by Sims (lit)
“That’s way too long a story for now,” Ellis said quickly. “Suffice it to say that the two groups had evolved so far apart that they could no longer have children together. Once that happened, their evolutionary courses were separated forever. So you see, a chimpanzee cannot evolve into a human any more than a human…”
His voice dried up.
Julie said, “But that doesn’t mean a sim won’t evolve into a human.”
“Sims are different, Julie. Theycan’t evolve. Ever. To evolve you must be able to have children, and sims can’t. Each sim is cloned from a stock of identical cell cultures. They are all genetically equal. Evolution involves genetic changes occurring over many generations, but sims have no generations, therefore no evolution.”
“This is pretty heavy luncheon chatter, don’t you think?” Judy said.
Ellis was grateful for the interruption.
“Your mother’s right.” He chucked Julie gently under the chin. “We can continue this another time. But did I answer your question?”
“Sure,” Julie said with a smile. “Sims will always be stuck being sims.”
Not if I can help it, Ellis thought.
8
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
“You’re not getting another beer, are you?” Martha called from the upstairs bedroom.
Harry Carstairs stood before his open refrigerator, marveling at the acuity of his wife’s hearing.
“Just one more.”
“Harry!” She drew out the second syllable. “Haven’t you had enough for one night?”
No, he thought. Not yet.
“It’s just a light.”
“Aren’t you ever coming to bed?”
“Soon, hon.”
She grumbled something he didn’t catch and he could visualize her rolling onto her side and pulling the covers over her head. He twisted the cap off the beer, took a quick pull, then stepped over to the bar. There he carefully lifted the Seagram’s bottle and poured a good slug into his beer.
Gently swirling the mixture, he headed for his study at the other end of the house.
He was drinking too much, he knew. But it took a lot of booze to put a dent in a guy his size. Still he didn’t think it was a real problem. He didn’t drink during the day, didn’t even think about it when he was surrounded by the hordes of young sims he oversaw. Their rambunctious energy recharged him every morning, filling his mind and senses all day.
But when he got home, when it was just Martha and he, the charge drained away, leaving him empty and flat. A dead battery. Not that there was anything wrong with Martha. Not her fault. It was all him.
He wished now they’d had kids. Life had been so fine before when it was just the two of them. And SimGen, of course. Martha worked for the company too, in the comptroller’s office. SimGen became part of their household, turning their marriage into a ménage à trois. But it had been a rewarding arrangement. They’d built their dream house on this huge wooded lot, traveled extensively, and had two fat 401(k)s that would allow them comfortable early retirement if they wanted it.
But a few years ago he’d begun to feel an aching emptiness in their home, to sense the isolation of the surrounding woods. He knew the day, the hour, the moment it had begun: When Ellis Sinclair had informed him about the sudden death of a sim.
Not just any sim. A special sim, one Harry had known throughout his entire time at SimGen. He’d taught that sim chess and turned him into a damn good player. They used to play three or four times a week.
And then he was gone. Just like that. Died on a Saturday, into the crematorium on Sunday, and his quarters stripped by the time Harry returned to work on Monday morning.
The boilermakers—Martha thought they were just plain beers—numbed the ache. But the ache seemed to require more anesthetic with each passing year.
Harry settled himself at his desk and reached out to restart the computer chess match he’d paused in midgame when—
He stopped. That feeling again. A prickling along his scalp…as if he was being watched.
Harry abruptly swiveled his chair toward the window directly behind him and caught a glimpse of a pale blur ducking out of sight. He sat stunned, frozen with the knowledge that he hadn’t been imagining it. Someone had been watching him through that goddamn window!
He leaped from his seat, lumbering toward the sliding glass doors that opened from his study onto the rear deck. He slipped, fell to one knee—damn boilermakers!—then yanked back the door and lurched onto the deck.
“I saw you, damn it!” he shouted, voice echoing through the trees, breath fogging in the cold air. “Who are you? Who thefuck are you!”
