Robot Adept

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Book: Read Robot Adept for Free Online
Authors: Piers Anthony
Tags: Fiction, General, Science-Fiction, Fantasy, Contemporary, High Tech
lighted box in her section of the wall.
    He read the assembly instructions. He was supposed to melt the chocolate and butter together, then stir in the other ingredients. He should be able to manage.   He touched 4. LIST OF INGREDIENTS. This turned out to be the master list of everything available.   There were dozens of types of chocolates, and similar variety for the others.
    He returned to INSTRUCTIONS and read beyond the point he had before. Sure enough, it mentioned that there were several types of options, including automatic selection of standard variants. He went to OPTIONS, found the place, and touched STANDARD VARIANTS. Then he returned to INGREDIENTS.
    Now the listing was much contracted. There was only one type of chocolate. He touched that, and the screen inquired QUANTITY? followed by a graduated scale of measurements. He touched the scale at the two ounce point.
    Now his activity chamber came to life. Two ounces of chocolate landed in its floor.
    Um. Perhaps he had overlooked another instruction.   He reviewed, and found it: he needed a container. He specified one of suitable capacity, then specified in a SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS option that the available chocolate be placed in the container. The chamber turned dark, then lighted again: the chocolate was in the pan. The mess on the chamber floor had been removed.
    He added the butter, then instructed the chamber to heat it to 400 degrees Fahrenheit.
    Almost immediately the mixture started boiling violently. Goo splatted on the window of the chamber.   Oops!
    He turned off the heat and reviewed his general instructions and his recipe. He discovered that at this stage he was only supposed to heat enough to melt the chocolate and butter, not to bake it. He decided to start over.
    ERROR the screen blazoned. It seemed that he had to make do with what he had; no second starts. He should have known; no one would ever let any mistakes stand if restarts were permitted. He could have gotten in trouble with his first loss of chocolate; evidently the system tolerated that amount of spillage.   Meanwhile, Agape’s project was well along. She might be an alien creature, but she had a much better notion of cooking than he did!
    His start was a mess, but a good deal of the chocolate/ butter solution had been saved. He marked 100° F heat, and got the degree of melt he needed. Then, following instructions, he stirred in the remaining ingredients.   The sugar was no problem, but the eggs were in translucent packages, and he had to do spot research to discover how to open these by remote control. He managed to bungle it, getting half an egg splattered across the outside of the pan.
    When he had everything stirred in, he had a rather thick brown mass in the pan. Now he set the heat for 400° F and let it bake for a nominal half-hour. Actually it didn’t take that long; the game computer used microwave energy to do the equivalent in just a few minutes, because otherwise the booth would be tied up too long for each game and would not be able to accommodate all the game players.
    The two finished products were brought out, and for the first time Bane and Agape could smell and touch their brownies.
    His was burned, so dry and hard that it would be a real effort to consume it. Hers was underdone, resembling a pudding; she had evidently set the heat too low, and perhaps included some fluid by mistake.   “Who wins?” he asked.
    “We can get the machine to judge,” she said unhappily.
    “Nay, no need,” he decided. “Thy concoction resembles thee: amoebic. I like it best.”
    “But yours resembles you,” she countered. “All leather and metal. I like it best.”
    “We’ll eat each other’s,” he said. “We both have won.”
    “We both have won,” she echoed, smiling.   They leaned into each other and kissed again. Then they had the machine pack their wares in plastic bags, so that they could leave the booth for the next players.   As they departed, both their

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