Tomas Coban
looked over his
cup of coffee, out his
kitchen window, past the
alleyway and toward
the river, to watch the
drones hovering
outside his window watching him. A single Russian EX400, looking like nothing more than a lumbering
blimp, suggested the Kremlin felt comfortable with the
world today. America wanted some attention since he could see at least
a dozen wasp-sized 1200s,
each a
meticulous clockwork of
pinhead
sensors and cameras. Behind them all, hovering
narrow and lethal, were four Israeli Darts. Jerusalem was feeling insecure. Beyond
that, it was more or less a standard mix. He recognized about twenty different models. There were a few new
unidentifiable workhorses obviously
purchased from one of the
standard suppliers and included in his entourage for the
sake of prestige.
He watched them and,
like always, felt a faint shiver at the amount of deadly force arrayed outside
his window. Remember, he told
himself, they’re like a pack of wild dogs: don’t attack
and don’t run. They’ll kill you
if you run.
One more day, he thought.
You have to count them
one at a time. One
more
day to be alive.
His room was austere: a room to sleep
in, a couch in front of the feed and a kitchenette off
to one side. He could eat, sleep, and watch the world
without walking more than five steps. From
the outside, his
building was unremarkable: a beige apartment building, slant
shadows in the Albuquerque
sun. Its chief distinguishing feature was
the cloud of small aircraft, none larger than crows,
hovering near his third-floor
window.
It was still February and the predawn weather was crisp
when he stepped outside
in his running suit. Tomas kept himself nondescript. He had shaved off his trademark mustache
and let his hair grow. He purchased
clothing that imitated
the styles of those he saw around
him so he could blend in. Tomas even went so far as to lighten
his normally dark skin
so that he no longer looked like
a mestizo but more like an upper class
Mexican or an Italian. His only distinguishing mark was
the cloud of drones that followed him everywhere he went.
Ah, he thought.
Who knows? Someday things
could change.
He looked around and rubbed his hands,
then started jogging.
Some of the drones liked to stay eye
level with him, watching
his face — this was a particular feature of the American devices. Americans liked media and it bled
through even into their
automated surveillance
systems. Other countries
didn’t care as long as they were within a specific striking
distance from him. He turned off Central Avenue and started
on the trail that led up to San Gabriel
Park.
Dawn cracked over the horizon and turned the twilight
into sharp-edged day. The
sandstone glittered
along the trail and
the scrub pine looked as if it had
been edged in black.
Coban liked to rest
briefly on a particular bench looking
down over the Rio Grande.
As he rounded a bend in
the trail, he stopped.
Someone else was sitting on his habitual bench. Someone with his
own cloud of drones.
He slowed to
a walk as he approached the
bench. The man on the bench was sitting, fiddling
with a cane and drawing
his jacket close around
himself. He looked up at Coban. Coban could see the contours
and shapes of his own
face looking back at him. Not the
same, of course. Their faces had
been created nearly
twenty years ago and the mileage
on each had been different. This man had never pursued
anonymity with Coban’s
intensity. But the
resemblance was still close
enough to see.
“Tomas Tikal,”
said the man on the bench. He fiddled with his cane again.
“Tomas Coban,” Coban replied.
“I know. I’ve been
expecting you.” Tikal smiled briefly.
Coban shrugged and sat next to him. He looked up and watched the drones circle each other, each
executing intricate handshake
maneuvers to determine the
other’s authenticity. A brief flash and one of Tikal’s drones flared and fell to the ground.
“I was
wondering about that one,” Tikal said dryly. “I suppose its
signature didn’t match up.”
“What are
you
doing here?” Coban asked. “We’re
not supposed to seek each
other out.”
“That’s not exactly
true.” Tikal crossed
his arms against
the cold and Coban wondered where he had been living for the last twenty years.
“We’re allowed to interact
under precisely controlled conditions and when
we’re thoroughly monitored.” He waved
to the drones. “I think we’re being monitored sufficiently.”
“What do you want?”
Tikal didn’t
answer. Instead, he watched the
drones fly over them.
“Things would have been
completely different if it had been the French
that had taken us down. They would have picked one of us at random, declared him the
right one and executed him.”
Coban stared at him. What was going on here? “If it had
been the Russians, we would all be dead the moment a glorious victory was
declared. A quick mock trial and then on to the
next. So what? Our own people wouldn’t have needed a trial or proof.
You know that. Only the
Americans were interested. And then only
because we slaughtered some American nuns.” Coban glanced away. It wouldn’t
do to let Tikal watch
his
face too closely.
They were alike enough Tikal
might be able to detect
what he was thinking.
“They should have killed us and been done with it.
That’s what I would have
done.”
Tikal laughed. “Me, also. A peculiarity of the
American psychology, do you think? The messianic determination to blame a single human face
for a crime. Hitler, Pol Pot,
Hussein, Ho Chi Minh. Now, Tomas. That
could be why they have kept us in custody.”
“Perhaps.” He thought
about his so-called brothers. There were seven
of them: each changed to
resemble Tomas. All of them had the same plastic surgery
scars on face, hands, and feet. At first they were thought
to be clones, but DNA comparisons dispelled that immediately. It would have been easier if they had been clones.
Tomas, the original Tomas
who
must have been hiding among them, had mixed samples
of his own DNA with the
others in all of the
places
where he had been known to reside. A bed where Tomas had been known to sleep had skin and hair from all seven of them. A razor with which he had cut his face was
stained with
multiple samples of blood. Bloody Tomas, without kin, without family,
without even a surname, had disappeared in plain sight.
After several
years
of investigation, the
Americans gave up and
decided they could not determine which
of the seven was the real Tomas. Each was given a surname
according to where
they had been found:
Tulate, Tikal, Coban,
Dolores, Pasion, San Jose, and
Livingston.
Coban ached for a cigarette.
As far as he knew,
it had been six years since he’d had one — if he,
in fact, had ever smoked
at all. Perhaps,
Tomas had smoked and
bequeathed the addiction to him without tobacco ever staining his lips.
Coban looked back at Tikal. He had not aged well. He was heavier
and his cheeks sank from
his
face as if the skin were
disconnected from the
tissue beneath. Maybe he had been older
than the rest of
them. This could be the result of mere aging.
“So this is what you
are
doing now? Crossing the
country to speak
with old friends?”
Tikal blew through
his teeth and said nothing
for a moment. “Tulate is dead. Heart attack. Dolores would
only speak with me if I bought
him dinner and then he didn’t say much. Pasion wouldn’t
speak to me at all. I spent an hour shouting through his
closed door. San Jose was in the hospital for a gallstone
operation. He had trouble speaking
but he had no difficulty making it clear to
me I was to leave
him alone. Livingston was the
only one glad to see me. He
wanted to borrow money. So, no. I can’t
say I’ve been a popular visitor.”
He glanced furtively at Coban, then returned to watching
the drones.
“Cheer up.” Coban smiled. “I’m not displeased to see you.”
“Such an enthusiastic greeting for your brother.”
Coban shrugged. “Take what you
can get.”
Tikal said
in a low
whisper. “Did you remember anything?”
“Nothing,” Coban replied
in a normal voice. He gestured
toward the drone. “They
hear
everything whether you want them to
or not. I remember nothing
more than I did the day
I was captured.”
The boundaries
of Coban’s
memory were precise. They began
when he took power and ended just
before he altered them himself. Memories of his childhood, his country of origin, his original ethnic heritage, were absent. Only the method of
the alteration could be determined. Any record of
additional manipulation, any
pirate changes or
traps, had been removed.
When
he
awoke, he knew only that he was Tomas,
had turned Guatemala into a bloody police state for fifteen years only
to
be deposed by the
Americans. His last
memory was his own
face, shining down on
him from a mirror over the
table, his smile rigid, his
jowls heavy, his mustache
narrow and dark, his head shaved and shrouded in a nest of cables. Then, his
face had dissolved into a formless brown mist, eyes, ears,
cables, and finally that
smile. The memory was obviously
contrived: a signature to the changes in his mind and a defiant
insult thrown at the Americans who
would inevitably be able to retrieve
it.
“Maybe you’re right,”
Tikal said. “Maybe
they should have killed
us. Or kept us in prison.”
“Even genocidal tyrants
suffer changes in fashion,” snapped Coban. “For
God’s sake, Tikal. It’s been six years since we were released and you’re sniffing around me now? What do you
want?”
“I’ve come to apologize.”
“Apologize?”
Coban shook his
head. “What for?”
“I am the real Tomas,”
he said matter-of-factly. “I can say it now. I am
allowing myself to say it now.”
Coban stared at him. This he had not expected.
“I have
come to each
of you,” Tikal continued. “To apologize for taking away your
faces, your memories, and
your lives.”
“No apology to the thousands of people we
killed? Surely we can spare a
tear for them. Or the three
hundred
American soldiers we slaughtered? I wouldn’t cry for them, but
I suppose we could manage to
toss them a couple of bucks — “
‘‘Stop it!”
Coban tilted his head and watched Tikal for
a moment. “Did I struggle?”
“Beg pardon?”
“Did I resist? Or did I volunteer?”
“It doesn’t matter
— “
“You are wrong,” Coban said,
interrupting him. “If I volunteered,
then
you have nothing for which to apologize.”
“I took your face
— “
“ — which I may have freely given.” Coban
turned aside and let it go.
“Where have you been?”
“To all of you, one at a time.”
“No doubt. But I meant where have you been all this time?
Where did they station you?”
Tikal didn’t say anything for a moment. “Washington.”
“Ah,” Coban
said
dryly and fell silent.
“What do you mean?”
Coban spread his hands.
“I meant nothing
by it.”
“It sounded…critical.”
Coban watched the drones. They had settled into a
figure eight pattern over their heads, each group chasing
the other. “We have the same
memories. It seems more than coincidental that the one who
determines himself to be the original has all this time been quartered in the capital
of those who deposed us.”
“None of the others questioned me like
this.”
Coban shrugged. “We began with different brains
even though we had
the same memories and motivations. Some differences were
bound to show up. What happens
now?”
Tikal looked uncertain. “I want absolution. I sent thousands
to their death in the
weapons breeding camps at Playa Grande. I
struck down the Americans with parasites at the battle
of Campur. I forced my own people to
march on the Americans and then detonated
the toxins in their bodies
as soon as the battle was
engaged. I did terrible things.”
Coban patted him on
the arm. “Yes. Yes. I know. I have
the same memories. But who is to say it
was you? The Americans? It could have
been any of us. Truth be told, it could
have been all of us. We were all there. We
were all present
at these places
at one time or another. Perhaps we all
gave some of the orders. Would
that make you feel
better?”
“All of us?”
Tikal said faintly.
Coban let his gaze wander over the river.
How curious the same river
that borders Texas is also here,
so
many hundreds of miles away. “I think Tomas emasculated us at the
end. He took from us the
memories that made
him what he was.
Could you have truly done what
we remember doing?”
Tikal shook
his
head.
“Nor I.” Coban stared at the water. “Tomas was a sociopath, obviously. Perhaps I am
— perhaps we are — as
well. But to express your
pathology on such
a grand scale.” Coban sighed. “I am not capable of that.”
Tikal stared at him,
horrified. He
stamped his cane on the
ground. “You feel no remorse for what he did?”
“What difference would it make if I did? Would one
village remain unslaughtered if I managed
to feel bad about it?” Coban held up his hands.
“Besides, Tomas changed our
memories and altered our minds. Can we truly be considered the
same person? Have we
not been absolved by that alteration?”
Tikal shrank back against the bench.
“Who am
I, anyway?” continued Coban,
leaning forward. “A timid
professor? A coerced peasant? A rabid volunteer? I can never know. Or am
I the man who attempted, however misguided,
to modernize my home
country? To bring
them electricity, water, roads? At the
expense of some of their lives, I grant you. Which would you rather be? Tomas or what you were, knowing that what you
were is forever gone? The alternative to being Tomas is to be nothing.”
Tikal seemed to huddle
into himself. “What I did was
wrong.”
“You sound like a little boy crying
to his father. Is that
what they did to
you in Washington?” Coban looked at him speculatively. “Maybe
you are the original. Perhaps repentance for the act can only
come from someone in whose brain still resides those deeper
synapses and circuits.” He leaned toward him. “I can only
remember from when I took power to
seeing my own face before I
went into the machine. Can you remember beyond that? Think, man.”
Tikal shook his head.
“No. But what I did in power,
I remember. And what
I remember, I repent. I have thought
on it for years. I sit on the patio
outside my house — “
“A house? You have
a house?” Coban stood and paced. “It
becomes clear. You
must have been suspected from the very beginning. Do you remember meeting any of us before
we were captured? I only
remember meeting you, and
the rest, when they brought us
to Leonard Wood. The seven of us, copies
all, sitting in that room staring
at each other. One
by one they took us and I never saw any of the others
again until today. After
all the questioning and the testing, you were the one they picked to work on. I was sent here to sit on my ass and wait for judgment,
or so I thought. All the
time, I was a spare. A control. Something
against which they measured you. Oh, the skill! Oh, the pure deviousness of it! Tomas would
have been proud.”
