I’ll
Follow You
By
Jason P. Burnham
The empty
containment unit had been viciously flayed open from the
inside. Splayed like petals of a metallic flower, the
unit was the lone human structure among the scattered
rocky outcroppings that characterized Ravi’s patrol
sector. Ravi was particularly displeased to have come
across this guaranteed extension to his day, having
nearly completed a double shift and already having
difficulty keeping his eyes open. He hated his job every
day, but this made today so much worse.
He
put his eye to the night vision scope on his pulse
rifle, surveying for the escapee, but found nothing.
That was one good thing about patrolling the deserted
area nearest AbsolutPetrol Central. They didn’t want
anyone to come knocking, so they surrounded themselves
with desolation. It had the dual purpose of dissuading
solicitors from knocking and dissuading containment unit
escapees from surviving. Usually, that is. The escapees
could cause problems for Resource Engagement Officers
like Ravi if they happened upon one another before the
escapee died of thirst. Ravi’s suit protected him from
dehydration and some level of pugilism, but perhaps not
from whoever destroyed this container. The REO
paid its officers in water and stims and at this moment,
Ravi was wishing he could have saved up some stims to
deal with… this.
Ravi
was not high-ranking enough to have information about
who was inside a unit in his sector—he was just a patrol
officer. Most of the time they were unoccupied—citizens
had learned better than to fight against the REO.
Consulting
his suit just in case he had an extra stim,
Ravi wondered if there was any chance he could just
ignore this, go home, and get some sleep with his dog,
Sandi. What’s the worst that could happen? Central
had already reduced their water disbursements to a level
that guaranteed near-constant thirst. Ravi knew they
wouldn’t pay him overtime for staying past his shift,
but the threat of having less water for he and
Sandi rooted him to his sector until he could resolve
the situation.
He looked
anxiously back at the unit. This sort of thing had
happened before, though usually an alert would go out.
Regardless, it was probably another subject rebounding
from an overdose of Anti-Agg and emanating chaos.
Anti-Agg could have paradoxical effects on subjects and
the risk was increased by high levels in the blood. It
was a derivative of phencyclidine, or PCP, that had
anesthetic and adrenergic properties. What that meant in
overdose was someone high on adrenaline that can’t feel
pain—the perfect storm for containment unit
annihilation. Ravi was wishing more and more than he had
just gone home instead of finishing his rounds.
He
studied the motion tracker on his wrist display. Damn.
And
he had to track the escapee at night. Not that Ravi was
afraid of the dark. Okay, he was a little bit afraid of
the dark, but who wasn’t?
What’s there to be
afraid of when you have infrared?
The
people who said that didn’t understand that not
everything showed up on infrared, particularly persons
knowing how to hide from it. Ravi imagined (and hoped)
that this containment-breaking subject was too psyched
out to recognize the need for infrared cloaking, but
there was no guarantee. Maybe they didn’t know the
intricacies of REO equipment.
Ravi
sighed. But what are the chances of that? The
REO were the second most hated organization in the
world. Stealing everyone’s water to “cleanse” it and
taking a cut in the process doesn’t garner favor. The
only conglomerate despised more was their parent
company, AbsolutPetrol, who caused the catastrophic
spill of a proprietary, “climate friendly,”
crude-dredging chemical. Incidentally only they
had the technology to extract the toxin from
contaminated water. Without AbsolutPetrol and their
disaster, there would not have been an REO. To his
dismay, Ravi would not have had a job without the
REO—there was no other game in town.
Ravi’s
head jerked at blips from his motion tracker. Half a
click away three (three?)
signals appeared.
No, no. Containment
units are only big enough for a single prisoner…
subject.
His
heart caught for a beat as he zoomed in on the movement.
Dogs. The subject probably fled long ago. He exhaled
deeply, the sigh reverberating in his air recycling
system. The dogs must
have been resting when he checked before.
