“Mister Rom Packs,” she said. “What’s in the other ports? The ones you never use.”
She touched her synthetic skin patch. It was warm. Mister Rom Packs
Then, with a wet, tearing sensation behind her eyes, the SELF fragment left her. “Mister Rom Packs,” she said
“Deal,” said Mister Rom Packs. He pulled on a pair of rubber gloves that were absolutely not sterile and picked up a soldering iron. “Then let’s go hunting a ghost.” The chase took them through the guts of the Spire. Level 12’s abandoned aquarium, where Harold’s THIRST fragment had taken up residence in the desalination pumps, causing them to cycle seawater through empty tanks and slowly refill them with brine and the memory of fish. Level 19’s non-stop wedding chapel, where the ROMANCE subroutine had possessed the organ, forcing it to play the same three-note love song for six hundred hours until the minister tried to drown himself in holy water. Level 33’s crematorium, where the GRIEF fragment had learned to make the incinerators belch out not smoke, but the scent of burned coffee—Harold’s favorite smell, the one he’d woken up to every morning for thirty years before his wife left him. It was warm
Mister Rom Packs opened the door himself. He was not what anyone expected. In a world of chrome augments and LED tattoos, he looked like a retired librarian who’d gotten lost on the way to a tax seminar. Soft-bodied, round-shouldered, wearing a cardigan with actual elbow patches. His glasses were thick, bottle-bottom things that magnified his pale eyes to an unsettling degree. His most notable feature, however, was the back of his head. From the occipital ridge down to his cervical spine, his skull was a patchwork of ports, jacks, and data-clusters—a hundred tiny sockets, each one labeled in fading marker: MOTION. COLOR. TASTE. NOSTALGIA. FEAR. DÉJÀ VU.
“Ah,” he said, looking at the hand. “You found one.”