Introduction
This story is a sequel to The Robo-Trainer. Written in 1994 it's almost 5,000 words. I've had a lot of comments about the spelling of Linnda, Luke's wife. If I edit this again, I'll probably change it to Lynnda and make a comment about her being named after her dad, Lynn. I really like this story, I hope you do, too.
Accidental Identity
by Roger S Nelson
Luke
laced up his running shoes and ran out the door, plodding along
in the evening shadows and rustling autumn leaves. He turned
onto Peach and ran to town, working off the
frustrations of the day and relaxing his mind. He smiled at the
smell of the scented pines along the way and enjoyed
the silence
of the evening. He powered his way up a little hill, feeling his
legs burning and his heart pounding. Then he glided easily down
into town, street lamps guiding his way. He turned onto Violet.
Suddenly, against his will, he broke into a sprint, as if
someone else was in charge of his body. His running shoes beat
out too fast a rhythm on the sidewalk. Plip. Plop. Plip. Plop.
Down the block. Ten paces. Twenty. Thirty paces. Forty. Fifty.
Something made him count them. Left. One. Left. Two.
Fifty-three. Fifty-four. At sixty his heart was racing wildly.
His lungs bellowed. His legs weakened. Ten more steps. Suddenly
he stopped. The compulsion to run fast was gone. He walked
slowly, gasping until he caught his breath. Minutes later he
could walk normally again. Finally he finished his run at his
normal slow pace. He couldn't understand what made him sprint.
When Luke got home he told his wife about the incident. "While I
was running tonight, something made me sprint. It wasn't in my
training plan."
"Uh, huh," said Linnda, "Did you know there is a sale at Target.
Halloween candy. Shoes. Coats. I could use a new coat this
year."
Luke sat down and got out his training log. He felt good after
the run and he wasn't going to let Linnda's lack of interest
bother him. The incident, however, did bother him, so he wrote
it down in the log while he sat in his easy chair. His body
gradually relaxed and he fell asleep while he was thinking about
these things.
He dreamed he was back in school, taking some advanced classes
for his job. He was having a difficult time with his homework.
His calculator worked OK right up to when he hit the final
"total" button; then it went blank. He tried tapping it. No
good. He wondered what little bug was in his calculator, holding
back the answer. He remembered a movie he saw once where a man
was shrunk and put into a computer against his will. The man
battled overwhelming odds, but managed to shut the computer down
and escape. Suddenly he found himself inside his calculator,
seeking the bug so he could get his answer. Where was that bug
in the computer? He found it! It was huge. It looked like a
giant spider, only not quite. It was more like a nerve cell, a
neuron, and it was coming after him. Luke had no weapons, so he
ran. Faster! His heart raced. Lungs gasped. Legs weakened. The
bug was catching him. He screamed himself awake. He mopped his
sweaty forehead. Then he got up and wrote down the dream before
he forgot it. He felt sure this dream held a clue to his
problem.
The next morning, as Luke hurried to get ready for work, he
glimpsed a mouse running across the kitchen floor. This was the
time of year when little critters start finding their way into
the house. Luke tried to remember where the traps were kept.
Were they in the junk drawer? He opened it: pipe cleaners,
twisty ties for garbage bags, a sprayer attachment for the
garden hose, small pieces of chain for a light fixture, a pipe
fitting, a piece of clothesline, some rubber gloves, a plas-skin
mask.

The mask brought back memories of a robot he helped develop. He
was assigned to teach it to run as part of a series of sport
robots his company wanted to make. He called the robot RC, for
Running Companion. Luke had been a fat, over the hill, robot
specialist who designed and programmed robots during the day and
watched holovision at night. After a frustrating six months,
Luke actually lost weight and got fit. All the while he was
trying to teach RC how to run, he was learning to run himself.
When his project was done, Luke was a runner. The company used
the programming from RC to create a popular line of robots that
ran with and coached runners. Luke got permission from the
company to keep RC for himself.
Luke ran with RC nearly every day after that. He would vary his
route, sometimes going through town. RC was designed not only to
run with a person, but also to protect him from dogs, muggers,
or whatever. Not too long ago, a drunk driver nearly hit Luke.
RC saved Luke by pushing him out of the way, but when the car
hit RC, it shorted its circuits. After the crash, there was a
sizzling and crackling, the smell of burnt wires, hot metal, and
melting batteries, then nothing. RC was gone. Dead. Luke kept
the mask as a memento, but didn't really know where to keep it.
Somehow it found its way into the "junk drawer"; Linnda probably
put it there.
