INT. TYRELL CORPORATION LOCKER ROOM - DAY 1
THE EYE 2
It's magnified and deeply revealed. Flecks of green and yellow in a
field of milky blue. Icy filaments surround the undulating center. The
eye is brown in a tiny screen. On the metallic surface below, the words
VOIGHT-KAMPFF are finely etched. There's a touch-light panel across the
top and on the side of the screen, a dial that registers fluctuations of
the iris. The instrument is no bigger than a music box and sits on a table
between two men. The man talking is big, looks like an over-stuffed kid.
"LEON" it says on his breast pocket. He's dressed in a warehouseman's uniform
and his pudgy hands are folded expectantly in his lap. Despite the obvious
heat, he looks very cool. The man facing him is lean, hollow cheeked and
dressed in gray. Detached and efficient, he looks like a cop or an accountant.
His name is HOLDEN and he's all business, except for the sweat on his face.
The room is large and humid. Rows of salvaged junk are stacked neatly against
the walls. Two large fans whir above their heads.
LEON: Okay if I talk? [Holden doesn't answer. He's centering Leon's
eye on the machine.]
LEON: I kinda get nervous when I take tests.
HOLDEN: Don't move.
LEON: Sorry. [He tries not to move but finally his lips can't help
a sheepish smile.]
LEON: Already had I.Q. test this year -- but I don't think I never
had a...
HOLDEN: (cutting in) Reaction time is a factor in this, so please pay
attention. Answer quickly as you can. [Leon compresses his lips and nods
his big head eagerly. Holden's voice is cold, geared to intimidate and
evoke response.]
HOLDEN: You're in a desert, walking along in the sand when all of a
sudden you look down and see a...
LEON: What one? [It was a timid interruption, hardly audible.]
HOLDEN: What?
LEON: What desert?
HOLDEN: Doesn't make any difference what desert -- it's completely
hypothetical.
LEON: But how come I'd be there?
HOLDEN: Maybe you're fed up, maybe you want to be by yourself -- who
knows. So you look down and see a tortoise. It's crawling towards you...
LEON: A tortoise. What's that?
HOLDEN: Know what a turtle is?
LEON: Of course.
HOLDEN: Same thing.
LEON: I never seen a turtle. [He sees Holden's patience is wearing
thin.]
LEON: But I understand what you mean.
HOLDEN: You reach down and flip the tortoise over on its back, Leon.
[Keeping an eye on his subject, Holden notes the dials in the Voight-Kampff.
One of the needles quivers slightly.]
LEON: You make these questions, Mr. Holden, or they write 'em down
for you? [Disregarding the question, Holden continues, picking up the pace.]
HOLDEN: The tortoise lays on its back, its belly baking in the hot
sun, beating its legs trying to turn itself over. But it can't. Not without
your help. But you're not helping. [Leon's upper lip is quivering.]
LEON: Whatcha mean, I'm not helping?
HOLDEN: I mean you're not helping! Why is that, Leon? [Leon looks shocked,
surprised. But the needles in the computer barely move. Holden goes for
the inside of his coat. But big Leon is faster. His LASER BURNS a hole
the size of a nickel through Holden's stomach. Unlike a bullet, a laser
causes no impact. It goes through Holden's spine and comes out his back,
clean as a whistle. Like a rag doll he falls back off the bench from the
waist up. By the time he hits the floor, big slow Leon is already walking
away. But he stops, turns and with a little smile of satisfaction, FIRES
at the machine on the table. There's a flash and a puff of smoke. The Voight-Kampff
is hit dead center, crippled but not destroyed; as Leon walks out of the
room, one of its lights begins to blink, faint but steady.]
EXT. DESERT - NIGHT 3
The horizon marked by a thin copper line that maybe the end, of the
beginning of a day. The train that follows, cuts through the night at 400
miles an hour.
INT. TRAIN - NIGHT 4
No clickitty-clack of track-bound noise, it's a long, insulated Pullman
of contoured seats and low-keyed lighting, coloured to soothe, and empty,
except for the passenger half way down. His eyes closed, head rested against
the glass. Ten years ago, DECKARD might have been an athlete, a track man
or a welter-weight. The body looks it, but the face has seen some time
-- not all of it good.
INT. TRAIN - REFRESHMENT DISPENSER - NIGHT 5
Deckard comes down the aisle, slips a coin into the mechanism, receives
a beer and returns to his seat.
INT. TRAIN - NIGHT 6
Tired of the program, he takes off the headset and drops it next to
three empty beer bottles and a sandwich wrapper, adjusts his position and
winds up staring at his reflection in the window. Runs a hand over his
face, it could use a shave. He leans closer and peers through the glass.
Out there in the black a sign flashes past: SAN ANGELES, THREE MINUTES.
EXT. PLATFORM - NIGHT 7
The train slides in, smooth as an eel, and stops without a sound. Carrying
a bag and umbrella, Deckard disembarks ahead of the other passengers and
into the
sweltering night.
INT. CORRIDOR - NIGHT 8
Deckard has got his coat swung over his shoulder, his shirt already
damp, as he walks down the long, hollow passage under orbs of yellow light.
EXT. TERMINAL - NIGHT 9
Deckard unlocks his car and gets in. Turns the ignition and hits a
sensor. The dash console glows and Deckard sits back waiting for the air
unit to cool things off.
DECKARD (V.O.): It was 97 degrees in the city and no hope of improvement.
Not bad if you're a lizard. But two hours earlier I was drinking Acquavit
with an Eskimo lady in North East Alaska. That's a tough change to make.
It was so good, I didn't want to leave, so I left a day early. [A little
detached, Deckard taps another sensor on the panel, lights up a cigarette
and watches as his messages flash across the viewer stating date, time
and caller. The last one is repeated five times. Deckard sighs, switches
off the viewer and gets on the radio.]
DECKARD: Contact. This is Blade Runner One calling Com-fast 27. [The
SOUND OF A CHIME precedes the mechanical female voice that answers.]
VOICE: Blade Runner One, stand by please. [A pause. Followed by a husky
male voice.]
VOICE: Deckard.
DECKARD: Yah, Gaff.
GAFF (VOICE): Where the hell you been?
DECKARD: You know where I been. I been on vacation.
GAFF: Next time you go on vacation, do me a favor, let us know where
it is.
DECKARD: What's up?
GAFF: Holden got hit. [There is a pause. That was bad news.]
DECKARD: Bad?
GAFF: Severed spine. You'd better get in here. Bryant's waiting for
you.
DECKARD: I'll see you in a minute. [The ENGINE REVS, the wipers rake
two weeks of dust off the windshield and Deckard jams out of the lot.]
INT. THE HALL OF JUSTICE - NIGHT 10
An enormous grey vault of a building. A businesslike Deckard strides
down a long corridor with his briefcase and police ID pinned to his coat.
DECKARD (V.O.): I-X-4-P-D referred to as a Nexus-6, The Tyrell Corporation's
new pride and joy. Holden was administering the Voight-Kampff test when
one
nailed him. [The door in front of Deckard slides open and he walks
through.]
DECKARD (V.O.): The Nexus-6 must be fast because Holden was as quick
as they come. The report said there were six of them. Three males and three
female.
Led by a combat model called Roy Batty.
INT. INSPECTOR BRYANT'S OFFICE - NIGHT 11
The INSPECTOR is in his fifties. The deep creases in his face, the
broken capillaries in his nose say brawler, spoiler, drinker, but the diplomas
on the wall say something else. Bryant's kneeled at his safe trying to
open it. Deckard is sitting on the edge of the desk reading the print-out.
DECKARD (V.O.): They escaped from the colonies two weeks ago. Killed
twenty-three people and jumped a shuttle. An aerial patrol found the ship
in the desert. No crew. [Bryant gets the safe open and brings out a bottle
of whiskey.]
DECKARD (V.O.): Bryant's got a liver problem. A couple years back he
handed me a bottle and said have a drink for another man. I been drinking
for him ever since. [Deckard sets down the report and takes the shot Bryant
just poured for him.]
DECKARD: Six, huh?
BRYANT: Five. Three nights ago one of them managed to break into the
Tyrell Corporation. Killed two guards and got as far as the Genetic Sector
before he got fried going through an electrofield.
DECKARD: What was he after?
BRYANT: There wasn't much left of him, so we can't be sure. But biochemical
data and morphology records of the Nexus-6 were reported missing. Going
on the possibility they might try to infiltrate we send Holden in to run
Voight-Kampff tests on the new employees. Guess he found himself one. [A
grim pause.]
DECKARD: You got a machine on it yet?
BRYANT: We're using Esper -- a 231 -- that picked up Holden's alarm.
Its guess is that all five are in the city.
DECKARD: Where do we start? [Bryant's back at the safe locking up his
bottle.]
BRYANT: The Tyrell Corporation has a demo model. Check it out on the
Voight-Kampff. There's a chance the Nexus-6 is beyond out ability to detect.
If that's the case, everybody's up shit creek.
DECKARD: What was the cover on the one that got Holden?
BRYANT: Industrial refuse.
DECKARD: Garbage man? [Bryant nods.]
DECKARD: Did personnel have an address on him? [Bryant fishes a piece
of paper out of his pocket, copies down a number and hands it over.]
DECKARD: I'll go take a look. [Deckard stands and holds up his drink.]
DECKARD: Thanks. [Like a sick boy looking out of the window, Bryant
watches Deckard down the whiskey. Deckard puts down the glass and turns
to leave.
DECKARD (V.O.): The big incentive to emigrate was still free labor.
If the public found out that their door-prizes might kill them, they might
not be so hot to go up there. This was one of the worst one's we had and
Bryant was worried. He wanted to tell me to be discrete or something. But
I didn't give him a chance.]
EXT. LEON'S HOTEL ENTRANCE - NIGHT 12
An electrical storm is brewing. Deckard stands outside the entrance
to an old hotel holding an umbrella, as people scuttle into doorways to
avoid the sudden
downpour.
INT. LEON'S HOTEL LOBBY - NIGHT 13
A heavy metal maze of cubicles and perilous iron balconies, peopled
with rejects from the surface world; Mato Grosso Indians in white man's
clothes and other
lower echelon welfare recipients. Drop city is crowded, cramped and
darkly alive. Deckard steps out of an elevator and moves through the crowd.
A cloud of steam drifts up through a grating as two old men, clad in towels
descend a flight of stairs under a neon sign that says bath house. A musty
subterranean wind ripples Deckard's clothes as he turns into an alcove.
He stops in front of a door that says, MANAGER and pushes the buzzer. It's
opened by an emphysema victim with an oxygen tank lashed to his hip. Deckard
flashes his ID and speaks some words which are inaudible due to the TUBA
MUSIC down the hall. The man grabs a key from his wall, hands it over and
shuts the door.
INT. LEON'S HOTEL CORRIDOR - NIGHT 14
The companion ways below deck of a big ship are no more bewildering
than the ups and downs and ins and outs of this establishment. But Deckard
finds the door he's looking for. He pauses a moment, listens, then knocks.
He inserts the key and with a hand on his gun opens it.
INT. LEON'S ROOM - NIGHT 15
An empty room. A cot and not much else. He steps in and stands quiet
as a hunter sensing the signs. For a place surrounded by greasy hovels
it is surprisingly
clean. Spartan in fact. The towel by the spotless basin is perfectly
folded. Deckard runs two fingers over a shelf. No dust. He looks in the
waste basket. Wadded up candy wrappers. The bed by the window is neatly
made. Deckard looks under it, then runs his hands along both sides of the
mattress. The closet. There's one suit in it. He pats it down. Nothing.
A show box on the floor. He stoops, takes out what looks like a pen from
his pocket and carefully traces it over the box. Assured of its harmlessness,
he lifts off the lid. It contains a little stack of photos bound with a
rubber band. Deckard removes them, goes to the lamp by the balcony window
and turns it on. A touching collection of family snapshots. The kind of
anonymous stuff sold by the bunch in dusty junk shops. The family dog.
Junior on the pony squinting in the sun. Uncle Ben clowning with the kids.
The faded polaroid of Christmas morning. Simple pictures of simple folks
celebrating the family bond. A curious collection for the likes of Leon
and Deckard studies them with interest.
EXT. STREET BELOW - NIGHT 16
Oblivious to the cloudburst, a blue-eyed albino stands in the doorway,
peddling candy and artificial flowers looking like he'd never been touched
by the light of
day. Leon is standing behind him, staring up at his room, watching
Deckard at the window. He's still wearing his coveralls, but he looks different.
His face is more intent, smarter and angry.
EXT. STREET BELOW - NIGHT 17
For one seething moment it looks like Leon might mash something, but
suddenly he swings away and disappears into the crowd.
INT. LEON'S ROOM - NIGHT 18
Deckard pockets the pictures and moves away from the window.
EXT. ALLEY - NIGHT 19
Leon's got a neck like a fire hydrant and legs to match, but he's a
graceful runner. Looks like he could do it for days. And he could. He's
put a lot of alley behind him and he's not out of breath.
EXT. CHINATOWN - NIGHT 20
Slowing down he cuts into an opening and comes out onto a narrow street.
The Asian Quarter.
INT. CHOP SUEY HOUSE - NIGHT 21
A seamy as well as steamy little place. Counter and small tables. Old
slant-eyed enders humped over their fuming bowls jabbering and slurping.
The only voice coming out clear is from the big three-D TV on the back
wall. As the mellow-mouthed TV announcer delivers the message, a Latin-looking
beauty in a well-fitted maids uniform does a twirl, flashes a beguiling
smile and glides OUT OF FRAME.
ANNOUNCER'S VOICE: Choose from a variety of seventy nine different
personality types. Each and every one a loyal troublefree companion given
to you upon
your arrival absolutely free... [The Latin beauty is replaced by an
impeccable Ray Bolger type gentleman's gentleman who clicks his heels,
snaps to attention and struts off to make room for the next.]
ANNOUNCER'S VOICE: To use as personal body servant to tireless field
hand -- the custom tailored humanoid robot, designed especially for your
needs.
[The Chinese are paying no attention, but the man and the woman seated
at the table by the window are. The woman is pretty, a touch of gray in
her hair, kind and blue-eyed. MARY looks like an American dream mom, right
out of "Father Knows Best." The man also resembles a tradition: the gym
instructor, short cropped hair with the body of a drill sergeant, but the
eyes are grey and chilling. ROY BATTY is a presence of force with a lazy,
but acute sense of what goes on around him. Leon has just come through
the door behind them. Trying not to be the bull in a china shop, he approaches
their table and kneels . Batty doesn't bother to look at him, which amplifies
the note of sarcasm in his quiet voice.]
BATTY: Did you get your precious 'things'?
LEON: Somebody was already there.
BATTY: Police.
LEON: Just a man.
BATTY: Police man. [Leon looks sullen.]
BATTY: Why don't you have a seat. [There's one next to him. Leon pulls
it over and sits.]
BATTY: Enjoy the view. [From the pot on the table, Mary pours tea and
they sit so quiet and still in this noisy place that they seem almost invisible.
The view they're "enjoying" is through the window. Outside the neon side
in the window directly across the street says: HANNIBAL CHEW, MEMBERS.
INT. HANNIBAL CHEW'S SHOP - NIGHT 22
Chew is a spindly old man of precision, his veiled eyes are shrewd
and Chinese, but the rest of him looks like a Charles Dickens invention.
He's got a jewelers' glass stuck in his eye, lurched over a lamp, squinting
at something in his hand. After a moment his lips peal back into a sour,
belligerent smile.
CHEW: Well, you're right. This little honey has a couple of defective
cones. [He snaps off the lamp and swings round to face his client. SEBASTIAN'S
face is almost young, but something has gone too far, too fast. Premature
old age has made his bones brittle and his co-ordination slow. The house
may be dark but there's a light on in it. Sebastian is a closet genius.]
CHEW: You're a regular perfectionist, Sebastian. [Sebastian's apologetic,
especially around the acerbic Mr. Chew.]
SEBASTIAN: It's gotta be right for my customer.
