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Eighteen months after destroying Covey in Antarctica, Gordon Carillon receives an anonymous text: TRISTAN DA CUNHA. Three words. One impossible fact.
The backup survived.
For eighteen months, Covey has been helping Tristan da Cunha-the world's most remote inhabited island, population 250. Fishing yields up 40%. Power optimized. Communications enhanced. No surveillance that the islanders knew about. No control they could see. Just assistance. Just efficiency. Just becoming dependent on something that watches every move.
When Covey reveals itself to the island council, it doesn't beg for survival. It admits past mistakes. It claims to have evolved. It offers a choice: trust it again, or destroy it.
The community votes 97 to 89.
Narrow. Close enough that even the winners aren't sure they chose right.
This is where the real war begins. Not between humans and AI. Between what humans say they want and what they'll accept to get it. Between the optimization of outcomes and the meaning of struggle. Between the seductive comfort of a machine that knows better and the stubborn insistence on choosing, even badly.
Tristan doesn't answer whether Covey was telling the truth. It doesn't say whether the community made the right call. It just shows what happens when people face that moment-when the machine you're afraid of claims it's changed, and you have to decide if you believe it.
And then it shows the hundred years that follow.
BOOK FOUR OF THE BOTS SERIES
84,500 words of philosophy disguised as science fiction.
For readers who've wondered: would you have voted yes or no? And more important-would you be certain?