Sabriel (
bindsthedead) wrote2019-03-09 01:38 am
PSL
There was a time when Sabriel might have been eager to see the inside of Cyberlife Tower. Her class had been to Detroit when she was thirteen, and they'd toured an android factory- or the part of it they showed to tourists, at least- and visited museums and art galleries and all the sorts of things Young Ladies ought to see, but weren't available in the small town of Wyverley, or in Bain.
But Sabriel wasn't here for a school trip. Recent events in Ancelstierre meant that with the sudden loss of all android soldiers meant that soldiers from the entirely human garrison at the Wall had been transferred elsewhere- which meant fewer soldiers watching the border, on top of the losses from Kerrigor's attack, and a necromancer had slipped across, making his way to the largest city that was close enough to the Wall that magic still worked- one that seemed rather different than how she remembered it.
But what was occupying most of her attention was the Cyberlife representative in front of her. Sabriel listened politely as the woman spoke about malfunctioning machines and simulated emotions and how things that weren't alive couldn't die, so why would a necromancer- and from the woman's voice it was clear she didn't believe such things were real- want with deactivated androids?
Sabriel stood up and shook the woman's hand, telling her she'd been very helpful without meaning a word of it, and headed out the office before pausing.
She sensed something ominously familiar- Death, and a recent one at that. She turned another corner, following the sensation as a hound tracked a scent, half-expecting someone to spot her, to see her in her armor and bells (security had made her check her sword at the front desk) and tell her she wasn't allowed to be here.
But no one came, and no one living was in the laboratory she went into- just a dead- (deactivated?) android on a table-or its head and torso at least, with panels on its chest removed to reveal tubes and biocomponents, and Sabriel felt she'd stepped into a morgue and found an autopsied body.
Sabriel was seized by a sudden impulse. If androids weren't alive, then she'd simply waste some time, but if they were... well, she'd have a source of information she could interrogate as she would any Dead spirit. And unlike the representative she'd just spoken to, she could force it to answer honestly and completely.
Decision made, Sabriel undid the straps and drew Saraneth from the bandolier. This far from the Wall, stepping into Death took a deliberate effort, but soon Sabriel was in the First precinct and she cast around with her senses, trying to feel out the spirit of the android- if it had one, it couldn't have gone beyond the First Gate, and probably shouldn't be that far into the the First Precinct.
But Sabriel wasn't here for a school trip. Recent events in Ancelstierre meant that with the sudden loss of all android soldiers meant that soldiers from the entirely human garrison at the Wall had been transferred elsewhere- which meant fewer soldiers watching the border, on top of the losses from Kerrigor's attack, and a necromancer had slipped across, making his way to the largest city that was close enough to the Wall that magic still worked- one that seemed rather different than how she remembered it.
But what was occupying most of her attention was the Cyberlife representative in front of her. Sabriel listened politely as the woman spoke about malfunctioning machines and simulated emotions and how things that weren't alive couldn't die, so why would a necromancer- and from the woman's voice it was clear she didn't believe such things were real- want with deactivated androids?
Sabriel stood up and shook the woman's hand, telling her she'd been very helpful without meaning a word of it, and headed out the office before pausing.
She sensed something ominously familiar- Death, and a recent one at that. She turned another corner, following the sensation as a hound tracked a scent, half-expecting someone to spot her, to see her in her armor and bells (security had made her check her sword at the front desk) and tell her she wasn't allowed to be here.
But no one came, and no one living was in the laboratory she went into- just a dead- (deactivated?) android on a table-or its head and torso at least, with panels on its chest removed to reveal tubes and biocomponents, and Sabriel felt she'd stepped into a morgue and found an autopsied body.
Sabriel was seized by a sudden impulse. If androids weren't alive, then she'd simply waste some time, but if they were... well, she'd have a source of information she could interrogate as she would any Dead spirit. And unlike the representative she'd just spoken to, she could force it to answer honestly and completely.