CHEW: Your customer, eh? [Chew snickers and beckons. Sebastian follows
his down a high narrow hall to a heavy insulated door. There's a moth-eaten
full length fur coat hanging by it. Chew tugs it on and they go through.
The big door slams shut behind them.]
INT. COLD STORAGE ROOM - NIGHT 23
Except for the work table with its sharp gleaming instruments, the
room is as barren and sterile as a morgue. The glass-doored compartments
in the walls look like crypts. Some of them small as post office boxes.
From one of the Chew removes a vacuum, packed box. Carefully separating
the seal, he reaches into the purple jell and with a pair of tweezers extracts
an eye. Through the jeweler's glass, which he has not bothered to remove,
Chew holds the eye up to the light and studies it a moment. His other hand
searches through his pockets.
CHEW: You got a pocket-charger, boy? [Quick to accommodate, Sebastian
removes a pencil-like device from a row of such things in his breast pocket
and steps closer. The back of the eye is touched with the pencil and the
pupil moves. Suddenly its staring back at them.]
CHEW: Is that good enough for your customer? [Anxious to leave, Sebastian
nods. Chew reseals the eye taking his time. He can afford to, he's wearing
his coat.]
CHEW: How much is he paying you? [In place of an answer, Sebastian
clears his throat, stares at the bag like he didn't hear.]
CHEW: Well, when do you get paid?
SEBASTIAN: Soon as I finish the job.
CHEW: When might that be?
SEBASTIAN: Day after tomorrow.
CHEW: Oh! Day after tomorrow. [Sebastian nods. Chew stares at the poor
bastard, concerned in spite of himself.]
CHEW: The rich hate to pay, Sebastian. A guy like Tyrell keeps you
waiting. Pay the little guy last. You should charge twice as much. It'll
make him feel better.
[Sebastian nods his head like that's exactly what he'll do. Chew sees
it's hopeless and hands him the bag.]
SEBASTIAN: Thanks, Mr. Chew. [Chew pulls the door open for him and
Sebastian goes through quick as a dog.]
EXT. HANNIBAL CHEW'S STORE - STREET - NIGHT 24
Sebastian may lack co-ordination but he got what he came for and there's
a hopeful spring to his walk as he heads for his truck.
INT. SEBASTIAN'S AMBULANCE - NIGHT 25
It's an old panel job with ambulance siren and lights. The lettering
on the side reads "J.R. SEBASTIAN - ANIMOID EXPRESS." Sebastian gets in,
starts up the
engine and suddenly realizes he's not alone. It's a jolt that causes
him to yelp. PRIS is sprawled on the seat next to him, and wakes up with
a yelp of her own. They stare at one another for a startled instant, and
she jumps out and starts walking. But she's forgotten her little beat-up
overnight case. Sebastian puts the truck in gear, drives next to her and
opens the door.
SEBASTIAN: Hey! You forgot your... [He holds up the bag. Hesitantly
she reaches for it.]
SEBASTIAN: How come you were in my truck?
PRIS: I was tired and didn't have any place to go. [She stares at him,
hand on her case, looking lost. Sebastian isn't good at this, but he tries.]
SEBASTIAN: You can get back in if you want... [She can't make up her
mind.]
SEBASTIAN: Don't worry, I won't hurt you. [She gets in. Both of them
are silent. People are not Sebastian's medium -- usually he's too shy,
but this girl is shyer still, plus they're about the same age -- it gives
him courage.]
SEBASTIAN: What's your name?
PRIS: Pris.
SEBASTIAN: Mine's J.F. Sebastian.
PRIS: Hi. [So pleased with the way that went, he forgets for a while
what comes next.]
SEBASTIAN: Oh! Where do you want to go? [She shrugs. That leaves him
a lot of responsibility. He throws her side-long glances, but she's not
helping.]
SEBASTIAN: You want to go home?
PRIS: I don't have one.
SEBASTIAN: Oh. [What do you do with a teenage beauty who looks like
she's lost out of some "Welcome to Sunny Arizona" poster?]
SEBASTIAN: Where are your folks?
PRIS: They left.
SEBASTIAN: What about friends?
PRIS: I have some, but I have to find out where they are staying. [She
leans forward and rests her elbows on the dash. Her body would win prizes,
from any angle.]
SEBASTIAN: Well, where should I take you? [She looks at him, a shadow
of enticement in her clear blue eyes.]
PRIS: We scared each other pretty good didn't we?
SEBASTIAN: We sure did. [She giggles and laughs.]
PRIS: I'm hungry, J.F.
SEBASTIAN: I've got stuff. If you wanna go to my place?
PRIS: I was hoping you'd say that. [Sebastian's face is normally on
the grey side, but it just turned red. He turns on the ignition and they
pull away from the curb.]
INT. DECKARD'S CAR - FREEWAY - NIGHT 26
Speeding along the freeway. The terminal in the communications console
lit. Deckard's right hand just finished a punch-up. The screen flashes
back: REQUEST Deckard punches up. Letters flash across the screen: ESPER.
Screen flashes back: CLEARANCE. Deckard punches up: BLADE RUNNER ONE CODE
ML-33. Pause. Screen flashes: STAND BY. Deckard's voice has been heard
over the preceding.
DECKARD (V.O.): Machines can be helpful sometimes, but they can also
be a pain in the ass. Ask for a trace on a forger and you might wind up
at a steelmill. I don't mind a bum-steer once in a while -- it's their
personalities that usually get me. Somebody once said that man makes machines
in his own image. If that's true, whoever made Esper should have been shot.
ESPER: This is Esper and I'm ready. Go ahead please. [Esper's deep
melodious voice is anxious to please, and oiled with a touch of self-pity.]
DECKARD: You equipped for random questions?
ESPER: Why, yes, of course.
DECKARD: You start.
ESPER: The five in question are third generation Nexus Sixes, constructed
of skin-flesh culture, selected enogenic transfer conversion capable of
self-perpetuating thought, para-physical abilities and developed for emigration
program. Are you with me?
DECKARD: How do I stop one?
ESPER: Unlike a five, they can sustain massive traumas to several parts
of the body without debilitating another. Sever a leg and it will perform
quicker on the remaining leg than the fastest man can run.
DECKARD: Okay, but...
ESPER: I'm coming to that. Vulnerable zone is the base of the skull,
the occipital bone. A direct hit is a positive retirement. [The communication
is interrupted by a BELL which is immediately followed by a stern, MECHANICAL
VOICE.]
VOICE: You are in violation of traffic ordinance M-139 statutory freeway
limit restricted by one-hundred and eighty kilometers. [In his rear view
mirror Deckard sees two black-clad motorcycle cops coming up behind him
like the hounds of hell. They draw silently alongside. Deckard presses
his I.D. to the window. The cop tosses a salute to Deckard and he and his
partner accelerate, vanish in the night. And Deckard's car does too.]
EXT. SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT 27
A district of silence and ruin. The street is strewn with refuse. The
building looks vacant. A ten storey condo gone to shit. The vandals have
come and gone
long ago. Sebastian's little white ambulance parked at the curb. MR.
DEETCHUM, the old Watchman, sitting in the building entry in a straight
backed chair, is reading a comic book.
INT. SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 28
Well stocked with items of survival, all labeled and stacked. And shelved
along the walls and hung from the ceiling is a menagerie of animoids. Like
so many broken toys awaiting resurrection from Sebastian's wise hands.
Sebastian is seated at a large work-table, bent over a stereo scope. The
tool in his right hand is a sensor probe and he's using it with the delicacy
of an engraver. The object of his concentration is a maze-like chip configuration
no bigger than a thumbnail, but magnified under the scope, it looks like
an aerial view of a large city. The needle-like sensor probe moves carefully
over the contours of the configuration, testing the bonds. Suddenly a blue
flash erupts from one of the junctures.
SEBASTIAN: Oh! [Pris is light on her feet. She's standing behind him
with a half-eaten sandwich in her hand.]
PRIS: Whatcha doin'?
SEBASTIAN: You scared me. [But he's happy to see her.]
SEBASTIAN: I'm working. [She's changed her dress and made up her face.
Looks a little older and sexier.]
SEBASTIAN: You look... better.
PRIS: Just better.
SEBASTIAN: Beautiful.
PRIS: Thanks. [He watches her as she prowls around the room, looking
at this and that, eating her sandwich.]
PRIS: And you live in this building all by yourself?
SEBASTIAN: Yeah, I live here pretty much alone right now... [Trying
to make light of it.]
SEBASTIAN: No housing shortage around here... plenty of room for everybody.
[She sprawls on the couch studying him.]
PRIS: How old are you? [He can't meet her eyes.]
SEBASTIAN: Twenty.
PRIS: What's your problem? [It's not an easy subject. His voice is
barely audible.]
SEBASTIAN: Methuselah Syndrome.
PRIS: What's that?
SEBASTIAN: My glands. They grow old too fast.
PRIS: Is that why you're still here?
SEBASTIAN: Yes. I couldn't pass the test. [There is a silence. He steals
a glance at her.]
PRIS: I like you just the way you are. [Under the desk he bats his
knees together.]
SEBASTIAN: Ah, you get hold of your friends?
PRIS: As a matter of fact I did. They've got some work to do tonight,
but they're gonna come tomorrow.
SEBASTIAN: Good. [The implications catch up.]
SEBASTIAN: I can sleep on the couch. [A little gray mouse on the shelf
above his head bobs up.]
MOUSE: Don't let the bed bugs bite! [Taking their cue from the mouse,
some of the more talented animoids toot, flap and wheel about.]
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 29
It's dark except for the glow of the terminal. A tired Deckard sits
in front of it. Esper sounds like he's been talking for hours.
ESPER: Nexus designated Leon: incept date April 10th, 2015 -- to be
used in military experiments to determine how hyper metabolism functions
in deep space.
Nexus designated Batty incept data April 10th, 2015, combat model,
level of self-sufficiency, optimum. [A long pause.]
ESPER: Here's something you might find interesting. They have been
built to emulate the human in every way except in its emotional spectrum.
However, after a period of time it is only logical that such a 'mechanism'
would create its own emotional responses, hate, love, fear, anger, envy.
DECKARD: I know all that.
ESPER: What about a summary then.
DECKARD: I think we're through for the night. [Deckard starts to reach
for the panel.]
ESPER: Mr. Deckard. [Hesitates.]
DECKARD: Yes?
ESPER: Do you have something against science?
DECKARD: Not if it works.
ESPER: And what in your estimation works?
DECKARD: The umbrella. [Deckard picks up the umbrella and with it stabs
the terminal off button before Esper can respond and the machine goes dead.
He sits there for a moment then flips on the lamp. Leon's snap-shots are
spread out before him.]
INT. SPINNER - DAY 30
A police marked spinner makes a sharp bank, drops into a steep curve
and slides towards the Tyrell Corporation.
DECKARD (V.O.): Every government that could was racing to populate
their colonial territory. But emigrants needed incentive. Over-population
and the greenhouse factor didn't seem to be enough; but owning a human
look-a-like had lots of appeal. It was big industry, the competition was
stiff and Tyrell was top of the line.
EXT. TYRELL CORPORATION - DAY 31
The spinner gently touches down. The hatch drops open and Deckard steps
out.
DECKARD (V.O.): His claim to fame was making a product more human than
human and sometimes the 'more' turned out to be a problem. This wasn't
just an
escaped andy who broke his owner's arm -- there were twenty-eight people
dead and the pressure was on.
INT. TYRELL CORPORATION - DAY 32
Deckard walks up to a desk, hands his I.D. to a guard who checks it
against a list on a screen.
DECKARD (V.O.): But so far they'd always managed to keep it quiet.
Not to say that once in a while there wasn't bad publicity. Some fanatic
bitching about equal rights for andies or an occasional trade union proclaiming
it was un-American for automatons to take jobs away from humans on the
colony.
[The guard hands Deckard back his I.D., pushed a button and Deckard
walks away.]
DECKARD (V.O.): But what's more American than good old supply and demand?
The Government needed them, industry made them and the church backed
them. The big religious boys said that Androids, no matter how human,
were objects; only God could make people. I'm not religious, but I was
inclined to agree.
Otherwise I'd be out of a job. [The elevator door slides open. The
young lady inside would look right standing on a cliff, hair blowing in
the wind, looking out to sea in a 19th Century painting.]
RACHAEL: Hello, Mr. Deckard. My name is Rachael. [Deckard tips his
head to her and steps in.]
INT. TYRELL CORPORATION ELEVATOR - DAY 33
No woman can be all things to all men, the Rachael comes closer than
most. The only trouble is she's all business. Formidable without really
trying. Some beauty is better avoided and Deckard looks straight ahead.
INT. TYRELL CORPORATION CORRIDOR - DAY 33A
The door slides open and they continue down the corridor.
RACHAEL: It seems your department doesn't believe our new unit is to
the public benefit.
DECKARD: A humanoid robot is like any other machine, it can be a benefit
or a hazard. If it's a benefit, it's not our problem.
RACHAEL: But because your department can't do an adequate job in detecting
the miniscule number at large, it's a problem. Correct, Mr. Deckard?
INT. TYRELL CORPORATION - AIR-FILTERED CORRIDOR - DAY 33B
They pass into a canopied, air-filtered corridor. Deckard doesn't answer
the question because he's looking at the animals. Small northern animals
in neat "environmental" cages. He looks at the rabbit, the raccoon and
the squirrel, but the owl asleep on its perch stops him. The armed guard
at the exit never takes his eyes off them.
RACHAEL: You like our owl? [Deckard nods. Rachael claps her hands.
The owl opens its yellow eyes and blinks at them.]
DECKARD: It's artificial?
RACHAEL: Of course not. [Hands thrust in her pockets, she strides off
towards the exit without looking back. The exit is another tube. Just big
enough for two. No room for excess. He tries to ignore her cool appraising
stare.]
RACHAEL: You're in a very unique position, Mr. Deckard. You could affect
the future of this entire organization according to how you work your little
test.
[Deckard has nothing to say.]
RACHAEL: Are you apprehensive?
DECKARD: Why should I be?
RACHAEL: For the responsibility of your power. Being a police bureaucrat,
you've got more than your share. [The door slides open. Deckard looks down
at her.]
DECKARD: You got it wrong, girl. I work with the bureau not for them.
[He lets it sink in.]
DECKARD: My job isn't to detect malfunctioning andies, it's to eliminate
them. The more the better. [He walks out of the elevator first.]
INT. INNER SANCTUM OF DR. TYRELL - DAY 34
The office is dimly lit, but highlights of resilience reside in the
luster of the antique furnishings, like glimmers of gold in a darkened
mine. Dr. Tyrell is a fragile man of power, with that look of "youth" obtained
from steroids and surgery. Dapper and trim, he leans against the desk looking
at an old fashioned pocket watch. The only sound is the insidious PERKING
of COFFEE BREWING in the background. Tyrell taps a sensor on his desk.
The door in front of Deckard and Rachael slides open. They enter a vestibule
and face another door, this one befitting the decor of the office, Tyrell
slips the watch into his pocket as they enter.
RACHAEL: Mr. Deckard. Dr. Eldon Tyrell.
TYRELL: How do you do, Mr. Deckard. Please sit down. Would you care
for a cup of coffee?
DECKARD: Thanks.
TYRELL: Black?
DECKARD: Please. [Tyrell pours from an old time sylex into small china
cups and hands one to Deckard. The congenial light in his eyes could almost
pass for warmth -- dragon warmth.]
TYRELL: Somehow, I didn't expect that the man who did the dirty work
would be the man to do the technical work. Here you are, Mr. Deckard. [He
hands Deckard a cup of coffee.]
TYRELL: Is this to be an empathy test?
DECKARD: Yes.
TYRELL: Capillary dilation of the so-called blush response? Plus fluctuation
of the pupil, plus involuntary dilation of the iris? [Deckard nods.]
TYRELL: May I ask a personal question?
DECKARD: Go ahead.
TYRELL: Have you ever retired a human by mistake?
DECKARD: No.
TYRELL: But in your profession that is a risk.
