Replicant night
( Blade Runner - 3 )
Kevin Wayne Jeter
The Blade Runner adventure continues in this dark and stylish novel of nonstop futuristic suspense as ex-blade runner Rick Deckard must cross the most dangerous line of all—the line between human and android.
Rick Deckard had left his career as a blade runner and the gritty, neon-lit labyrinth of L.A. behind, going to the emigrant colony of Mars to live incognito with Sarah Tyrell. But when a movie about Deckard’s life begins shooting, old demons start to surface. The most bizarre and mysterious is a talking briefcase—the voice belonging to Deckard’s most feared adversary. The briefcase tells Deckard that he’s the key to a replicant revolution back on Earth. Deckard must deliver the briefcase—the secret contents—to the replicants of the outer colonies before he is tracked down and killed. Is the briefcase lying? Who is really after Deckard? And who is the little girl who claims her name is Rachael? Once again Deckard is on the run from a sinister force determined to destroy him—and already closing in.
Replicant Night
by K.W. Jeter.
For Russ Galen
Wake up . . .
He’d heard those words, that voice, before. Deckard wondered, for a moment, if he were dreaming. But if he were dreaming—I’d be able to breathe, he thought.
And right now, in this segment of time, all he could feel were the doubled fists at his throat, the tight grip on the front of his jacket that lifted him clear of the Los Angeles street’s mirror-wet and rubbled surface. In his vision, as he dangled from the choking hook of factory-made bone and flesh, all that remained was the face of Leon Kowalski and his brown-toothed grin of fierce, delighted triumph.
The other’s stiff-haired knuckles thrust right up under Deckard’s chin, forcing his head back enough to make him dizzily imagine the passage of air snapping free from the straining lungs in his chest. He could just make out, at the lower limit of his vision, his own hands grabbing onto Kowalski’s wrists, thick and sinew-taut, more like the armatures of a lethal machine than anything human. His hands were powerless, unable to force apart the replicant’s clench.
“Wake up . . .”
The same words, a loop of past event repeating inside Deckard’s head. An echo, perhaps; because he knew the other—the replicant, his murderer—had said it only once. But he’d known it was coming. Those words . . . and his own death.
Everything had to happen, just as it had before. Just as he knew it would.
Echo, dream, memory . . . or vision; it didn’t matter. What was important was that there had been a gun in Deckard’s hands, in the hands that were now clawing to let desperate air into his throat. His gun, the heavy black piece that was standard issue in the LAPD’s blade runner unit, a piece that could blow a hole through the back of a fleeing replicant and an even larger, ragged-edged hole through its front.
And that had happened as well. Echo of time, echo of sound, the impact of the gun’s roaring explosion travelling up Deckard’s outstretched arms, locked and aimed, as it had so many times and so many replicants before. While the sound of death itself had slammed off the city’s close-pressed walls, the intricate neon of kanji and corporate logos shivering as though with a sympathetic fear, the honed leading edge of the shot and its lower-pitched trail rolling over the street’s crowded, incurious faces. All of them as used to death as Deckard was, just from living in L.A.; he knew they could watch him being pulled apart by Kowalski with the same indifferent gazes they had swung toward the replicant Zhora’s bullet-driven terminal arc.
When he’d still had the gun, he’d walked with the black piece dangling at his side, its weight pulling down his hand the same way it’d dragged rock-like the shoulder holster strapped beneath his long coat. Rivulets of L.A.’s monsoon rains and his own sweat had oozed beneath his shirt cuff, across the back of his hand, into the checked, death-heated grip inside the aching curve of his palm. He’d walked across spear-like shards of glass crunching under his shoes.
