by Dawn Knox
sherry
Gwen tipped the steaming contents of the foil tray on to
a plate and carried it to the dining room.
Christmas dinner for one.
She sat down in her usual place and eyed her guest on the
other side of the table.
“Alexa!” Gwen said and waited until the whirling green and
blue lights stopped spinning around the top of the Voice-Controlled Intelligent
Personal Assistant.
“Merry Christmas,” Gwen said, holding her glass up as if
toasting the unit.
The clipped, disembodied voice of Alexa rang out, “Merry
Christmas and a happy new year.” The blue and green lights flashed and died.
Gwen was about to eat Christmas dinner alone in the company
of an electronic gadget.
She sighed and picked up her fork. There was no disguising
the fact that this was a frozen Christmas dinner. Nothing like the ones she’d
enjoyed years ago at her mother’s table with her sister, Fiona.
Three women determined to enjoy Christmas without the man of
the house who’d deserted them all.
Mother’s table now belonged to Gwen, along with the house –
their mother having slipped away several months ago. Fiona had taken her share
of the money and left after a senseless argument over their mother’s favourite
bracelet.
So many times, Gwen had picked up her phone to call Fiona but
pride had stopped her.
She hadn’t started the argument.
She hadn’t begun the name-calling.
It was up to Fiona to call her and apologise.
Gwen wondered if Fiona was alone and lonely today, just like
her.
“Alexa!” Gwen said, more to hear the sound of a voice rather
than because she thought she’d receive a sensible answer. She waited for the
lights to indicate the unit was listening, “Where’s Fiona?”
“Hmm,” Alexa said, “I’m sorry, I don’t know that
one.”
“You and me both,” said Gwen
sadly.
She pulled her cracker and put on the paper hat.
Gwen sighed. She’d never spent Christmas Day on her own
before. Alexa’s silky voice might sound human but it was a poor substitute for a
real person.
“Alexa… I’m lonely,” Gwen said.
The blue and green lights flashed.
“I’m sorry you’re feeling that way. Sometimes talking to a
friend, listening to music or even taking a walk can help. I hope you feel
better soon,” Alexa said and the blue and green lights faded.
The sympathetic words sounded hollow. But that was hardly
surprising. Alexa wasn’t programmed to have emotions.
“Alexa!” Gwen paused, “What should I do?”
“Hmm, I don’t know that one,” Alexa replied.
Well, of course the unit wouldn’t know what to do. It didn’t
even know what was wrong.
But Gwen did.
“Alexa… Should I apologise to Fiona?”
“Sorry, I’m not sure.”
Gwen sighed.
“Alexa… I wish you were a person.”
“Humans are cool and fascinating but I like myself just the
way I am,” Alexa replied.
Who programmed the answers into Alexa? Gwen wondered.
Everything the unit said was delivered in the same, expressionless tone. Perhaps
one day, lonely people would really sit down to eat with robots who would be
sophisticated enough to respond like a real person. But not yet…
“Alexa!” Gwen waited for a few seconds then asked, “What will
happen tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow’s date is Thursday, the twenty-sixth of December
twenty nineteen.”
Gwen sighed. Well, it was a personal assistant attached to
the Internet, not a fortune teller. If only she’d telephoned Fiona before
Christmas. She’d got as far as opening her contacts and finding Fiona’s number
in the phone but she’d lost her nerve and hadn’t continued.
Why was it so hard to apologise?
“I’m sorry,” she said aloud. Perhaps the more she practised,
the easier it would be to say when it counted.
But suppose she telephoned Fiona and she wouldn’t accept her
apology?
“I’m sorry,” Gwen said again, louder, her voice echoing in
the stillness. But simply saying it aloud wasn’t the same as apologising to a
person.
“Alexa!” Gwen said, “I’m sorry.”
“Don’t worry about it,” Alexa replied, “Calling Fiona
Blackburn.”
For a second, Gwen wondered if she’d heard correctly. She
hadn’t asked Alexa to call her sister. Had she?
Had she said it without realising?
She was about to tell Alexa to cancel the phone call, when
the dialling tone stopped.
“Hello?... Hello?” The tinny voice which came out of the unit
belonged to Fiona.
“Hello?” Gwen whispered. During the next few seconds of
silence, Gwen closed her eyes, prepared to hear a click as Fiona cut the call.
‘Oh, Gwen! It’s so good to hear your voice! I can’t tell you
how many times I’ve picked up the phone to call you…”
Green and blue lights flashed on the top of the unit, as if
Alexa were celebrating.
About the author
Dawn enjoys writing in
different genres and has had romances, speculative fiction, sci-fi, humorous and
women’s fiction published in magazines, anthologies and books. She’s also had
two plays about World War One performed internationally. Her current work in
progress is a story set in Bletchley Park during World War Two. You can follow
her here on https://dawnknox.com , Facebook
here DawnKnoxWriter or on Twitter here https://twitter.com/SunriseCalls
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