He didn’t ask if I was nervous.
Walker took a deep, shuddering breath, and then his mouth was on mine again, his hands at my waist, slipping beneath the black T-shirt. I stiffened. His hands on the skin—How would it feel? What would he think of the body when he saw it?
“You okay?” he whispered. His eyes were closed again, his face pinched, like he was expecting a blow.
“Okay.”
“So, you can, like, do stuff?” he asked.
“I can do anything.” I tried to force myself to relax.
Asking call-me-Ben about it, back in rehab, hadn’t been the worst moment of that hell, not even close. But it had been humiliating enough.
“Can I get wet?” I’d opened with something easy. “Or will I melt or short-circuit or something?”
And call-me-Ben had had the nerve to laugh. “You’re fully waterproof.”
“What about sleeping?” Another lob. Working my way up to the real question. I barely heard his answer.
“The body will simulate the sensation of fatigue, as a signal to you that it’s time to shut down for a few hours, give the system a rest. Tests show that it’s probably a good idea to follow your normal schedule by ‘sleeping’ every night.”
“Can I eat?” That was a no.
Just like there’d be no more bathroom breaks, no more tampons. At this point, call-me-Ben suggested I might be more comfortable talking to a woman, but by woman, I knew he meant Sascha, and I wasn’t about to give her the satisfaction.
“What happens if I break?” I asked.
“You’ll come to us,” said call-me-Ben. “Just like you’d go to the doctor. And we’ll fix you up. But if you take care of yourself, it’s unlikely to happen. Although we attempted to emulate the organic form as much as possible, you’ll find this body much more durable than the old one.”
“Why?”
He looked surprised. “Well, for all the obvious reasons. It seemed economically efficient, not to mention—”
“No. I mean, why that, but no other differences? Why no superpowers or anything?”
Ben frowned. “This isn’t a game. We’re not trying to create a new race of supermen, no matter what the vids want to claim. This is a medical procedure. We want to supply you with a normal life, as much like your old life as it can possibly be.”
“So… I should be able to do anything I used to do,” I said.
“Within reason,” Ben said. “Anything.”
“What about… Well, I have this boyfriend, so… Could he and I…?”
Call-me-Ben looked like he wanted to summon Sascha, no matter what I said. “As you’ve been told, your internal structure is—obviously—quite different. But the external structure mirrors the organic model completely.”
I must have looked blanker than usual.
“You and your boyfriend will be fine,” he clarified. “All systems go.”
I didn’t think to ask him how it would feel.
Now I knew: It felt wrong.
We didn’t fit together: not like we used to. Our faces bumped, my elbow jabbed his chin, his legs got twisted up in mine, and not in a good way. Every kiss got broken by a murmured “sorry” or “ouch” or “not there” or “no, nothing, keep going” or, always, “it’s okay,” and we did keep going, his hands running up and down the body, my fingers searching his, trying to find the dips and rises they remembered, but everything felt different against the fingertips, distant and imagined, like I was lying in the grass alone, pretending to feel the weight of Walker’s body on top of mine.
Things didn’t get very far.
“Sorry,” he said yet again, rolling off me. I pulled my shirt back on. It was one thing for him to touch the body, but I didn’t want him to have to look at it while we were lying there. I didn’t want to look at it. If I didn’t have to see it, I could pretend. That was easier in the dark. “I can do this, I just need a minute.”
“It’s okay,” I said. Like a parrot who only knew one phrase.
“I know it’s okay,” he snapped. “I just need…” He snatched a pill out of his pocket, popped it into his mouth. “It’ll be fine.”
“What was that?”
“Nothing. Just a chiller. Help me relax.”
“Another one?” I knew he’d been popping them all night, and probably most of the afternoon.
“Don’t worry about it.” He rolled over on his side. “Okay. Ready?”
I pressed my hand against his chest, holding him in place. “You say that like you’re gearing up for battle.”
“What are you talking about?”
“It would just be nice if you didn’t need to be totally zoned out before you could touch me.”
“I don’t need anything.”
“Every time you come near me, you look like you’re being punished.”
“And what about you?” he asked. “I touch you, and you freeze up. It’s like hooking up with—Forget it.”
“What?”
“Nothing.”
“Just say it,” I insisted, and, maybe out of habit, he followed orders.
“With a corpse.”
I sat up. “What a coincidence. Me being dead and all.”
He sat up too, and hunched over his knees, cracking his knuckles. “You have to admit… it’s kind of weird.”
“Oh, really? I hadn’t noticed. Life has been oh-so-normal for me these last couple months. Not that you would know.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“It means my life is shit,” I spat out. “And where are you?”
“I’m here, aren’t I?” Walker drove a fist into the grass. “What do you want from me?”
“I want you to be like you used to be.”
“And I want you to be like you used to be,” he shouted, “so I guess it’s tough shit for both of us!”
Silence.
“You hate this,” I said quietly. “Me. Like this.”
“Lia, I didn’t—”
“No.” I sat very straight and very still. “Just admit it. The truth will set you free and all that.”
He sighed. “Fine. I hate it. Not you. This. This whole thing. It’s weird, it’s gross, it freaks me out, but I’m doing my fucking best. I’m here, aren’t I?”
“Because you feel sorry for me,” I said.
“No.”
Yes.
“Because you think you owe me something,” I said.
“Don’t I?”
Yes.
“Whatever it is, this isn’t it.” I stood up.
“Don’t do this,” he said.
“I don’t need this,” I said. “I don’t need your trying. I don’t need you forcing yourself to be with me, like I’m your personal charity case.”
“I’m not telling you to go.”
Which wasn’t quite the same as telling me to stay.
“This is you, Lia. Giving up. If you walk away, just remember, that’s on you.”
“And if I don’t walk away, I get stuck with someone who has to dope up before he can even look at me. I think I can do better than that.”
“Yeah? Who?”
And that was the question, wasn’t it?
Cass’s mouth breather didn’t count. He wanted to screw a mech-head, some kind of fetish fantasy, nothing real. It wouldn’t count even if he weren’t scum, which he was.
No one normal—and especially no one beyond normal, no one like Walker—would choose me, not the way I was now. But Walker was stuck with me, and I knew he would stay, mostly out of obligation, with a little nostalgia thrown in for flavor, because I knew Walker. I could keep him. I could sit down beside him and let him kiss me, ignoring the fact that it made him cringe. Ignoring the fact that when he touched me, it felt like nothing. Not because I couldn’t feel his body on mine, but because the feeling was meaningless. It was like trying to tickle your own feet. Graze your fingers across your skin in the same places, with the same pressure, at the same speed, the mechanics all the same, but somehow the effect is entirely different, the sensation lifeless. Not that I was ticklish at all, not anymore.