The frames of the store windows through which Zhora’s dying body had crashed were transformed into gaping mouths ringed with transparent, blood-flecked teeth. He’d walked and stood over her, his sight framing a vision of empty hands and empty face, eyes void as photo-receptors unplugged from any power source. All life fled, leaked from the raw hole between her hidden breasts, dead replicant flesh looking just the same as human. The furious energy, the animal grace and fear, that had impelled her dodging and running through the streets’ closing trap, spent and diluted by the drops of tear-warm rain spattering across the pavement’s red lace. Deckard’s energy, that of the hunter, also gone. The chase, from the moment Zhora had wheeled about in her dressing room at Taffy Lewis’s club down in Chinatown’s First Sector and nailed him with a hard blow to the forehead, then all the weaving among crowds and dead-run stalking over the metal roofs of the traffic-stalled cars—that hadn’t exhausted him. It’d been the end of the chase, the shot, his own will inside the bullet. That had struck and killed, a red kiss centered on her naked shoulder blades. That had seemed, for a moment, to kill him as well.
Exhaustion had made it possible for the other escaped replicant to get the drop on Deckard, to pull him between two segmented refuse haulers, then smack the gun out of his grip like swatting a fly and send it spinning out toward the street. So exhausted that he hadn’t been surprised at all when Kowalski, eyes maddened by the witnessing of the female’s death, had picked him up like a rag doll and slammed him against the side of one hauler, spine leaving a buckled indentation in the carapacelike metal. And words, spat out angry and sneering, something with which Kowalski could hammer the killer.
How old am I? Then— My birthday’s April 10, 2017. How long do I live?
Deckard had told him the answer, gasped it out with the last of his breath.
Four years. That was how long all the Nexus-6 replicants had been given. They carried their own clock-ticking deaths inside their cells, more certain than any blade runner’s gun.
The answer hadn’t been to Leon Kowalski’s liking, though he must have known it already. His eyes had gone wider and even more crazed. More than you. More than the man dangling from his fists had to live
“Wake up!”
But that’s wrong, thought Deckard. The other’s face, mottled in his sight with the black swirling dots of oxygen starvation, grinned up at him. The operating remnants of his brain could remember what had happened before. Kowalski hadn’t shouted the words, not that loud; he’d mouthed them softly, as though savoring their taste between his teeth. Those words, and the words that’d come after.
And he didn’t lift me so far off the ground . . .
“Wake up! Time to die!”
He could feel himself dangling in air, could hear the replicant’s voice, the words shouted or whispered—it didn’t matter now. It hadn’t mattered before.
All that mattered was the crushing pressure on his throat, the weight of his own body against Kowalski’s fists squeezing off the city’s humid air from his lungs. The other’s words roared inside his head, each syllable a pulse of blood against his skull’s thin shell of bone. Now the voice, the shout, seemed to hammer right at his ears. Maybe that’s why it sounds so loud, thought a cold, abstracted part of Deckard, watching himself die. Because I know .
He knew what happened next. What would happen, had already happened; foreordained, scripted, bolted to the iron rails of the past, unswerving as those of the rep train that rolled in the darkness beneath the dark city.
Time to die . . .
He wondered what was taking so long. Where is she? wondered Deckard. She was supposed to have been here by now .
Kowalski’s fists lifted him higher, h
is spine arching backward. The sky wheeled in Deckard’s sight, needles of stars and gouts of flame penetrating the storm clouds above the L.A. towers. Police spinners drew distant, slow-motion traces of light, while the hectoring U.N. advert blimp cruised lower, seemingly within reach of his hand if he could’ve taken it away from the replicant’s choking grasp. Emigrant vistas swam across the giant screen imbedded in the midst of the blimp’s spiked antennae; an even larger voice boomingly cajoled him to seek a new life in the off-world colonies. What a good idea, that other part of him mused. His old life was almost gone.
The city’s faces roiled across his sight; all of them, indifferent or hostile, eyes hidden behind black visor strips or magnified and glittering behind chrome-ringed fish-eye lenses. Chemical-laced tears ran down pallid cheeks, laughter broke past doubled ranks of filed teeth; a row of Taiwanese Schwinn clones jangled the bells on their handlebars, to cut through and then be swallowed up by the two-way rivers of foot and motor traffic. The black dots in Deckard’s vision had grown larger and started to coalesce. Beyond them, he could see another face, made of a grid of photons. A woman in geisha-lite drag, Euro-ized kabukoid makeup and perfect black-shellac hair; she smiled with ancient suavity at the Swiss pharmaceutical capsule on her fingertips, then swallowed it, her coquette smile and glance turning even more mysterious.
