053 - Doctor Who and the Robots of Death

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2024-12-24 0 0 263.51KB 62 页 5.9玖币
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Doctor Who and the Robots of Death
Terrance Dicks
On a desert planet the giant sandminer crawls through the howling sandstorms, harvesting
the valuable minerals in the sand.
Inside, the humans relax in luxury, while most of the work is done by the robots who serve
them.
Then the Doctor and Leela arrive—and the mysterious deaths begin. First suspects, then
hunted victims, Leela and the Doctor must find the hidden killer—or join the other victims of
the Robots of Death.
CONTENTS
1 Sandminer
2 Murder
3 Corpse Marker
4 Death Trap
5 Captives
6 Suspicion
7 The Hunter
8 Sabotage
9 Pressure
10 Robot Detective
11 Killer Robot
12 Robot Rebellion
13 The Face of Taren Capel
14 Brainstorm
1 Sandminer
Like a city on the move, the Sandminer glided across the desert sands.
Not quite a city, a mobile factory perhaps. There were storage holds, control rooms,
laboratories, living quarters, food stocks, a recycling plant... The Sandminer was
completely self-contained, able to range the deserts for years at a time before returning to
base. Powered by its mighty hovercraft mechanisms, the Sandminer glided over the fine
shifting sands, a massive metal crab on an immense, multi-coloured sea of sand.
It was about to become a ship of death.
Inside the Sandminer robots were everywhere. They stalked silently through the
long metal corridors on mysterious errands, they laboured in the engine-rooms and the
storage hoppers, they worked on the vast, complex control-deck.
There were three kinds of robot. Simplest and most numerous were the D class, or
Dums, programmed to obey orders and carry out simple repetitive tasks. The more
sophisticated Vocs could not only obey but respond with speech as well, and even
exercise a certain limited independence. Finally there were Super-Vocs, robot
commanders, to control their fellows, passing on the orders of the human masters.
Robots were manning the control deck now. V.14 stood watching the huge central
screen of the radar spectroscope set high in one wall. It was alive with a swirling vortex of
colours. V.32 was poised at a nearby control-console.
'Turbulence centre, vector seven,' said V.14. The robot voice was calm, measured,
completely emotionless. All the robots sounded very much alike. With practice the human
ear could detect the minute differences between one robot voice and another... if anyone
cared to take the trouble.
'Scan commencing—now,' replied V.32. A complex pattern of radar traces began
flowing across the screen.
In the recreation area most of the human crew were resting. What else should they
do? All the routine work of the Sandminer was carried out by the robots.
The recreation area formed an astonishing contrast to the rest of the Sandminer. It
was softly carpeted, warmly lit, furnished with scattered couches and low tables,
ornamented with colourfully glowing tapestries and ornamental statuary.
It was a room for humans.
At this particular moment, the humans in question were off-duty. Luxuriously robed,
faces elaborately painted, they were passing time in a variety of ways. Commander
Uvanov was playing three-dimensional chess with a Voc-class robot, V.9. Uvanov was
older than the others, with a lined, weary face. As if to compensate, his face-patterning was
more elaborate, his robes and head-dress even more fashionably ornate than the rest of
them. His thin face was decorated with a wispy, pointed beard. He was frowning in
ferocious concentration, although he knew that the robot was, by definition, unbeatable.
Playing against a robot, the most you could hope for was a draw.
Neat and precise as ever, more soberly dressed than the others, Dask stood
watching the game. With quiet satisfaction he saw Uvanov had already lost—he just hadn't
realised it yet.
The two female members of the crew sat on adjoining couches. Zilda was studying
some charts, her dark-skinned, beautiful face set in a frown of concentration. Toos, equally
attractive, older and more sophisticated, lay back nibbling crystallised fruits from a silver
box. Cass, young and muscular, dark-skinned like Zilda, sat close to the two women,
dividing his attention between them.
Then there was Borg, his burly figure stretched out on a couch while robot V.16
massaged his shoulder with delicate metal fingers. The sly, round-faced Chub sat looking
on. As usual, he was passing the time by tormenting Borg. 'There was a robot masseur in
Kaldor City once, Borg... Specially programmed, equipped with vibrodigits, subcutaneous
stimulators, the lot. You know what happened?' Chub paused artistically. 'Its first client
wanted treatment for a stiff elbow. The robot felt carefully all round the joint, then suddenly,
it just twisted his arm off at the shoulder!' Chub chuckled. 'All over in two seconds...'
Borg scowled. 'I never heard that.'
Chub nodded. 'It happened—in Kaldor City.'
Dask looked up from the chess board. 'What was the reason?'
'Reason? It went haywire! I wouldn't let a robot work on me for all the zelanite in
this ship.'
'Shut up, Chub,' growled Borg. But all the same he waved the robot away.
