Read Torn Page 18


  “You shouldn’t have come,” he whispered.

  I didn’t say anything.

  “I hate you,” he said.

  I put my arms around him, and he let me, and, dry-eyed and heartless and mechanical, we held each other up.

  So what do you do?

  What do you do when there’s nothing to do next? When it’s over, when whatever rage and panic drove you from one moment to the next disappears, and there’s no more must do this, must go there, must stop him, must save him? When you can’t let the day end, because today was the last day you saw him, the last day you heard his voice, the last day he knew? Today, when the sun came up, when you opened your eyes, he was still in the world; today is still a world he knew, and so is still a world you understand. Today he’s still an is, his loss something still happening, an unfolding event, a sentence with a question mark; today there’s still a what happens next.

  What do you do when today ends and you know tomorrow will open on a world in which he’s dead? Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow, until he’s a thing that once happened, a thing you used to know.

  People use words like “unthinkable.” But what do you do when the unthinkable happens, and refusing to believe it won’t bring him back?

  How can anything seem unthinkable anymore, when you’re a machine, a living impossibility, a stack of memories in a head-shaped box, when you, the real you, died almost two years ago, just like he did?

  How could you be stupid enough to forget that the unthinkable happens all the time?

  Happens to you.

  Which is why you should know exactly what to do: what you always do, what you have to do. Nothing. Because reality doesn’t need your permission to exist; tomorrow doesn’t need your approval to dawn. You go home, to a place that was never your home, with a sister who by her own choice is no longer your sister and a brother whose shared grief makes him family in a way that shared skin, shared circuitry, shared manufacturer never could. You go home and you lie in a bed that used to be his and you think about uploading the way he uploaded, following his lead, wherever it takes you. You think that if you really loved him, you wouldn’t hesitate; you would want his infection burning through your artificial veins.

  You would, but you don’t, and so you close your eyes and are grateful that you don’t have to try to sleep with memories of his face burning the insides of your lids, that you don’t have to bury your face in a pillow so the others don’t hear you sob and scream, that your hands are still and unshaken. You’re grateful, for once, that your body can’t feel, that the truth stays lodged in your mind, where it can’t hurt, that you can close your eyes and shift your consciousness in that familiar, deeply inhuman way, flicking an internal switch. It’s not like falling asleep, fading away. It’s like one moment you’re awake and in agony and wondering how long it will be before you forget the sound of his voice.

  And the next moment—

  You’re gone.

  When I woke up the next morning, Riley was still dead.

  Zo was curled up next to me in bed, her eyes slitted and fixed on Jude. I suspected he had been up all night. Maybe watching me, to make sure I followed through on my promise not to upload a backup, just in case Riley’s wasn’t an isolated case. Or he just hadn’t been able to face the end of the day. Riley’s last day.

  He sat with his back to the wall, eyes open but darting sightlessly back and forth. It was the telltale flicker of his long lashes that gave it away: He was linked into the network, staring at us but seeing his zone or a vidlife or, for all I knew, the president’s latest sex vid. Anything to keep the world away.

  I poked Zo. “I know you’re awake.”

  For a moment she didn’t move, like she could fool me. Then she threw in an admirable pantomime of “waking up.” “I am now.”

  “Uh-huh.”

  She jerked her head at Jude. “Can he hear us when he’s doing that?”

  “With perfect clarity,” Jude said, gaze still blind.

  Zo flinched at his voice. I wondered how long it would be before she stopped seeing him the way he’d been in the city, like an animal.

  “Get up,” Jude said abruptly, closing his eyes in the long, slow blink that I knew would disconnect him from the network. “We’ve got a problem.”

  I almost laughed.

  He smiled weakly. “I mean a new one.”

  It was the lead story on every news zone. Ben’s virus analogy had been more apt than he knew: Riley was patient zero. The infection had spread through the system, and any mech who connected their uplink before word got out had been wiped. Backing up, the process that was supposed to be our ticket to eternal life, now meant death. The permanent, org kind, from which we were meant to be exempt. Jude was already flying across the network, checking in with every mech he knew—and too many of them didn’t answer. The rest of us—the “lucky” ones—were dying too, just more slowly. The virus had wiped out our stored backups, and obviously we couldn’t make more. These bodies were now all we had.

  It was strange, this sudden awareness of vulnerability. It was supposed to be the reason the orgs hated us, the reason there would always be an us and a them. They died; we didn’t. And now that we were just like them, it meant … nothing? Meant only that now they had the opportunity to get rid of us one by one. Vids popped up of flash mobs surrounding mechs, dismantling them piece by piece, a helpful how-to of the unmaking of a person. Like the virus, or whatever it was, had granted ultimate permission, had turned us from a threat into a target, literally overnight, even though nothing had changed except our mortality, except the fact that erasing us now meant erasing us for good.

  “That’s what this is,” Jude said, still inhabiting some other plane of preternatural calm. “Genocide.”

  We watched the story unfold on the news zones, scrambled to track down the mechs we knew, and didn’t speculate about who was behind it. Partly because we’d already settled on the Brotherhood as the most likely suspect; partly because we were afraid they weren’t acting alone. If any of this was BioMax’s fault, if this was retribution, then that made it our fault. That made Riley our fault.

