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He understood now. “You want them to destroy the Tyrell Corporation.”

“I’ve wanted that for a long time. And before that . . . I wanted to kill Eldon Tyrell. My uncle. The way he’d killed me; slowly, from the inside out. A little bit at a time. I knew there was still something like a soul inside him. Not much of one, but something that could love and grieve and mourn just a little bit. All that was left inside him . . . but that would have been enough. He’d loved Ruth-my another—but he’d lost her. To his own brother.” A smile that was like a razored wound appeared on the image’s face. “Rather biblical, don’t you think? At this level of money and power, this world that I’ve lived in, there are no real complications. Everything is reduced to its simplest elements. The oldest stories. Complications are for little people . . . like you, Deckard. That’s what you were, for Eldon Tyrell. And for me. Nothing more.”

“And what were you . . . you and your uncle . . . to each other?”

“If I said lovers, that wouldn’t be correct. Not really.” The voice from the monitor softened. “Perhaps as some euphemism for the mechanics of incest. But I didn’t love him . . . and he didn’t love me. He loved the dead . . . the way you do. Because the dead are memories. Where moth and rust doth not corrupt—isn’t that the way it is, Deckard? Look behind you.”

He did as the image ordered. He saw the sleeping, dying woman on the bed. The same face as on the monitor screen, but with eyes closed, a flush of pink to the skin across her cheekbones, a line creased in her brow, as though she were fighting off some nightmare evoked by the words tangling in the still air above her head. One of Rachael’s hands was closed into a trembling fist upon the pillow.

“You see?” Rachael’s voice, but not Rachael’s voice; Sarah’s voice, a whisper from the monitor. “She’s as good as dead. You know that, don’t you? All that keeps her here is time . . . and that’s such a little thing, Deckard. And memory is so much . . . truer.” The whisper lowered, gentler, almost a kiss at his ear. “I made you this offer before. I could be for you . . . what I was for my uncle. Not the real thing . . . not the woman you loved . . . not the dead. But close enough.”

He said nothing. As if he had heard nothing. He reached down and stroked Rachael’s brow, soothing away the bad dreams that had troubled her long sleep. He laid his hand, softly, against the side of her face, and her lashes trembled against his fingertips.

“I knew you wouldn’t.” Bitterness etched the voice that came from the monitor. “Nothing can change your mind.”

“No . . .” He spoke without turning to look at Sarah’s image.

“I knew it would be this way. You prefer the dead to the living, the fake to the real. The memory . . . to me.” The voice became harsher and more grating. “The same as he did. That’s why I’ve had to do these things. Perhaps if I became the dead . . . if I became a memory . . . then I’d have a chance.”

Another voice spoke. The same, but another. A whisper: “Deckard . . .”

He looked down and saw that Rachael had opened her eyes. She gazed at him, calmly and unafraid, as she had done once before, a long time ago. When he had woken her from a deathlike sleep.

Do you love me? Memory, his own words.

I love you. . . .

Do you trust me?

He bent down and kissed her. “Don’t worry . . .” He placed his fingertips against her lips before she could say anything. “We’ll be leaving here soon.”

I trust you. . . .

“That’s very touching.” Sarah’s voice came from the monitor. “I admire your faithfulness. I’m not lying when I say that. What I wouldn’t give . . .” The voice broke off for a moment, then spoke flat and harsh again. “You’re right. It is time to leave. Time to finish . . . everything.”

Deckard glanced over his shoulder, to the image on the screen. “Where are you?”

“I’m right here in the building with you.” She laughed, short and humorless. “I wouldn’t miss this for the world. I’ve waited too long for it.”

Outside, visible through the high windows at the far end of the suite, jagged lightning shot down from clouds pressing lower with their own weight. A low rumbling noise, almost beneath the limits of human audibility, trembled through the expectant air.

“Did you hear that?” On the monitor screen, the image looked away, listening.

“It’s the thunder.” He spoke to both the image and to Rachael near him. “That’s all it is.”

“Oh, no—” The image looked back at him. Sarah slowly shook her head, eyes widening.

As though with delight. “It’s starting. The end of everything . . .”

“What are you talking about?” A cold fingertip touched his spine.

“You never remember. I tell you things . . . but it seems you just don’t want to remember.” Pity in the gaze of Sarah’s image, in her voice. “The red button . . . though there is no button, nothing to be pushed. If it were that easy, I would have done it myself . . . a long time ago. There’s a command series, transmitted by the U.N. authorities, to initiate the auto-destruct sequence, the explosive charges that were built into and throughout the Tyrell Corporation headquarters. Right here.”

Another low-pitched noise rolled through the building; the candle flames shivered.

Deckard reached down, his arm around Rachael’s shoulder, pulling her closer to him.

“They must have made their decision.” The image spoke as though savoring its own words. “The U.N. authorities have been monitoring your progress all along; not as closely as I have, but enough to be aware of the results. Of yours and Batty’s and Holden’s futile quests. The fact that none of you were able to track down this missing sixth replicant. That you were, in essence, defeated by it.”

“But they also know-they’d have to-that it’s all lies.” He tightened his grip on Rachael’s upper arm. “It was all concocted by you, for your own reasons—”

“That doesn’t matter to them. The U.N. has been looking for a pretext to shut down—to eliminate—the Tyrell Corporation. Now they have it. Why it came about is of no concern to them. They’ll be able to make the changes to the off-world colonization program that they’ve wanted to for a long time. No Tyrell Corporation . . . and no replicants.” The image smiled.

“As has been shown now-they’re just too dangerous. Too much . . . like us.”

A stronger shock wave traveled through the building. He felt the floor buckle beneath his feet as the columns running the length of the suite cracked around their bases. There was no use for the gun now, if there ever had been; he tossed it aside. Rachael made no resistance as he drew her from the bed and got her to her feet.

“So now you’ll have what you want.” Through the far windows, he could see a roiling light, flames, and smokechurning explosions, advancing up the sides of the other slanted towers. “Nothing that Eldon Tyrell created will be left. That should make you happy.”

“No . . .” Sarah’s image shook its head. “Not happy. Satisfied, perhaps. In this little time we have left together—”

Harder, and deafening; he was barely able to stay upright, stumbling backward a step, with Rachael pressed close against himself. Columns toppled and crashed to the floor, as the walls were torn apart, raw-edged darkness showing through the chasms splitting wider. Glass fragments sprayed across the rooms as the tall windows twisted in their frames and shattered.