He stopped, listening. Where’d he go? But the woods were silent.
And then Martha’s voice, frightened, crying: “Harry! Harry, come quick!”
Harry ran back inside, charging the length of the house, shouting her name. He made it up the stairs to the master bedroom where he found her standing in the dark, staring out the big window overlooking the front yard.
“What is it?”
“I saw someone out there!” Her hand fluttered before her mouth like a hummingbird over a flower. “Just a glimpse. He was moving away toward the road but I know I saw him!”
“Nowdo you believe me?”
He’d told her before about this feeling of being watched but Martha had always chalked it up to his drinking.
“Yes! Yes, I do! And I’m calling the police!”
“Good. You do that,” Harry said, feeling a deep rage start to burn—damn, it was good to feel something again. He headed for the stairs. “And tell them to hurry. Because if I get to him first they’ll have to scrape what’s left of him into a goddamn bucket!”
“Harry, no!” Martha cried.
Harry ignored her. His blood was up, he could feel it racing through his head, his muscles. He’d been spooked, he’d been doubted, he’d even doubted himself, but now it was clear he’d been right all along and it was time for a little payback, time to kick some major donkey.
He hit the front drive running and sprinted for the street. In seconds his heart was thudding, his lungs burning.
Out of shape. And four sheets to the wind. But he was going to catch this fucker, and before he wiped up the road with him, he was going to find out why he—
Ahead…to the right…a car engine turning over, gears engaging, tires squealing on pavement.
Shit!
By the time Harry reached the street all he could see was a distant pair of taillights shrinking into the darkness.
He bent, hands on thighs, grunting and gasping for air. Maybe it was for the best. If he had caught up with the guy he might have been too winded to do much more than grab him and fall on him and hope he crushed the fucking hell out of him.
But the worst part was he still had no answers. Why was somebody watching him? Why should anyone care enough about him to come out here and sit in the cold dark woods to watch him play chess with his computer?
Get a life, man!
One thing was certain—no, make that two…two things were certain.
First, he was going to get a gun. Tomorrow.
Second, he was going to stop drinking. At least stop drinking so much. Also tomorrow.
Right now he was thoroughly rattled and needed a double of something. Anything. Just so long as it was a double.
9
MANHATTAN
OCTOBER 29
“There it is,” Romy said, pointing.
Patrick squinted down the garbage-strewn alley to where a naked bulb glowed dimly above a dented metal door. Back in the Roaring Twenties, a speakeasy might have hid behind a door like that. Here in the twenty-first century he knew nothing so innocuous awaited him.
“I don’t like this.”
A week had passed since Romy Cadman had barreled into his life. She’d called him this afternoon, suggesting they meet in the city for a late dinner, and then she wanted to show him a few sights.
They h
ad an excellent meal in the Flatiron district, with perhaps a little too much wine, and Patrick found himself feeling more than a little amorous. Butamour did not appear to be on the menu.
A real shame, because Romy Cadman was without a doubt the most exciting, most fascinating woman he had ever met. Being in her company reduced all the other women he’d known in his life to wraiths. But he couldn’t get past the firewall she’d set up along her perimeter.
He came close, though. At one point during dinner the conversation had strayed from sims and legal matters to the theater; somehow the subject of ballet came up, and Patrick had seen a change in Romy as she enthused over an upcoming production ofSwan Lake . She smiled and her eyes sparkled as she went on about her favorite dancers and performances. Patrick wished he’d known more about the subject, but ballet had always left him cold. He did a good job of looking interested, though. Hell, he’d try toe dancing himself if it would keep this woman’s guard down.
But too soon the subject ran out of steam and her defenses were back in place. She wasn’t playing hard to get, shewas hard to get. At least where he was concerned.
After dessert, as he’d helped her into her long black leather coat, he said, “I’m surprised you’d wear something like this.”
“Cleathre?”
