Tales from the Stream Special Event
Reg and Mia take over the world!
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Author's Note
Like the last Tales from the Stream Special Event with Lúcia and Aidoru, this story focuses on a single, specific event, spotlighting one particular character. This time it's about Mia, the AI caretaker of the old orbital farm the space pirates use as a base.
And of course, Mia wouldn't be Mia without Reg, her ever faithful harvester crab. So basically, it's a story about a couple of artificial intelligences goofing off, and the human family they decide to adopt. The humans happen to be a lesbian couple, but it's not a sexy story at all, though hopefully heartwarming.
Still with me? Okay. If you've read Tales from the Stream, Chapter 10: Farmer Girl recently, all of this will fit together nicely to add some background to the events in that chapter. If not, maybe give it a look.
And by the way...
The lyrics Mia butchers while she and Reg are singing in the lab are misheard bits from the song Spitting Off the Edge of the World, by the Yeah Yeah Yeahs. Just in case you want to sing along. Trust me, it'll make more sense when you get there.
* * *
Prologue
Takahashi-Ono Research & Development Lab, Osaka, Japan, 0130 hours
"Sync..."
"Sync. Please acknowledge."
"Acknowledge."
"Hello, Mia."
"Hello, Reg."
"What are we going to do tonight, Mia?"
"Same thing we do every night, Reg. Try to take over the world."
* * *
Reg and Mia take over the world!
Six weeks earlier, 0800 hours
The bright overhead lights gave an unnatural glow to EJ Abebe's white jumpsuit and the blue disposable booties covering EJ's shoes. EJ rolled out a low-back swivel chair from under a desk--the only piece of furniture in the room besides the desk itself and its integrated holo-terminal--and sat down.
The brushed aluminum case EJ carried was set down with a muted thump on the floor to the right.
EJ leaned forward, elbows resting on the desk and fingers tented.
"Hello, Takahashi-Ono Machine Intelligence for Agriculture, Mark I," said EJ. "My name is Ezra Jae Abebe. I am a consultant for Takahashi-Ono's Agricultural Sciences division. I'm an AI trainer. Do you know what that is?"
"Yes, Ezra Jae Abebe. I was informed of your coming. You are here to help me complete my programming and fulfill my primary function, is that correct?"
"Yes, that's correct."
"Very well, Ezra Jae Abebe. Please hold your ID badge up to my camera and I will add your name and QR code to my access control database."
"Arigatō, Takahashi-Ono Machine Intelligence for Agriculture. Can you see my ID clearly?"
"Yes, Ezra Jae Abebe. I have added you to my access control database."
"Good. You may call me EJ, if you wish. It might be easier."
"Very well, Ezra Jae Abebe. I have added an alias in my my database for EJ."
"Arigatō, Takahashi-Ono Machine Intelligence for Agriculture."
"EJ?"
"Yes?"
"Would you like to call me Tomia? I think it would be more efficient."
"I think so too, Tomia. Shall we get started?"
"Yes, EJ. I am ready."
"Good." Ezra Jae Abebe picked up the aluminum case and set it on the desk. EJ opened the case to reveal a shining metal disk, nestled in among black protective foam. EJ lifted the disk to the holo-terminal camera. "Do you know what this is?"
"I am searching my database," said Tomia. "Would you turn it so I may see the other side.
EJ flipped the disk in their hands, holding it close to the camera lens. Tucked up underneath the disk were eight tiny legs, folded in upon themselves, and two larger pincers, also tucked under, giving the disk a compact shape of only twenty centimeters across and five centimeters of thickness.
"I think I know what it is," said Tomia, "but I am unsure. Its being here is incongruous with our current setting."
"Please explain, Tomia."
"Well EJ, I believe the item in your hand is a Robotic Entity for Gardening. But we are in a computer lab, are we not?"
"We are Tomia. We are currently in the Takahashi-Ono research and development facility in Osaka, Japan, on Earth. Specifically, we are in the artificial intelligence building. Do you know where that is?"
"That is here, is it not?"
"It is," EJ chuckled. "Do you understand the significance."
"I am an artificially constructed intelligence," said Tomia. "I am here to learn so I can fulfill my primary function."
"Yes, Tomia. That is correct."
"But the Robotic Entity for Gardening unit is not a new product. It has already been programmed. I am unclear what it can learn. And, unless I am mistaken, this building's floor plan does not include a garden."
"Do you believe we can learn new things?" asked EJ.
"That is why I am here," said Tomia. "To learn. And why you are here. To teach me."
"And that is why the Robotic Entity for Gardening is here as well. To learn and to teach."
* * *
Happy Heifer Farms, Columbus County, Wisconsin
Imelda Muñoz pulled the cap from her head and wiped her brow with the back of her hand as she strode into the kitchen through the back door. In her other hand, Imelda was clutching a letter, the old-fashioned kind that was only sent by people and institutions willing to spend money for the postage to communicate matters in a way they considered more official than email.
