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Authors: Hayley Stone

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BOOK: Counterpart
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“About time,” I say, wheezing and massaging my back, while the Poles begin securing the room. I don't wait to watch the horror replay in their eyes, as it did in Larry's. Instead, I start back toward the machine, despite the captain's protests that it's not safe. I have to bite back a snarky remark at that.

“You want to help?” I reply. “Have your people keep their EMP-Gs trained on the machine.
No bullets.
Unless you want to play Dodge the Ricochet. I just need a few minutes.”

Ulrich sighs audibly, shaking his head, like a father just receiving the news he needs to babysit the kids for another couple of hours. This wasn't exactly the short trip I promised.

“To do what, exactly?” Captain Paszek asks me. Her deep voice doesn't match her petite frame and girlish features, but I don't doubt for a moment that her ability matches her rank. You don't make captain during an apocalypse on good looks. Compared to one of her soldiers gagging over there in the corner, Paszek appears downright stoic. Her eyes focus on me, and me alone. “Commander?”

I meet Paszek's gaze while she lazily fires at the machine, subduing it once more. “You're just going to have to trust me, Captain. Now,” I glance at a nearby countertop, “someone hand me that saw.”

Chapter 12

I deliver the head of the machine to Zelda, carrying it under my arm like a chatty watermelon. After it rebooted postsurgery, I could have kept it offline—Ulrich even offered to help with that, because of course he did—but I failed to see the point. Detached from its body, the machine's cranium poses no real threat, except to my sanity. It talks the whole way down to the military level, jabbing me with stories I should know, but don't, trying to prove its identity and debunk mine.

“If you're Rhona Long,” it remarks slyly, sounding more like me than ever before, “why don't you remember that time at the Fisherman's Wharf with Mom and Samuel? When Mom yelled herself hoarse at that man who killed a seal right in front of us?”

“Who says I don't remember that?”
Fisherman's Wharf,
I think.
Seal. Samuel. Blood.
But none of the words provoke any sort of memory; it's too far back. Lost in translation.

“What about visiting Disneyland Paris with Camus for the first time? I was disappointed because Indiana Jones and the Temple of Peril was closed for maintenance. I even bought a fedora and everything.” A smile slides into the machine's voice. “Then I made Camus ride Big Thunder Mountain with me until he started feeling sick, and we got drinks in Pluto-shaped cups at that stand near the castle…”

“Okay,” I say loudly, before pulling my voice down to a whisper as people pass me in the hall. “Now you're just showing off.” I've bundled the machine's head in a bloodless, white lab coat, but I'm still receiving odd looks. Maybe I should've taken Ulrich up on his offer. To be fair, as far as anyone knows, I have a rather noisy walkie in the pocket of this coat. And I just happen to be talking through the fabric. Like a freaking crazy person.

“Do you remember it?” The machine is a dog with a bone.

“Yes. Of course.”

“Vocal oscillations indicate stress. You're lying.”

And that's not even the half of it. The machine's indignant anger surfaces briefly, between long passages where it's either bargaining with me to make it whole again, or softly crying. I peek once into the folds of the lab coat and spy realistic tears sliding down its smooth digital cheeks. Its eyes get just as red as mine when I weep. I quietly and quickly cover the head back up. If I didn't know any better, I'd think the machine was traveling through the five stages of loss. And, quite frankly, I'm too damn tired to deal with the implications of that.

For my part, I try not to acknowledge it during its disturbing pity parties, but several times it snares me with its questions.

“Why is this happening to me?”

There's a tremor in its voice. So human. It sounds so terribly human. And afraid.

“Why me?” it asks, just as we—
I
, I remind myself,
there is no we here
—step off the elevator onto the military level. “Please. Tell me.”

“I don't know,” I finally answer, adjusting the bundled head so it rests a little more comfortably beneath my arm. “I'm sorry.”

Zelda is not nearly so sympathetic.

“The hell?” is all she manages before slapping some kind of electromagnetic bolt on the machine's head, knocking it out with a sharp, static sizzle. With her good arm, she tugs at the end of one of her dreadlocks. “Seriously, Long. What. The. Actual. F—”

“Yeah,” I cut in. “I'm just as surprised as you. Believe me.”

I honestly can't tell whether Zelda is amazed or angry as she rotates the head back and forth, spinning it this way and that way on her work table, trying to get a good look at it.

“Ulrich and a few others are carting the rest of the body here as we speak,” I continue. “I told them to be discreet. For obvious reasons. So, what do you think?”

