skonen_blades: (hamused)
The airport wasn’t packed this time of night. I scanned the thin crowd for my audition.

Bingo.

She had a gold filigree tattoo printed onto her upper arm near the shoulder, the kind of tattoo that went away in a year but twinkled brilliantly like Egyptian history as it faded. Her forearms carried the whorls and puckers of burn scars; acid or fire, he couldn’t tell.

There’s two ways to live here. Under the radar or straight peacocking. Red vinyl Mohawk implants made from old records, chrome knucks, eye enlargements, antlers, kangaroo blades, whatever. Bright and cheerful. High profile meant you needed to be able to back it up. If you were easily recognizable, you were easily trackable. ‘The most dangerous care the least’ was the theory. Of course, it could also just be bravado, someone playing ‘fake it ‘til they make it’ but that kind of stupid was its own kind of dangerous as well.

Me, I go under the radar. Regular suits, a little rumpled, and I look tired. My implants are all subdermal. I try to be as tourist as possible. Just on a layover, sir. I try to look a little scared all the time and I try to go quickly from place to place.

It’s just bait. Anyone sees me for a mark, they follow me into an alley and then they die. I get ninety per cent of my scavenge that way and save the best for myself. I do alright.

But I was just about to turn twenty-five in a part of the world where life expectancy was twenty-three for solos. I needed to get connected. I need join one of the big gangs and get paid in policy. Independence was good for the soul but it was getting harder. I was good enough to join one of the middle guilds but I wanted to shoot for one of the top eight. The Terminotaurs.

I’d been given a time and a location. This airport concourse at 9:30PM. Even though I was qualified, there was always an interview. There was always a deadly test.

And Gold Tattoo there was mine. Armband twinkling in the flat, fluorescent lights. Scanning the crowd for me and she still hadn’t found me. Showtime.

I stood up and checked my watch and scanned the departure boards nervously like I was worried my fictional flight might be delayed. I caught the eye of an airport attendant just behind Tattoo and waved at him. I jogged over to him clumsily in a way that would take me within an arm’s reach of Tattoo. If I played it super straight, she’d see me as background right up until it was too late.

It didn’t work. She saw through the act and recognized her target.

The gun barrels that fanned out of her wrists swept under her snarl in an arc that hosed down the whole crowd, me included, with a staccato engine thunderstorm of plastic shrapnel. Commuters dropped like cut-string puppets and everyone else became a scream and fled. The conflict shutters slammed down over kiosk windows. Within five seconds, we were alone with the bodies of a dozen downed travelers and a wide radius of cowering people taking whatever cover they could. We had seconds before security took us out.

My armour soaked up most of it but blood was definitely being guzzled out of me somewhere. I tongued my incisors and front tooth in the sequence that puffed open the glands in my neck. My bloodstream sang murder and time stopped.

I felt my muscles tear as I moved. There was a price to this speed. She finished her sweep left with both her arms pool-cue straight, stopped and elbowed her hands to point at the ceiling before setting her eyes on me and straightening her hands in my direction. The motion took a millisecond of jerking muscle but to me it was a ballet. Not slow motion but clear. She was excellent. No wasted movement. A real artist. I was flattered they’d sent someone so good.

As she brought her barrels down, I stayed ahead of the sweep and crouched until my hips and knees popped open and sideways. I skittered like a spider towards her as, wide-eyed, the vector of her guns stayed above me no matter how quickly she lowered them, like the direction of her lowering arms was a broom sweeping me towards her. I was like the shadow of a diving bird. I felt the projectiles shred the air in a stream above me, nearly parting my hair as I reached her ankles and minnowed between them in a corkscrew.

Her arms had guns and mine had blades. I flapped my arms out once and brought them in again as I spun torpedo-style under her and past her.

I cut off her feet.

The resulting awkwardness from her and her screams of defeat were hard to watch. She even attempted to balance on the bone stumps. I had cut them cleanly so for a second she almost managed it, taking one, two, three skittering clops before she slipped and thudded to the floor, elbow, knee, shoulder, rolling back towards me for another shot.

