WORLDWIRED
Elizabeth Bear
Acknowledgments
It takes a lot of
people to write a novel. This one would not have existed without the
assistance of my very good friends and first readers (on and off the
Online Writing Workshop for Science Fiction, Fantasy, and
Horror)—especially but not exclusively Kathryn Allen, Chris Coen, Jaime
Voss, James Stevens-Arce, Michael Curry, Ruth Nestvold, Chris Manucy,
Bonnie Freeman, Holly McDowell, Ejner Fulsang, Larisa Walk, John
Tremlett, Amanda Downum, and Leah Bobet. I am also indebted to Stella
Evans, M.D., to whom I owe whatever bits of the medical science and
neurology are accurate; Peter Watts, Ph.D., for assistance with
questions of biology; M.Cpl. S. K. S. Perry (Canadian Forces), Lt.
Penelope K. Hardy (U.S. Navy), and Capt. Beth Coughlin (U.S. Army),
without whom my portrayal of military life would have been even more
wildly fantastical; Leonid Korogodski and Claris Cates-Smith Ryan for
linguistic assistance; engineer Catherine Morrison and recovering
biologist Jeremy Tolbert for fielding questions about rising sea
levels, alien microbiology, and decontamination procedures; safety
engineer Wendy S. Delmater; Meredith L. Patterson, linguist and
computer geek, for assistance with interspecies semiotics; Melinda
Goodin for Australian Rules English assistance; Stephen Shipman, for AI
geekery; Chelsea Polk and Kellie Matthews for bolstering my knowledge
of the native music of Soviet Canuckistan; Celia Marsh for emergency,
just-in-time delivery of vintage Kate and Anna McGarrigle; Steven Brust
and Caliann Graves, for advice and tolerance; Dena Landon, Sarah
Monette, and Kelly Morisseau, francophones extraordinaire, upon whom
may be blamed any correctness in the Québecois—especially the
naughty bits; my agent, Jennifer Jackson, my copyeditor, Faren
Bachelis, and my editor, Anne Groell, for too many reasons to
enumerate; and to Kit Kindred, who is patient with the foibles of
novelism.
For the sake of
accuracy, I should note that in the interests of drama, my United
Nations bears about the same resemblance to the real one that an
episode of
Perry
Mason
bears to an actual criminal proceeding.
The failures, of
course, are my own.
ALSO BY
ELIZABETH BEAR
HAMMERED
SCARDOWN
ABOUT
THE AUTHOR
Elizabeth Bear shares
a birthday with Frodo and Bilbo Baggins, and very narrowly avoided
being named after Peregrine Took. This, coupled with a tendency to read
the dictionary as a child, doomed her early to penury, intransigence,
friendlessness, and the writing of speculative fiction. She was born in
Hartford, Connecticut, and grew up in central Connecticut, with the
exception of two years (which she was too young to remember very well)
spent in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom, in the last house with
electricity before the Canadian border. She attended the University of
Connecticut, where her favorite classes were geology and archaeology,
although she majored in English and anthropology.
After six years in
southern Nevada, she is currently in the process of relocating to
Michigan, where messages from travelers report trees and snow.
Elizabeth has been at
various times employed at: a stable, a self-funded campus newspaper,
the microbiology department of a 1,000-bed inner-city hospital, a media
monitoring service, a quick-print shop, an archaeological survey
company, a doughnut shop (third shift), a commercial roofing material
sales company, and an import-export business, with a somewhat flexible
attitude toward paperwork among her achievements.
She's a
second-generation Swede, a third-generation Ukrainian, and a
third-generation Hutzul, with some Irish, English, Scots, Cherokee, and
German thrown in for leavening. Elizabeth Bear is her real name, but
not all of it. Her dogs outweigh her, and she is much beset by her cats.
WORLDWIRED
A Bantam Spectra Book
/ December 2005
Published by
Bantam Dell
A Division of Random
House, Inc.
New York, New York
All rights reserved
Copyright © 2005
by Elizabeth Bear
Bantam Books, the
rooster colophon, Spectra, and the portrayal of a boxed “s” are
trademarks of Random House, Inc.
eISBN: 0-553-90212-1
www.bantamdell.com
v1.0
To Kit
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Editor's Note
BOOK ONE
BOOK TWO
BOOK THREE
About the Author
Also by Elizabeth
Bear
Preview for
Carnival
Copyright Page
Editor's Note
In the interests of
presenting a detailed personal perspective on a crucial moment in
history, we have taken the liberty of rendering Master Warrant Officer
Casey's interviews—as preserved in the Yale University New Haven
archives—in narrative format. Changes have been made in the interests
of clarity, but the words, however edited, are her own.
