Authors: David G. Hartwell and Kathryn Cramer
“Sorry?”
Elise pointed at the carbon black knives laid out on the counter. “The ones you ordered for me came today.”
“Iâ” Myung crossed to the counter and picked up the paring knife. “Elise, I didn't order these.”
The floor of the room fell away from her. Elise grabbed the handle of the refrigerator to steady herself. “But you said you would. We talked about it.”
“When?” Myung's nostrils had flared.
“It's not a delusion.” She swallowed and her throat stayed knotted. “You called me. You asked me to come to the office.”
“Fuck.” He slammed his fist on the counter. “Elise, I'm sorry. It's the clone.”
Relief swept her so quickly that her knees gave way. She dropped to the floor, one hand still clinging to the refrigerator. The door cracked open letting out a cool breeze that chilled the tears running down her face. Thank God. She had not imagined the phone call. She hadn't ordered the knives herself and forgotten. “The clone did it.”
Myung crouched by her, wiping the tears from her face. “I'm sorry. He was working on a report and we let him use my office.”
“You're letting him contact the outside?”
“No. I changed the passwordsâ”
Elise started laughing. “And he guessed?”
Myung's skin deepened in a blush and he shut his eyes. “Should have seen that coming.”
“Yes, dear.” Elise wiped her eyes. “Oh God. I thought it was another sign of crazy.”
At that, Myung opened his eyes, pain creasing his brow. “I'm so sorry.”
“Don't be.” Elise stood, using her husband's shoulder to push herself off the floor. “He bought the knives I asked for.”
“With my money.”
“Wellâ¦he's doing your work.”
“Point.” Myung got to his feet. “And I would have gotten them for you if you'd mentioned it.”
“I thought I did.” Giggles overtook her for a moment and they both stood in the kitchen laughing. When she caught her breath, Elise said, “Tomorrow, I'll come to the office with you.”
The delight that blossomed on Myung's face almost made Elise withdraw the offer. Not that she resented making Myung happy, but she would disappoint him tomorrow. In the context of the lab, her slips of mind would be more apparent.
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Elise shifted on the hard metal chair in the observation room. To her left, a mirrored window hid the staff watching her. She angled her head so the reflections were not so apparent. No time for hallucinations today. The rest of the walls were pale blue Sheetrock, meant to be soothing, but clinically cold. The ballast of one of the fluorescent lights buzzed just at the edge of her hearing. They would have to get that fixed.
She put her hands on the linoleum table in front of her and then in her lap again as the door opened.
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Myung came in, dressed in a white T-shirt and jeans. He wore athletic socks but no shoes. Glancing at his feet, his dark hair masked his eyes for a moment, like a K-pop star. “We didn't have matching shoes, so opted for none.”
Elise grinned, beckoning him closer. “Are they good for a sock-hop?”
He laughed, voice bouncing in a three-note pattern. “That is not on the set of questions.”
“You.” She pointed at him accusingly. “Aren't supposed to know what they are.”
“I don't.” Myung held his hands out in mock surrender. “But I'm guessing that it's not.”
“Fine. We'll stick to the standards.” Elise waved her hand to command him to sit across from her. Her heart beat like she was at a speed dating service. She looked at the list of questions she planned to ask each man. “When we got married, what did you whisper after you kissed me?”
Myung turned red and glanced at the mirror. He wet his lips, leaning forward across the table. “I think I said, âHow soon can we get out of here?'” His eyes were alive as if he wanted to take her right there on the table.
A flush of warmth spread out from Elise's navel to her breasts. At the wedding, his hands had been warm through her dress and she had been intently aware of how long his eyelashes were.
He looked out from under them now with his pupils a little dilated as if he also found the room too warm. “Next?”
“What is our most intimate moment?” Watching him, time focused itself in a way it had not done since the accident. Each tick of her internal clock was crisp and in sequence.
