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No. 4368
I know an update so soon is out of the blue, but I felt you guys deserved it after the rather dull infodump that was chapter 9. Also I was very excited to write this. I would to start posting chapters more often, but I can't make any promises that it will be at a pace like this. Thanks for reading and please enjoy the chapter.
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Dell.
So that's what his name was. Dell. The Snipe had gone all this time wondering, and then Miss Pauling just tossed out there like it meant nothing.
She walked by him then, her mouth a thin, chapped line, opening only to point out various locations she advised he check. He got the distinct feeling she was cross with him, even though she wasn't—either way he didn't really care.
"I've been a little hesitant to stray past this point," she admitted to him as they got to a stairwell. "The facility's pretty large, and I really only stayed in this wing. If you could branch out a bit to see if you could maybe find some extra food or medical supplies, that would be fantastic." She paused thoughtfully a moment, her nose wrinkled. "Maybe some soap, too," she added.
"Right." An abandoned building wasn't exactly the Sniper's ideal terrain to trek, but at least it would be a change of scenery.
"Honestly, just get anything you think we could use, and as much of it as you can carry. You're smart, Mundy, I trust your judgment." She adjusted her spectacles. "I'm going to head back. I can't say I'm much of a homemaker, but I suppose I'll be the one to feed you two tonight while you and Dell are preoccupied. Is there anything else you need to know?"
Dell.
There it was again.
His mouth twitched, and he could have sworn he'd almost opened it to say, "Yeah—what's his last name?" but all he did was shake his head.
"Alright, then." She gave a short nod. She turned her heel, and then paused, looking over her shoulder. "Be careful, okay?"
He smirked. "I'll try."
Dell.
Walking the empty halls of the facility, the name didn't leave his mind. He mouthed the word over and over again until it began to feel strange and foreign in his mouth. Four hours into his exploration, he recited the simple name with a rucksack full of rubbing alcohol, gauze, and matches slouched over his shoulder. A purloined shotgun stuck out of the top, and the shells he had found along with it clinked together at the bottom of the bag—he figured it would be wise to gather more weapons, especially ones he knew the Engineer would put to good use. A couple birds he'd shot down were tied to his belt, dangling limply as he continued on.
A sense of frustration was pulsing within him. The Engineer hadn't stopped obsessing over his stupid wife since they got there. Who needed wives, anyway? They seemed like such a burden.
The Engineer would be better off without her. He'd be better off with—
No. He was being ridiculous. The Engineer loved his wife, and that should be a good thing. He should be sympathetic. He knew he had to, but it was almost as if he just couldn't bring himself to. It felt like snake venom pulsing through his veins, making his heart ache.
The Sniper strayed from the areas Miss Pauling had directed—he never was really the type to stay on the beaten path. He turned into what seemed like another hall of testing chambers, all marked with numbers. He peeked in the first one, but all he saw was a glass panel that looked out into an empty, stark white room with a single cube within.
"Great, a bleedin' modern art museum," the Sniper mumbled to himself, closing the door.
The rest of the rooms were generally the same: an empty observation room that looked out on to a strange, simplistic scene that almost seemed like some kind of unfinished puzzle.
Yet again, nothing to loot.
Different from the norm was a room labeled Genetic Lifeform and Disk Operating System, fronted by a large black door. The Sniper smirked at the name—it sounded like something that would pique the Engineer's interest. There was yet another reason why he wished he hadn't been alone in this trek.
A horribly familiar stench wafted to his nose the moment he opened the door, but he didn't need to look far to see where it was coming from. A shriveled male corpse lay at his feet, clad in a stained brown suit, his withered hands still clutching the wires wrapped tightly around his neck, mouth still open in a lost scream.
"Crikey," the Sniper mumbled, nudging the body with his foot. "What happened to you, mate?"
"aN unFORTunate ACCIdent."
