Nix kneels to help, but she leaves the last apples in the grass. She plants her hands on her hips, basket looped around her arm.
“It rained last night,” she says. “A black cloud crawled over the mountains, a storm that reached the heavens. Shep and I watched it unleash a torrent of rain that washed away the dust and scoured the land. When it was done, everything smelled new. It was beautiful.”
She turns around.
“And you weren’t there to see it.”
“Our lives,” Nix says. “I’m risking our lives.”
“That’s what I mean.”
“I am Dreamland, Raine.” He thumps his chest. “This reality exists inside me; I created this. When I die, it dies. When we have children, I don’t want them inside my head.”
She shakes her head. “You didn’t used to think that.”
“I faced the facts.”
“You think I’m in your head? Just your imagination?”
“That’s not what I’m saying.”
“You said everything comes from you. I’m here, Nixon. I was born here. You’re saying I’m not real, I’m just something you dreamed up.”
“That’s not what I mean.”
“Then what? You can’t have it both ways. I’m in here, I’m part of Dreamland. I know this is real, Nix, because when you’re not here, I still am. I think for myself. I get sad, I get happy. I sleep and eat and everything that defines a human, you know that.”
“I can’t…” He paces beneath an apple tree and grabs a branch. He can’t explain that part. She doesn’t feel like a dream; he just knows Dreamland is inside him. “I can’t take the chance, Raine.”
“This is my life.”
“That’s what I’m fighting for.”
“You should ask me, first.”
She strolls up the slope, hips swaying in time with the basket. She shrinks at the crest, Shep trotting next to her. When Nix was young, he was convinced that biomites helped transport him to another reality, a technological portal to a heavenly dimension. He would lead humanity to this paradise that existed in their minds, show them that problems didn’t exist, that Heaven was right here and now.
But thoughts are convincing, and often deceiving. Not necessarily evil, perhaps even protective. But thoughts can make us believe the imaginary. Cali eventually convinced him there was no alternate reality inside the biomites, that he wasn’t going anywhere other than a dream—a lucid one.
And Raine is part of it.
Perhaps that’s the initial wedge that split them apart: his refusal to accept her rational explanation that biomites create a dream. In the end, she changed his mind and he hated her for it. If Dreamland wasn’t real, then he had to get Raine.
Growing up, Cali had explained, means accepting life as it is.
But that doesn’t mean he can’t change things.
If Raine is a construct of his mind, he’ll make her flesh and blood. He’ll incarnate her in the real world. She’ll be her own person. And Cali will help.
Until then, Raine and Shep will be alone.
23
Wind gusts against the house.
Cali exits the kitchen with a mug of peppermint tea, the floor protesting her footsteps. A large recliner is positioned next to a cluttered desk. She closes the blinds.
Her head throbs with urgency. Bing. Bing. Bing.
The dogs curl up at her feet, groaning. She sips the tea; butterflies flutter from her stomach and lodge in her throat. She allows the discomfort, watching her thoughts and expectations, not expecting peace to come, simply settling into the present moment.
A deep breath.
The cup shakes as she places it on the desk.
She sits back and opens to the pressure in her head. Warmth floods through her, followed by thoughts and sensations of another person, someone far away, synchronizing with her biomites.
Her inner ears itch. Her eyes sting.
A shadow forms on the braided rug. It takes the shape of a young man, the edges wispy and undefined as her eyes interpret the data flowing through her secure connection. Colors bleed from within the mysterious cloud, swirling and solidifying until he’s there.
Nix is standing in the room for her eyes only.
His face is smooth; his hair short and sun-bleached. The image is tainted with the memories of her little brother, making him appear much younger than a forty-year-old man. Certainly more youthful than the old-man body.
It’s what she wants to see.
“You’re in a secure location?” she asks.
“I’m using your line.”
“What about your body?”
“It’s fine.” He steps off the rug, accessing her senses to see the room. He studies the shelves of books that never get opened. “Everything still looks so old. Even you. I thought you were all alone. Why are you still modifying your appearance?”
“It’s just me, Nix.” She reaches for the tea, her hand now steady. “But people come around.”
“Do they?”
He stops in front of a photo of Cali and her daughter, Avery. She feels his thoughts. He wonders if she’s conjured up her daughter since he left, created an illusion much like Raine. She’d tried that years ago and learned that the dead should stay dead.
Delusion frays the fabric of the mind.
“It’s good to see you,” she says.
“Why didn’t you answer my calls?”
“You know why.”
“You’re too late now, sis. The warehouse is cleared out; the bodies are gone, including the girl you could’ve saved.”
“You’re blaming her on me?”
“Isn’t that why you waited, so it wouldn’t be your fault?”
“Why the girl?”
“Why save someone that’s innocent?”
“Stop, Nix. Just…stop. You weren’t there to save the girl.”
“Neither were Marcus Anderson and his bricks. That girl was a survivor in that shutdown and they were going to take her back to M0ther.”
“How do you know that?”