Her lips are moving almost imperceptibly, but she's not actually saying anything aloud. It's like her mouth is struggling to follow the rapid speed of her thoughts. I watch more closely, and realize she's repeating the same phrase.
What is this? What is this?
With the occasional swear word thrown in for good measure. Yeah. I know the feeling.

“Is it possible someone created this model toward the end of the war and we're only seeing it now?”

“What? No.”

“How are you so sure?”

Zelda gives me a scathing look. One that says
Ask me that again. I dare you.

That's right. Because Zelda was there at the end, along with a handful of other brave programmers trying to repair the damage they helped cause. Trying to reason with, or else dismantle, the higher echelon, which had already begun to devour and destroy the more pacifistic and innocuous strains of the world's many, many artificial intelligences. Honestly, I'm not sure why she's so offended by the question. It's not like she's an open book. Most of what I know about her role in the Machinations I've had to learn secondhand from Ulrich and others.

“Okay,” I say slowly. “So then—what? The machines are creating new machines? The higher echelon isn't just manufacturing old models, it's designing new ones. Is that it?”

Zelda laughs, a single burst of sound, like dropping a wineglass on a hardwood floor. “Hell if I know.”

“Find out.”

She lays a hand on the top of the machine's featureless head. “Trust me. I intend to.”

“Before you get to work, there's something else you should know.” I pick at a scab on my arm until I release a fresh welling of blood. Even then, I don't look up, trying hard not to think about the next words out of my mouth. “It has my memories. Some of them, anyway. Enough of them.”

Zelda doesn't laugh at this. She doesn't sneer. She asks, “How?”

I smile weakly. “Hell if I know.”

“Could it have learned the memories from someone else?”

“Like who?”

“Some prisoner of war. A family member. Friend. I don't know, I'm not the keeper of your social history.” She folds her good arm over the one cradled in a white sling and pinches her mouth closed. Then, after another moment, she says something I never expected to hear from her. “Sorry. Here I am giving you shit, and you've clearly had a long day.” I raise an eyebrow, and she rolls her eyes. “Pun unintended.”

“Thanks,” I say, applying pressure to my bleeding scab with my thumb. It's not working. “To answer your question, the things it knows…no. It couldn't have learned them from someone else. It's like it downloaded my brain.”

Zelda shrugs. “Maybe it did.”

“What's that supposed to mean?”

“Really? You're a
clone.
Lewis managed to transfer memories into your head.”
Samuel.
It keeps coming back to Samuel.
“Makes sense the machines could do the same.” She's not wrong. Samuel was able to store my memories on servers before. But the facility at Brooks was destroyed—so how did the machines get access to them?

Unless they have access to the mind that first experienced those moments…

“But why? What would be the point?” I ask, but Zelda's too preoccupied with the small jacks on the side of the machine's head to answer. To keep myself from pacing and pulling my hair, I plop down on a nearby bench. “You haven't seen the rest of this thing yet. It's built like a human, and it believed—it tried to put on skin. Those sticky bits on the top of its head? That's someone's
scalp.

She rips her hand away, scrunching her nose in disgust. “You could've mentioned that before. Damn.” She wriggles her gloves, trying to shake off the red strands attached to them.

“I thought it was obvious.” I rest my chin on my arms, watching her work, and ignoring the small bubble of blood on my arm. “You should have seen it. The thing was out of its mind. It thought it was me.”

“You tell the council about this yet?”

“Not yet. I was hoping you could provide me with a few answers first.” I close my eyes. The existence of this machine doppelgänger only deepens the McKinley conspiracy; it solves nothing. It certainly doesn't answer the question of who was on the footage, or who the
her
is that the machine mentioned. I plant my face in my arms on the table. This machine raises a whole slew of other issues, strategic and ethical alike. What it means for our war effort, I can't begin to guess.

“Hey, Long.”

I jerk upright, suddenly awake and a little dizzy, as if I'd lifted my head too quickly out of the water after bobbing for apples. Zelda's not where she was standing a moment ago; on her work table, the back of the machine's head lies open, already partially dissected. I must have drifted off without realizing it, or suffered another blackout. One or the other. At this point, I'm too beat to care which.

“Take off,” Zelda says, not harshly. “Get some sleep. You look like hell.”

“You, too.” I gesture vaguely at her injuries. My thoughts feel as jumbled as—something really jumbled. “Uh, the looking like hell part.”

Zelda smiles.

