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Apex Risen

Page 11

by Scott Medbury

He led her to a frayed leather recliner with stirrups and arm rests. Inga looked at Ivan who nodded reassuringly. The doctor sat on a stool beside the recliner and pulled a large magnifying glass on an articulated arm into place over her face. Ivan stood behind him.

  “Amazing detail,” said the doctor, as he peered at Inga’s magnified face. “The pores, the fine hairs, everything!”

  Without taking his eyes off her, he slipped on a pair of latex gloves and probed the scrape on her face gently.

  “I’ve seen this model on the internet and in promotions of course, but I never imagined how perfect the RealFlesh is. These scratches are healing already. She has bullet wounds, you say?”

  “Yes, in her back and head.”

  “Sit up, darling,” the doctor requested.

  He slowly unwound the scarf and peeled it away from her wound, before moving the magnifying glass over it.

  “Hmm…” he said, probing it with a gloved finger, only to snatch it away abruptly when Inga gasped in pain. He glanced up at Ivan, confused.

  “It is her programming; she can feel physical pain.”

  “Ahh,” the doctor said. “I have heard of this; it is illegal. Must have cost a fortune…”

  “Yes,” said Ivan, not offering any more.

  The doctor shrugged, then addressed Inga.

  “I have to clean and stitch your wound, darling. It will hurt, do you wish to turn off your pain programming first?”

  “I am unable to disable PhysSens due to the errors in my system. A full diagnostic check by a trained technician is required to assess the damage. You may go ahead and make the repairs required to close my wounds.”

  “You’re sure?” the doctor asked, looking at Ivan.

  “Yes,” they said, in unison.

  The next fifteen minutes were hard on Ivan. Inga cried and moaned in pain the entire time, tears streaming from her eyes as the amazed doctor closed the wounds in her scalp and back with sutures that he applied deftly with a needle and thread. When he was done stitching and began bandaging the wounds, she immediately stopped crying.

  “Interesting,” the doctor said. “Her pain is immediate and real, but only lasts as long as the actual infliction. It doesn’t linger. I wonder if this is by design or just something they haven’t quite worked out.”

  “Development of PhysSens – patent pending – ceased when the artificial intelligence industry administration board outlawed the software. The software installed in me is a beta version and may differ in functionality from future versions.”

  “I see,” said Dr. Vlad. “That’s a very comprehensive answer, thank you.”

  “You couldn’t help us with her programming?” Ivan asked hopefully.

  “No, Ivan. I’m not a technician. Frankly, I don’t know anyone in our… circle of friends who would be advanced enough to help. If it makes you feel better, though, the bullet in the back bounced off the chassis. The head too, although it left quite a dent. More than likely that is where the damage to her circuitry occurred.”

  “Thanks, Doc. How much do I owe you?”

  “Five hundred ought to do it.”

  Ivan and Inga left after he handed the money over, then got back in the Hyundai to make the return trip to Mateo Babic’s restaurant.

  25

  Andre’s phone rang approximately three minutes after he made the call to his contact.

  “Da?”

  Molenski didn’t turn away from his window but listened carefully.

  “Where?” Andre asked the caller and listened for a moment before hitting the intercom. “Quickly, head to Little Italy, we got a lucky break.”

  He squeezed Molenski’s leg excitedly, the old man’s piss stain forgotten. Molenski nodded.

  “Keep him on the line until we have a visual.”

  “Stay on the line with me.”

  ***

  Barely five minutes after they left the doctor’s, Ivan spotted a vehicle following them. It was a kick in the guts. He hadn’t expected that Molenski, even with all his resources and contacts, would be capable of finding them so quickly.

  Ivan thought furiously. There was no way to escape the pursuing vehicle without perhaps causing more complications like police involvement. He wasn’t sure how Molenski had handled the cops arriving on his doorstep, but he knew the Russian was adaptable, and depending on how much he had told the CPD, there might already be an APB out for him… not to mention the killer robot sitting beside him.

