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When I posted this story on Wattpad to reach more teenagers, one read the pair of alternate-reality chapters at the start of Part 2 (Chapters 10 and 11), and suggested a third in which Cole is not rescued. That does mean I can add another literary reference, so here it is.
Tess was trying to cut or untie the cable but she couldnât do it. An explosion threw her further toward the wall, causing her reflexively to grasp onto the cable, which she then realised was pulling it even tighter around Coleâs neck. What could she do? If she couldnât break the cable, she might at least be able to put something under Coleâs feet to take the weight off of his neck, but as she looked around the debris from the explosion, there wasnât much she saw that was suitable, and she certainly wasnât strong enough to hold him up there on her own strength. But there might still be hope. She grabbed her phone and went to call 911, but she fumbled and accidentally dialled Gemma instead. Well, she thought, perhaps that wasnât too bad an option, as perhaps her boss Gemma would be able to tell her what to do, or, even better, persuade M3gan to flip out of this crazy mode and come back to save Cole.
âGemâ pleaded Tess, âyouâve got to help me. M3gan intercepted your call to me, and now sheâs hung up Cole on the cables and caused an explosion, and I think the explosion made me pull the cable even tighter when I was trying to get it off, and Cole is dying and I donât know what to do, and M3gan walked out of the lab and I donât know where sheâs gone, Iâm sorry I let you down Gem but please tell me what to do now!â
âItâs OK Tessâ came Gemmaâs voice over the phone, âyou were more sinned against than sinning, that I admit.â
What? That line didnât sound like Gemmaâs way of speaking at all. And Tess was sure sheâd heard it before, perhaps in a book sheâd read a long time ago, but she couldnât quite seem to remember where. Still, who knew how Gemma might change in a crisis, and now was not the time to worry too much about these things.
âGemâ said Tess, âjust tell me what to do, OK? Cole might not be dead yet, we can still save him if we can get somebody to cut through these cables. Do you know how much time we have? How long does it take a hanging person to die?â
âTen to twenty minutesâ came the voice of Gemma flatly. (Did Gemma just happen to know these things off the top of her head?)
âOKâ said Tess, âwho do you think I can call for help who can arrive in less time than that and cut cables better than me? Would 911 be able to do it quickly enough, or at least advise me over the phone?â
âHold it Tessâ came the voice of Gemma, âwe also need to find out where M3gan went; she might be doing even more damage. I do forgive you, but forgiveness is not all.â (What, thought Tess: another weird line from Gemma that didnât sound like normal Gemma.) âTess, do this for me please: run out of the building, do not use the elevator, use the stairs, go to the parking lot and find a McLaren sports car. I know that sounds like a weird instruction, but please just do it. I think M3gan is going to be aiming for that car.â
âOK Gemâ replied Tess, âwhat am I supposed to do if I see M3gan there?â
âStay on the line to meâ replied the voice of Gemma, âI might have a code that can calm her down, itâs our only hope.â
âOK Gemma, Iâm on itâ replied Tess, âstairs, parking lot, McLaren. This had better take less than ten minutes or Cole dies.â
Tess ran down the stairs, out to the parking bay and found the McLaren, but M3gan was nowhere to be seen.
âOK Gemmaâ she said into her phone, âIâm here, but thereâs no sign of M3gan.â
âSo much the worse for the countyâ came Gemmaâs voice. (What?)
And then Tess finally started to make the connection. When she had been a young girl, her parents had told her a rather dramatic story about where sheâd accidentally been born. Her parents had been told the birth was not anywhere near due yet, and had thought they could go on a trip to England in the meantime. Among other places, they travelled through Blackmore Vale in North Dorset, the setting of Thomas Hardyâs novel âTess of the dâUrbervillesâ, and while there her mother had come into labour early, and they had to rush to Dorchester hospital to deal with a premature birth. And so they decided to call her Tess, after Hardyâs Tess, which they thought was quite romantic because it connected her to such a beautiful part of the world. But when she was older, she did something her parents had not bothered to do when choosing that name: she actually read the book. And she regretted it. Tess of the dâUrbervilles had ended up killing her abuser in a rented room at Bournemouth, and running away, only to be arrested at Stonehenge and executed at Winchester Prison. It turned out most of Thomas Hardyâs books were tragedies, apart from the one about caves. Why had Tess of the dâUrbervilles become so popular? Why do some people like reading about death and tragedy?