He didn’t know her name, or even what she was selling; he had never known, during all the time he had walked and lived and killed inside the traplike city, and the woman had floated above him like some anonymous, disdainful angel. In his anoxic delirium, he could imagine that she was about to lean down from the ad-screen and bestow a kiss upon him .
The Asian woman’s face disappeared, replaced by the only one that mattered.
Kowalski pulled him close, not for a kiss but to snap the vertebrae at the hinge of Deckard’s neck. He’d be paralyzed before he was dead, but only for a few seconds, until Kowalski finished him off.
“Wake up! Time to die!”
Deckard heard the words again, but knew it was only memory. He saw Kowalski’s smile and nothing else, as the replicant jabbed two fingers toward Deckard’s eye sockets.
Maybe they finally got it right, he thought. This time it’ll be different . . .
But it wasn’t. Even as he looked down at the other’s face, time started up again, the loop running as it had before. As it had so long ago. The replicant’s expression changed to one of stunned bewilderment. The light behind Kowalski’s eyes dwindled to a spark, then died out, as the life that the Tyrrell Corporation had given him rushed from the red flower, torn flesh and white thorns of bone splinters, that had burst from his forehead. The bullet had passed all the way through and vanished, tumbling somewhere beyond Deckard’s shoulder.
The thing that had been Kowalski crumpled forward, falling onto Deckard and trapping him against the shining wet pavement. Deckard clawed out from beneath him and stood upright again, regaining his balance and his breath. His vision shifted, from blurred to focussed, close to medium distance; Rachael stood at the mouth of the alley, swathed in high-collared fur, the gun that Kowalski had knocked away now clasped in both her hands—it must have landed right at her feet—and trembling from the shock of its firing, the slight motion of the trigger that had placed the steel-jacketed bullet like a quick finger tap at the back of Kowalski’s head. She looked dazed, lips parted to draw in her own held breath; just as though she had never killed anyone before. As though this were the first time this had happened.
His gaze went back down to the dead replicant at his feet. Or supposedly dead.
He’s doing a good job, thought Deckard. Kowalski looked as dead as a real corpse.
“Come on, get up—” Deckard kept his voice lowered, so that none of the on-set microphones would pick it up. “It’s a wrap, they got it all on tape. You can get up now.”
Blood welled from the hole in Kowalski’s shattered brow.
Then Deckard knew it was real.
“What the hell!” At the edge of the soundstage, where the fake streets, the re-created Los Angeles, gave way to bare dry concrete and steel, the flooring laced with thick power cables and data conduits like black snakes—Deckard stood up, angrily ripping the headphones away from his ears. The folding chair toppled over as he threw the ’phones at the central monitor, the one that had shown the view from the eyes of the other Deckard, the fake one, the one that had been dangling from the now-dead replicant’s fists. Across the smaller screens, the angles of all the other video-cams unfolded like a magician’s pack of cards.
“Now what?” The close-up on the fake Rachael showed her dropping out of character, the look of shock on her face transmuted to that of a disgusted professional as she let the heavy gun hang at the end of her arm. She sighed wearily. “Christ, this shoot’s taking forever.”
Deckard ignored her, striding past the cameras on their automated tracking booms, the skeletal apparatuses of light and event. The drizzle from the overhead rain gantry ran off his jacket sleeves, the grid underneath the soundstage sucking away the excess from the glossily photogenic puddles. He pushed aside the faux Deckard, the actor playing him, and stood looking down at Kowalski. At what was left of the replicant, the bleeding artificial flesh.