  The BioMax connection surfaced within the hour, an hour that felt like a week, barricaded in that tiny apartment, poring over the vids, just like old times at Quinn’s estate, when we’d locked ourselves behind electrified walls and try to decipher who hated us and what they planned next.

  It came in as a joint announcement, simulcast to all the major news zones and dumped into the personal zones of me, Jude, and probably any mech they could track. Rai Savona and our old friend M. Poulet, appearing side by side, faces somber and pale. “When I founded the Brotherhood of Man, I did so to elevate and illuminate, to remind the human race of our unique destiny in God’s plan.”

  Zo snorted. But it was a mark of how serious things were that Jude held back whatever retort must have been on his tongue. I did the same.

  “I blame myself for this tragedy,” Savona continued. “A tragedy born from the mind of an unstable teenager.”

  No.

  “I felt I had to atone for my own mistakes, and so I allowed myself to overlook the zealot hiding in our midst. I ceded control to a very young, very damaged boy—I gave him a platform and a voice, and I have only myself to blame for his wrongheaded actions.”

  “The Honored Rai Savona came to us with his suspicions, and our investigation confirmed them,” M. Poulet said. “Auden Heller masterminded the release of an insidious virus directed at download recipients, or mechs, as they often refer to themselves. We’re doing everything we can to apprehend Heller, and our brightest minds are at work on the virus. In the meantime we implore the public to be respectful—”

  “Respectful,” a pretty word for “not murderous, bloodthirsty, and mad with a furious skinner bloodlust.”

  “—and we assure all download recipients that the problem will soon be taken care of. But we remind all download recipients that this is a very serious matter. As of now, for
ty-seven erasures have been confirmed. Several hundred clients remain unaccounted for. The source of infection appears to be the uplink connection, so this is crucial: Do not upload your backup memories until we have this problem solved. More information will follow, as soon as we have it.”

  Forty-seven “erasures.” I wondered if they’d all gone by accident. Or if some had been left behind, like me, and just decided it would be easier to let the virus run its course.

  It seemed they’d come to the end of the script, when Savona leaned in and grabbed the microphone, eyes burning into the camera lens. “Auden, if you’re out there, if you’re listening to this, please come to me. I understand, son. You’ve been hurt, you wanted to lash out and hurt them back, but this is not the way. Come home to the Brotherhood, and help us fix this. Save yourself.”

  “He’s lying,” I said.

  “Obviously,” Jude said. “This has Savona’s stink all over it.”

  “No, I mean, he’s lying about Auden.”

  “Don’t you ever get tired of defending him?” Jude asked. “The guy shot you. What else does he have to do to convince you he’s not on your side? He thinks you’re the freaking devil.”

  “And you think he is. So you’re not exactly objective on the subject.”

  “And you are?”

  “I’m not defending him,” I said.

  “Really? Because it sounds like—”

  “I’m not defending him for his sake. The more we know about what’s going on, the better chance we have of stopping it.”

  “Except we don’t know that Savona’s lying just because you feel it. There’s a little difference between a fact and a wish.”

  “So you’re saying you think Auden’s behind this?” I asked him.

  “Honestly?” Jude paused. “I don’t think that twonk could plan a picnic, much less a genocide.”

  “So—”

  “So who cares? Either Savona’s telling one lie, or he’s telling a bunch of them. It’s beside the point.”

  He was right. The point was someone trying to kill us. BioMax, according to the private messages it had sent out to its mech mailing list, was working to “contain” the problem and “strongly suggested” that all download recipients report to a facility they’d designated as Safe Haven, to protect us from org violence and any further attacks while we were in such a “vulnerable state.”

  A state no more vulnerable than any orgs on any given day, but somehow it felt like walking around with a knife at our throats. Because what if this was just phase one? Org viruses mutated; maybe this one would, too. Maybe in its next variation it would kill us where we stood. We drew power from a wireless grid—if they could hack the servers, no reason to think they couldn’t hack the grid, too. Poison us from afar. They’d wiped out our backups—wasn’t the obvious next step to eliminate us once and for all? I didn’t see how any Safe Haven could keep us safe from that.

  HIDDEN

  “Maybe this would finally make us even.”

  Two of us had nowhere to go—nowhere safe, at least. But one of us did. So I decided to start with her, the one person I could help, or at least protect. The one part of this situation I could control: Zo. I sat her down on Riley’s couch, but I stayed on my feet. It was better to say this from above, to loom. Jude sat at the narrow kitchen table on the other side of the room, plainly watching—but without ejecting him from the apartment, this was as much distance from him as I was going to get.

  “I think you should go back home,” I told Zo.

  Then, reconsidering my tone and the presumed response, I said it again, and this time it wasn’t a suggestion. “You should go home.”

  “The hell I should.”

  “I know you don’t want to—”

  “Not. Going. To. There’s a difference. Never speaking to either of those assholes again. Never setting foot in that house.”

  “Zo, I know that’s how you feel now.”