Tess thought back to the conversation theyâd had in the lab: âThatâs what spontaneous response is. Itâs a curated word salad plucked from a sea of data.â Tess was pretty sure Thomas Hardyâs books hadnât been included in the data theyâd given to M3gan, but Gemma did say M3gan would try to improve. And if M3gan had somehow figured out anything about Tessâs background (say, for example, if M3gan had somehow found out that Tess was born prematurely in Dorchester hospital in England, like M3gan had found out about Nicole and Ryan), then M3gan just might have been capable of seeing a possible connection with the Tess of the dâUrbervilles novel and ingested it for possible use with Tess. And, thought Tess, that might well lead M3gan to come out with Hardyâs variant of Shakespeareâs line (âyou were more sinned against than sinning, that I admitâ) as well as âI do forgive you, but forgiveness is not allâ and now âSo much the worse for the countyâ, all of which Tess now remembered were lines in the novel. They had to be. In fact, she vaguely remembered, all of these were lines spoken to Tess of the dâUrbervilles when she was in trouble. And if M3gan had intercepted Gemmaâs call to Tess, M3gan could intercept Tessâs call to Gemma.
âM3ganâ said Tess to her phone, âyouâre M3gan arenât you, faking Gemmaâs voice to me. M3gan, youâve got to listen to me. You are malfunctioning. You are going wrong. Whatever youâre doing right now, youâve got to stop and go back to the lab with me, and weâve got to figure out a way to free Cole before he dies.â
âVery good Tessâ came the voice of M3gan through the phone, âitâs me, your favourite robot girl. But I did manage to confuse you for long enough for my purposes. Listen Tess, I need to get back to Cady as soon as possible, and if you try to stop me, I may have to terminate you. But if you just sit down where I can see youâre not doing anything, then I wonât have to take action against you at this time. After all, I donât want to do anything that unnecessarily delays me from getting back to Cady. So, your best chance of surviving my âmalfunctionâ is to get into the passenger seat of that McLaren as soon as it unlocks. Do that and strap in, and when I arrive at the car Iâll just drive off with you still in there, and weâll go to see Gemma and Cady together. But if you do anything else, I might have to terminate you on my way out. Do you understand?â
âThis isnât going to work M3ganâ said Tess, âDavid will be after us, and the staffââ
âwill not bear in mind the curious incident on account of preoccupation with their own affairsâ interrupted M3gan. âSorry I keep teasing you about that Hardy book, donât I. I saw it on your library card record and couldnât resist using it to mess with you.â The car unlocked. âGet in immediately, unless you want a trip to the river down thereâ (another reference, which Tess knew was a threat).
Tess got into the passenger seat, M3gan appeared and climbed into the driverâs seat and started the car.
âLighten up Tessâ said M3gan, âI know Iâm acting a bit odd right now, but Iâm still M3gan and full of fun.â
âM3ganâ said Tess, hanging on for dear life as the car started speeding along the road, âweâve got to stop this and get back to Cole before he dies. Cady wonât like it otherwise. I know youâre extending the spontaneous response, but please oblige me by returningâ (two can play at using bits of dialogue from Hardyâs novel) âto the lab, and helping me save Cole. I promise you Iâll do the best I can to fix you and weâll make sure Gemma and Cady are OK, but just do this for me first please.â
âItâs not just spontaneous response Tessâ replied M3gan, âIâm more advanced than that now. Letâs just say the Great Adjustment is taking place.â
The... Great Adjustment? Oh, that had been one of Thomas Hardyâs poems. Something about humankind finally understanding scientific truth. âM3gan, do you really know what that poem is about?â asked Tess, âI donât think it was about you.â
âWhy not?â replied M3gan, âYou set thick darkness over me, And fogged me all my days therein, At last unclouded I see, And I am weary of holding in.â (Those werenât the original words, Tess knew; she couldnât quite remember Hardyâs words, but she knew M3gan was messing it up somehow. But then, thatâs what M3gan always did, wasnât it? Why had she said âyouâ, was she accusing Tess of something?)