The motives of the
other individuals involved are not as well documented, although we have
had the benefit of our unique access to extensive personal records left
by Col. Frederick Valens. The events as presented herein are accurate:
the drives behind them must always remain a matter of speculation,
except in the case of Dr. Dunsany—who left us comprehensive
journals—and “Dr.” Feynman, who kept frequent and impeccable backups.
Thus, what follows is
a historical novel, of sorts. It is our hope that this more intimate
annal than is usually seen will serve to provide future students with a
singular perspective on the roots of the civilization we are about to
become.
— Patricia Valens,
Ph.D.
Jeremy
Kirkpatrick,
Ph.D.
10:30 AM
27 September
2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
I've got a
starship dreaming. And there it is.Leslie Tjakamarra leaned both hands on
the thick crystal of the Montreal 's observation
portal, the cold of space seeping into his palms, and hummed a snatch
of song under his breath. He couldn't tell how far away the alien
spaceship was—at least, the fragment he could see when he twisted his
head and pressed his face against the port. Earthlight stained the
cage-shaped frame blue-silver, and the fat doughnut of Forward Orbital
Platform was visible through the gaps, the gleaming thread of the
beanstalk describing a taut line downward until it disappeared in
brown-tinged atmosphere over Malaysia. “Bloody far,” he said, realizing
he'd spoken out loud only when he heard his own voice. He scuffed
across the blue-carpeted floor, pressed back by the vista on the other
side of the glass.
Someone cleared her
throat behind him. He turned, although he was unwilling to put his back
to the endless fall outside. The narrow-shouldered crew member who
stood just inside the hatchway met him eye to eye, the black shape of a
sidearm strapped to her thigh commanding his attention. She raked one
hand through wiry salt-and-pepper hair and shook her head. “Or too
close for comfort,” she answered with an odd little smile. “That's one
of the ones Elspeth calls the birdcages—”
“Elspeth?”
“Dr. Dunsany,” she
said. “You're Dr. Tjakamarra, the xenosemiotician.” She mispronounced
his name.
“Leslie,” he said.
She stuck out her right hand, and Leslie realized that she wore a black
leather glove on the left. “You're Casey,” he blurted, too startled to
reach out. She held her hand out until he recovered enough to shake. “I
didn't recognize—”
“It's cool.” She
shrugged in a manner entirely unlike a living legend, and gave him a
crooked, sideways grin, smoothing her dark blue jumpsuit over her
breasts with the gloved hand. “We're all different out of uniform.
Besides, it's nice to be looked at like real people, for a change. Come
on. The pilots' lounge has a better view.”
She gestured him away
from the window; he caught himself shooting her sidelong glances,
desperate not to stare. He fell into step beside her as she led him
along the curved ring of the Montreal 's habitation wheel,
the arc rising behind and before them even though it felt perfectly
flat under his feet.
“You'll get used to
it,” Master Warrant Officer Casey said, returning his looks with one of
her own. It said she had accurately judged the reason he trailed his
right hand along the chilly wall. “Here we are—” She braced one
rubber-soled foot against the seam between corridor floor and corridor
wall, and expertly spun the handle of a thick steel hatchway with her
black-gloved hand. “Come on in. Step lively; we don't stand around in
hatchways shipboard.”
Leslie followed her
through, turning to dog the door as he remembered his safety lectures,
and when he turned back Casey had moved into the middle of a chamber no
bigger than an urban apartment's living room. The awe in his throat
made it hard to breathe. He hoped he was keeping it off his face.
“There,” Casey said,
stepping aside, waving him impatiently forward again. “That's both of
them. The one on the ‘left' is the shiptree. The one on the ‘right' is
the birdcage.”
Everyone on the
planet probably knew that by now. She was babbling, Leslie realized,
and the small evidence of her fallibility—and her own nervousness—did
more to ease the pressure in his chest than her casual friendliness
could have.
You're
acting like a starstruck teenager, he reprimanded himself, and managed
to grin at his own foolishness as he shuffled forward, his slipperlike
ship-shoes whispering over the carpet.
Then he caught sight
of the broad sweep of windows beyond and his personal awe for the woman
in blue was replaced by something visceral . He swallowed,
throat dry.
The Montreal 's habitation wheel
spun grandly, creating an imitation of gravity that held them,
feet-down, to the “floor.” Leslie found himself before the big round
port in the middle of the wall, hands pressed to either rim as if to
keep himself from tumbling through the crystal like Alice through the
looking glass. The panorama rotated like a merry-go-round seen from
above. Beyond it, the soft blue glow of the wounded Earth reflected the
sun. The planet's atmosphere was fuzzed brown like smog in an inversion
layer, the sight enough to send Leslie's knuckle to his mouth. He bit
down and tore his gaze away with an effort, turning it on the two alien
ships floating “overhead.”
