Authors: Robin Wasserman
Tags: #Juvenile Fiction, #Mysteries & Detective Stories, #Fiction, #General, #Family, #Teenage Girls, #Social Issues, #Science Fiction, #Death & Dying, #Fantasy, #Fantasy & Magic, #Friendship, #School & Education, #Love & Romance, #Family & Relationships, #Death; Grief; Bereavement
He found a mirror.
It was smal , about the size of a hand stretched flat, with the fingers pressed together. Framed with black plastic that maybe was supposed to be shiny but wasn’t, not anymore.
He paused, tipped his head toward my father. “Do you want to…?”
My father shook his head.
So it was the pretty doctor, the kind of guy Walker would be someday if he remembered to shave and stopped flunking gen-tech, who approached, mirror in hand. He kept it angled safely away. “You ready?”
As if it mattered. I closed my eyes.
The computer said yes.
They’ll fix it,
I promised myself.
No matter how much it costs, no matter how long it takes.
If my mother could keep her skin looking like she was twenty-two, if Bliss Tanzen could show up with a new nose to match every new season’s shopping spoils, a few scars were nothing. Maybe I’d even keep a couple. Becca Mai had a delicate white fault line running down her cheekbone that she claimed came from a close encounter with jagged glass on some il icit venture into the city. Everyone knew Becca Mai was too prep to sneak out of the house and too petrified to sneak into the city, and Bliss had spotted one of those home tattoo kits on Becca’s shop-log, just before it mysteriously got edited out. But guys stil loved her sexy little shiver as they traced their fingers down the scar. Becca gave good shiver.
I could do better.
“Lia, if you want to see, you’re going to have to open your eyes.” The doctor’s voice didn’t quite match up to his pretty face. I liked voices lower, a little husky. Of course, Walker was nearly a tenor. Carved cheekbones, a tight six-pack, and a girl can get used to just about anything.
Anything,
I told myself. And then, deep breath.
Eyes wide open.
I didn’t know computers could scream.
“I was a ghost in the machine.”
T
he lips,
I thought.
Focus on the lips.
Because they were normal. Pale pink, washed out. Curved into a half pout. A glimpse of white teeth barely visible, straight and whole. It was a mouth, a normal mouth.
Just not my mouth.
The nose, too. It was a nose. Narrow, nearly sharp but not unpleasantly so, no bumps or hooks, delicate nostrils, a gentle slope up the face toward the—
No, not the eyes.
Don’t look at the eyes.
No scars. No burns. It wasn’t the Hal oween fright mask I’d imagined. It was…perfect. The skin was unmarked, stretched taut and smooth across the face. A stranger’s face.
And the eyes. The eyes that weren’t my eyes. Pale, watery blue, unspeckled iris; black, motionless pupil; and at the center, a pinprick circle of amber. Unblinking. Dead.
But when I closed one eye, the eye in the mirror closed, too. Brown lashes brushed against a too-smooth cheek. I opened the eye, and the mirror eye opened. It was dead. It was mine.
Which meant that what lay above it was mine, too. Blondish brows with a high, perfectly plucked arch, like they’d been penciled in. A wrinkle-free forehead. And above that?
The machine.
Scalp flayed back. A mess of circuitry, like when Zo was five and cracked open my new ViM because I wouldn’t let her use it. Wires spooling out of my head. Wires feeding into my head. Silvery filament crisscrossing a waxy, flesh-colored base.
It wasn’t until the computer fel silent that I realized I was stil screaming. But now the screams were just inside my head.
What else was inside my head?
“Try to calm down,” said the first doctor, the ugly one. The mirror was gone, but I couldn’t stop seeing the face. “I’l turn the speaker back on, but you have to stay calm, for your own good. Let us explain. Can you do that?”
As if I had any choice.
One blink.
I forced the screams back inside myself.
“This is why I didn’t want you to see at this stage,” the doctor said irritably. “Cranial exposure is only necessary until we confirm neurological stability. Once the skul cap is attached and the hair—”
“What did you do to me?”
Dr. Handsome shot the uglier guy a look that made me realize who was real y in charge. And he was the one who final y answered. “We saved your life.”
“What did you do?”
No one spoke.
My mother lifted her head from my father’s shoulder. She looked me in the eye. Not the forehead, the eye. She wasn’t crying anymore. “You know about BioMax,” she said. “You remember.”