He pauses, considering whether the truth would help or hurt him. She never pried into his thoughts and always respected her brother’s identity, even when his beliefs threatened him. She could force a look at his deepest secrets, but she didn’t have to.
He kept them on the surface.
“I pawned her.”
He took over her senses, saw through her eyes, and heard through her ears when she was in the warehouse. “Fool.”
His silent footsteps stomp across the wood floor, the dust bunnies undisturbed. “You hide in here while the world is falling apart and call me foolish?”
“You’re not saving it, Nix. You’re searching for a fabricator; that has nothing to do with the rest of the world.”
“You don’t know what it’s like out there, you don’t see what those nixes are doing to people. It’s like a drug the world has never seen and M0ther is turning them off by the thousands.”
“Sacrificing yourself won’t change anything.” She sips the tea. “Why were you at the warehouse, Nix? Why did you pawn the girl?”
“Time’s running out, Cali. It won’t be long before M0ther clamps down on everything. Fabricators are getting rare. I’m afraid it won’t be much longer before they’re extinct.”
“I can’t help you.”
He twitches, not able to look at her for several moments. She feels his connection weaken, senses his impulse to disconnect.
“Marcus is leading this witch hunt,” he says. “You think he’ll stop when nixes are eliminated? You think he’ll be satisfied when M0ther still hasn’t found you or me?”
“Sticking your neck out is not helping us.”
“You know why I’m doing it!” His voice rattles in her head. “It doesn’t matter what happens to me. He won’t stop until he has you.”
Marcus Anderson.
That name used to accompany a cold shank of fear somewhere in her solar plexus, would leak it’s venom into her legs.
If he had a single biomite in his body, she would destroy him, turn his body into a slow-rotting corpse.
The sick bastard with his sex-toy fetishes and trails of lies.
His wife had secretly recorded dozens of masochistic sex parties with fabrications that looked ten years old. The wife had used it to get everything in a settlement in return for her silence.
But the world needed to know what made that sick fuck tick. Cali made sure of it. But in the end, he ended up working with M0ther and now wielded more power than ever. The irony was insufferable.
“He didn’t take the halfskins,” Nix says. “He just left them on the floor and let family and friends weep over three-day-old corpses. The girl wasn’t halfskin, though. She was under 50%, still legal to exist, and he didn’t care. He was going to take her back. Instead, he got what he wanted and left her cold. It’s not just halfskins anymore. He’s killing who he wants.”
“And how was I going to save her?”
“I don’t know.” He paces around the rug, running his hands through his thick blond hair. “Reach out, manipulate the network, alter the bricks. Make them take her away from Marcus.”
“I can’t do that.”
“No, you won’t do that. You could’ve manipulated someone to get her out, but you’re afraid to compromise your safe house, afraid to see what you’ve done to the world.”
Twenty years ago, the nixes had saved his life. Now he curses them.
“The girl’s not dead,” Cali states.
He continues pacing. “What do you mean?”
“She’s still alive.”
“How?”
Cali looks away. She swore she wasn’t going to do this. If she was honest, the guilt worked. It was absurd to believe she’s responsible for people’s actions. She released the sex videos of Marcus Anderson, but she never leaked the code for nixes. The story of their escape eventually got out and that’s all it took for garage nanobiometric hobbyists and big corporations to break the invisibility barrier. They discovered their own nixes without her help. Yet she still got the credit.
And the guilt.
Cali, though, has plenty of guilt parked inside her. Nix only has to kick over one domino to get them all to fall.
“The photo you sent…her name is Jamie. Her background wasn’t hard to find—single-parent household, mother guilty of substance abuse, arrested for shoplifting, possession of firearms, and other petty crimes. Jamie’s last registered biomite scan tapped 49.9%. She was going halfskin when the bricks hit the warehouse. I scanned her biomite identity and found it still active.”
“Can’t be. Maybe her identity had already been recycled.”
“She’s alive, Nix.” She leans back. “Trust me.”
He doesn’t ask why she investigated such an innocuous person. Why go through all the trouble? Why the risk? Because Avery would’ve been her age.
Would Cali’s daughter have been in that warehouse? Would she have succumbed to the halfskin promise of everlasting pleasure, even if Cali told her such promises were empty?
Truth be told, Cali doesn’t want Jamie to be dead.
“Whose body was in the warehouse?” Nix asks.
“Maybe Marcus fabricated it.”
Innocence haunts him, reminding Cali of the little boy she’d cared for when their parents died. Life seemed so difficult then. How could it have possibly become harder?
“Did he take her back to M0ther?” he begs.
“I don’t think so.”
“You know where she’s at?”
Cali cups the mug, swirling the contents. She doesn’t tell him all the layers of encryption it was buried beneath. Someone doesn’t want Jamie to be found.
“It’s a trap, Nix.”
“You think everything’s a trap.” The childish visage fades.
“That’s why we’re alive.”
“You’re surviving, Cali. Not the same thing as living.”
“We can’t beat M0ther, Nix. Twenty years ago, maybe, but not now. She’s learning, evolving. Her intelligence is increasing exponentially. Despite all the safeguards, I think she’s evolved into an identity that could threaten everything, not just the halfskins. People are still blind to her power. We have to hunker down and survive until the world sees what she’s become. They need to see the truth.”
