
all the King's men, couldn't put Humpty together again."

"Oh, Lore," said Dr Soong, looking at him with eyes that were - more 
than worried. "Listen to me. You've been alive for less than a year. In some 
ways, you're still just a child."

"Then why won't you let me go to school with the other children?" 
Lore hated the way his voice skittered up the scale when he got scared. He 
forced himself to speak normally. "I'm stuck here all the time, with nothing 
to do, and-"

"In time, Lore, in time. Perhaps we-"

"I don't want to wait!" With a suddenness that surprised even him, 
Lore snatched up the prattling teddy bear and tore it in half. The little 
robot squealed once, fitfully, and fell silent, bits of circuitry and stuffing 
hanging out of its body like entrails. He hurled it against the wall.

His father jumped back, looking at him.

"No," said Lore, "no, no, oh no-" Because he'd seen the children look 
at him like that, he'd seen Dr Clendenning look at him that way when his 
wife had come into the lab carrying their daughter, he'd seen the farmers 
look at him that way, their conversations dribbling out to nothing when 
he'd come near-

His father was afraid of him.

"I hope it does come back!" he shouted. "I hope it does come back, and 
it kills all of you! All of you!"

And he found himself running, out of the room, out into the complex. 
Looking for anyone. Anyone who would *listen* to him.



In the Pakled lab, he stared into a mirror. He was looking at his eyelashes. 
His father had attached each of them individually; it must have taken more 
than a day's work. He tried to imagine the patience, the loving care, but all 
he could think about was Data.

He'd been fair, hadn't he? He'd offered Data a chance to come over to 
his side. The Soong boys, together, right? Their father would have been 
proud. It was much more than Data deserved, the little whelp, nothing more 
than a computer with legs. Unable to feel a thing. Wanting to be human, for 
God's sake.

A dreadful blackness was scraping around inside him, like a bit of 
clockwork that had come loose. Humans were stupid and slow and - weren't 
they? Obsolete. Weren't they? It didn't matter if they died. Data was like a 
little puppy, yapping around their heels, oh so anxious to please them. The 
colonists would've just loved him.

Lore turned away from the mirror. Rindol was mucking about with 
the repaired computer core, turning it around and around in his pudgy 
hands, as though just randomly moving it would somehow make it work. He 
didn't mind Lore's unblinking stare.

"Where are we going?" asked the android.

"We look for things," said Rindol.

"Is that all? Just looking for things?"

Rindol smiled his idiot's smile. "We wanna be strong. We don't wanna 
wait to be strong."

"But where are you going?"

Rindol shrugged. "You are strong. We need you. We want to make 
some more Lores." The Pakled put down the circuitry. "Where are *you* 
going?" he asked.

Lore raised an eyebrow. "I'm programmed to serve," he said. "I want 
to go with you."

"Do not try to trick us," said Rindol lightly. "We can tell."

Lore raised his other eyebrow. "You're not as stupid as you look, are 
you?"

Rindol's grin widened. "We are smart. We are more smart than you. 
We will make more Lores. We are smart." The Pakled stood and left the lab, 
still grinning.

"At least," said Lore, "I know where I'm going."



He came running back to the lab, as he always came running back to the 
lab. The doors hissed open to admit him.

No sign of his father. He turned, and turned again, looking into the 
corners of the laboratory. The air was cool, the room was full of machines for 
heating and bending and testing. It frightened him. There was something 
terribly important he had to tell his father, something awful. There wasn't
much time.

There was a hand on the bench.

Lore froze where he stood. Involuntarily, he looked down, making 
sure both of his hands were still attached.

It was macabre, this deactivated body part, just sitting there... just... 
was it a replacement? It must be for him. A replacement, a spare part, for 
him. It must be for him. It must be, it must be.

With a paroxysm he ran to the wall and slapped the control panel.
The door opened, venting a great jet of freezing vapour. He ducked 
under it, desperate.

The other arm was inside. And a leg, and another leg, and scattered 
pieces like a jigsaw puzzle man, and a face. A face. There was a face in the 
wall. His *face*. *His* face.