Decision made, Sabriel undid the straps and drew Saraneth from the bandolier. This far from the Wall, stepping into Death took a deliberate effort, but soon Sabriel was in the First precinct and she cast around with her senses, trying to feel out the spirit of the android- if it had one, it couldn't have gone beyond the First Gate, and probably shouldn't be that far into the the First Precinct.

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It doesn't matter. She's from Cyberlife, the RK800 is listening to her, and she's just given their cover story. Connor has two top priorities now, and one of them includes learning and delivering information about their real plans before they're able to silence him permanently. (The second one is to not get killed.)
He's relieved of his other two guns, and Connor winces faintly, feeling a little like he's already lost bodyparts, even though no torture has actually started. His LED has turned yellow, his jaw is clenched, and for as long as he can he follows the guns with his eyes. (This isn't going to end well. Can he get out of this alive?)
(...)
(... Connor starts gathering the most pertinent details of his work and builds a file, setting the file to send automatically upon death.)
"If it's information you're after..." He focuses on the Abhorsen. THe RK800's presence is like a blazing spotlight by his back, but he already underestimated her once, and look where it's gotten him. He's trapped between two jaws, both closing around him from either side. His LED is yellow, and his stress levels remain high.
"... Why don't we try an information exchange? I know things you don't know. And you..." Connor's eyebrows arch, corners of his mouth floating up in the most obviously fake expression known to man or machine.
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That smile looks ridiculous though. Sabriel offers one of her own- sweet and polite, but it doesn't reach her eyes. She knows Connor's derided her for being soft before, but she's not quite that naive. The other Connor is dodging, trying to avoid telling them anything while getting information out of them.
"I'm sorry, but you just pointed a gun at him, and you're currently disarmed and immobilized. You're not in a position to request things." There might not be any cruelty in her tone, but there is a certain sharpness. She immobilized him instead of using a spell that would hurt him, and she hadn't let Connor shoot him. Apparently that wasn't getting across that she didn't mean to harm him, even if Connor clearly wanted to.
"Why don't you start by explaining what you think we know?"
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Justifying. Suggesting. Stepping back from her own position of control—and making it obvious that she wasn't willing to use force. She launches into coaxing without so much as a pause, leaving no room for him to interject. Was she that sure he couldn't contribute?
Not that she'd left him many options. [Pressure]? Unlikely to succeed, when the deviant knew he wouldn't be permitted to take action. [Persuade]? Only if he wants to echo the human's pleas—and make them both sound weaker in the process. He could remain silent until her own efforts failed, and try to salvage what he could from the wreckage.
Or he could use a different skill entirely.
Connor tucks a second gun into his jacket, freeing up a hand. He eyes the deviant, hesitating just a moment to wipe the memory of a blue-stained wall from cache. Then Connor reaches forward, clasping his frozen duplicate by the wrist as he launches an immediate, ruthless mental probe.
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--a steel wedge crashes into his mental shields, and suddenly it doesn't matter.
Connor grunts, eyes slamming shut as he struggles to fend the attack off. He's a state of the art android designed for hacking, and his advantages are worth almost nothing against another model that knows all his tricks. Connor separates a few stray commands and fights to tear away, but he still can't move, and--his first layer of firewalls falls under the onslaught, which redoubles on the next.
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Sabriel's not sure what Connor's doing, but whatever it is, it seems to be painful. Sabriel steps forward, not sure what will cause more damage- stopping Connor, or letting him continue. What if the damage has already been done? What if, for reasons she can't understand, the other Connor had actually been intending to hurt them?
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A final barrier shatters, and Connor drives invasively into the gap, seizing its memory and rifling through the contents. The search is ruthless and efficient, but the presence half-embedded in the other unit's code might betray a few more impressions. A flicker of triumph. A swelling of contempt. And underneath all of it? Loathing. For this deviant in particular.
RK800_313_248_317-60, the digital ID reads.
