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SIXTEEN
In the sumptuous and enormous hotel room Rick
Deckard sat reading the typed carbon sheets on the two
androids Roy and Irmgard Baty. In these two cases
telescopic snapshots had been included, fuzzy 3-D color
prints which he could barely make out. The woman, he
decided, looks attractive. Roy Baty, however, is something different. Something worse.
A pharmacist on Mars, he read. Or at least the
android had made use of that cover. In actuality it had
probably been a manual laborer, a field hand, with
aspirations for something better. Do androids dream?
Rick asked himself. Evidently; that's why they occasionally kill their employers and flee here. A better life,
without servitude. Like Luba Luft; singing Don Giovanni and Le Nozze instead of toiling across the face of
a barren rock-strewn field. On a fundamentally uninhabitable colony world.
Roy Baty (the poop sheet informed him) has an
aggressive, assertive air of ersatz authority. Given
to mystical preoccupations, this android proposed
the group escape attempt, underwriting it ideologically with a pretentious fiction as to the sacredness of so-called android "life." In addition, this
android stole, and experimented with, various
mind- using drugs, claiming when caught that it
hoped to promote in androids a group experience
similar to that of Mercerism, which it pointed out
remains unavailable to androids.
The account had a pathetic quality. A rough, cold
android, hoping to undergo an experience from which,
due to a deliberately built-in defect, it remained excluded. But he could not work up much concern for
Roy Baty; he caught, from Dave's jottings, a repellent
quality hanging about this particular android. Baty had
tried to force the fusion experience into existence for
itself -- and then, when that fell through, it had engineered the killing of a variety of human beings
...
followed by the flight to Earth. And now, especially as
of today, the chipping away of the original eight androids until only the three remained. And they, the outstanding members of the illegal group, were also
doomed, since if he failed to get them someone else
would. Time and tide, he thought. The cycle of life.
Ending in this, the last twilight. Before the silence of
death. He perceived in this a micro-universe, complete.
The door of the hotel room banged open. "What a
flight," Rachael Rosen said breathlessly, entering in a
long fish-scale coat with matching bra and shorts; she
carried, besides her big, ornate, mail-pouch purse, a
paper bag. "This is a nice room." She examined her
wristwatch. "Less than an hour; I made good time.
Here." She held out the paper bag. "I bought a bottle.
Bourbon."
Rick said, "The worst of the eight is still alive. The
one who organized them." He held the poop sheet on
Roy Baty toward her; Rachael set down the paper bag
and accepted the carbon sheet.
"You've located this one?" she asked, after reading.
"I have a conapt number. Out in the suburbs where
possibly a couple of deteriorated specials, antheads and
chickenheads, hang out and go through their versions of
living."
Rachael held out her hand. "Let's see about the
others."
"Both females." He passed her the sheets, one dealing with Irmgard Baty, the other an android calling
itself Pris Stratton.
Glancing at the final sheet Rachael said, "Oh
--" She
tossed the sheets down, moved over to the window of
the room to look out at downtown San Francisco. "I
think you're going to get thrown by the last one. Maybe
not; maybe you don't care." She had turned pale and
her voice shook. All at once she had become exceptionally unsteady.
"Exactly what are you muttering about?"
He retrieved the sheets, studied them, wondering which part
had upset Rachael.
"Let's open the bourbon." Rachael carried the paper
bag into the bathroom, got two glasses, returned; she
still seemed distracted and uncertain -- and preoccupied. He sensed the rapid flight of her hidden thoughts:
the transitions showed on her frowning, tense face.
"Can you get this open?" she asked. "It's worth a fortune, you realize. It's not synthetic; it's from before the
war, made from genuine mash."
Taking the bottle he opened it, poured bourbon in
the two tumblers. "Tell me what's the matter," he said.
Rachael said, "On the phone you told me if I flew
down here tonight you'd give up on the remaining three
andys. 'We'll do something else,' you said. But here we
are --"
"Tell me what upset you," he said.
