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Authors: Bryan Hurt

Tags: #General Fiction

Watchlist (51 page)

BOOK: Watchlist
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Indeed, Strava showed me the approximate spot where the two of them tended to give up, in front of a sprawling, palatial home that looked down on the whole of Colorado Springs. A massive American flag flew in front of the house. It was a magnificent vista; I can see why they stopped, I remember thinking, at which point the garage door of the home began to move.

Thinking I had lingered too long, that it was the owner of the house, some Republican with a shotgun charging out to tell me to get off his property, I began to continue my arduous climb up the hill. But instead of an enraged landowner, out of the garage came a helmeted figure in blue-and-white cycling gear, a gleaming weightless road bike in tow.

“Don't worry,” he said, satirically, as he mounted the bike, “it's all downhill from here.”

It was then I recognized him. “Okay doc,” I said.

“Tim?” said Smith Barnard. “Is that you? How'd you get up here?”

I gestured to my bike. “I was doing okay to begin with,” I said. “But we all need to catch our breath somewhere. This is a popular spot.”

If he made the connection, I didn't see it. He took off his sunglasses. “I'm impressed.”

“You told me to change my life,” I said, and gestured to my drenched T-shirt. “This is what that looks like.”

“Good for you,” he said.

Then we stood there for a moment.

“This is a big hill,” I said. “I don't know how you guys do it. You and Meghan I mean.”

“Is that your bike?” he said. “How old is that?”

I said I didn't know. “The tires inflated,” I said.

“No wonder you can't make it up this hill,” he said. “You need a better bike. You know what, I'm going to give you one of mine.”

“No need,” I said.

“I insist,” he said. “It's the least I can do.”

“The least you can do?”

It took him a second. “For getting you on Strava,” he said. “You wouldn't be here, if not for me. I take full responsibility.”

“Keep your bike,” I told him.

“Look,” he said. “I know you're not working.”

Now it was my turn to nod and say nothing.

“Anyway,” he said, and seemed about to say something else, but changed his mind. “I'll drop it by.” And a moment later he was gone, pedaling with ease up the mountain. Watching him glide up the hill, I found myself wondering why he had needed to stop. Maybe it was Meghan who'd had to stop that day.

I kept on pushing my bike up hill and at some point a blue blur that I understood was Smith Barnard swished by me, shouting to me to keep going.

I got to the top forty minutes later then coasted down to the bottom of Sunrise Descent.

“Coasted” is decidedly the wrong word for it. It was a descent that frightened me to death. You start at the top and plummet. As harrowing as the first two-thirds of the ride is, as steep a descent, it is nothing compared to the final third where there is a precipitous, numbing drop. When I arrived at the bottom I threw down my bike and vomited. It was hard to imagine what it would take to be King of the Mountain on such a stretch of road. But Smith Barnard had done it. Tucked himself into a sleek hurtling blur. He had done it.

When I got home Smith Barnard's bike was waiting for me at the house, propped up against the front of the garage. Meghan pulled up shortly afterward. Whether or not he had called her—warning her I suppose—I don't know, though I expect so. These are the things that become part of the public record. They will come out at trial. Cell phone records. I expect to be a suspect. I also expect there will be no actual evidence.

Meghan saw Smith Barnard's bike in the driveway. “Is he here?” she asked, and I saw it in her face. She had imagined this scene. Practiced her reaction. It was just his bike, I told her, he'd given it to me. Then I watched her face change. If I didn't know before I knew then.

The key point to make in the teaching of
Paradise Lost
is that Satan's escape from hell will never happen. Hell is not a physical location, you tell your students, it is a state of mind. He carries it with him.

I said nothing. Gave no indication whatsoever that anything had changed. That I had done the math. Uploaded the data. Seen the leaderboard. Not the next day and not the day after. On occasion I would take the bike Smith Barnard had given me and ride it, allowing Strava to take my measure, though it became a somewhat more lonely endeavor.

Meghan told me she'd grown tired of it, being always in a race, and though Smith Barnard said he was planning to do the same, he didn't. Perhaps it had something to do with being the King of the Mountain. It is not something you let go of easily. On occasion I would see him whiz by me, a blue-and-white blur, poised in headlong descent.

Going at that speed, everything is a fine calculation. Anything can throw the rider off the bike. Over the handlebars and into the concrete. A rock in the roadway, a car pulling out unexpectedly, there is so little margin for error. This morning I got in my car and drove to the top of Sunrise Descent and floored it, all the way to the bottom.

Faster than humanly possible. I uploaded my ride. King of the Mountain.

Then I drove back up Sunrise Descent. Not to the very top, or even the middle, but to the bottom third. The steepest part where those descending it are nothing but speed and reflexes. The point of the descent where touching the brakes at all becomes a risky proposition.

I don't know exactly what happens when you lose your KOM. If it's an alarm that goes off, or if you get an email notification. Maybe both. Soon enough Smith Barnard will find out. It is only a matter of time. I'm keeping the engine running. It won't take much.

We Are the Olfanauts
by Deji Bryce Olukotun

U have to whyff this.

Cant.

Y not?

Just cant.

Shes bak.

Dont care. Send it up.

I pasted in the link anyway, ignoring Aubrey's decision.

www.olfanautics.com/13503093!hsfi9hhhh

I knew she would whyff it eventually. One click and you were there. You might as well download it directly into your brain, and with a whyff the effect was nearly as instantaneous. I played the video again to confirm that it was as special as I remembered.

Close-up of a desk. Glass top on a chrome frame. On the desk, a knife, a leather strap, a small glass bowl, and the girl's wrist. Light tan skin. The whyff: hints of lilac, clearly the girl's perfume.

She holds the knife in her palm and waves her second hand over it, like a game show hostess displaying a valuable prize. Then she stabs the tip of her finger with the knife and lets her blood trickle into the bowl. The whyff is not of pain, or the metallic scent of blood. It smells like the richest, freshest strawberries, collected right there in the bowl. And you can hear her laughing.

I should say that the girl
appeared
to stab the tip of her finger with the knife. You see, there was no proof that she had actually done it. When I slowed the video down, and advanced it frame by frame, her index finger and thumb obscured my view at the exact moment of puncture. She might have stabbed her own finger, or she might have somehow burst a capsule of fake blood with her fingers. Or, more likely, based on the whyff, a capsule of concentrated strawberry essence. It was the work of either a skillful illusionist or a deranged sadomasochist. With my Trunk on, it smelled hilarious.

Aubrey eventually messaged back:
Told u to send it up.

What abt the whyff??

Send it up.

Shld Private Review.

Send it up.

Cmon, grrl. Strawberries!

This was the second video this user had posted, and each had ended with a whyff that completely subverted the image of the video with humor. It felt like she was playing with us, questioning whether we would believe our eyes or other senses. Wasn't that reason enough to Private Review? To talk it through? Last week, Aubrey and I had met in the Private Review rooms twice. I wasn't going to let her ruin my discovery, though. Instead of sending it up, as she had ordered, I posted the link to
ALL-TEAM
. Immediately I heard gasps in the cubicles around me.

“Oh, shit, Renton!”

“She's back!”

“Aw, man, I bet she's hot!”

Then they went back to their keypads and we began a group chat.

You gonna send it up?

What do you think?

Think we shld.

You smell the strawberries?

I thought it was raspberries.

You cant see the wound.

She a kid?

No, shes 18+.

You hear her laughing?

Crazy grl.

I let the discussion go on for some time as the team chatted amongst themselves, enjoying the fact that with every passing moment the post was staying online, and some new stranger could appreciate its artistry. There was something beautiful about the glass and the steel and the blood. Only the essentials, the sterility of the table against the violence engendered in the blade. The whorls in the redness as the blood filled the bowl, the burst of strawberries and the laughter, ethereal, hovering above it all.