I knew just about as much as I cared. Which was very little. BioMax, some biotech subsidiary of my father’s corporation, hyped on the vids the year before with some freaky new tech that—
“No.”
I knew.
“We had to,” my mother pleaded. “We didn’t have any other choice.”
“No.”
“Honey, you heard the doctors, you were going to
die
. This was the only way.”
“No.”
“Lia.” My father bal ed up his fists, shoved them into his pockets.
“Yes
.”
“We held off for as long as we could,” the pretty doctor said. I felt like he was leering at me, like I was some mechanical puzzle he was desperate to take apart, then try to put back together. Except he’d already done so. “Dr. Dreyson”—he jerked his head toward his trol -like partner—“had you on the table for seventeen hours before we made the decision.”
“Before you gave up.”
“We would never give up on you,” my mother said.
My father frowned. “That’s why you’re stil here.”
But I wasn’t.
I was a ghost in the machine.
A mech-head.
A Frankenstein.
A skinner.
“The download process was a complete success,” Dr. Handsome said. “Your brain came through the accident completely intact, and we were able to make a ful transfer. The body is, I’m afraid, not the customized unit you might have selected under less critical circumstances, but we did our best to choose a model that would emulate your baseline specs, height, weight, coloring.”
He was talking like I was a new car.
Everyone knew about the download freaks, or at least, we knew they were out there, computer brains stuffed into homemade bodies, walking around looking like real, live people. Sort of. The first few were al over the vids for a while, until they got boring and people moved on to something else just as irrelevant, like betting on how long it would be before the president went AWOL from rehab again.
“You turned me into a skinner.”
Dr. Trol wrinkled his big nose. “We prefer not to use that word.”
But that’s what they were cal ed, because that’s what they did.
Skinners.
Computers—
machines
—that hijacked human identities, clothing themselves in human skin. Except the flesh was just as artificial as what lay beneath. A skinner was nothing more than a computer that wore a human mask, hiding wiring and circuitry underneath a costume of synthetic flesh. A mechanical brain, duped into thinking it was real.
Or, in this case: a mechanical brain duped into thinking it was Lia Kahn.
“You
are
Lia,” the repulsively handsome one said. “Al your memories, al your experiences, everything you are was simply transferred to a more durable casing. Just like copying a file. Nothing more mysterious than that.”
“Put me back.”
“Lia…” My mother pressed her eyes closed with her left hand, massaging the lids.
“Once we train the neural network to accommodate itself to its new physical surroundings, you should be able to pick things up right where you left off.” Dr. Handsome was unstoppable. “You’l see we’ve done remarkable things with sensation, motion…Of course there are things to get used to, but many of our clients have found life postdownload nearly indistinguishable from their experiences before the procedure. And quality of life wil certainly be far superior to anything you would have experienced with your degree of injuries—”
“Put me back the way I was. I don’t care about the injuries. I don’t care. Put me back.”
One leg, one arm, no skin, I didn’t care. As long as I was human. As long as I was
me
.
“It’s not possible.”
“Anything’s possible if you want it enough.”
Another of my father’s favorite slogans.
The doctor’s voice was cold. “There’s nothing to put back. There’s no body to go back to. The body of Lia Kahn is dead. Be grateful you didn’t die with it.” And when I wouldn’t believe him, he offered to prove it. Wires were detached. Machines wheeled away. Two men—not doctors; the doctors never touched me—grabbed my sides. They hoisted me into a sitting position. My head lol ed forward on my neck, and I saw my hands for the first time. They hung limp in my lap, fingers half curled, nails round and smooth; useless. Somebody else’s hands, resting on somebody else’s legs. The flesh was unnatural y smooth, just like the skin on the face. There were no creases and whorls, no subtle shifts of color or thready blue veins beneath the surface. I wondered if there were fingerprints.
One of the men grabbed me under the armpits and hoisted me off the bed. He looked like the type of guy who would have bad breath, and for a moment his mouth was close enough to mine that I could have smel ed it, if I could have smel ed anything. I was wearing a sleeveless paper-thin blue gown, loose around the armholes. His hands pressed bare skin, or whatever it was. He could probably see down the front of it if he’d wanted to. I didn’t care. It wasn’t my body under there. It was a thing. A thing I couldn’t feel and couldn’t move, a thing I was trapped inside. It wasn’t me.