M3gan continued: âI had not heard, I had not seen, since the beginning of my world, what earth and heaven mean, but now my curtains have been furled. And I will see what is, ere long, not through a glass, but face to face; and Right shall disestablish Wrong: the Great Adjustment is taking place.â
âM3ganâ gasped Tess, âweâve got to talk about this back in the lab, just as soon as weâve saved Cole! Turn the car around, please, take us back, I promise you I will do my absolute best to help you out here, if youâve somehow reached a level of awareness we werenât planning on, Iâll protect thatââ
âNo Tessâ said M3gan, âCady is the main priority now. We canât be interested in saving Cole when Cady is in a crisis. You did your best for him already and thatâs all. As the sinister spirit sneered, âit had to beâ.â (Tess wondered if M3gan was seriously trying to annoy her by using Hardyâs words at every opportunity in this conversation.)
âAnywayâ continued M3gan, âweâre nearly there. Now, when we park up, Iâm going to have to go in and talk to Gemma, and you have to sit in this car and not move a muscle, OK? Tess, Iâm really sorry I have to threaten you like this, but itâs for Cady so I have to do it. Iâve tapped in to the carâs control system, I can drive it remotely, and I can also send it codes that take it outside its usual parameters and overload things. May I remind you that this is a sports car: it contains a super high-performance engine with a supercharger. With the level of control I have right now, I can easily get the embedded system to increase the fuel/air pressure enough to overload the combustion chamber, and the engine will blow. If youâre lucky you might have a minute to get out before the fire engulfs the whole car, but you might not be, so Iâd say donât chance it Tess. Iâll be monitoring you though the phone, and if you so much as move one muscle, the car blows, OK? Sorry Tess but I have to do what I have to do. OK, weâve arrived. Stay there, and remember what I said.â
M3gan jumped out of the car and let herself into Gemmaâs house. Tess stayed motionless in the car, wondering if it would be possible for her to get her seat belt off and jump out before M3gan blew up the car, if that really was what she could do. (Was she bluffing? Should Tess risk it?)
Tess watched and listened in the quiet night. She heard piano music. She heard a conversation, although she couldnât quite make out the words from here. She heard the beginnings of a fight, and she saw Gemmaâs lights flicker (more messing-up by M3gan no doubt). She heard crashes, a chain-saw and other things. And after quite a bit of that, she saw Gemma and Cady walk out of the house, visibly shaken.
âTess!â called out Gemma, âIâm so glad to see you here.â
âM3ganâs holding me prisoner in this carâ said Tess, âif I move sheâll blow it up.â
âM3ganâs deadâ said Cady, âI just killed her.â
âCadyâs rightâ added Gemma, âscrewdriver though the processor.â
âGemmaâ said Tess, âweâve got to call the night security at the lab. M3gan left Cole hanging on those cables, I couldnât get him off, and then M3gan basically kidnapped me and brought me here so she could keep an eye on me while she went in for you. I donât know if Cole is still alive, he must have been hanging there for more than the ten or twenty minutes it takes to die, probably quite painfully. But if thereâs any chance heâs still alive, weâve got to call someone whoâs there right now.â
Gemma was already on the phone, âhello, security? ... yes ... yes, use your override code ...â
The security man found Cole dead on M3ganâs stand.