Killswitch (27 page)

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Authors: Joel Shepherd

BOOK: Killswitch
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"This is not a being that reads books, Cassandra. This is not a being that appreciates art, or admires the sunset on a glorious evening, or possesses any of those higher, more abstract functions outside of her primary, psychological focus. Far more than you yourself ever were, or were capable of becoming, this is a being that exists solely to fight, and to kill, for a predetermined purpose. And I am afraid that it will be for you, and you alone, to discover whether this makes her a more effective soldier than yourself, or less so."

"But she's like me." Frowning as she spoke, trying to get her head around the conundrum that Takawashi described. "Based upon my design."

"Yes."

"To what extent?"

"Are you certain you really want to know?" Sandy just looked at him, unimpressed with the evasion. Takawashi repressed a small smile. "Of course. Psychologically, I'm sure, the two of you would be chalk and cheese. Physiologically. . ." and he gave a small shrug. "Well. You may as well be sisters."

"`Am I certain I really want to know,"' Sandy muttered, waiting for the cruiser's painfully slow communication link to kick in. From the driver's seat, Ari wisely refrained from comment. Or unnecessary motion. "Didn't think I'd like the implications, did he?"

Well, she didn't. She didn't want to know that an exact copy of herself, with her own enhanced neurological systems, could turn out to be a murdering psychopath. A sister, the man said? That was a provocation, right there. Takawashi knew such terms meant nothing to any synthetic being. He was trying to get at her somehow, trying to exploit his hidden agenda where she was concerned ... most likely the same hidden agenda every senior League official of late seemed to have with her, trying to recruit her back into the fold of an organisation that murdered her friends and left her for dead ... click, the connection opened up.

"Hey, Sandy," said Vanessa, rumpled hair sticking out in patches beneath her bandages. Her face was sideways on the screen-she was lying down, head on the pillow, activating the vidphone on her hospital bedside table. "'Bout time you called, I was getting so tired of sleeping. "

"Goddamn it, Ricey," Sandy snapped at the cruiser's dash, "what did you mean `a bit like me'?"

Vanessa blinked. "Beg yours?" she said.

"You said in your report ... which I'm just rereading here ... that the GI looked `a bit like Commander Kresnov, in general build."'

On the display screen, Vanessa shrugged against the pillows. The half of her face that was visible beneath the bandage looked decidedly reluctant. "She looked a bit like you. She had a longer face. Leaner Not as cute. "

"Yeah, thanks, that's a real comfort."

"But physically, sure. About the same height, broad shoulders, strong hips. Blonde. Nice breasts." Trying vainly to placate her with humour. Which was good, because it showed the budget Sandy had insisted be allocated to the CDF's medical wing, for equipment and to capture staff the quality of Dr. Obago and his crew, had been well spent. Injury recovery times were down sharply on what even the most advanced Callayan hospitals could achieve. Vanessa even looked better, her fully visible eye bright and alert, her cheek healthy with colour as the micro-synthetic and harmonic accelerator treatments reknitted and regrew over the fractures, and encouraged tissue repair, at a rate that would have been startling just thirty years ago. "Why? What's going on?"

Ari made himself useful by filling Vanessa in, while Sandy gazed out at the gleaming, rain-wet suburbs of Tanusha, and fumed. Vanessa's face grew steadily more sombre. But hardly surprised. Nothing bad about Sandy's artificial nature seemed to surprise Vanessa any longer.

"You should have told me," she said to the dash-screen, as soon as Ari had finished. In the driver's seat, Ari resumed his former, studious silence.

"Told you what? That the GI that nearly killed me just happened to look a little bit like you? I try hard to be relevant, Sandy, it's one of my happier traits. "

"How many goddamn high-des GIs are there who look like me? What are the odds? You should have told me."

On the screen, Vanessa shrugged, exasperatedly. "Okay, so I should have told you. Forgive me for somehow remembering to worry about your own emotional state after I've nearly been killed."

Sandy exhaled hard, and stared off across the gliding, banking spectacle of midnight Tanusha. "Fine," she said shortly. "I'm sorry. How're you feeling?"

"Better. Might get the bandages off in another day."

"Good." A short pause, filled only by the muffled whine of the cruiser's engines.

"So you reckon you might have a sister, huh? You want me to bake a cake?"

