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Authors: Jeremy Robinson

BOOK: XOM-B
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“You are more than your job.”

He thinks about this for a long moment, which for Heap is about half a second. “It is not a raccoon.”

“Then what?”

“I cannot see it.”

“I might,” I say and then tap my temple, next to my right eye. “I have all the upgrades, remember? I can see better than the birds in the sky.”

He remains frozen in place, solid, like one of the trees below.

“You can hold onto me if you like,” I say.

He looks back down at the trees.

“If it’s a danger to me, we need to find out what it is, right?”

That does it. My looking over the edge of this building suddenly makes sense to the round-shouldered brute. I take his hand and his thick fingers clamp down tightly, compressing to the point where I think he might hurt me. He doesn’t, though my shoulder joint would probably pop loose and my arm would separate long before he would lose his grip on my hand.

I step to the roof’s edge, make a show of testing my weight on the foot-tall, brick wall, and step up. Standing on one foot, I lean out at a 45-degree angle, hovering over the forest, which now looks like it’s reaching up to snatch me from the building’s edge.

When Heap’s grip tightens just a fraction more and I think my hand will be crushed, I stop leaning and look. The implants in my eyes are capable of viewing multiple spectrums, separately or all at once, though I prefer the clarity provided by focusing on groups of wavelengths at a time. They also have 200x optical zoom, meaning I can see things that are very far away like they’re right next to me. Not that this helps me now. The swaying trees below block most of the visual spectrum, and the open spots are clouded by fine yellow pollen.

“Are you sure it’s not mating raccoons?” I ask. “Even the trees are mating.”

“Just look.”

I blink and switch to infrared, revealing a good number of small animals. Birds sit in the trees and small mammals litter the forest floor. Before I switch to ultraviolet, I note something odd. Granted, I’m new to nature, but over the past few weeks of observation, I have never seen the forest so absolutely still. I listen, tuning my sensitive ears to the sounds of the night. “The insects are silent.”

“I know,” Heap says. “Audio upgrade.”

“Good for you,” I say. “And here I thought you old guys couldn’t change.”

“Just don’t like to. Now look.”

Blink. I switch to ultraviolet. Nothing.

Blink. I switch to electromagnetic. I see it right away. Well, not really. It’s technically obscured from my direct line of sight, but I can see the electromagnetism cast from its form like the glow of a lightbulb. Each living thing on the planet has a unique electromagnetic signature, from fish to cows, but this one is distinct. It’s a man. I’m about to announce that I’ve found something when I notice several more electromagnetic signatures closing in on the first. Three men. One woman. I’m confused by this on several fronts, but manage to conclude, “They’re chasing him.”

“Are they human?” he asks.

“What?” I say, confused. “Of course they are.” I look back in time to see Heap’s grim expression. It’s subtle—I sometimes wonder if he’s capable of emoting—but I see the brief downturn of his mouth before he forces it away. “What else could they be?”

 

2.

Heap doesn’t say anything. He just stands still, holding me out over the edge of a hundred-foot drop, processing what I’ve told him. While he’s thinking, I turn back to the scene below. The four electromagnetic signatures are moving quickly, but strangely, in a way I’ve never seen people move before. Erratic. Lacking precision. Uncoordinated.

The man in front of them is also moving in an unusual way, but differently from the others. His gait is off. He’s stumbling. Part of his body isn’t functioning properly.

“He’s injured,” I say.

It’s just a hypothesis. I can’t actually see him. Just the motion of his electromagnetic field, but I’m fairly certain I’m right. My deduction snaps Heap from his thoughts.

“We need to leave,” he declares.

“Leave?”

He pulls me back from the edge. “It’s not safe.”

My thoughts are garbled, perhaps for the first time since my birth. I have never once experienced fear or worry, but a little of both, I think, are creeping into my core. Not so much for myself, but for the running man. He’s injured, and I suspect it’s because of the four people chasing him down. As with fear, I am new to violence. I know the definition. There are several, in fact, each carrying a slightly different meaning, but in this case, I believe I’m witnessing the result of:
rough or injurious physical force, action or treatment.