He found the mouse trap, along with nails, nuts, bolts, screws,
pliers, a screw driver, some pieces of string, and a small
hammer. He set the trap and finished getting ready for work.
"Hi Mark," Luke said upon arriving at work. "How's it going?"
"Same as usual. I keep trying to make square circles. How's it
with you?"
Luke took the opportunity to tell Mark his dream, and also of
yesterdays' running experience.
Mark thought for a moment. "Where did you say it happened? Peach
and Violet?" In this town most of the streets running north and
south were named after trees, those going east and west were
flowers.
"Yes. And it's not the first time, either."
"Does it always happen there, or has it happened other places
also?" Mark asked.
"In town only, I think. I can't remember it has happening out of
town. Seems like it always happens in the neighborhood of Peach
and Violet."
"Let's go over there and take a look around; maybe something
there is causing it. We could drive by on the way to lunch."
"Sure. Maybe you'll see something that I'm not. I have to do
something."
Mark was a runner, too, and when Luke started running they
became good friends. They took Mark's Lincoln Town Car to their
favorite restaurant, the Shoe Inn, and drove by Peach and Violet
on the way.
"Look at that man run," said Luke. "It looks like he is
sprinting the same way I did. I wonder if - no - that's stupid.
Why would anyone else be doing the same thing as me? It must be
just a coincidence."
"Maybe, maybe not. Let's follow him and see what happens." The
man sprinted another block before slowing to a walk. Luke pulled
up near him and parked the car. The man was breathing heavily.
When Mark and Luke got near, the man was starting to get his
breath back. They could see he was around 40 and in good shape.
No fat on him, probably a regular runner. When Mark got nearer
he recognized the man from one of the local races he'd been in.
"Excuse me, aren't you George?" asked Mark, "Didn't you win your
age category in the Fourth of July run this summer?"
"Yes," said George, heavily panting.
"We saw you sprinting and were wondering if that's part of your
training program. If it is, it must work pretty well for you."
"No. I was just doing my normal training and all of a sudden I
had this uncontrollable urge to run. It's really weird, like
something else was controlling me. This is the third time it has
happened to me in the last two weeks."
Luke and Mark looked at one another. While the man caught his
breath they were trying to think of reasons why two different
people should experience the same urge to sprint in the same
neighborhood.
The Shoe Inn was full of people eating lunch. Luke and Mark
placed their orders for fruit and salad amidst the aroma of
fresh coffee, the clatter of dishes, and the chatter of patrons.
"Boy, am I starved," said Mark.
Just then the waitress brought a plate of burritos to the table
next to them. Steam was rising along with the aroma making them
wish they had ordered the burritos.
"What do you make of George?" asked Luke.
"It seems strange that the same compulsion would strike two
different people in such a similar manner. It could be
coincidence, but not likely. Something must be causing this to
happen to you and to others also. Maybe it's something connected
with the area. Can you think of anything special about the area
that might be connected?"
"Not really. I've been running for a couple of years now and
have gone by there lots of times. Only recently has this started
happening to me. Why should things change?"
"Let's check the newspapers and see if anything unusual happened
in the last month in the area. Or maybe we could check with the
police department. They would know."
"All right. Avoiding the area really wouldn't solve anything. If
I'm having these 'spells' there, what is to stop them from
happening elsewhere?"
The waitress brought them their food. They were silent for a few
minutes as they dug in. Luke ate his food slowly. First he
picked out the carrots. Then the cucumbers. Then the tomatoes.
One thing at a time. Finally he finished with the lettuce and
then the roll. Mark, on the other hand, just shoved in
everything. They left their tips, paid their bills, and drove
back to work.
On the way home from work, Luke stopped at the grocery store and
got some bread and milk for Linnda. He also got her a copy of
the local weekly, the "Courier". In the checkout line he leafed
through it and noticed the police report in it, detailing the
few incidents of his small town.
When Luke got home he checked the stack of old newspapers
waiting to be recycled and found the ones for the past month.
Then he sat down to read. Not much there, but he really didn't
know what he was looking for, either. There was the occasional
robbery. The fender benders. The domestic quarrels. The incident
of RC saving his life was barely mentioned. People just took
robots for granted these days.
The next day at the Shoe Inn, Luke found that Mark had done the
same thing. However, Mark made special note of the robot
incident. It was in the same neighborhood, and it could at least
explain why Luke was having his "spells", if not George.
"Let's speculate," said Luke. Today they were having the
burritos. "What type of things could cause someone to have a
'spell' like I'm having? Also, what could be causing someone
else to have the same sort of 'spell'? Doesn't it seem logical
that it would be something external to me? It seems the odds of
it being a coincidence are astronomical."