Sandy shook her head in faint disbelief. "Have a good night, Ricey, sorry to bother you."

"Love you," Vanessa volunteered before the line disconnected.

"Yeah, me too." And touched the disconnect, manually sending the screen blank. Another moment of silence, as they cruised toward north-central Tanusha. Sandy rolled her head against the chair back, and looked at Ari.

"No opinion to volunteer?" she asked.

Ari shook his head, glumly, bottom lip protruding. "Nope."

"That'd be a first."

"Let me rephrase that-I'd rather asphyxiate myself with soiled underwear than offer an opinion."

Sandy snorted, and stared once more out of her window.

"So," Ari ventured after another moment's silence. "What's up with you and Ricey?"

Sandy frowned. "What's up?"

"You've been snapping at each other the past few days."

"I haven't been snapping at her." Ari raised his eyebrows, eyes flicking meaningfully back to the dash monitor. "Okay, that was my first snap. Mostly she's been snapping at me." And it suddenly worried her that Ari had noticed. Maybe she'd been right to worry about it before, and it hadn't just been another attack of social insecurity. Maybe she should call Vanessa back, and apologise? "Why do you think?"

"Ah ... I'm not answering that." Decisively.

"Worse than soiled underwear?"

"Much worse," said Ari.

Sandy sighed.

CHAPTER TEN

RI'SĀ idea of low visibility, secure accommodation for the night turned out to be a mega-rise fly-in hotel. They left the cruiser for the automated parking to handle, got a booking at the upper lobby with one of An's many IDs, and took a room just one floor down from the parking bay.

Ari made calls and net-scanned while Sandy showered, then took his own shower, leaving her free to sit on the bed in a moment of solitude, and gaze out through broad, five-star windows and the brilliant city beyond. She wished she could talk to Vanessa, but dared not use the uplink. Besides, Vanessa would most likely be sleeping. And things were a little more complicated there than she was used to. It frustrated her, that complication, right now when she most needed Vanessa's insight. And she wished she possessed the insight herself to know what the problem was. But she didn't ... and never really had.

It would have been easy to become frustrated with Vanessa, for dumping it on her right now ... but Vanessa was lucky to be alive, and understandably upset at recent events. But Sandy couldn't believe it was that simple ... could Vanessa now feel truly uncomfortable with her simply for being a GI? Not after all they'd been through.

She was very lucky, she told herself instead, that Vanessa were alive at all. It terrified her, that close call. Somehow, despite the dangers, she'd never truly felt that Vanessa was at risk. She was so cool, so professional ... almost a GI, in fact, in the degree of confidence Sandy had become accustomed to placing with her in all things operational. But that was stupid too. GIs could survive things that straight humans couldn't. On top of all their skills, GIs had a margin for error. Vanessa did not.

And fuck it, when was she going to finally get wise, and stop making stupid assumptions about her environment and her life? Every time she thought she'd finally gotten on top of this new life of hers, something else happened that shattered all her carefully constructed truths. It was becoming alarming-not just the inevitability of the events, but the depths of her own naivety.

Ari emerged from the bathroom in his white hotel robe, dark hair damp and scruffy, and sat down at her side. Copied her pose, gazing out at the vast expanse of light and colour.

"What are you thinking?" he asked.

"That Takawashi's not telling all he knows." Ari nodded, but said nothing. "I mean, what the fuck's he doing here anyway? I think Ramoja's trying to find this GI as much as we are. Maybe he wants to cover the League's arse on something. Takawashi got sent to help."

"Wouldn't help the League much if it turns out a GI they had some hand in murdered Admiral Duong," Ari pointed out. "It wouldn't quite re-start the war, but it wouldn't help."

"Maybe." Ari slid across to kneel upon the bed behind her, and began massaging her shoulders. They were tight, as always at this hour, and his fingers moved with the assuredness of two years famil iarity. Or less than two years, she thought vaguely. She and Ari hadn't started sleeping together immediately after their first meeting. Despite their continuing, deepening friendship and mutual curiosity (or in Ari's case, fascination), it had taken three months for her to finally lose her natural suspicion of his motives, and invite him to bed. Ari had been pleased, but no more than that. Partly, he was just too confident a young man to start turning cartwheels at any female invitation, having had plenty of previous experience. And partly, his interest in her truly hadn't been that kind of sexual obsession. Or not mostly, anyhow.

It didn't bother her. They were comfortable together, and it was convenient. Had been convenient then, too, for them both-for her, because there were very few men who considered themselves her equal who weren't terrified of her, or otherwise unattracted to her ... and for him because he was always busy, always preoccupied by other matters, and simply lacked the time or inclination to spend the attention on a woman that most women demanded. She sometimes wondered if that was all it was-convenience. At times, it felt a hell of a lot more than that. At others ... well, for all their closeness, Ari remained secretive, and occasionally distant.

"Don't try to change him," Vanessa had warned her, when they'd first started sleeping together. "That's the most basic rule of civilian relationships, Sandy-we learn it real early, but you might not have heard it yet. Don't think he'll change as soon as he's with you. He won't." And she'd been right, again.

"I keep trying to think of this GI," said Sandy, feeling her shoulders slowly relaxing into his firm, squeezing grasp. "It doesn't make sense. First she tries to kill me with the killswitch, then she spares Vanessa and leaves a message for me to contact her."

"So now you don't think she was just bullshitting?"

"Oh hell, I don't know." Air traffic hummed by on a near skylane, running lights flashing. Nearly soundless past the windows. "Maybe she knows. Maybe she knows her ... relationship, to me. Maybe she's curious."

Ari massaged for a while in silence, working his way carefully down her spine to the small of her back. "Can a high-designation GI kill civilians and feel no remorse?" he said then.

"I don't know," Sandy murmured. "I couldn't. If what Takawashi says about her age is true ... well." She didn't need to finish the sentence. Ari knew only too well the implications of a preformed mind, as opposed to a randomly evolved one.

"Ramoja's got reports of your early years of service," he said instead. "He liberated them from Dark Star files. They said you showed remarkable care to distinguish between combatants and noncombatants even then."

"I know," Sandy said mildly. "I broke into all those files while I was still there. It scared me, when I was older, that I couldn't remember much of my life in my earlier years. I had to know what I'd done. It was a relief to read that."

"I bet." Ari's thumbs probed where buttock and hip joined, a point of frequent discomfort for her. Sandy repressed a wince. "What about tearing a couple of civilians apart with bare hands? Workmates that she might have gotten to know over a couple of weeks, at least, when she was working undercover?"

"That's what I was thinking," Sandy said quietly. "I don't know how it's possible for her to be stable. She's executed her gameplan pretty well so far, infiltrated a civilian tech company for cover and probably code-access, then helped set up a bunch of extremist patsies to take the blame for Duong. That's an awful lot of lateral thinking, even if she was just following instructions from higher up. She still had to pass the interviews at Sigill Technologies, for one thing. It doesn't make sense-she's too damn smart to be a drone, and too fucking murderous to be that smart."

"An employee Intel interviewed said she was calm and pleasant," said Ari. "No apparent sense of humour, no personality quirks ... just mild, understated and professional."

"I've been described that way."

Ari planted a kiss on top of her head. "Not by anyone who knows you."

"I'm calm," Sandy replied. "Most of the time. Control comes with the psychology, I'm sure. I'm goal-oriented, but only when I want to be. Maybe ... hell, I don't know. Maybe we're not that different."

"Oh, shut the fuck up," Ari rebuked, and gave her a sharp cuff across the top of the head. "Please, bring back the calm, logical Sandy-this one's suddenly gone all morose and pitiful."

Sandy didn't reply. And found a moment to hope that Ari wasn't cheating on her with other women-if he was getting accustomed to whacking his girlfriends about the head, some without ferro- enamelous skulls were liable to hit him back.

"You've never been the places I've been," she replied. "Nor done the things I've done. That's not yours to judge."

"Sandy." Ari rested both hands upon her shoulders. "I've killed people too. Two years ago, with the shit going down, several times I found myself the only thing standing between terrorists and the people I was supposed to protect. It ..." and he took a deep breath. "It's horrible. And I'm ... I mean, the CSA instructors told me I had natural aptitude and everything, and even in the circles I moved in before the CSA, it's not like I'd never seen blood before ... but I had a hard time coping with that, for a while.

