My eyes are open.
Those words are as good as any to begin this crazy little story of mine. That was the first thing that popped into my head as I woke up. Not the fact that it was going to be raining for awhile. It always rains in Janus City. Not the fact that it's Thursday, and I'm running. Not the fact that I'm open for business because I'm wearing nothing but my panties. I shudder at the thought. I palm underneath my pillow for my Beretta. Sometimes I have this irrational fear that I won't wake up, that my jugulars will be reopened or the Beretta would go off and paint the bed with sausages and Jell-O
NO
The window. Janus City greets me through the blinds, all neon and rain drip drip dripping on the glass. The ceiling fan spins around like clockwork, beating me with the winds from Aeolus's bag of tricks, and the holoclock reads 5:30 AM. Huh. I'm genuinely surprised. Was it a creeper's bump in the night? Insomnia? Figure it out, like my mother said.
I have a very rigid morning routine. It keeps me active, focused, where I have to be.
I do the usual. s**t, piss, shower. For breakfast: a stale box of Wonder Flakes, the cereal of the Off-World Colonies. “It’s not just great… it’s WONDROUS!” In all reality, it’s as bland as escargot, even when it’s fresh.
I’ve got some time, so I hop on Pegasus, my console. I have a chuckle downloading the latest blockbusters before they hit the screen in stunning HD and watching some retarded kid get crushed by a stampede of bull elephant. Don’t tell me it was an unfortunate accident. He knew, in his simian brain, what he was doing.
Finally, I don the highest of runner fashion: a long, green London trenchcoat with a hood; Ray-Ban Wayfarers, upgraded with an added reality interface; slightly (just slightly) torn jeans; and Nikes that have seen one patch of scum to many.
The final step: the mirror. In one word, describe your emotional state.
Well, I’m twenty-one years old… or twenty? Twenty-three? I have no f*****g clue. I’d just popped a couple of Valiums, so I can be a little zoned out. It relaxes the earthquakes on the inside. I’m in my early twenties, I have red hair, milk skin, bee-stung lips, dark eyes. People say I look like Molly Ringwald. Could I be a clone of her? Figure it out.
Heard mother was living and dying in L.A. I’m certain it is better down there than here.
I’m twenty something… and my brain is fried.
“I don’t f*****g know. Fine.”
Fine.
You’re in the garage now, staring at the Crown Victoria. Twenty years old, and what are you doing, besides running? I don’t know I don’t know I don’t f*****g know f**k
Keep yourself at bay, Eva.
You’re just going to run. So far awaaaaaay.
###
Shukutai Task Management, Inc. is a two-story office building, a miniature tower of glass. Sometimes, I wonder what would happen if the place was struck by lightning. All of Tricky Dick’s easily-earned money goes tumbling down and slicing me and him and his lackeys to ribbons. I wish.
Dick Shukutai. That last name means “scumbag” in Japanese. Chink f****r looks the type too, five foot five, two hundred pounds, Hawaiian shirt stained with sweat and coffee and dirty Aviators. I keep my Wayfarers clean, despite the fact that I wade through the swamp on a daily basis. I land my Crown Vic in the back parking lot, get out, and go south through the transparent glass doors. Davey Bowie’s “Let’s Dance” is playing over the speakers. “Eva,” Will the deskbot says, “glad you got over here. The Cap wants your ass in his office.” Cap. That was Will’s name for Shukutai.
On a normal day, a low-level runner like me only catches a fleeting glimpse of Shukutai. You’d only get called up if you f****d up big time or were getting a raise. I get the feeling that this is none of the above. My guesses are spot on so much, you’d think I was psychic.
“Hi, Will.” I take off the Wayfarers. “What’s Dick up to? Probably wanting me to join in on a threesome with him and his ladies.”
“Eva, you’re such a cynic.”
“It’s my nature, I guess. I…” Pause. “I just popped a couple Valiums. I’m a little zoned out, like I always am.”
