Halo: First Strike
mobile" robot, came toward him:  teardrop-shaped, it
    stood about four feet high and was topped with a cluster of glassy
    sensor rings and five extensors of black fibroid and jointed
    chrome.  It glided atop a thick network of fiber stalks that
    hissed beneath it as it moved toward him.
     
    The sam asked, "Can I be of assistance?"  Like most robots
    designed for common human interaction, it had a friendly, gentle
    voice, near enough human in timbre and expression to be
    reassuring, different enough to be easily recognizable as a
    robot's.  Designers had learned to avoid the "Uncanny Valley": 
    that peculiar region where a robot sounded so human that it
    suddenly appeared very strange.
     
    "I'm just looking around," Gonzales said.  The robot didn't
    respond.  Gonzales said, "I couldn't sleep."  He said nothing of
    how, sweating and moaning, he had come awake out of a nightmare in
    which the guerrilla rocket got there, and he and the ultralight
    pilot who launched it burned to death in the night.
     
    The sam said, "Much of Athena Station has been closed to
    unauthorized entry.  Would you like me to accompany you?"
     
    Gonzales shrugged.  He said, "Come along if you want."
     
    Without more negotiation, the sam followed Gonzales,
    periodically announcing rote banalities in a small, soft voice:
     
    "Athena Station was once humankind's most forceful and
    successful venture off-Earth.  Here many of the tools for further
    population of the Earth-Moon system were developed:  zero-gravity
    construction and fabrication techniques, robot-intensive mining
    and smelting procedures.  Now projects such as Halo command
    attention, but they were made possible by the techniques developed
    at Athena "
            Gonzales let the sam natter.  As the two passed through the
    corridors, he was reminded of old airports, hotels, malls.  He saw
    that most of the station had become dingyworn plastic flooring
    and walls, scuffed and marked, unpolished metal trim.  These
    dulled and scarred materials and scenes had been meant to be seen
    and used only when new, fresh from architect's plan and builder's
    hands, never after having suffered the necessary abrasion of human
    contact.  All around were logos of vanished firms (McDonald's,
    Coca-Cola), along with those of famed multi-nationalsLunar-
    Bechtel's crescent, SenTrax's sunburst.
     
    Gonzales felt a ghost-story chill as he realized that this
    entire endeavor, indeed all others like it, had been conceived out
    of late-twentieth century corporate and governmental hubris, and
    so, necessarily, should be regarded with suspicion, as should
    anything from the days when it seemed humankind had turned on all
    living things like an insane father coming into the bedroom late
    at night with an axe.
     
    The stories were part of every schoolchild's moral and
    intellectual catechism.  Toxic chemical and radioactive wastes had
    bubbled up from the ground and the seas as lame efforts at
    disposal foundered on the simple passage of time.  Stable
    ecosystems had been altered or destroyed without thought for
    anything past the moment's advantage, and species died so quickly
    biologists were hard pressed to keep the recordswrite in the
    Domesday Book now, mourn later.  Temperature norms and
    concentrations of vital gases in the atmosphere had fluctuated in
    alarming manner, as though Gaia herself had been taken to the
    fever point.
     
    Historians marked the Dolphin Catastrophe as the breakpoint,
    the year 2006 as the time of the change.  More than ten thousand
    dolphins floated onto the Florida coast near Boca Raton.  Crippled
    and twitching, they nosed into the surf and beached themselves in
    front of horrified sunbathers, and there they died, as doctors and
    volunteers watched, weeping and raging against the chemical spill
    that was killing the dolphins, millions of gallons of toxic waste
    carried on Gulf Stream currents.  Along with the thousands of
    volunteers, most of whom could do

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