Myung's eyes hooded for a moment as he thought. “Yellowstone. We might have had the whole park to ourselves but there was also this profound sense that someone would catch us in the act. And that you would⦔ He hummed under his breath for a moment, sweeping his hand through his hair. “Let's just say, I knew that you trusted me.”
Elise looked at the paper again. She had thought he would say that it was their first time after his vasectomy. At the time he had reveled in the freedom.
“Last question. Pick a number.”
“That's it?”
“Yep.”
Myung fingered the end of his nose, and Elise could not doubt that she was talking to her husband. He nodded.
“Very nice. Confirmed memory, subjective memory, and random.”
She tapped a finger on the paper. “No opinion please. Number?”
“Thirty-six.”
“Why thirty-six?”
He picked at the cuticle on his thumb. “Remember the time we went to see that puppet play, âBetween Two Worlds'?” He waited until she nodded. “The guy who thought that he could win his predestined bride through Kaballah had this line, âThirty-six, in that number lies the essence.' It stuck with me for some reason.”
Myung came in, dressed in a white T-shirt and jeans. Elise's breath hung in her throat at the palpable déjà vu. She had seen printed clones dozens of times as parts donors but she had never seen one animated. Had she not been a part of the process to give a clone consciousness, she would have thought that her husband had just walked into the room. Like the other one, this Myung wore white athletic socks but no shoes. Glancing at his feet, his dark hair masked his eyes for a moment, like a K-pop star. “We didn't have matching shoes, so opted for none.”
Elise pressed her hand over her mouth, trying to remember what she had said to the first one. No wonder they had wanted her to script her questions.
“Are you okay?” Myungâshe could not think of him as anything elseâtook a step closer.
“It's uncanny is all.” Wrong. She should not have said that out loud. It might skew his responses. “Shall we get started?” Elise beckoned him to sit across from her. She looked at the sheet of questions, trying to center herself. The calm certainty she felt before had stripped away, leaving her flustered. “When we got married, what did you whisper after you kissed me?”
Myung turned red and glanced at the mirror. He wet his lips, leaning forward across the table. “I think I said, âHow soon can we get out of here?'”
Sweat coated her skin.
He looked out from under his long eyelashes. “Next?”
“What is our most intimate moment?” Watching him, Elise looked for some clue, some hint that he was not her husband. But perhaps he was, and the Myung she had met first was the clone.
Myung's eyes hooded for a moment as he thought. “Yellowstone. We might've had the whole park to ourselves but there was also this profound sense that someone would catch us in the act. And that you would⦔ He hummed under his breath before sweeping his hand through his hair. “Let's just say, I knew you trusted me.”
Elise looked at the paper again. Her hands were shaking and she could barely find air to breathe. Every nuance was the same.
“Last question. Pick a number.”
“That's it?”
“Yes.” Dear God, yes. She had helped create one of these two men, but she wanted nothing more than to get out of the room. Even though she knew he might be her husband, the uncanniness of having the same conversation twice threatened to shred her mind.
Myung fingered the end of his nose. “Very nice. Confirmed memory, subjective memory, and random.”
A shiver ran down her spine. “What number?”
“Seventeen.”
Elise had to stop herself from gasping with relief. Had they chosen the same number she might have screamed. “Why seventeen?”
“That's the day we were married.” He shrugged.
Something, a darkness flickered in the corner of the room. It would be so much easier to drop into crazy than to keep thinking. “May I see you both at the same time?”
Myung stood. “Sure. I'll ask him to come in.”
Forcing her mind into order, Elise folded her list of questions in half. Then half again, creasing the edges with her nail to crisp perfect lines.
The door opened and the other Myung came in. Elise had met identical twins before, but no twin had the commonality of experience that these two men had. One was her husband,
the other was a copy and she could not tell them apart. They had even printed the extra weight that Myung carried so both had identical little potbellies.
The clone carried microchip transponders in his body, and a tattoo on his shoulder, but neither of those were visible. As they talked, Elise slowly noticed a single difference between the two.