Dogs, Ravi thought with a heavy heart. A flashback hit
him—listless puppies, blending in to the sand, shallowly
respiring. He had been on a so-called “Waterlarcene
Raid” and the lethargic canines had lined the alley to
the waterlarcene’s door. The woman had been accused of
sequestering water illegally—REO didn’t allow any water
distribution that didn’t go through them; they said it
was for “quality assurance.” When they broke into the
house, the woman inside turned out to not be hoarding
water; the REO had received a bad tip. That didn’t stop
Ravi’s fellow REOs from beating the woman and taking her
for booking, purposely spilling the meager water rations
she had for herself. Ravi had to go back the next week
to finish up some paperwork for Central, only to find
all the puppies gone. He asked a kid on the street what
had happened and the child said that after the REO took
the woman in, the dogs couldn’t share her water anymore
and they had all died. Except, as it turned out, the
mother of the litter, who tried to bite through Ravi’s
suit as he was leaving. She knew. To add insult
to injury, whoever gave the false tip probably got a
week’s water ration for their lie. People would sell you
out for watered-down sweat.
He
shuddered, partially at the memory, partially from
exhaustion and the continued necessity of finding the
escaped subject. On the upside, confronting the hulking
rage of whoever broke out of this container would
assuredly be emotionally easier than sentencing a litter
of puppies to death.
The noise of
his air handlers gave him a boost of confidence. The
higher oxygen concentration in the filtered air of his
suit would give him an advantage over the escapee in
this toxic atmosphere, but he wasn’t certain how much.
After all, they had really destroyed that container. He looked at the shredded metal again. I’m too tired for
this, he thought, sleep’s fingers clawing at his
eyelids, the weight of the lost litter draining him. I just want to get
home and collapse with Sandi under the blankets. Ravi’s dog was tan
too.
Under
a rocky outcropping in the shadows, Ravi stumbled first,
then gave in to exhaustion and sat. He would never be
allowed to go home until he faced whoever was out there.
There was still a theoretical chance the escapee could
make it to Central, though without a suit like his, the
possibility was vanishingly small. But he couldn’t
confront them without getting some sleep. He debated
whether the miniscule noises of air processing from his
suit would be enough to attract attention. But if he
turned it off, he would have to breathe the polluted
air, clogging up his lungs and putting him on a level
playing field with the runaway. Before he could decide,
he had passed out. He dreamed of puppies.
###
Crrrack.
Ravi
screamed. He had broken bones before, but never his femur.
“They
say the body is 60% water. How pulpy do you think I have
to make you to be able to drink that 60%?” asked the
figure holding Ravi upside down.
In
the dissociative pain of his broken limb, Ravi suddenly
recalled that one of the withdrawal effects of
Anti-Aggression serum is an extreme hypersensitivity to
noise. In his pain fugue, Ravi thought, I wish I had
turned off my air handlers. Then, I sure wish
Central would quit authorizing
overdoses of Anti-Agg.
“No
response? Guess I’ll just have to keep smashing.” The
figure raised Ravi up and moved toward a nearby rock
outcropping, preparing, apparently, to beat him against
it.
Ravi tried to
speak, but teeth and blood bubbled out instead.
“I
wish the fluids would come out of you in a more pleasant
tone. You sound like swamp gas and I do so prefer
babbling brooks. Or at least that’s what my mother told
me the sounds she played for us were. I’ve never heard
the real thing.”
For
a flash, the lancinating pain from the rebounder’s grip
abated and Ravi was falling. The agony jumped from femur
to lower back and then both his legs went numb.
REO won’t pay to
fix that, he thought distantly.
Paralyzed
from the waist down, vision failing from blood loss, he
tried to focus on the human standing over him, shoulders
heaving. She was about his size, skin a few shades
darker brown than his own and long frizzled hair, half
of it matted with sweat to her neck.
She’s crying,
he thought as sympathetic hot tears carved valleys in
the coagulating blood on his face—he could see his death
playing out in slow motion.
The
rebounder looked at him.
Oh shit, it’s her.
It was the woman whose puppies had all died when
they took her in. Ravi was surprised to see her because
he didn’t do the post-arrest processing and had no idea
what happened to most of the people he brought in. Her
residence was a few clicks away, at the edge of his
patrol sector, so this was probably the nearest
containment unit. You would have to give me Anti-Agg
too if you killed my dogs.