  The vehicle tailing them appeared to be content just to follow for the moment, so he forced himself to relax. He sighed when they just missed a green light that would have given them a little more breathing space and perhaps the opportunity to ditch the pursuers.

  “Are you well, Myfriend?” Inga asked him.

  “Da… yes everything is okay.”

  She smiled.

  “I like you, Myfriend.”

  Despite the gravity of their situation, he laughed in surprise.

  “I like you too, Inga.”

  “Do you like me because I am fuckable, Myfriend?”

  “What? No!” he said, blushing.

  “You do not find me highly desirable as a sexual partner?”

  “No, that’s not what I meant. What I meant is… there is more than one way to like someone. I like you, but not only because I want to – not only because you are sexy.”

  A horn sounded behind them. The lights were green. He put his foot on the gas and glanced in the rearview mirror; the headlights of his tail were still three cars back.

  “Sexy - sexually appealing, attractive, or exciting.”

  “Yes. You should say sexy instead of fuckable. It’s much nicer.”

  “Yes, Myfriend,” she said, and put her hand on his thigh, just above the knee. “I like you too, and not just because you are sexy.”

  Ivan glanced at her pretty and very sincere face by the glow of the dashboard. His stomach did a somersault. Grappling with the unfamiliar feelings he’d been experiencing since he first met Inga, he turned his attention back to the road and their tail.

  He hadn’t had time to analyze fully why he had risked everything to rescue her and take her away from Molenski, but her display of affection somehow validated his decision. Made him more determined than ever to escape his former boss’s clutches.

  Ivan smiled grimly as he weaved through the traffic. The best way to lose this particular tail was to cut it off completely. Time for a trip to the shore and a final confrontation with the Russian. A few minutes later the nondescript Hyundai exited the 290 and headed onto West Congress Parkway. His hands were steady on the wheel. Since the shooting, he didn’t suffer any of the adrenaline-charged nerves that used to occur before a confrontation.

  In fact, now that he was resigned to it happening, he was quite clinical about the coming clash. He knew that in ten minutes, he or Molenski would be dead. He was determined to ensure it wasn’t him… if it was, the fate that awaited Inga didn’t bear thinking about.

  Finally, in the distance, he saw street open onto a green space and beyond, the blue water of Monroe Harbor. As luck would have it, the final set of lights leading into the road system of the park switched to amber and then red as they approached. Ivan floored the gas pedal and ran the red light, glancing in the mirror to see the tail blocked as they attempted to change lanes.

  He sped through the empty network of roads that crisscrossed the whole precinct, then swung hard into the parking lot of Grant Park and parked in the darkest corner he could find. Being late Fall, there was virtually nobody around, and that was just the way he wanted it. If things escalated into a gunfight, the fewer witnesses and innocents in the area, the better.

  “Come, Inga.”

  Seeming to understand Ivan’s urgency, the robot stepped out of the car quickly and rushed to keep up with him as he ran down a path. The big man checked the clip in his pistol as he ran, before making sure the two spare clips were still in his pants pocket.

  “Why are you checking yo
ur weapon, Myfriend?” Inga asked, as he put it back in the shoulder holster.

  Perhaps he should have lied, remembering her reaction to his handling of Danny Garcia, but he decided not to. Obviously, something had changed after she had been shot, but it was best to know now if her robotics law programming was going to be a problem when the Russian arrived.

  “There may be trouble,” he said, glancing over his shoulder. “I may have to shoot some people.”

  She nodded, seemingly comfortable with the prospect of human on human violence. They had just passed through the opening of a large hedge when Ivan spotted a pair of headlights coming from the direction they had just drove from. He grasped Inga’s arm and directed her to behind the hedge.

  “Wait here until I call you out.”

  “Yes, Myfriend.”

  He turned to go and then, realizing that he may never get the chance again, he took Inga by her slender shoulders and kissed her on the lips.

  “I love you, Inga.”