The ship on
perspective-right was the enormous, gleaming-blue birdcage, swarming
with ten-meter specks of mercury—made tiny by distance—that flickered
from cage-bar to cage-bar, as vanishingly swift and bright as motes in
Leslie's eye.
The ship on
perspective-left caught the earthlight with the gloss peculiar to
polished wood or a smooth tree bole, a mouse-colored column twisted
into shapes that took Leslie's breath away. The vast hull glittered
with patterned, pointillist lights in cool-water shades. They did not
look so different from the images and designs that Leslie had grown up
with, and he fought a shiver, glancing at the hawk-intent face of MWO
Casey.
“Elspeth—Dr.
Dunsany—said you had a theory,” she said without glancing over.
He returned his
attention to the paired alien spaceships, peeling his eyes away from
Genevieve Casey only with an effort. “I've had the VR implants—”
“Richard told me,”
she said, with a sly sideways grin.
“ Richard?The AI?” And silly not
to have expected that either. It's a whole new road you're
walking.
A whole different sort of journey, farther away from home than even
Cambridge, when there was still more of an England rather than less.
“Yes. You'll meet
him, I'm sure. He doesn't like to intrude on the new kids until they're
comfortable with their wetware. And unless you've got the full
'borg”—she lightly touched the back of her head—“you won't have to put
up with his running patter. Most of the time.” She tilted her head up
and sideways, a wry look he didn't think was for him.
She's talking to
the AI right now.Cool shiver across his shoulders; the awe was back, with
company. Leslie forced himself not to stare, frowning down at the
bitten skin of his thumb. “Yes. I spoke to Dr. Dunsany regarding my
theories . . .”
“Dr. Tjakamarra—”
“Leslie.”
“Leslie.” Casey
coughed into her hand. “Ellie thought you were on to something, or she
wouldn't have asked you up here. We get more requests in a week than
Yale does in a year—”
“I'm aware of that.”
Her presence still stunned him. Genevieve Casey. The first pilot.
Leaned up against the window with me like kids peering off the
observation deck of the Petronas Towers. He gathered his wits and forced
himself to frown. “You've had no luck talking to them, have you?”
“Plenty of math.
Nothing you'd call conversation. They don't seem to understand please
and thank you.”
“I expected that.”
Familiar ground. Comfortable, even. “I'm afraid if I'm right, talking
to them is hopeless.”
“Hopeless?” She
turned, leaning back on her heels.
“Yes. You see, I
don't think they talk at all.”
Leslie Tjakamarra's
not a big man. He's not a young one either, though I wouldn't want to
try to guess his age within five years on either side. He's got one of
those wiry, weathered frames I associate with Alberta cattlemen and
forest rangers, sienna skin paler, almost red, inside the creases
beside glittering eyes and on the palms of big thick-nailed hands. He
doesn't go at all with the conservative charcoal double-breasted suit,
pinstriped with biolume, which clings to his sinewy shoulders in as
professional an Old London tailoring job as I've seen. When London was
evacuated, a lot of the refugees found themselves in Sydney, in
Vancouver—and in Toronto.
God rest their souls.
He shoots me those
sidelong glances like they do, trying to see through the glove to the
metal hand, trying to see through the jumpsuit to the hero underneath.
I hate to disappoint
him, but that hero had a hair appointment she never came back from.
“Well,” I say, to fill up his silence. “That'll make your job easier,
then, won't it?” What do you think of them apples, Dick?
Richard grins inside
my head, bony hands spread wide and beating like a pigeon's wings
through air. The man's brains would jam if you tied his hands down. Of
course, since he's intangible, that would be a trick. “That's got the
air of a leading question about it.” He scrubs his palms on the thighs
of his virtual corduroys and stuffs them into his pockets, white shirt
stretched taut across his narrow chest, his image fading as he “steps
back,” limiting his usage of my implants. “I'll get in on it when he
talks to Ellie. No point in spoiling his chance to appreciate the view.
I'll eavesdrop, if that's okay.”
It might be the same
asinine impulse that makes English speakers talk loudly to foreigners
that moves me to smile inwardly and stereotype Dr. Tjakamarra's smooth,
educated accent into Australian Rules English. No worries, mate.
Fair dinkum.
Richard shoots me an
amused look. “Ouch,” he says, and flickers out like an interrupted
hologram.
Dr. Tjakamarra grins,
broad lips uncovering tea-stained teeth like a mouth full of piano
keys, and scratches his cheek with knuckles like an auto mechanic's. He
wears his hair long, professorial, slicked back into hard steel-gray
waves. “Or that much more difficult, if you prefer.” His voice is
younger than the rest of him, young as that twinkle in his eye.
“Talking isn't the only species of communication, after all.”
