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Which spoke now: “You’re in big trouble, pal.” The briefcase kept its voice level and calm, as though unconcerned with human problems.

Holden glanced over at the briefcase. Plain black, a decent grade of leatherette, chrome snaps and bits around the handle. It looked like the exact sort that millions of junior execs carried into office towers every morning, back on Earth. By rights, it shouldn’t have been talking at all; that it was doing so indicated the long-standing personal relationship between the two of them.

“Big, big trouble.” The briefcase continued its simple, ominous pronouncements.

“I know—” Holden reached out to the control panel and dialed the skiff’s guidance system toward the silver crescent’s intake beam. “I breathe trouble.”

More than metaphor; the lungs in his chest, and the heart between them, were efficient constructs of Teflon and surgical steel. His original cardiopulmonary system had been blown out his back by an escaped replicant named Leon Kowalski. Back on Earth, back in the L.A. from which he and the briefcase had just flown. That bullet had been a couple of years ago; there had been others before and since then, some of which he’d fired, others that’d been fired at him. The bio-mechanical lungs sucked whiffs of imminent death and left them on his tongue. Tasting like the ashes of the cigarettes the LAPD doctors had made him give up.

“Breathe it out, too.”

“You’re probably going to die.”

“Coming from you, that’s good.” Holden knew that the briefcase’s voice was the voice of the dead. A dead man speaking. It didn’t matter whether that man, when alive, had been human or not. “You’d know, wouldn’t you?”

If the briefcase had had shoulders, it would’ve shrugged. “Just leveling with you. That’s all.”

Holden ignored the last bit. Lights had started flashing on the control panel, indicating that the intake beam had locked onto the skiff. One light, he knew, would stay yellow for a few more seconds; that was the window of opportunity for abandoning the intake approach, for breaking off and turning the little craft around. And heading back to Earth or anywhere else his own death didn’t seem quite so probable.

He kept his hands folded in his lap, watching and waiting until the yellow light disappeared, replaced by the green one right next to it. They were going in.

The silver crescent loomed bigger and brighter in the skiff’s viewscreen. He could make out the segmented panels that formed its curved, double-tapered shape. Croissant, thought Holden. Thinking of French bakery goods, stuff served with real coffee. The same word, actually. He knew his mind was rattling on, filling up the empty corridors inside his head with nonsense. So there wouldn’t be room for worrying about the job he’d come all this way to Outer Hollywood to do.

A delivery job. Once I was a blade runner, he mused; now I’m some sort of errand boy. He didn’t mind; he’d kept his gun when he’d quit the police department. That was the main thing: he needed it now more than before.

The silver crescent grew larger, blocking out the pocked white shape of the real moon. Brown-mottled Earth lay somewhere behind the skiff; Holden didn’t sweat the navigational fine points. Those had all been programmed in, along with the other details of the job. He glanced again at the briefcase, which had mercifully fallen silent. The initials on the small brass plaque under the handle read RMD. Not his, but those of the person to whom the briefcase was to be delivered. Then he can deal with it, thought Holden. He wondered if Mreally was Rick Deckard’s middle initial, or whether that was just something that the people who’d put the briefcase together had made up out of thin air.

Outer Hollywood filled the screen now; the intake beam had brought the skiff around to the landing bays on the curve’s fat convex side. There’d been a single bright flash, the viewscreen’s pixels max’d out, when the skiff had passed through the focussed reflection from the bank of mirrors that served as the crescent’s attached star. Holden had caught a glimpse of the massive struts and triangulated framework that held the mirror bank between the station’s horns. The open steel girders looked rusted— In a vacuum? he wondered; that’s weird—and warped from neglect. Cables drifted loose like beheaded snakes; the motors and other servo-mechanisms that served to adjust the mirrors’ angles and catch the unfiltered radiation from the sun, looked barely functional. Light bounced off some of the mirrors and out like idiot semaphores into space, instead of illuminating the soundstages behind Outer Hollywood’s pressure-sealed windows. Holden figured that’d be all right if only night scenes were being taped . . . or scenes of L.A. during the rainy season. Anything cheerful enough to require an approximation of daylight, and they’d all be out of luck.

The briefcase spoke up again. “You strapped?”

For a moment, Holden thought the briefcase was referring to the pilot seat’s restraints, then realized it had slipped into the urban patois it sometimes affected. He patted the holstered weapon inside his camel’s-hair jacket. “Of course.” The gun felt like a rock above one of his artificial lungs.

“We’d be better off if it was me carrying you.” A fretful note sounded in the briefcase’s voice.

He couldn’t understand the briefcase’s self-absorbed concern. The bastard’s already dead, he thought. How could things get any worse for it? For himself, though . . . that was another matter.

“Welcome to our faciliteezz.” A canned female presence, bodiless and somewhere above his head, started talking as soon as Holden climbed out of the skiff’s cockpit. “For all your video production needzz Something was wrong with the hidden p.a. speakers; the woman’s sibilants came out as an insectoid hiss.

“Zztock and cuzztom zzets fully furnizzhed editing zzuites . . . all at a competitive rate. Why go elzzewhere?”

The answer was obvious to Holden. He looked around with the briefcase dangling from his left hand, leaving his right to reach inside his jacket if need be.

The orbital studio was close to being a ruin. Another hiss, of oxygen leaking through the landing bay’s gaskets, sounded behind him. A chill draft in his face, like the wind down a deserted city alley, when even the last of the scavenger packs had crawled into their trash-lined burrows; no sky above, but instead a tangle of catwalks and wiring loops imbedded against the barely discernible visual field of the studio’s welded exoskeleton.

Big empty spaces; the recorded greeting was the only human element immediately apparent. Other than himself, Holden noted.

“There should be some kind of offices,” the briefcase suggested. “Farther inside. Where you can find out what set the shoot’s been booked into.”

He started walking, footsteps hollow and loud on the metal flooring. The noise echoed down the hangarlike vista before him. The chances of his moving about, of making his delivery and leaving with no one’s being aware, were nonexistent.

The orbital studio’s sets had already begun collapsing into one another, false fronts and flimsy backdrops muddling together from neglect and general entropy. Holden found himself, briefcase in hand, walking past a Tara—old antebellum mansion, fluted pillars warping out of shape, that had somehow crept among the turrets and spires of medieval Prague. A glacier of artificial grass and poppies spilled down the cobbled street, studded with crosses stamped from plastic to resemble white-painted wood; the dates on them were all from some post-World War I soldiers’ cemetery. Nobody was buried there, but the draft against Holden’s face still smelled like death and slow decay.

Scavengers existed everywhere; as in L.A., the real one, so above. He found one in the quieted battlefield set, an ersatz Flanders Field, next to the empty burial ground. The guy looked familiar enough, all scruffy beard and antique aviator goggles, tattered leathers flopping about a stunted frame; Holden wondered if he recognized him from somewhere in the real city’s alleys.