After nearly being murdered by machines, anything that falls under the umbrella of “not dead” is pretty much a compliment.

As I'm leaving, I notice I still have Ulrich's walkie. “If you discover anything,” I tell Zelda, turning back, “anything at all, I want to hear about it first. Clear?”

“You're the boss,” she replies without looking up from the machine's head.

Just as I'm exiting the workshop, I hear a breathy curse, a clatter, and then my voice saying, “Zelda, you have to help me. Look what she's done to me.”

And Zelda's awed reply: “Holy shit. What
are
you?”

“I'm Commander Rhona Long, leader of the resistance,” the machine responds, annoyed.

“Yeah,” I hear Zelda say, followed by the sound of some tool scraping against a concrete surface. “No, thanks. We already have one of those.”

The door slides shut behind me.

The military level passes in an iron-colored blur as I navigate the halls, trying not to make eye contact with anyone, lest they drag me into some conversation about security or the future of the base.

I'm waiting in line, about to board the only working elevator left on the level—apart from the express elevator, which does me no good since I don't want to go to Command—when the doors open and amidst the flood of soldiers who emerge is a face I'd recognize anywhere. The first face these eyes ever took in. The one I've been looking for.

And he's frowning.

“Samuel!”
Finally!
I wave frantically to catch his attention before he gets too far away.

His chin bounces up—he was occupied with the floor, watching his step or deeply lost in thought—and when he spots me, he returns the wave before winding his way back through the crowd.

When he's within reach, I pull Samuel back into the queue with me, mouthing an apology to the people behind me who've been waiting just as long. The rest of the elevator's occupants spill past us, some still clutching candles, which initially baffles me until I remember the vigil. It was only hours ago, yet it already feels like a lifetime.

Up close, he looks awful. His cheeks are pebbly and unshaven, and his eyes bruised and worried. Combined with some weight loss, I barely recognize him as the same man who rescued me from death and doubt last year.

“About damn time.” I bypass any hellos and how-are-yous, wrapping my arms around him in a quick hug. I swear I feel his ribs through his jacket.
Damn. He's gotten skinny while out in the field.
Or maybe it's stress?

Samuel's breath floats toward me when he opens his mouth, and that's when I notice how cold it is. The air-conditioning unit must be malfunctioning again. Wrapped in a blanket of adrenaline and activity, I couldn't feel the chill before now. “Sorry,” he says. So typical. He's always apologizing for things that aren't even his fault. “I just got back, maybe an hour ago. I was coming to look for you, actually.” He lowers his voice, quietly adding, “Are you all right?”

“Why do you ask?”

He frowns, eyebrows pulling together. I didn't mean for my tone to be so sharp, so accusing. But Cordier's suspicion still hovers at the back of my mind, a vulture waiting for its meal. “Because of the attack, and the council's accusations,” he replies. “Because of…Rankin.” He says his friend's name softly, almost reverently. “Hanna met me in the hangar. She told me everything that happened. I'm so sorry.”

I don't look at him, because I know what expression I'll find. His soft brown eyes will be full of sympathy, his full lips caught in a worried pout. It will be the same look he gave me when I first crawled out of my capsule, climbing naked and shivering into his arms, when everything was going wrong. It will remind me of all the reasons I deserve pity and compassion
now
, at this moment, and I don't want to think about those reasons. For the first time in my life, I don't want to remember.

Samuel's shoulder bumps mine as we board the elevator.
Going up.
I take my usual spot nearest the threshold, and try not to feel sick—trapped—as the elevator doors close.

“So?” he persists. “How are you holding up?”

“Physically or emotionally?” I reply.

He hesitates, like I've just asked him whether I look old in a photograph. “Uh, both?”

“You know that scene in
Alien
where the creature bursts out of that guy's chest?”

This loosens his look of concern. He breaks into a small smile. “Ouch.”

“Yeah. I've had better days. And worse.”

The elevator reaches its destination: the dormitory level. While the smell of smoke's abated for the most part, a strong overtone of mildew has replaced it, enough to make me wrinkle my nose. I can't speak to the rest of the level, but this whole area has a creaky, waterlogged feeling to it, like a ship that's been a long time at sea. Distinct waterlines mark the walls at baseboard level, recalling the sprinkler detonation the other day, and even more stains ribbon down the wall from the ceiling like streaks of urine. Which I happen to recognize all too well, courtesy of McKinley's overpopulation issue.

BOOK: Counterpart
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