  “You sound like him,” she said.

  It was a low blow.

  “It’s safer there,” I told her.

  “Then you should go.”

  “Zo, come on, I can’t just hide out and wait for this to go away.”

  “Because suddenly you’re this brave, conquering hero? Since when do you care about anything but whether your microskirt matches your boots?”

  “You don’t know me anymore,” I said, coldly. “And that was your choice. So you don’t get to have an opinion on what I care about.”

  “I’m sorry,” she said. “You want me to say it again? I’m sorry. I’m sorry!” she shouted. “I’m sorry I’m sorry I’m sorry!”

  “Stop it!”

  “Then you stop,” she shot back. “Stop throwing all that crap in my face every time we disagree about something. So I screwed up. Fine. Like you’ve never done that. Like you’re perfect.”

  “I never said I was perfect.”

  “You didn’t have to say it.”

  “And you didn’t have to say you hated me,” I reminded her, “and that I wasn’t your sister, and that you wished I was dead. But you did. All of it.”

  “And I fucked your boyfriend. Don’t forget about that one.” Jude couldn’t stop himself. “Did she just say—”

  “Shut up.”

  Wonder of wonders, he did.

  “That doesn’t matter anymore,” I told Zo. “I don’t care about him. Or any of that.”

  “Well, maybe there are things I don’t care about anymore either. Maybe there are some things I thought that … I don’t think anymore. Things I said …”

  “I told you, it doesn’t matter.”

  “You say that, but you still won’t trust me.”

  “It’s not about that,” I said. “I want you to be safe.”

  “Since when?”

  “Since always.”

  She snorted. “Like you cared about that when I was helping you sneak into the temple. Or hack Dad’s files or crash BioMax. You wanted me along because I was useful, and now suddenly I’m not? This has nothing to do with me being some weak little girl that needs your protecting. You’re not that dumb.”

  Except that I was. Zo was right. Things were no more dangerous—for her, at least—than they’d ever been. And before, I hadn’t hesitated to let her help, no matter the risks. Her life, her call. But now …

  I could have put it on Riley, on the fact that now I understood how things could go wrong and people could disappear. But that was more a reminder than a news flash. It wasn’t that I suddenly understood that I could lose Zo; it was that I suddenly couldn’t stand the prospect. Somehow she had become my sister again. My little sister. Which meant, somehow, she’d become my responsibility.

  Obviously, I couldn’t tell her that.

  “It’s because you’re a mech and I’m an org, right?” Zo said flatly. “All that bullshit about how we’re all the same, all those speeches you gave, it was all crap, right? In the end you draw a line: you on one side, me on the other.”

  And because it would be easier than convincing her she needed protection—because it would be easier than telling her the truth—I let her believe it. She proved me right by doing what I needed her to do. She left.

  “Didn’t see that coming,” Jude said, once she was gone.

  I joined him at the table, slumping down in the second chair. It was missing a leg, and wobbled precariously as I sat down. Perfect, I thought, bitter and exhausted. Even the furniture had an opinion on my life. Though for the metaphor to really work, the chair would have to dump me on my ass just when I’d finally let myself relax. I was sure that could be arranged.

  “Kind of harsh, don’t you think?” Jude added.

  “Like you don’t believe all that, us and them.”

  “You don’t.”

  “Are we done talking about my sister?”

  Jude raised his hands in surrender: Done.

  Good.

  “So what now?” I said. “We obviously can’t trust BioMax—we can’t let anyone t
rust BioMax. But that’s not exactly an action plan.”

  “They’re right about one thing,” he said. “It’s going to be open season on mechs, and without the backups, dead is dead. We have to get somewhere safe.”

  “Safe Haven?” I said, incredulous. “You’re joking.”

  “It’s not the only option. Let’s not forget, while some of us were busy dancing on BioMax’s string, others of us were planning ahead.” He smiled for the first time since Riley. “‘Some of us’ equals you, in case you didn’t catch that. ‘Others of us’ would be me.”

  “As far as I can tell, all you did was hole up in a filthy, irradiated dead zone—” I stopped, suddenly understanding what he was getting at. “You’re not serious.”

  His smile widened.

  “It’s been the plan all along,” I realized. “You’re probably glad to finally have an excuse.”

  The smile vanished. “I didn’t want it to happen. I knew it would happen. There’s a difference.”

  “So you want us to run and hide.”

  “You have a better idea?”

  “There’s got to be something better than holing up like refugees—like animals—in some kind of toxic waste dump.”

  “Not all of us grew up like you did,” he snarled. “For some of us it would practically be luxury.”

  “Don’t give me that city-rat crap,” I warned him. “This isn’t about me being spoiled. It’s about this not being a solution.”

  “It’s a first step,” he admitted.

  “It’s a crappy one.”

  “And your brilliant plan is … ?”

  I didn’t want to hide. I wanted to stay, to fight. I wanted to avenge Riley and destroy BioMax and the Brotherhood and make the world, this world, safe for mechs. As Jude would have pointed out, if I’d been foolish enough to say it out loud, it was a pretty speech.