“You sound like you need to disconnect, girl? You know, get some R&R? Hey,” Will taps my shoulder, leans forward, “You ever try the Red Room? Golden.”
“That’s a redesign hangout. A natural like me’d get her eyes gouged out just looking at the place. It’s that exclusive.”
Redesigns. All the gifts that science can give them, and what do they do with it? This:
Hey, Steve!
Hey, Jake!
Say, Steve!
Yes, Jake!
Do you like my Ferrari?
That’s nothing, you should see my Lam.
I go up the stairs, turn right, down a few offices to the end of the hall. As I walk towards Cap's door, I can hear chit-chit-chatter. Looks like he's got guests. Another one of his more shadier business ventures I suppose. The windows of some of the offices are busted, mine are cracked, and the thick smell of cigarettes emanate from underneath Shukutai's door. I'm dying for one right now. Cap's got a little lantern that you stick the cig in as soon as you got in your mouth to light it, resembles a Chojin. Japanese have taken over the world. I can see the videoboard geisha, white as porcelain, eyes blacker than obsidian, sing to me through the cracked windows of my office. Big Brother is watching.
I open the door to see Shukutai sitting behind his desk, tweedling his thumbs, cigarette burning between forefinger and f**k you finger. Raises eyes to mine, says "Mosh-mosh, Evadge. How's the low life going?" He snorts his primordial snot back through the tubes of his nose.
"Captain Shukutai."
I pause. I noticed four things wrong with this room: a pretty guy; a graying crew-cut, beer gut shirt-button buster in a wool coat; another chink, a girl, folding origami and sitting in the back, right corner, rocking her chair; and a woman of about forty, maternal looking, white coat.
"Don't be a gopher, Evadge. Sit down."
I do that.
"Cig?" he offers.
"Sure."
Light her up. Rock n' roll.
Leaning back into the leather seat, steam from my mouth like Godzilla, I draw my attention to Origami Girl. She's real focused on her art. So far, she's made a bear, a snake, a worm, and a butterfly. Staring at the paper facsimiles, I am lost. It happens a lot. I feel like I don't know where I am, what time it is. Sometimes, I don't even care what condition my body's in. I am simply numb. Butterfly.
I want one A little little orange one
"Yo!" I shout, fingers surrounding my mouth. Origami Girl doesn't answer.
The motherly looking one says, "That's Trish. She prefers to let her actions speak for her."
Shukutai: "Evadge, this is Dr. Cope. Dr. Cope, this is Evadge."
"Call me Eva."
"What's the problem with 'Evadge'?" Cope asks. She peeks down, then veers her eyes back to Shukutai. "Oh. I see. Pleasure to meet you." She extends her left hand. I reach for it, but it cuts through her like air.
"Artificially intelligent hologram, eh?"
Cope: "Precisely."
Cope introduces me to the two men sitting on my side. Exhibit A: Prettyboy.
"Evangeline, this is Doctor Klaus Krieger. Doctor Krieger, this is Evangeline."
Evangeline. Nobody but a fink calls me that. Fink's my name for a fed or a cop or any other spook type. Cope's voice is sincere, friendly, but firm. I could still hear the rain trickling outside, down the blue-glowing windows. I feel like I'm a detective in a vintage noir, about to get briefed on the case. How I wish I were color blind. Things would really be looking up.
Klaus. Blonde hair, about my height (five-eight). Quite muscular. Looks a great deal like Macaulay Culkin, except he's missing an eye, his right. He's got one of the new cyberpatches over it. I am certain it has an AR interface. He's got on a white t-shirt with an image of Friedrich Nietzche facepalming himself splattered across it. Blue jeans. Nikes. Awfully nihilistic attire for a doctor. Of what.
The fat guy's Holden. James Holden. Holden, me. Me, Holden. He says nothing, but he's got a look in his eyes. Fascination? No.
Shukutai's office has shitty air conditioning, and as a result, sweat is already beginning to drip down my oval face. My eyes are dancing.