“Why do you?” Macon asked.
“It’s your work ethic,” said Leon. “Beautiful thing.”
She went up the steps and into the house, through a screened side door with wooden trim older than the dynamite box. Into the kitchen, cleaner than she expected but she guessed it wasn’t used for much. Went into the living room and found Burton, sitting on a broken-down sofa with brown-and-beige floral slipcovers, and Conner, who was sitting up very straight in a chair. Then Conner stood, and she saw there’d been no chair.
He was Velcro’d into a prosthetic the VA bought for him. Made him look like a character from an old anime, its ankles wider than its thighs. Dynamic, until he moved, and then she saw why he didn’t like wearing it.
“Little sister,” he said, grinning at her, freshly shaved and remarkably uncrazy looking.
“Hey, Conner,” she said, then looked at Burton, wondering whether this was going to be like her conversation with Macon and Edward. “Saw Macon in the driveway,” she said.
“Got them over to fix the bike,” Burton said. “Conner’s been having trouble fueling up.”
“You weren’t so happy,” she said to Conner, “last time I saw you.”
Conner’s grin sharpened. “Worried Homes might keep your bro in Davisville. Beer?” Gestured toward the kitchen, left arm and two remaining fingers. “Red Bull?”
“I’m good, thanks.” VA would have transplanted a toe, she knew, to use as a thumb, if he’d had a few. He could still get a donor thumb, if he’d just sign up and be ready to give it the time. Maybe a right foot that way, too. But there wouldn’t be any transplants for his right arm or left leg, because the stumps weren’t long enough. Something about needing a certain minimum length of the transplantee’s own nerves to splice. But whatever had happened to his mind, she suddenly knew in some different way, had been the worst. Because right now he seemed all smoothed out, could even pass for happy, and she guessed it was because he’d just killed four total strangers. She felt tears starting. Sat down fast, on the opposite end of the sofa from Burton.
“They’re seriously good for the money,” Burton said.
“I know,” she said. “Came over here with a lottery winner.”
“Not just that. They put something better together.”
“What do you mean?”
“Sent a man over from Clanton today, with cash.”
“How do you know they aren’t builders, Burton?”
“He’s a lawyer.”
“Builders all have lawyers.”
“I’ll have a beer,” Burton said.
Conner’s prosthetic locomoted him into the kitchen and up to the fridge, which was new and shiny. When she saw him snag the door handle with his two fingers, she heard the quick gnat-whine of a small servo. The prosthetic, she now saw, had its own thumb. He opened the door, fished out a beer, swung the prosthetic’s shoulder enough to nudge the door shut, and clumped back out to Burton. It was like the thing had only the one gait. Then he stuck the bottle cap against what would have been the front of the bicep of his right arm, if he’d had one, and popped it off. She saw he had a rusty old opener glued there, on the black plastic. The cap bounced on the bare vinyl floor, rolled under the sofa. He grinned at her, handed Burton the beer.
“It’s okay,” Burton said, and took a swallow from the bottle. “I don’t think they’re builders and I don’t think they’re Homes. I think it’s about their game. And they want to get you back in their game. They want them some Easy Ice. That’s why they’ve got Macon building some kind of interface gear.”
“Fuck their game,” she said.
“Your gaming assets have gotten very expensive. That’s what brought that man over from Clanton.” He drank some more, looked at the level of beer in the bottle, seemed about to say something more, but didn’t.
“So you agreed on my behalf?”
“Deal breaker, otherwise. Has to be you.”
“You could’ve asked me, Burton.”
“We need the money for Pharma Jon. Whatever this is, we don’t know how long the money’ll last. So we do the work, stack up what we can, and see. I figured you’d agree to that.”
“I guess,” she said.
Conner’s prosthetic squatted down again, becoming a chair for him. “Scoot the sofa. Sit with me,” he said.
“Ready to measure your head,” said Macon, from the kitchen door. He held up something in flu orange, complicated, skinny sticks and a ring. It looked more like some Hefty Mart bow-hunting accessory than a laser. “You want to sit on the couch?”
“Let’s do it on the front porch,” she said to Macon. She’d seen there was a faded red plastic chair out there, as Leon had driven in, and she needed to get away. “I’ll sit with you sometime, Conner, but right now my brother’s being a dickhead.”
Conner grinned.
She went out the front door, onto the porch, swept a dry brown mulch of last year’s leaves out of the butt-shaped depression molded into the seat of the chair, and sat down, looking out at the tall rusty tractor. Macon handed her something, like the funny eye protector they gave you in a tanning joint, but made of polished stainless. “How strong’s this laser?” she asked.
“Not strong enough to need that, but we’ll play it safe.”
“How long’ll this take?”
“A minute or so, once we get it adjusted. Put ’em on.”
The protector had a thin white elastic cord. She pulled it on, settled the eye-shaped steel cups over her eyes, and sat in pitch darkness, while Macon positioned the soft tips of the thing’s legs on her shoulders. “When do you start printing?” she asked him.
“Printing the circuitry already. Do this headset stuff tonight. We pitch an all-nighter, might have it together tomorrow. Now hold really still. Don’t talk.”
Something began to tick around the ring-shaped track, headed to the right. She pictured the stuff in Conner’s yard, humped over with morning glory vines, and imagined him never joining the Marines. Failing the medical, for something harmless but never noticed before. So that he’d stayed here, found some unfunny way to make a living, met a girl, gotten married. Not to her, definitely, or to Shaylene either, but somebody. Maybe from Clanton. Had kids. And his wife getting all the morning glory cleared away, and everything hauled off, and planting grass for a real front yard. But she couldn’t make it stick, couldn’t quite believe it, and she wished she could.
And then the laser was right behind her head, still softly clicking, and then beside her left ear, and when it was back around the front, it quit clicking. Macon lifted it away and removed the eye shield.
The stuff in his yard was still there.
36
Anton had one,” Lev said, when Netherton had finished telling him about what had happened in Covent Garden. “He tore its jaw off at a garden party, in a drunken rage.”
They were standing together at the top of the Gobiwagen’s gangway, watching the peripheral run the treadmill. “Impossible to deny that it has a certain beauty,” Netherton said, hoping to change the subject, else it somehow lead to Putney. Though he did find it beautiful. Ash, standing near the treadmill, had the look of someone reading data on a feed, which she likely was.
“Dominika was furious,” Lev said. “Our children might have seen him do it. He sent it back to the factory. Then he shot it. Repeatedly. On the dance floor, at Club Volokh. I wasn’t there. Hushed up, of course. That was the turning point, for our father.”
Netherton saw Ash say something to the peripheral. It began to slow its pace. Running, he saw its beauty differently, the grace it brought to the repetitive act somehow substituting for personality.
“Why did Anton do that?” Netherton asked, as he watched the muscles working, exquisitely, in the thing’s thighs.