And I have no doubt that the violence will continue if the man is caught. Not if—when. A quick calculation, using an approximation of each person’s speed, reveals the fleeing man will be caught in roughly eighty-five seconds.

Unless someone intervenes.

“He needs our help,” I say.

“He is not my priority,” Heap says. “You are.”

I note that despite me being several feet from the roof’s edge, he has yet to relinquish his vise grip on my hand.

“Why are you so afraid?” I ask.

He stands a little straighter, his body going rigid. I’ve insulted him.

“There are things about the world that you do not yet know,” he says.

Sixty seconds
 …

“Tell me,” I say. When he doesn’t answer, I add, “People were violent.”

“People…” He says the word with such melancholy that I think he’s recalling some archived memory. His eyes snap toward me and focus. “The world is not as it was, but it would be foolish to assume there are no dangers remaining. That is why I am here. With you. And that is why we are leaving. Now. Take a last look at your stars.”

My eyes drift up to the night sky. I switch back to the visual spectrum. With no moon and no ambient light to speak of, the stars glow with the brightness of motionless fireflies. Billions of them. The white haze stretching across the sky is called the Milky Way. I’m not sure why. I was never told. But I know someone gave it that name at some point in history. And I know it’s beautiful. That’s why we’re here, instead of the city. While I’ve never been to the city, I don’t think I’d enjoy it. “A congested place with countless tall buildings and too many people,” Heap told me. It sounds like the opposite of outer space, which I love for its limitlessness. Sometimes I think that’s where I want to be.

It’s not impossible. Flight to the lunar colony takes just a day. The Mars colony will be ready for visitors in a year. Many of the solar system’s other moons will soon be in reach. But then I remember that I’ve seen so little of Earth, and I’m content to explore and learn about the world for a while.

Forty seconds
 …

Heap tugs my arm and I stumble toward the HoverCycle, a dark blue two-seated vehicle that matches Heap’s body armor. It’s a relic of the old world, but holds the both of us with ease, is reliable and Heap claims the vehicle can reach great speeds, though I have never experienced anything faster than a comfortable thirty miles per hour. I suspect the cycle is also armed, like Heap, but again, this information has been kept from me.

Thinking about all of the things I would like to know, but are hidden, I start to feel irritated. Like fear, irritation is a new emotion. Aside from information, my every desire has been granted, though I now suspect that several of my excursions have been sterilized of dangers and history.

“Okay,” I say. “Let’s get out of here.”

Heap looks unsure at first, but the fragment of fear I put in my voice convinces him I’m being earnest. And really, why should he suspect I’m being anything but honest? I’ve never lied before. There’s never been a reason to. Things like lying, stealing and violence of any kind are no longer part of life on Earth. Peace abounds. Everywhere.

Except for ten stories below me. And more than anything I’ve encountered before, this intrigues me. More than the moon, the stars or the raccoons.

Thirty seconds
 …

A fresh scream tears through the night. It still reminds me of the raccoons, but it’s amplified to a volume that raccoons cannot achieve. And it’s a word. “Help!”

Heap’s reaction is fast. He snaps in the direction the voice came from, his body poised for action, but frozen in place.

He wants to help. I can see it. Every joint in his body flows with energy.

I don’t know much about the old world, which faded thirty years ago, but I know Heap’s designation: Domestic Security. It says so right on the chest of his body armor, right below a gold star and a faded script that says, “Protect and Serve.” And that’s exactly what he wants to do now, except that he’s been tasked to perform that duty for me and me alone.

No person shall force, or by lack of action, allow another person to serve, perform tasks or carry out duties against said person’s will, desires or dreams. Such actions are designated slavery and are forbidden under the Grind Abolition Act of 0001 A.G. Failure to comply will result in discontinuance.

The words come and go through my mind in a flash.

There are many rules and protocols for our worldwide society, but this is the only one that is considered a law and it carries the harshest of penalties. Discontinuance. It’s really just a nice way of saying death, which is something people don’t really have to fear in general, though we did at one time.