In the end someone sent it up. I wasn't surprised. We were paid to be cautious, to keep the slipstream of information flowing at all costs, even if it meant removing some of it from the world.

O
UR TEAM WAS
based in a multibillion-dollar technology park fifteen kilometers outside Nairobi, and our data servers, which would have made us liable under Kenyan law, floated above national airspace in tethered balloons. The Danish architect had modeled the Olfanautics complex after a scene from Karen Blixen's novel, as if that was what we secretly aspired to, a coffee ranch nestled against the foothills of some dew-soaked savannah. The cafeteria was intended to replicate the feel of a safari tent. Catenary steel cables held up an undulating layer of fabric, which gleamed white in the midday sun. In reality, the tent was the closest I had ever been to a safari. I only left Nairobi to go rock climbing.

Aubrey found me as I was ordering a double veggie burger with half a bun and six spears of broccolini. I could tell from the few frayed braids poking out of her head wrap that she had not slept well last night, nor had she gone to the campus hairdresser to clean herself up. I reached for her thigh as soon as she sat down but she swatted my hand away.

“I told you to send it up.”

“Nice to see you, too, Aubrey,” I said.

“I'm your boss, Renton. If I say send the video up, then send it up. You're making me look bad.”

That was the problem with dating your supervisor. She thought any discussion could be resolved by pulling rank. “Didn't you whyff the strawberries? They were hilarious, hey. That girl's an actress or something.”

“We don't know that, Renton. She could have really been cutting herself. Or someone could have been forcing her off camera and layered in that whyff afterward. We don't even know if she's a she. It could be a man.”

Aubrey always pulled her liberal philosophy on me, as if I couldn't trust my own nose.

“The metadata said she was a twenty-four-year-old woman,” I said. “I looked at the time signatures. The whyff was recorded simultaneously.”

“The signatures could have been spoofed.”

“That's only happened once.”

I wasn't concerned about speaking to Aubrey so intimately in the cafeteria. No one would have believed that we were together, because for all appearances, I was a handsome young Kenyan man with his pick of eligible women, and Aubrey was a frumpy foreigner from Somewhere Else. But they were using the wrong sense when they judged her.

“Aubs, maybe you should eat something.”

“We can't Private Review anymore, Renton.”

“Here, have one,” I offered. I liked to eat broccolini from the spear to the tip, leaving the head for last.

“Those rooms are set aside for us to do our jobs.”

“It's high in folate. And iron.”

She glanced around. “Would you stop bloody ignoring me!”

“I think you need to eat something.”

“I don't want any of those bloody things. They're not natural. They were invented by some scientist.”

“At least it's food.” I showed her the screen of my Quantiband on my wrist. “Says I need five hundred milligrams of iron today, and these will give me a thousand. Don't shoot the messenger, hey. I do what I'm told.”

“Just not when your boss is the one telling you,” she said, and walked away. Only after I had finished my broccolini spears did I realize that she hadn't been wearing her Quantiband.

T
HAT EVENING
I tried to forget my conversation with Aubrey because I wanted to be totally focused on my Passion. In three years, I planned to free-climb the sheer granite face of the Orabeskopf Wall in Namibia, one of the most difficult routes in southern Africa, and I had meticulously plotted out my conditioning, fitness, and routes with my personal fitness instructor, whose name was Rocky. You see, because of our work on Trust & Safety, we were afforded certain additional privileges: a trainer (mine was Rocky), a psychologist, a full-subscription Quantiband, an additional five floating holidays, a stipend of OlfaBucks that we could use at the gift shop, and access to a sleep specialist. The company would support one Passion for each of us. It could be running a marathon, completing a competitive Scrabble tournament, or stitching a quilt. What mattered was that you chose a Passion with a measureable goal. That's why I loved my Quantiband: it calculated my heart rate, blood pressure, distance walked, calories, alertness, mood, sleep quality, and even the frequency with which I had sex. When I was treating my body well, my Quantiband felt as light as air, but it could constrict itself around my wrist like a snake when I veered off my programmed routine.

BOOK: Watchlist
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