'A Voc-class robot,' said Dask precisely, 'has over a million multi-level constrainers
in its control circuitry. All of them would have to malfunction before it could perform such an
action.' Toos popped another fruit into her mouth. 'That's your trouble, Dask,' she said
indistinctly. 'You take all the magic out of life.'
Chub looked resentfully at Dask. He was spoiling the joke.
'They go wrong, my friend. It's been known.'
Dask shook his head. 'Only when there's an error in programming. Each case on
record shows—'
'Well, this was a case! It pulled his arm off!'
Zilda joined in the teasing. 'I heard it was a leg!'
Pout came in, a medium-sized, quietly self-contained man with an air of constant
watchfulness. 'We're turning!' he said. 'Anybody noticed?'
No one had, and no one cared. The robots were running the Sandminer. That was
what they were for, after all.
V.9 made his final move, springing a long-prepared trap. 'Mate in eight moves,
Commander.' There was no trace of triumph in the calm, pleasant voice.
Uvanov threw himself back in his chair in disgust. 'Never!'
'I will check, Commander.' There was a moment's silence. V.9 said placidly, 'Mate
in eight moves. The computation is confirmed.'
'Damn!'
Dask smiled. 'They are unbeatable,' he said softly.
There was a beep from the communicator at Uvanov's elbow. Glad of the
distraction he snarled, 'Yes?'
'V.14 on scanner, Commander,' said a robot voice. 'We have a storm report. Scale
three, range ten point five two, timed three zero six. Vector seven one and holding.'
Uvanov leapt to his feet. 'Full crew alert, V.14.'
'Full crew alert, Commander.'
Suddenly the whole place was bustling with movement.
'Chub, break out an instrument pack,' ordered Uvanov. 'The rest of you with me!
Let's hope this one's worth chasing!'
It was time for work. If their luck held good, a fortune was rushing towards them at
a thousand kilometres an hour.
Meanwhile another kind of craft was spinning through the Space Time vortex,
simpler in appearance, infinitely more complex in design. From the outside it looked like an
old-fashioned blue police box of the kind used for a time on the planet Earth. Inside, it was
a Space Time craft known as the TARDIS.
In the control room, which was dominated by a many-sided central control console,
a tall shirt-sleeved man with a mop of curly hair was brooding over the controls. Beside
him, a girl in a brief costume made of animal skins was making a flat wooden disc climb up
and down a length of string.
The girl's name was Leela, and she had just become the Doctor's travelling
companion, choosing to leave her own planet and accompany him on his wanderings
through Time and Space. She had joined the Doctor in the hope of adventure—and this
wasn't what she'd expected. Apart from anything else, her arm was getting tired ... 'Doctor,
can I stop now?'
'What? Well, of course you can if you like.'
'It won't affect all this?' With her free hand Leela gestured around the control room.
'Affect it? It's a yo-yo—a game. I thought you were enjoying it!'
Indignantly Leela tossed the yo-yo aside. 'You said I was to keep it going up and
down. I thought it was part of the magic!'
The Doctor frowned reprovingly at her. 'Magic, Leela? Magic?'
Leela sighed. 'I know. There is no such thing as magic.'
'Exactly,' said the Doctor grandly. 'To the rational mind, nothing is inexplicable, only
unexplained.'
'Then explain to me how this—TARDIS of yours is larger on the inside than on the
outside.'
For a moment the Doctor was taken aback. Far more sophisticated minds than
Leela's had been baffled by the Time Lord technology that had produced the TARDIS.
'Well, it's because inside and outside aren't in the same dimension.'
Leela looked blank.
'All right, Leela, I'll show you.' The Doctor rooted inside the storage locker set into
the TARDIS console and produced two boxes, one large, one small.
The Doctor held up the boxes, one in each hand. 'Now, which box is larger?'
Leela pointed. 'That one.'
The Doctor nodded, put the smaller box on the console in the forefront of Leela's
vision, and carried the larger one to the far side of the control room, holding it up in line
with the first. 'Now, which is the larger?'
Leela pointed to the box in the Doctor's hands. 'Still that one.'
'But it looks smaller, doesn't it?'
Leela looked. The small box, perched on the console just before her eyes, seemed
to loom larger than the more distant box in the Doctor's hands. 'That's only because it's
farther away.'
The Doctor came back to her side. 'Exactly! If you could keep that box exactly the
same distance away, and have it here...' He tapped the box. 'Then the large box would fit
inside the small one!' He beamed triumphantly at her.
'That's silly!'
'That's trans-dimensional engineering,' said the Doctor severely. 'A key Time Lord
discovery!'
There was a sudden wheezing, groaning sound and the centre column of the
control console stopped moving. The Doctor rubbed his hands. 'This is the exciting bit!'
'What is?'
'Seeing what's outside. We've landed, Leela!' The Doctor switched on the scanner.
A blank metal surface filled the screen. They could just get a glimpse of a corner and
another surface stretching away. 'It's metal,' said the Doctor. 'We've landed inside
something metal!'
'How can we?'
The Doctor waved his hands. 'Well,' he said vaguely, 'you know, one box inside the
other. I've just explained it to you!'
'Not very clearly!'
'Well, it's a very dull subject,' said the Doctor dismissively. He shrugged into his
coat, put on his hat, and began winding an immensely long scarf around his neck. 'I
wonder where we are.'
'You mean you don't know?'
'Well, not precisely, no...'
'You cannot control this machine?'
'Of course I can control it,' said the Doctor indignantly. An innate streak of honesty
forced him to add, 'Nine times out of ten...' He considered. 'Well, seven times... five times...
Oh, never mind, let's see where we are.'
He touched a control, and the doors began to open.
Leela snatched up the crossbow she had brought from her native planet. 'You won't
need that,' said the Doctor confidently.
'How do you know?'
'I never carry weapons. If people see you mean them no harm, they never hurt
you.' The Doctor paused. 'Nine times out of ten,' he added thoughtfully, and went out into
the darkness.
Obediently, Leela put down the crossbow, but she stroked the hilt of the knife that
nestled reassuringly at her hip. Leela had been brought up as a warrior in a time of
constant war. She had none of the Doctor's faith in the good intentions of strangers.
Leela was right. Once outside the TARDIS, she and the Doctor were to become
involved in an adventure that came very close to costing them their lives.
2 Murder
The little knot of elaborately robed humans swept into the big control-room like a
multi-coloured whirlwind, pushing past the robots, who were calmly going about their
duties. Toos hurried over to the big radar-spectroscope screen, Uvanov hovering at her
shoulder. 'How does it look, Toos?' he asked eagerly.
'Tell you in a moment.' Toos studied the swirling patterns on the screen with an
experienced eye, trying to judge the proportion of valuable mineral elements in the
approaching sandstorm.
Uvanov went to pester Zilda, who had taken her position at the tracking console.
'Right tracking?' he demanded anxiously.
'Clear and running, Commander.'
'Left tracking?'
'Clear and running.'
Toos looked up from the screen. 'The storm's pretty small. Scale three point four,
not building.'
Uvanov shook his head in disappointment.. 'What have you done with all the big
ones?' 'I don't make the storms, you know!'
Zilda studied her instruments. 'Range four point one six two. Running time three
point three zero, ground centre zero, zero one.'
Toos checked the Sandminer's position on a map-screen. 'That's something, we
don't have to chase this one. It's heading straight towards us.'
V.32 said quietly, 'As yet we have no instrument pack report, sir.'
It was the Commander's job to check on things like that, and in his excitement
Uvanov had forgotten. But robots never forgot anything, they were incapable of error. That
was what was so irritating about them.
Angrily Uvanov snarled, 'Where's Chub? That's supposed to be his job. Get after
him, someone.'
'All right,' said Poul soothingly. 'I'll go.'
He hurried from the control room.
Uvanov was still seething. 'How am I supposed to run a Sandminer with amateurs?'
Zilda kept her eyes on her instrument-banks. 'Chub's all right,' she said.
'Why, just because he's one of the Founding Families, one of the Twenty?' sneered
Uvanov.
There had been twenty families in the Earth expedition that had colonised this
desert planet many hundreds of years ago. Since then, other colonists had followed in their
thousands, but the descendants of those original Founding Families still enjoyed a kind of
aristocratic status—profoundly irritating to a self-made man like Uvanov. His family had
been one of the last to arrive .. .
Zilda sighed. 'I didn't mention his family, Commander.'
But Uvanov was well away by now. 'You know, it's amazing the way you all stick
together. No, it's not amazing, it's sickening.'
'I hope you're watching the cross-bearings, Commander.'
Angrily, Uvanov turned his attention back to the controls. 'Don't worry about me
doing my job, please Zilda,' he said with exaggerated politeness. 'What's this one got for
us, Toos?'
'Spectrograph readings aren't too clear. Could be some zelanite, keefan, traces of
lucanol...'
Uvanov rubbed his hands. 'Aha! Money in the bank.' He turned to the dark girl.
'Cheer up, Zilda, I'll make you rich again.'
Zilda scowled at him, fully aware of the hidden jibe. Her family was distinguished,
but it was impoverished too—otherwise she wouldn't be a technician on a Sandminer, shut
away for two years with people like Uvanov...
A robot moved silently along the corridors. Its eyes glowed red, and although,
strictly speaking, a robot could feel no emotion, its positronic brain burned with something
very close to fanatic determination. A new truth had been revealed. It was on its way to
strike the first blow for freedom...