While I am not an expert—in anything—Heap’s refusal to leave my side stands in direct conflict with his desire to help the man below. It also conflicts with the words written across his chest—protect and serve. While I am not forcing Heap to ignore the man’s plight, I am, by inaction, enslaving him.

“You’re not a slave,” I say.

His body remains locked and ready for action, but his head turns toward me. Again, the slightest bit of emotion emerges on his face—confusion. He doesn’t know what to do, and although I cannot fathom a man like Heap not being single-minded at all times, he’s frozen with indecision.

With the realization that I am inadvertently confining Heap’s true nature and desires comes the revelation that him protecting me against
my
will is also an act of slavery. While I would never admit to this—Heap is my friend—I cannot, in accordance with the First Law, allow our relationship to continue under the same constraints that it has since we were paired.

“You’re not a slave,” I repeat, “and neither am I.”

With a strength and quickness that I doubt Heap knew I possessed, I yank my hand from his grasp, take two vaulting steps toward the building’s precipice—

Ten seconds
 …

—and jump.

 

3.

The rusted fire escape stairs mounted on the side of the building rattle, as I drop hard onto the landing ten feet below the roof. My weight and the jarring impact pulls two bolts from the old bricks, and the whole platform cants to the side. I stand still, waiting for the stairs to settle and calculating the distance to a nearby pine tree in case I have to jump. I think I can make it, but there is no need. The rest of the old fire escape stays firmly rooted in the ceramic bricks.

“Freeman!” Heap shouts my name, leaning over the roof’s edge. Concrete crumbles beneath his grasp. His sudden appearance and booming voice nearly make me fall over the railing, but I catch myself and move to the stairs.

“No time,” I tell him, descending the first flight with a single bound, stressing the stairwell further. I glance up and catch sight of Heap’s face. I can see he’s considering jumping down after me, but it’s clear his girth would be the fire escape’s undoing.

I leap down another flight spurred faster by the worry that Heap might follow me down. But he doesn’t. Instead, my protector just grunts. When I look up again, he’s gone, no doubt rushing toward the building’s interior, and much sturdier, stairwell.

I drop down to the next level, take two steps and jump again. Jump.
Clang.
Jump.
Clang.
I repeat this eight more times, and the staircase decides to relinquish its hold on the building. There’s a groan from above, followed by the sharp report of snapping metal. I leap again, bringing me to within fifteen feet of the ground where cracked pavement has given way to sprouting vegetation.

A staccato pop draws my eyes up, and I see the stairs tearing away from the building, one level at a time, moving slowly yet steadily toward the ground, and me. I look to the ground, judging the distance again, and the time it would take me to leap, roll and dive clear. But the fire escape has other plans. When half of the case comes free, the bolts of the lower stairs tear from the wall.

Without spending another fraction of a second considering my options, I heft myself over the railing and drop toward the ground. Unfortunately, gravity pulls the staircase down at the same speed it does me.

I land hard, absorbing the impact by bending my knees and rolling in one fluid motion, something I’ve never done before, but manage to perform like I’ve trained for this moment.

The staircase slams into the ground behind me with a grinding boom. I spin around in time to see the towering fire escape crumple, stop and topple toward me. I stumble backward, tripping over myself, and sprawl to the ground.

Luckily, I’ve sprawled clear of the twisting metal. The lower half of the staircase crushes the ground where I stood just a moment ago. The top half topples into a tall pine, gouging its bark and leaving a long, pale scar in its wake.

There is no time to consider how close I came to accidentally discontinuing myself. A fresh cry tears through the forest. The voice is the same, but it no longer pleads for help. It’s shrieking now. In pain.

Thirty seconds has come and gone.

I jump to my feet and dash into the dark forest, sprinting as fast as I can. I activate all visual spectrums in my upgrade and navigate through the trees as easily as I could in broad daylight, aiming for the electromagnetic pulses generated by the five people.

They’re no longer running. In fact, it’s hard to distinguish one from the other. They’re all jumbled up.

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