The Sniper jerked his head up immediately, ears perked. The voice had been small and strange, warbling like an irregular heartbeat, but it had most certainly been there. He reached a hand back and lightly touched the feathered ends of an arrow, poised in case of danger.
Through the darkness that enveloped the belly of the large room, a small orange light blinked on, almost sheepishly.
"Er—hello?" the Sniper called out, wrapped his hand around the end of the arrow.
"DoN'T wORRy. i WOn't hurt YOU."
He loosened his grasp, but didn't lower his arm. "Who is that? Where are you?"
"my NAme is carOLIne," the entity continued. "whAT's YOurs?"
The Sniper hesitated, trying to squint at the orange beam. Was she shining a flashlight at him? Why did she sound so strange?
"I'm—"
"tRICk QUEstioN," Caroline cut him off. "I alREAdy knOW All abOUT you. i REAd yOUr fILEs."
"Bollocks," the Sniper whispered, his eyes narrowed in suspicion. He stepped forward. "Turn on the light. Lemme see you."
"tHERe isN'T much TO SEe." The lights snapped on, and the Sniper's attention was immediately drawn upwards. A series of wires, mostly severed, hung from the ceiling like stalactites. Nestled in the middle, like a spider in its nest, was a smooth device that seemed drastically unfinished, bare in places with wires and bright green hard drives exposed. It moved above him almost as if it was sentient, but its incompleteness gave it a noticeably handicap. The orange light looked down at him like an eyeball. "I'M juST aRTIFICal inTELLigenCE. or at LEAST, i AM noW."
"Holy Dooley," the Sniper said in wonder, gaping up at the machine. "Wish my friend was here to see this. He'd get a load outta you."
"wHAt fRIEnd?" Caroline asked quickly. "do yOU mEAN the RED ENginEER?"
"Yeah. How'd you know that?"
"i TOLd yoU. i knOW ALL abOUT you. I REad your FILES. i hAVe aCCESS to ALL fORms oF cOMMunICaTION aND DaTA sTORage iN tHIs faCILity. GOing thrOUgh thEM pasSES thE TIme. bELIEVe it OR nOT, it gEts verY BORing hANGing from a cEILing all DAY." She almost seemed to sigh. "i waTCHED yOU tWO SUFFer oUT theRE. IF i still hAD a hEARt it WOULd hAVe GONe out to You."
"So… you really did see all that, eh?" The Sniper couldn't quite believe he was talking to a robot, but there was something about it—her?—that was mesmerizing to him.
"yES. I WAtched yoU STarve… aND fight… ANd kIll… and fall in love…" She hummed innocently.
"What?" Sniper blinked at the bobbing light, feeling a panicked, hot sting crawl up his neck.
"yOU feLL in LOve with HIM, diDN't you?"
"With—with Truckie?" the Sniper stuttered in shock. "Crikey, no, I ain't—I ain't some kinda bleedin' poof!" In a knee-jerk sort of reflex, he grabbed an arrow from behind his back and raised his bow, aiming it towards that orange eye.
"i bEG to DIFFer…" The panel, which almost seemed to serve as her head, snapped quickly to the side and her orange eye glazed over and flickered, projecting a moving image on to the wall. The Sniper stepped forward, squinting to see what it was. It was a hunched beast, shivering with frantic lust. When he recognized the blurred image as his own body, he recoiled shamefully, looking away as his face turned ruddy.
"MASturBATion mAKEs me GLaD i'm nOT huMAN anymORE," she told him, turning off the projection and turning back to him. "esPECiaLLY wHEn yoU STUck yoUR fINGers In—"
"Alright, I get it!" the Sniper interrupted her with a snarl. How strange, that an emotionless robot he knew nothing could make him feel so disgusted and ashamed with himself. But then again, it hadn't been her making him feel ashamed—it was himself. What he did. What he had been doing. How he was feeling.