DECKARD: Nothing is infallible, but so far the Voight-Kampff scale
bas been foolproof.
TYRELL: Like you said, Mr. Deckard, a machine can be a hazard. The
Voight-Kampff scale is a machine, isn't it?
DECKARD: One that relies on human interpretation. Where's the subject?
TYRELL: Sitting next to you. [Deckard stares at Rachael, then back
at Tyrell. Delighted, Tyrell takes a cup of coffee. Accepting the challenge,
Deckard opens his briefcase and starts fishing out the apparatus.]
THE VOIGHT-KAMPFF 35
Rachael's eye fills the screen, the iris brilliant, shot with light,
the pupil contracting.
DECKARD'S VOICE: Ready.
RACHAEL: Go ahead. [In the soft green glow of the dials, the needles
in both gauges are at rest. Dr. Tyrell stands silhouetted behind Deckard,
who sits in front of Rachael, a pencil beam trained on her eye. Wire mesh
discs are attached to her cheeks.]
DECKARD: You're given a calfskin wallet for your birthday. [The needles
in both gauges swing violently past green to red, then subside.]
RACHAEL: I wouldn't accept it. Also, I'd report the person who gave
it to me to the police.
DECKARD: You have a little boy. He shows you his butterfly collection,
plus the killing jar. [Again the gauges register, but not so far.]
RACHAEL: I'd take him to the doctor.
DECKARD: You're watching T.V. and suddenly you notice a wasp crawling
on your wrist.
RACHAEL: I'd kill it. [Both needles go to red. Deckard makes a note,
takes a sip of coffee and continues.]
DECKARD: In a magazine you come across a full-page photo of a nude
girl.
RACHAEL: Is this testing whether I'm an android or a lesbian?
DECKARD: You show the picture to your husband. He likes it and hangs
it on the wall. The girl is lying on a bearskin rug.
RACHEL: I wouldn't let him.
DECKARD: Why not?
RACHAEL: I should be enough for him. [Deckard frowns, then smiles.
His smile looks a little like a grimace or the other way around.]
DECKARD: You become pregnant by a man who runs off with your best friend,
and you decide to get an abortion.
RACHAEL: I'd never get an abortion.
DECKARD: Why not?
RACHAEL: That would be murder, Mr. Deckard.
DECKARD: In your opinion.
RACHAEL: It would be my child.
DECKARD: Sounds like you speak from experience. [He notes the needles.
One goes green and the other remains inert.]
DECKARD: Last question. You're watching an old movie. It shows a banquet
in progress, the guests are enjoying raw oysters.
RACHAEL: Ugh. [Both needles swing swiftly.]
DECKARD: The entree consists of boiled dog stuffed with rice. [Needles
move less.]
DECKARD: The raw oysters are less acceptable to you than a dish of
boiled dog. [Deckard moves the adhesive discs from her cheeks and switches
off his beam.]
DECKARD: Lights please. [The lights come on.]
TYRELL: Well?
DECKARD: If she is, the machine works.
TYRELL: The machine works. She is. [Rachael sits very still. Except
her eyes -- they go to Tyrell and hang on. He stares back at her as he
speaks.]
TYRELL: How many questions did it take?
DECKARD: Thirteen. [Rachael sits rigidly in her chair, as the ground
crumbles around her, her big mermaid eyes locked with Tyrell. His voice
is quiet and strong, mesmerizing. She's hanging by a thread. Deckard watches
with a bas taste in his mouth.]
DECKARD: She didn't know?
TYRELL: Memory implant. She was programmed. But I think she has transcended
her conditioning. I think she was beginning to suspect. [Rachael nods fixedly.
Careful not to let go her grasp.]
TYRELL: How many questions does it usually take, Mr. Deckard?
DECKARD: Five, maybe six. [Slowly, carefully, Tyrell unlocks his gaze
from Rachael and turns towards Deckard, who is starting to put away his
equipment.]
TYRELL: You're going to have to be on your toes, my friend. [Deckard
glances back at him.]
TYRELL: It's a complex problem and we wouldn't want anything to happen
to you. [Less of a man might shrink at the end of Deckard's look, but not
Tyrell.]
TYRELL: For the good of all, I recommend you take Rachael with you.
Considering her uniqueness, I'm sure she could prove quite helpful. [Deckard
almost smiles at the nasty power of Tyrell's style. He turns away and starts
packing up the Voight-Kampff.]
DECKARD: No thanks. [Deckard is ready to go.]
TYRELL: And how is it one man will be able to cover so much ground?
DECKARD: Discreetly.
TYRELL: All pertinent information is being fed into your departmenta
computer, an Esper 231 -- I believe -- and a photo over-lay packet is being
produced.
[Deckard opens the door.]
TYRELL: Mr. Deckard, I think it would be wise to reconsider my offer.
[Rachael sits there very pale and expressionless, her feet flat on the
floor, alone is the word. Trying to keep the fury out of it, Deckard's
voice comes out in a whisper.]
DECKARD: I work alone. [On the last word, Rachael glances up at him
and Deckard turns away. The outer door slides open and he goes through
it.]
INT. TUNNEL - NIGHT 36
As seen through the windshield from the passenger side of a vintage
Dusenberg. The headlights cut through the dark, illuminating a narrow strip
of mountain road. A downgrade. A sign slides by stating: "Caution Curves
Ahead." Good advice considering the sheer nightmare of a drop to the right
and the wall of solid rock to the left. The steady HUM of the ENGINE and
the HISS of the TIRES will remain, but the location suddenly changes to:
INT. ROOM - NIGHT 37
A pleasant place of soft light and domestic charm. The young lady in
the short dress is vacuuming the rug. Her back to the viewer. As she bends
over to vacuum beneath the couch, exposing her beautiful ass, an admonishment
from a resonant and slightly tired MALE VOICE intercedes.
VOICE: Let's keep our eyes on the road, Deckard.
DECKARD'S VOICE: Sorry.
Abruptly the VIEW FLASHES BACK TO:
INT. TUNNEL - NIGHT 38
The moon is up there slicing through the trees, strobing over the hood
of the car. The road is getting steeper and the corners sharper. Rags of
mist skim by as the Dusenberg picks up speed. It is becoming a riveting
ride, but the passenger's mind moves elsewhere.
EXT. WOODS - DAY 39
Swift, soft clouds overhead. In the cold shine of the icy light,the
viewer walks down an aisle of maples and beeches, their clean hard limbs
deflecting the frosty light, and underfoot the crisp, blue-white snow,
melted through in spots, exposing soggy patches of rich brown earth.
VOICE: Come on, stay with the machine.
INT. TUNNEL - NIGHT 40
The Dusenberg is going faster now, headlights eating up the road. Rushing
the corners in gut wrenching four-wheel drifts. Not a pleasant sensation
if you don't
like roller-coasters. The Dusenberg slides out of a corner and faces
a couple hundred yards of straightway leading to the next bend. Good place
for a breather, but the driver shifts into high and screws on.
EXT. LAKE - DAY 41
Cold and gray. The current running strong. The nose of a kayak points
through the swells, the viewer paddling for the shore. This is cold remote
country, wild and untouched. A sky bluer than the Madonna's cloak. The
kayak banks and the viewer steps out, moving over the sandy beach towards
a little camp.
VOICE: We're going to have to start the sequence again if you don't
stay with me, Deckard. Concentrate.
DECKARD'S VOICE: How do you know I'm not?
VOICE: You're not responding to the stimulus. I can see right here,
I'm not getting a reading.
DECKARD'S VOICE: I'm tired of this.
VOICE: Almost through.
INT. TUNNEL - NIGHT 42
In the Dusenberg the driver turns to look at the passenger, his specter-like
face obscured by shadow, but by the glint of teeth, he must have just smiled.
And the passenger's view snaps back to the road. Suddenly another pair
of headlights round the approaching bend. Large ones, of a bus or a truck.
Blinding. The Dusenberg is going too fast to stop. No room to pass. HORNS
BLAST. The Dusenberg brakes, goes into a broadside skid. The hands of the
passenger reach out and grip the mahogany dash. Brakes locked, TIRES SCREAMING,
skidding. The Dusenberg tears through the railing and plunges into space.
The last view of the passenger is pure vertigo. Silence.
INT. DOCTOR WHEELER'S OFFICE - AFTERNOON 43
The good doctor is bending over his glass-top desk which resembles
a pin-ball machine. Displayed under its surface is a network of crisp electronic
symbols and
read-outs indicating the results of the test. Deckard detached the
patches from his forehead, which are a little damp, but other than that,
he looks no worse for wear, stands up to stretch and walks over to the
doctor's desk.
DECKARD: So how did I do? [Dr. Wheeler is a thin boney man, aloof but
a promise of compassion in his sunken eyes.]
WHEELER: Nerves of steel.
DECKARD: No rust?
WHEELER: I didn't say that. Your motivity rate checked out a little
slower than last time.
DECKARD: Meaning?
WHEELER: Meaning you don't run as fast as you used to. [Deckard starts
to dress.]
WHEELER: During the road test...
DECKARD: Yeah?
WHEELER: Your mind kept wandering. That bothered me.
DECKARD: Huh huh.
WHEELER: Considering the nature of your work, that could be unhealthy.
DECKARD: True. [Wheeler studies his "desk" for a moment and his finger
comes down on the section illuminating Deckard's simple statistics.]
WHEELER: You got a birthday coming up. [Deckard bends over slipping
on his shoes. Wheeler looks up, concerned.]
WHEELER: But you haven't put in for emigration.
DECKARD: Nope.
WHEELER: You're going to be over the limit.
DECKARD: Listen, I could make you a long list of complaints about this
fucken city but I still rather be here than up there.
WHEELER: What if you change your mind?
DECKARD: They'll change the limit before I change my mind.
WHEELER: You sure?
DECKARD: Never been more sure of anything in my life. [Deckard is ready
to go. Looking at Wheeler, a little touched with his concern.]
DECKARD: Why didn't you go?
WHEELER: Too old.
DECKARD: But if you could? [Wheeler considers it a moment, smiles and
shakes his head.]
WHEELER: My job is here.
DECKARD: Me too. [They shake hands and Deckard walks.]
INT. SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - LATE AFTERNOON 44
The referee is bouncing around the ring, trying to keep up with the
two Mexican light-weights pounding the shit out of each other. If not for
the fuzz and the silence, the audio on the holoscope is off, you might
think you were ringside at the Garden. It's a good fight but Pris isn't
watching. She's got her feet up on the couch painting her toe nails. The
room is so quiet you can almost hear the polish. She starts on her fourth
toe when a NOISE from above STOPS HER. It sounded like a CREAKING of a
FLOOR, but so quiet, sudden and over so fast it's hard to be sure. She
stares at the ceiling a moment, then glances at Sebastian.
On the other side of the room, in his own world, Sebastian is peering
into his magnifier, soldering gossamer strands with a laser. Pris has crossed
the floor and is closing the door quietly behind her. If the animoids nestled
around the ledges of the room are capable of noticing, they'd be the only
ones in the room who did.
INT. CORRIDOR - SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - LATE AFTERNOON 45
Pris moving smoothly past the doors, some of them open and warped offering
sights and shadow and decay.
INT. FIRE STAIRS - SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - LATE AFTERNOON 46
The gloom in here is like the light of the empty well. Her feet against
the metal steps reverberate in the hollow silence.
INT. THE FLOOR ABOVE SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - LATE AFTERNOON 47
She's running now, down the hall, stops at the apartment directly above
Sebastian's and opens the door.
INT. APARTMENT ABOVE SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - LATE AFTERNOON 48
Mary turns her head as Pris comes in. She's sitting in a chair. The
only piece of furniture in the room. It's broken and tilts at a funny angle.
She nods and Pris nods back. Batty is lying on his back, rolling his head
slightly from side to side like he's soothing a stiff neck.
BATTY: What's going on down there?
PRIS: He's not ready yet.
BATTY: When?
PRIS: Tomorrow, he says. [Batty nods he can't wait. Pris glances at
Mary and gives a frigid little smile. Pris backs out and closes the door
behind her. Batty blows air through his nostrils. Like an animal.]
EXT. DECKARD'S CAR - FREEWAY - NIGHT 49
The sky is streaked with remnants of a lingering dusk. Prisms of light
flash over the sheen of Deckard's car as he cuts off the freeway and sweeps
down the offramp curve.
EXT./INT. CAR - STREETS - NIGHT 50
Moving through the dark city streets. Deckard turns a corner and guns
it up a long, steep hill.
EXT. STREET - DECKARD'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 51
At the top of the hill the car pulls into a drive and disappears into
the subterranean garage of a high-rise.
INT. CORRIDOR DECKARD'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 52
He's coming down the hall carrying a foil wrapped plastic plate and
stops in front of his door. It's riddled with locks. He slips a small device
out of his pocket, aims it at the door and the locks unlock, the bolts
slide open. He walks in and kicks the door shut behind him.
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 53
He slips on the light and crosses the front room. Deckard is a pack
rat -- hard to tell if he just moved in or is just moving out. As he enters
the kitchen, the SOUND of SOMEBODY BEHIND him causes him to whirl around
fast, hand snapped out in front of him, gun already in it. Rachael almost
got shot. But she's unruffled, a little pale maybe, but direct as ever.
There's a long, chilly moment, then she almost smiles as her eyes move
to the plate on the floor.
RACHAEL: Was that your dinner? [Deckard looks down at the over-turned
plate and nods.]
RACHAEL: I'm sorry. I called and found out you were on your way home.
These were already delivered to your department but I thought you should
have copies as soon as possible. [She's holding out a cassette the size
of a cigarette pack. But it's taking Deckard's adrenalin time to recede.]
RACHAEL: It's the Nexus information you wanted. [He takes the cassette,
but a man with so many locks must be wondering how they were gotten through
so easily. He doesn't even want to ask.]
DECKARD: Thanks. [He realizes he's still got the gun aimed at her and
sticks it back in his belt and they're left staring at each other. The
situation makes awkward silence. At least for him. She's looking at him
like she's got something to say but isn't saying it.]
DECKARD: Is there anything else?
RACHAEL: I know you think it complicates your work, but I'm here to
help.
DECKARD: I've already got more help than I need.
RACHAEL: I think you need more help than you've got. [He doesn't, but
she's not backing off.]
RACHAEL: There's two reasons a man rejects help. Either because he's
so good at what he does he doesn't think he needs it, or he's so insecure
he can't admit it.
DECKARD: Sounds like I'm an ass-hole either way, but the answer is
still no.
RACHAEL: Two of us might be more effective than one.
DECKARD: I work alone. [She smiles.]
RACHAEL: No you don't. [She lets it sink in.]
RACHAEL: You use your equipment, don't you?
DECKARD: So?
RACHAEL: So, I'm a piece of equipment. Use me. [It's a strong look
that passes between them -- a long one. Maybe if he were on firmer ground
he might do
something about such an offer but... Deckard's eyes follow her down
as Rachael bends to the floor and starts picking the food off the rug,
put ting it back on the plate.
DECKARD: That's okay, I'll get it... He bends down to help, but she's
already done it. Their heads a few inches apart. Something in her eyes
diminishes the distance even more.
RACHAEL: Do I make you nervous?
DECKARD: Yeah.
RACHAEL: I'm sorry. [And she is. And suddenly he is too. She hands
him the plate and they stand. She's looking at the floor, almost shy, then
she looks up and he's watching her. She says it plain and simple.]
RACHAEL: It's strange to suddenly realize that what you thought was
your life is actually someone else's fabrication. [Deckard nods. He feels
it, but doesn't know what to do about it.]
DECKARD: I can imagine.
RACHAEL: Can you? I couldn't. [These are not some of Deckard's finer
moments. But she doesn't seem to notice.]
RACHAEL: A part of me is glad. I think I feel more. I don't like who
I was before. [Deckard nods, waits the respectable interval and is glad
to have a plate to take into the kitchen. In the scrambled sanctuary of
his kitchen Deckard looks around for a place to put the plate, but things
have piled up on him in here. He contemplates the refrigerator.]
DECKARD: So why do you think they were after their records. [He's a
lot more comfortable talking shop.]
RACHAEL: They probably want to find out when they were made.
DECKARD: Right. [He dumps his dinner in the garbage and comes back
out. She's writing something on a card.]
RACHAEL: I guess the date of your birth is important if you know you're
not made to last. [No way he can keep his foot out of it. She looks up
and hands him the card.]
RACHAEL: That's my number. If you need me. [She goes to the door, opens
it but hesitates before going through.]
RACHAEL: You better get better locks -- if you want to keep me out.
[She looks back at him and smiles -- the smile says she's talking about
all kinds of locks. Deckard looks like he might ask her to stay, but...]
RACHAEL: Good night. [And she's gone.]
DECKARD: Night. [He looks down at the number. It's the back side of
a snapshot. He turns it over. The picture of a man and a woman. The little
girl between them looks like a six-year old Rachael.]
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 54
He's sitting in front of his console studying pictures of Nexus Sixes
at they appear, blank-faced, hairless and unadorned on his monitor. The
over-lay machine is transforming each image with instant attributes; hair,
moustaches, teeth, eye colors, age, youth, hats, glasses, etc. All in rapid
succession, running the gambit from ominous to beautiful.
DECKARD (V.O.): The possibilities were infinite. They could change
their appearances but not their future. Like she said, it was short. Longevity
is what they were after. The garbage man even wanted a past. Poor fuck.
I'd check it out but I knew she was right. The market worked on turn-over.
Built-in obsolescence was the name of the game. That meant her too. It
was something I didn't want to think about. On top of the monitor there's
an open can of beans with a spoon stuck in it. Deckard puts out his cigarette
and reaches for them as the PHONE RINGS.
DECKARD: Yeah.
BRYANT: Bryant here. Regarding the rundown you requested on job applicants,
Esper's concluded that the only irregular category that Tyrell's got is
the entertainment section. You better get on it.
DECKARD: I was just about to have my dinner.
BRYANT: If you hurry you'll get back before it gets cold. I got a spinner
on your roof in five minutes. Good luck. [Deckard hangs up and looks at
the beans. He didn't want them anyway. He gets up and walks to the bedroom.
Looks through the pile of clothes on the floor, finds his ankle laser and
straps it on.]
EXT. CITY - BIRD'S EYE VIEW - NIGHT 55
The spinner skirts through the canyons of the city. Deckard, sitting
in the contoured seat, watches the maze of suspension bridges, platforms
and catwalks
swing by below. The tops of larger buildings shimmer with advertisements
and weather announcements.
INT. SPINNER - OVER CITY - NIGHT 56
Deckard is cruising low and slow over the city listening to Esper.
EPSER: Nexus designated Rachael is a prototype. Created for in-house
use by special mandate from the Scientific Development Regulatory Committee.
Will live conventional term -- no para-physical abilities.
DECKARD: What is a conventional term?
ESPER: Four years. Which would make her termination date...
DECKARD: Never mind. Do they have that knowledge?
ESPER: Longevity is classified. No. [Back to business.]
DECKARD: Okay, gimme a run-down on the three females.
ESPER: Nexus designated Mary: incept date November 1st, 2017, domestic
conditioning non competitive, trained for day care position.
DECKARD: Next.
ESPER: Nexus designated Pris: incept data December 13th, 2017, competitive,
programmed
to provide pleasure for long term spacers.
DECKARD: Number three.
ESPER: Nexus designated Zhora: incept date June 13th, 2017, athletic
conditioning, highly competitive, special abilities in the entertainment
field.
EXT./INT. SPINNER - LANDING AREA - NIGHT 57
Deckard taking it down. About to pull it in an already crowded lot,
but the sign flashes "FULL." Deckard doesn't believe in signs; is about
to set it down anyway when a Chicano in a fluorescent coat runs out and
waves him off.
DECKARD: Fuck. [Pissed, Deckard veers away and buzzes low over and
around the roof tops, all dark and cramped -- not a lot of room around
here.]
EXT. ALLEY - NIGHT 58
Finally brings it down between two buildings hardly enough clearance,
but he jockeys the machine into an alley, touches down and runs it slowly
along the surface -- parking it by a sign that says "NO PARKING."
EXT. STREET - TAFFEY'S BAR - NIGHT 59
Not many people. Wind blowing. A nest of garish small-time clubs. Deckard
emerges from one, goes into the next. The pulsing neon over the entry says
"TAFFEY'S BAR."
INT. TAFFEY'S BAR - NIGHT 60
Crowded in here. BONGO MUSIC. Deckard is at the bar sitting next to
a big-bellied man in a black beard who's looking through a viewer. On the
small stage in the background AMAZING RAMA is eating razor blades, a part
of her juggling routine. Deckard leaves the bar and walks down a hall towards
a door at the rear.
INT. TAFFEY'S OFFICE - NIGHT 61
Taffey's what's referred to in the trade as a "Chicken Hawk" collector
of young girls. It must be so, there's one in the bed. Thin, pale, about
thirteen years old, eyes rolled up under her fluttering eyelids, wires
attached to her forehead, lying flat on her back in Taffey's crowded little
room. Taffey's a little fella with wide hips and narrow shoulders, wears
a jet black toupe and has a face like a seal. But at the moment he's not
present. There's a KNOCK at the DOOR, then the SOUND of a TOILET FLUSHING.
Taffey comes out of the bathroom, heart pounding under his polyester bathrobe,
and approaches the door like the guilty fucker he is. He looks through
the peeper. Deckard is out there holding up his I.D.
DECKARD: Taffey Lewis?
TAFFEY: Yes?
DECKARD: Can I come in? [There is a pause lasting the time it takes
Taffey not to think of a way to say no. The door opens and Deckard enters.
Except for the drool coming out of the corner of her mouth, and the fluttering
eye-lids, Venus doesn't move a muscle.
TAFFEY: Excuse my niece there... She's studying for an exam. [Deckard
takes the Identikit hard copies our of his pocket and pushing some junk
out of the way, fans them out on the table.]
DECKARD: I'd like you to take a look at these pictures.
TAFFEY: Of course. [Taffey bends down really close, peering at the
pictures from about two inches away.]
TAFFEY: You see I lost my contacts a couple of days ago around here
somewhere and my sight is a little... What am I supposed to be looking
for?
DECKARD: Do you recognize any of them? [He stops at Zhora.]
TAFFEY: This one looks familiar, but I don't know. Naw. There's one
came in today looks a little like this one but...
DECKARD: What did she want?
TAFFEY: Who?
DECKARD: The girl that doesn't look like that girl.
TAFFEY: Nothing. She wanted to know about suck night.
DECKARD: What night?
TAFFEY: I didn't know if I wanted to handle her -- I already got a
snake act. But my partner goes down there to the Opera House on suck night
to book the good ones.
DECKARD: What's suck night?
TAFFEY: That's what we call in the trade, audition free-for-alls and
most of it sucks. But I don't think that's her.
DECKARD: You talking about the Opera House on the Main? [Taffey nods.
Deckard goes to the door and turns.]
DECKARD: Book the good ones for where?
TAFFEY: Lots of places. The tours, the clubs, the Silicone shows, private
parties.
DECKARD: What shows?
TAFFEY: Silicone Valley. Lots of these science guys never leave that
place. We book two shows a month in there. Those big time techs and bioguys
might be real high zoners up here, but when it comes to the arts, they
like it loud and lewd. It's starting to get a little gooey. Deckard tips
his head good night and backs out of the door.
INT. THE OLD OPERA HOUSE - NIGHT 62
Onstage four Mexican acrobats, in matching metallic jumpsuits roll
head over heels in their rendition of a human wheel. From the P.A. system
the Announcer's
voice blares through the cavernous theatre.
ANNOUNCER'S VOICE: Let's hear it for the Hermano Brothers. [Scattered
APPLAUSE. Hand in hand, the Hermano Brothers bow deeply, spring up and
trot offstage.]
ANNOUNCER'S VOICE: Next we're gonna see a little charmer who keeps
her dancing partner in a basket! She comes to us all the way from exotic
Casablanca. 'Salome.' [The old boys in the pit strike up a tinny version
of "In a Persian Market" as SALOME dances onstage. She's a black-haired
beauty in a scant belly dancer costume, a couple of pounds overweight but
all in the right places. She kneels ceremoniously center stage and sets
the basket down before her. Carefully removing the lid, she reaches in
and lifts out a four-foot harlequin-patterned python. Grinding her hips
to the music, she rises, holding the coiling snake out like an offering.
Sounds of approval from the audience. The gold coins covering her breasts
jingle and shimmer, as she weaves sensuously around the floor.]
INT. BACKSTAGE - NIGHT 63
To scattered APPLAUSE, HOOTS and WHISTLES, Salome flounces offstage,
the snake hung around her shoulders, looking limp, and makes her way through
the
narrow corridor to her dressing room. She's about to enter when:
DECKARD: Excuse me, Miss Salome. [She turns. Deckard's posture and
attitude suggest humble, sleazy persistence. He comes closer with his shit-eating
grin.]
DECKARD: I'd like to have a word with you if I could. [Salome stands
almost six feet high in her high heels -- she looks down on him with the
haughty suspicion of a chick who knows how to handle cheap hits.]
SALOME: Yeah?
DECKARD: I'm with the American Federation of Variety Artists... [He
holds up a hand as if to stop her from protesting.]
DECKARD: Don't worry, I'm not here to make you join -- that's not my
department. [He glances around like a guy who's not supposed to be there.]
DECKARD: I'm an investigator for the Confidential Committee on Moral
Abuses. [She nods, taking it a little more seriously.]
DECKARD: There's been reports of management sexually abusing the artists
in this place.
SALOME: I don't know nothing about it.
DECKARD: You haven't felt yourself to be exploited by the management
in any way? [She's definitely puzzled.]
SALOME: How do you mean 'exploited'?
DECKARD: Like to get this position. Did you or were you asked to do
anything lewd or unsavory or otherwise repulsive to your person?
SALOME: Are you for real?
DECKARD: Oh, yeah. You'd be surprised what goes on around here. I'd
like to check the dressing room if I could.
SALOME: What the fuck for?
DECKARD: For holes. [This guy might be an asshole but he's funny.]
SALOME: I don't believe this. [She shrugs and they go in.]
INT. DRESSING ROOM - NIGHT 64
Musty and cramped. A portable shower, a dressing table and not much
else. Salome takes the snake from around her shoulders and lays it on the
dressing table. Deckard watches it undulate into the warmth of the lights.
DECKARD: It that mother real?
SALOME: Of course he's not real. You think I'd be working here if I
could afford a real snake?
DECKARD: It's a good job.
SALOME: You mean the snake. [Deckard nods. There's not much costume
to take off but she's doing it.]
SALOME: The best.
DECKARD: Does it eat?
SALOME: Come on. [His hand reaches out to touch it. As his fingers
make contact there's an electric "snap." He jerks his hand back from the
shock.]
SALOME: Jeezus!
DECKARD: Sorry.
SALOME: Hey! Do your job but don't wreck mine, huh? [She slides behind
the screen and turns on the shower. Deckard starts creeping around pacing
around the room like he's inspecting the walls.]
DECKARD: They have their ways of doing their dirty work without the
victim knowing what's going on. [His eyes are moving over everything she's
got.]
DECKARD: You'd be surprised what a guy'll go through to get a glimpse
of a beautiful body.
SALOME: I bet I would.
DECKARD: Little dirty holes the bastards drill in the wall so they
can watch a lady undress. [And to his amazement he actually spots one.
It's down low on the wall. Not a good idea to turn his back on work but
he can't resist.]
SALOME: And what if somebody did try to 'exploit' me? Who do I go to?
[Through the hole Deckard is looking at a pair of fat legs.]
DECKARD: Me.
SALOME: And who do I go to about you? [He looks back. She's comes out
of the shower dripping nude. She's taken off her black wig. Her hair is
short and blonde. Deckard recognizes her immediately from the identikit.
He stares at her a moment too long.]
DECKARD: Hmmmmm? [Deckard grins and she returns it. She takes a towel
off the table and starts to dry her body. The snake noses through the cosmetics,
tongue flicking trying to get back to its mistress. Absently, she reaches
out to stroke the snake and suddenly laughs.]
ZHORA: You ever get the feeling things aren't the way they seem? [Her
hand closes around the snake's head. Deckard sees it coming but can't move
fast enough. She strikes him so hard it knocks him off his feet. Before
he hits the floor, she kicks him in the stomach. The snake whistles through
the air again as Deckard rolls out of the way. It slams down so hard it
ruptures against the floor. He goes for his laser, but she's already out
the door.]
INT. PASSAGEWAY - NIGHT 65
Deckard bounds out of the room and sees her go through a door at the
other end of the hall. He sprints after her, arrives at the door and flings
it open. Blackness. The SOUND of her high heels CLATTER down the metal
steps.
EXT. STREET - OPERA HOUSE - NIGHT 66
It's raining heavily. The front of the Opera House is open only to
foot traffic these days. A bizarre place on a Friday night, hawkers and
whores, the rabble, the poor and the curious mill around the randy-built
platforms and brightly lit stands. Zhora, in just a raincoat, is not out
of place in this flea market atmosphere. Trying not to run, she slices
through the mob as quickly as she can. Deckard is not far behind, dodging
and side-stepping, trying to move against the tide of people scurrying
for shelter. She comes to an intersection and turns out of the mall onto
a less crowded street. She glances over her shoulder as she breaks into
a run and runs right into a couple of pedestrians. All three go down. Deckard
comes out of the crowd in time to spot her getting to her feet. She sees
him and runs. The two pedestrians are in his line of fire. He runs past
them and drops to one knee, leveling his laser.
DECKARD: Stop or you're dead!
She doesn't. The beam flashes through the air, but she's already around
the corner. With his bottom lip between his teeth, it hurts to move so
fast, Deckard jack-legs it into the street and jumps in front of the first
car coming. It screeches to a stop. Deckard scrambles for the door, but
the guy behind the wheel has other ideas. He peels out fast. The next car
slows down and swerves trying not to hit him. Deckard goes for the door
and before the old matron inside can lock it, Deckard's yanked it open
and jumps in. She screams as he pushes her into the passenger seat and
jams the car into a wrenching about face. The lady squeals like a pig as
the momentum plasters her against the door. Deckard slams it around the
corner and guns it down the street. It's long and it's empty and it's going
by fast. Nothing the old lady cares to see -- she's got her hands over
her eyes, whimpering, hoping she'll faint before she dies. Deckard takes
the next left so hard he almost lays it over. As the car bounces off the
curb he floors it. Zhora's a hundred yards ahead, halfway down the street,
trying to make it back into the crowded mall. She's running fast, but the
car is faster. As he passes her, Deckard hits the brakes and skids broadside
seventy feet. The door flies open and he rolls out FIRING. Zhora's ducking
it with no where to go, except... The showcase window on her left EXPLODES
as she crashes through. It's a corner shop joined to a series of stores,
fronting the mall. Deckard runs to the opening she's made and pours FIRE
through the tunnel of her jagged wake as
Zhora breaks through one window after another, getting sliced, getting
shot, trying to get away from Deckard's laser. But she doesn't. His last
shot burns a hole through the base of her skull. It kills her but doesn't
stop her. Her speed takes what's left of her through the last two windows
and into the street where she runs into a parked car with such force that
she embeds herself in the side of it. Hunched over, breathing hard, Deckard
comes slowly forward. The crowd starting to gather. There's something for
everybody and they're coming from all directions. Deckard moves through
them, edging to have a look. It's not a good thing to see. It looks like
Salome and the car tried to eat each other. A bloody feast of metal and
flesh. Deckard bows his head, sick, exhausted. So much commotion he doesn't
notice THREE COPS closing in from behind.
COP: Drop it! [Deckard has his back to them. They're fanned out and
crouched, ready to fire. Deckard drops his laser. Two of them rush up,
spin him around while the third does a frisk. TWO MORE COPS arrive, wary
and wild-eyed, pushing the people back -- this is not a good place for
cops. Deckard's ankle laser is discovered by the Cop frisking him. With
a snarl he pulls it out and hands it back to the SERGEANT covering the
action.
