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EIGHT
After parking the department's speedy beefed-up
hovercar on the roof of the San Francisco Hall of Justice on Lombard Street, bounty hunter Rick Deckard,
briefcase in hand, descended to Harry Bryant's office.
"You're back awfully soon," his superior
said, leaning back in his chair and taking a pinch of Specific No.
I snuff.
"I got what you sent me for." Rick seated himself
facing the desk. He set his briefcase down. I'm tired, he
realized. It had begun to hit him, now that he had
gotten back; he wondered if he would be able to recoup
enough for the job ahead. "How's Dave?" he asked.
"Well enough for me to go talk to him? I want to
before I tackle the first of the andys."
Bryant said, "You'll be trying for Polokov first. The
one that lasered Dave. Best to get him right out of it, since he knows we've got him listed."
"Before I talk to Dave?"
Bryant reached for a sheet of onionskin paper, a
blurred third or fourth carbon. "Polokov has taken a
job with the city as a trash collector, a scavenger."
"Don't only specials do that kind of work?"
"Polokov is mimicking a special, an anthead. Very
deteriorated -- or so he pretends to be. That's what
suckered Dave; Polokov apparently looks and acts so
much like an anthead that Dave forgot. Are you sure
about the Voigt-Kampff scale now? You're absolutely
certain, from what happened up in Seattle, that --"
"I am," Rick said shortly. He did not amplify.
Bryant said, "I'll take your word for it. But there
can't be even one slip-up."
"There never could be in andy hunting. This is no
different."
"The Nexus-6 is different."
"I already found my first one," Rick said. "And
Dave found two. Three, if you count Polokov. Okay,
I'll retire Polokov today, and then maybe tonight or
tomorrow talk to Dave." He reached for the blurred
carbon, the poop sheet on the android Polokov.
"One more item," Bryant said. "A Soviet cop, from
the W.P.O., is on his way here. While you were in
Seattle I got a call from him; he's aboard an Aeroflot
rocket that'll touch down at the public field, here, in
about an hour. Sandor Kadalyi, his name is."
"What's he want?" Rarely if ever did W.P.O. cops
show up in San Francisco.
"W.P.O. is enough interested in the new Nexus-6
types that they want a man of theirs to be with you.
An observer -- and also, if he can, he'll assist you. It's
for you to decide when and if he can be of value. But
I've already given him permission to tag along."
"What about the bounty?" Rick said.
"You won't have to split it," Bryant said, and smiled
creakily.
"I just wouldn't regard it as financially fair." He had
absolutely no intention of sharing his winnings with a
thug from W.P.O. He studied the poop sheet on Polokov; it gave a description of the man
-- or rather the
andy -- and his current address and place of business:
The Bay Area Scavengers Company with offices on
Geary.
"Want to wait on the Polokov retirement
until the
Soviet cop gets here to help you?" Bryant asked.
Rick bristled. "I've always worked alone. Of course,
it's your decision -- I'll do whatever you say. But I'd
just as soon tackle Polokov right now, without waiting
for Kadalyi to hit town."
"You go ahead on your own," Bryant decided. "And
then on the next one, which'll be a Miss Luba Luft --
you have the sheet there on her, too -- you can bring in
Kadalyi."
Having stuffed the onionskin carbons in his briefcase, Rick left his superior's office and ascended once
more to the roof and his parked bovercar. And now
let's visit Mr. Polokov, he said to himself. He patted his
laser tube.
***
For his first try at the android Polokov, Rick stopped
off at the offices of the Bay Area Scavengers Company.
"I'm looking for an employee of yours," he said to
the severe, gray-haired switchboard woman. The scavengers' building impressed him; large and modem, it
held a good number of high-class purely office employees. The deep-pile carpets, the expensive genuine wood
desks, reminded him that garbage collecting and trash
disposal had, since the war, become one of Earth's important industries. The entire planet
had begun to disintegrate into junk, and to keep the planet habitable for
the remaining population the junk had to be hauled
away occasionally ... or, as Buster Friendly liked to
declare, Earth would die under a layer -- not of radioactive dust -- but of kipple.
"Mr. Ackers," the switchboard woman informed
him. "He's the personnel manager." She pointed to an
impressive but imitation oak desk at which sat a prissy,
tiny, bespectacled individual, merged with his plethora
of paperwork.