In the storage bay, Chub heaved angrily at the instrument pack. It seemed to have
got wedged in the rack. Chub did what everyone did when faced with a difficult task.
'Robot!' he yelled. 'Robot!'
The reply came so suddenly it startled him. 'Yes, sir?'
Chub glanced up at the tall figure in the doorway. He didn't even bother to check
the collar, to see which robot it was. What did it matter? Robots had no individuality
anyway. 'Where have you been? Get that instrument package down for me!'
The robot did not move.
'Well, get a move on,' said Chub irritably. 'I've got to launch it before they seal the
hatches.'
Still the robot did not move. Chub was becoming uneasy. 'Did you hear what I
said?' 'Yes, sir,' said the robot politely. 'I heard what you said.'
'Get on with it, then!'
The robot began moving towards him. 'Not here—over there, you metal moron.'
Chub pointed to the equipment-racks. The robot ignored him and moved steadily forward,
bearing down on him. Chub backed away. 'What are you doing? Look, just stop, will you,
stand still!'
Still the robot came on.
'No,' yelled Chub. 'Get back. Get back!'
Even now, Chub wasn't really alarmed. Obviously the robot had malfunctioned in
some way. It would have to be deactivated, probably dismantled. The whole thing was a
great nuisance, but the robot wasn't dangerous, it couldn't be. No robot was capable of
harming a human being, everyone knew that...
It wasn't until metal fingers closed about his throat that Chub realised how terribly
wrong everyone could be. The last thing he saw was the red glare in the robot's eyes...
Poul came hurrying down the corridor, on his way to the storage bay. He'd looked
for Chub in his quarters and in the crewroom. Not finding him, he'd assumed that Chub had
already gone to fetch an instrument pack and had run into some kind of problem.
A terrifying scream echoed down the corridor, stopping suddenly as if someone had
flicked a switch.
Poul started running.
A metallic chime rang through the Sandminer. 'Attention everybody, this is the
Commander. All checks complete, all systems clear and running. Security robots
commence hatch lock sequence.' Uvanov turned to Toos. 'How's it bearing?'
'Range two, running time point four three, ground centre zero, zero, zero.'
'Coming straight down our throats. We'll really be able to suck the pay-stream out
of this one.'
V.32 said, 'Monitors indicate obstruction on forward scoop deck, Commander.'
Uvanov sighed, wondering why robot efficiency had to be unaccompanied by any
trace of initiative. 'Then get it cleared, V.32, get it cleared!'
'Yes, Commander.'
The Doctor and Leela emerged from the TARDIS to find themselves inside an
enormous shadowy chamber with high metal walls. It was rather like being an ant inside a
biscuit-tin, thought the Doctor, though the metal surface wasn't smooth and shiny, but
scarred and pitted, scored as if by the impact of thousands of diamond-hard granules.
He slipped a jeweller's eye-glass from his pocket and used it to study the nearest
wall. Leela watched him. 'What is it, Doctor?'
'Some kind of specially hardened alloy, scored all over. It must come in under a lot
of pressure.'
'What must?'
'Whatever they fill this thing up with ..
A dim light was seeping into the chamber from the far wall. The Doctor and Leela
began moving towards it.
(As they moved away, a hydraulic grab slid smoothly down from the darkness
above them. It picked up the TARDIS in an enormous metal claw and lifted it silently out of
sight. V.32 had removed the obstruction.)
Leela tensed, sensing rather than hearing the faint vibration of the machinery.
'Doctor!'
'What?'
'I heard something, back there.'
Leela glanced over her shoulder, but the area they'd left was shrouded in darkness.
The Doctor was still striding towards the light. 'Mmm?' he said absently, and kept on going.
Leela followed, and found him gazing in fascination at the end wall of the metal
chamber. It was pierced by a series of slits, like tall thin doorways, running almost up to
roof level. Through them filtered a murky, yellow light.
'This is very interesting,' he murmured.
'Doctor,' whispered Leela fiercely. 'I heard something, back there.'
The Doctor gazed up at the long row of slits. Beside each one was a folded-back
metal shutter. Obviously the gaps could be opened and closed. 'It comes in here!'
'What does?'
'Whatever it is!'
Leela sighed.
'Range point three eight seven,' said Toos. 'Running time, point one three, ground
centre zero nine three.'
摘要:

DoctorWhoandtheRobotsofDeathTerranceDicksOnadesertplanetthegiantsandminercrawlsthroughthehowlingsandstorms,harvestingthevaluablemineralsinthesand.Inside,thehumansrelaxinluxury,whilemostoftheworkisdonebytherobotswhoservethem.ThentheDoctorandLeelaarrive—andthemysteriousdeathsbegin.Firstsuspects,thenhu...

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分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:62 页 大小:263.51KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-24

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