"mUST hAVE been diffiCULT, hiDING you ABNORMALITY." She bobbed above him. "yoU MUst hAVe FElt likE a fREAk, gROWing Up. a DISappOINTment to yOur FAMily. is tHAt whY yOU rAN oFF intO tHE bUSH? to rUN aWAy frOM it? avOIDing pEople is So muCH eaSIEr thaN ADmittING yOU're a PERVERT, isn't it? bUT thEN hE cAMe aLONG aND MAde all thOSe sCARY fEELings cOMe Back..."
The year was 1947. Crouched in the dusty dim of an abandoned custodian's closer was a gawky boy just shy of fifteen, his knobby hands and ears almost too large for his body, like a puppy that hadn't grown into his paws yet. His long nose and forehead were pink with sunburn, and under his thrice-mended uniform trousers, his knees ached with the scrapes and bruises of stubborn forest exploration. He sat on those knees and hunched his shoulders to peer a squinting eye through the jagged crack in the wall, his chest caging a thousand hummingbirds, desperately flapping their nervous wings against his heart.
Biting his bottom lip, his fingers gripping the fabric of his trousers tightly, he watched with bated breath as his classmates peeled off gym uniforms to reveal awkward adolescent flesh.
Despite the number of times he kept coming back to watch, he knew there was something wrong about his curiosity, but he wasn't quite sure what. Sometimes doing it gave him an erection, which at the time he didn't even have a name for, and when that happened he'd run—out of that closet, down the hall, out of the school, into the wild.
The quiet whistling peace of the bush gave him a sense of calm that he didn't find amongst most people. His peers found him strange and creepy because he forgot to bathe and put salamanders down people's shirts and once pissed in a Coca Cola bottle and kept it in his backpack for three days. He didn't want to be with them. He didn't want to be with anyone.
"Is that why you ran off, into the bush?" Her words were not that tinny electronic monotone, but rather the snide, condescending voice of a balding therapist sitting across from the boy, his hands clasped on his desk. "Because you think you're a homosexual?"
Up until then, time had been a mystery, but at that moment, as she spoke to him, it was 1947 all over again. His bow clattered to the floor. The Sniper's stomach gave an unstoppable heave that brought up nothing, and his legs quaked beneath him. He backed up against the wall, covering his face with his hands.
He told himself no one would ever find out again, but someone had, and once more he was that scared, gawky, helpless little boy, sinking into that shameful leather armchair.
"cOMe On…" she cooed. A disconnected wire slowly descended from the ceiling and tickled his shoulder like a comforting hand. "i'M a roBOT… I DON't pass jUDGments… in FAct… I'D liKE to help you."
He pulled his hands from his face. "Help me with what?" he demanded in a hoarse whisper.
"wiNNIng hIM ovER, of COurSE. maKINg hiM lOVe you baCK."
The Sniper blinked stupidly at her for a moment, not quite believing what he heard. "He's got a wife," he argued weakly. He knew it was ridiculous to humor this conversation, but part of him desperately wanted to believe that this strange being actually empathized with him.
The huge mechanical contraption swung to the Sniper across the room with some creaky effort, swooping around his shoulder. "it DOesn'T hAVe to BE thAt Way. dON't YOu thINK yoU deSERVe him mORe thAn sHE dOES? whO Was The One wHO KEpt hIM fED, tAUGHt him to surVIVE? nOT hER."
"I mean… I guess so…" he muttered, pulling his hat down over his eyes. "But he ain't a…"
"tHAT dOESN't mATter," she responded coolly, lurching back in front of him. "hE DoesN'T hAVe to bE. He jUSt neEDS TO love you."
There was a click that sounded like the shutter of a camera as she projected another image. However, rather than bleeding through him on to the wall behind, it stood before the Sniper like a hologram. It twitched and jerked as though from an old film reel, but he saw it slowly crack a familiar grin and hold up its large, flickering hand. The Sniper lifted his hand to press their palms together, but his fingers spread through instead. It looked down at his hand and frowned before fading away.