“And you see the truth?”
How does a person see truth? Once upon a time Cali was a nanobiometric engineer, brilliant and savvy, yet she couldn’t see the truth of her life. Not then.
What about now?
“Where’s Jamie?” Nix asks.
Cali drums her fingers. It only takes a thought to transfer Jamie’s identity code. That’s all he’ll need to find her.
His image fades.
She remains in the recliner with a cold cup of tea and warm dogs on her feet, knowing why she told him. Knowing that he’ll need her again.
When he does, he’ll come back.
24
A bus turns off Dupont Circle onto Connecticut Drive, whooshing a few feet from the sidewalk. Marcus crosses the street, exhaust fumes reminding him of the capital. Pedestrians ignore him, with briefcases or fully loaded backpacks.
The sun is cresting the urban skyline into cloudless blue space. The temperature is ideal with just a slight breeze.
Perfect.
He follows a tall brunette into Starbucks, her black heels tall, slender, and loud. The lines are long and the seats taken. Baristas shout for pickups while patrons rigidly wait their turns. The brunette looks through her purse while queuing up.
Marcus goes directly to the front.
No one fusses or argues, not even a slight look of annoyance. They move like a school of fish making way for a Great White. His order—a decaf latte with a bagel and grapes—is ready and waiting. He folds a newspaper beneath his arm. The fat man near the window gets out of the cushioned chair in time for Marcus to sit. It’s still warm.
Marcus bows his head.
The room falls silent.
“Bless us, oh Lord, and these thy gifts, which we are about to receive, from thy bounty, through Christ our Lord. Amen.”
He makes the sign of the cross. Life inside M0ther resumes.
It wasn’t always this good. When he accepted the post, life was grim in the hazy world beneath the dome. His days were spent in golf carts or beige offices, taking conference calls and approving memos. It was grinding him down and, despite his dedication, he considered quitting. The loneliness and loss was too much.
But something changed. Just when he needed it, God answered his prayers and gave him strength. The dull gray walls filled with color. Things started to appear when he asked for them, like clothing or furniture, even a vehicle. There was evidence of increased biomite activity inside the dome.
And then an elderly woman walked into his office: M0ther, with her flowing wardrobe and gentle smile.
“I want to help you,” she said.
And so she did.
Marcus samples the coffee while reading The Washington Post’s headlines. A shutdown in San Francisco is front-page news. The editorials are filled with public outcries, calls for legal reform and stays of shutdown. An ethnic cleansing, one idiot calls it. Liberal statisticians claim the drastic reduction in the human population could set it on course for extinction in fifty years. Unless, they state, something is done about M0ther.
What they don’t take into consideration is the population of clay humans that will never be threatened. Rather than ethnic cleansing—there’s nothing ethnic about biomites—Marcus believes this is a modern-day rapture. The good Lord is removing the unworthy through temptation. The Earth will be returned to the Garden of Eden once it has been cleansed.
Perhaps, as one radical scientist claims, this is simply an evolutionary correction. The planet cannot support several billion people, and by our own fault we are coming back into balance.
He finishes the bagel, savoring the coffee while the lines get longer and the traffic backs up. A
woman in a red dress walks across the street. Anna steps inside Starbucks. A hipster gets up, shoving his chair next to Marcus for her to sit.
Anna crosses her smooth legs, the hem just above the knees.
A barista delivers a tall coffee. The pretense that she needs to eat and drink—that any of these fabrications have anywhere to go—puts him at ease, helps him forget just how far away home is. He reminds himself, often, that Jesus walked among the wretched and impure, the prostitutes and sinners.
What about the unreal?
“You’ve been withdrawn lately,” Anna says. “Are you depressed?”
“And what would you know about depression?”
“It is often due to a chemical imbalance, specifically serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine.” She tilts her head. “Would you say you are experiencing heavy emotions?”
“And now you understand emotions?”
“Emotions can be described as bodily sensations that accompany thoughts. Fear is described as cold and numb, a sense of contraction. Anger is hot and raging. Depression feels as if you’re beneath a heavy blanket.”
“And you feel these things?”
“Perhaps you would like medication to reestablish balance?”
Marcus looks away. Antidepressants are for the weak-minded. The Lord created depression to test our resolve, to forge strength and faith. It was not meant to be cured with a pill.
“You’ve never talked about your feelings, Marcus. You have not grieved for the loss of your marriage or the separation from your family. Many people find resolution through experiencing their suffering, by first talking of it.”
“Shut up.”
M0ther is regurgitating Powell’s orders for counseling. He leans forward, resisting the urge to smack the arrogance from her tone.
“We care about you, Marcus.”
“We.” Who is she talking about? These are all M0ther’s creations, all various forms of imitated life composed of biomites pretending to exhibit emotions, pretending to be self-aware, pretending to feel. Aren’t they all one and the same? Why does Anna pretend she’s separate?
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