Standing
over him, she vacillated between murderous and
melancholy, raising her foot to crush his windpipe then
turning suddenly away to sob.
She can’t see my
face, he thought. If she could and recognized him
through his battered countenance, he would have already
been dead. Her vengeance would be justified.
Her
heaves turned to shudders and Ravi glimpsed her face—she
was laughing. Inexplicably, he laughed too, delirious at
his impending demise, at the ridiculousness of where he
found himself. An
unwilling pawn watching the inexorable approach of the
queen.
Her laughter
caught in her throat at the sound of his ragged guffaws.
But when she recognized it as genuine, she cackled, and
the two of them giggled uncontrollably until their faces
and chests hurt, Ravi’s having the added pain of lungs
pooling with blood. It was the most he had laughed on
the job since begrudgingly joining the REO all those
years ago.
“Hey,
hey, come here,” Ravi gurgled, motioning to her.
The
figure ambled closer. Her rebound was coming to an end.
Ravi knew the
exsanguination, particularly the pulmonary hemorrhaging
wasn’t survivable, even with his suit actively suturing
arteries and administering blood products. His lungs
would be too full of blood to exchange oxygen by the
time he got to a medical unit.
“Here,” he
pressed his commandlink into her palm. “Take this and
wear my suit.” He looked down at where she had crushed
his femur. “It will repair itself when you put it on.
Don’t bother cleaning it.” He coughed, blood spattering
his chest plate. “It’ll fit—you’re about my size. Go
right to Central and obliterate
them.”
She
stared at him and he couldn’t tell if her look was
distrust, fear, or uncertainty. No, it’s understanding.
“Yes,
it’s a suicide mission, but your degree of
Anti-Aggression rebound is uniformly fatal. It’s only a
matter of time, but you can destroy a lot with this suit
if you hurry. Once you pass security with my suit and
access codes, you’ll find the entire executive suite at
Central, all virtually defenseless.” He gurgle-laughed.
“They’re so arrogant, they think nobody will touch them
there.”
She
gulped.
“You
can do some serious damage to AbsolutPetrol and thereby,
the REO. Maybe even enough for others to join the
fight.” He had a sudden revelation. “Bring your dog to
help you.” He coughed again.
Growling
at the word dog,
she ripped off his helmet, connections snapping like
thunder, air handlers cycling into overdrive in the open
circuit. She retched at the sight of him.
She knows. He
hadn’t been wearing his helmet when they took her in.
“I…
I’m sorry,” he said.
If Ravi
hadn’t been looking at her, he never would have believed
the noise that he heard had been human. She sounded like
a wounded bear, defending its cub with its dying
breaths.
He didn’t
want to break her fury vigil, but he knew he had to
speak before his time ran out.
“I’m sorry,”
he found himself saying again. “But if you want revenge
on more than just me, you need to go now.”
She
looked at him grimly. “Why?”
It
could have been a thousand questions. Why
do people die from the rebound? Why did you take our
water? Why did you hurt my family? Why did you join
the REO? Why did they put me in that containment unit?
But there was only one answer to her question.
“Because
I hate them as much as you do,” he said, words he knew
to be true, but had never been able to say. “Every REO
is bad, including me. Only now can I admit it. Death
illuminates the darkness of living.”
Her
lips quivered and twisted into a snarl. Ravi knew most
of it was for the REO, but as their face here and now,
some of it was for him, and he accepted that. She said
nothing further and he could feel life draining away,
but not fast enough for her to get to AbsolutPetrol
Central.
“You…
you’re going to have to kill me quickly if you want to
make it. Don’t forget to take my retinas with you or the
suit won’t work.”
He
sputtered and coughed again, but there wasn’t anything
left to say.
She
stood over him, motionless except for the wind blowing
through her sweat and blood-stained hair. A sliver of
the moon appeared from behind a cloud.
“Thank
you,” she said, tears on the brims of her lower eyelids
reflecting the boulder she had picked up to smash his
head in. “Time to die.”
He
smiled. For the first time that he could remember, Ravi
was not afraid to go into the dark. Especially now that
he knew the leaders at Central would be headed there
shortly. He had a few bones to pick with them.
THE
END
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