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- Behind the T-1000 was an enormous I-beam, hanging
- from two chains, used to lift ingots into the smelters,
- running on linear tracks. The polymorph grabbed the
- I-beam and sent it rolling down the track. Straight at
- Terminator. The two-ton girder smashed into his chest,
- crushing it.
- The T-1000 pulled the I-beam back and then heaved it
- forward again. Terminator wrenched himself sideways
- to take the second blow on the shoulder. Metal crunched
- and pieces broke loose inside the savaged cyborg. He
- sagged, turning to grip the wall....
- The visual array was collapsing inward and ballooning
- out rapidly, and the man/machine’s sense of balance
- was gone. It tottered as the third blow bashed into his
- back, smashing his spine and pelvis. Servos ratcheted,
- freezing up in buckled mounts, failing with a pro-
- test of clattering steel. Terminator dropped to his knees,
- crucified against a wall of machinery.
- The T-1000’s fourth blow was centered between the
- cyborg’s shoulder blades. His skull was partially caved
- in. Terminator slid to the floor.
- Prime core disruptions fired through the wafer
- circuit brain. Memories spun loose from their electrical
- moorings. Terminator had no real life to see flash before
- his eyes, but there was data. And other people’s lives.
- The chaotic pattern of human emotions spun out inside
- its head like a tangling audiocassette as it saw glimpses
- of the past few days. Sarah and John, kneeling, holding
- one another as they wept. John trying to hide his tears.
- Sarah facing the T-1000 with an inappropriate weapon.
- The T-1000 itself, emotionlessly reacting to changing
- operational environments. And for a microsecond,
- a weird fusing caused a gestalt grasp of its entire
- existence, the meaning of human interaction, and from
- this mushrooming explosion of cross-reffing came one
- single entity that the cyborg had not been programmed
- to experience.
- Feeling.
- Terminator fell back on the concrete, energy firing
- like misdirected rockets through his synthetic mind. As
- the cyborg convulsed in machine-death, he learned his
- most profound lesson about organic life.
- Too bad he didn’t have time to analyze it.
- Terminator was a pathetic shape on the floor, a lump
- of scrap-heap. But the tattered strands of a ripped
- apart consciousness sought alternate energy traps
- inside the fractured CPU. Skynet had designed the
- terminators to withstand enormous damage and survive
- with enough consciousness to repair the damage
- enough to complete the mission. And now, the man/
- machine’s brain found back-up circuits in the onion
- peel layers of the wafer-circuit, and despite the total
- trauma to the outer and inner chassis, it searched for
- alternate strands of cabling to carry the command to
- move
- move
- MOVE ...
- A spark here. There. And then, a leg joint bent
- convulsively.
- MOVE!
- The leg bent.
- No mere man could have come back from the brink
- like this. But no man had such compelling commands
- programmed into every molecule of its artificial
- intelligence.
- Besides, Terminator had seen the revelation,
- and now it was going to move. Frozen servos
- notwithstanding.
- The cyborg began to feebly crawl, dragging his
- malfunctioning legs behind the crushed spine. His
- arm stump screeched on the tile floor as he inched
- himself forward. But his exposed machine-eye burned
- red with determination.
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