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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Too busy, except for the fact that Jericho will probably insist he answer their questions more thoroughly, this time. And for the fact that leaving an issue that could affect all of Detroit (or more) in the hands of a single android and a single human is dangerous in the best of cases.
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His duplicate included. Still, if that is the metric of worth they're all relying on, it might work in his favor now. And if Connor is right about his predecessor's real goals... his absence would serve that at least as well as his death. Connor shrugs, hands spreading—though he's careful to keep the weapon pointed down.
"Fine. What are we waiting for?"
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The other android moves on, and Connor tilts his head as well as he can with a tall, unconscious human draped around his shoulders. Then with an act of will to keep from glancing down at the gun, Connor carefully turns back towards the door.
(If he listens as carefully as he can for sudden movement behind him, no one has to know.)
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What she sees... isn't what she expects. She's on one of the tables in the lab, with the deviants who she and Connor had rescued standing back and eyeing her nervously- and Connor's here too, not standing so far back.
"What happened?" The words come out unexpectedly raspy. "I know everyone in here is alive, but- what happened outside?"
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It starts up again soon enough, but Connor can tell that the androids are listening as hard as they can towards this corner, and when he glances, he sees that they're pretending not to watch.
It doesn't matter. They won't hear well, and even if they did, they're all sharing the same goal. Connor turns to Sabriel and steps forward, glancing her over as he talks.
"No word. The other Connor is checking the cameras now."
She's pale, and there's a slight tremor to her motions. Her pulse looks weaker, but not as sluggish as it was during her earlier crash. Her voice rasped--a sweeping glance confirms it, she's dehydrated. She'll need water at some point, or anything else safe for human consumption.
"How are you feeling?"
He wants his tone to be impersonal, smooth under the weight of the captive androids' attention. He doesn't quite manage it; he's watching too carefully, and doesn't sound dismissive enough.
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"I should probably- eat something. Get something to drink. I wasn't asleep for too long, was I?" Hopefully nothing serious has happened in the meantime.
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"You got everything in that area," he confirmed.
He tilts his head a little, acknowledging and agreeing. She'll need human food, and--he remembers a small break room out in the hall. Maybe the cabinets have food. "It's been a couple of hours," he says, glancing at the door.
The motion is enough to provoke a couple of subtle shifts in the androids in that direction, as they suddenly appear engrossed in their own conversations and tasks. At least one of them isn't even bothering with subtlety, and is glancing openly every so often.
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"...Took you long enough."
Abhorsen, to wake up? The other Connor, in waking her? The annoyance seems equally directed at them both, though Connor's eyes flit to his double as he continues.
"Your friends are getting impatient." Considering the drones clearly scouting their position, even Connor found it hard to blame them there. He jerks his head towards Abhorsen. "Can she open the door or not?"
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"Once I have some water, I should be able to- if I have something to east and Connor helps me, I might be able to do it without knocking myself unconscious."
She can't stop the surge of guilt she feels whenever she looks at Connor. (This Connor, the one she hurt.) But there are more important things than her feelings, like making sure everyone can leave. So Sabriel swings herself upright, and then, cautiously, gets to her feet. She feels... not entirely stable, but better than she was expecting, and she takes a few, hesitant steps in the direction Connor indicated, recalling the marks she'd used to seal the door and the least draining way to get it open again.
It would be manageable. But she would need Connor's help. She'd just need to explain the basics of how to cast Charter Magic as part of a group, rather than an individual.
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"There should be food there, and water, and while you eat we can discuss how I'll assist."
That's not all that needs doing: evacuation will go faster if the deviants are moved close to the door, starting with enough time for the ones missing bodyparts to be helped. Connor sweeps the room with a glance, coming to rest on the other RK800.
... Jericho could do it themselves. The only advantage is moving faster, but with the urgency to leave as it is--
"We should move everyone else to the entrance," he says carefully, watching for a reaction.
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Connor raises his eyebrows, tone flat and only slightly mocking. "Good idea." Without moving, he looks to the small cluster of deviants gathered at a workbench further along the wall. Most of them are fiercely occupied pretending not to listen in.
That stops quickly enough as he addresses them. "Get to the entrance. Find the rest and bring them too." The group stalls for a moment, eyes flicking to the Connor they know better—but if he doesn't protest, they'll mutter affirmations and make their way out of the room. If not without some worried glances toward the human.
Connor watches for a moment, then looks back to his copy. Problem solved, right? Unless, of course, the goal was getting rid of him.
"If that's all..." He casts a hand toward the door—and break room.
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Normally, she would have heated up the coffee, and added cream and sugar. in her current state, cold and black is good enough.
"I'm going to need your help." she finally says after the first cup of coffee. "Charter magic can be cast cooperatively, and doing so allows it to be cast with less strain and more power than if the mages involved tried to cast separately. If we do that, I should be able to avoid passing out again."
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This alternative is efficient. The deviants can move themselves, there's nothing dangerous left between them and that entrance that no one can breach.
Connor tells himself this as the three of them thread their way towards the break room, with his counterpart pointedly joining them. He's a thorn in a pile of rocks, making an already tiring task that much pricklier, and once they're inside Connor gives him more space than he does Abhorsen. He tells himself it's because she's moving, and there'd be no point in avoiding someone who might follow him.
When Abhorsen drains her scavenged mug and speaks, Connor is leaning against one of the counters, arms folded against himself.
"How does it work?" he asks, unfolding and pushing off to stand properly. There's a curl of something dark, and miserable in his cut (dread), but it's faint enough to ignore. "Will we each cast the same marks?"
(Marks. Spells. He knows how computer networks operate cooperatively, and there's always a hierarchy involved. Will cooperative magic be different?)
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This alternative is efficient. The deviants can move themselves, there's nothing dangerous left between them and that entrance that no one can breach.
Connor tells himself this as the three of them thread their way towards the break room, with his counterpart pointedly joining them. He's a thorn in a pile of rocks, making an already tiring task that much pricklier, and once they're inside Connor gives him more space than he does Abhorsen. He tells himself it's because she's moving, and there'd be no point in avoiding someone who might follow him.
When Abhorsen drains her scavenged mug and speaks, Connor is leaning against one of the counters, arms folded against himself.
"How does it work?" he asks, unfolding and pushing off to stand properly. There's a curl of something dark, and miserable in his cut (dread), but it's faint enough to ignore. "Will we each cast the same marks?"
(Marks. Spells. He knows how computer networks operate cooperatively, and there's always a hierarchy involved. Will cooperative magic be different?)
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"We'll have to use a line reinforcement. One of us will call up the marks, and then pass it to the other, who will then pass the unlocking spell into the door, opening it. Both of us will need to know the marks, and visualize them- but the greater burden will be on the one the spell is passed to, so- as the more senior mage, I should do it, unless you think you can handle it."
"With just two of us, it won't be much of an amplification, but it will reduce the strain." And then Sabriel explains the marks they'll need. Some of them are general marks of opening and unlocking, but others are specific counterparts to the marks she used to seal the door, keys to specific locking marks, that will need to be ordered in a particular way to work.
And some of those marks are powerful ones, that Sabriel wouldn't be able to draw from the Charter in her present state unassisted. Not without risking further harm.
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She explains the marks. Connor traces them in the air with a finger when she's done, reaching experimentally for the charter--but aside from a few faint light-motes, nothing appears, and he closes the motions before they can truly channel.
"I'm ready." Connor drops his hand to his side, privately reviewing the symbols again in a preconstruction. He makes a minor adjustment, then tucks the files away. "We can start when you're finished, here."
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The conversation is predictable enough. Connor glances over once or twice, catching the sequences of marks as they're sketched out into the air. Her theory book had talked about augmentation like this, and he rolls his eyes at the other RK800's confidence, muttering just loud enough to be heard:
"Enjoy being a battery."
Abhorsen's almost finished. It shouldn't be much longer, and then—he can go. The pressure lingering in his core twists at the thought, and Connor refocuses on the table: reassembling the weapon in quick, efficient motions.
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Instead, Sabriel drains her mug, scarfs down one of the bars, and then shoves as many of the snacks as she can into her pockets before she leaves the room- no point in letting anything useful go to waste.
Sabriel can hear snippets of hushed conversation as she heads towards the entrance- conversation that ceases the instant they realize its her, and she can't do much more than offer her apologies as they back away from her.
"Sorry, I just- need to get to the door to open it. All of you will be out soon, I promise."
Once she's at the door, Sabriel rests her palm against it, feeling the spell she put there, almost surprised at the strength of it. Still, she's more than certain the marks she showed Connor will open the door, and it's likely both of them will be conscious after they've opened it.
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He says nothing. He deliberately relaxes. When Abhorsen finishes, Connor leads the procession out.
He remembers to clear the shadows from his expression just before they reach the door, and when the cluster of walking wounded see him he looks, if not reassuring, then at least neutral. It's not enough: without something to grab and keep their attention their eyes dart past, searching out and landing on Abhorsen. They shift around her like magnet filings repelled by a wrong pole.
Connor lets her lead this last small distance. Soon they'll be out, and the group will be able to avoid Abhorsen indefinitely, unlike him.
Quelling that thought, Connor steps up beside her, mirroring the gesture and holding out his remaining hand to take hers in an impersonal clasp.
He knows what comes next. The preconstruction plays out in rapid-speed, and he closes his eyes, concentrating. The marks are simple enough to hold in his mind, and he's had enough practice 'evoking' that he does so decisively.