  Before she could respond he was on the move, darting back through the opening in the hedge and turning immediately to the right. He would circle around to the back of the parking lot so he could come upon them from behind.

  What the fuck? Did I just say ‘I love you’ to a robot?

  He laughed harshly under his breath. Perhaps Molenski was right; maybe he was losing it.

  Ivan slowed as he approached the parking lot from the west. There was a dark SUV parked near the Hyundai and he could only see one figure from his vantage point, someone leaning over and looking into the car by the light of a phone. Ivan didn’t recognize the man by his build, but of more concern was the fact that there was no one else present. That meant they were already hunting for he and Inga. He would have to make this quick. A broken neck would do it.

  Stealthy, nothing but a shadow, Ivan ran towards the SUV, keeping it between him and the man looking into the car. He stopped at the rear of the vehicle and peeked around the corner, gun held at the ready. The light on the phone had been switched off, making his job a little more difficult as the other man would now be undistracted.

  His target had moved away from the Hyundai and was looking at something in his hands, heading for the path that Ivan and Inga had taken just minutes before. Ivan was confused, this man was sloppy. Surely Molenski didn’t send this clown alone? It didn’t matter and he shrugged the question off. What mattered was a stealthy kill. If there were more, a gunshot would only bring them down upon him.

  Ivan charged.

  The other man didn’t hear Ivan, but perhaps sensed him. He turned around when the big man was still five feet away. He shot both hands into the air, one holding a small gadget, and started to backpedal and shake his head. Ivan didn’t pause; he ran straight at the man. As he closed in, the expression on his target’s face changed from fear to recognition, and he stopped where he stood.

  Ivan didn’t stop but he slowed and instead of shoulder charging the seemingly unarmed man, when he was within reach, he grasped his head in his two hands.

  “Please, wait! I can help you!”

  Ivan squeezed the man’s head between his hands but didn’t twist it… yet.

  “Who the fuck are you?!”

  “My name is Tom Redfern; I work for Genitix. I saw you… I mean, you have the Sinthetica robot, right?”

  Ivan stared at the man. He looked like he had been through the ringer, his face was bruised and puffy, and there was blood on his clothes. He immediately judged him to not be a threat, but his presence raised many questions.

  “How do you know about Inga?” Ivan asked, easing his grip a little.

  “Inga?” asked Redfern, lowering his hands a little. “Oh, you mean the robot. Look, buddy, we don’t have a lot of time if you’ll just show me where she is, I can deactivate her…”

  Ivan began to crush the man’s head again. Redfern made a squeaking sound.

  “You will not touch Inga.”

  “Okay, okay,” said the red-faced technician. “But she’s in some serious trouble – we all are when the authorities catch up with us. I need to remove the card from her to stop her hurting anyone else.”

  “Card? What card?”

  “I haven’t got all night to tell you about it, you just have to trust me,” said Redfern becoming more animated despite realizing that the big man was more than capable of twisting his head off.

  “Tell me,” said Ivan, unrelenting.

  Redfern rolled his eyes.

  “I was delivering the robot to your boss; we got held up by two heavies. I don’t know who they were, but they made me insert a card into… Inga. It overrode all her security and legal programming and let us send her orders remotely. Orders to kill.”

  Suddenly it all made sense to Ivan. Inga going crazy had been an assassination attempt, probably ordered by the Columbians, and instead of a gun, the weapon they were using was a robot that their intended victim had ordered.

  His eyes suddenly narrowed, and he looked intently at Redfern.

  “You helped them?”

  “No! They forced me,” he said, his voice breaking as he became aware that again his life was on a knife’s edge. “They threatened to kill my wife and little girls.”

  Ivan slowly relaxed. Molenski’s pursuit wasn’t as close as he had thought, but there was still little time to waste. He lowered his gun and gestured at the device Redfern was holding.

  “Is this how you tracked us?”

  “Yes, the card I was forced to install contains a GPS tracking chip.”

