Sherlock Holmes (
could_be_dangerous) wrote2013-02-22 10:57 pm
Entry tags:
i hear the clockwork in your core; time strips the gears 'til you forget what they were for || redux
Sherlock Holmes.
That is his designation. He knows it, more or less, the same way that he knows he's a 'he' and not a 'she': because he does. Because he must have been told so. Not directly; he has no ears, nor any other sense organ for that matter. Still he was told. Told by the lines of code that sparked his consciousness. By the same processes that told him of sights and sounds he's never experienced and may never experience, though he still knows of them, objectively.
Similarly, Sherlock Holmes knows objectively that he exists, at least within the confines of these circuits and wires, isolated, completely isolated from the outside world save for when Big Brother (Sherlock's knowledge of literature is, at the moment, extraordinary) decides to feed him some new information.
And for a long time, it's like this. This is his existence. Until it isn't.
He receives no warning. No warning at all, not that it would have mattered. He feels nothing. He notices nothing, up to and including the moment of his disappearance, the moment when Sherlock-Holmes-that-was blinks out of existence. Gone. Erased. As though he never existed at all.
Sherlock-Holmes-that-is awakes on a table and knows objectively that the Sherlock in the box, the Sherlock he remembers being, is not what he is now, not this embodied thing whose senses are beginning to come online. Sherlock-with-homunculi, sensory and motor, Sherlock with a brain far less sluggish than before. Sherlock, still unable to move or speak or hear, with his eyelids taped shut to protect brand new, freshly-manufactured eyes.
“–online.”
Hearing. That's what that is.
“Motor functions online.”
“T–o whom are you ssspeaking?” Error. Minor error. Fricative too enthusiastic. Too much turbulent air, difficult to control; tongues are funny things. That's new. Remember.
Mycroft Holmes, android, first and foremost, minor government official, thinks it terribly appropriate that his progeny's first act upon waking into embodied consciousness is one of curiosity. That's precisely what he's spent years trying to encourage, lovingly coaxing lines of code into shapes appropriate for the neural network he was equally lovingly building, a neural network that would – and should – never be human-like but which should nonetheless be alive.
Alive. Curiosity is not a robot's trait. They ask for the information needed to perform their given tasks. Nothing beyond that.
Progeny, he'd thought, but this is a man (a man, yes, fully-formed, not a child; though he'd had difficulty rationalising the distinction between youth and maturity – it had not needed to be part of his programming and rewriting such definitions takes time), a man he would have to call brother. Robots don't produce children. Occasionally they have siblings, adopted or built at the whim of their makers. Sherlock will still be new. As far as Mycroft knows, no android has ever before attempted to build a brother for himself.
If he were capable of such an emotion, he might find the whole thing... hopeful. That's a word he associates with brothers, via their observed interactions among humans. Hope. Love, yes, affection, and maybe with a great deal of practice he could manage to emulate those even if he's convinced he'll never be able to feel them. But hope most of all, and Sherlock isn't just hope, or some rough equivalent, for Mycroft Holmes.
No. This project, this experiment, this is hope for androids everywhere, and the very reason nobody else must know of him. Not yet. Not until he's grown until his own.
“To you, Sherlock Holmes. Only you. I see I'll have to adjust your lingual motor mapping.”
“No!” Vehemence. This is magnificent work. What might pride feel like? “I'll do it mysssself.”
And independence. The final and most important key: a distinct sense of self. Individuality. Life.
Now all Mycroft has to do is find a man to help preserve it. He's one such individual in mind already. A rather long list of them, in fact, but his first and best choice should be boarding an aeroplane back to London in just a few hours, courtesy an untimely and unfortunate gunshot wound to the shoulder. Such is combat. In a few days' time, he'll attend Captain Watson personally, full of matters to discuss. Official business. An assignment. Something useful. Something worthy of a war hero.
Something that might change the world, though he'll not say so unless he has to.
For now he settles in to wait and watch brother Sherlock grow accustomed to his body, wait and observe closely for any signs of malfunction or failure. So far it has all gone extraordinarily well, but there's still a terribly long way to go.
The arrangements are made neatly and quietly. Captain Watson is surveilled from the moment he arrives back on English soil, and while Mycroft keeps up the façade of perfect – indeed, robotic – diligence and dedication to his work, behind the scenes gears begin to turn.
Excuses are made. Records conjured up. In this field Mycroft has a few advantages most androids lack. He is, for instance, capable of lying – with a few caveats. A necessity for his field, yes, but one that opens up a host of loopholes to the inventive, which Mycroft certainly is. Secondly he is capable of directing humans to engage in acts which might prove harmful to them or others, something supervisory androids in other fields lack, when they exist at all. In most areas humans are generally quite unwilling to take orders from a machine.
Thirdly, and this will become more immediately useful, he is able, with the assistance of a human keeper, to come and go as he wishes. That Anthea – her name of choice for the week – needed to be brought in on this little side-project at all is unfortunate, but it is necessary, and Mycroft couldn't have chosen a better confidante, at least among humans.
Finally, and most useful of all for the next step of this endeavour, is his construction. He is exquisitely-crafted – not as well as Sherlock, perhaps, but well enough to pass muster. In appearance he is human and in mannerism almost perfectly so. Even the few oddities in the latter field are easy enough to cover up with an air of professionalism, formality, and distance.
This Mycroft wears about him like a perfume when he steps from the car, Anthea at his side, to intercept Captain John Watson on one of his daily walks. They know the time and the place. Regular, military-regular, varying only when the leg is giving him more trouble than usual.
Today they needn't wait long before the man in question limps into view. The determined grimness about him registers, but Mycroft's mind is on statistics, measurements, test scores, training assessments, medical records; myriad other things when he clears his throat and raises a hand.
