Hampton Fancher's Script - 1980
David Peoples' Script - 1981
 
Alternate Endings:
January 1980
December 1980
February 1981
June 1982

The 1980 Blade Runner Script






                            






                               Screenplay by


                              HAMPTON FANCHER



        July 24, 1980                    Brighton Productions Inc.

                                         1420 No. Beachwood Drive

                                         Hollywood, Calif. 90028



                                ****************



        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 with-

        out 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 ig-

        nition 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 mes-

        sages 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 brief-

        case 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 it 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 electro-

                  field.



                                DECKARD

                  What was he after?



                                BRYANT

                  There wasn't much left of him,

                  so we can't be sure.  But bio-

                  chemical 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 out-

        side 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 care-

        fully traces it over the box.  Assured of its harm-

        lessness, 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 trouble-

                  free 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.  Try-

        ing 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 win-

        dow 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.  Se-

        bastian 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 in-

        struments, 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, con-

        cerned 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 walk-

        ing.



        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 com-

        munications 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 steel-

                  mill.  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 en-

        graver.



        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 care-

        fully 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 aun-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 busi-

        ness.  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 corri-

        dor.



                                 RACHAEL

                  It seems your department doesn't

                  believe out 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 "en-

        vironmental" 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 speaks 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 hang-

        ing 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 departmental

                  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 passen-

        ger, 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 approach-

        ing 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

        it 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

        form 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 AFTER-     45

        NOON



        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 AFTER-  46

        NOON



        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       47

        AFTERNOON



        She's running now, down the hall, stops at the apart-

        ment directly above Sebastian's and opens the door.



        INT. APARTMENT ABOVE SEBASTIAN'S APARTMENT - LATE       48

        AFTERNOON



        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 off-

        ramp 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 refrig-

        erator.



                                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 listen-

        ing to Esper.



                                EPSER

                  Nexus designated Rachael is a

                  prototype.  Created for in-house

                  use by special mandate form 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

                  November 1 2017, domestic

                  conditioning non competitive,

                  trained for day care position.



                                DECKARD

                  Next.



                                ESPER

                  Nexus designated Pris:  incept

                  data December 13 2017, competitive,

                  programmed to provide pleasure

                  for long term spacers.



                                DECKARD

                  Number three.



                                ESPER

                  Nexus designated Zhora:  incept

                  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 any-

        way 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.

                  Bit 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 bio-

                  guys 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 shoul-

        ders, 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 hum-

        ble, 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.  Deck-

        ard 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 some 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.  Black-

        ness.  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 traf-

        fic these days.  A bizarre place on a Friday night,

        hawkers and whores, the rabble, the poor and the cur-

        ious 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 get-

        ting to her feet.  She sees him and runs.  The two ped-

        estrians 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 be-

        hind 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 ma-

        tron inside can lock it, Deckard's yanked it open and

        jumps in.  She screams as he pushes her into the pas-

        senger 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, front-

        ing 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 for-

        ward.  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 tries to eat each other.  A bloody feast

        of metal and flesh.



        Deckard bows his head, sick, exhausted.  So much commo-

        tion 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 -- his 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 be 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 count-

        ing 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 was free

                  drink.  I will pay.



                                DECKARD

                  Forget it.



        But the big man's digging through his pockets.  Deck-

        ard'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 but 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, reach-

        es 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 scamp-

        er 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 sober

        as 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 satisfac-

        tion 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, del-

        icate 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, mould-

        ing 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 trans-

        fusion 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 Sebas-

        tian 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 teen-

        ager.



                                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 ex-

        cited, 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 some-

        thing 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 of 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 has sex with your prey, old

                  buddy.  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, look-

        ing 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 quiet-

        ly 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 stuff-

        ing.  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 try-

        ing 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, pro-

        ceeds up the steps and into his mansion.



        INT. TYRELL DEN - NIGHT                                 87



        Next to a tray of cookies and milk, Sebastian sits pa-

        tiently 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 stat-

        ues 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.  Turn-

        ing 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 over

        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 it 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, it 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 Bat-

        ty'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 cor-

        porate 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 no-

        tice 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 cross-

        legged 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 sha-

        dows 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 shat-

        tered 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 stair-

        well.



        Close to the wall, he moves towards the elevator, keep-

        ing 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 stair-

        well 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 in-

        to 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 pound-

        ing.  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 al-

        ready 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 over-

        head, 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 stag-

        gers 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

        gest to the apartment above Sebastian's.  Slowly he

        turns the know 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 to-

        wards 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 Coman-

        che warrior and a transvestite.  The immensity of his

        insolence awesome -- the muscles of his body are swol-

        len, 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 edges up to the gaping wall.  Batty is be-

        hind 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 and 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.  Sud-

        denly 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.



        Betty walks off and disappears through one of the doors.



        Deckard gets to his knees, leans against the wall a mo-

        ment, 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 land-

        ing 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, fol-

        lowing it with RAPID FIRE.  It's a TV.  He spins back.

        but Batty's already on him.  He gets one SHOT off be-

        fore 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 would 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 lei-

        surely 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 hor-

        ror, 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 shoul-

        ders 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, try-

        ing 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 over-

        hand 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.  The col-

        lapses 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 occasion-

        al 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 spin-

        ning 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 star-

        ing 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