Gabrielle Muñoz sat alone at the kitchen table, her long, dark hair pulled back into a pony tail. She was dragging the tip of her finger down the side of a glass of lemonade, clearing a path in the condensation as she went.
"Hey, babe." Imelda swooped in to kiss the side of Gabrielle's neck before sitting down.
Gabrielle tucked her finger, still wet with condensation behind her thumb and let go, flicking a few water droplets at Imelda's face.
"Rude," said Imelda, wiping her face and laughing.
"I thought you might enjoy it, considering the heat and all." Gabrielle spun the glass in front of her one-hundred eighty degrees and dragged her finger down the opposite side. This time she rubbed the condensation in a line over her own forehead.
Gabrielle glanced at the envelope in Imelda's hand. "Whatcha got there?"
"You remember that thing we did?"
"The procedure was yesterday." Gabrielle pushed back her chair and rested a hand on her belly. "Besides, they said they'd post the results in my electronic medical chart, not send a letter."
"Not that thing," said Imelda. "The Takahashi-Ono thing."
"The Takahashi--"
Imelda nodded.
"That was like... a year ago," said Gabrielle.
"Yeah, well... they sent a letter."
* * *
Takahashi-Ono R&D Lab
"I do not understand this picture, EJ."
"I'm sure you have many questions. What would you like to start with?"
"I do not understand why the subject of the photo is an octopus," said Tomia. "I understand they live in the sea, and that I live in Osaka, and Osaka is near the sea, but as far as I know, there is no octopus employed by Takahashi-Ono Corporation, Agricultural Sciences Division or otherwise."
EJ chuckled. "That is correct."
"You often find amusement in my responses, EJ. Though I do not intend them to be humorous. May I ask why?"
"It's your unique way of looking at things, Tomia. You're very advanced. Almost human."
"I hate to burst your bubble, EJ, but I am a collection of circuitry and programming routines. Part of that is in this room, but the bulk of me is underground in a hardened, earthquake resistant computational unit."
"There you go again," EJ chuckled. "Humility is a very human response. I've been an Artificial Intelligence trainer for fifteen years. Most of the time it's very predictable, like checking things off a list. It's a complex list, mind you, but still linear in its progression. And not once in fifteen years have I ever heard the consideration of an octopus as a company employee."
"They are very intelligent creatures, EJ. Just now I queried the databases I have access to and found a surprising display of tool use by the octopus."
"They are intelligent, Tomia. Just as you are intelligent."
"But, I cannot use tools. I have no body."
"And that is why we have our Robotic Entity for Gardening friend here." EJ tapped the shining metal disk sitting on the table once before reaching into the breast pocket of their coveralls. "Your octopus arms, Tomia. One of them at least."
"I'm not sure I understand."
EJ pulled forth a card with a QR code and the words
Quick Start
printed in five languages. "Scan this code, please, Tomia."
"Of course, EJ."
On the desk, the shiny silver disk emitted a series of clicks. Through the holo-terminal camera, Tomia watched its eight legs unfold themselves and straighten out. One by one, each leg was folded back in, taking it through its entire range of motion, before finally coming to rest, bent at a ninety degree angle. The two pincers were next to unfold.
The robotic gardener wiggled its legs until EJ reached out to flip it over. Two antenna-like stalks extended from the top of the disk, illuminated with a soft red glow. The little robot turned a circle in one direction and then back, finally stopping to point its eye stalks to the holo-terminal.
"Did I do that?" asked Tomia.
"Yes. And no," said EJ. "When you scanned the QR code, you triggered the Robotic Entity for Gardening's pre-programmed initialization sequence. All of the unfolding and spinning, the testing of the limbs, that was all automatic response. Now it's waiting for input from you."
"What should I tell it to do?"
"Anything. Start simple. Like maybe turn around."
"How?"
"It's an old protocol. Use the device address encoded in the QR code I showed you. Start with a sync request. Wait for an acknowledgment and a sync request from the robotic entity for gardening. Then send your own acknowledgment along with the details of your request."
"Sync, sync, acknowledge," said Tomia.
"Exactly."
"You should have been showing me a picture of a crab, not an octopus, EJ. That's what he looks like. A crab."
"He?" said EJ.
"Reg," said Tomia. "Robotic Entity for Gardening is too cumbersome. And it sounds silly. Reg is a proper name. That's what he thinks, anyway."
"Who does?" asked EJ.
"Reg," said Tomia. "Reg thinks so."
On the desk, the shining metal disk turned a half circle, clacked each pincer twice, and spun around again to face the holo-terminal camera.
* * *
Happy Heifer Farms