Are those faint lights, just visible through his silicone eyelids? Are there sounds in the room, a shift in air pressure, a whisper as deviants recoil or freeze at the sight? His eyes squeeze tighter, and his hand presses the slightest bit harder against the door. He's concentrating. The more he focuses, the faster this will be over.
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When she's focusing on the spell and the Charter, it's easy to forget how tired she is- instead there's just the Charter, that sense of connection to something vast and comforting, and the rest of the world doesn't matter.
Then the spell flows down her arm and through her fingertips, and as it enters the door Sabriel's once again aware of her body, and how exhausted she is, as the second spell undoes the first and starts to force the door open.
There's a shriek of metal and a deep rumbling as it does, and Sabriel sees- many androids on the other side. There's one a the front, with long hair who looks- familiar, but Sabriel's exhausted mind can't think of where she's seen her before.
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The figures revealed as the door splits wide look considerably less intimidated.
The WR400 is at the front. North, his predecessor had said before. The PL600—Simon—isn't present, but Connor thinks he recognizes a few of the other androids gathered behind her. All of them are armed, clothes spattered with weapon residue and stains (both blue and red). Evidently the humans didn't vacate the place willingly.
Jericho's attention is fixed on the exception: Abhorsen, sagging in exhausted triumph. And Connor's predecessor, beside her. A few weapons rise, drawing a bead on the human, but most of the group seems content to keep their guns simply... in hand.
Their leader is no exception. The WR400 takes a step forward: eyes hard, scowl dragging from Abhorsen, to her accomplice... to him.
"Connor?"
His mouth presses flatter, but Connor doesn't respond.
He's not the one they're looking for.
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"Sorry we took so long," Connor continued, lightly but without quite smiling. He lowered his arms. "We're here, now--this is everyone that was inside."
"What the hell was that, just now?" The androids around her shift minutely, but still no one actually ventures across the line where the heavy doors used to stand. "Those lights? You couldn't do that, before."
The whole story pushes into his mouth, against the back of his teeth. What actually comes out is, "I've been learning some new skills. And I have a lot to tell you, but I'd rather do it somewhere more secure."
North doesn't seem surprised, or impressed. After a long moment of silence more she gives a sharp gesture, LED pulsing yellow, and--Connor receives no messages. The guards do, and they start forward, fanning into the cluster of androids. Many of them go to the hurt deviants in the background, checking them over and helping them leave--except for three, which stop facing the RK800.
Connor tears his attention away when he sees several more standing around himself and Abhorsen. His awareness is lagging, and his processing is congested with fatigue, but he tries not to show it as he turns back to North, expression more unruffled than his actual thoughts.
"Come on then," North says slowly, looking from one face to another. "... Let's move this somewhere else."
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(He'd known it wouldn't be this simple. He'd fucking known, and still—)
He keeps his voice hard and flat. "I'm leaving now. Unless that's a problem?"
His glare lingers pointedly on the guards around him—and then flickers to his copy.
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She's ready to say more, opening her mouth to start, but Connor interjects before she can: "He's deviant now." He says it like a reassurance, like it's a tiring, positive thing. "I freed him--he won't rejoin Cyberlife. He can go."
North stares at the RK800--except the RK800 she's looking at now is Connor, with a stare that takes in everything he'd rather not show, and more. The stare alone drags out the few pernicious doubts he has remaining, shaking them awake, and Connor mentally stamps them back.
... The look isn't just searching for flaws in his assurance. On an intuitive level Connor knows he's the one being evaluated too, and Connor withstands it as steadily as he can, feeling part of himself fall quieter. She's--measuring him, weighing something that once they'd taken for granted, something he hadn't realized was gone.
It's disturbing. He may have misjudged.
"A lot's happened," Connor says quietly. He doesn't just mean the deviation.
"I can tell," she replied.
She glances past him to the guards, breaking the standoff. "No one leaves until we've debriefed." Her eyes skate over the human, then land on the younger RK800, finding his gaze and holding it. "... We'll sort everything out then."
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Still, it doesn't seem to be enough.
His jaw locks tight. His LED burns solid red. Connor wants to sneer, or snarl—or laugh, sharp and poisonously bitter, at the mercy he'd been told that Jericho would show. The last time he'd seen this WR400, it had promised he would suffer, and now it stares him down, expecting him to submit.
...All that struggling, and he's just as trapped as he was when he walked in here. He'd been "free" for a scant few hours before he sacrificed it to survive.
(And did he really lose anything of value?)
Connor closes his eyes. Blanks his expression. (Tries, and if he fails, that's hardly anything new.) He's stiff and furious and tired, and not quite dulled enough to miss the utter lack of promises this time. His fists curl closer at his sides, and when he opens his eyes to match North's gaze again, his chin juts up in challenge.
"...I'm keeping my weapons."
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