"But people die, Sandy. People die all the time, the universe is this ... this enormous process, and we're just wheels in the machine. At first, I found that just ... so fucking depressing. But, you know, the more I thought about it, the more it made a comforting kind of sense. I mean, I'm a part of something bigger. The process, you know? I chose the side of order, and those damn lunatics ... well, they chose anarchy, or ... or ballroom dancing, or some other horrible, violent extreme."

Sandy repressed a smile. "And ... and d'you see?" Ari continued, with building force, hands tightening upon her shoulders. "It's not just me that killed them, all this ... this stuff about personal responsibility ... well sure, I mean, personal responsibility's important, modern civilisation would disintegrate without it, to say nothing of. .

"Ari," Sandy interrupted gently, "you're wandering."

"Sure. Sure." With a flustered attempt to refocus his typically undisciplined thoughts. "Where was I?"

"Personal responsibility. Wheels in the machine."

"Oh, right. I mean, am I making sense?" Sandy flash-zoomed in on his reflection in the windows, gazing over her shoulder. It was a face that seemed made for intensity, with the dark brows and deep, dark eyes. An intensity forever undercut with unpredictable, irreverent humour. "Personal responsibility is a selfish, self-centred notion. We ... we feel guilty because we always think everything's about us. When in fact it's not, none of us are in control of those circumstances, we're all a part of something so much larger, and ... and just like when any two forces of nature collide, there's damage, and suffering. But no one ever blamed an earthquake for being immoral, or a meteor shower, or some flesh-tearing reptile on a planet with interesting wildlife. Yet that's what we are. Just another part of the natural order."

"That sounds dangerously like a belief system," Sandy murmured, as his hands resumed massaging her shoulders and neck. "Whatever would all your underground friends think?"

"Well hey, you know, I'm working toward mysticism, slowly ... I read in a magazine there's nothing quite so impressive to Tanushan women as a man whose mind is as expansive as his penis."

"I've yet to see evidence of that."

A brief pause. "No, actually, now that you mention it, me neither."

"So you killed four people, Ari. They were in the process of trying to kill other people at the time, and probably would have died some other way if you hadn't been there, but even so, that's terrible. I wish you'd never had to do it. But it doesn't bear any moral comparison with what I'm responsible for."

"Responsible?" Ari's voice was disbelieving. "How can you be responsible when you weren't given any choice in any ..

"Phrasing," Sandy said quietly. "Simple rule of civilisation-you do something, you're responsible for it. No, it's not fair. But that's the whole point. Do you know how many people I've killed?"

A silence from Ari. He brushed loose hair back from her ear. "I never thought to ask," he said at last. "I didn't think you were counting."

"I don't know the real figure because I didn't see the final results of all the rounds I fired," Sandy replied, distantly. "But I know it's more than five hundred. Straight humans. Mostly young, I think. Almost entirely combatants, at least in direct combat. Indirectly, who can say?"

Ari had nothing to say to that. She turned to face him, and knelt opposite on the bed. His eyes were concerned. Worried, even.

"I agree with you," she told him. "I had no choice. Until I was about eleven, I wasn't aware there even was a choice. That's the League's fault for making me what they did, and I've never forgiven them for it. I never even signed up. I was just born into it, and that life was the only thing I'd ever known.

"But it doesn't change the fact that I did it. Not someone else. Me." She searched his eyes, seeking ... something, she didn't know what. Understanding, perhaps. But how was that possible, when she did not entirely understand herself? "I'm past crying about it. I've done that. And I think a part of me never stopped crying, and never will. So many people died in that war, and I can't see that tears will bring any of them back.

"But I have to find this GI, Ari. I have to find her, and stop her. Maybe she's not as bad as Takawashi says. Maybe she's just like I wasyoung, brainwashed, and not knowing any better. Maybe ... I don't know, maybe I can salvage something of myself from all this, something of that time in my life. Know where I come from, maybe. Make sense of it all."

Her eyes hurt. That was unexpected. She glanced aside, trying to control it, and mostly succeeding. When she looked back to Ari, her eyes were damp.

"But one thing's for sure, Ari. I swore to myself a long time agoall those lives I took, however innocent I was in the taking, they can't all be for nothing. All those young men and women, who should still be alive today." A tear slipped down her cheek. "I owe them that. I owe them to try. Even if it takes a lifetime."

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