Rick presented his police I.D. "Where's
your employee Polokov right now? At his job or at home?"
After reluctantly consulting his records Mr. Ackers
said, "Polokov ought to be at work. Flattening hovercars at our Daly City plant and dumping them into the
Bay. However --" The personnel manager consulted a
further document, then picked up his vidphone and
made an inside call to someone else in the building.
"He's not, then," he said, terminating the call; hanging
up he said to Rick, "Polokov didn't show up for work
today. No explanation. What's he done, officer?"
"If he should show up," Rick said, "don't tell him I
was here asking about him. You understand?"
"Yes, I understand," Ackers said sulkily, as if his
deep schooling in police matters had been derided.
In the department's beefed-up hovercar Rick next
flew to Polokov's apartment building in the Tenderloin.
We'll never get him, he told himself. They -- Bryant and
Holden -- waited too long. Instead of sending me to
Seattle, Bryant should have sicced me on Polokov --
better still last night, as soon as Dave Holden got his.
What a grimy place, he observed as he walked across
the roof to the elevator. Abandoned animal pens, encrusted with months of dust. And, in one cage, a no
longer functioning false animal, a chicken. By elevator
he descended to Polokov's floor, found the hall unlit,
like a subterranean cave. Using his police A-powered
sealed-beam light he illuminated the hall and once
again glanced over the onionskin carbon. The Voigt-
Kampff test had been administered to Polokov; that
part could be bypassed, and he could go directly to the
task of destroying the android.
Best to get him from out here, he decided. Setting
down his weapons kit he fumbled it open, got out a
nondirectional Penfield wave transmitter; he punched
the key for catalepsy, himself protected against the
mood emanation by means of a counterwave broadcast
through the transmitter's metal hull directed to him
alone.
They're now all frozen stiff, he said to himself as he
shut off the transmitter. Everyone, human and andy
alike, in the vicinity. No risk to me; all I have to do is
walk in and laser him. Assuming, of course, that he's in
his apartment, which isn't likely.
Using an infinity key, which analyzed and opened all
forms of locks known, he entered Polokov's apartment,
laser beam in hand;
No Polokov. Only semi-ruined furniture, a place of
kipple and decay. In fact no personal articles: what
greeted him consisted of unclaimed debris which Polokov had inherited when he took the apartment and
which in leaving he had abandoned to the next -- if any -- tenant.
I knew it, he said to himself. Well, there goes the first
thousand dollars bounty; probably skipped all the way
to the Antarctic Circle, out of my jurisdiction; another
bounty hunter from another police department will retire Polokov and claim the money. On, I suppose, to
the andys who haven't been warned, as was Polokov.
On to Luba Luft.
Back again on the roof in his hovercar he reported
by phone to Harry Bryant. "No luck on Polokov. Left
probably right after he lasered Dave." He inspected his
wristwatch. "Want me to pick up Kadalyi at the field?
It'll save time and I'm eager to get started on Miss
Luft." He already had the poop sheet on her laid out
before him, had begun a thorough study of it.
"Good idea," Bryant said, "except that Mr. Kadalyi
is already here; his Aeroflot ship -- as usual, he says- --
arrived early. Just a moment." An invisible conference.
"He'll fly over and meet you where you are now," Bryant said, returning to the screen. "Meanwhile read up
on Miss Luft."
"An opera singer. Allegedly from Germany. At
present attached to the San Francisco Opera Company." He nodded in reflexive agreement, his mind on
the poop sheet. "Must have a good voice to make connections so fast. Okay, I'll wait here for Kadalyi." He
gave Bryant his location and rang off.
I'll pose as an opera fan, Rick decided as he read
further. I particularly would like to see her as Donna
Anna in Don Giovanni. In my personal collection I
have tapes by such old-time greats as Elisabeth
Schwarzkopf and Lotte Lehmann and Lisa Della
Casa; that'll give us something to discuss while I set up
my Voigt Kampff equipment.
His car phone buzzed. He picked up the receiver.
The police operator said, "Mr. Deckard, a call for
you from Seattle; Mr. Bryant said to put it through to
you. From the Rosen Association."
"Okay," Rick said, and waited. What do they want?
he wondered. As far as he could discern, the Rosens
had already proven to be bad news. And undoubtedly
would continue so, whatever they intended.