I was running ahead of her arc like a speed skater on the clean airport floor. I would try not to kill her. I looped around and her face twitched like a lizard to track me. Her arms were too heavy to go as fast as her neck and her frustration roiled off of her. I got to her head before she could focus her armaments on me.

There was a moment, then, when I think she considered surrendering. I had my blade to her head and she had not brought up her guns to shoot. Time hung still like dust in a sunbeam.

“I-“ I started and she twitched her arms up. I flexed my forearms and everything above the line of her nose blended. Her arms splayed out Jesus-wide with metallic thumps and that was the end of her time with the Terminotaurs.

And the beginning of mine.

Getting away from airport security was part two of the test. But that is a story for another time.



tags
skonen_blades: (Default)
He sits at the end of the bar with metal jutting out of his head. He was one of the first to receive the implants.

They’d done a lot with tinier and tinier ento-nerve breeding. They’d gotten the miniature steam tubes down to a fraction of a millimeter. Cooling was still the big problem in his day.

That was why he had four giant steaming bars of copper sticking out of the base of his skull. A steady drip of cooled oxygen dripped into a grommited hole in his head just above his ear with the precision of a well-wound clock from what looked like a hamster feeder.

Jack Furstens. We just called him Firsty. It was play on words since the pioneering operation he had endured had left him with a lisp and he drank here a lot. Firsty it was.

He has the same tech as the rest of us but we were younger and had received our implants after the advent of elektriks. Good old Peter Edison had discovered that this invisible stream of electrons could be made to travel down through wires that were smaller than the vacuum tubes and steam pipes. They ran cooler and could be put into a smaller space.

Used in conjunction with the bioware and steamdrivers, the new ‘computers’ were durable, stable, ran cooler, and only needed a little bit of upkeep. Some water here, a few crumbs there and little charge in the battery and Bob was your uncle. The fans were a little noisier but hey, it was a noisy city.

Firsty was a volunteer who went under the knife to get one of the first implanted cranial computers. With a series of punch cards, he could know Spanish or any of a dozen other languages. One of the problems was that no-one manufactured punch cards anymore.

His head was almost entirely hardware in an era that was starting to use ‘soft’ware to program their computers. Firsty’s head would have to be given to a hobbyist/mechanic/surgeon for the proper changes just to add another language or specialized field of knowledge to his existing slots list.

The heavy machine that had been grafted into his head was unable to be removed without fatal consequences. The bioware had grafted in surprisingly well. Might as well pull a tree out by it’s bloody roots.

He was a dinosaur. He was an oddity. He was a footnote in history.

We bought the Time Magazine with Firsty on the cover off of a collector at a boot sale down at the market last year. We had it framed and put above the bar for his birthday as a surprise.

The picture is Firsty in front of the glass and iron hospital service that performed the operation. There are zeppelins in the sepia sky in the background. He’s very handsome. His implants are rimmed with shining brass flanges to hide the entry and exit pustules. The copper gleams. He looks like he’s had one of those old fashioned espresso machines installed behind his face. It looks like Dr. Frankenstein took up industrial design and watchmaking. It’s a breathtaking shot.

He’s smiling with abandon like he just won the heavyweight championship of the world. He’s happy in a way I’ve never seen. I don’t think I’ve even seen his teeth since I worked here.

His face went pale when he saw it. He asked us to take it down. We thought he was joking with that flatline deadpan of his. When we laughed, he threw his glass from across the bar with amazing accuracy and smashed the frame to pieces. We swept it up and he continued drinking like nothing had happened.

I had it reframed. It’s in my office now where he’ll never see it.

Firsty. He’s down at the end of the bar with steam coming off of his head. He sticks to chilled drinks. He’s nearly had enough. I know the signs.

I’m polishing a glass when I hear his heavy head bounce off of the oak of the bar with a sound somewhere between a cash register and a parking meter before he slides off the stool to the ground.

The boys’ll put him in on the couch in the back.




tags

Profile

skonen_blades: (Default)
skonen_blades

June 2023

S M T W T F S
    1 23
45 678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated 9 July 2025 15:30
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios