Drawn to them, as always, her eyes scan the photos, appreciating their beauty, when she notices one sitting on the corner of the mantelpiece itself, and she finds herself smiling. It is a picture she knows well, especially since she is one of the main subjects of it.
It shows a winter field, blanketed in heavy snow. One lone tree stands in the background, adding perspective. In the foreground, Dakota, clad in leather, holds a gauntleted fist out as a swooping Wiyo, massive wings spread out to their widest point, comes to land.
“I remember that day,” the Judge reflects, drawing a finger across a weathered cheek. Fenton Harcourt is a tall man, still strapping despite his advanced age, with a shock of snow-white hair and a face filled with stern lines that only the occasional twinkle in his deep brown eyes seems to belie. “It was colder than a witches’ mammary and twice as harsh.”
Chuckling, Koda draws her finger lightly across the picture, not quite touching the glass that protects the paper from the elements. It was the first time Wiyo had come at her call and landed on her wrist. She can almost feel the deadly strength of those talons on her arm now; a grip so strong, and yet somehow so tender, that she knew at the time that even if she hadn’t been wearing the gauntlet, her skin would not have been pierced.
Dakota turns from the photo finally, meeting the older man’s deep-set eyes. They share a moment of perfect understanding. Judge Harcourt loves Wiyo almost as fiercely as she does. Just as he had loved, and cared for, Wiyo’s brother, who was brought down by a drunken idiot with a penchant for shooting birds. That man would have been dead by Harcourt’s own hand, judge or no judge, if he hadn’t jumped into his pickup truck and promptly driven it into a tree, turning himself into hamburger flambé.
The Judge had mourned the loss of the bird, mourned as he never would for a fellow human. It was as if he had lost a part of himself in the death of the wild one he had helped to raise from a hatchling. And that loss changed him, profoundly and permanently.
“So,” he says finally, breaking the silence between them, “I assume there’s a purpose for this visit beyond assuring yourself of my current state of liveliness?”
Koda snorts. “You’re too evil to die, old man.”
Harcourt tries to look offended, but the glitter in his eyes once again belies the stern, craggy lines of his face. “Alas, you’ve discovered my secret. Whatever will the Society of Crazed and Evil Immortals (you’ll notice the particular emphasis on certain words there) think? We’re the only group to have survived this latest human debacle intact, you know,” he adds in a mockingly conspiratorial stage whisper.
Koda rolls her eyes, then turns serious. “I need your help.”
The Judge’s bushy eyebrows raise, like two white caterpillars perched atop his glasses. “My help? Whatever for? In case you haven’t noticed, Ms. Rivers, I’m rapidly approaching 80. I’m afraid my days of heroic derring-do are long over.”
“I’m not asking for heroism, I’m asking for help,” Koda bites off as she breaks his gaze and looks out into the springtime day. “Look. I’ve moved down to the base to try and help take care of this mess. Women are being kept in prisons all over this country, raped repeatedly, and forced to bear children for reasons we haven’t figured out yet. We’ve managed to survive another android skirmish, and the survivors are coming through the gates in a never-ending stream.” She sighs, slipping her hands into her pockets. “At first, we just had the usual ‘settling in’ problems, but lately things have been getting worse, in a big way.”
“Yea, verily, I say unto you,” Harcourt’s dry voice intrudes, “wherever two or more are gathered, they’ll spend their time bashing the stuffing out of one another.”
Koda’s smile is faint, and disappears quickly. “That’s becoming the size of it, yeah.”
“I’m failing to see the problem here,” Harcourt remarks. “Surely there are enough military types still alive on that base to adjudicate their own affairs with reasonable swiftness and accuracy.” He holds up one arthritis humped finger. “You’ll notice my use of the word ‘reasonable’, here. I, myself, wouldn’t trust a military court to judge whether my shoes were tied or not. However, it is their domain, is it not?”
Cutting her gaze from the window, she eyes him evenly. His eyebrows go up again. “I’m missing something, I presume.”
“Did you ever hear a state of war or emergency declared?” she asks simply.
He ponders for a moment. “I don’t believe so, no.”
She continues to stare at him until his eyes finally widen in comprehension. “No. No, my dear, and no again. I will not be a party to a pitiful and doomed attempt to prolong the last gasp of a species who should have become extinct before they were allowed to breed. Humankind has finally heard the Judgement Trumpet blown, and I say it’s about damn time.”
“Judge…”
“No, Dakota. No. The body of Man is getting exactly what it deserves. And I, for one, fully intend to enjoy what is left of my life here on this planet in a state of peaceful relaxation, free from the petty concerns of a dying society. I have my books. I have my birds—I spotted a Cassin’s Sparrow just yesterday, by the way. Only the second sighting in this area, I’ll have you know. Too bad there’s no longer anyone around who gives a whit. No, I’m quite afraid you’ll have to find someone else to aid you with the postmortem. I’ve retired from the species.”
Dakota’s gaze goes far away, and Harcourt feels a sense of disquiet niggling its way into his hardened heart.
“Wa Uspewicakiyapi is dead. He was caught in an illegal trap, and attacked by predators. I noticed his mate first. She was looking for help and a couple of drunk assholes were taking potshots at her for shits and giggles. I was able to rescue her. She was starving, bleeding, and had obviously dropped an early litter. When I found the pups, all were dead save one. Wiyo led me to Wa Uspewicakiyapi. There was…nothing I could do for him. His life was….” Pulling her hands out of her pockets, she stares at them as if they are foreign objects. “I killed him.”
Harcourt’s eyes close in sympathy, his face set and grim.
Koda’s jaw clenches, the muscles in her face pronounced. “And now he’s locked up in a freezer on the base…for evidence.” The word comes out like evacuated poison.
“Evidence? For what?”
“Manny and a friend killed the trapper. He’d snared several other animals in his illegal traps. They were rescuing them when he found them and drew a bead on them. They acted in self-defense, and Tacoma believes that Wa Uspewicakiyapi’s body is needed to prove their innocence.”
Such is her state of agitation that she doesn’t see or hear the Judge move, and stiffens slightly as a large, warm hand is placed on her shoulder in a gesture of support. “I need your help, Fenton. Humanity might be dying out, but it’s taking a lot of others as it goes. Innocents who don’t deserve what’s being done to them. I need someone I can respect and trust, and that someone is you.” She turns fully to him, feeling his hand slide away. “Please. Help me.”
Harcourt’s eyes are sad. “Dakota….”
“You won’t have to move there, Fenton. We’ll set something up so it’ll be like the old west. Have all the cases lumped together once or twice a month. I’ll even have a driver come down and pick you up and drop you off back home.” She’s perfectly aware that she’s begging, but knows as well that this is much more important than her pride.
The sudden silence is long and sharp as a shadow-blade dividing the space between them. Dakota relaxes, knowing she’s done the best she can and can only accept his decision, whatever it might be.
His hands clench in tightly made fists, but a reluctant nod is pulled from him, like a confession pulled from a lawbreaker when he realizes the consequences of remaining silent.
“I have conditions,” he remarks in a soft voice.
“Name them.”
“I’ll reserve that right until I set my eyes upon this new Xanadu, if you don’t mind.”
“Fine.”
He nods again. “Store that death trap of yours behind the house. We’ll leave in my truck.”
“Thank you, Fenton,” she says with real emotion.
“Save those for my final decision. Now let’s go.”
*
“It reminds me of the Warsaw ghetto.”
Maggie, sitting beside her in the back of the APC, raises a quizzical eyebrow, and Kirsten falls silent. The convoy of armored vehicles moves slowly through the streets of Rapid City, strung out the length of a city block to allow maneuvering room in the event of attack. Their shadows, spiked with the bristling shapes of automatic weapons, glide along the asphalt beside the trucks, sharp-edged as spilled paint in the noon sun. After a moment Kirsten adds, “I don’t mean the buildings are similar. I mean. . .” she pauses again, searching for the precise word. “They feel. . .robbed.”
Maggie, her hand resting on the M-16 in her lap, does not reply immediately. Then she says, “It’s not just the emptiness. It’s the devastation.”
“Exactly.”
The weeks she has spent on the Base have spoiled her, Kirsten reflects. Even in the first days of the uprising, with bodies frozen or rotting where they lay at the whim of the weather, she has seen nothing like the urban landscape that scrolls across the small rectangle of the vehicle’s armored glass. Houses still stand, for the most part, though here and there blackened beams thrust up out of yet-unmelted snow covering the burnt- out rubble. Some, their windows boarded up, might have been purposefully abandoned when the inhabitants fled. Like others suddenly emptied, though, their doors stand open on broken hinges, odd bits of furniture and clothing scattered across dead lawns sodden with snowmelt. Brightly painted ceramic shards litter the sidewalk where the convoy pauses to turn, the wire frame of a lampshade jammed into the hollow of a tree root; the remains of sofa cushions tumble across a porch where a washing machine lies toppled beside them. Shards of glass cling to the frame of broken-out windows. Here and there a line of holes in splintered siding or gouged brick testifies to automatic weapons fire. There is no way to tell how much of the damage has been done by androids, how much by the looters and two-footed predators who have followed in their wake.
As they move toward the center of the city, signs of life begin to appear. In the abandoned parking lot of an apartment complex, a pair of ten-year-old boys and a cocker spaniel are chasing a Frisbee under the watchful eye of a grey-haired woman with pistol strapped to her hip. Above them, laundry festoons a cobweb of ropes strung between balconies, children’s sweaters in bright pink and yellow, work shirts, a woman’s nightgown in faded black satin and lace. Across the side of one of the buildings, red paint proclaims, JESUS IS COMING BACK!! under a crudely drawn image of a bearded man in a robe. The figure brandishes a sword with one hand, an open book in the other.
“You know, the fanatics scare me as badly as the androids,” Maggie says softly. “The damned metalheads might push us back to the Middle Ages, but it’ll be the schizos who hear God talking to them from the toaster that’ll keep us there.”
“They’re beginning to dig in. We may have to fight them, too.”
“Ironic, isn’t it? First we put down the slave rebellion; next we’re going to have to feed the fanatics and the self-appointed prophets to the lions.”
“Poor lions.” Kirsten’s mouth quirks up in an involuntary smile. “You know Dakota would never let us do that to innocent animals.”
“Or Tacoma. He’s the one with the affinity for cats.” Maggie leans forward and taps the driver on the shoulder. “We’re getting to people. Start the tape.”
Kirsten knows what to expect, but the sound of her own amplified voice is still a shock. The truck’s external speakers sputter and crackle for a moment, then boom out, “Attention! Attention please! This is Kirsten King, speaking for the United States Government. A census will be taken today and tomorrow at the City Auditorium. All citizens are asked to cooperate in determining the needs of the civilian population and in the re-establishment of civil institutions. Thank you for your assistance.” The recording plays over and over again.
As they approach the intersection of suburbia and the business district, signs of habitation become more common. Here and there they pass a pedestrian or a bicyclist. A man on a mule, a double pannier of winter apples suspended across its withers, becomes an unofficial roadblock when his mount halts suddenly in the middle of an intersection, apparently frightened by the strange, square metal things bearing down on it. The lead driver manages to swerve in time, and for an instant Kirsten finds herself face to face with a wall-eyed, bucking beast, its braying clearly audible even through the bulletproof glass and steel walls of the APC. Then her convoy sweeps past, leaving the rider tugging frantically at the creature’s reins.
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