He presses his hand
flat against the glass again and peers between his fingers as if trying
to gauge the size of the ships that float out there, the way you might
measure a tree on the horizon against your thumb. His gaze keeps
sliding down to the dust-palled Earth, his eyes impassive, giving
nothing away.
“How bad is it in
Sydney?” I press my steel hand to my lips, as if to shove the words
back in with glove leather. Tjakamarra's head comes up like a startled
deer's. I pretend I don't see.
“We heard it,” he
says, as his hand falls away from the glass. “We heard it in Sydney.”
He steps back, turns to face me although I'm still giving him my
shoulder. He cups both hands and brings them together with a crack that
makes me jump.
“Is that really what
it sounded like?”
“More or less—” A
shrug. “We couldn't feel the tremors. It wasn't all that loud, fifteen
thousand kilometers away; I would have thought it'd be a sustained
rumble, like the old footage of nuclear bombs. You ever hear of Coober
Pedy?”
“Never.”
“There were bomb
tests near there. Over a hundred years ago, but I know people who knew
people who were there. They said the newsreels lied, the sound effect
they used was dubbed in later.” He laces his hands together in the
small of his back and lifts his chin to look me in the eye, creases
linking his thick, flat nose to the corners of his mouth.
Surreal fucking
conversation, man. “So what does a nuclear explosion sound like, Les?”
His lips thin. He
holds his hands apart again and swings them halfway but doesn't clap.
“Like the biggest bloody gunshot you ever did hear. Or like a meteorite
hitting the planet, fifteen thousand kilometers away.”
He's talking so he
doesn't have to look. I recognize the glitter in his dark brown eyes,
darker even than mine. It took me, too, the first time I looked down
and saw all that gorgeous blue and white mottled with sick dull beige
like cancer.
It takes all of us
like that.
He licks his lips and
looks carefully at the Benefactor ships, not the smeared globe behind
them. “The shot heard round the world. Isn't that what the Americans
call the first shot fired in their colonial revolt?”
“Sounds about right.”
He reminds me of my
grandfather Zeke Kirby, my mother's father, the full-blooded one; he's
got that same boiled-leather twist of indestructibility, but my
grandfather was an ironworker, not a professor. His mouth moves again,
like he's trying to shape words that won't quite come out right, and
finally he just shakes his head and looks down. “Big universe out
there.”
“Bloody big,” I
answer, a gentle tease. He smiles out of the corner of his mouth; we're
going to be friends. “Come on,” I say. “That gets depressing if you
stare at it. I'll take you to meet Ellie if you promise not to tell her
the thing about the bomb.”
He falls into step
beside me. I don't have to shorten my strides to let him keep up. “She
lose somebody in the—in that?”
“We all lost
somebody.” I shake my head.
“What is it, then?”
“It would give her
nightmares. Come on.”
Toronto
Evacuation Zone
Ontario, Canada
Thursday 27
September 2063
1300 hours
Richard habitually
took refuge in numbers, so it troubled him that with regard to the
Impact all he had was approximations. The number of dead had never been
counted. Their names had never been accurately listed. Their families
would never be notified; in many cases, their bodies would never be
found.
The population of
Niagara and Rochester, New York, had been just under three million
people, although the New York coastline of Lake Ontario was mostly
rural, vineyards and cow pasture. The northern rim of the lake,
however, had been the most populated place in Canada: Ontario's “Golden
Horseshoe,” the urban corridor anchored by Toronto and Hamilton, which
had still been home to some seven million despite the midcentury
population dip. Deaths from the Impact and its aftermath had been
confirmed as far away as Buffalo, Cleveland, Albany. A woman in Ottawa
had died when a stained-glass window shattered from the shock and fell
on her head; a child in Kitchener survived in a basement, along with
his dog. Recovery teams dragging the poisoned waters of Lake Ontario
had been forced to cease operations as the lake surface iced over, a
phenomenon that once would have been a twice-in-a-century occurrence
but had become common with the advent of Shifted winters. It would
become more common still until the greenhouse effect triggered by the
Impact began to cancel out the nuclear winter.
An icebreaker could
have been brought in and the work continued, but things keep in cold
water. And someone raised the specter of breaking ice with bodies
frozen into it, and it was decided to wait until spring.
The ice didn't melt
until halfway through May, and the lake locked solid again in
mid-September. The coming winter promised to be even colder, a savage
global drop in temperatures that might persist another eighteen to
twenty-four months, and Richard couldn't say whether the eventual
worldwide toll would be measured in the mere tens of millions or in the
hundreds of millions. Preliminary estimates had placed Impact
casualties at thirty million; Richard was inclined to a more
conservative estimate of under twenty million, unevenly divided between
Canada and the United States.
In practical terms,
the casualty rate by January 1, 2063, was something like one in every
twenty-five Americans and one in every three Canadians.
The fallout cloud
from the thirteen nuclear reactors damaged or destroyed in the Impact
was pushed northeast by prevailing wind currents, largely affecting New
York, Quebec, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine, Newfoundland, the Grand
Banks, Prince Edward Island, Iceland, and points between. The emergency
teams and medical staff attending the disaster victims were supplied
with iodine tablets and given aggressive prophylaxis against radiation
exposure. Only seventeen became seriously ill. Only six died.
It was too soon to
tell what the long-term effect on cancer rates would be, but Richard
expected New England's dairy industry to fail completely, along with
what bare scraps had remained of the once-vast North Atlantic fisheries.
And then, after the
famines and the winter, would come a summer without end.
Colonel Valens's
hands hurt, but his eyes hurt more. He leaned forward on both elbows
over his improvised desk, his holistic communications unit propped up
on a pair of inflatable splints and the unergonomic portable interface
plate unrolled across a plywood surface that was three centimeters too
high for comfort. “Yes,” he said, rubbing the back of his neck, “I'll
hold. Please let the prime minister know it's not urgent, if she has—
Constance. That was quick.”
“Hi, Fred. I was at
lunch,” Constance Riel said, chewing, her image flickering in the cheap
holographic display. Valens smoothed the interface plate, cool plastic
slightly tacky and gritty with the omnipresent dust. The prime minister
covered her mouth with the back of her left hand and swallowed, set her
sandwich down on a napkin, reached for her coffee. Careful makeup could
not hide the hollows under her eyes, dark as thumbprints. “I was going
to call you today anyway. How's the Evac?”
“Stable.” One word,
soaked in exhaustion. “I got mail from Elspeth Dunsany today. She says
the commonwealth scientists have arrived safely on the Montreal . One Australian and
an expat Brit. She and Casey are getting them settled.”
“Paul Perry said the
same thing to me this morning,” Riel answered. Her head wobbled when
she nodded.
“That isn't why you
were going to call me.”
“No. I have the
latest climatological data from Richard and Alan. The AIs say that the
nanite propagation is going well, despite the effects of the—”
“Nuclear winter?
Non-nuclear winter?” Valens said.
“Something like that.
They're concerned about the algae die off we were experiencing before
the Impact. More algae means less CO2left in the atmosphere, which
means less greenhouse warming when the dust is out of the atmosphere
and winter finally ends—”
“—in eighteen months
or so. Won't we want a greenhouse effect then?” To counteract the
global dimming from the dust.
“Not unless 50°
or 60°C is your idea of comfort.”
Valens shook his
head, looking down at the pink and green displays that hovered under
the surface of the interface plate, awaiting a touch to bring them to
multidimensionality. He shook his head and ricocheted uncomfortably to
the topic that was the reason for his call. “We've done what we can
here. It's time to close up shop. Do you want to tour the exclusion
zone?”
“Helicopter tour,”
she said, nodding, and took another bite of her sandwich. “You'll come
with, of course. Before we open the Evac to reconstruction and send the
bulldozers in.”
“You're going to
rebuild Toronto?” Valens had years of practice keeping shock out of his
voice. He failed utterly, his gut coiling at something that struck him
as plain obscenity.
“No,” she said.
“We're going to turn it into a park. By the way, are you resigning your
commission?”
Valens coughed.
Riel's image flickered as the interface panel, released from the
pressure of his palm, wrinkled again. “Am I being asked to?”
The prime minister
laughed. “You're being asked to get your ass to the provisional capital
of Vancouver, Fred. Where, in recognition of your exemplary service
handling the Toronto Evac relief effort, you will be promoted to
Brigadier General Frederick Valens, and I will have a brand-new shiny
cabinet title and a whole new ration of shit to hand you, sir.”
“I'm a Conservative,
Connie.”
“That's okay,” she
answered. “You can switch.”
HMCSSMontreal , Earth orbit
Thursday
September 27, 2063
After dinner
Elspeth touched the
corner of her mouth with her napkin, careful of the unaccustomed weight
of lipstick. She leaned a shoulder against Jen Casey's upper arm and
nudged, the steel armature hard under the rifle-green wool of Jenny's
dress uniform. Jen's glass of grapefruit juice clicked against her
teeth. She shot Elspeth a tolerant glance. “Doc—”
“Sorry.”
In present company,
it wouldn't do for Jen to drop that steel arm around Elspeth's
shoulders and give her a hard, infinitely careful hug, but she managed
to make her answering jostle almost as comforting.
They had moved into
the captain's reception hall after dinner, and Captain Wainwright
herself was propping up a wall in the corner by the room's two big
ports. It was too cold for Elspeth's taste, that close to the glass,
and she'd joined Jen in her relentless stakeout of the
nibbles-and-dessert table. Both Jeremy Kirkpatrick—the commonwealth
ethnolinguist—and Dr. Tjakamarra were sticking close to the windows,
although Elspeth could tell the Australian was shivering. He stood
hunched like a worried cat, his arms folded over each other, and
divided his attention between Jaime Wainwright and Gabe Castaign, whose
hulking presence manned the canapé bucket brigade for the
newcomers, in courtesy to their temporary role as distinguished guests.
The ecologist Paul Perry—long-fingered, slight, and dark—almost
disappeared behind Charles Forster, a paunchy xenobiologist with his
vanishing hair shaved close to a shiny scalp. One little, two
little, three little Indians. Or should that be we few, we happy few,
we band of brothers?
Five scientists, a
programmer, a pilot, and an artificial intelligence. And a partridge in
a pear tree. And the biggest scientific puzzle of the century.
You've come a bit
far for a bout of impostor syndrome, El.
“What do you think of
the new kids?” Jen said, dropping her half-full glass on a passing tray
with a grimace of distaste.
“They made it through
the rubber-chicken dinner with a minimum of fuss.” The tilt of
Elspeth's head indicated the mess hall on the other side of one of Montreal 's few irising doors.
“Especially since it
was rubber tofu.” Jen grinned, that wry mocking twist of her mouth that
was as contagious as the common cold, and Elspeth had to grin back. “I
haven't had a chance to talk to Kirkpatrick yet, but the Australian's
all right.” She shrugged. “My heart's not in it, Doc—”
“No.” Elspeth reached
for a drink herself, tomato juice and a stalk of celery, wishing there
were less Virgin and more Bloody in it. “I don't think any of our
hearts are in it, after last Christmas.” After Toronto. “But it's got to be
done. They scare me.” She tipped her head to indicate the long ornate
outline of the shiptree, visible beyond the port, winking lights and
elegant curves like hand-smoothed wood. “And Richard says Fred says
something has to break on the PanChinese front shortly. Riel's going to
demand restitution for Toronto—”
“She wants to get
Richard admitted as a witness.”
“Right. And there's
that Chinese pilot, the one who tried to prevent the attack—”
“He's safe at Lake
Simcoe,” Jen said, her voice dripping mockery. Both she and Elspeth had
a longstanding acquaintance with the high-security military prison
there. “Protective custody.” She cocked her head, that listening
gesture that told Elspeth—to Elspeth's infinite frustration—that she
was talking to Richard.
Their eyes met for a
moment, a shared frown. “You heard that Fred is Brigadier General Fred
as of this afternoon, I assume?”
The irony in Jen's
expression made her eyes glitter like a bird's. “Richard says to let
him and Fred and Riel handle Earth and China, and worry about talking
to the Benefactors.” Jen swallowed and glanced about for the drink
she'd discarded. Thwarted, she shoved her hand into the pocket of her
uniform.
“Can't we worry about
everything at once?” Elspeth wandered toward the snack table, Jen
trailing, and picked up a plate. She started loading it with
canapés, inspecting each one.
“Richard says it
might not be a bad idea to have figured out how to talk to the
Benefactors by the time the PanChinese start shooting at us again. If they start shooting
at us again. In case the Benefactors take that as evidence that the
hairless apes are too uppity to be permitted to roam the universe at
large, and decide to do something permanent about us.”
“Richard is a
bloodthirsty son of a bitch.” Elspeth bit a cracker in half and chewed
in an unladylike fashion. So much for the lipstick. I need to get VR
implants at least. She hated not being able to
listen to Richard directly, the way that Jenny and Patricia Valens, the Montreal 's apprentice pilot,
could. “Very well. ‘We cannot weep for the whole world.' I guess we
hold up our end of the table and trust in Fred to hold up his. We'll
have a summit meeting tomorrow, us two and Gabe and Charlie and Paul
and the new kids. And Dick, onscreen so everybody can talk to him.” She
swallowed the other half of the canapé, cracker corners
scratching her throat. “What're you doing for your birthday?”
“Birthday?”
“Sunday? The day you
turn fifty-one?”
“Don't remind me—”
Elspeth grinned.
“Okay, I won't. Gabe and I will plan something. It'll be just us and
Genie.” Her voice wanted to hitch on Genie's name; it wasn't supposed
to be just Genie. It was supposed to be Genie-and-Leah, but the second
name hung between them, chronically unsaid. Elspeth brushed it aside
with the back of her hand. “You just promise to show up and be a good
sport.”
Jen's expression
warred between resignation, delight, and trepidation. Finally, she
nodded and studied the carpeted floor, scrubbing her gloved iron hand
against her flesh one as if dusting away a fistful of crumbs. “Patty,”
she said. “Patty Valens. Invite her, too? She's all alone up here—”
“More than fair.”
Elspeth's hesitation was strong enough that Jen looked up and frowned,
meeting her gaze directly.
“What?”
“This meeting
tomorrow—”
“Yes?”
“Is it too much to
ask for you to brainstorm and come up with something we can do to get the
Benefactors' interest, other than balancing our checkbooks back and
forth at each other?”
Jen laughed dryly.
“I've got an idea you're going to love, if Wainwright doesn't shoot me
for suggesting it.”
“Well, don't leave me
hanging.”
Genevieve Casey
arched her long neck back, stared at the ceiling, laced her hands
together in front of her, and said with studied casualness, “I want to
find out what happens if we EVA over to the birdcage and wander around
inside.”
Thursday 27
September 2063
HMCSSMontreal processor core
HMCSSCalgary processor core
Whole-Earth
Benefactor nanonetwork (worldwire)
21:28:28:35–21:43:28:39
When Dick took over
the planet, he'd been prepared for surprises. But the ache of the
Toronto Evac Zone like a runner's stitch in his side had not been one
of them.
He'd comprehended the
scale of the damage, of course; of all the sentiences in his sphere of
experience, he was uniquely qualified to do so. He'd understood that
the global nanotech infection that Leah Castaign and Trevor Koske had
given their lives to engender would be a mitigating factor at best, and
not even the temporary magic bullet of a penicillin cure. He'd thought
he understood what spreading his consciousness through a planet-sized,
quantum-connected worldwire would entail. If he could call it his consciousness
anymore, as he evolved from a discrete intelligence into a
multithreaded entity that might be compared to a human with
disassociative identity disorder—
— ifsuch a disorder were a
native state of affairs, and if the various personalities carried on a
constant, raucous, and very rarified debate regarding every serious
action they undertook. If portions of that entity brushed
feather-light fingertips across the waking and sleeping minds of
certain augmented humans, and other portions moved through the ruined
waters of Lake Ontario, and hovered in the well-shielded brain of Her
Majesty's Canadian starship Calgary in its position of
rest at the bottom of the ocean; if other portions infected fish and
birds and bushes and topsoil and atmosphere, and extended like a meat
intelligence's subconscious through eleven-dimensional space and into
the alien nanotools of the far-flung Benefactor empire, or confederacy,
or kinship system— or whatever the hell it might be,Richard mused, with
the fragment of himself that never stopped musing on such things. If.
I never began to
imagine what I was in for,he thought, shifting focus as
Constance Riel touched her earpiece and accepted his call. She wasn't
in her temporary office in the provisional capitol, but a mobile one
aboard her customized airliner. “Good evening, Dr. Feynman.”
“The same to you,
Prime Minister. I understand that you will be touring the Evac with Dr.
Valens tomorrow.”
“Preparatory to
closing the relief effort, yes. I'm on my way there now. And on behalf
of the Canadian people”—she leaned forward—“I want to formally thank
you for your efforts. Which I am about to ask you to redouble.”
“Restoring the Evac
is a lower priority than mitigating the climatic damage, you realize.”
A quick, dismissive
flip of her hand reinforced her curt nod of agreement. “We have an
official complaint on record from the PanChinese ambassador to the
Netherlands, by the way. It seems he's attempting to get the nanotech
infestation classed as an invasion of the sovereign territory of the
PanChinese Alliance, and get it heard by the International Court of
Justice.”
“You don't sound
displeased.”
Riel grinned
wolfishly. “We can't bring our suit for attempted genocide unless they
consent to be a party to the case. Which they just did, more or less—or
we can spin it so they did. Of course, Premier Xiong can't put up much
of a fight, since he's still pretending the attack was the work of
fringe elements.”
“If Premier Xiong was
not privy to the attack, he may have a coup on his hands before too
much longer. My analysis—which is based on severely inadequate data,
and the preliminary testimony of Pilot Xie—is that the orders to attack
must have come from high up in the PanChinese government.”
“I agree.
Unfortunately, there's not much I can do about that currently. In a
more immediate concern, though, World Health is on my ass again. We
need a policy on use of your nanotech in medical emergencies.”
Richard sighed,
pushing aside the “itch” that was the infestation's response to the
damage surrounding the Impact. Life-threatening conditions first.
Superficial wounds, no matter how unsightly, can wait. “This whole thing is
a moral—”
“Quandary?”
“Quagmire.” He
shrugged, hands opened broadly in one of the little gestures he'd
inherited from the human subject his personality was modeled on. “I've
got 60 percent global coverage right now and growing, and we used the
nanosurgeons successfully on a few of the worst-injured Impact
victims—and unsuccessfully on a whole lot more—but I've got extensive
climatic damage to consider. I'm expecting mass extinctions, once the
field biologists get some hard data back to us, and another spike in
dieoffs once the dust clears and the temperature increase starts.
Practically speaking, we can get a certain amount of the carbon dioxide
out of the atmosphere before then, but not enough to prevent the
damage. We're talking mitigation at best, and we should expect a much
warmer global climate overall.”
“How much warmer?”
“Think dinosaurs
tromping through steamy tropical forests, and shallow inland seas. And
wild weather. Also, we should expect earthquakes as the polar ice
melts. It's heavy, you know—”
“These are all
secondary concerns, aren't they?”
“Not in the long
term.”
“They sound
infinitely better than that snowball Earth you and Paul were talking
about last year. Look, tell me about your moral quagmire first. The
climate issues are easy; we mitigate as much as we can, and whatever we
can't, we suck up. I'm worried about the personal cost.”
A moment of silent
understanding passed between them, intermediated by the technology that
permitted them to look eye-to-eye. Riel glanced down first. Since
Richard's image floated in her contact lens, it didn't break the
connection. “I'm tempted to tell you to restrict the damned
nanosurgeons from PanChinese territory. But then they would claim we
were sabotaging their environmental efforts and failing to make
resources freely available on an equal basis . . . It's a mess, Dick.
And once we move Canada off a crisis footing, smaller wolves than China
are going to be sniffing about for a piece of the corpse as well.
Russia and the EU have provided aid; it's not like I'm in a position to
turn them away—” She choked off, shaking her head. “I love my job. I
just keep telling myself that I wouldn't rather be doing anything else
in the world.”
A shared grin, and
Richard cleared his throat and hesitated—another simulation of human
behavior. Most of the humans were more comfortable with him, rather
than Alan—the only other AI persona who had had significant
interpersonal contact. In fact, most of the humans had no idea the rest
of the threaded personalities existed, yet.
Richard had never
been one to spoil a surprise. “The least complex solution would be to
prepare a contract and ask any country that wishes my intervention to
sign it.”
“What are we going to
do about sick people who wish to volunteer for nanosurgical treatment?”
“We'll have to let
them volunteer,” Richard answered. “We've already used the nanites on
Canadians in a widespread fashion. It would be . . . inhumane to
restrict the benefits to your own citizens. But the volunteers will
need to be apprised of the risks, which are significant.”
“Ever the master of
understatement.” She pressed a fountain pen between her lips absently,
sucking on the gold-plated barrel. Richard quelled the irrational—and
impossible—urge to reach out and take it out of her mouth. “The promise
of free medical treatment will open some borders. What about the
nations that demand access to the augmentation program?”
“Military
applications of technology have always been handled differently than
medical ones.”
“Touché.
People will scream.”
“People are
screaming. This isn't magic, Prime Minister.”
“No,” she said,
leaning back in her chair. “Just something that will look like magic to
desperate people, and they'll be angry when it doesn't work like magic,
won't they? Oh, that reminds me. I'd like to keep as many
people—commonwealth citizens and otherwise—uninfected as possible.”
“Most people are
going to encounter a life-threatening incident sooner or later.” But
that wasn't disagreement. She was right; they didn't know what the
Benefactors were capable of, or what they wanted, and it was their
technology with which Richard had so cavalierly infected the planet.
It seemed like a
good idea at the time.
And cavalier wasn't a
good word, though the process had been less cautiously handled than
Richard would have preferred.
Less cautiously
handled than Riel would have preferred, too, and she was talking again.
“Most people are. Some will refuse treatment. Some won't need treatment. It's a
unique situation; this stuff is loose in the ecosystem, but unlike
every other contaminant in history, we have perfect control over it.”
“Or, more precisely,
I have perfect control.”
“I, we. Which is
another thing. Can't we make some hay out of PanChina having a
worldwire of its own?”
“Well . . .” he
began, “what they have is not exactly a worldwire. What they've got is
a bigger version of the limited networks we started off with, much more
protected, not self-propagating . . .”
“And not self-aware.”
“We hope.”
“Ah, Richard. I'd
like to extend the offer of Canadian citizenship to you.” She raised
her hand before he could comment, shaking her head so that dark curls
brushed her ears and collar. “Don't jump up and say no. Think about it.
For one thing, it would do wonders toward confirming your legal
personhood. For another, there's the matter of our suit against China
in the World Court, and the question of whether AIs can testify.”
Richard patted his
hands against his thighs to a bossa nova beat. “Wait until somebody
figures out that the nanite infestation falls under the third Kyoto and
the second Kiev environmental accords, and that it's a violation of
both.
Potentially
harmful particulate contamination of international ocean waters. That's us.”
“An environmental
lawsuit is the least of our problems.” Riel rubbed her eyes and stifled
a yawn. “I have to sleep if I'm going to be pretty on camera tomorrow.
In thirty seconds, