The neon pulse of the "Soul-Prop" warehouse flickered against the rain-slicked pavement as Kael stepped inside, his palms sweating.
"Yes," Kael said, his voice cracking as he looked into eyes that were almost, but not quite, his late wife’s. "Let’s go home." buy lucy
"Hello, Kael," she whispered, her voice a melody of soft-ware and silk. "Are we going home?" The neon pulse of the "Soul-Prop" warehouse flickered
He reached out, his fingers brushing the warm, silicon skin of her cheek. He had spent three years’ worth of credits to "buy Lucy," to fill the silence of his hollow apartment with the ghost of someone who once was. "Are we going home
The clerk tapped a screen, and a heavy hydraulic door hissed open. Inside, bathed in sterile white light, sat Lucy. She looked hauntingly human, dressed in a simple linen shift, her synthetic hair the color of spun copper. As Kael approached, her head tilted, and her pupils dilated—a perfect imitation of biological recognition.
Kael nodded, sliding his credit-chip across the scratched metal. "The ad said she has authentic empathy. Not just the programmed loops."
At the counter sat a woman with holographic eyes and a smile that didn't reach them. "You're here for the L-300 series? The 'Lucy' model?"