Facing him defiantly, Rachael said, "Tell me what
we're going to do instead of fussing and fretting around about those last three Nexus- andys." She unbuttoned
her coat, carried it to the closet, and hung it up. This
gave him his first chance to have a good long look at
her.
Rachael's proportions, he noticed once again, were
odd; with her heavy mass of dark hair her head seemed
large, and because of her diminutive breasts her body
assumed a lank, almost childlike stance. But her great
eyes, with their elaborate lashes, could only be those of
a grown woman; there the resemblance to adolescence
ended. Rachael rested very slightly on the forepart of
her feet, and her arms, as they hung, bent at the joint:
the stance, he reflected, of a wary hunter of perhaps the
Cro-Magnon persuasion. The race of tall hunters, he
said to himself. No excess flesh, a flat belly, small behind and smaller bosom
-- Rachael had been modeled
on the Celtic type of build, anachronistic and attractive.
Below the brief shorts her legs, slender, had a neutral,
nonsexual quality, not much rounded off in nubile
curves. The total impression was good, however. Although definitely that of a girl, not a woman. Except for
the restless, shrewd eyes.
He sipped the bourbon; the power of it, the authoritative strong taste and scent, had become almost unfamiliar to him and he had trouble swallowing. Rachael,
in contrast, had no difficulty with hers.
Seating herself on the bed Rachael smoothed absent1y at the spread; her expression had now become
one of moodiness. He set his glass down on the bedside
table and arranged himself beside her. Under his gross
weight the bed gave, and Rachael shifted her position.
"What is it?" he said. Reaching, he took hold of her
hand; it felt cold, bony, slightly moist. "What upset
you?"
"That last goddamn Nexus-6 type," Rachael said,
enunciating with effort, "is the same type as I am." She
stared down at the bedspread, found a thread, and
began rolling it into a pellet. "Didn't you notice the
description? It's of me, too. She may wear her hair
differently and dress differently -- she may even have
bought a wig. But when you see her you'll know what I
mean." She laughed sardonically. "It's a good thing the
association admitted I'm an andy; otherwise you'd
probably have gone mad when you caught sight of Pris
Stratton. Or thought she was me."
"Why does that bother you so much?"
"Hell, I'll be along when you retire her."
"Maybe not. Maybe I won't find her."
Rachael said, "I know Nexus-6 psychology. That's
why I'm here; that's why I can help you. They're all
holed up together, the last three of them. Clustered
around the deranged one calling himself Roy Baty. He'll be
masterminding their crucial, all-out, final defense." Her lips twisted. "Jesus," she said.
"Cheer up," he said; he cupped her sharp, small chin
in the palm of his hand, lifted her head so that she had
to face him. I wonder what it's like to kiss an android,
he said to himself. Leaning forward an inch he kissed
her dry lips. No reaction followed; Rachael remained
impassive. As if unaffected. And yet he sensed otherwise. Or perhaps it was wishful thinking.
"I wish," Rachael said, "that I had known that before I came. I never would have flown down here. I
think you're asking too much. You know what I have?
Toward this Pris android?"
"Empathy," he said.
"Something like that. Identification; there goes I. My
god; maybe that's what'll happen. In the confusion
you'll retire me, not her. And she can go back to Seattle
and live my life. I never felt this way before. We are
machines, stamped out like bottle caps. It's an illusion
that I -- I personally -- really exist; I'm just representative of a type." She shuddered.
He could not help being amused; Rachael had become so mawkishly morose. "Ants don't feel like that,"
he said, "and they're physically identical."
"Ants. They don't feel period."
"Identical human twins. They don't --"
"But they identify with each other; I understand they
have an empathic, special bond." Rising, she got to the
bourbon bottle, a little unsteadily; she refilled her glass
and again drank swiftly. For a time she slouched about
the room, brows knitted darkly, and then, as if sliding
his way by chance, she settled back onto the bed; she
swung her legs up and stretched out, leaning against the
fat pillows. And sighed. "Forget the three andys." Her
voice filled with weariness. "I'm so worn out, from the
trip I guess. And from all I learned today. I just want to
sleep." She shut her eyes. "If I die," she murmured,
"maybe I'll be born again when the Rosen Association
stamps out its next unit of my subtype." She opened her
eyes and glared at him ferociously. "Do you know," she
said, "why I really came here? Why Eldon and the
other Rosens -- the human ones -- wanted me to go
along with you?"