“Please A hand clutched ineffectually at his elbow. “Mr. Deckard . . . you can’t just—”
He turned angrily upon the production assistant, a tiny androgynous figure with heavy retro black-framed glasses. “It wasn’t supposed to happen this way!” He jabbed his finger at the assistant, who fended it off with an upraised clipboard. “I was told you weren’t going to kill anyone!” The circumference of his gaze tinged with red as he looked back toward the crew ringing the soundstage. “Where’s Urbenton?”
That was the name of the director. Who was conspicuously missing, the folding chair that had usually supported his pudgy frame now unoccupied. Chickenshit sonuva bitch—Deckard felt his teeth grinding together. The director must’ve snuck out after the video recorders had started rolling, while Deckard had been wrapped in the view from the cam monitors, watching the re-creation of his own past. Urbenton would’ve known that Deckard would go ballistic when a real bullet, from a real gun, wound up churning through someone’s brain.
“Come on, man The actor playing him—not a replicant like the one who had been playing Kowalski, but an actual human-tried out as peacemaker. “It can’t all be special effects, you know. Sometimes you gotta go for realism.”
“Get away from me.” Revulsion worked its way up Deckard’s throat, choking him as though the replicant’s big hands had been around his own neck instead of the other man’s. The actor didn’t even look that much like him, or at least not yet.
Like most of the talent in the video industry, in addition to the remote cam implanted behind one eye, the actor also had barely visible tracker dots sewn under his skin, so that in postproduction another’s face could be ceegeed over the one he’d been born with.
That new face would’ve been the real Deckard’s. But not now, he fumed. Not if I can help it. “So where is he?” Deckard stopped just short of gathering up the front of the assistant’s collar in his hand and squeezing tight, the way the dead Kowalski had done to the human actor. “Where’s Urbenton?”
“I . . . I don’t know The assistant retreated, sweating hands clasped to the clipboard. “He got called away.”
“Yeah, right. I bet.” Deckard stepped over the corpse and started toward the soundstage’s big rolling doors and the interlocking corridors and spaces of the studio complex beyond. “I’ll find him myself. He’s got one hell of a lot of explaining to do.”
He didn’t look over his shoulder as he strode away. But he could sense the fake L.A. dying its own death, the constant artificial rain stopping, the vehicles halting and being shut off in the middle of the crowded street, the actors and extras walking off the set. The replica blimp, a tenth the size of the one that had once actually floated above the city, dangled inert from the overhead riggi
ng, adscreen blank and faceless.
The city’s walls parted as the grips moved the scenery back. There was nothing behind them except dust and stubbed-out cigarettes, and a few scattered drops of blood.
A silver crescent in the sky, hanging below him. Dave Holden thought it looked like some kind of Islamic emblem, complete to the glittering star between the points of its horns. The artificial moon’s gravitational field tilted the skiff’s gimballed pilot’s seat, hanging him upside down inside the tiny interplanetary craft. Inside the cramped cockpit area, there was barely room enough for himself and the cargo strapped onto the empty seat beside him.
Which spoke now: “You’re in big trouble, pal.” The briefcase kept its voice level and calm, as though unconcerned with human problems.
Holden glanced over at the briefcase. Plain black, a decent grade of leatherette, chrome snaps and bits around the handle. It looked like the exact sort that millions of junior execs carried into office towers every morning, back on Earth. By rights, it shouldn’t have been talking at all; that it was doing so indicated the long-standing personal relationship between the two of them.
“Big, big trouble.” The briefcase continued its simple, ominous pronouncements.
“I know—” Holden reached out to the control panel and dialed the skiff’s guidance system toward the silver crescent’s intake beam. “I breathe trouble.”
More than metaphor; the lungs in his chest, and the heart between them, were efficient constructs of Teflon and surgical steel. His original cardiopulmonary system had been blown out his back by an escaped replicant named Leon Kowalski. Back on Earth, back in the L.A. from which he and the briefcase had just flown. That bullet had been a couple of years ago; there had been others before and since then, some of which he’d fired, others that’d been fired at him. The bio-mechanical lungs sucked whiffs of imminent death and left them on his tongue. Tasting like the ashes of the cigarettes the LAPD doctors had made him give up.
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