Rachael Rosen's face appeared on the tiny screen.
"Hello, Officer Deckard." Her tone seemed placating;
that caught his attention. "Are you busy right now or
can I talk to you?"
"Go ahead," he said.
"We of the association have been discussing your
situation regarding the escaped Nexus-6 types and
knowing them as we do we feel that you'll have better
luck if one of us works in conjunction with you."
"By doing what?"
"Well, by one of us coming along with you. When
you go out looking for them."
"Why? What would you add?"
Rachael said, "The Nexus-6s would be wary at being
approached by a human. But if another Nexus-6 made
the contact --"
"You specifically mean yourself."
"Yes." She nodded, her face sober.
"I've got too much help already."
"But I really think you need me."
"I doubt it. I'll think it over and call you back." At
some distant, unspecified future time, he said to himself. Or more likely never. That's all I need: Rachael
Rosen popping up through the dust at every step.
"You don't really mean it," Rachael said. "You'll
never call me. You don't realize how agile an illegal scaped Nexus-6 is, how impossible it'll be for you. We
feel we owe you this because of -- you know. What we
did."
"I'll take it under advisement." He started to hang up.
"Without me," Rachael said, "one of them will get
you before you can get it."
"Good-by," he said and hung up.
What kind of
world is it, he asked himself, when an android phones
up a bounty hunter and offers him assistance? He rang
the police operator back. "Don't put any more calls
through to me from Seattle," he said.
"Yes, Mr. Deckard. Has Mr. Kadalyi reached you,
yet?"
"I'm still waiting. And he had better hurry because
I'm not going to be here long." Again he hung up.
As he resumed reading the poop sheet on Luba Luft
a hover car taxi spun down to land on the roof a few
yards off. From it a red-faced, cherubic-looking man,
evidently in his mid-fifties, wearing a heavy and impressive Russian-style greatcoat, stepped and, smiling, his
hand extended, approached Rick's car.
"Mr. Deckard?" the man asked with a Slavic accent.
"The bounty hunter for the San Francisco Police Department?" The empty taxi rose, and the Russian
watched it go, absently. "I'm Sandor Kadalyi," the man
said, and opened the car door to squeeze in beside
Rick.
As he shook hands with Kadalyi, Rick
noticed that
the W.P.O. representative carried an unusual type of
laser tube, a subform which he had never seen before.
"Oh, this?" Kadalyi said. "Interesting, isn't it?" He
tugged it from his belt holster. "I got this on Mars."
"I thought I knew every handgun made," Rick said.
"Even those manufactured at and for use in the colonies."
"We made this ourselves," Kadalyi said, beaming
like a Slavic Santa, his ruddy face inscribed with pride.
"You like it? What is different about it, functionally,
is -- here, take it." He passed the gun over to Rick, who
inspected it expertly, by way of years of experience.
"How does it differ functionally?" Rick asked. He
couldn't tell.
"Press the trigger."
Aiming upward, out the window of the car, Rick
squeezed the trigger of the weapon. Nothing happened;
no beam emerged. Puzzled, he turned to Kadalyi.
"The triggering circuit," Kadalyi said cheerfully,
"isn't attached. It remains with me. You see?" He
opened his hand, revealed a tiny unit. "And I can also
direct it, within certain limits. Irrespective of where it's
aimed."
"You're not Polokov, you're Kadalyi," Rick said.
"Don't you mean that the other way around? You're
a bit confused."
"I mean you're Polokov, the android; you're not
from the Soviet police." Rick, with his toe, pressed the
emergency button on the floor of his car.
"Why won't my laser tube fire?" Kadalyi-Polokov
said, switching on and off the miniaturized triggering
and aiming device which he held in the palm of his
hand.
"A sine wave," Rick said. "That phases out laser
emanation and spreads the beam into ordinary light."
"Then I'll have to break your pencil neck." The
android dropped the device and, with a snarl, grabbed
with both hands for Rick's throat.
As the android's hands sank into his throat Rick
fired his regulation issue old-style pistol from its shoulder holster; the .38 magnum slug struck the android in
the head and its brain box burst. The Nexus-6 unit
which operated it blew into pieces, a raging, mad wind
which carried throughout the car. Bits of it, like the
radioactive dust itself, whirled down on Rick. The retired remains of the android rocked back, collided with
the car door, bounced off and struck heavily against
him; he found himself struggling to shove the twitching
remnants of the android away.