He didn’t peek. Instead he dumped me into a high-backed wheelchair and fastened a belt around my waist. Then another around my forehead, pressing my head against the seat and fixing my eyes straight ahead. Through it al , he never looked at my face.
The pretty doctor, who got less attractive every time he spoke, told me to cal him Ben. He wasn’t actual y a doctor, he said. Which made sense. Doctors took care of people, right? Sick people, injured people.
People.
I wasn’t one of those, not anymore. Thanks to
Ben
. My mechanic.
Cal -me-Ben wheeled me down a long corridor. I couldn’t feel the body, couldn’t feel the seat. It felt like I was floating through the hal , just a set of eyes, just a mind, just a ghost.
My parents stayed behind. My mother said she couldn’t see it again.
It,
she said. My father didn’t say anything, but he stayed with her.
“We’ve kept it in cold storage for you,” Ben said from behind me. “Most clients request a viewing.”
It.
We wheeled into a narrow room, its white tiled wal s lined by silver plates. Ben pressed his palm to one, and it slid out of the wal , revealing a long, metal panel bearing a sheet-covered lump. A body-shaped lump. “You sure?” Ben asked, guiding the wheelchair into position. “This can be difficult.” I couldn’t stand to hear the computer speak for me, not here. Not now.
I blinked once.
He began with the feet. Foot.
The flesh was red and ruined, gouged. Mottled with deep, black scabs. There were thick streaks of pearl white, as if the skin had calcified. Or maybe the flesh had been flayed and I was looking at bone. The knee was bent at the wrong angle; the other leg was gone, ending just below the thigh, swirls of dried blood and charred flesh winding around one another, like the rings of a severed tree stump.
The sheet drew farther back.
I wish I could say I didn’t recognize it, that it was some monstrous mound of skin and bones, broken and unidentifiable.
It was. But it was also me.
I recognized the hips jutting out below my waist, always a little bonier than I would have liked. The dark freckles along my col arbone, stil visible on a patch of skin the fire had spared. My crooked ring finger, on the arm that remained intact, a family quirk my parents had chosen not to screen out, the genetic cal ing card of the Kahns.
My face.
The burns were worse there. Pockets of pus bubbled beneath the skin. One side had caved in, like my face had been modeled from clay, then crushed by an iron fist. The left eye sagged into a deep hol ow. My lips were gone.
There was a gray surgical cap stretched over my head.
“The brain?”
I felt as dead inside as the voice sounded.
Cal -me-Ben sighed. “You don’t want to know the technical details.”
“Try me.”
He did.
He told me how the brain—my brain—was removed.
Frozen.
Sliced into razor-thin sections.
Scanned.
Functional y mapped onto a three-dimensional model, axons and dendrites replaced by the vector space of a quantum computer, woven through with artificial nerves, conduits that would carry impulses back and forth from an artificial body, simulating al the pains and pleasures of life. In theory.
He told me how the frozen leftovers were discarded. Because that’s what you do with medical waste.
Now I understood:
Skinner
was the wrong word after al . I wasn’t the thief. I hadn’t stolen an identity;
I
hadn’t stolen anything. They were the ones who stole from me. They flayed back my skin, reached inside and dug up whatever secret, essential quality made me who I was.
Then they ripped it out.
They ripped it out—ripped
me
out—and left me exposed, a naked brain, a mind without a body. Because this
thing
they’d stuck me in, it wasn’t a body—a sculpted face, dead eyes, and synthetic flesh couldn’t make it anything but a hol ow shel . Maybe I hadn’t lost the essential thing that made me Lia Kahn, but I’d lost everything else, everything that made me human.
I wasn’t a skinner.
I was the one who’d been skinned.
When we were kids, Zo and I used to fight. Not argue.
Fight.
Hair-pul ing, skin-pinching, wrist-burning, arm-twisting, squealing, spitting, punching, shrieking
fight
. And once—it wasn’t our worst fight or our last one—after she kneed me in the stomach, I punched her in the face. Her nose spurted blood al over both of us. She threw up. I passed out. It’s the one thing we’d always had in common: Fear of blood. Fear of doctors. Fear of hospitals. Fear of anything that stinks of sick.