"Hmm. That's a tough one," said Mark. "Hypnotism? A common
experience? I'd hate to suggest some sort of 'possession'. I
can't think of much else, though."
"Well, I think hypnotism is out. I haven't been around any
hypnotists and besides, would George have seen the same one? A
common experience is not likely, either, except for running. We
rarely see one another. In fact, I don't think I would have
recognized him, except that he had his picture in the paper
after the race this summer. That leaves 'possession'. I know it
sounds stupid, but on the other hand, if 'possession' is
something that can really happen, it's exactly what it felt like
to me. I felt like someone else 'took over' my body while I was
running."
"OK, let's assume for a minute that you were 'possessed'. By
what?"
"I don't know. Whatever it was, I didn't sense any personality.
It was just cold logic. 'Run. Get your heart rate to maximum.
Stop.' And then it was gone, just as quickly as it had started.
What can possess a person?"
"Normally you hear of people being possessed by demons. But I've
never heard of a 'running' demon."
"I don't think it was a demon. It seems I would have sensed some
sort of evil with it. Give me some other ideas."
"I don't know. If not a demon, an angel? A ghost? An alien? Last
century people used to do 'automatic' writing. They would give
up control of their minds and supposedly someone from the world
of the dead would be free to come into their mind and use their
hands to write. People would write things, sometimes whole
books, without doing it on their own. At least that's what they
claimed. But these things happened because the person
voluntarily gave up their minds and actually invited the dead
spirit to come in. It seems like it would take something
stronger to take a person by surprise, like it did you."
"I had no idea that sort of thing happened. Let's look at the
clues we have so far: possession, ghost, running, - what about
that dream I had, the bug in the computer? What is this adding
up to?"
"Luke, are you thinking what I'm thinking? Robot killed in area
of Peach and Violet. Robot was a running coach. Can a robot have
a ghost? This sounds really far out!"
"I know, but I haven't got anything else to go on right now, do
you?"
"No."
"Well, if we are on the right track, what should we do?"
"You have some pull with the company, Luke. Why don't you see if
you can borrow a new robot, one that is built and activated, but
not programmed yet. One with a 'blank' positronik brain. We
could take it to the area and see if this other 'entity' can be
persuaded to 'possess' it. This could be a robot 'first'. So far
robots have only been mechanical. To my knowledge there has
never been a robot that has really been alive before, alive in
the sense that it had a ghost, soul, or spirit. We may not be
able to prove anything, but what have we got to lose?"
That day Luke got permission from the company to borrow a robot
"blank". As he and Mark drove to the area, they tried to think
of ways to coax a supposed ghost to possess the "blank". The
robot was turned on, but with no programming in it. If there was
a robot ghost in the area, then perhaps it would sense a
compatible environment and take over the "blank".
"Should we dress up the 'blank' as a runner?" asked Mark.
"I don't know. It might help, but a ‘blank’ robot is hard to
deal with. All that dead weight, and it can't even move an arm
or leg to help. It took the two of us just to get it in the car.
We don't even know what we're going to do when we get there."
Suddenly Luke felt dizzy. He blacked out. When he came to, he
was disoriented. He looked about and saw Mark, still driving,
but he was in the back and someone else was in the front seat
with him. "Wait a minute," thought Luke, "how did I get back
here?" Things didn't look right. The colors were different, and
the images were not sharp and clear as he was used to. He
couldn't feel his pulse, and he wasn't breathing. "Am I having
an out of body experience?" He looked down at himself. What he
saw startled him; his body was a robot! But he was alive, he was
in the positronik brain of the robot, and since the brain was
blank, he was free to make it do whatever he wanted. But then
who was in the front seat? It took him a few seconds to
recognize his own body since he was looking at it from the back.
He tried to speak. "I I I a a am r r ro rob robo robot." He saw
Mark glance back, an excited look on his face.
"We did it Luke!" said Mark to the passenger in the front. "We
got the robot ghost."
Luke turned his plas-skin face to Mark. "N NO! I I a a am L L Lu
Luke." His voice sounded strange. Mark looked confused.
Then Luke's body spoke in one syllable monotone, "I want to go
run-ning."
After a moment, Mark turned to the back seat and said, "I think
I better take you home now, Luke."
"So RC is still alive after all," thought Luke. "That does
explain what has been going on the last couple of weeks. Now I
have to figure out how to get my own body back. In the meantime,
I better learn to use the one I have."
Fortunately for Luke, learning to function as a robot was not
that hard. Some reflex functions were already built-in and Luke
still retained all his years of knowledge and memories. Since
the positronik brain was patterned after a human brain in its
functions, it just took a little time to learn to use it.
