A short story by Zoe Blade
From the roof of the legal bookstore,
I have a clear shot at my target, Jon Russell.
He’s sitting down at a table outside a cafe
where Chancery Lane meets Fleet Street, sipping a
cardboard cup of coffee. I briefly ponder how
ironic it seems that he’s actually bought a drink;
it must be for show, although there’s no way
that he can tell that right now he has a very specific
audience.
Even in the sunshine, the guiding
beam of my tripod mounted rifle is brightly illuminating
a thick circle of skin on his neck, just below his
white beard, but even if any of the passersby can see
infrared as well as I can, they won’t have time
to do anything even if they notice it. My eyes
are already over two years old now, but they were expensive
enough at the time to still be considered detailed
even by today’s standards. With their
magnification, I can see the circle of light on his
neck clearly, growing steadier with every passing second
as a familiar cocktail of drugs calms my metabolism.
I try not to let the laser’s
fan distract me. The guidance beam’s one
thing, but the main laser, the one that generates the
lethal pulse, gives off heat like you wouldn’t
believe. With the midday sun shining straight
down on me, the laser needs all the cooling it can
get, and the fan sounds like someone’s standing
next to me, drying her hair.
Once I can hold the laser still enough,
I brace myself. For just a few precious seconds,
I let myself ponder the consequences of what I’m
about to do. I’m about to execute this
guy, but although he’s broken the law, I’m
no sheriff. I think about the effect that what
I’m about to do will have on people who look
up to Jon Russell, and that makes me nervous.
I have nothing against them; if anything, I actually
sympathise with their cause.
I put the thought out of my mind.
It’s unprofessional, a pause at best and a
hindrance at worst. It’s far too late to
start developing emotions at this stage of my career,
after months of training and almost three years of
missions.
I pull the trigger, just for half
a second, my eyes momentarily shielding themselves
from the visible end of the beam on his neck.
There’s no recoil on my weapon, giving it the
eerie feel of a simulation. The only sign that
it’s firing is a loud popping noise like someone
squashing a bag of crisps. It’s over in
an instant. I can almost convince myself that
I haven’t done anything wrong, but not quite.
The bright circle is instantly replaced
with a gushing stream of blood, pumping out in rhythmical
bursts. His cardboard cup drops to the floor,
and I unscrew the rifle from the tripod, duck below
the top of the brick wall of the bookstore, fold up
the tripod and put everything in my holdall, hidden
beneath a pair of jogging bottoms.
In a fleece, t-shirt and designer
jeans, I hopefully pass for someone on her way to
one of the gyms scattered around the legal district,
where people who help corporations sue their customers
for a living would feel far too inconvenienced by
taking a detour on their way home just to stay in
shape. I put on a pair of designer sunglasses
to cover up my designer eyes, as if anyone could spot
their telltale trademark without being close enough
to kiss me, then I pull the scrunchy out of my hair
and tie it in again, keeping my dark brown ponytail
as taut and professional as it is glossy.
By the time anyone can work out what
happened to Russell and where the brief burst of energy
came from, I’m already half way down the fire
escape. By the time anyone’s dialed the
emergency services, I’m already briskly walking
down Fleet Street and out of the scene.
“Remind me why I had to kill
Russell.” I drop my bag onto the desk of
my boss, Mike Vegas, and it lands with a satisfying
thud. Frankly, I’m glad to be rid of the
evidence, if only until tomorrow.
“Because it’s your job.”
Mike slides the bag under his desk without even glancing
at its contents, then finally looks up to meet my gaze.
His facial expression looks as blank as usual to me,
but a piece of software I installed on my eyes starts
flashing up a translucent yellow warning sign, pointing
out that he’s making tiny involuntary movements a
momentary flicker of the cheek here, a curl of the
lip there. Nothing a human could consciously
spot, but my eyes have a sufficient refresh rate and
resolution to pick up that sort of thing. The
bottom line is that he’s uncharacteristically
uncomfortable, for whatever reason.
“You know what I mean,”
I continue. “He was hardly violent.
Don’t you think that actually having him taken
out was kind of overkill on Godin’s part?”
“It’s not our job to question
our clients’ motives, only their ability to
pay. Besides, he was a liability. Copyright
violation is one of the most serious crimes there
is these days, given the structure of our fragile
economy.” He gets up and makes his way
to a shelf filled with various photos and figurines,
where he pours himself a shot of whiskey from an expensive
looking decanter.