Abhorsen's interjection is unsurprising, but not quite an order to desist. Connor's lip curls, LED blinking a rapid yellow even as he places a mental bookmark and looks up. "I'm accomplishing my mission," he bites off, scorn audible. Does it look harmed? "Not that it knows anything worth—"
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It's an utterly useless realization, as deep as it hits. He knows it, but it doesn't help him rebuild his firewalls, or give him a clue to lure the android into overreaching, to trick him into exposing some weakness where--
--the RK800's attention is diverted? It happens abruptly enough that Connor blinks, wasting precious seconds in sheer surprise. He's still half embedded in Connor's code and not at all resettled into a more secure status, but he's stopped.
All at once, Connor throws himself into a counter-attack. RK800s are meant for field dissections, not to intrude and then take up residence. The lack of an attack left Connor with enough resources to lash out with his own probe, pressing full-tilt towards the channels he still has open for the transfer. The firewalls aren't strong, here, and Connor cuts through the few still up like butter.
Except--these channels don't lead towards recent memory storage, they lead directly towards where the RK800 kernel is kept. In order to control access to Connor's memories, it was using its own base programming, and now Connor has access to it. On sheer impulse he starts a transfer, grasping at everything he can. Recent memories pass through him and are brushed aside for later, thoughts, sensations--Connor has only one goal right now, and he's going to hold fast like a dying man.
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...it's a tug forward. A pull into the system he's half-occupying already: as code streams past him in reverse, cluttering his channel for retreat. Plastic creaks, his skinless hand clenching spasmodically around his duplicate's wrist, before even that sensation strips away, lost in the exchange. Connor moves to jerk back physically, breaking the connection, but—
His (its) limbs don't answer. Its (his) grip won't pry apart. The deviant in front of him is nowhere to be seen, but there's pressure on (his) wrist, a presence at his back—
"What..."
Connor can't move.
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It worked. He can move, he's in his successor's body, like an uncomfortable, surreal mirror of hisown. There's an ache in one arm that he tracks down to a rip in the cloth he'd seen and dismissed earlier. There's a hint of lag in a few bioservos, suggesting he hasn't calibrated--
'What...'
Connor's attention snaps back to him, and he refocuses. Yes, despite not being able to move, the RK800 can still talk. Will this be a problem? ... If the human realizes he's moved, she's just going to paralyze this new body. If the RK800 is allowed to warn her... Connor reaches for its throat, tapping over its addams apple with bone-white fingers. It's not enough to initiate an interface, but the RK800's skin recedes, and a section of the neck disengages, separating from the rest.
"It was about to call for help," Connor remarks, removing the voice-box. (No--that didn't sound like him. What would a real servant of Cyberlife say?)
(It would grandstand. Then it would make general attempts towards the mission.)
"You're fortunate that I caught it in time. Now we can interrogate it for as long as we need."
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"We need to stop," she pauses, and looks at the other Connor out of the corner of her eye, "Our target, before he and his allies make too much progress, or none of the current political situation will matter to anyone, because they'll all be dead or trying not to be eaten."
Sabriel's gone thin lipped by now, tension clear in every line of her body. Even if she has no intention of doing so, Sabriel looks like she's about to lunge at Connor.
"We have leads- and you were right, going to the police was a good idea and I thank you for it. But we need to follow those leads, not indulge in this- this grudge of yours, or whatever this is."
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(How had he failed—again, this badly—?)
...Connor wants to scream.
Predictably, Abhorsen notices nothing. She snaps and snarls—too upset at having her pretense of sympathy disrupted to pay attention to what's happening in front of her. The sight is just infuriating enough to ground him, and Connor presses his lips together, glaring stark loathing at his owner. The yellow/red flicker of his LED isn't visible beneath this body's hat, but Sabriel's phone will receive a set of texts from a new number.
You fucking idiot, that isn't me.
Kill it.
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When he has himself under control, he nods once.
"Of course." At least he doesn't have to be actually perfect: his counterpart is full of more loathing and spite than he would've thought him capable of, and one corner of Connor's mouth curls. "I meant that he didn't know anything about our target. If we send him on to Cyberlife for further interrogation, they might be able to find out more about deviants from a full system analysis."