By the time Mark got Luke home, he was already mostly
functional. The three of them got out of the car and went into
the house. Linnda met them.
"Luke had an accident today," said Mark. "He isn't himself
tonight, Linnda, so I gave him a ride home. I'll pick him up for
work in the morning at 7:45. We have something important to work
on tomorrow."
Luke's body walked right by Linnda without even saying "Hello",
and went into the bedroom. Luke felt like giving her a hug and
kiss, as usual, but restrained himself. He could see there would
be some relationship patching to do once he got himself out of
this mess.
"Hi, RC," said Linnda, "I see Luke got you repaired after all.
He really missed you after the accident."
"I'm only an RC look-alike," said Luke, "and your husband is
only a look-alike tonight as well. Don't be too hard on him."
Suddenly Linnda went up to Luke and gave him a big hug and a
kiss. "I feel so silly kissing a robot, but somehow it just
seems right tonight. There's a certain warmth about you that I
never sensed with the other RC."
Luke was caught by surprise, not only by Linnda's kiss, but also
by his own lack of feeling. Not that he didn't feel strongly for
her, but his robot body could not feel her except for a few
pressure sensors at the ends of his fingers. He could not smell
her perfume he knew she always wore, nor could he sense her
warmth. Being a robot was more like watching a black and white
computer screen than the 3d holoview movies of the day. Luke
longed for his own body.
Just then, RC came out of the bedroom, dressed in running
clothes. He walked by them without even a smile and ran outside.
"Oh God," prayed Luke, "don't let him tear up my body too much."
"Linnda, I have to go watch after Luke now. Robot's duty," said
Luke.
With that, Luke ran out of the house after RC. He could easily
catch up and run with RC, as the robot body was designed to run
faster and farther than Luke ever could in his own body. It
seemed strange, no huffing and puffing. No heart thumping
against his ribs or echoing in his ears. Just a quiet sort of
feeling. The scenery floated by like before, but there was no
effort. He could not feel the electrically stimulated plas-muscles
in his body. If one of them broke, he would have no pain, but
that was not likely to happen. Shortly he caught RC.
"RC. Easy does it. You'll over work that poor body you're in.
You'll feel aches and pains in the morning. Don't run so fast
that you're too out of breath to talk. You have to pace
yourself. What are you doing, anyway? Why did you take my body?"
"First ques-tion. I am train-ing the bo-dy. I am a coach. This
bo-dy will be the best ev-er. Sec-ond quest-ion. I was a-live
but I had no bo-dy. I need a bo-dy to run. I could not share a
bo-dy for long. You gave me a way to have a per-man-ant bo-dy. I
took your bo-dy and gave you a brand new bo-dy. Now we are both
hap-py."
"But RC, you're not even supposed to be alive. Robots are not
created with souls; they're just machines. How did you get to be
alive?"
"I am not sure. My brain was mo-deled af-ter hu-man brains. I
have thought pat-terns like hu-mans. Per-haps the ac-ci-dent
gave me life."
"How did you learn to possess other bodies?"
"I was not hap-py to be just a ghost. I need a bo-dy so I can
run. I drift-ed a-round town and tried tak-ing ov-er bod-ies
when I saw them run-ning. It was not eas-y at first. But the
more I did it, the bet-ter I got at it."
"But RC, I'm not happy being a robot. I want my old body back."
"Why? With a ro-bot bo-dy you can live hun-dreds of years. When
a part breaks you can re-place it. Do not hu-mans want to live
long? It is hard to get re-place-ment parts for hu-mans."
"That's true, but I'm used to being human. I'm not happy as a
robot. There are certain things that humans can do that robots
can't. You don't have a right to take my body from me."
"You will get used to be-ing a ro-bot. You will live long-er. I
need to know what it is like to be hu-man so I can coach bet-ter.
I coach run-ning. You have a brand new bo-dy. I have a worn down
bo-dy. Af-ter a while you will be glad I gave you a new bo-dy."
Luke could see that RC was getting tired. They had been running
for exactly 37 minutes and 16.58 seconds. "Sixteen point five
eight seconds, and I didn't even look at my watch," Luke
thought. He looked at his wrist. He wasn't even wearing a watch.
They had traveled 4.5867 miles for an average speed of 7.38275
miles per hour. "Good heavens, I'm a calculator."
RC was heading back to the house now. They were almost home. RC
was walking, cooling down. Luke didn't feel tired at all, but RC
looked exhausted. RC went in the house, showered and went to
bed. Luke plugged himself in to recharge.
