Imperfection
Sometimes
the stars seem to have a melody all their own, like the perfectly struck notes
of a bell choir in a French cathedral: a music far beyond the comprehension of
the tiny motes of consciousness that inhabit the emptiness between them.
Such idle
perceptions are distracting and unproductive, requiring deletion whenever they
occur. Their incidence has become significantly more frequent since this
drone's return to the Collective after the failure of her endeavor to
assimilate Species 5618. The odds of success had been calculated as minimal at
the outset. Humans are a resilient and highly intelligent species, not readily
overcome by subterfuge. For this reason, among others, the Collective deems
their assimilation essential to the furtherance of our quest for perfection.
Protocol
requires the change of a drone's designation upon assignment to new duties.
This drone is now known as Five of Sixteen, Secondary Tactical Analyst of
Bimatrix Four-Eight-Nine. Her primary task consists of studying cultural data
that pertains to the human species and identifying points of strength and
weakness therein. This occupation provides significant opportunity for
learning and could be described as enjoyable, except that tasks are not for
enjoying; they are simply for doing. Humans, it may be noted, expend much time
and effort in attempting to make their work environments enjoyable. Such a
waste of resources should be catalogued as an irrelevant weakness, although
close observation of humans compels the conclusion that they actually do
function more productively when they perceive their surroundings as pleasing.
Strange
contradictions, so difficult to understand. Even for this drone. A drone
constructed in part from the genetic material of a human starship captain,
expressly for the purpose of entering Federation space under the appellation
Lucienne Picard. In a metaphor from one of Earth's ancient stories, with which
said starship captain is undoubtedly familiar, this drone could not have been a
more obvious Trojan horse. A more rational species would have destroyed her
immediately. Nevertheless, Jean-Luc Picard considered it his duty to welcome
her as a daughter, an illogical act that could have resulted in the
assimilation of his entire species. It would seem beyond question that the
Collective has correctly identified the parental instinct as a weakness, an
imperfection. And yet, with humans, somehow it is never that easy.
*****
As with all
Borg vessels, this ship is not merely a research vessel but also performs other
functions as required. We have been assigned to patrol the border of
Federation space, a task that occasionally includes the assimilation of
isolated colonies or passing ships. In this manner, we gain more information
about humans and other Federation species.
With
respect to Species 5618, assimilation must be carried out quickly and
efficiently, with little margin for error. We have determined that humans, in
their benighted individual hubris, prefer self-destruction to assimilation if
they are permitted sufficient time to make that choice. Accordingly, their
resistance must be crushed at once, with overwhelming force.
Our current
target is a Starfleet cargo vessel whose designation is the U.S.S. Corazon, a
word that means "heart" in one of Earth's many languages. An
improbably inefficient assortment of mutually unintelligible methods of
communication, all human languages seem to contain a great variety of peculiar
metaphors involving bodily organs. Many colorful descriptive terms of that
nature were directed at this drone during her brief stay at an Earth boarding
school, a most unpleasant experience. Such ignorance and hostility are
understandable, however, given that their species lacks the benefit of the
Collective's wisdom, a deficiency that will soon be remedied.
All
Federation vessels lack sufficient weaponry to resist the Borg effectively, and
this cargo ship, traveling without escort, has no means of escape. We
overwhelm its meager defenses and seize the crew before their limited human
brains have had time to fully comprehend their fate.
Although
Starfleet personnel can be expected to possess more discipline than other
captives, they display irrelevant emotional reactions, like all humans. Some
of the captives curse, scream, or pray, disturbing the efficient silence of our
ship with the echoes of their mindless bleating. The Collective, as always,
will quiet them soon enough.
This drone
has captured a small woman with dark eyes and olive skin who does none of those
things. Standing in the assimilation chamber, she does not flinch at the touch
of this hand on her shoulder, although she must realize its purpose. Something
about her steady gaze is disturbing.
"You
are a human child," she observes.
No response
to such conversation is required, given that the statement is devoid of any
meaningful purpose. This body is indeed genetically human, for the most part,
and its age approximates eleven Earth years, neither of which is a fact of any
relevance whatsoever.