As he glances back at me, I decline
his offer of the same with a subtle shake of my head.
Call me paranoid, but in my line of work, I never
could feel comfortable if I was anything less than
a hundred percent sober.
“They couldn’t just have
him running around pirating their intellectual property,”
Mike continues.
“But it’s food,”
I protest. “It’s not like it’s
a rich kid’s luxury like music or films.
There are homeless people I’ve seen eating decent
meals thanks to him.”
“There are plenty of public
domain staple foods. The homeless can eat the
same handouts as the starving children in Africa:
rice, grains, vegetables, pulses. No one’s
trying to stop people from eating. They have
more than enough to live on.” He takes
a sip of his drink. “All Godin want to
do is ensure the uniqueness of the very specific dishes
served in their chain of five-star restaurants, so
don’t give me any of that melodramatic bollocks
about starving homeless people just because they have
to eat boiled rice and steamed vegetables instead of
foie gras en brioche.”
“It still doesn’t feel right.”
“Which brings me to my next
point. Have you given any more thought to my
offer? Most people would kill for another free
synaptic implant.”
“That all depends on the implant.
The uplink to the Mesh and the map are all well and
good, but I’m still not sure about suppressing
my emotions. It just seems so... inhuman.”
“As opposed to all the drugs
you take to calm you down as you make the hit?”
“At least they wear off after
a few minutes.” I walk past the shelf
and look out the window at the scenic view of the city,
taking a moment to watch the clouds drift along in
the summer breeze. The trees are such a vibrant
green this time of year, they look somehow unreal,
set against the pale grey concrete blocks that people
waste their lives in. I quickly inspect all the
nearby rooftops, making sure nobody’s on any
of them. Old habits. “You know, I’ve
been thinking a lot lately, and between the implants
and the drugs, I’m beginning to feel less and
less like a real woman and more and more like some
kind of machine, just efficiently fulfilling her job
rôle and nothing else.”
“Efficiently?” I hear
Mike practically choking on his drink.
I turn back around to face him.
“Is there something wrong with my performance?”
“I’ve been running over
the encrypted video feed of the hit that your eyes
sent me.”
It wasn’t exactly a secret he
kept from me that when I was on the job, my eyes sent
an encrypted live broadcast straight to the office,
hidden in the Mesh’s entropy. Talk about
your body betraying you. I had to take Vegas’s
word for it that he couldn’t spy on me when I
was off duty. It was something I tried hard not
to think about every time I had a shower. Just
the thought gave me the shivers.
“You stalled. Your heartrate
had slowed down just fine, you were as calm as a cow,
and yet you didn’t fire until almost five seconds
later. Why the pause?”
“He was drinking a cup of coffee
at a table. I could tell he was going to be
there for at least another two minutes. It made
no difference.”
“I didn’t ask you if you
thought it would make a difference. I asked
you why you paused. I hire you because you’re
the sort of woman who knows better than to take unnecessary
risks. Why did you wait so long?”
I let myself sigh. “Ok,
so I felt a little empathy towards the target.
He’d never hurt anybody. I mean, I read
his profile. He was essentially a good man.”
“Which is exactly what I’m
talking about. We can’t afford to let your
personal opinions and morals slow you down when you’re
at work. Those profiles are there to help you
to better understand the targets, to better predict
them, not to make you feel an emotional attachment
towards them. You can do whatever you want at
home, donate your wage to charity, I don’t care,
but when you’re out in the field, I need you
to be there for me, performing at a hundred percent.”
“Yes, sir,” I say reluctantly.
He talks into his glass as he swishes
around the remaining dribble of whiskey, as if he
has trouble meeting my eyes for once. “Someone
will meet with you on your way out.”
This takes me by surprise. I
don’t need the red warning label that’s
suddenly superimposed over my vision to tell me that
something’s wrong. “Who?”
“A doctor. I’d like
to run a few checks on you, just to be on the safe
side.” If he’s not outright lying,
then my software’s convinced that he’s
at least hiding something from me.
“Checks?”
“Yeah. Checks.” He takes another
sip of his drink.
My paranoia starts to kick in as I
realise how easy it would be for him to kill me, just
as long as he took me unaware. For all my jacked
up reflexes and painstakingly learned skills, in light
of the new wholly artificial employees our rivals
have been raving about, I’m starting to look
a lot like an old Decca television set in a room full
of Sony projectors. In all likelihood, Mike
would have had me killed months ago already if I wasn’t
still so damned good.
“And Suzi?”
“Yes?” Our eyes meet again, at last.
“Do yourself a favour.
Don’t get emotionally involved. It’s
just business.”
“I know.” I walk out the door, not
looking back.
“Well, all your tests show you’re
operating within specs,” says the man that Mike
claims to be some sort of medical doctor.
“That’s a relief,” I say sarcastically.
“Nevertheless, I’m still
concerned about these certain imperfections in your
performance. I just can’t seem to find
a neurological or physiological source for them.”
“Did it ever occur to you that I’m only
human?”
A grunt serves him as laughter.
“Isn’t that your main selling point?
From what I hear, you’re Mike’s poster
girl. Maybe even the whole industry’s.”
He looks me up and down, and I fight the urge to pull
out the knife I’m carrying and gouge his inferior
eyes out. “Shame no one knows what you
look like.” Perhaps sensing my obvious
discomfort, he changes the subject. “You
know how few of you there are left in your line of
work?” By ‘you,’ I assume he means
humans. “Less than a dozen, by our estimates.
Worldwide. You’re a rarity.”
I let myself flash a brief smile. Professional
pride.
“A dying breed, you might say,”
he adds with a chuckle. I feel my whole body
tense up.
“There’s one more test
I’d like to carry out on you. It will take
several hours, but thankfully I don’t actually
need you to be present for it so you can go and do
whatever you like. I just need to take a relatively
quick backup of your brain’s neural pathways
first, then you can go home and get some rest.”
“A neural backup?”
“It won’t hurt, I promise.”
Another warning sign pops up next to his face, and
I finally decide it’s time to kick into defence
mode. There’s no discernible change from
an outsider’s perspective, but inside my brain
and its hardware, a dozen little defence applications
are springing to life, waiting for my signal that they
should start wreaking havoc. I usually slip
into this mode several times a week, but in my line
of work it’s safer to err on the side of paranoia.
“What’s this really for? Insurance
in case I mess up?”
“I can’t slip anything
past you.” The doctor grins, revealing
two rows of surprisingly well worn teeth. “Let’s
just say your employer doesn’t like to take
chances, and you’re the best person in the business.”
“From what you’re saying,
I’m pretty much the only person in the
business.”
“Exactly. Now, please,
lie down here while I perform a quick scan of your
neural pathways. It’ll only take a few
minutes.”
For some reason, I black out.
I feel rain on my face, a light drizzle.
My nostrils fill with the scent of wet plants and
damp soil. I open my eyes to discover that I’m
lying on a park bench less than a mile from my flat.
That’s never happened to me before: I’ve
always stayed awake just fine for brain scans in the
past, both objectively and subjectively. I summon
my clock application, its translucent display fading
into my vision and out again for just long enough
for me to tell that I was out for almost two hours,
which is about right for the journey home.
I stand up, a little giddy at first,
and tentatively start to make my way through the park.
By the time I’m striding through the streets,
stepping around all the puddles on the pavement, I’ve
had a few minutes to reflect on the day’s events.
I decide not to let Mike or his crony doctor get
to me. Let him be pissed off at me. I’m
the last human assassin. Replacing me with an
android would be a terrible PR move, and he knows
it.
Still, I can’t overlook the
fact that something is terribly wrong, although
it’s probably just healthy paranoia on my part
to assume that it concerns me at all. Maybe
he’s just shielding me from some dull business
problems he’s having. Whatever it is, I’m
glad I don’t have to think about it anymore
tonight.
As I walk into my driveway, I think
about how I can spend the rest of the evening.
Maybe a hot shower followed by a stir fry and a nature
documentary. Both the matter and the subject
matter were popular torrents on my favourite Swedish
tracker the previous week. It really puts my
job into perspective when I’m reminded how the
human race is the only species that isn’t still
wrapped up in daily life-or-death struggles for food,
or at least, not for copyright free food.
As I approach my block of flats, for
some reason I feel uneasy. I realise something’s
wrong, although I can’t quite work out what it
is yet. I switch to defence mode yet again as
I press the palm of my hand against the security pad,
look into the retina scanner and open the door as
quietly as I can. To my surprise, my eyes’
apps seem to have been upgraded. I have them
set not to update automatically, which means they
must have been switched while I was out from the brain
scan. No wonder I lost consciousness: they’d
been altering me, not just passively examining me.
I switch modes again, figuring that it’s better
to take my chances on my own, rather than risk firing
off unknown software that could do anything from crash
to sabotage me. I creep along the corridor,
then open the door to my flat just as quietly.
I switch my eyes to +IR mode so that
they overlay the infrared frequencies of the electromagnetic
radiation around me over the top of the human-visible
ones. The eerie glow of the walls and pipes is
familiar enough, but the human sized and shaped blob
glowing in the living room isn’t. I switch
the vision to only twenty percent infrared overlay
so that I don’t have as much information to distract
me, and I brace myself.
I keep two katanas hung up decoratively
on the wall in my living room, and with the element
of surprise I might manage to grab one before the
intruder knows I’m there. I have no idea
if he or she is even armed, so I don’t want
to take any chances.
The blur moves like she or he is about
to stand up, so I run into the room as quickly as
I can and grab a katana. Despite bracing myself,
I’m not prepared for what I see next.
The figure dashes for the other katana,
then leaps back to the other side of the room so we
can properly study each other. I can see her
clearly now, from her thermal imprint to the deep brown
colour of the artificial eyes hidden behind her epicanthic
folds. In every discernible way, she looks identical
to me. She’s even wearing the fleece,
t-shirt and jeans I picked out this morning.
Even more incredibly, she looks just as confused as
I feel.
“Oh, that’s just perfect,”
she says. “Did Mike send you?”
“What?” I don’t
take my eyes off her. Her face is serious; her
poise calculated. She’s ready to attack
me without warning, just waiting to know for sure
that I’m a threat. I nod, gesturing towards
her. “Who are you?”
“Suzi Yamada,” she says.
“That’s impossible!”
“Evidently it isn’t.”
She speaks without moving her head a single degree,
watching me carefully. “Listen, I’ve
had a really bad day today. Some phony
doctor tried to kill me earlier, and it doesn’t
look like you’re shaping up to be any friendlier.”
“You killed him?” I ask.
“It’s a habit.”
She lunges towards me, her sword pointed directly
at my chest, aiming straight for my heart.
I manage to nudge her blade out of
the way of my body with my own sword, redirecting
the force of her sprint away from me. “I
didn’t come here to kill you. Can’t
we just talk like civilised adults?” I then
sweep my blade around, aiming to slice off her bicep,
but she similarly counters my move. In a weird
sort of way, it’s exhilarating to finally have
a worthy opponent to fight someone who could
actually beat me.
“Let me guess.”
She swings her blade around to my hip and I counter
it. “The last thing you remember is Mike
sending you to some creepy bastard who gave you a
brain scan, then you just woke up somewhere strange.”
“How do you know that?”
I try to stab her in the stomach, but she sweeps
my blade away.
“Surely it must have occurred
to you by now that one of us is an android.”
“Actually, I’d kinda been preoccupied.”
“So why’d they build you?”
“How do you know they didn’t build you?”
“Because androids are damned
near infallible,” she says as I take one last
sweep at her neck. “And you’re better
than me.”
As I’m taking in what she’s
said, my sword’s edge slices through the air
towards her neck. I lunge backwards, managing
to just barely nick her skin instead of slicing her
head clean off. She starts to bleed a tiny dribble
of bright red blood, but I know she’ll live.
“You’ve got a point.”
I stare at the blood. Real blood. “And
we’ve got a problem.”
“We can’t trust each other?”
“Trust is simply a matter of
being able to predict someone’s moves.
Since I’m a pretty good facsimile of you, I figure
we can both predict each other just fine by working
out what we would do in each other’s situation.”
It just doesn’t feel right calling myself a
copy. Have I really become a commodity?
I keep my sword raised, on guard just in case the
other Suzi tries anything.
“So what’s the problem?”
“Our boss tried to kill you.”
“You mean you’ve had a change of heart?”
“I’d like to propose an
alternative, but we’re going to have to trust
each other.” I throw my katana onto the
floor as a sign of good faith. While I’m
not exactly ready to commit harakiri just yet,
suddenly my imitation of a life doesn’t seem
to be worth fighting for so hard. I figure that
if either one of us lives on, I haven’t really
lost much. The gamble’s worth it, because
if she’ll go along with my plan and
I’m pretty sure she will, because I’m
pretty sure I would then we can both get
what we deserve.