The man to her right watched every move she made. His eyes were hungry for her in a way thatâ“You're the clone, aren't you?”
She had interrupted the one on her left. The two men shared a look before nodding, almost in unison. The clone said, “How did you know?”
“The way you look at me⦔ Elise faltered. He looked at her like he was trying to memorize her.
The clone grimaced and blushed. “Sorry. It's just that, I haven't seen you in months. I miss you.”
Myung, the original Myung picked at his cuticle. “I told you she could tell the difference.”
“But you were wrong about the reason.” The clone smirked. “She could tell because you don't love her as much as you used to.”
“That is a lie.” Myung tensed visibly, his fist squeezing without his seeming awareness.
“Is it?” The clone shook his head. “Everything else is the same, why would my emotional memories be any different? The only difference between us is that absence makes the heart grow fonder.”
“Stop.” Elise stood abruptly, her chair squeaking against the floor. She pressed her hand against her forehead.
Both of them looked abashed. In stereo they said, “I'm sorry.”
“It doesn't matter.” Her thoughts were fragmenting. The reflection in the window moved, a child trying to get her attention. Elise shook her head. “You brought me down to see if I could tell the difference. Now you know that I can.”
Her Myung said, “But not when we were separate.”
“No.” Elise fingered the paper on the table. “Which of you came in first?”
“I did,” the clone said.
They sat in silence, Elise tried to fold the paper into another square. “I think I'm ready to go home.”
“Of course.” Her Myung stood, chair scraping across the floor.
The clone leaned forward on his. “Won't you stay for lunch?” His voice cracked as he asked, as if the request were more urgent than just a meal.
Elise raised her eyes from the paper to his face. The way his brows curled in the middle. The way his eyes widened to show a rim of white under the dark iris. The way his soft lips hung a little open. All of the minute elements that made the whole of her husband pulled, begging her to stay.
And the other Myung, the original, stood next to him, legs spread wide with a slight tension in his arms as if ready to protect her.
No. Not to protect her, but to protect his right to have her.
“Yes.” She put her hand on the clone's, startled by the familiarity of the contact. “Yes, of course I'll stay.”
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The smell of sautéing onions wafted in from the kitchen. Myung had offered to cook breakfast before going to work, his usual ploy when he felt like he needed to make up for something. Clearly, he had no idea that breakfast was like a confession that the clone was right; Myung did not love her as much as he used to.
That wasn't quite true. Myung loved her the same as beforeâwhat had changed was that now there was a version of him that missed her all the time. Elise stretched under the covers and the cotton caressed her body like a lover. “I am the forbidden fruit.”
Myung's cell phone rang on the bedside table where he'd left it. Rolling over, she picked it up. Caller ID showed the office. Elise got out of bed, not bothering with a bathrobe, and carried it toward the kitchen.
Myung met her partway down the hall. He took it, mouthing his thanks even as he answered.
Elise lifted the hair away from her neck, knowing that it would raise her breasts and make her torso look longer,
daring him to choose work over her. His eyes followed the movement. Lips parting, he reached for her. Stopped.
His face shut down. Myung put one hand on the wall and squeezed his eyes closed. Dropping her arms, Elise shivered at the sudden tension in his frame.
“No. No, I heard you.” He leaned against the wall and slid down to sit on the floor. “Did he leave a note or⦔ His eyes were still closed but he covered them with his hand.
Elise crouched next to him. Her heart sped up, even though there was nothing she could do.
“No. I haven't checked email yet.” Myung nodded as if the person on the other end of the line could see him. “I'll do that. Thanks for handling this. Tell Larry not to do anything until I get in.”
He hung up. Cautious, Elise touched his thigh. “Myung?”
Her husband slammed his head against the wall. Elise jumped at the horrible thud. Cursing, Myung threw his phone down the hall and it ricocheted off the floor. Tears glittering on his cheeks, he hurtled to his feet. “He killed himself. Sent us all a video. By email.”
Myung was halfway to the office before Elise could pull herself together enough to stand.