"To observe," he said. "To detail exactly what the
Nexus-6 does that gives it away on the Voigt-Kampff
test."
"On the test or otherwise. Everything that gives it a
different quality. And then I report back and the association makes modifications of its zygote-bath DNS
factors. And we then have the Nexus-7. And when that
gets caught we modify again and eventually the association has a type that can't be distinguished."
"Do you know of the Boneli Retlex-Arc Test?" he
asked.
"We're working on the spinal ganglia, too. Someday
the Boneli test will fade into yesterday's hoary shroud
of spiritual oblivion." She smiled innocuously -- at variance with her words. At this point he could not discern
her degree of seriousness. A topic of world-shaking importance, yet dealt with facetiously; an android trait,
possibly, he thought. No emotional awareness, no
feeling-sense of the actual meaning of what she said.
Only the hollow, formal, intellectual definitions of the
separate terms.
And, more, Rachael had begun to tease him. Imperceptibly she had passed from lamenting her condition to taunting him about his.
"Damn you," he said.
Rachael laughed. "I'm drunk. I can't go with you. If
you leave here --" She gestured in dismissal. "I'll stay
behind and sleep and you can tell me later what happened."
"Except," he said, "there won't be a later because
Roy Baty will nail me."
"But I can't help you anyhow now because I'm
drunk. Anyhow, you know the truth, the brick-hard,
irregular, slithery surface of truth. I'm just an observer and I won't intervene to save you; I don't care if
Roy Baty nails you or not. I care whether 1 get nailed."
She opened her eyes round and wide. "Christ, I'm
empathic about myself. And, see, if I go to that suburban broken-down conapt building
-- She reached
out, toyed with a button of his shirt; in slow, facile
twists she began unbuttoning it. "I don't dare go because androids have no loyalty to one another and I
know that that goddamn Pris Stratton will destroy me
and occupy my place. See? Take off your coat."
"Why?"
"So we can go to bed," Rachael said.
"I bought a black Nubian goat," he said. "I have to
retire the three more andys. I have to finish up my job
and go home to my wife." He got up, walked around
the bed to the bottle of bourbon. Standing there he
carefully poured himself a second drink. His hands he observed, shook only very slightly. Probably from fatigue. Both of us, he realized, are tired. Too tired to
hunt down three andys, with the worst of the eight
calling the shots.
Standing there he realized, all at once, that he had
acquired an overt, incontestable fear directed toward
the principal android. It all hung on Baty -- had hung
on it from the start. Up to now he had encountered and
retired progressively more ominous manifestations of
Baty. Now came Baty itself. Thinking that he felt the
fear grow; it snared him completely, now that he had
let it approach his conscious mind. "I can't go without
you now," he said to Rachael. "I can't even leave here.
Polokov came after me; Garland virtually came after
me."
"You think Roy Baty will look you up?" Setting
down her empty glass she bent forward, reached back,
and unfastened her bra. With agility she slid it from
her, then stood, swaying, and grinning because she
swayed. "In my purse," she said, "I have a mechanism
which our autofac on Mars builds as an emer --" She
grimaced. " An emergency safety thingamajing, -- jig,
while they're putting a newly made andy through its
routine inspection checks. Get it out. It resembles an
oyster. You'll see it."
He began hunting through the purse. Like a human
woman, Rachael had every class of object conceivable
filched and hidden away in her purse; he found himself
rooting interminably.