Mike doesn’t get into his office
until seven the next morning. When he sees me,
he freezes, and for just a second he reveals fear in
his eyes.
“You’re early,” he says.
I briefly wonder how much effort he’s
putting into keeping his voice steady, trying his
best not to give away how scared he is, but that brief
glance has already betrayed his fear. He knows
the doctor’s dead. I figure I should have
taken him up on his offer a few months back to join
in his poker games. I’d have made a fortune
off him.
“I didn’t get much sleep.”
I figure I can trust him not to try to kill me yet
because I haven’t revealed my intentions.
He’s far too trusting like that. The
right move would have been to kill me as soon as he
saw me in the room. But he can’t do that.
He needs me. So I turn my back to him, walking
up to the window.
“Bad night?” asks Mike, feigning ignorance.
“You could say that. When
I got home, I found an intruder waiting for me.”
“My god!” says Mike. “What
happened?”
“I dispatched her, naturally.”
The first rule in my line of work is never trust
anybody, not even somebody pretending to be your friend.
“Her?” asks Mike,
pretending to be shocked by her gender, knowing full
well how rare human assassins are, let alone women.
I nod silently.
“Did she say anything?” asks Mike.
“No, nothing. She didn’t have a
chance to.”
“Wow,” says Mike. “I guess
that’s too bad, in a way.”
I shrug. “We all get what’s
coming to us, eventually. She just wasn’t
smart enough to quit while she was ahead.”
Mike sighs. “I’m
not an idiot, you know. You have to understand,
it’s business, nothing personal.”
He’s sweating now. I watch a little bead
of perspiration make its way down his forehead.
“How much do you know?”
I make my way to the shelf and pour a shot of whiskey.
“It’s a bit early for that, isn’t
it?”
“Special occasion,” I
insist. It always helps to inebriate your opponent,
to give yourself any edge over him that you can when
it comes to reflexes. “I know how attached
people can get to certain ways of doing things.
The comfort of the familiar.” I look at
my glass thoughtfully. “I think it’s
time to make a clean break.” I get another
glass, pour another shot, and hand it to him.
Raising my glass, I declare a toast. “To
the future.”
Mike has a dubious look in his eye
like he knows I’m up to something, just
not what. For a manager, he sure lacks vision.
He looks out the window at the ant-like people all
those floors below, oblivious to the woman pointing
a high powered laser rifle straight at him from the
next block along, and raises his glass. “To ”
Despite giving my new business partner
the order to fire, the laser burst still somehow makes
me jump. I’ve never seen it up close before.
On the receiving end, it’s deadly silent, the
only sound being the sloshed gurgles of the target.
The smell, on the other hand, is overwhelming searing
flesh with a hint of burnt cotton from his shirt.
The great thing about biometrics is
that they still work when the person’s dead.
With the help of Mike’s eyes and fingers, it
takes me less than five minutes to drain his bank
accounts both his company’s and his
own. Nothing personal.
Sitting on a bench in the local park,
I take a second to close my eyes and just listen to
the birds. I open them again just in time to
see a young woman waving at me as she walks towards
me. To an outside observer, she looks like she
could be my identical twin. I wave back, smiling
as I watch her familiar mannerisms from an unfamiliar
point of view.
She sits down beside me. “How
long do you reckon we’ve got ’til someone
realises what happened to Mike?”
I shrug. “A few hours,
maybe. Long enough to get a few things from
our flat, move the money to a safe account, and walk
away.”
“Ah, yes, the money.”
She smiles sweetly, a smile I’ve never seen
outside of a mirror before. “What do you
figure we should do with it?”
“I say we take what’s
owed to us, enough to start a new life, and give the
rest to Jon Russell’s charity. He did bring
about this turn of events, in a weird sort of way.”
She nods. “I guess so.”
After a few seconds’ silent reflection, she
turns to look at me. “And us?”
“I’ve been thinking about
that,” I say. “I think we could continue
to do what we’re doing, only freelance.
If you’re up for it, I mean. We’d
have to really start trusting each other, but at least
we’d get to choose our clients, and we’d
get to stay human. Well, you would, anyway.”
That smile again, turning into a broad
grin. “Twin assassins? No one would
see it coming. It’s a hell of an edge.”
“Exactly.” I smile
back at my new business partner. Maybe things
didn’t turn out so bad after all.