A man who has crossed a mob financier is about to be executed by a hitman in the woods. When pleading for his life, the hitman offers him a neural implant forcing him to accept his approaching death. After indeed doing so and convincingly telling the hitman to no longer fear death, the hitman instead kills himself.[3]
Translation
The short story was translated into Hungarian by Attila Jeles, Czech by Petr Kotrle, Romanian by Mihai-Dan Pavelescu, Italian (2003), Spanish (2006), French by Francis Lustman & Quarante-Deux (2006), Japanese by Makoto Yamagishi (2008), Chinese and Korean.[1][2]
Reception
Reviews
Karen Burnham writes in Greg Egan (Masters of Modern Science Fiction), that the short story "looks again at the exact technology of 'Axiomatic'", but "it does so using a rather poorly motivated main actor".[4] She argues: "The story does not work terribly well: because we never get the point of view of the hit man, we have no idea why he decides to kill himself."[5]
Awards
The short story reached the 10th place of Asimov's Reader Poll in 1993.[6]
Literature
Burnham, Karen (2014). Greg Egan (Modern Masters of Science Fiction). Modern Masters of Science Fiction. University of Illinois Press (published 2014-04-03). ISBN978-0252038419.