  Ivan held out his hand. Redfern hesitated, then handed it to him reluctantly. Ivan threw it to the pavement and then smashed it to pieces with his heel.

  “There will be no more tracking.”

  Redfern flinched as the big man grabbed his shoulder and patted him down, locating the gun quickly and pulling it out. He looked questioningly at the technician.

  “It’s not mine; I took it from the men after… after I shot them.”

  Ivan stared at him a little longer and then slid the gun into the belt of his pants.

  “You won’t need it anymore. Come.”

  Ivan gave him a gentle shove, propelling him along the path towards Inga’s hiding spot.

  “So, you’re a technician? You can help me with Inga…”

  They rounded a bend, and pulled up in surprise. Inga was standing in the middle of the path staring up at the full moon.

  “Inga! I told you to wait in the bushes.”

  She looked around at them.

  “Yes Myfriend, but I grew bored.”

  Redfern’s eyes widened at this declaration. The machine was clearly faulty and probably a great danger to any humans it met in its current state.

  How the fuck am I supposed to deactivate it with the big guy watching over me.

  “Who is this man?”

  “He is a technician from Genitix.”

  Redfern watched the robot warily as they walked up to her. His guts churned nervously, he’d seen what the machine was capable of and knew she could flip at any second. Her disconcerting stare only added to his uneasiness.

  “How do you want me to help her?” he asked.

  “She keeps talking about how she needs to run a full diagnostic check, but I don’t want her… I don’t want her to change back.”

  Relief flooded Redfern.

  “Oh good! Yes, I know. We can’t risk her reverting to the new programming. I saw the damage she did. Look, the only way we can be sure she won’t go assassin again is to remove the card and deactivate her until the authorities…”

  The gun was placed against his forehead so quickly that Redfern didn’t even have time to flinch. He put his hands up, his eyebrows raised.

  “What? What did I say?”

  “You will not fucking deactivate her. I just want you to make sure there is no long-term damage and that she doesn’t turn again. I want her to stay as she is now.”

  Redfern nodded.

  “Fine, I can’t do anything he
re, though. We need to get her to the Genitix lab, so I can remove the card and run her diagnostic check.”

  Ivan looked at him suspiciously.

  “If I remove the card, it will mean no one else can control her remotely.”

  “Fine, but any tricks and I will shoot you through the head,” Ivan said, in a flat voice.

  Redfern didn’t doubt his sincerity. He swallowed hard and gave Ivan a nod. He would have to play this by ear. Hopefully, an opportunity would arise once they were safely back at Genitix.

  “Good, hurry, we have to go,” ordered Ivan.

  Two minutes later they were in the SUV that Redfern had commandeered and heading out of the park. They were almost to the turn back onto West Congress Parkway when a black stretch Mercedes sped past them going in the opposite direction. Ivan recognized the license plate immediately but kept his speed steady as they merged into the traffic and headed into the city.

  Molenski was close. But not close enough.

  “Show me the way,” he said to Redfern, after a glance in the mirror to make sure the Mercedes hadn’t turned to follow them.

  ***

  “Have them search the whole fucking park,” snapped Molenski, when Andre and the other three jogged back to inform him they had found no sign of Ivan or the robot.

  “You heard him!” shouted Andre.

  He thought it was stupid to waste any more time here, but given the mood Molenski was in, he wasn’t going to risk saying anything. He turned to follow his men.

  “Nyet! Not you, idiot!” yelled Molenski.

  Andre turned, his face red. Molenski kicked out at the ruined device on the pavement.

  “I want you to get in touch with that FBI guy you were dealing with for the Obermeyer job. See if he can do something to resurrect this fucking GPS and find out what it was tracking. Whoever it was must have been in that SUV we passed.”

  Andre swallowed a sarcastic reply. When they had passed the SUV on the way into the park, he had suggested it might be worth following and pulling them over just in case. Molenski had shut him down.

  “You are probably right Boss,” he said, without a trace of irony. “I will call him now.”

 

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