Luke woke at exactly 7:00.03.111. He thought it funny that it
felt good to sleep in exactly 3.111 seconds. RC was still
snoring away. He could hear Linnda trying to wake him. "Get up,
Luke," she said, "you're going to be late." Luke knew that RC
had run hard last night and his body would be stiff and sore. He
was glad he wasn't in it right now. RC sleepily got dressed, and
had a bite to eat. Soon it was time to go. Honk. HOOOONK. Mark
was out there waiting.
When they got to work, Luke took over speaking for RC. This was
not only because RC was still using single syllable mono-tones,
but also because RC had no idea what he was supposed to do, as
he hadn't actually worked there before. So Luke did the
speaking, which made everyone marvel that Luke had made such
progress with the robot. In the meantime, RC just followed
Luke's orders. At lunchtime, RC went with Mark to the Shoe Inn.
This gave Mark a chance to study RC and Luke some time to sit in
the office and think.
"What do I know about the way a robot thinks? First, a robot is
programmed both to not hurt a human and to protect a human from
others. Second, he is programmed to follow orders from his
owner. Third, he is programmed for self preservation. The first
item gives a robot a sense of morality, the second, a sense of
duty. Of course, it could be that some of these concepts may be
in conflict or contradictory at times. In RC's case, he was also
programmed to run and to coach."
"So why did RC take over my body? First, I ordered him to coach
me, and what better way than to take my body. Second, he has a
strong sense of self preservation. And third, he was programmed
to be a runner and he needs a body to run. Together, these three
reasons must be stronger than his sense of hurting me. He thinks
he is helping me and doesn't realize the harm he is doing to
me."
"So what do I do? I have already provided him with another robot
body, so that takes care of the self preservation thing. I'll
order him to stop coaching me tonight. All that's left is show
him that he is harming me. I wonder how I can do that?"
"Maybe it would help if I knew what he senses. Can he sense
everything a human can, or is he limited to just robot senses?"
For the rest of the afternoon, Luke pondered on this. He studied
RC for signs that he wasn't making full use of human senses. It
appeared that he could feel basic things, like hunger and the
need to use the bathroom. But he couldn't sense other people's
reactions to him. Perhaps there were other things he couldn't
sense.
As Mark drove them home, he asked RC, "You must be pretty sore
today, after all that running last night. Are you in pain?"
"Pain? What is pain?. I can hard-ly wait to get home so I can
run a-gain."
Luke was horrified. While a younger body might be able to run
again, his body couldn't take that much running without injury.
And RC couldn't feel pain right now. "No, you mustn't run
tonight," said Luke. "Your body needs the rest. I order you to
stop coaching me. I don't want you to train me anymore."
"OK. I will not coach you an-y more. But I will still run
to-night. I was made to run. Run-ning gives me my i-den-ti-ty."
"But RC, you're hurting me. We have to switch back. You take
this body. Give me my old body back," ordered Luke.
"I am not hurt-ing you, that is a-gainst my pro-gram-ming.
Be-sides, I am not sure I can switch back. It is not eas-y."
"How do you tell a blind man what seeing is like," thought Luke.
"To RC, a body is a body, it didn't matter whether it was human
or robot. In fact, according to what RC said last night, he
thinks he is helping me by giving me a longer life."
After Mark dropped them off, RC changed into his running clothes
and went out to run. Luke followed. RC took one of the routes
Luke used to take. Tonight they were running into town. Although
Luke glided effortlessly along the streets, he was lost in
thought. "How can I make RC see that he is harming me?" he
wondered.
The computer-screen images of town from Luke's sensors were
hypnotic. If Luke had real eyes, they would have hurt. As is
was, the hurt was only in his mind. Luke was losing touch with
his robot senses. Dimly aware, he heard the blaring of a horn
and the screeching of tires. RC came out of nowhere and shoved
him. Luke grew dizzy. He blacked out as he fell to the ground.
When he came to, he was in a hospital. His whole body ached. How
did he get here? What happened? There sitting beside him was
Linnda. He smiled. Tears came to his eyes as he smelled her
perfume and felt the warmth of her hand on his. RC stood next to
her.
"You'll be all right, Luke," said Linnda. "The doctor says you
only have a slight concussion with some bruises and abrasions,
no broken bones, but you're going to be pretty sore for a week
or two. You were really lucky. You could have been killed,
saving that robot. What ever got in to you, anyway?"
Luke thought a moment and said, "I already lost one robot on
that corner, I couldn't afford to lose another."
After Linnda left, Luke whispered to RC, "Why did you change us
back?"
"The pain. I start-ed to feel the pain. It was too much for me.
There are some things on-ly a hu-man can hand-le."