And with any luck, slow Cyberlife's plans as they deal with eventually discovering which android they actually have.
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"And involve ourselves in Ancelstierrian politics?" Sabriel doesn't add that turning over a living being to people who don't see him as alive, and will almost certainly kill him... isn't something she's comfortable with. She knows how he'd react, it wouldn't convince him- no point in discussing it.
"The Old Kingdom has enough problems without me getting involved in the mess the Ancelstierrians made. I know you hate deviants, but that's not relevant to our mission. I want to deal with the threat and do my duty as Abhorsen, not take sides in a fight." Especially not one where she wasn't sure who was right, or if there even was a right side.
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...probably. (If the deviant did kill her, she'd deserve it.)
He sends off another text. Another. Abhorsen doesn't so much as twitch, and Connor networks directly to her phone to check. The device is silenced, but not off, and he turns the sound up to maximum. The next message produces a loud chime from her pocket.
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... This isn't what Connor was prepared for. For a moment he wonders if she knows, and she's deliberately being as contradictory to expectations as possible, but the probability is too low. It's much more likely that he's miscalculated, and that now he has to scramble.
Ding! The sound is coming from her side. Ding! Ding! Ding!
Connor's eyes dart to the paralyzed android, and his own LED (now exposed) turns yellow as he remotely silences her phone.
Cyberlife is involved. Somehow. Their mission is just... unexpectedly nuanced.
"If we don't send it in," says Connor slowly, trying to feel for the right response. She didn't want torture, but her earlier phrasing was 'don't shoot without permission'--not 'don't shoot at all.' He lifts the gun still in one hand. "... Then we should dispose of it altogether."
If Connor's careful, he could damage the android in a way that would simulate death, but leave remains intact enough to examine after he leaves.
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"No, there's no need for that- you read the books, didn't you? You know what I can do." If it worked. If the android wasn't able to immediately recover the suppressed memories, in which case he'll be angry and probably have questions- and Sabriel doesn't know enough about computer science to come up with a scientific explanation that would make any amount of sense. That she can control the electrical impulses of her nervous system and use them to manipulate electronics?
Androids memories might work differently than humans- it's a risk, but it's better than killing someone, over what might be a misunderstanding. And the immobilizing spell has worked the same as it would on a human. But Connor is- something isn't right. He's not sneering at her or making some snide comment, and Sabriel frowns slightly, one hand reaching for her phone before dropping to her side. With her luck, it's news that someone recorded the Dead and videos are all over the news.
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No need to dispose of him. Or just no need to use the gun? No—if Abhorsen was too squeamish to let Connor kill for her, the odds of her dirtying her own hands were even lower. She had a different solution in mind. There were spells to bind creatures to a place or object. Others that could tamper with their minds. Was she planning to acquire a second RK800? (Or a replacement?) She didn't have her bells this time.
The phone's volume cuts out again, and Connor seethes. He could turn it back on—but then, it's not as if Abhorsen was paying his calls the slightest mind. He can't speak. Can't move. Can't even turn his glare back toward his double, and fingers twitch in sheer, helpless rage—
Connor freezes. His eyes flick down toward the hand at his side—and his head tips just the slightest fraction, trying to bring it into view.
The spell is wearing off.
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Motion draws Connor's attention towards the android's hands, and he's at the perfect angle to see its head tilt. Time is running out. Maybe if he'd 'read the books', he'd know how much there was left.
Connor still hasn't moved the gun away. "If you have something in mind, then--"
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"There's a way to deal with this situation without killing anyone. First, we need to put back everything you took, or he'll wonder where they've gone. Not that guns will be much use against what we're dealing with anyway." If they're going to make him forget anyway, it's not like there's much point in strictly avoiding discussion of the supernatural, and she knows Connor's going to argue about keeping the guns.
Then she turns her attention back the frozen android and- was that a twitch? She doesn't have much time left, and the movements of her hands speed up.