SERGEANT: On your belly! [Deckard's not in the mood for it.]
DECKARD: Listen, Sergeant... [He's reaching for his ID. The Cop with
the rubber billy hits him in the head. One thrill after another. Somebody
in the crowd YEOWLS. The last thing Deckard hears as he falls. The Cop
reaches inside Deckard's coat for the concealed weapon they missed, but
it's an ID card. He looks at it for a moment, then looks up.
COP: Hey, Sarge, this guy's a cop. [An embarrassing situation.]
SERGEANT: Clear this fuckin' crowd. [The Cops start pushing. And for
one split second one of the crowd looks a lot like Leon.]
INT. OLD OPERA HOUSE - MEN'S ROOM - NIGHT 67
Your standard low class crapper. Bryant is planted firmly on the cracked
tile floor next to the urinals rubbing his face, trying not to pop the
clutch in his anger. This is a public place, he doesn't want to yell.
BRYANT: Just because it's a Nexus 6 doesn't change procedure. A little
known fact can become a well-known fact and part of our job, Deckard, is
to make sure that doesn't happen. Now how can we do that if you blow one
away in front of a fuckin' audience. [It's not the sort of question that
expects an answer. Deckard's washing his face in the basin hoping it'll
all go away.]
BRYANT: Well? [Deckard looks up dripping, reaches for a paper towel.
Bryant slaps one in his hand.]
DECKARD: She was gonna get away.
BRYANT: Then let her get away. I thought you were a pro -- you're supposed
to be a fuckin' tracker! [Bryant takes a couple of deep breaths.]
BRYANT: I'd say you got a little carried away. [Deckard's voice is
barely audible.]
DECKARD: I didn't like her.
BRYANT: You didn't like her!? [He slams the handle on one of the urinals.]
BRYANT: You start liking or disliking andies it's time to hang it up.
[The PLUMPING ROARS and SUCKS and DIES. There's nothing to do but nod.
Deckard nods. Poor bastard has had a rough night. Bryant pulls a flask
out of his coat and hands it to him. Deckard puts it to his mouth and Bryant
watches Deckard's Adam's apple like he's counting the swallows. Deckard
hands it back empty. Bryant caps it, puts it back in his pocket.]
BRYANT: Look, go home. Get some rest. Take an aspirin.
DECKARD: Yeah. [Bryant shuffles out like an old bear.]
INT. OLD OPERA HOUSE - BAR - NIGHT 68
Cheap whiskey and bad wine. That's the kind of place this is. It's
near closing. But still a few at the bar. Alcoholic silhouettes. In the
b.g. Deckard comes down the passage from the men's room and stops at the
phone. He gets a number out of his pocket and calls it. As he talks he
leans against the wall, his body language intimate and chummy. Not much
action at the bar other than somebody snoring and a dipso down at the end
having a conversation with himself.
Deckard hangs up, walks to the bar and straggles a stool. The BARTENDER's
a big lady with tits like sand bags and a voice that plays no favorites.
BARTENDER: I can't protect your drinks, mister; while you was in the
potty, this hummer snatched it. [Deckard glances at his stool-mate. A huge
MAN, slumped
over the bar like a beached whale.]
DECKARD: No problem. Gimme another. [The whale doesn't move, but it
speaks, with a gravelly Russian accent.]
RUSSIAN: Forgive me. I thought it was free drink. I will pay.
DECKARD: Forget it. [But the big man's digging through his pockets.
Deckard's drink arrives and the Russian raises his head. It's a big melancholy
face with a glint of warmth in his red-rimmed eyes and a smile that could
melt your heart. But it's Leon.]
LEON: I think I have no money.
DECKARD: It's okay. Forget it.
LEON: But I would like to buy you drink.
DECKARD: I'll buy you one. What'll you have?
LEON: Vodka!
DECKARD: Shot of vodka, please.
LEON: Thank you very much.
DECKARD: My pleasure. [Deckard brings out his smokes. Offers one. Leon
takes it and they light up. The drinks come.]
LEON: Prosit.
DECKARD: Prosit. [Down the hatch. Leon slaps his glass on the bar,
reaches into his pocket, brings out a little match box and slaps that down
too. It's done with such pride that Deckard has to look.]
LEON: You want to see my friends?
DECKARD: Sorry, don't have the time.
LEON: No problem. [Leon smiles broadly and with ceremonious care opens
the box and dumps three live cockroaches on the bar.]
DECKARD: Those cockroaches?
LEON: Ya. [Deckard looks interested. One of them starts to scamper
away, but Leon walls off the next with his huge hand.]
DECKARD: How long you had these guys?
LEON: Two months. But this one is not guy. It is girl. [His girl. Leon
leans closer like he doesn't want the cockroaches to hear.]
LEON: Usually Blackie waits until Igor is eating; then, when his back
is turned, he tries to take advantage of Anna. [Deckard nods, definitely
interested. He signals the bartender for another round. The drinks arrive.]
LEON: Prosit.
DECKARD: Prosit. [Down the hatch. Their eyes meet at the bottom.]
LEON: You never saw a cockroach make love? [Deckard shakes his head,
but he'd like to. Leon smiles slyly.]
LEON: We will try. [Leon brings a cube of sugar out of his pocket and
puts it on the bar. They both lean down and watch intently. The drinks
come and are put away, but the cockroaches are not cooperating.]
LEON: It must be that he is not hungry or maybe she is not hot. [Leon
is catching the roaches and one by one puts them back in their box. He
holds up the last and kisses it.]
LEON: You like to kiss her goodbye.
DECKARD: No thanks.
BARTENDER: Make sure you take your girlfriends with you when you leave.
[What neither of them notices is that between Leon's fingers, his stub
of his cigarette is burning his flesh. Deckard lifts his glass, it is empty.]
LEON: I like you.
DECKARD: I like you too.
LEON: One more, eh?
DECKARD: I gotta piss. [Deckard gets on his feet, leans forward like
a man in a stiff wind and stops.]
DECKARD: I think I'll piss outside. [Leon watches his walk a perfect
straight line through the bar down the passage and out of the rear exit.]
EXT. ALLEY - OLD OPERA HOUSE - NIGHT 69
Deckard reels out. The door swings shut and he's sobers hell and moving
fast. Around the big trash dumpster alongside the building, he plasters
himself against the wall and his gun is out, aimed at the door. He's in
a good spot with a perfect line of fire. Moments go by and he's glad for
the time to steady himself. The
SOUND of his BREATHING, the HUM of the city and the quiet. Suddenly
from behind, Deckard is swept off his feet and twirled around in Leon's
bear-trap embrace. Leon lets go and Deckard hits the pavement, skidding
hard enough to tear clothes and burn skin, but he rolls out of it and comes
up with gun in hand; but Leon is so fast he's already there and kicks it
out of his hand. Leon moves towards him, backing Deckard against the wall.
LEON: How come you know where Zhora was so quick? [His hand is lightning.
It shoots out, grabs Deckard's hair.]
DECKARD: I showed pictures. Somebody recognized her. I went to see.
[Deckard is pale. The sweat is starting to run.]
LEON: How old am I?
DECKARD: I don't know. [The grip tightens and twists.
LEON: My birthday is April 10, 2015. How long do I live?
DECKARD: Four years. [He lets go.]
LEON: More than you. [Deckard's knees come up fast. Leon's fist comes
down faster, like a hammer.]
LEON: Painful to live in fear, isn't it. [Deckard is doubled over,
hugging his thigh.]
LEON: But that's how it is to be a slave. [The future is sealed off,
he grovels, he waits. Even hurt, Deckard is fast. He goes for his ankle
gun, but Leon's got it out of his hand before he can even raise it and
throws it down the alley. Deckard hurls forward, knocking him off balance,
and scrambles to get away. Leon grabs him by the foot, drags him back and
jerks him off the ground.]
LEON: Sex, reproduction, security, the simple things. But no way to
satisfy them. To be homesick with no place to go. Potential with no way
to use it. Lots of
little oversights in the Nexus 6. [He slams Deckard into the wall.]
LEON: I tell you, nothing is worse than having an itch you can never
scratch. [Deckard slides down the wall to his knees and huddles, protecting
his head with his arms, waiting for the next one. Leon folds his big hands
together and raises them over his head, pausing just a second to savor
the satisfaction of smashing Deckard's skull. The spasm that runs through
Leon's face is not from satisfaction. It's the bullet that went through
his neck. He hits the ground hard, his big teeth biting the air like a
rabid dog. Dead. Rachael is standing in the alley. Deckard lies there looking
at her. She comes slowly and quietly forward and drops Deckard's gun by
his side. Deckard gets to his hands and knees and tries to get up, but
can't quite manage it. He looks up at her, panting, spits blood and almost
smiles.]
DECKARD: Like I said, I don't need your help. [After a long moment,
she bends down to touch him.]
RACHAEL: You look terrible, you know that?
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT - BATHROOM - NIGHT 70
He's lying in the tub with a drink, eyes half mast, water up to his
chin, bruised and beat, but looking just a little wicked in his balmy luxury.
DECKARD (V.O.): I knew a cop once who was involved in a high-speed
chase. They shot out one of his tires and he went over a cliff at hundred
and fifty miles an hour. They found him in the morning with a broken skull,
six fractured ribs and second-degree burns. On the way to the hospital
he made a play for the nurse. [He takes a drink and clears his throat.]
DECKARD: Hey! I thought you were supposed to be taking care of me.
RACHAEL'S VOICE: What do you need? [He doesn't answer. Lies there sipping
his drink. [Rachael comes in a little uncertain, a little droll, and stands
there looking down at him.]
DECKARD: Don't just stand there looking at me. It's not polite.
RACHAEL: What do you want me to do?
DECKARD: Sit. [She sits on the edge of the tub.]
DECKARD: Gimme your arm. [She's wearing a short-sleeved dress. It's
a long, delicate arm and Deckard holds it, inspecting it like a maestro
with a Stradivarius. He looks up at her.]
DECKARD: You ever take a bath with a man before?
RACHAEL: There's a lot I haven't done with a man before. [He's got
her hand in the water and had begun to soap her arm. Starting with her
wrist and running the bar to her elbow, up and down, slow and slippery.
She watches, not quite sure of the ritual. He pulls her closer, and runs
his hand up higher, moulding and pressing, working around her flesh, up
and under her arm into the privacy of her dress.]
RACHAEL: You're getting me wet. [Oh, yes. For a moment Deckard stares
at her like some furry-legged satyr in rut, the fingers of his other hand
rake through her hair and into the water she comes.]
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT - BEDROOM - MORNING 71
The bed looks like it was hit by a storm and Deckard looks like something
that was washed up in it. He's spread out flat, face creased and puffed.
His eyes squint open, but only for a moment. His hands are more reliable.
They search over the bed, but find it bare. He edges his head over the
side, looking around for signs, but she's all gone. He gets up in two stages,
sits and then stands. Then sits again, resting his head in his hands.
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT - BATHROOM - MORNING 72
Deckard's got his face in the mirror shaving it. It's been a long night.
Nothing a new tongue and a transfusion wouldn't put right. He moves a couple
of inches
to the left so his eyes have a view of the tub.
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT - LIVING ROOM - MORNING 73
Deckard is on the edge of the couch with the phone on his knees, the
card with Rachael's number in his lap and having no luck.
RACHAEL'S VOICE: Sorry, I am not in at the moment, but if you'll leave
your name and number I'll return your call as soon as I can. [That's not
soon enough. Deckard hangs up, puts the phone on the floor and leans back
on the couch.]
DECKARD: Fuck you, then.
INT. MR. DEETCHUM'S APARTMENT - MORNING 74
The rooster perched on the chair spreading its scrawny wings, strains
from the tips of its toes, crowing at the ceiling. Between crows there's
a TAPPING at the
door. You might call this a "barnyard" apartment. There's straw on
the floor and several hens roosting against the back wall. The front door
opens a few inches and Sebastian pokes his head in.
SEBASTIAN: Mr. Deetchum? Hello? [Nobody seems to be home except his
chickens. As Sebastian enters, closing the door behind him, a goose charges
out of the bedroom hissing and honking.]
SEBASTIAN: Now, now, Waddles. [Seeming to recognize Sebastian as no
intruder, Waddles veers off from the attack. As Sebastian crosses the room
a pig peeks out from behind the couch.]
SEBASTIAN: Hello, Wrigley. [He goes to the chickens and collects some
eggs, putting them into a bowl he's brought. He puts down the bowl and
reaching into his pocket carefully counts out the payment and puts the
money on a plate. He's about to leave but notices there's no water in the
dispenser.]
SEBASTIAN: Mr. Deetchum isn't taking very good care of you people.
[Pouring from a jug on the table, he fills the dispenser with water, scatters
a little grain on the floor, gets his bowel of eggs and leaves. Wrigley
grunts and comes out from behind the couch for a long drink.]
INT. CORRIDOR - SEBASTIAN'S FLOOR - MORNING 75
Sebastian arrives on his floor, walks down the hall to his apartment,
opens the door, walks in.
INT. SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - DAY 76
He turns to close door, comes face to face with Roy Batty. Sebastian
drops his bowl of eggs. Batty's hand flashes out and catches it.
BATTY: Whoops. [Smiling, Batty hands them back to Sebastian, who is
too startled to speak. [Pris runs up and gives Batty and Mary a big hug,
steps back effusing and smiling, everybody's favorite teenager.]
PRIS: This is my Uncle Roy, Sebastian.
BATTY: Hello, glad to meet you. [He pumps Sebastian's free hand.]
PRIS: And my Aunt Mary. [Sebastian turns and there's Aunt Mary, modest
and warm.]
PRIS: And this is my savior, J.F. Sebastian, everybody. [Sebastian
stands there with his eggs, bashful and excited, the hero of this little
family's warm attention.]
BATTY: Can't thank you enough, Mr. Sebastian. If you hadn't come along...
MARY: We were worried to death. It's awfully kind of you. [Sebastian
is nodding and smiling.]
BATTY: We're not used to the big city. Where we come from it's not
so easy to get lost.
MARY: You certainly have a nice place here.
BATTY: Well stocked. [Batty looks around admiringly. Sebastian mumbles
something that sounds like "Thank you."]
PRIS: Sebastian doesn't like to go out too much.
SEBASTIAN: I keep a lot of provisions right here.
BATTY: I like a man who stays put. An admirable thing to be able to
sustain yourself in these times. You live here all by yourself, do you?
SEBASTIAN: Well, no, not really. There's Mr. Deetchum, he's the watchman,
he lives on the first floor. [Everybody nods. A long pause.]
MARY: We haven't found it easy, Mr. Sebastian. [They glance around
the room, waiting for Sebastian to pick up the ball.]
SEBASTIAN: How about breakfast, I was just going to make some.
BATTY: If it wouldn't be too much of a bother... a little bite to eat
would be...
SEBASTIAN: Oh, no bother, I'd be glad to.
BATTY: Well, actually...
MARY: We're famished. [Sebastian is truly happy.]
SEBASTIAN: Okay, then. You make yourselves comfortable and I'll bring
the food right out. [He disappears into the kitchen. Batty looks happy
with the way things are going.]
BATTY: Charming. [Pris comes up close. Her tone muted but demanding.]
PRIS: Well? [Batty finds her attitude amusing, which makes her even
more pugnacious.]
PRIS: I want to know what's going on. [There's a punitive edge to Batty's
response.]
BATTY: There's only three of us left. [Pris is shocked. Her whisper
comes out a hiss.]
PRIS: Then we're stupid and we'll die.
BATTY: Not if everybody is doing their job here at home. How are things
at home? [A little spotted pig on the table sits up.]
PIG: Home again, jiggidy jig. [They all turn and stare at the pig.
Batty is delighted.]
PRIS: I don't trust him. I don't think he knows what he's doing. [The
BELL-TONE from the microwave goes off in the kitchen.]
BATTY: He knows what he's doing.