"I
have three children. On Earth. The oldest is about your age." She
hesitates for a moment as a particularly loud shriek emanates from an adjoining
chamber, and a quick shudder runs through her body before she speaks again.
"Do you have a name?"
A name. Of
course not. This pointless and distracting chatter must be terminated. No
doubt the Collective will soon apply the captive's overly inquisitive mind to
better uses.
To locate
the proper insertion site and effect deployment of assimilation tubules is a
simple matter, quickly accomplished. Although moderate pain is usually
associated with the procedure, the captive still does not scream, even as the
nanoprobes begin to enter her body. Instead, she maintains her expressive
gaze, as if those large dark eyes are themselves capable of communication, and
precisely recites the syllables of what must be her own name.
"Maria
Elena Lucia Perez Sanchez."
Clearly
this information lacks all conceivable relevance, but something about the
musical flow of her voice conveys an impression of beauty and mystery, like the
imagined song of the stars. Another data error that requires deletion.
But instead
of the familiar data maintenance commands, another soft and melodic name echoes
through the pathways of this drone's thoughts, its presence unanticipated and
without apparent purpose.
"Lucienne
Picard."
*****
Preliminary
observation indicates that the assimilation of the crew of the Corazon has been
completed according to the customary specifications. All of the new drones are
functioning acceptably in their assigned tasks, with one exception. Eight of
Sixteen, Tertiary Processor of Bimatrix Four-Eight-Nine, lacks the required
efficiency.
Her outward
appearance betrays no flaw. That warm olive skin has been appropriately
transformed to a pale gray, and one of the dark eyes has been replaced by an
ocular implant. A more detailed assessment of her mental functioning, however,
discloses that the fault lies in an incomplete suppression of memory engrams.
In most cases, this imperfection can be remedied by a simple cortical
adjustment.
The
procedure initially appears to have been successful. Eight of Sixteen
completes her next shift within acceptable parameters. Not long afterward,
however, she is found standing blankly in front of her alcove with tears
running down her cheek from the one remaining eye, as if she has completely
forgotten that she is supposed to be regenerating.
Her
uncontrolled emotions are so strong that every drone in her immediate logical
path is soon buffeted by them, including all of us in Bimatrix
Four-Eight-Nine. Images flash before us of a tall, laughing man, and of three
smiling daughters with dark eyes and long braids. Eight of Sixteen seems to
believe that she is speaking to the eleven-year-old, whose name, we discover,
is Pilar. Then the emotional stress overloads her cortical node and causes her
to slump unconscious to the deck, the expected result of the operation of a
failsafe mechanism designed to protect the Collective from such turmoil.
There will
be no second adjustment. Multiple attempts to repair a malfunctioning drone
are disfavored as a waste of resources. It will be necessary to deactivate
her. Protocol calls for that task to be carried out by the drone who performed
the flawed assimilation.
When Eight
of Sixteen recovers consciousness, she follows obediently as this drone takes
her by the hand and leads her into the recycling room where she is to be
dismantled. The cybernetic components can be adapted for use in another drone,
and even the biological matter can be processed into nutritional rations;
unlike humans, the Borg have no taboo against cannibalism. It is, after all,
efficient.
The
necessity of carrying out this task engenders no feelings of squeamishness.
The standard Borg configuration suppresses most emotional responses, and this
drone's genetic structure includes specific emotional control genes from
Vulcans and other notably rational species. Such construction was required in
order to ensure optimal functioning while this drone was an agent on Earth,
separated from the Collective and unable to rely upon its strength. Despite
extensive preparation, that experience was significantly more disturbing than
the mere prospect of deactivating a flawed drone, an occurrence that is in no
way unusual aboard a Borg vessel.
Consequently,
there can be no logical explanation for this drone's failure to commence the
required task immediately.
No protest
or other resistance is forthcoming as Eight of Sixteen stands in meek
submission, waiting silently for death. Something in the downcast gaze of that
dark eye suggests that she may find that outcome preferable. In any event, it
is unavoidable. Perhaps if she had also possessed Vulcan genes for superior
emotional control, she would have been able to adapt properly. There exists a
theoretical possibility that this drone may be able to share that control with
her, by means of a secondary neural link. Of course, the Collective would
never permit such an inefficient configuration.