“This is cleathre?” Cloned leather. He’d heard of it but had never actually seen it. He fingered the smooth, supple surface. “Feels like the real thing.”
“Itis the real thing. It’s just that no animals had to die to make it.”
Cleathre and furc, cloned from skin cells of cows, minks, sables, even pandas, were the hottest new thing in the fashion industry. Ethically pure, esthetically perfect, and not cheap.
From the restaurant she’d cabbed him down to this crummy ill-lit neighborhood in the West Teens, so far west he could smell the river.
He felt like a fish out of water: overdressed and under-leathered. Romy’s coat matched the dominant color of the passing locals, but Patrick’s white shirt, paisley tie, and herringbone overcoat made him stand out like a Klansman at an NAACP meeting.
“Nothing to worry about,” she said.
“Easy for you to say. You’re staying out here.”
He glanced around uneasily. He was no country boy, knew Manhattan pretty well, in fact; but this was a part of the city he tended to avoid. Clubs down here were in the news too often, usually connected to stories about shootings and drug overdoses.
Romy’s smile had a bitter twist. “I’d go in with you, but it’s not exactly my kind of place.”
“You keep saying that, but it doesn’t help me. Before I walk in there I’d much rather know whose kind of place itis than whose kind it isn’t.”
“You need to find out for yourself.”
“Okay then, why don’t I find out in the daytime?”
“Because the action at a place like this doesn’t get rolling until about now.”
“This is all because I said I thought sims had a pretty cushy existence, right?”
“Stop stalling,” she said, giving him a gentle punch on the shoulder. “Are you going to knock on that door or not?”
Patrick tried a grin. “I’d love to, except that it means leaving you out here alone on these mean streets.”
“Oh, I can take care of myself,” she said, and this time her smile had a touch of warmth in it. She pulled a finger-length vial from her pocket. “One spray of this will stop a horse.”
Was this a rite of passage, a trial by fire? Was this what he had to do to win her? Or at the very least, earn the right to try? He glanced at her intent dark eyes under those perfect brows. If so…
“Okay,” he said. “Here I go.”
He walked the dozen or so paces to the door, took a deep breath of urinetinged air, and rapped on its battered, flaking surface.
A narrow window slid open and two dark eyes peered out at him.
“Yeah?” said a harsh voice.
Feeling as if he’d stepped into a particularly corny episode of the oldUntouchables , he said, “I’d, um, like to come in.”
“Ever been here before?”
“No, um, a bartender at the Tunnel sent me.”
“What’s his name?”
“Tim. He told me to tell you that Tim sent me.”
Actually, Patrick had never met Tim, but Romy had told him to say that.
The door opened. Fighting the urge to turn and trot back down the alley, he stepped inside. The door slammed shut behind him and Patrick found himself sharing a long narrow hallway with a two-legged slab of beef who probably held graduate degrees in bar bouncing: shaved head, earrings, crooked nose, and a steroidal body stuffed into a sleeveless black T-shirt emblazoned withMOTHER ’S. An old Guns n’ Roses tune vibrated from the end of the hall.
The slab held out his hand. “Twenty-five bucks.”
“What for?”
“Door charge.”
“Twenty-five bucks just to walk in?”
“You see busloads of gooks marchin through here? This ain’t no sightseein stop. Pay up or walk.”
Patrick reached into his pocket. “Tim didn’t say anything about a door charge.”
“He’s not supposed to.” The bouncer grinned and stuck out his tongue—long and forked—and waggled it in Patrick’s face.
A splicer, Patrick thought, trying to hide his revulsion. What the hell has Romy got me into?
Patrick handed him the money.
“Welcome to the Jungle.” The bouncer pointed toward the end of the hall. “Mona will take care of you,” he said, then cupped his hands around his mouth and shouted, “Incoming! Newbie!”
Patrick hurried down the hallway, brushing the sides in his haste. The faster he went, the sooner this would be over. He hoped.