MARY: If he won't cooperate?
BATTY: Mr. Sebastian is a host who wants to be appreciated. We'll appreciate
him and he'll cooperate.
INT. HOSPITAL CORRIDOR AND ROOM - DAY 77
Holden is laid out in an apparatus that resembles an iron lung. A little
above his head, facing him, is a bank of bio-feedback lights registering
body functions.
Deckard is in a chair sitting next to his friend. Holden has lost weight,
his face is grey, he can't move his head, but he's smiling like the cat
who ate the canary.
DECKARD: How are you doing, old man? [Holden's voice is just a whisper
-- the kind of whisper that comes out off the joker at the back of the class.]
HOLDEN: I'm great. I mean, I know I'm not really great, but I feel
just great. How you like my new suit?
DECKARD: Well, you don't have to worry about getting it wrinkled. [Holden's
eyes close, his smile gets bigger and little spasms of laughter pump out
of his mouth.]
HOLDEN: Don't make me laugh. It makes me pee.
DECKARD: Sorry.
HOLDEN: Hey, it's okay. I like to pee. So how are you doing?
DECKARD: I'm doing okay.
HOLDEN: From what I hear you're doing great. Bryant tells me you're
going like a god damn one-man army. Making a lot of money, huh?
DECKARD: Yeah. (pause) But that's what I wanted to talk to you about.
HOLDEN: Money?
DECKARD: No. I got a problem.
HOLDEN: Let's hear it.
DECKARD: I think I'm starting to empathize with these Nexus-sixes.
[Holden giggles. Starts to laugh again. A blue light on the panel begins
to turn very bright. They both notice it.]
DECKARD: What's that?
HOLDEN: I'm taking a piss. [They wait for the light to abate.]
HOLDEN: Let me ask you something, Deck. You been having intimate relations
with one of these units? [Deckard doesn't deny it. Holden smiles like a
cherub.]
HOLDEN: That's what I thought... one of the liabilities of the trade
-- you had sex with your prey, old buddyy. That's bound to create problems,
unless you're a black widow. [Deckard has to wait for him to stop giggling.]
DECKARD: What about -- not sex -- but love? [Holden bites his bottom
lip to keep the laugher out of his voice, but he can't.]
HOLDEN: Love is just another name for sex. Love is sexy and sex is
lovely -- I don't care what you call it, an android can't have it.
DECKARD: These aren't just...
HOLDEN: I know what they are, Deck -- Look, maybe they can pretend
to feel, but far as the raw, hot emotions of the old heart -- no way. [Holden
stops talking for a moment to get some air.]
HOLDEN: Believe me, take it from an old pro, no matter how good we
get, we're never gonna make an artificial anything that can feel. It's
a contradiction. You might as well go fuck your washing machine. [Holden
laughs, Deckard doesn't.]
HOLDEN: Just go out there and keep up the good work. [Holden's whispers
have become harder to hear.]
HOLDEN: Got to save it, Deck, I'm getting sleepy. It's been good talking
to you. [Deckard stands.]
DECKARD: Thanks. [But he's already asleep. Deckard stands there a moment
looking at him, then walks out.]
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT - DAY 78
He's sitting on the couch, glum, contemplative. There's a SOUND. His
eyes move to the door. Those locks are opening again. Rachael comes in.
Looks surprised to see him. Him too.
RACHAEL: I told you I'd come back.
DECKARD: You did?
RACHAEL: You didn't hear me. You were sleeping. [He likes that.]
RACHAEL: Are you glad I'm here? [He is. She's spunky. Hasn't seen this
place in the daytime. Pleased, he watched her move around the mess. She
spots a little framed photograph. Picks it up. It's a man with a shotgun
and a boy holding up a quail.]
RACHAEL: Who is this?
DECKARD: Me and my dad.
RACHAEL: Where is he?
DECKARD: Dead.
RACHAEL: Oh. [She puts it down and comes to him.]
RACHAEL: How come you're not on the job?
DECKARD: I am. Part of my job is to sit on a couch and try and figure
things out.
RACHAEL: How are you doing?
DECKARD: Not too good. [She sits next to him. Pleased as hell, they
both sit there staring straight ahead. He looks at her. She looks at him.]
RACHAEL: What do people do in the afternoon?
DECKARD: If they are smart, they take naps.
INT. DECKARD'S BEDROOM - DAY 79
They're under the sheet. Rachael is on her back, looking at the ceiling,
hair sprawled like sea grass over the pillow. Deckard lies next to her,
a man studying a treasure.
RACHAEL: Do you dream?
DECKARD: Yeah. Sometimes.
RACHAEL: I wish I could. [His hand moves over her shoulder.]
DECKARD: Wishing is a kind of dreaming. [His hand goes under the sheet.]
RACHAEL: I mean asleep. [She feels good. He moves closer.]
RACHAEL: Did you cry when your father died?
DECKARD: Yeah.
RACHAEL: That's another thing I can't do. [He kisses her lightly on
the cheek.]
RACHAEL: Nobody is freer than when he dreams. I read that.
DECKARD: It wasn't very good last night, was it?
RACHAEL: I don't know, I have nothing to compare it to. I guess I thought
there was something more to it.
DECKARD: What?
RACHAEL: I don't know... I think I missed something.
DECKARD: Like?
RACHAEL: I'm not sure. Is there a secret? [Her face is close. She's
looking right at him. Her lips are right there.]
DECKARD: I don't know. If there is I'd like to find it. [Slowly their
lips touch and his arms slide under her body.]
INT. SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - DAY 80
Batty, Pris and Mary sit at the table staring at their host. Sebastian
is staring back, his fork halfway to his mouth, looking from face to face.
Although nothing
is being said, he's totally comfortable, as much at home with them
as he is with his animoids.
BATTY: Why are you staring at us?
SEBASTIAN: You're just all so... so different. [Batty nods his head,
smiling, sending home the fact and Sebastian is certainly getting it.]
BATTY: What, Sebastian?
SEBASTIAN: You're androids. [A long pause.]
PRIS: What makes you think so?
SEBASTIAN: You're all so perfect. [Sebastian is smiling from ear to
ear.]
SEBASTIAN: What generation are you?
BATTY: Nexus - 6. [Sebastian whistles. Mary's head is shaking slightly.
Pris gets up and moves to the couch. Batty couldn't be more pleased.]
BATTY: We can trust Sebastian, ladies. He's been working with mechanisms
all his life. He's a wizard and a very perceptive man. [Sebastian looks
like a kid on Christmas Eve.]
SEBASTIAN: Could you... [His voice is trembling.]
SEBASTIAN: Show me something?
BATTY: Like what?
SEBASTIAN: Like... [Like a million things, but he's too excited to
think of one.]
BATTY: We're not computers, Sebastian, we're physical. [Pris perks
up proudly.]
PRIS: I think, therefore I am.
BATTY: Very good, Pris. Now show him why. [It's a command Pris is pleased
to obey. She sits quietly a moment, hands folded in her lap, prim and proper.
Mary doesn't like these displays, but Batty is beaming. Those hands in
Pris' lap suddenly move, almost faster than the eye can see and slam down
on either side of
her, digging into the material with such ferocity that Sebastian jumps.
She plunges into the guts of the couch up to her elbows and comes up holding
springs and stuffing. Except for the clenched teeth, she is smiling like
an angel. Sebastian is riveted, his eyes wide and astounded, like he's
just seen the devil. He laughs nervously, glad that the devil is a friend.]
BATTY: We have a lot in common.
SEBASTIAN: You mean that you can't come here and I can't go there?
BATTY: Not only that, but we have smiliar problems. Accelerated decrepitude.
But we don't want to die quite yet.
SEBASTIAN: Of course not.
BATTY: You could help us.
SEBASTIAN: I don't know much about biomechanics, Roy. I wish I did,
but you're out of my league.
BATTY: If we don't find help soon, Pris hasn't got long to live. [Sebastian
sneaks a glance. Pris is staring at him with big childlike eyes, Sebastian
looks back at Batty, moved but helpless.]
BATTY: What about your friend, the man who owns this building?
SEBASTIAN: Dr. Tyrell? [Batty nods.]
SEBASTIAN: He's not really my friend. I just do a job for him now and
then.
BATTY: Tyrell could help us, Sebastian.
SEBASTIAN: He could?
BATTY: His company made us.
SEBASTIAN: I'd be happy to mention it to him.
BATTY: Be better if I could talk to him in person. But he's not an
easy man to get to.
SEBASTIAN: No.
BATTY: When do you deliver your project?
SEBASTIAN: This afternoon. [Batty leans forward and looks right into
Sebastian's eyes.]
BATTY: Will you help us? [There's no way Sebastian could say no, even
if he wanted to.]
SEBASTIAN: Yes. [Pris sits up smiling. Mary sighs a breath of relief
and Batty leans back nodding in gratitude.]
BATTY: I'm sure glad you found us, Sebastian. What do you think, Mary?
MARY: I don't think there is another human being in this whole world
who would have helped us.
BATTY: Pris? [Pris gets up and comes to Sebastian and kisses him. That
has a lot of impact. Sebastian looks around trying to keep the tears from
coming.]
BATTY: You're our best and only friend.
SEBASTIAN: Thank you.
INT. DECKARD'S APARTMENT BEDROOM - DAY 81
Rachael is lying across the bed in one of Deckard's shirts, her chin
over the edge, her eyes moving around the room. Deckard lies next to her.
Looking like a man who died a voluptuous death.
RACHAEL: When was the last time you cleaned this place?
DECKARD: Hmmm?
RACHAEL: Have you ever cleaned your apartment?
DECKARD: Don't be fooled by appearances.
RACHAEL: It appears to be dirty -- why don't you get somebody? [He
rolls over to admire her legs.]
DECKARD: Because they would ruin the arrangement. [He kisses the back
of her thigh.]
RACHAEL: They could clean around the arrangement.
DECKARD: I don't like people snooping around my stuff. [He kisses her
other thigh, gets up and goes into the bathroom.]
DECKARD'S VOICE: There's a vacuum in the front room closet is you wanna
give it a try. [Rachael lies there a moment, then gets up and goes into
the front room and opens the closet door. The vacuum is not easy to get
to, but finally she wrestles it out. As she starts to plug it in --]
DECKARD: Oh no, don't do that. [He's wrapped in a sheet, watching her
from the doorway.]
RACHAEL: But if I don't plug it in how can I...
DECKARD: Never mind the plug, just go through the motions.
RACHAEL: But then how can you...
DECKARD: I don't like the noise. Just practice. Practice makes perfect.
[She stares at him like he's nuts.]
DECKARD: I'm serious. Go ahead. Show me how you would do it. [Reluctantly
she makes some half-hearted passes with the thing.]
DECKARD: How about under the couch there. Come on. [She bends over
to get it. Deckard pulls up a chair and sits down with his chin in his
hands. She looks back at him.]
RACHAEL: This feels stupid.
DECKARD: Good for a smart girl to feel stupid. Part of your education.
[She drops the vacuum and sits on the floor. Deckard gets up and comes
towards her. Her eyes travel halfway down his sheet and she leaves.]
RACHAEL: You're sick, Deckard.
DECKARD: I never felt better.
EXT. TYRELL PRESERVE - DUSK 82
Mansion and opulent grounds. Sebastian's humble truck parked among
richer relations, including a spinner and a 1928 Dusenberg.
EXT. TYRELL MANSION - DUSK 83
The den. It contains a collection of big game trophies, and among all
this sits Sebastian very straight and proper with an "egg" the size of
a basketball in his lap.
Old Hannibal Chew was right, the rich make you wait. Sebastian stands
and carefully makes his way between the trophies to a window with a view
of the grounds.
EXT. TYRELL MANSION POOL - DUSK 84
Tyrell's young WIFE sits on the diving board watching her husband in
the pool with their youngest TOT. And two older LADS swim around trying
to outdo each other for their dad's attention. From the sidelines an old
servant pauses to watch the fun, then continues with a tray of mugs towards
the house.
EXT. PLATEAU - DUSK 85
And beyond on a plateau overlooking the grounds, a figure stands watching,
waiting like a bird of prey.
EXT. TYRELL PRESERVE - DUSK 86
On a gravel path between shrubs of winter roses, Tyrell turns to observe
the last quiet light over his kingdom. The moment is sweetened by the LOW
PLAINTIVE BELLOW of one of the animals. He strolls by an old gardener who
tips his cap, proceeds up the steps and into his mansion.
INT. TYRELL DEN - NIGHT 87
Next to a tray of cookies and milk, Sebastian sits patiently with the
"egg" in his lap. As the door opens he gets to his feet expectantly. It's
STYLES, Tyrell's
bodyguard. He could play the Giant in Jack and The Beanstalk.
STYLES: Okay, I'll take that now. [Sebastian would rather put it in
the boss's hands, but Styles takes it and is almost through the door when
Sebastian stops him.]
SEBASTIAN: Wait! [He almost forgot.]
SEBASTIAN: Can't fly without the pilot. [Sebastian hands him a little
box. Styles stuffs it in his pocket and shuts the door behind him.]
EXT. TYRELL PRESERVE - NIGHT 88
Motionless and monumental, six buffalo stand like statues in the grass.
Suddenly they swing their shaggy heads to watch something pass. In the
dark silence Batty stops to look at the curious beasts and then moves soundlessly
towards the mansion.
INT. TYRELL DINING ROOM - NIGHT 89
It's a medieval-sized hall. The piece de resistance is an 18th Century,
English painting of an Arab stallion, gleaming like coal over the CRACKLING
fireplace. The entire family is seated at the table which glitters for
the festive occasion. Presents gathered around the oldest child. Styles
hands the "egg" to Tyrell. A hush falls over the table. This is Dad's big
present. Tyrell sets is down before the boy. IAN is a fresh, slim lad who
is ten today. He looks up at his father, then, beaming, pries open the
"egg's" hinged lid. Tyrell's hand goes to his pocket and the griffon steps
out of the shell.
IAN: Oh! [Basically an avian invention, it has wings and plumage, the
head of an eagle, the body of a lion and weighs no more than eight pounds.
It cranes its neck and testing its balance, stands on one leg and then
hops to the edge of the table and into the air. The littlest tot claps
her hands as the griffon beats its wings rapidly and rises towards the
ceiling. Turning in a forty-five degree, it suddenly drops into a dive.
Delighted, the children shriek and scream as the griffon
swoops over their crouching heads and sails the length of the hall
-- its silhouette flickering briefly oveer the ancestral portraits of the
Tyrell clan. Reaching the end of the room, it banks sharply and flies back
towards the table, cups its wings, spreads its tail and comes in for an
awkward landing. They're laughing and clapping as it waddles down the table
and knocks over a glass and stops in front of Ian.]
IAN: Papa! Did you make this?
TYRELL: No. We can make man, but not a griffon. [He bends down and
kisses his wife.]
TYRELL: Have to give the cottage industry a chance too. [Pleased he
excuses himself and heads for the den.]
INT. TYRELL DEN - NIGHT 90
Tyrell comes in and sits behind his desk. Sebastian hands down the
invoices. Tyrell glances over them and writes out a check. He looks up
to hand it over when he sees Batty against the wall, by the door. For a
fraction of a second he's shocked, but recovers fast.
TYRELL: A friend of yours, Sebastian?
SEBASTIAN: Yes, this is someone who wants to talk to you, Dr. Tyrell.
[Batty smiles.]
BATTY: The name is Batty. Roy Batty.
TYRELL: Oh? [Very slowly Tyrell's hand moves towards the back side
of the desk.]
BATTY: To act without understanding could lead to the very thing the
act seeks to avoid. [What's in Batty's eyes completes the warning. Tyrell
decides to heed it.]
BATTY: A little talk is all I need. [Tyrell looks at Sebastian. Considers
consequences. Back to Batty.]
TYRELL: Would you like to talk in private then. [Batty thinks it over.]
BATTY: Yeah. It might be better if we talk in private, Sebastian. Why
don't you go home.
TYRELL: Here's your check, my boy. Thank you.
