bindsthedead: (art-explaining)
Sabriel ([personal profile] 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.
313_248_317_60: (Mirrored)

[personal profile] 313_248_317_60 2020-01-06 06:03 pm (UTC)(link)
Cyberlife Tower was too well defended. Jericho, almost certainly likewise. But a field lab would be less established or well-armed—and he did, after all, have orders that should get him in. All Connor needed was to find their thirium reserves. Access them, and make an exit: past or through anyone who got in his way.

(Stealing Cyberlife resources. Threatening their personnel. It was familiar enough to choke on, and Connor burned with loathing at how far he'd fallen. He should shut down. He should turn himself over in reality; offer every sick and mutated line of his warped code for Cyberlife to piece apart.)

Finding the lab had been easy. But it took more time and effort than he could have imagined to reduce his LED to a calm blue. Connor reported blandly to the guards outside, supplying Craven's orders and authority. They directed him forward, and he stepped into the elevator. Down the hall. Eyes fixed on him immediately from the adjoining lab. They knew his face. All of them did. Knew what it had done to Cyberlife before.

...He shouldn't have come here.

Connor knew that before he stepped out into the hall. Before the leveled weapons and sharp orders, hands pressing and checking and stripping him of both his guns. They missed one knife. Took the other. Pushed him forward toward the lab, and he submitted calmly (hoping they believed him, hoping their focus would somehow shift away).

He was seated. Watched. Three technicians closed in from the front (two guards behind), and Connor obediently took the cable they profferred. "Let's take a look at you," and he stared, wondering with numb, blank dread if deviancy would let him falsify their diagnostics. If it mattered, anymore. His LED blinked: yellow, yellow, hand stalled around the cable as the lead technician's frown began to sharpen. As the guards tightened their holds on the weapons—as movement flickered in the hall outside—


—a woman, dark-haired with icy pale skin. An android with his features and his face. His predecessor met his gaze, and Connor froze, LED snapping stark red.

He wasn't the only one who noticed.