the presence of coherent light activity and rang the bell inside her apartment. The sensor, at least, interpreted him as being human.
Maybe she wasn’t home – whenever he got this close, he started hoping that. Though he couldn’t imagine where else she’d be. Off work, she socked in tight into her cozy home space. The same as everyone else on the horizontal.
The door swung open. Axxter held up the image of his hand. “Hi. Just thought I’d drop by. And say hello.”
Ree glared at him. There was a discrepancy, a jitter on the line: the image she perceived of him was displaced a few inches behind his sensory feedback. The effect was as though her narrow gaze was boring right into the back of his skull.
“What do
He made the image shrug. “Hey – like I said. I just wanted to see you. That’s all. I mean, I don’t even have tactile sensation. See?” He poked at the doorjamb, the image of his finger disappearing two inches into the panel. “So it’s not like I’m here just to… fool around or anything.”
A weary sigh from her. “Believe me; you wouldn’t have, anyway.” She leaned against the door, arms folded. “So now you’re here, you’ve seen me – is that it? You’re happy now?”
“Well, there were some things I wanted to tell you -”
“Tell
“I don’t?” Axxter tilted the image’s head, puzzled. “I mean – you and me – we’re not -”
Her eyes, small to begin with, disappeared in the tight lines of her scowl. “Not after this latest bullshit. You don’t care about yourself, you’re happy to be some bum out on the wall, some… some glorified tattoo artist – fine. That’s up to you. But you’re not going to embarrass me with it anymore.”
“That’s what I came to talk to you about. What I came to tell you – I’m going to give it up.” His image had stepped back, away from the freezing chill of her words; he could feel that with or without any sensory input.
“Really. I’m not kidding you about this. I’ve thought about it a lot. And that’s what I’ve decided. Soon as I get back, I mean back for real, I’m going to go back on the horizontal. Give up running around on the vertical. I’ll have plenty of money, I’ll be able to buy myself a commission, some nice junior executive job… the whole bit. And then… you and me… you know, we could work it out.”
She shook her head. “Ny – I don’t believe you. You’ve always been a lying sack of shit.”
He was about to say something, some vow of intention, when another voice shouted, loud enough to rattle the image’s optical feedback, setting the corridor and the open door shimmering in his sight.
“Hey! Who the fuck are you!” A female voice, but not hers; he could see her mouth, closed and tight-lipped. “Get off this line, or I’ll deck you so hard you won’t know what’s happening!”
He saw her staring at him now, eyes widening a bit, lips curling in disgust.
“You heard me!” The voice, attached to nothing, went louder. “You little shit! Just you wait!”
Then he wasn’t standing outside his girlfriend’s apartment, way over in the distant horizontal. The hookup with HoloDays had evaporated with a jarring suddenness. He was hanging in the dark again, over on the eveningside.
“I’m gonna kick your butt so hard -”
He pulled his finger from the plug-in jack, and the voice inside his head disappeared. Leaving silence.
He stuck his finger back into the jack; an experiment. With immediate results.
“There you are, dickhead. I wasn’t through with you.” The voice grated low. “You’re in deep shit with me now.”
“Hey, hold on a minute.” The barrage was getting tiresome. “Who is this? What’s the problem?”
“You’re gonna find out what the problem is, fella. And you know damn well who this is. And you know this line is part of
“Who? What are you talking about -”
The words CRACKER D:FEX spelled out in his sight, one red letter after another, then faded away.
“I’ve had just about enough shit from you D:Fex clowns. This is
Silence again, then more red words. This time spelling out FELONY M:PULSE. They took a lot longer to fade away.
Violence had been promised, though of what sort –
Still with his finger in the jack; a legit call came through.
“Ny – where the hell have you been?” Brevis’s voice was excited, but not in any way that indicated money. Panic, instead. “I’ve been trying to get hold of you for hours!”
“What’s the matter?”
“You gotta get moving, Ny; I mean, like
“Hold on. Come on, slow down.” His agent’s words had come swarming over him, almost too fast to understand. “What’re you going on about?”
The sound of a big gulp of breath came over the line. “Heavy action, Ny. I didn’t count on shit like this. It’s the Havoc Mass – they’ve sent major weight out after you. A megassasin has been spotted crossing over Linear Fair Left; it’s apparently making a beeline straight for you. I can’t believe how pissed those people are at you; I mean, this is the first reported instance of any military tribe personnel entering eveningside territory. It’s just unheard of. But the word’s out, Ny – they’re not going to stop until they’ve got you squashed like a bug.”
He felt dazed. As if he weren’t in enough shit already.
“How long ago? I mean, how long ago did it go through the Fair?”
“Don’t know, exactly – might’ve been four, five, maybe six hours ago. And it was making tracks, by all reports. Those big megs can really move.”
Axxter wondered if it was the same one that he’d done the graffex designs on; Cripplemaker’s commission. It’d appeal to the warriors’ sense of irony for him to get squashed by the megassassin bearing his own work. The last thing he’d see would be the emblem he’d designed himself. It’d be like getting killed by your own signature.
Brevis’s voice rattled on. “That’s what I mean, Ny. You gotta get moving. It’s got you pinpointed by the location of the jack you’ve been using. The longer you hang around there, or anywhere nearby, the sooner it’s going to be on your ass.”
“Christ…”
“Look, just get away from there. Any direction’s fine; but just go. I’ll do what I can from this end – maybe I can find out what direction the meg’ll be coming in – but everything else you’re going to have to figure out on the run. Okay? And give me a call when you find some place just as far from where you’re at as you can make it.”
When the first gray half-light oozed around him, the plug-in jack with its yellow marking rings was already beyond sighting, hidden by the curve of the building. His progress had been slow in the dark, clambering blind, his chest close to the wall, only the pithons sure about striking out for new holds.
He paused to catch his breath; his heart had been hammering in his throat the whole distance. Brevis’s panic had infected him, locking into his spinal column.
His pulse had slowed with the light; trying to move in the dark had spooked him. Too much like running in