Jason walks around the chair in the pool of light, stands behind it and leans on its back. "So, what, then? Do we draw knives and have at it, may the best memory win?" He looks down at his torso. The nanobots are there -- a full bodysuit, as he reconfigured them in '14, after that assassination attempt. But they don't stir to his will. "Or do you simply tear me apart with your 'bots, take over my body, replace me? Is that, ultimately what this is all about?" The boy shakes his head, his face sad. "I'm here to fix you. That's what we do, we Quills. We fix stuff." "I fixed the world." "No, you broke it, and super-glued the pieces back together into a different shape. You didn't fix it, you made it worse." " You weren't here, dammit!" Jason slams one hand on the back of the chair, then rounds it and takes a step toward his younger self. "Listen to my story for a change. The Vyortovian invasion caused massive damage -- governmental, economic, societal -- that reverberated world-wide. It was all falling apart. With the Keynomes gone, it was even worse. There were riots, wars were ramping up around the world, food supply chains disrupted -- we were going to lose it all . Rook -- Rook had a plan, use hypertech to fix things, fix the economy, take care of that first level of Maslow's hierarchy for everyone . Food, housing, medical care, the works. Everyone! Everywhere! And we did it! It hasn't been easy, and the job isn't complete, and there will still be a lot of work to do after, to take it to the next level, but we did it, dammit." "And Rosa Rooks runs the world." " We run the world. She makes a lot of day-to-day decisions, along with some others but I'm the one actually in charge, and she knows it." "And things like freedom, democracy, all that?" "Fun while they lasted. Lifeboat rules -- survival comes first. If that means people don't get to make decisions, or just have the illusion of doing so while Q/R actually runs the show, so be it. We're alive. Hell, the global standard of living is the best it's been in human history. Dissent, civil liberties, they can't get in the way of that. And I'm a hell of a lot better qualified to make the decisions that keep the wheels on than Joe Sixpack in Bumfuck, Nebraska. "Must be nice." "Don't use that tone of voice with me. It's hell . There's always a new problem, always a new decision to make, always some -- moral compromise. The world isn't a four-color adventure. You've seen enough of that to know. It's a million shades of gray, and telling the differences between them in every case ... isn't ... simple." "And so instead it becomes easier and easier to seek the pragmatic. The expedient. Get the decision out of the way, regardless of the result. Eyes on the goal, the ends justify the means even if the means inevitably shape the ends. Make the tough decisions." The boy's voice is soft. "Like Leo." "Leo? That was years ago. There's been so much bigger, so much ... worse since then. But someone had to make those decisions. They had to be made. And Rosa Rook, and the others -- they weren't going to do it. Or do it any better. Or do it right. It had to be me." "And that's made you the loneliest man in the world." Jason freezes a beat, then shrugs. "I've found ... people to talk to." A smile. "AIs aren't people, man. You won't get anything out of those conversations you haven't already put in. That's not a conversation." "The nanobots --" "That's just another way of talking to yourself. You know that. I know that." The boy shakes his head. "Jeez. Maybe I understand you more than you think. I've been planning on quitting the team, get into more important things in life. I looked at Dad and saw how the whole science-adventure thing distracted him, how he let his war with Dr. Chin affect his ability to change the world. I thought I needed to get more into real life. Now I wonder if that's going to turn out to be a mistake, if it means I isolate myself from my friends." He looks back at Jason. "Turn into you." "Would that really be so bad?" "I'm not claiming I'm perfect. But even I can see this, all this you've done, is wrong." Jason slumps back into the chair. "And I can see you're an optimistic idiot who thinks he can do one big thing and save the world. Which kind of defines 'seventeen years old,' I guess. Even for me." He rubs his temples with one hand, echoing the younger version's gesture of a few minutes before. "So back to the question: what now? Do I fade into the darkness and you take over? Throw me into a cell and take my place -- or let Leo do it? You think you can run all this, fix all this, boy?" The boy shakes his head, a small, wry smile on his lips. "No way. You broke it, you bought it. All I'm going to do is fix things." "You keep saying that. How are you going to fix it? What are you going to fix?" The boy taps his forehead. "I have the patches for what Dad did, fixes for the slap-dash coding errors he allowed in before he went and got himself sucked to the Sepiaverse. I can correct that code and the damage it did -- the damage it's still doing . And I've got the diff files for my memories, the ones Dad erased. You should have those recollections back -- they're important. And I have my own memories, since the Divergence. I told you my story, but you should experience it. Understand it." "And then?" "And then I'm done. You go on, a bit less broken, a lot fewer holes in your mind, and with my memories, the things I experienced, the decisions I made, including the mistakes. And you carry on from there. For the better, I hope." "So that makes me a new man? A better man? You think it will really be that simple?" "This isn't Dickens. I'm not the Ghost of Jason Past, not really, any more than this is the real Warehouse A3. This conversation, it's simply code packets trying to find the right interface, the right permissions, through your nanobot / cognitive structure. Your consciousness is just picturing it all this way." He glances around. "Which is, honestly, a little creepy, but it could have been a lot worse, I guess. But, yeah, that simple. Whether it makes you new and better, I dunno. That's for you to decide." Jason shudders. "I don't want your memories. I don't want to know those things. It never happened here -- or it happened and was forgotten. Why would I want that?" The boy smiles again, with a bit of sadness this time. "We're scientists, man. There's no such thing as too much data. You can't draw accurate conclusions if you decide what results to look at and what to refuse to see. Maybe you won't change. But if you do, or if you don't, you'll be doing it with a more complete data set. One that might help you with some of those hard decisions." Jason lowers his face into his hands, the weight of decades suddenly resting on him, the ghosts of the dead and buried whispering in his ears. "I'm not -- evil. I just did what I thought I had to." He feels a hand on his shoulder. "I know. That's what we all do." And then the light starts to dim, the darkness of the room beyond getting closer. Jason, without even looking, realizes it isn't shadow after all, but nanobots, all around him, slowly moving in with that rustling whisper they have. He's here to kill me. That was his thought when he first saw the boy. Now he knows that's not true. He should still be terrified, but, he realizes, for maybe the first time in a long while, he's actually curious about what happens next. The boy's voice comes one last time. "Let's find out together." -fin-