Meanwhile, Rachael kicked off her boots and unzipped her shorts; balancing on one foot she caught the
discarded fabric with her toe and tossed it across the
room. She then dropped onto the bed, rolled over to
fumble for her glass, accidentally pushed the glass to the
carpeted floor. "Damn," she said, and once again got
shakily to her feet; in her underpants she stood watching him at work on her purse, and then, with careful
deliberation and attention she drew the bedcovers back,
got in, drew the covers over her.
"Is this it?" He held up a metallic sphere with a
button-stem projecting.
"That cancels an android into catalepsy," Rachael
said, her eyes shut. "For a few seconds. Suspends its
respiration; yours, too, but humans can function without respiring --
perspiring? -- for a couple of minutes, but the vagus nerve of an andy
--"
"I know." He straightened up. "The
android autonomic nervous system isn't as flexible at cutting in
and out as ours. But as you say, this wouldn't work for
more than five or six seconds."
"Long enough," Rachael murmured, "to save your
life. So, see --" She roused herself, sat up in the bed.
"If Roy Baty shows up here you can be holding that in
your hand and you can press the stem on that thing.
And while Roy Baty is frozen stiff with no air supply to
his blood and his brain cells deteriorating you can kill
Roy Baty with your laser."
"You have a laser tube," he said. "In your purse."
"A fake. Androids" -- she yawned, eyes again shut
"aren't permitted to carry lasers."
He walked over to the bed.
Squirming about, Rachael managed to roll over at
last onto her stomach, face buried in the white lower
sheet. "This is a clean, noble, virgin type of bed," she
stated. "Only clean, noble girls who --" She pondered.
"Androids can't bear children," she said, then. "Is that
a loss?"
He finished undressing her. Exposed her pale, cold
loins.
"Is it a loss?" Rachael repeated. "I don't really
know; I have no way to tell. How does it feel to have a
child? How does it feel to be born for that matter?
We're not born; we don't grow up. Instead of dying from illness or old
age we wear out like ants. Ants again; that's what we are.
Not you; I mean me. Chitinous reflex-machines who aren't really
alive." She twisted her head to one side, said loudly, I'm not
alive! You're not going to bed with a woman. Don't be
disappointed; okay? Have you ever made love to an
android before?"
"No," he said, taking off his shirt and tie.
"I understand -- they tell me -- it's convincing if you
don't think too much about it. But if you think too
much, if you reflect on what you're doing -- then you
can't go on. For ahem physiological reasons."
Bending, he kissed her bare shoulder.
"Thanks, Rick," she said wanly. "Remember,
though: don't think about it, just do it. Don't pause and
be philosophical, because from a philosophical standpoint it's dreary. For us both."
He said, "Afterward I still intend to look for Roy
Baty. I still need you to be there. I know that laser tube
you have in your purse is --"
"You think I'll retire one of your andys for you?"
"I think in spite of what you said you'll help me all
you can. Otherwise you wouldn't be lying there in that
bed."
"I love you," Rachael said. "If I entered a room and
found a sofa covered with your hide I'd score very high
on the Voigt-Kampff test."
Tonight sometime, he thought as he clicked off the
bedside light, I will retire a Nexus-6 which looks exactly like this naked girl. My good god, he thought; I've
wound up where Phil Resch said. Go to bed with her
first, he remembered. Then kill her. "I can't do it," he
said, and backed away from the bed.
"I wish you could," Rachael said. Her voice wavered.
"Not because of you. Because of Pris Stratton; what
I have to do to her."
"We're not the same. 1 don't care about Pris Stratton. Listen." Rachael thrashed about in the bed, sitting
up; in the gloom he could dimly make out her almost
breastless, trim shape. "Go to bed with me and 1'll
retire Stratton. Okay? Because I can't stand getting this
close and then --"
"Thank you," he said;
gratitude -- undoubtedly because of the bourbon -- rose up inside him, constricting
his throat. Two, he thought. I now have only two to
retire; just the Batys. Would Rachael really do it? Evidently. Androids thought and functioned that way. Yet
he had never come across anything quite like this.
"Goddamn it, get into bed," Rachael said.
He got into bed.
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