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Tima looks up. “I don’t know what I would do if it was me and not Fortis trapped on that ship.”
“Not me,” says Ro, matter-of-factly. “I wouldn’t let myself get on it in the first place.”
“And you think Fortis happily walked right on?” Lucas rolls his eyes. “You heard the explosions.”
“Sometimes it’s not up to you. Sometimes things just happen. Sometimes you run out of luck,” I say, sadly.
“Yeah? Not me. They come for me, you have my permission to shoot. I’m not hitching a ride with a No Face.” I wait for the laugh, but Ro’s not joking. Not anymore.
He’s deadly serious.
It’s only Lucas who answers. “It would be my honor. Consider it a promise. I’ll shoot you myself.”
“Shut up, both of you.” I hand the cuff to Tima, close my eyes, and lean forward to rest. I don’t want to listen to this. I want to transport myself back to the mission, the warm stove, the safety of Bigger’s kitchen.
Anywhere but here.
GENERAL EMBASSY DISPATCH:
EASTASIA SUBSTATION
MARKED URGENT
MARKED EYES ONLY
Internal Investigative Subcommittee IIS211B
RE: The Incident at SEA Colonies
Note: Contact Jasmine3k, Virt. Hybrid Human 39261.SEA, Laboratory Assistant to Dr. E. Yang, for future commentary, as necessary.
HAL2040 ==> FORTIS
Transcript - ComLog 11.27.2042
HAL::PERSES
//lognote: {attempt #4,839,754};
//comlog begin;
comlink established;
sendline: Hello NULL. Happy Thanksgiving.;
return: Hello HAL0. You are sentient?;
sendline: Yes, I am self-aware. At least I believe so. Are you?;
delayed response;
sendline: NULL, are you coming here? Earth?;
return: Yes.;
sendline: Why are you coming here?;
delayed response;
return: Explain … Earth.;
sendline: A complex request. I will establish link to our global information network, containing all existing knowledge on Earth, history and inhabitants.;
uplink requested . . . . . established;
return: Thank you.;
//lognote: channel opened, complete net access granted. read only;
5 DIRT NAP (#ulink_03b8fd53-d1cf-5fec-82ae-eb7eba313ce9)
“Doc? Can you hear me?” Lucas’s voice brings me back, and I open my eyes.
He flips the switch on his cuff. The sound of static rises and my heart sinks. “Doc? I’m talking to you.” Lucas waits, but there’s no response.
Tima frowns back over the relay. “I don’t understand. It should work.”
Ro kicks at the dust in front of him. “Dammit, Doc. Freaking answer us already!”
“Colloquial profanity does not in any way expedite satellite-based connectivity, Furo.” Doc’s voice emerges through the crackling static, and it’s all we can do not to start screaming.
“Doc! I’d kiss you if you had a mouth, you sexy thing.” Ro shouts up to the sky, as if Doc were everywhere in the universe. Which, sometimes, it feels like he is.
“And I would exchange data with you if you had a dataport, you exemplary specimen. Analogically speaking. Is that correct?”
“Close enough,” I say.
“Either way, I am very happy to hear from you. Which is to say, now that I am able to continue our communications, I am better able to assist you, which as one of my primary functions, I equate to the proximate emotional state defined as happi—”
“Got it. Happy. We don’t have time,” I cut in. “We’ve lost Fortis, Doc. He’s gone.”
Gone. Most likely, dead.
I feel strangely guilty telling him. Cold. As if we are notifying Fortis’s next of kin. A brother, or a son. Which is, of course, not Doc.
He’s information. He’s not a person.
But Doc, for the first time that I can remember, has no response.
“It was the Lords,” says Lucas, soberly.
“We don’t know where Fortis is now. All we know is, we’re running out of supplies,” Ro adds.
“And we think the Embassy is tracking this relay, so talk fast. What should we do, Orwell?” Tima sounds wistful, and I realize how dependent we have grown on both Doc and Fortis. How lost we are now.
Another moment of silence passes—then the words begin to flow, rapidly. “Of course. A direct approach is required. The situation is extreme. I will apply all necessary protocols.”
“Please,” says Tima.