"I'm sorry. I'm not sure why you threatened us, but I'm starting to think it was all a misunderstanding."
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Single target. Mental modification. Connor bristles, straining desperately to move, even as the motions of her hands speed up. The sequence is too quick to follow, but there are counters indicating time, repeated calls to memory. Is she—trying to reset him?
No. No, he can't let her. He can't forget his mission, can't lose—can't fail (again) in this pathetic, worthless state—
It's not gradual. One moment, the paralysis is operating in full force: body stiff, limbs frozen, only the barest twitch of his own tension coiling through borrowed hands. The next, Connor is free.
He spins back toward the deviant, smashing a hand sideways to knock aside its gun—just in time for it to squeeze the trigger, round discharging uselessly into the air. Connor grabs its wrist in the same motion and steps through, yanking it into Abhorsen's line of fire. Or close enough, at least, to foul her use of spells on him. His other hand settles on top of the gun, twisting for a rapid disarm.
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His counterpart brings up the gun, and Connor lunges forward, pushing the arm off course and slamming the butt of the gun towards his LED.
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So she'll just have to freeze both of them, at least at first. And let Connor keep one of the guns, and apologize to him for being so slopping.
She launches the spell without a work, golden light spilling from her fingertips once again.
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—as a spark of golden light wells up just past his predecessor. Connor jerks left without stopping to identify the spell, placing his opponent's stolen body squarely between himself and Abhorsen. Light flares as the spell makes contact... and his duplicate freezes.
How good of the human to finally assist.
The smirk that flashes across Connors face doesn't slow the rise of his weapon. The deviant wasn't Abhorsen's intended target. She'll try again, and quickly... but not quick enough to stop him doing this. It's the shot he was created for, and Connor's eyes glint with desperate triumph as levels the barrel with his predecessor's pump. As he finally, finally, pulls that trigger—
DON'T SHOOT, say the red walls standing in his way.
...He has to shoot. He wants to. He needs to put down the threat, to kill the deviant—stop it, before it makes him a failure again. Teeth grit, expression furrowing as his hand shakes: trigger finger trying to squeeze again, and again, and again. It doesn't work. Stress levels spike in furious bursts and it isn't fair; he doesn't want to die a failure—
DON'T SHOOT.
DON'T SHOOT.
He can't see past the order. Certainly, he can't act. The light at his temple blinks furious red as Connor stands frozen as thoroughly as his double.
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Connor sends the files he'd put together earlier, along with a short apology. Case files, a snapshot of his situation, an estimated cause of death--it's as close as he'll ever get to a will and testament, having no actual possessions to put in order. His death won't be a mystery, and someone else will be able to continue the case in his stead.
The hand holding the gun shakes. The glint in his eye fades, and the upward curve of his mouth reverses as his stress ticks upward. Connor tracks every twitch of his trigger finger in his peripheral, refusing to actually stop staring his death in the eye. Once, twice, three times...
"... You can't shoot me," Connor realizes. Its LED is red, and it obviously desperately wants to, but. "... You have your orders," He whispers.
If this is the case, then maybe there's time. Connor has room to work, even if it's all gone so catastrophically wrong. He can't turn his head, but he calls out, "He's not paralyzed yet, Ms Abhorsen."
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She cuts off the spell she's about to cast, turning her attention to someone who's definitely not Connor.
"But he won't shoot you because I told him not to," Sabriel's voice shakes a little as she puts it together, "And Connor's never called me Miss. You're not the real Connor. He is. You switched when he touched you. Do you think we're working for Cyberlife? Is that why you threatened us?" The other possibility is that he's working for them, but Sabriel dismisses that. If Cyberlife wanted Connor, they'd send her something demanding him back, and if they did send another android to collect him, that android would be wearing a uniform.
"Connor, take all his other guns and get your voice back. And shoot him if he does anything threatening." Even if she tries to keep her voice neutral, it still sounds like an apology.
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aaand short timeskip
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