Tikal relaxed
slowly. “I am the original, then. I wasn’t
sure. They told me I was and I wanted to believe them — to feel remorse,
I told myself.
Someone should
feel remorse. I shouldn’t
be here working my garden, petting my cat. Eating in a restaurant.”
“A garden,” Coban repeated
dryly as he sat down. “I
have
a tiny apartment over an
alley.”
“But I wanted it to be my
garden. My cat.”
“So it is,” pronounced Coban. “It is all yours.”
“Yes. I am
the
original.”
Coban watched Tikal speculatively for a long time. “Certainly,
somebody has to be. If we are all unmanned, certainly you are more emasculated than
the rest of us. It is only right you should be proclaimed
the original.”
Tikal looked at him. “‘Proclaimed’?”
“Tomas escaped. That has to be it. We are all copies. You were the one
most likely to serve as his
sacrificial lamb.”
Tikal stared at him
anxiously. “He
couldn’t have escaped. They looked everywhere and they found us. There were all the clues:
the DNA, the faces.
He couldn’t
have escaped.”
Coban laughed. “Tomas was a genius. He staged us all to make it seem
as if he were hiding among us. But think: such an arrogant
egomaniac as Tomas, which you and I can clearly see for ourselves
better than anyone, would never erase himself
merely to survive.
He made us up to be him and
then disguised himself
and left. After all this time, the Americans have never found him. Then, the time
comes and you
repent and somebody in Washington says, ‘Maybe
we were wrong. Maybe Tomas did hide
a pearl among pearls. At long last, he
repents of his crimes.
Could he be the real Tomas?’
And another, more powerful and wiser man says, ‘Even if Tomas escaped, he is old and surely near
death and cannot hurt us.’ And perhaps an even more powerful
and still wiser
man says, ‘It does not matter for this
is the Tomas we have. Let us release him to seek
his fellows and watch what he does.’
So, Tomas. You’ve seen us all. What
shall you do?”
“I am
the real
Tomas,” Tikal said.
Tikal jumped up from
the bench and ran down along the river. For a moment,
the drones stilled their flight. More than half of them shot after
Tikal.
Tikal stopped
then, perhaps a hundred
feet away. Coban could tell
from his movements, Tikal had planned this
for
some time. Good for you, he
thought.
Tikal fiddled with his
cane for a moment, then rushed the drones, leaping up at them and beating
at them with his cane. Tikal would never have hit any of them but
several fell. He must have
a device in the
cane, thought Coban. For a moment,
Coban thought he might actually manage it.
The drones hesitated, then two of the Israeli Darts shot forward.
With a strangled cry, Tikal collapsed. Coban grinned
sourly. It fit that the Americans would make sure to
keep their own hands clean.
Coban watched for a moment. The
police would be here soon. One could always
trust to American
ingenuity and thoroughness. He left the
park and jogged back toward his apartment.
As he ran, one by one, his own entourage of drones detached themselves
and left him. The Israelis
were already gone. Coban watched
them: first the unidentified insects, then one country after another, as they were
no
doubt informed by the
Americans that Tomas
was dead. Finally, the
Russian
blimp lumbered away. By the
time
Coban reached Central Avenue, only
the American drones remained. He was as close
to alone as he had ever been
in fifteen years.
Coban stepped into his
building. The wasps followed
him outside,
following his heat signature as faithfully as wives. That was all right. He could
deal with a few of them.
The time had
come, he thought. Which he never thought
it would come at all. He remembered his own face, Tomas’s face, staring
back at him. In hindsight, it did seem to
him,
that Tomas did
resemble Tikal somewhat more than he did. Perhaps
Tikal was the
original after all.
But it did not
matter to Coban any more than it
mattered to Tomas. Tomas was an idealist. He had
wanted to create a vision of the
world. Whether he accomplished it biologically or through a creature imprinted
with his personality made no difference to him.
Tomas Coban spread his arms in the windowed
sun. It was good to be
alive.
Copyright © 2010 by Steven
Popkes.
http://www.stevenpopkes.com/
First published in The Magazine of Fantasy &
Science Fiction,
July 2006