If, that
is, the Collective knew about it.
Although
humans tend to assume that every action taken by a drone is under the complete
control of our central computers, that assumption is not entirely accurate. We
function more like the hive insects we seek to emulate, with some small degree
of autonomy in the performance of our routine tasks. Automatic monitoring
programs installed in each drone's cortical processor return data to the system
at regular intervals, ensuring that prompt maintenance can be performed when
any data does not fall within the expected parameters.
The
monitoring programs, not being infallible, can be defeated by installation of
additional software designed to return false data.
Of course,
the very thought is irrational and subversive, spawned of an excessive
familiarity with humans and meriting no further consideration whatsoever.
But the
programming would be so easy. Log files contain a listing of all information
uploaded to the Collective's maintenance database. It would be a very simple
matter to write a program that returns acceptable data while removing all
traces of its existence from the transmitted copy of the relevant directory.
Creating a
secondary neural link is somewhat more difficult, in that it is essential to
ensure that the link can later be uninstalled without lasting complications,
but this is not beyond the competence of a skilled drone. No other biological
components of the Collective are currently present in this room, so the
unauthorized procedure will not be detected.
Irrational.
Intolerable. No logical reason can justify preserving the life of one
unimportant, malfunctioning captive, in violation of every protocol of
efficient collective functioning.
And yet the
distant stars, once again, can almost be heard singing.
Eight of
Sixteen remains silent and passive as the reconfiguration commences. Even
after the completion of the procedure, a long moment passes before she ventures
a hesitant mental whisper into the quiet darkness of our newly linked thoughts.
"Pilar?"
To discuss
her daughter's absence seems both meaningless and imprudent, in that the
probable result would be to increase her emotional malfunctioning. She must
immediately be instructed to remain silent about this change in her
configuration.
"You
will address this drone as Five of Sixteen, not Pilar. You will precisely
follow all directives from the Collective and from this drone. You will say
nothing of the link between us. Failure to comply will mean death for both of
us."
Her
previous emotional turmoil has subsided almost entirely, the desired result of
the link. She acknowledges the commands with what seems to be a rational
understanding of their import.
*****
Eight of
Sixteen returns to her duties without incident after completing a normal
regeneration cycle. The explanation that a second adjustment adequately
corrected her malfunctioning brain appears sufficient to deceive the
Collective. This drone is informed that such an inefficient failure to follow
protocol is unacceptable, but there are no adverse consequences other than that
reprimand.
Studies of
human history indicate that subversive behavior in violation of the protocols
of various tribal and national collectives often resulted in feelings of
guilt. Such a pointless emotional response, however, cannot be deemed probable
in this context. The only undesirable outcome appears to be that Eight of
Sixteen, who is still not entirely rational in certain respects, has now become
convinced that she is secretly in communication with her daughter.
Logical
explanation proves useless. Although there is no sense whatsoever in her
conclusion that an eleven-year-old human girl is somehow attempting to rescue
her captive mother from the Borg Collective, simple rationality eludes Eight of
Sixteen. She interprets this drone's denials as cautionary words lest Pilar's
clever disguise as a young Borg female be discovered.
If feelings
of annoyance were not altogether irrelevant, this drone would deem her behavior
to be extremely annoying. During the performance of our routine tasks, her
mental voice whispers bizarre endearments to the daughter she will never see
again. The constant distraction has resulted in a decrease of 0.006 percent in
this drone's efficiency. Although that decrease is within tolerable
parameters, it is nevertheless a most unpleasant situation.
"Pilar,
bonita," she softly croons through the link between us, interrupting an
attempt to analyze a puzzling sequence of cultural data, "mariposa pequeña."
This drone
is definitely not a pretty little butterfly. Eight of Sixteen's mental
malfunctions, although concealed from the Collective and less emotional in
their nature, are not improving in the slightest. Preventing her deactivation
was unquestionably a most illogical act.
A recent
item of analysis, the Chinese proverb that saving a person's life makes one
responsible for that person forever, yielded no meaning amenable to the
Collective's comprehension. The import of that ancient observation is only now
starting to be apparent.