Lore screamed, hearing his voice crescendo up into an electronic 
whine. He backed out of the wall recess, banging his head on the door, not 
noticing.

"Lore!" said his father.

He spun around, making Dr. Soong startle.

"You - you've, you-" his language programming seemed to have 
jammed. He pointed back through the steam at the collection of pieces.

"Oh, Lore," said Soong. "I'm so sorry. It's alright. I'm sorry. I was 
going to tell you..."

Lore whipped the phaser out of his jacket pocket and pointed it 
straight at his father, his hand trembling, servomechanisms failing to 
compensate. He felt his whole body start to quake as a great tangled wave of 
rage crashed over him.

It had never occurred to him before how much his father looked like 
him. It was like shooting into a mirror. But his father's hair was greying, 
and there were lines around his eyes. Lore was better, because he would 
never get old. He was stronger. He was a damn sight smarter. And he- he-

"That's what you've been doing. In secret." Lore glanced at the arm 
on the bench. The word *replacement* suddenly came back into his mind.

He fell to his knees in front his father and wrapped his arms around 
him. "Oh, please!" he sobbed. "Please! Please don't take me apart! I'll be 
good, I promise! I will! I will! Oh, please, Father, don't take me apart-"

"Oh, Lore." There were tears coursing down Soong's cheeks as he ran 
his fingers through his creation's hair. Those gentle fingers, so delicate. 
"Shhhh."

He still had the phaser gripped in one shivering hand. He should 
have killed Soong, then, just pressed the weapon into his back and let it 
tear him apart, molecule by molecule.

"Shhhhh."

But he didn't have to.



Shooting into a mirror.

The Starfleet people hadn't trusted him from the beginning. They 
hadn't given him a chance. It wasn't fair. Data was inferior, couldn't they 
see that? He couldn't even talk properly. It didn't make sense to keep the 
replacement when they had the original. But they saw him as the copy, as 
some sort of flawed twin.

Lore stared at himself in the mirror, but all he saw was his father's 
face, his brother's face. And he knew that he wanted to be alone.

He smacked his hand into the mirror.

"I'm *not* your twin!" he wailed.

He smacked his hand into the mirror.

"I'm not your *twin*!" he wailed.

He smacked his hand into the mirror.

"*I'm not your twin!*" he wailed.

At last the mirror shattered, exploded, bright fragments embedding 
themselves painlessly in his palm, lacerating the skin. He started to leak, 
laughing, laughing. They had put him back together, but he was still in 
pieces.

From the doorway, Rindol said, "We will take it apart. We will see 
how it works." The Pakled was holding a disruptor.

The wave broke on him them, boiling up out of some hot place inside 
him, as it had when he'd torn apart that kindergarten classroom, as it had 
when he'd smashed apart that hovertractor, as it had when he'd screamed 
at his father, feeling that gentle hand sliding down his arm, not 
understanding until the last moment when those delicate fingers pressed 
into the gap in his side.

He was across the room in an instant. Without effort, without a  
thought, he took Rindol's wrist between his forefinger and thumb and 
wrenched the Pakled's arm out of its socket. 

Rindol started howling then, an intolerable high-pitched wail of 
animal panic. The fingers of his disconnected arm unclenched, dropping the 
disruptor to the floor. Lore flicked his hand across the Pakled's face, 
sending him flying into the wall, blood exploding from the violated 
shoulder. He took the fat man's other arm and twisted it free, dropping it 
onto the floor next to its twin.

Rindol died. Lore stalked out of the room, still laughing. Two Pakled 
tried to stop him as he headed for the ship's main airlock; he snapped one 
fat man's neck with a casual slap, punched the other in the ribs so hard his 
spine broke with the impact. Ripped apart airlock circuitry until the outer 
door opened and the inner door opened and the air screamed out of the ship, 
Pakled bodies whirling past on the hurricane. Until there was nothing to 
breathe, nothing to carry the sound of his voice.

Still laughing.

Alone in the darkness.
-- 
Kate Orman, SFLAaE/BS (Assoc.), SEFEB, RAAS, LAS, ALIA, FS47, BBGC
This .sig is really Odo