The Quick Way Down

“Some of us come into life with an innate fascination for death. It said something profound about Victor’s character, as it did for myself, that he became a disassembler instead of a surgeon. Between us we might have cured much suffering and saved many lives, but instead of life we chose death. You might think this odd or selfish, but how would you feel if you knew your doctor was more excited about doing your autopsy than curing your cancer? Trust me, it’s better this way.”

sci-fi suspense, tech-noir whodunnit, subterranean techno-utopia, political bulshittery, social inequality, body horror

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Excerpt

I set off at a brisk walk and felt the clean air clearing the smell of human sweat and cheap cologne from the lining of my sinuses. My shoes picked up a generous coating of rust-coloured dust. I wondered at how quickly a lifetime of nervous tension simply fell away when in the presence of a large number of green growing things. I passed along a raised ridge that rolled down to the shore of the lake and puffed on my vape. A group of school kids with fishing nets and magnifying glasses was splashing about in the reeds by the shore. I off-gassed a gout of nicotine steam and one of their babysitters scowled over at me and broke my pleasant illusion for the second time that day. You only get to feel comfortable in a place if you can trick yourself into believing that you belong. Judging by the po-faced look I was getting from her, I sure didn’t belong in Crystal Park.

One of the kids in the reeds on the marshy shore had stopped spelunking for amphibians and was pointing up into the lights far above. One of the babysitters noticed and followed her gaze and just had time to cover her mouth in shock before the tumbling body hit the water twenty metrics from shore with a smack. A huge wave rolled up onto the shore and took the feet out from under a couple of rubber-booted children and dunked them into the shallow water. The kids squealed and splashed about in terror until they remembered that the water only came up to their shins.

Nobody seemed inclined to get their feet wet. I’m not much of swimmer, but I have my first two badges in ankle-wading and so I splashed out towards the body, doing that awkward high-step when the water is too deep to walk but too shallow to swim.

The body was young, male, and naked, lean and lanky, with wiry musculature and hair that was wavy and long and somewhat matted. On his back there was an intricate snake tattoo in white ink that ran from the C1 vertebra right the way down to the knobbly tip of the coccyx.

I flipped him over. His face had a thin ridge of brow over an unremarkable nose and a fortnight’s worth of sparse-growing beard on a narrow chin. He was completely naked and the hair on his chest was thin and wiry, his pubis was a water-bedraggled mass. His face and skin were rich and dark and did not have the unique pallor of the average mole rat denizen of City-235. The health of his skin alone pegged him as from one of the froo-froo upper-caste districts, and most probably as a Crystal Park local. The main incongruity was that he was so skinny that his ribcage and pelvis looked like they were carved into a block of wax. But then again, even rich people can be anorexic.

The impact had cracked a couple of ribs. Which was fine, there wasn’t much market for them anyway. The spine had not been severed, which was a blessing, but the internal organs would probably be pulp. There was so little subcutaneous fat that I could see even without palpitating them that ankles, knees, shoulders, elbows, and wrists were all in perfect nick and would fetch a good price.

I looked back to shore and the child-minder who had scowled at my innocent steam-off-gassing was scowling at me again as she talked to Enforcement on the communicator. I couldn’t hear the words but I knew it was Enforcement because who else would it be?

I left the young guy to float while I waded back to shore. The scowling woman scowled at me some more and pocketed her communicator. She had short cropped hair on a nearly spherical head and eyes like diamond drill tips. She didn’t like me one bit.

“Are you just going to leave him out there?”

“Protocol. Enforcement doesn’t like it when non-uniform types fiddle with a crime scene before they get a chance.”

The little girl who had seen the body falling came over and tugged at the knee of the woman’s elegantly baggy pants. Her eyes were full of concern and the woman’s scowl softened. The kid was young and small and still had her chirrupy munchkin voice.

“Is he dead?”

The minder’s face came over with grave concern and then she looked up at me. I nodded.

“Yes, Binnie, he is.”

The child’s eyes brightened, “Can we go see—!?”

The minder’s face flushed with surprise and embarrassment at this childish indecency. I was amused, but not surprised. Out in the reeds, the minder’s partner was having a hard time corralling the children at the bank and stopping them from wading out to inspect the body for themselves. Kids are morbid little fuckers.

The minder resumed her gentle authority and gave Binnie a gentle push up the bank.

“You go up and wait by the bench over there. The Enforcement Individuals will be here soon and we don’t want them to get angry with us for ruining their evidence.”

The child pointed at me with a direct stabbing finger, “But he went all the way out there and touched it. He touched it all over, I saw him. Why does he get to—?” Pivoting to me, she said, “How come you got to touch it? He has to be dead, right mister—?” She stared at me with unfiltered and unembarrassed expectation.

“Not everybody gets to, but I can because it’s my job. I’m a disassembler.”

It’s hard to tell how people will react when you tell them that you dissect cadavers and sell the parts on the open market. Sometimes I get a hug and sometimes they take a swing, depending entirely on whether they’ve had some broken part replaced or not. The closer to death they were, the nicer they generally are. Most of the time they did what this woman did, a sudden glare and tension through the shoulders that softens into a step backwards and a wary distance behind the eyes. It’s rare to meet someone like Binnie who gets a look of hungry fascination.

“Really mister—?”

I nodded and pulled out my city-issued security lanyard and looped it around my neck, “Really really.”

The kid’s eyes widened and I knew then I was looking down at an enthusiastic future member of the Guild of Morticians and Disassemblers. The disgust on the minder woman’s face deepened and she stumped over to Binnie and took her by the arm. She dragged her over to the bench and plumped her down on it. She sat down beside her and put a restraining hand on the girl’s shoulder. Their voices were thinned by distance.

“We are staying here and not going to move until the Enforcement Individuals tell us we can leave.”

“But miss…”

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