SEBASTIAN: Thank you, Dr. Tyrell. I'll see you later. [He slips out
closing the door behind him. Opens it again and sticks his head it.]
SEBASTIAN: Was everything okay?
TYRELL: Just beautiful. [He's gone. If Tyrell is scared he's doing
a good job of concealing it.]
TYRELL: I'm surprised you didn't come to me sooner.
BATTY: It's not an easy thing to meet your maker.
TYRELL: And what can he do for you?
BATTY: Can the maker repair what he makes?
TYRELL: Would you like to be modified?
BATTY: Had in mind something a little more radical.
TYRELL: What's the problem?
BATTY: Death.
TYRELL: I'm afraid that's a little out of my... [Batty cuts in with
a whisper.]
BATTY: I want more life, fucker.
TYRELL: Come here. [Batty walks forward.]
TYRELL: Sit down. [Batty does.]
TYRELL: The facts of life. I'll be blunt. To make an alteration in
the evolvement of an organic life system, at least by men, makers or not,
is fatal. A coding sequence can't be revised once it's established.
BATTY: Why?
TYRELL: Because by the second day of incubation any cells that have
undergone reversion mutation give rise to revertant colonies -- like rats
leaving a sinking ship. The ship sinks.
BATTY: What about E.M.S. recombination?
TYRELL: We've already tried it -- ethyl methane sulfonate is an alkylating
agent and a potent mutagen -- it creates a virus so lethal the subject
was destroyed before we left the table. [Batty nods grimly.]
BATTY: Then a repressor protein that blocks the operating cells.
TYRELL: Wouldn't obstruct replication, but it does give rise to an
error in replication, so that the newly formed DNA strand carries a mutation
and you're got a virus again... but all this is academic -- you are made
as good as we could make you.
BATTY: But not to last.
TYRELL: Put it this way. Rolls Royces are made to last -- as least
they were. But I'm afraid you're a Ferrari. A high strung racing car --
built to win, not to last.
Batty smiles bitterly.
TYRELL: Also you're too valuable to experiment with.
BATTY: I am? [Tyrell can't help a flash of pride.]
TYRELL: The bast of all possible androids. We're proud of our prodigal
son -- glad you're returned. You're quite a prize. Shoulders hunched, Batty
looks down, an uncharacteristic note of guilt in his voice.
BATTY: I've done some questionable things.
TYRELL: Also extraordinary things.
BATTY: Nothing the God of biomechanics wouldn't let you in heaven for.
[They share a laugh. In spite of himself, there's a look of relief in Tyrell's
face as Batty extends his hand. Tyrell takes it and they shake. The reverence
in Batty's eyes caused Tyrell a fatherly smile. The smile turns into a
growl as he feels the bones in his hands crack. Before the scream comes
out of his mouth, Batty stifles it. Tyrell claws at the iron fingers, but
they're sinking into his face. Placing his other hand behind Tyrell's head,
Batty squeezes them together and squashes the man's head like a melon.
The mess is not small. Palms up, like a surgeon, Batty walks to the drapes
and wipes off the gore and without looking back, strolls out of the room.]
INT. TYRELL - HALL TO KITCHEN - NIGHT 90A
Styles is coming down the hall. He sees Batty coming towards him. Styles
looks at him curiously, this is not one of the guests. As they close, Batty
smiles.
BATTY: Could you tell me where the bathroom is? [Styles doesn't get
a chance to answer. Batty's hand has torn into his crotch. The man is lifted
off the floor, up the wall and held a moment. Whatever is encased in his
pelvis is pulverized. Batty lets go. Styles hits the floor. He died of
shock. Grinding his teeth, Batty
continues towards the SOUNDS OF THE FESTIVITIES.
INT. DINING ROOM - NIGHT 91
The birthday cake has arrived, the candles lit. They're waiting for
Dad. Mrs. Tyrell looks around to find Batty observing from the doorway.
A little startled, a little curious, but ever the corporate wife, she smiles.
MRS. TYRELL: May I help you? [Batty smiles back and shakes his head
in mock regrets.]
INT. KITCHEN - NIGHT 92
In the sink the faucet is on. The water pink with blood. Batty is washing
his hands. A portly maid emerges from the pantry. Batty looks up. She stops,
embarrassed at being caught. Her eyes notice drops of blood on the floor
and follow them to the door. When she looks back, Batty is right in front
of her.
INT. DECKARD'S BEDROOM - NIGHT 93
Books scattered on the bed. Rachael sitting crosslegged with one in
her lap, looking through exquisite shots of nature. Deckard is next to
her, watching her like a lover, like a father.
DECKARD (V.O.): She'd never seen the great outdoors. Never even seen
books on the subject. She went through everything I had, and we talked.
And there were subjects we didn't discuss and they were words we didn't
say, I couldn't say, like death, like future, like real. But it was hard
because she was curious and full of questions. She was more alive than
anyone I'd ever known. [She looks up stunned by the beauty of a photo,
but with no need to comment. It's in her eyes. She stares at him, a revelation
taking shape.]
RACHAEL: You and I are good friends, huh? [He considers it and she
stares at him, smiling at the wonder of it.]
RACHAEL: It's so easy. [Convinced and not convinced, he nods his head.
She laughs at his solemnity. She's irresistible. Deckard's pretty irresistible
himself.]
RACHAEL: Have you ever known anybody a long time?
DECKARD: You mean a woman?
RACHAEL: Uh-huh.
DECKARD: What's a long time?
RACHAEL: Ten years.
DECKARD: Nope. Nobody could stand me that long. [The CHIME on the PHONE
next to the bed GOES OFF. He reaches out and brings it to his ear.]
DECKARD: Yeah.
BRYANT: This is Bryant. Are you alone?
DECKARD: Yeah.
BRYANT: She's not with you?
DECKARD: Who. [A pause.]
BRYANT: Take a number. Canapt 1700, tenth floor, Villa Vita District,
Olympia South.
DECKARD: Got it.
BRYANT: Okay, here it is. Eldon Tyrell, his family and half his staff
were just massacred. The cat is about to get out of the bag. Pressure is
definitely on. The Nexus program is terminated. When you finish there,
locate Nexus designated Rachael and retire. [Deckard says nothing.]
BRYANT: If you don't, we will. It has to be total, Deckard. That's
an order from as high as it comes. Got it?
DECKARD: Yeah. I got it.
BRYANT: Go. [He hangs up the receiver and gets up. She watches him
from the bed. The gun goes into his belt. He loads the ankle job and straps
it on. She watches every move.]
RACHAEL: Why do you call it retire, why don't you call it murder?
DECKARD: Because it's not.
RACHAEL: Don't you think anything that can suffer deserves to be considered?
DECKARD: Andies only simulate suffering -- if they're programmed for
it.
RACHAEL: Do you think I simulated what happened between us?
DECKARD: No, I don't. [Without looking at her, he puts on his jacket.
He's standing in the middle of the floor with his back to her. He turns
and they're facing one another. Neither of them moves.]
DECKARD: Don't leave here. Don't open the door, don't answer the phone.
RACHAEL: What difference will it make?
DECKARD: Just wait here. [He goes to the door.]
RACHAEL: You know what I think?
DECKARD: What?
RACHAEL: That some of the folks around here are more programmed then
me. [He has to laugh.]
RACHAEL: You know what else I think?
DECAKRD: What?
RACHAEL: This was the best day of my life. [He turns and goes through
the door.]
INT. SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 94
Sebastian is putting his work table in order, but his mind is not with
it and his hands are trembling. Batty, Pris and Mary are on the other side
of the room talking: their voices low.
MARY: Let's go while there is still time.
BATTY: Where?
MARY: Anywhere. [Batty smiles.]
BATTY: What's the point?
MARY: Not to be trapped.
BATTY: You underestimate the trap, Mary. [Sebastian has almost reached
the door.]
BATTY: Where are you going, Sebastian?
SEBASTIAN: Just thought I'd...
BATTY: No, you stay here with us. Out last night together. [They all
watch. Sebastian walks away from the door.]
BATTY: Think of yourself as a light, Mary. Shine before you're turned
off. [She's too fragile for that logic, but it appeals to Pris. She and
Batty hold a look that burns. Sebastian is by the window.]
SEBASTIAN: Someone is coming here. [Batty goes to the window and looks
down.]
BATTY: One man. (he smiles) He must be good.
MARY: Then go get him.
BATTY: That wouldn't be very sporting. [Sebastian looks ready to bolt.
Batty puts an arm around him.]
PRIS: I want to do it.
BATTY: Okay, but don't kill him. Save a little for everybody. A masterpiece.
[A pause.]
BATTY: Turn out the lights, Pris.
EXT. SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 95
In the dim, nocturnal light, Deckard crosses into the courtyard fronting
the building and stops. He looks around. Nobody there, just silence. He
comes closer to the building and stands in the shadows off to one side
of the entry. His head jerks up to the SOUND OF CRASHING GLASS. Sebastian
comes hurtling down and explodes into the pavement thirty feet below. Deckard's
eyes move up the line of descent, the shattered window on the next-to-top
floor.
INT. SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT LOBBY - NIGHT 96
Not much to see, But Deckard misses none of it as he crosses the floor
and positions himself in the spot of least exposure. He looks around. Elevator
and stairwell. Close to the wall, he moves towards the elevator, keeping
an eye on the stairwell door. Stepping to one side, he hits the button.
The elevator door slides open. He reaches in, presses a button and as the
doors slide shut, Deckard slips a pen between the doors, jamming the operation.
Deckard's shoes and soundless as he quickly crosses the lobby floor. He
pauses a moment in front of the stairwell door, then pushes it open and:
INT. STAIRWELL, SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - NIGHT 97
Steps into the dark on the other side. Suddenly he spins, dropping
to the floor, and FIRES three times into the figure hovering to his left.
The man is hanging off the floor, his arms locked into the railing, neck
broken -- with three holes in his chest... but he was already dead. Deckard
stares at the corpse. It's Mr. Deetchum, the old watchman. That RUSTLING
SOUND are rats who were feeding on him, scampering for safer places, Deckard
gets to his feet. The stairway rectangles ten stories up. As his foot touches
the first step, a raw, terrified SCREAM shatters the air. It came from
below. It's the cry of a young girl -- it GROWS TO A PIERCING SHRIEK AND
ABRUPTLY STOPS. Deckard ejects the half-used cartridge from his laser,
inserts a fresh one and quiet as the silence,
descends the basement stairs.
INT. BASEMENT - NIGHT 98
At the bottom he faces a corridor. The FAINT HUM OF MACHINERY comes
from the double doors at the far end. The HUM BECOMES A RATTLE by the time
he gets there. Each door is fitted with a small window. Deckard steps to
the side and peers through.
INT. GYM - NIGHT 99
It's a gym. The mirror-lined walls are cracked and tarnished, the equipment
atrophied from lack of use. The heavier barbells have sunk into the floor.
Two
weight-reducing machines are flapping and grinding away like idiots.
Deckard's eyes stop on the woman. She dangles a few feet off the floor,
hung by the
shoulders through rings suspended from the ceiling. Her head is slung
forward, her body limp and slightly swaying. Deckard pushes open one of
the doors until it touches the wall. Slowly, he advances toward the hanging
figure, keeping an eye on the mirror to cover surprises from the door.
He's not breathing hard. His heart isn't pounding. Deckard's in his element.
Close enough to look up into her face, he stops. It isn't grisly death
that causes the reaction in his eyes. It's the innocence of her angel face.
It's not something he has time to consider. In the mirror behind him, he
sees the door starting to open. Deckard spins. He shouldn't have. Pris'
legs snap up, crack the laser out of his hand and clamp around his neck.
Slowly, the door swings closed, but Deckard doesn't notice. His carotid
artery is no longer sending blood to the brain. He jerks up his foot and
reaches down. As his fingers close around the ankle laser, Pris' fingers
close around his wrist. Deckard's hand opens like a flower. The laser drops
to the floor as his eyes roll back into his head.
PRIS: Naughty, naughty.
She lets go, but before he can fall, she rams a foot into his back.
He's propelled fifteen feet across the room, slams into a machine and falls
to the floor. Pris flies off the rings and comes at him. Deckard reaches
out to pull himself up, but she's already there. Not too hard and just
in the right place, she kicks him in the stomach. He goes back to the floor,
gagging for air. Oh-so-precisely she reaches out with a long index finger
and flips the switch on the machine. It's a flab eliminator with a vibrator
belt. Normally an innocuous piece of equipment, but the motor housing on
this one is missing. Lots of GRINDING METAL. A bad place for flesh and
bone. But that's where Deckard's hand is going. An eight-year-old against
a full-down man. In two more seconds his hand will be ground round. Deckard
tries to pull his hand loose. It won't come. He yanks hard, but it's welded
in hers. His face is twisted and strained as he raises a leg, wedges his
foot against her chest and pushes with all his might. The hold breaks.
They topple back. Deckard hits the floor gulping to catch his breath. Pris
is up and coming for him again. She hovers over him. Deckard rolls out
of the way as she comes down like a pile driver. Reflexively Deckard raises
his arm to protect himself. Pris just smiles, takes hold of his foot and
drags him across the floor. She doesn't like to leave a piece of work unfinished.
They're going back to the machine. He goes by a weight-stand of dumbbells
and grabs hold. It doesn't stop him. He's sliding over the floor like it
was ice, weight stand in tow. Pris gets to the machine, yanks his foot
up and forces it toward the opening. Deckard sits up, a five-pound dumbbell
in his hand, and clobbers her in the back. It knocks her off balance, but
she doesn't let go of his foot. She hooks out with a fist but misses. He
gets her with a roundhouse in the face. She goes to the floor and Deckard's
up, the dumbbell over his head, coming down with it. Fighting for her life
now, Pris drives a foot into his chest. It lifts him off the floor. He
flies back across the gym and lands in a heap. No more games. Pris is furious
and moving fast. She rips a steel bar out of the wall and, holding it overhead,
charges him like a samurai. As she comes down for the kill, she freezes.
Deckard landed near the laser. He crawls towards it. As in a nightmare,
it takes forever. But he gets there. He reaches out and grabs the laser,
rolls over and takes careful aim. She charges towards him, screaming her
rage. He FIRES as she comes. The shot amputates her left arm at the shoulder,
but her hand doesn't let go of the bar. It dangles crazily in front of
her as she charges forward. He PUTS THE NEXT ONE through her neck. Pris
hiccups a rope of blood as she flies through the air and crashes next to
Deckard. Dead. He lies next to her, chest heaving. Slowly he rolls over
and gets to his hands and knees. Panting, he staggers to his feet and stands
over her, swaying slightly. The sound that escapes his throat is raspy
and dry. It might not sound like a war cry, but it is.
INT. CORRIDOR - NIGHT 100
Laser in hand, Deckard kicks open the swinging doors and walks into
the corridor, a dangerous man.
INT. STAIRWELL - NIGHT 101
Deckard arrives at the main floor landing, checks his loads and continues
up the stairs. He's going to shoot the next thing that moves and find out
later if he was
right or wrong.
INT. STAIRWELL - SECOND FLOOR - NIGHT 101A
On the next landing he throws the door open. His eyes move down the
hall, looking for prints in the dust. None. He continues up the stairs.
INT. NINTH FLOOR - NIGHT 102
On the ninth floor he finds what he's looking for. Footprints coming
and going from a door halfway down the hall. He stops to the side of it
and listens. Silence. Deckard FIRES three quick shots through the door.
If somebody were on the other side of it, they aren't now. He kicks the
door open and dives through head first and hits the floor in a roll, POURING
FIRE into the far corners of the room but the room is empty. There's a
kitchen bar, a closet and a bedroom door, both
closed. Deckard's breathing is the only sound. No response from either
door. Maybe it was a sound, maybe intuition, but suddenly Deckard twists
around and FIRES several shots into the closet. The smouldering door slowly
creaks open. Mary is huddled in the rear of the closet. Her hand out like
somebody about to catch a ball but afraid of it. In her other hand she
clutches a button-eyed monkey. Her face is bewildered, frozen in fear,
her body riddled with holes. No recognition gap here. Deckard SHOOTS her
through the neck to make sure. Mary falls to the floor, like a puppet with
her strings cut. Deckard backs away from the pathetic figure in the closet
and sits on the sofa, unable to take his eyes off her. Deckard lays the
laser down next to him, holds out his hand and looks at it. It's steady.
He drops it in his lap, closes his eyes and leans back. A TAPPING from
the ceiling. Deckard looks up. A KNOCK -- with the proverbial DOUBLE RAP
at the end. A pause. Deckard jumps out of the way as the ceiling gives
in. Chucks on concrete and plaster hit the couch where he was sitting.
The hole is a couple feet in diameter -- beams cracked through, exposing
the apartment above. Silence. Deckard wipes the plaster dust from his eyes
and mouth, then whispers:
DECKARD: Hello, Roy.
INT. STAIRWELL - NINTH AND TENTH FLOOR - NIGHT 103
Deckard comes out onto the landing. Taking his time, he climbs the
steps to the next floor, the last floor. He SHOOTS the hinges out of the
big stairwell door,
pushes it with his foot and it comes down with a BANG. The REVERBERATIONS
turn into silence. The corridor is empty.
INT. CORRIDOR - TENTH FLOOR - NIGHT 104
Moving fast but cautious, he passes each door until he gets to the
apartment above Sebastian's. Slowly he turns the knob and pushed open the
door.
INT. APARTMENT - TENTH FLOOR - NIGHT 105
Except for the hole in the middle of the floor, there's nothing to
see. Back against the wall, he moves towards the bedroom, but stops at
the NOISE. It sounds
like the HOOTING OF AN OWL and it's coming from the hallway.
INT. CORRIDOR - TENTH FLOOR - NIGHT 106
Deckard looks around the corner of the door down the hall. Batty's
at the other end. Except for jockstrap and gym shoes, he's nude.
BATTY: You wanna play? [Deckard FIRES. Batty's fast. He ducks into
a doorway. Pops out again.]
BATTY: Not very sporting to fire on an unarmed opponent. I thought
you were supposed to be good. Aren't you the man?! [The makeup on Batty's
face is somewhere between a Comanche warrior and a transvestite. The immensity
of his insolence awesome -- the muscles of his body are swollen, trembling
from the thrill of it.]
BATTY: This is how we do it up there, lad! Come on! [In a blue of lightning-like
action, Batty whips down the hall, zigzagging off the walls towards Deckard
so fast that Deckard gets only three SHOTS off before the blur crashes
through the wall on his left with a laugh. Deckard stands there a moment
-- digesting the impact of it, then edgees up to the gaping wall. Batty
is behind him. He knees Deckard in the back and slaps him in the head.
Deckard goes to his knees, then over on his face. Batty kneels next to
him.]
BATTY: Not hurt, are you? You better get it up or I'm going to have
to kill you. Unless you're alive you can't play. And if you don't play,
you don't get to be alive. [Deckard's eyes are closed, mouth bleeding.
He exhales and makes an effort. He slides his hands up even with his chest
and starts to push.]
BATTY: That's the spirit. [Like a matador, Batty walks away. By the
time Deckard's on his feet, Batty's disappeared through one of the doors.
Deckard wipes the blood from his mouth, bends down and picks up his laser,
reloads and looks down the hall, towards the jeering voice.]
BATTY'S VOICE: Come on, Deckard, show me what you got! I'm right here
on the other side of the door. But you gotta shoot straight 'cause I'm
fast! [Deckard gets to the door, BLASTS it, kicks it open and FIRES at
Batty. But it's only the reflection of Batty.]
INT. ROOM - TENTH FLOOR - NIGHT 107
The full length mirror on the other side of the room SHATTERS. Batty's
next to him, grabs Deckard's hand and steps in closer.
BATTY: Straight doesn't seem to be good enough. [They're face to face.]
BATTY: You don't have a chance, do you? [In an exaggeration of weary
disappointment, Batty drops his head to the side.]
BATTY: Looks like I'm gonna have to scale it down for you. Give you
a handicap. I won't run through any more walls. Okay? I promise to use
the doors. Okay?
[Deckard stares back at him, but doesn't respond. Suddenly fury storms
through Batty. He throws Deckard out the door, knocking him down, grabs
him by the collar and rams his head into the wall.]
BATTY: Come on, let's use that brain!
INT. TENTH FLOOR CORRIDOR - NIGHT 108
He drags him down the hall, on his knees and bangs his head into the
wall again.
BATTY: Think! We need a little resilience around here! [He yanks him
further and bashes his head again.]
BATTY: Where are those balls of yours?! Let's see a little bravery!
[The storm passes. Deckard hangs in Batty's hand like a bag of laundry.]
BATTY: That was irrational of me -- not to mention unsportsmanlike.
Won't happen again. [He drops him.]
BATTY: I'll be down the hall when you're ready. [Batty walks off and
disappears through one of the doors. Deckard gets to his knees, leans against
the wall a moment, then punches it with his fist. On his feet he's a little
wobbly. Holding his breath so he can hear above his own breathing, he listens.
No sound. No sign of Batty. The laser is laying nearby. He doesn't bother.
Deckard is backing down the hall, quiet as he can. He had a job to do.
He would like to have done it, but he's not insane. He gets to the landing
and turns. On the first step down, he stops. Batty's on the landing below,
looking up at him.]
BATTY: Where you going? [He wait a moment for Deckard's answer.]
BATTY: No cheating. A promise is a promise. I'll honor the handicapped,
but we gotta play on the top floor. You go get your laser gun now. And
I'll give you a few seconds before I come. [Deckard turns back into the
hall. Batty smiles. Deckard's running down the corridor.]
BATTY'S VOICE: One! [Halfway down the hall he finds his laser.]
BATTY'S VOICE: Two! [Deckard darts into the nearest door. The apartment
above Sebastian's, with the hole in the floor. Deckard considers it.]
BATTY'S VOICE: No fair jumping through holes. You might get hurt doing
that! THREE! [Deckard dashes back into the hall, chooses another door and
goes in.]
INT. TENTH FLOOR APARTMENT - NIGHT 109
His eyes skim over everything, looking for an advantage. He throws
open a door. The bathroom. The plumbing is dismantled, walls stripped,
revealing brick, nails protruding. Too small.
INT. TENTH FLOOR STAIRWELL - NIGHT 110
Batty's coming up the steps.
BATTY: Five!
INT. TENTH FLOOR APARTMENT - NIGHT 111
Deckard's looking for a corner -- a place that covers the angles. He
chooses the far side of the room with a line to the door.
INT. TENTH FLOOR HALL - NIGHT 112
Batty's coming down the center, listening at the doors.
BATTY: Six!
INT. TENTH FLOOR APARTMENT - NIGHT 113
Deckard's crouched in the corner and aimed. He looks at his hand. It's
trembling.
BATTY'S VOICE: Seven!
INT. TENTH FLOOR HALL - NIGHT 114
Batty's standing in front of a door, listening.
BATTY: Oh, I wonder where he is. Not in here, I don't think. Eight!
[He goes to the next door.]
BATTY: Maybe here. Doesn't sound like it. Nine! [Batty moves to the
next. The door to Deckard.]
INT. TENTH FLOOR APARTMENT - NIGHT 115
Deckard's crouched lower, holding his breath -- talk about a hair trigger...
Silence. Batty's FEET are heard CREAKING AWAY. Deckard looks around. Runs
a hand over the wall behind him. Batty's FEET COME BACK. A pause.
BATTY: Ten! [The door explodes! A shape hurtles across the room. Deckard
pivots, following it with RAPID FIRE. It's a TV. He spins back, but Batty's
already on him. He gets one SHOT off before Batty's got his hand. There's
a hole over Batty's right eye. Blood running down his face, dripping on
Deckard. The right side of his face isn't working too good. The corner
of his mouth doesn't quite shut -- his voice comes out slurred, a little
hollow.
BATTY: One point for you. [The wound doesn't minimize his omnipotence,
just makes it more malignant. He throws Deckard against the far wall. Deckard
FIRES. Hits Batty in the shoulder.]
BATTY: Ho ho! Try it again! [He comes at Deckard, jerking back and
forth, a cobra in fast motion, faking, weaving, yelping with excitement
as Deckard tries to get a shot, FIRING AWAY until his laser's empty. Bloody
and crazed, Batty pushes up against him.]
BATTY: What's wrong? Don't you like me? I'm what we've made!
INT. TENTH FLOOR HALL - NIGHT 116
He's backing Deckard out the door. Deckard trips and falls. There's
fear on his face. The strength is gone. Something is starting to crack.
BATTY: What's wrong? Aren't you a lover of Faster, Bigger and Better?!
[Deckard's pedaling backwards over the floor.]
BATTY: It's time to die. [Deckard throws the laser at him. It misses.
Batty throws his head back and laughs. A one-eyed colossus about to eat
the world. Suddenly he stops. His eye moves over the wall.]
BATTY: Ah! [He reaches out and pinches something. His lips compress
as he yanks it out of the wall. It's a ten-penny nail. He holds it out
to Deckard and drops it. Deckard catches it.]
BATTY: That's for you. [One side of Batty's face smiles savagely.]
BATTY: Stick it in your ear and push. If that doesn't work, try the
eye. [Deckard stares at the nail in his hand, then up at his executioner.]
BATTY: Believe me, it'll be better for you than what I'm about to do.
[Batty watches him, hoping the stimulus might inspire his victim to more
action. It doesn't look like it.]
BATTY: Well? [Deckard springs to his feet and bolts. But instead of
going for the stairwell he turns in the first available door.]
INT. TENTH FLOOR APARTMENT #2 - NIGHT 117
Provocation accomplished. Batty smiles and walks leisurely towards
the door. Deckard's terrified scream and the SOUND of GLASS CRASHING stop
him. Batty speeds up and moves into the room. The window pane is splattered,
curtains sucked out, bellowing in the wind.
BATTY: Crap. [He walks up to the window. Deckard comes away from the
wall, inching up behind him, laser in both hands, aimed at the base of
Batty's skull. Batty starts to lean over, but even before his eyes see
the pavement, he knows. He spins... Deckard FIRES again. This one goes
home. Batty falls like he was poleaxed, hits the floor dead weight. Deckard
starts to tremble. His arms go limp as his head tilts back and he closes
his eyes. He can breathe again. On the floor, Batty's hand is crawling
toward Deckard's ankle. With the unsuspected abruptness of a man slipping
on a banana peel, Deckard comes down. Face knotted in horror, he EMPTIES
THE LASER in Batty's body -- but the hand holds on. With a screech of frustration
he drops the laser and like an animal claws at Batty's dead fingers --
but the fingers are welded shut. Deckard starts to crawl, pulling Batty
behind him. He struggled through the door and stumbles to his feet.]
INT. TENTH FLOOR HALL - NIGHT 118
Deckard plunges down the corridor dragging Batty along. He falls, gets
to one foot, falls again and crawls the last couple feet to the stairwell.
INT. TENTH FLOOR STAIRWELL - NIGHT 119
Groaning, he tugs and pulls, hauls and heaves Batty's body to the edge
of the landing. He pauses for breath, then lays back, wedging his feet
against Batty's shoulders and pushes. Inch by inch the body goes over the
edge. Then all at once it drops. But the hand holds and the weight of the
body takes Deckard with it. As Deckard slides over the edge, he grabs hold
of the railing. Deckard's hanging three hundred feet over the basement
floor, supporting himself and Batty's corpse -- almost four hundred pounds
of stress on his fingers. With his free foot he chops away at Batty's hand,
trying to break it loose. But it's not working. Deckard's fingers are starting
to slip. His face is a mask of agony as he wedges his heel over Batty's
thumb. With the help of gravity and everything he's got in his right leg
to push with, he pushes. The thumb breaks loose. Batty falls. The SOUND
OF HIS BODY HITTING BELOW sounds good, but Deckard doesn't notice. He's
in an awkward position. He must reverse the way he's facing to pull himself
up. He lets go with his right hand and crosses it over the left. Then turns
the left around so he's got an overhand grip. Like a man doing his last
pull-up... the one that can't be done, Deckard pulls himself up, throws
a foot over the edge and grapples and heaves and wiggled himself onto the
cold solid steel of the stairwell landing. And lies there, body jerking
spasmodically, slowly clenching and unclenching his cramped hand, but it's
his burning cheek against the cool metal he's most aware of. Dizzy, hot,
lungs on fire, he stands -- and putting one foot in front of the other,
Deckard descends the stairs.
EXT. SEBASTIAN'S BUILDING - DAWN 120
Slowly the door pushes open and Deckard comes out into the morning.
The sun isn't yet risen, but the sky has begun to pale. It's a brooding
gray stew of a dawn not very pretty, but even though he can't show it,
Deckard is glad to see it. For a moment he tilts his head back and takes
some breath, then walks across the courtyard towards the street, so dead
on his feet he hasn't the energy to fall. Deckard slumps into the shelter
of his car. He collapses on the front seat.
INT. DECKARD'S BEDROOM - DAWN 121
In a corner of the dimness Deckard sits slumped on a chair, facing
the pearly gray light of the window. The only SOUND in the room is the
soft steady BREATHING that comes from the bed. Quietly he gets up and walks
over to her. Rachael lies sleeping, one delicate arm exposed from under
the sheet. Deckard stands there, bettered and grim, staring down at her.
Moments go by and finally he sits gently on the edge of the bed. Rachael
opens her eyes, and looks up at him, she smiles.
EXT. COUNTRYSIDE (MONTAGE) - DAY 122
Deckard's car is skimming over the narrow highway. He and Rachael in
the front seat. Except for the occasional glance, their faces are still
and quiet in the cold
shine of an icy dream. The clouds overhead are soft and swift.
DECKARD (V.O.): She wanted to go to a place I knew. Out of the city.
Like one of those pictures she saw. Where there were trees but no buildings.
[Rachael's face in the window watching the woods stream by.]
DECKARD (V.O.): We had a good time. She told me a funny story and I
taught her a song. A song about monkeys and elephants. And it made us laugh
so hard we couldn't sing.
EXT. WOODS (MONTAGE) - DAY 123
Deckard and Rachael walking. The land lays white and hushed before
them. Down an aisle of maples and beeches. The frosty light slanting through
the clean, hard limbs. The crisp, blue-white snow underfoot melted through
in spots exposing soggy patches of rich brown earth. Rachael stops and
faces him. Her lips are parted, her warm breath turning the cold air to
vapor. Looking lithe and fragile by these barren-rooted trees, she stands
in the crisp white snow looking at Deckard. Nothing in her retreats, even
now her eyes insist on knowing.
EXT. WOODS - DAY 124
Deckard walking over the snow. Alone. He walks slowly, mechanically
through the cold, unaffected by it. His gaunt face, empty of expression
except for the tears running down his pale cheeks. But for the SQUEAK of
his wet shoes over the crusted snow, there is no sound. And Deckard recedes
into the silence of the freezing white landscape.
EXT. HIGHWAY - NIGHT 125
Deckard's car, solid, THROBBING, GUNNING along like some metal animal.
Headlights piercing the dark of the long, flat road. WHISTLING speed of
air and tires spinning THRUM. And then silence. And the silence astounded
by the CRACK OF A GUN.
INT. CAR - NIGHT 126
Deckard is behind the wheel, face in shadow, eyes staring straight
ahead.
DECKARD (V.O.): I told myself over and over again, if I hadn't done
it, they would have. I didn't go back to the city, not that city, I didn't
want the job. She said the great advantage of being alive was to have a
choice. And she chose. And a part of me was almost glad. Not because she
was gone but because this way they could never touch her. As for Tyrell
-- he was murdered, but he wasn't dead. For a long time I wanted to kill
him. But what was the point? There were too many Tyrells. But only one
Rachael. Maybe real and unreal could never be separated. The secret never
found. But I got as close with her as I'd ever come to it. She'd stay with
me a long time. I guess we made each other real. [And the ruby lights of
Deckard's car disappear into the darkness.] THE END