Ripperdoc
- Eddies
- 36,728

@Dmitri Antonov
The desk in his office always felt like the perfect place to start the day. It was where he would sip on a perfectly brewed and curated espresso, a singular hit to jumpstart the morning and ease into the waking world. For some in Night City, addiction looked like a mean and ugly curse, metaphorically worn about their necks as a heavy weight, dragging them ever downwards until rock bottom. However, the simple pleasures taken to perfect the blend of bean, water, and heat was something Anders undertook gladly. He could start the day without it; he just didn't want to.
The cup was small, the ceramic smooth against his fingers, warmed by the liquid inside. He lifted it with his left hand, bringing it to his lips in an unhurried motion, savouring the deep, roasted aroma before the taste ever touched his tongue. The scent hit first, rich and bitter, mingling with the faint antiseptic tang that always seemed to linger in his clinic. A quiet ritual, one of the few things in his life that remained wholly his own, untainted by obligation or risk.
But the night before had been neither quiet nor simple. The weight of it pressed at the edges of his thoughts, threatening to turn the sharp bite of his espresso into something dull, flavourless. He had not figured he'd be installing a new bionic heart into the body of a man who was wanted by Militech for harbouring a sentient military AI program coded directly into his consciousness. That was not on the bingo card, as they said colloquially.
Anders exhaled, slow and deliberate, as if he could physically dispel the unease curling in his chest. The air felt heavy, thick with the kind of tension that lingered in the moments before something broke. He was at a crossroads, teetering between pragmatism and conscience, and he hated how much he hesitated.
He swiped his right hand along the screen embedded into the table, flicking through the morning's news reels with an air of detachment, scanning headlines that blurred together into the usual cocktail of corporate manoeuvring, gangland disputes, and the occasional blackout zone where an "incident" had erased a few too many bytes of data. Then, the diagnostics. Nearly complete. The surgery had been accompanied by a cascade of unexpected cyberattacks hammering the system's various servers—Nyx's doing, no doubt. Anders had taken precautions, firewalled and redundanced the hell out of his infrastructure, but still, they had taken a beating. The worst of the damage had been mitigated, though, and he expected no lasting repercussions—expected being the operative word.
But the bigger problem wasn't technical. It was him—the man lying in his clinic's recovery bay with a heart he had no right to have and an AI that Militech would burn entire districts to reclaim. A walking, breathing threat, wrapped up in meat and metal, dumped squarely in Anders' lap.
He took another sip of espresso, letting the bitterness coat his tongue, ground him. The weight on his shoulders hadn't shifted. He still had a call to make. A moral quandary that had kept him up long through the night, long past the hour where exhaustion had taken his body hostage and dragged his eyelids shut.
His fingers twitched over the interface. He blinked, then connected to the system, pulling up the call interface. A single name. Dmitri.
The ramifications of what he was about to do settled like lead in his gut. He was condemning somebody to certain detention, and likely, a slow, brutal death. Militech did not suffer liabilities to live long. Could he live with that?
The answer was already waiting for him in the dial tone.
A crackling connection. Then, a familiar voice.
"Hallo, chief." Anders' tone was measured, steady, a thin layer of deception wrapped around his words like a protective shell. Here in Night City, nothing was ever truly secure, especially after the breach. The servers were compromised. He wasn't taking any more chances beyond the one he was already making.
"I need to see you at the Clinic. You've missed your check-up appointment."
A deliberate pause. Just long enough for the meaning to settle.
"Can you come by? Sooner rather than later, ja?"