The Sniper's hand fell limply to his side.
"i cAN maKE HIm lOVe You. I CAn mAkE hIM wANt yOU. jUSt aS yOu wANT Him." The wire continued to stroke his shoulder. "bUT yOu neED to Do sOMEthiNG foR Me in return."
The Sniper glared up at the machine and shrugged off the caressing cord. "There's always a bloody catch," he growled.
"iT'S nOTHing i iMAGine you'LL obJECT to. i NEed the enGINeer aS MuCH as You do. lOOk at me." The Sniper's eyes scanned over her missing plates, exposed hard drives, wires that frayed out like frizzy hair. "i'M unFINISHed. half-FORmed. ACTivated wiTH a PURpose, yEt withOUT the MEans to Do iT. bUT thE ENGineER caN sureLY comPLEte me. yoU juST neED to conVINce hIM to HElp me... jUST as i Am gOING to hElp yOU."
"But that's the whole problem," the Sniper explained to Caroline in exasperation. "He's too busy fiddlin' with that damn radio to give a rat's arse about either of us." It was strange to say 'us'—to relate himself to an inflectionless device. "All he cares about is his bloomin' wife and kid."
"sO we GET riD of THem."
Across the facility, a can of baked beans bubbled over on the Bunsen burner. Miss Pauling had never been housewife material—Home Economics had been her worst subject in high school. Yet, even though her profession had been abruptly terminated by a series of nuclear warheads, she continued to feel a sense of responsibility for the boys she had left, even more so than she had before.
Perhaps she was trying to make it up to them, for what she had allowed them to be put through.
While she had never exactly been drinking buddies with the mercenaries, she had been close enough to get a sense of who they were, and it was evident to her that something had changed in both of them. A kind of bitter impassion hardened around the two men, yet in each it only thinly veiled something painfully desperate.
She watched the Engineer's back and he took apart the radio, piecing and re-piecing and fiddling with wires and grunting and swearing under his breath all the while. "Should've asked Slim to pick up some spare radio parts," he muttered, rubbing his eyes. "Couldn't even get a word in, though. Been so cross with each other. Jesus." He turned, massaging the back of his neck. "How long's that fella been gone for, anyhow?"
"A few hours, I guess," Miss Pauling answered shortly. "I can't say for sure. I never know what time it is anymore. Sometimes it feels like it's just stopped all together."
"Yeah," the Engineer said softly, his eyes flickering downward with a nod. "Yeah."
An immeasurable amount of time passed before the Sniper finally returned to them, stone-faced as usual, carrying his assortment of much appreciated supplies.
"You were gone for longer than I hoped," Miss Pauling said worriedly as he entered, helping him shrug the knapsack off his shoulders. "Dell almost went looking for you. Did you get lost?"
"I don't get lost," the Sniper answered, stretching his shoulders. "I just got distracted."
"Well, next time don't stay out so long," the Engineer mumbled gruffly. His back was to the Sniper, having gone back to his radio and disassembled it for the umpteenth time. He pinched the bridge of his nose with his robotic hand as if he was nursing a stinging headache. "You're an adult. Act like one, for once."
The Sniper opened his mouth to argue, but a fourth party interjected, entering with a gentle, sugary instrumental opening.
"I say I'll move the mountains
And I'll move the mountains
If he wants them out of the way."
The Engineer flew back at the very sound, almost toppling over in his chair. He gaped at the gutted radio as the soft words were warbled into the room. Miss Pauling stepped forward, her mouth set in a thin line and her eyes wide behind her frames.
"That's—that's impossible," he said breathlessly, picking up various parts and shaking them, trying to plug and unplug, doing what he could to make it stop. "This ain't right, I took the whole damn thing apart, why the hell's it playing music?"
"Crazy he calls me
Sure, I'm crazy
Crazy in love, I say."
As he watched them from the doorway, the smallest hint of a smile twitched on the Sniper's lips.
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