Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse

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Book: Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse by Stephen King, George R. R. Martin, Cory Doctorow Read Free Book Online
Authors: Stephen King, George R. R. Martin, Cory Doctorow
going to eat it before we call Bunbaum."
    "He'll probably call it company property," Jaak groused.
    "Yeah, that's the way it always goes. But we still have to report. Might as well keep the evidence, since we didn't nuke it."

    We ate sand for dinner. Outside the security bunker, the mining robots rumbled back and forth, ripping deeper into the earth, turning it into a mush of tailings and rock acid that they left in exposed ponds when they hit the water table, or piled into thousand foot mountain scapes of waste soil. It was comforting to hear those machines cruising back and forth all day. Just you and the bots and the profits, and if nothing got bombed while you were on duty, there was always a nice bonus.
    After dinner we sat around and sharpened Lisa's skin, implanting blades along her limbs so that she was like a razor from all directions. She'd considered mono-mol blades, but it was too easy to take a limb off accidentally, and we lost enough body parts as it was without adding to the mayhem. That kind of garbage was for people who didn't have to work: aesthetes from New York City and California.
    Lisa had a DermDecora kit for the sharpening. She'd bought it last time we'd gone on vacation and spent extra to get it, instead of getting one of the cheap knock-offs that were cropping up. We worked on cutting her skin down to the bone and setting the blades. A friend of ours in L.A said that he just held Derm-Decora parties so everyone could do their modifications and help out with the hard-to-reach places.
    Lisa had done my glowspine, a sweet tracery of lime landing lights that ran from my tailbone to the base of my skull, so I didn't mind helping her out, but Jaak, who did all of his modification with an old-time scar and tattoo shop in Hawaii, wasn't so pleased. It was a little frustrating because her flesh kept trying to close before we had the blades set, but eventually we got the hang of it, and an hour later, she started looking good.
    Once we finished with Lisa's front settings, we sat around and fed her. I had a bowl of tailings mud that I drizzled into her mouth to speed her integration process. When we weren't feeding her, we watched the dog. Jaak had shoved it into a makeshift cage in one corner of our common room. It lay there like it was dead.
    Lisa said, "I ran its DNA. It really is a dog."
    "Bunbaum believe you?"
    She gave me a dirty look. "What do you think?"
    I laughed. At SesCo, tactical defense responders were expected to be fast, flexible, and deadly, but the reality was our SOP was always the same: drop nukes on intruders, slag the leftovers to melt so they couldn't regrow, hit the beaches for vacation. We were independent and trusted as far as tactical decisions went, but there was no way SesCo was going to believe its slag soldiers had found a dog in their tailings mountains.
    Lisa nodded. "He wanted to know how the hell a dog could live out here. Then he wanted to know why we didn't catch it sooner. Wanted to know what he pays us for." She pushed her short blond hair off her face and eyed the animal. "I should have slagged it."
    "What's he want us to do?"
    "It's not in the manual. He's calling back."
    I studied the limp animal. "I want to know how it was surviving. Dogs are meat eaters, right?"
    "Maybe some of the engineers were giving it meat. Like Jaak did."
    Jaak shook his head. "I don't think so. The sucker threw up my arm almost right after he ate it." He wiggled his new stump where it was rapidly regrowing. "I don't think we're compatible for it."
    I asked, "But we could eat it, right?"
    Lisa laughed and took a spoonful of tailings. "We can eat anything. We're the top of the food chain."
    "Weird how it can't eat us."
    "You've probably got more mercury and lead running through your blood than any pre-weeviltech animal ever could have had."
    "That's bad?"
    "Used to be poison."
    "Weird."
    Jaak said, "I think I might have broken it when I put it in the cage." He studied it seriously. "It's not

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