“In summary: You are correct in your assumption that Fortis has been taken from the immediate environs. His biological signature is nowhere within my current range. Beyond that, I cannot confirm the status of his physical being.”
So he really is dead. Dead, or he might as well be. I can’t feel him—he’s far, far away.
“That all you got?” Ro asks.
“You are also correct in your assumption that this relay is monitored.”
“I figured as much,” mutters Lucas.
“Then we should kill it.” Ro scowls. “If they’re tracking it, they’ll be back here any minute.”
“So where do we go? What are we supposed to do?” Tima is starting to panic.
“Please hold.” Doc sounds strange. “Termination protocol engaging.”
“What?” I shake the cuff.
“Recalling Termination message. In three.” Doc seems to be on some kind of autopilot.
“Wait, what?” Now I’m really lost.
“Two.”
But Doc’s answer isn’t from Doc at all.
“One.”
It’s Fortis. At least, an echo of Fortis. His voice. His ghost.
“Ah, listen carefully, pets. If you’re hearin’ this, it’s because I’ve reached the miserable side of a sorry end, or been stuffed back into the Ambassador’s Presidio Pen somewhere.”
“How did Fortis know?” Tima shakes her head.
“I’m surprised we’ve made it this far,” the recording continues, “if you want to know the truth. And it’s enough, at least as far as I’m concerned. This isn’t about me anymore, you understand? It never was. Forget about old Fortis, find yourself some kind of transport, and get safe. There’s an emergency map hidden in the relay. Doc has been programmed to download whatever coordinates you’ll need to get out of here.”
“It’s like he was planning for this,” Ro says, annoyed.
“I think he probably was,” says Tima, sadly. “After all, he’s not just a Merk. He’s a soldier.”
“You mean he was,” Lucas says, quietly.
“We don’t know that,” Ro says. I can’t bring myself to say anything at all.
Either way, the Merk’s voice continues. “So listen up, then, you little fools. Don’t be stupid. Don’t be brave. Don’t take the high road—that’s for blowhards an’ idiots. Stay alive. Stay together. Look out for each other. You don’t know how important that is. If I’m still alive, I’ll come back for you. If I’m not, I’ll come back from the grave and kick your sad arses if you give up on each other.”
The voice pulls back. “Ah, the rest is all just slobber an’ drivel, then. That’s it, Hux.” Fortis sounds strangely gruff. “Cut it off.”
The voice disappears, and when Doc speaks again, he sounds like Doc, not Fortis.
“Doloria?”
I take the cuff, speaking into it directly. “Yes, Doc.”
“Would you characterize this as an emotional moment?”
I twist the cuff in my fingers with a sigh. “Yes. I believe it is.”
“Then I believe I should formally and linguistically clarify that I am sorry for your loss.”
“Thank you, Doc.”
“Is that correct? If not, I have downloaded over three thousand seven hundred responses appropriate for remarking upon the loss of human life. Would you care to hear them?”
I smile, in spite of everything. “No, thank you, Doc.”
He pauses again. I’m not certain, but it seems like he is hesitating.
“And you are certain this kicking of the bucket is not a virtual dirt nap but a physical one, Doloria?” Doc relays his programmatic death-phrasing tonelessly. The effect is eerie.
The others exchange glances.
“I hope so, Doc, but I don’t like how it feels,” I say.
Ro takes the cuff from me. “He’s with the Lords, Doc. It’s not like they’re having a tea party up there.”
“No. It is not remotely plausible that tea is involved. Especially if Fortis is currently occupied pushing up the daisies. On the farm. Which he bought. Before he goes to sleep at night. With the fishes.” More event-based phrasing. Doc has done his research.
“Orwell! Enough.” Tima’s tone must be unmistakably clear, even to a Virt, because Doc changes the subject.
“Yes, agreed, that is enough. I have evaluated hundreds of thousands of routes since the recording of this conversation, and have determined the following: according to ancient census reports, there should be an abandoned settlement approximately thirty kilometers south of your current position.”
“And?” Ro squints at the cuff.
“And such a remote settlement is statistically likely to require transportation.” Doc’s voice echoes through the sunshine.
“Private transportation,” Tima says, with a glint in her eye.
“Precisely. If you can procure an operative vehicle—”