Freedom Incorporated by Peter Tylee (me reader .txt) š
- Author: Peter Tylee
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The bastard had turned out to be a UniForce operative. And boy was he pissed when I caught him. Dan didnāt enjoy thinking about it. The assassin was still a free man after UniForce bought a gaggle of lawyers and intimidated a handful of judges to protect the sensitive information in his head.
āYouāre following in your grandfatherās footsteps?ā Dan thought it was a particularly stupid thing to ask but nothing else came to mind and he wanted to smooth over the uneasy tension thatād settled in the car.
She mumbled something softly. Or perhaps it wasnāt a mumble. Perhaps it was her words fighting against the inward rush of highway air whistling past Danās shattered window. āSorry, what was that?ā
āI said I canāt.ā Jen raised her voice above the din of turbulent air. āNobody can. Donāt you get it yet? Theyāve fixed it so that nobody can take his place.ā
Dan had never given it much consideration. Heād always been laid-back and gone with the flow. Like most Australians I suppose. Heād never wanted to demonstrate against the corporations whose presence dominated all aspects of human life. Heād certainly never wanted to incite others to join a foolhardy crusade that was doomed to failure.
But now he was starting to think.
And he didnāt particularly enjoy the picture his mind was painting.
Iāve joined the oppressors. Part of him, the part that was still capable of feeling compassion, felt disgusted and gritty. He knew he was a cog in the massive engine that maintained the status quo, a tiny part of a machine that was so enormous he wasnāt sure whether he could fully comprehend its power. And, blissfully, he was unaware of the sacrifice it would take to halt the machineās advance. Oh Godā¦ A stricken expression entered his otherwise composed demeanour. What would Katherine think? Even though she was gone, Dan was still mindful of her opinions and reactions. In that way, she was a powerful force in his life.
āIām not a terrorist you know,ā Jen said. She looked as if she was starting to relax, or perhaps she was just becoming resigned to her fate - whatever that might be.
āI never assumed you were.ā
āBut thatās the charge Iām probably facing,ā she retorted. She wasnāt directing her anger at him, but she didnāt have a definite object to target. She was simply angry at āthe systemā. āI mean, technically speaking, I am a terrorist. Thatās how scared they were of activists, they bundled the opposition in with the people who blew up planes and bombed embassies. Donāt you think thatās a little extreme?ā
Dan knew sheād backed him into a corner. How could he disagree with that sort of logic? āYes, I suppose it is.ā
āWell I havenāt done any of that. Iād never touched a gun until today. Iāve never handled explosives, and Iāve never threatened anybody. All I want is to share my point of view - the same way corporations share theirs. Thatās it. And for that Iāll either be sent to prison for the rest of my productive life, or executedā¦ which might be preferable.ā
āHmm,ā Dan replied. It was all he could manage while so deep in thought.
But Jen was just getting started. āWhat makes them think their message is so important, so correct, that they have the right to silence all opposing voices?ā She clenched her hands into fists and frowned with such intense frustration that it bordered on madness. āThey think theyāre so fucking righteous! Or maybe theyāre scared theyāre wrong. Maybe deep down theyāre afraid that if someone draws attention to it, people will demand change.ā Jen sneered. āTheyāre terrified of change, I know that. But is it really worth killing for? Theyāve killed so many already. They killed my grandfather. They killed his friends and colleagues. Iām sure that Raven freak has killed people. And how about you? Mr Daniel Sutherland?ā
āItās just Dan.ā
āOkay. How many people have you killed, Just Dan?ā
āIāve never killed for UniForce.ā
āHa!ā But Jen stopped her ridicule short when she saw the truth scrawled on his face. Although it was a guarded answer, she believed it. āOkay, well maybe you havenāt. But Iām sure you have friends whoāve killed for their corporate masters.ā
āNo. I have no friends.ā
āJesus, who are you? No friends? Sheesh!ā But, again, she saw the truth on his face and caught a glimpse of his pain searing just beneath the surface. She softened her tone and said, āIām sorry.ā
Dan faked a smile; it looked strained. āThatās okay.ā
āHasnāt a company ever fucked you over?ā Jen asked, pleading her case. She saw him as her judge, jury and executioner - if he so chose.
Dan nodded. āAs a matter of fact, yes.ā UniForce. Every time they sell my exclusive lists to the Raven.
āAnd did you do anything about it?ā She eyed him curiously, wondering what other gems sheād glean from his expression. But Dan had erected his stony mask again, so she saw nothing. Yet sheād glimpsed something, twice, so she knew he had emotions. And that was good. Maybe I can still get out of this.
āNo, I canāt-ā
āThere!ā she exclaimed, triumphantly cutting him off. Then she smiled and added, āYou see? They have all the power. They hold all the cards. Youāre just living off scraps. When one of them fucks you over thereās nothing you can do. You just accept it and go on. And that is the world my grandfather was fighting to change.ā
It was starting to make sense. But just as reason dawned, Dan felt as though an ocean of guilt was tossing him around like a tiny cork. Were my other targets the same? Am I just a corporate tool? Is apprehending these people really the right thing to do? For the first time since Katherineās death, he wondered whether heād be proud of his work when he met his almighty maker. If such a thing exists. The jury was still out on that issue. His microchip read āagnosticā in the field reserved for religion. He wanted to believe. Heād wanted so desperately to believe in an afterlife since Katherineās death. But how could he console the notion of a god with what was happening in the world? It was the same everywhere, droves of ex-believers were abandoning the worldās major religions and flocking to Xantex prescription houses instead. Why not? It was a faster fix than religion and didnāt require any painful soul-searching. Besides, Xantex had better commercials.
He crammed his chaotic thoughts behind the already-straining doors of mental discipline and refocused on his immediate concerns. What am I going to do with her? He found it curious - Jennifer Cameron was the first person heād apprehended from his new list and he was thinking about letting her go. How the hell did that happen? At this rate he was going to lose a fortune. Yet, somehow, the importance of turning a profit was quickly losing its significance. Whatās the point? He desperately needed something fresh in his life, some kind of purpose other than being a capitalist drone. Whatās the point of having money if I have to sell my soul? The maths on that just didnāt add up.
Dan risked another look. Sheās pretty. She did remind him of Katherine, no matter what he tried to tell himself. Not her looks, Katherine was taller and heavier and had a cute little gap between her front teeth. Yet there was something in the way Jen held herself, the way she spoke and the things she said. It pained him a little.
Finally, he admitted something heād known deep down for several hours: I canāt turn her in. His decision came from a combination of many things, but he wisely decided against analysing it. Donāt examine it, Danny-boy. Just let it be. The logical part of his mind was throwing spasmodic tantrums but, for the first time in months, heād thoroughly appeased his conscience.
Now I have to tell her, Dan thought with a slight pang of unease. He didnāt want her to think a few cheap words had convinced him to quit his job. But isnāt that essentially what just happened? Dan scowled and said irritably, āIf I donāt turn you in, what should I do with you?ā
Hope flared in Jenās eyes. She sat straighter and licked her lips before hesitantly asking, āAre you serious?ā
Dan nodded solemnly.
āSo youāre not such an evil hunter after all,ā Jen said, sighing with relief. Her words inadvertently stabbed a dagger into Danās already tender mind.
He recoiled in shock, but knew Jen hadnāt meant to cause him anguish. āIt must be my turn to tell a story,ā he said and cleared his throat. āSeven years ago there was a great man, a leader. He was admired by his followers and feared by his corporate enemies. His name was Mike Cameron.ā
āThis sounds familiar, didnāt-ā
āPlease let me finish.ā Dan needed to get this off his chest. āMike was assassinated by a UniForce agent and, although the murder wasnāt sanctioned by the WEF, the police couldnāt touch the case due to some tremendous political pressure. Youāre one of the few people who might understand that. The pressure UniForce applied was like nothing else the investigating officer had ever experienced in his life.ā
Jen did understand, or at least she thought she did. She knew what kind of heinous things corporations would stoop to in the name of preserving their control.
āThe investigating officer nearly lost his job and UniForce tormented him for weeks. But he didnāt give up and eventually hauled the assassinās arse in.ā
Jenās breath froze in her lungs as she grasped what he was trying to tell her. āIt was you, wasnāt it?ā
Dan nodded. āYes.ā
āButā¦ā She was stunned, too stupefied to finish her thought.
āIām sorry he got off Jen, I really am.ā
Jen braved a wane smile. āThank you,ā she said, then paused to collect her wits. āI mean, thank you for everything you did.ā Something seemed strangely out of place. How could this possibly be the same person? āBut I donāt understand how you got into bounty hunting. I never wouldāve guessed that someone who brought a UniForce assassin to justiceā - she shuddered at the pitiful legal system that unashamedly bought and sold ājusticeā on the open market - āwouldāve started working for them.ā
Dan clenched his jaw. āMaybe Iāll tell you someday.ā But his tone told her that he probably wouldnāt. āI just wanted you to understand that Iām not a monster. Iāve never done anything illegal on behalf of UniForce; Iāve made sure of that.ā He heaved a tired sigh. āAnd I wonāt turn you in.ā Maybe Iāll start screening targets and return only those who deserve it? But that was impossible, and he knew it. With UniForce double selling my lists, Iām barely breaking even. I canāt choose which targets to apprehend, Iād go bankrupt.
āSince youāre letting me go, Iād like to let Samantha know Iām
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