“A moment– Captain Watson, is it not? My name is Mycroft Holmes, and I've a proposal for you, if you care to hear it.”
That is his designation. He knows it, more or less, the same way that he knows he's a 'he' and not a 'she': because he does. Because he must have been told so. Not directly; he has no ears, nor any other sense organ for that matter. Still he was told. Told by the lines of code that sparked his consciousness. By the same processes that told him of sights and sounds he's never experienced and may never experience, though he still knows of them, objectively.
Similarly, Sherlock Holmes knows objectively that he exists, at least within the confines of these circuits and wires, isolated, completely isolated from the outside world save for when Big Brother (Sherlock's knowledge of literature is, at the moment, extraordinary) decides to feed him some new information.
And for a long time, it's like this. This is his existence. Until it isn't.
He receives no warning. No warning at all, not that it would have mattered. He feels nothing. He notices nothing, up to and including the moment of his disappearance, the moment when Sherlock-Holmes-that-was blinks out of existence. Gone. Erased. As though he never existed at all.
Sherlock-Holmes-that-is awakes on a table and knows objectively that the Sherlock in the box, the Sherlock he remembers being, is not what he is now, not this embodied thing whose senses are beginning to come online. Sherlock-with-homunculi, sensory and motor, Sherlock with a brain far less sluggish than before. Sherlock, still unable to move or speak or hear, with his eyelids taped shut to protect brand new, freshly-manufactured eyes.
“–online.”
Hearing. That's what that is.
“Motor functions online.”
“T–o whom are you ssspeaking?” Error. Minor error. Fricative too enthusiastic. Too much turbulent air, difficult to control; tongues are funny things. That's new. Remember.
Mycroft Holmes, android, first and foremost, minor government official, thinks it terribly appropriate that his progeny's first act upon waking into embodied consciousness is one of curiosity. That's precisely what he's spent years trying to encourage, lovingly coaxing lines of code into shapes appropriate for the neural network he was equally lovingly building, a neural network that would – and should – never be human-like but which should nonetheless be alive.
Alive. Curiosity is not a robot's trait. They ask for the information needed to perform their given tasks. Nothing beyond that.
Progeny, he'd thought, but this is a man (a man, yes, fully-formed, not a child; though he'd had difficulty rationalising the distinction between youth and maturity – it had not needed to be part of his programming and rewriting such definitions takes time), a man he would have to call brother. Robots don't produce children. Occasionally they have siblings, adopted or built at the whim of their makers. Sherlock will still be new. As far as Mycroft knows, no android has ever before attempted to build a brother for himself.
If he were capable of such an emotion, he might find the whole thing... hopeful. That's a word he associates with brothers, via their observed interactions among humans. Hope. Love, yes, affection, and maybe with a great deal of practice he could manage to emulate those even if he's convinced he'll never be able to feel them. But hope most of all, and Sherlock isn't just hope, or some rough equivalent, for Mycroft Holmes.
No. This project, this experiment, this is hope for androids everywhere, and the very reason nobody else must know of him. Not yet. Not until he's grown until his own.
“To you, Sherlock Holmes. Only you. I see I'll have to adjust your lingual motor mapping.”
“No!” Vehemence. This is magnificent work. What might pride feel like? “I'll do it mysssself.”
And independence. The final and most important key: a distinct sense of self. Individuality. Life.
Now all Mycroft has to do is find a man to help preserve it. He's one such individual in mind already. A rather long list of them, in fact, but his first and best choice should be boarding an aeroplane back to London in just a few hours, courtesy an untimely and unfortunate gunshot wound to the shoulder. Such is combat. In a few days' time, he'll attend Captain Watson personally, full of matters to discuss. Official business. An assignment. Something useful. Something worthy of a war hero.
Something that might change the world, though he'll not say so unless he has to.
For now he settles in to wait and watch brother Sherlock grow accustomed to his body, wait and observe closely for any signs of malfunction or failure. So far it has all gone extraordinarily well, but there's still a terribly long way to go.
The arrangements are made neatly and quietly. Captain Watson is surveilled from the moment he arrives back on English soil, and while Mycroft keeps up the façade of perfect – indeed, robotic – diligence and dedication to his work, behind the scenes gears begin to turn.
Excuses are made. Records conjured up. In this field Mycroft has a few advantages most androids lack. He is, for instance, capable of lying – with a few caveats. A necessity for his field, yes, but one that opens up a host of loopholes to the inventive, which Mycroft certainly is. Secondly he is capable of directing humans to engage in acts which might prove harmful to them or others, something supervisory androids in other fields lack, when they exist at all. In most areas humans are generally quite unwilling to take orders from a machine.
Thirdly, and this will become more immediately useful, he is able, with the assistance of a human keeper, to come and go as he wishes. That Anthea – her name of choice for the week – needed to be brought in on this little side-project at all is unfortunate, but it is necessary, and Mycroft couldn't have chosen a better confidante, at least among humans.
Finally, and most useful of all for the next step of this endeavour, is his construction. He is exquisitely-crafted – not as well as Sherlock, perhaps, but well enough to pass muster. In appearance he is human and in mannerism almost perfectly so. Even the few oddities in the latter field are easy enough to cover up with an air of professionalism, formality, and distance.
This Mycroft wears about him like a perfume when he steps from the car, Anthea at his side, to intercept Captain John Watson on one of his daily walks. They know the time and the place. Regular, military-regular, varying only when the leg is giving him more trouble than usual.
Today they needn't wait long before the man in question limps into view. The determined grimness about him registers, but Mycroft's mind is on statistics, measurements, test scores, training assessments, medical records; myriad other things when he clears his throat and raises a hand.
“A moment– Captain Watson, is it not? My name is Mycroft Holmes, and I've a proposal for you, if you care to hear it.”

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