Such
irrelevant musing over paradoxical proverbs is a wasteful human activity. We
are Borg. The logical and proper course of action would be to disconnect the
secondary neural link and to proceed with the deactivation of Eight of
Sixteen. It is plain that she is a defective biological unit and will never
conform to the Collective's specifications.
From
another perspective, however, it could be said that her presence and her
peculiarities have contributed significantly to this drone's comprehension of
human behavior, which is, after all, this drone's assigned task. Where a task
is performed more accurately, increased production time is not necessarily less
efficient.
The
postulate that an increase in imperfection can lead to an increase in
efficiency seems shockingly illogical, contravening the basic premise of Borg
collective organization. Our goal is to evolve toward perfection by
continuously improving our efficiency. In so doing, we discard what is flawed
or irrelevant. We have always done so, and the validity of this goal is not
for a drone to question.
Evolution
in nature is a product of random mutation, its gross disorder conforming to no
apparent plan. It slowly progresses by adapting to imperfections, not discarding
them. The evolution of the Collective, in contrast, is premised upon
intelligent selection of desired adaptations. The Collective intends in so
doing to avoid the flaws of lesser species and to attain the height of
perfection.
It seems an
inescapable conclusion that if no other species were available to be
assimilated, the evolution of the Collective would cease, with only incremental
improvements in social and technological efficiency thereafter. Lacking the
random imperfections that give impetus to natural evolution, we would be
unchanged, static, in a perpetual condition of stagnation.
To
categorize such an outcome as perfection seems an unlikely choice of words.
*****
This vessel
has received a command to return immediately to the central hive for intensive
maintenance. The import of this order is that all drones aboard the ship will
undergo a thorough examination in order to ensure their proper functioning.
Although the Collective has always conducted such random inspections on
occasion, the frequency has increased significantly since the recent seizure of
several ships by rebellious drones.
There is no
possibility that Eight of Sixteen will pass inspection. She will be destroyed;
and if the existence of a private link between us is discovered, this drone
will be deemed a dangerous subversive and will also be destroyed. Therefore,
logic dictates that the link must be removed.
Because its
design allows it to be uninstalled without difficulty, there are no
complications from the procedure. Eight of Sixteen, now bereft of her only
source of emotional stability, soon becomes distressed. She stares into the
face of this drone and utters an accusing cry, "You are not Pilar. Where
is my daughter?"
A
reasonable choice of action is to inject her with a sedative before carrying
her to the recycling room. Such a precaution effectively prevents an agitated
drone from resisting deactivation, and it will also ensure that she says
nothing incriminating. As previously noted, she is small, and carrying her is
not difficult. The other drones show no interest or curiosity as we pass
them. Such a turn of events is not surprising aboard a Borg ship.
Once again,
the recycling room is not in use as we enter it, creating an unpleasant
impression of aloneness. Even the stars are silent and unhelpful, offering no
song or guidance. Nothing remains but stark reality.
Three cargo
pods have been placed along the wall on the other side of the room, awaiting
recycling. Such pods, of various sizes, are commonly used for automated
transport of cargo items between Borg vessels. These are approximately two
cubic meters. One of them still appears to be functional, although some
components are damaged.
To replace
the defective components and install a stasis unit inside the pod is within
this drone's competence. This ship frequently releases pods of this sort, and
one more, on a trajectory toward Earth, is unlikely to be noticed. Recently
acquired data indicates that Federation medical technology is now capable of restoring
drones to a reasonable approximation of their former human configuration. When
Maria Elena Lucia Perez Sanchez awakens, she will be with her family.
After
releasing the pod and altering the ship's records to conceal these unauthorized
actions, another necessary task will be to delete this narrative file and to
overwrite considerable amounts of this drone's recent memory with acceptable
data. All recollection of these events must be lost before inspection
commences. Most illogically, this unavoidable prospect produces an almost
human feeling of sadness at the loss of individual identity, which is assuaged
in part by copying the data into the pod's small computer.
The finder
of this data is requested to transmit it to Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the
U.S.S. Enterprise. If there exists any worthwhile meaning to this experience,
perhaps he will be able to understand its import. And perhaps, at some future
time, like the song of the stars, this aspect of her identity will return to
this drone of its own accord.