Washington D.C. 10.30 a.m.
It was humid and hot, yet I immediately wanted to reach the hospital. I had just received a call from my colleague that there was a trauma case. In a car accident, three people were seriously injured and brought to the hospital in critical condition.
Driving the car at a fast speed, I reached the hospital's emergency OT.
When I reached there, I found that one of the three patients had already died.
One of the surviving two patients was quite fine, but the other, a girl, was very seriously injured. Except for her face, the whole body was injured, and there were injuries to the neck and head. She was being given first aid.
I immediately checked the girl on the brain-checking machine and found that her brain was 70% fine.
I immediately instructed the doctors that the girl would be surgically operated upon and artificial organs installed. After 8 hours of continuous operation, we put an artificial brain, spinal cord, and lungs in the girl's body.
To operate an artificial limb, we also had to fit some robotic things into the body.
But the result was just fine.
After 48 hours, the girl opened her eyes and said, "Who am I? Maybe she didn't remember anything.
Even after looking at us for a long time, the girl did not remember anything.
I understand that the girl lost her memory due to the artificial brain. And now she will behave like a robot.
The girl had a painful smile on her face. She was looking at us, but there was no expression on her face.
Perhaps due to her memory of 5–10%, she had signs of severe pain on her face.
We told her companion what we had to do to save the girl's life. The man said this was his sister, but he would keep her in the hospital until she regained her memory.
It has been almost a month since she came here, but she does not remember anything. She is alive but like a machine. Now we have put her on the work schedule of the hospital.
No one from her home has come to pick her up yet. We gave her a new name, Robbie-1.0. There is no feeling in her; she only does the normal work of the hospital and does not talk to anyone.
No one knows what her future will be.