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“Quit worrying.” The unshaven doctor or butcher fumbled a cigarette pack out of the pocket of his white coat, lit up another. “You got at least three minutes or so before any real brain damage starts setting in.” Dragged deep, coughed, then gestured to what appeared to be a couple of assistants standing around. “Yo, guys, get over and give me a hand with this one. Come on, let’s get to work.”

“Hang in there, pal.” Batty’s deranged smile floated in the mist above. “See you on the other side,”

They rolled him into the largest and oldest-looking of the prefab buildings. Holden managed to read the sign above the building’s doorway as he disappeared inside.

RECLAMATION CENTER. Of course, like the mechanics picking apart the old spinners on the field of night. Now he understood. There must still be a few good parts inside him.

He closed his eyes.

Deckard waited until the sun went down.

Too easily spotted, caught, even in the last few hours of daylight. He knew he needed not just darkness but crowds, the streets full of L.A.’s shoving, jostling nocturnal life. Everyone that the oppressive heat drove indoors, like desert animals sheltering beneath the flat, cool undersides of rocks—he could hide among them, move like a knife through garishly illuminated water, the flickering neon’s toxic colors turning his face into a mask the same as the others wore.

Didn’t even try to get away from the Van Nuys Pet Hospital—soon as the thuggish Andersson had booted him out on the freight dock, with a shove that had sent him stumbling, the metal door slammed behind him and he looked around for the nearest alley. The sun’s angle had shifted far enough to make the one at the side of the building into a shadowed cleft, trash dumpsters and discarded boxes forming the tunnel into which he crawled. Glitter-eyed rodents, disturbed at their inspection of a decamped squatter’s rags and meager treasures, hissed and threw bits of clawed-up asphalt at him. As Deckard crawled farther into the nest, light and heat nipping like a leashed dog at the soles of his boots, the small animals retreated, squatting on a crumbling brick ledge, old-womanish paws folded across their grey bellies, glaring at him.

Even in the shadows, out of the direct hit of the sun, the day’s heat was enough to start him sweating under his clothes. The Santa Ana wind, sifting red dust through the alley, scraped the moisture off his limbs, sucked it from his mouth, leaving his tongue swollen arid and his eyes gritting in their sockets. He shucked off his coat, wedging its empty shoulders into the sides of the narrow space to make a shield against both the remains of the afternoon’s light and anyone’s random detection.

In his pocket was the book of matches that he’d used to ignite the woodstove, in the cabin up in Oregon. He struck one now, using its flaring glow to investigate the small space. It smelled of the dirt and sweat of the previous inhabitant. Who must’ve been a throwback literate, an enthusiast: tucked into the grime-crusted bed of rags were several old-style analogue books, nothing but antlike crawls of ink words on yellowing, damp-swollen pages, dead without any sparking digital enhancements. The covers—there were only a few—showed blond women whose half-lidded gazes were like weapons, mouths like bright wounds, and men with bruised, unshaven faces. The book pages crumbled as Deckaxd shoved the relics away.

He searched through the rubble, another match held aloft, looking for anything of use.

The previous inhabitant’s Registered Homeless card—the thumbnail photo depicted a suffering saint, Christ-like hair tangled down to his shoulders. Dead, too. The Welfare Department’s monitor implant must’ve caught the man’s last heartbeat; two cartoon X’s had appeared in the transparent lamination over the man’s eyes, making the card useless for anyone else. The digits on the ration microchip had ticked back to zero as well. Deckard tossed the thin rectangle away.

Something handier, which the sanitation trucks had left behind when they’d hauled off the body: a simple steel rod, just about the length of his own forearm. Good heft in his fist, with enough whip to make a good skull-cracker. The match had burnt out, but he could read with the ball of his thumb the embossed warning. FOR SELF—DEFENSE PURPOSES ONLY.

AGGRESSIVE OR PREDATORY USE PUNISHABLE BY LOSS OF BENEFITS. The rod was standard issue for the city’s street people, along with the Sally Anne sleeping bags that usually got ripped off first thing.

Now he didn’t feel so naked. Deckard laid the steel rod on the asphalt beside himself, close at hand. He clasped his arms around his knees, lowering his head and waiting for the last daylight visible through his coat to fade. He’d already started putting his plans together.

The sounds of something moving—something bigger than the disgruntled rodents—snapped him awake, out of the pit of nervous exhaustion into which he’d fallen. His head jerked back, one hand shot down to grab and raise the steel rod. Using the metal’s tip, he pulled back one edge of the flimsy barrier he’d made from his own coat; leaning against the brick wall, the rodents above scampering farther away, he sighted down the length of the alley.

Enough sleep residue blurred his vision, that his first irrational thought was that a ghost was walking toward him. A figure all in white—the sun had set, though most of its stifling heat remained in the air, so the image seemed to supply its own pale radiance. Drawing back, keeping himself hid, Deckard rubbed his eyes with his free hand. Then he could see a man inhabiting the white outfit, some kind of retro-tropical suit number.

“Charlie?” The white-suited man stopped halfway down the alley, straining to peer ahead of him. He had a small bundle tucked under one arm. “You home, buddy? Got something for ya.” He displayed the bundle, wrapped in paper and string, on the tips of his fingers. “Thinking of you . . .”

The name on the Homeless Reg card had been Charlie something. With the steel rod, Deckard pulled the coat farther back, like a curtain.

“There you are.” A gold-toothed smile as the white suit ambled forward. “Speak up, next time. I coulda walked right by ya—”

Close enough now. Deckard reached out, the dropped steel rod clanking on the alley’s littered floor, and grabbed the man, elegant tie and collar points wadded in his fist. The little bundle’s string and wrappings burst open as it flew in a startled arc and hit the ground. More of the tattered books spilled across the rubble.

“Hey, buddy . . .” The summer-weight dandy managed to gasp a few words, his face reddening above his collar. His feet dangled free of the alley. “Ease up, will ya . . .”

“Nice and quiet.” Deckard kept the knot of the man’s tie inside his fist, knuckles tilting the pointed chin back. “Let’s talk real softly.” With the sun gone, the evening parade had begun out on the streets. Nobody passing by had glanced down the alley yet. “Got that?”

“Yeah, sure . . .” Both of his hands gripped Deckard’s wrist, as though praying in midair.

“I got it, buddy, I got it . . .” A screeching but obedient whisper. “Whatever you want . . . is fine with me . . .”

He eased his grasp, letting the other man settle on tiptoes. “I’m glad.” In sinister fashion, he fingered the white lapel. “Nice jacket.”

“Huh? Where’s Charlie?”

“Indisposed. You should’ve made an appointment.” The other man was so skinny, he could’ve either broken him in two or tied him in a knot. But the white suit’s jacket was loose enough, fiaglike through the shoulders; it’d be the right size. “Here.” Deckard let go of the man’s necktie, reached past him, and tugged his own long, dark coat from the brick niche he’d anchored it into. “Make you a trade.”