Mona—at least he assumed the obese woman in the tight red dress exposing acres of cleavage was Mona—met him at the end of the hall. Another splicer: oversized lizard scales ran up the sides of her face and across her throat and who knew where else. She and the bouncer must be a couple—both into reptiles.
Tattoos and piercings had once been considered avant garde, but eventually were mainstreamed. Then tailored genes and nonhuman splices hit the black market and the bod-mod crowd jumped on them like cats on a nipcoated mouse.
“Hi, honey,” she said, showing pointed teeth in a big welcoming grin. “First time, huh?”
“Uh, yeah.”
First time forwhat ?
“Everybody’s a little nervous the first time.” She took his arm and led him around a corner. “Let me introduce you to the girls first, then you take your time and pick the one you want. The base charge is two-fifty and that allows you half an hour. We charge extra if you go over, and of course there’s surcharges for any specialties you want…”
Patrick stopped cold when he saw them.
“Kinda gets you, don’t it,” Mona said. “Nobody ever imagines they could look this good.”
The “girls” were female sims, but nothing like Patrick had ever seen or imagined. Someone had caked them with makeup, either styled and dyed their hair or fitted them with wigs, then dressed them in vinyl or studded leather or lingerie—satin teddies, frilly see-through nighties, the whole Frederick’s of Hollywood catalog. And their legs—most of them had shaved legs. Sims as a rule were only slightly hairier than humans, and the hair was coarser, but they didn’t shave their legs or underarms. Patrick had never seen a shaved female sim, or ones with such breasts—they must have had implants.
“Good Christ!” he blurted. “What have you done to them?”
He did his best to hide his revulsion as Mona gave him a sharp look, but God it wasn’t easy. Sim whores…
She grinned again and gave him a knowing wink. “You don’t like them all dolled up? That’s all right. I think I know your type.”
“You do?” That possibility was almost as unsettling as the sight of these sim sex slaves.
She pointed to two unshaven, unenhanced females lounging nude
on a couch.
“We’ve got Teen and Mone over there. They work in our special jungle room for clients who like their sims just the way you’d encounter them in the wild.”
“In the wild? They don’toccur in the wild! They’re…manufactured!”
“Hey,” Mona said, her smile fading. “Are you here to have fun or nitpick my ass?”
Patrick stared, he gawked, he gaped in shock at their surreal sicko getups. His stupefaction that anyone could find these pathetic creatures even remotely erotic quickly faded, replaced by a deeper revulsion as he noticed the bruises on their shaved limbs, their dead dull eyes. They looked like desiccated shells as they sat and smoked and stared at him.
Smoked…he’d never known a sim to smoke.
He had to get out of here. Now.
“I…I think I’ve changed my mind.”
“What’s the matter?” She looked genuinely offended. “We got the best in town.”
Patrick started backing toward the hallway. “I’m sure you do, it’s just that I…nothing personal, but I don’t think I’m ready yet.”
Glaring now, Mona said, “Then why’d you come?”
“A friend told me to.” God, he wanted to kill Romy. “Said I’d find it enlightening. But I don’t.”
He turned and headed for the door where the bouncer waited.
“Jerry!” Mona called out behind him. “Something’s not right with this guy.”
Jerry placed himself between Patrick and the door.
“You got a problem, pal?”
Oh, no, Patrick thought as his gut clenched. He’s going to beat the shit out of me.
“Yeah,” Patrick said, pressing one hand against his stomach and the other over his mouth. “I think I’m going to be sick.” He retched for effect.
“Don’t you even fuckin dream of it, asshole! You puke in here, you’re gonna clean it up—with your tongue!”
Patrick retched again, louder this time. “Oh, God!” He doubled over.
“Motherf—”
He felt the back of his coat bunch as Jerry grabbed a fistful of fabric, heard the door swing open, and then he was propelled into the stink of the alley. He stumbled, almost lost his footing, but managed to stay upright as he skidded to a halt against the brick wall on the far side.