Shakily, he at last reached for the car phone, called
in to the Hall of Justice. "Shall I make my report?" he
said. "Tell Harry Bryant that I got Polokov."
"'You got Polokov.' He'll understand that, will he?"
"Yes," Rick said, and hung up. Christ that came
close, he said to himself. I must have overreacted to
Rachael Rosen's warning; I went the other way and it
almost finished me. But I got Polokov, he said to himself. His adrenal gland, by degrees, ceased pumping its
several secretions into his bloodstream; his heart
slowed to normal, his breathing became less frantic.
But he still shook. Anyhow I made myself a thousand
dollars just now, he informed himself. So it was worth
it. And I'm faster to react than Dave Holden, of course,
however, Dave's experience evidently prepared me; that has to be
admitted. Dave had not had such warning.
Again picking up the phone he placed a call home to
his apt, to Iran. Meanwhile he managed to light a cigarette; the shaking had begun to depart.
His wife's face, sodden with the six-hour self-accusatory depression which she had prophesied, manifested
itself on the vidscreen. "Oh hello, Rick."
"What happened to the 594 I dialed for
you before I
left? Pleased acknowledgment of --"
"I redialed. As soon as you left. What do you want?"
Her voice sank into a dreary drone of despond. "I'm so
tired and I just have no hope left, of anything. Of our marriage and you possibly getting killed by one of those
andys. Is that what you want to tell me, Rick? That an
andy got you?" In the background the racket of Buster
Friendly boomed and brayed, eradicating her words; he
saw her mouth moving but heard only the TV.
"Listen," he broke in. "Can you hear
me? I'm on to
something. A new type of android that apparently
nobody can handle but me. I've retired one already, so
that's a grand to start with. You know what we're going
to have before I'm through?"
Iran stared at him sightlessly. "Oh," she said, nodding.
"I haven't said yet!" He could tell, now; her depression this time had become too vast for her even to hear
him. For all intents he spoke into a vacuum. "I'll see you
tonight," he finished bitterly and slammed the receiver down. Damn her, he said to himself. What good
does it do, my risking my life? She doesn't care whether
we own an ostrich or not; nothing penetrates. I wish I
had gotten rid of her two years ago when we were
considering splitting up. I can still do it, he reminded
himself.
Broodingly, he leaned down, gathered together on
the car floor his crumpled papers, including the info on
Luba Luft. No support, he informed himself. Most
androids I've known have more vitality and desire to
live than my wife. She has nothing to give me.
That made him think of Rachael Rosen again. Her
advice to me as to the Nexus-6 mentality, he realized,
turned out to be correct. Assuming she doesn't want
any of the bounty money, maybe I could use her.
The encounter with Kadalyi-Polokov had
changed
his ideas rather massively.
Snapping on his hovercar's engine he whisked nippity-nip up into the sky, heading toward the old War
Memorial Opera House, where, according to Dave
Holden's notes, he would find Luba Luft this time of
the day.
He wondered, now, about her, too. Some female
androids seemed to him pretty; he had found himself physically attracted by several, and it was an odd sensation, knowing intellectually that they were machines but
emotionally reacting anyhow.
For example Rachael Rosen. No, he decided; she's
too thin. No real development, especially in the bust. A
figure like a child's, flat and tame. He could do better.
How old did the poop sheet say Luba Luft was? As he
drove he hauled out the now wrinkled notes, found her
so-called "age." Twenty-eight, the sheet read. Judged
by appearance, which, with andys, was the only useful
standard.
It's a good thing I know something about opera,
Rick reflected. That's another advantage I have over
Dave; I'm more culturally oriented.
I'll try one more andy before I ask Rachael for help,
he decided. If Miss Luft proves exceptionally hard --
but he had an intuition she wouldn't. Polokov had been
the rough one; the others, unaware that anyone actively
hunted them, would crumble in succession, plugged like
a file of ducks.
As he descended toward the ornate, expansive roof
of the opera house he loudly sang a potpourri of arias,
with pseudo-Italian words made up on the spot by himself; even without the Penfield mood organ at hand his
spirits brightened into optimism. And into hungry, gleeful anticipation.
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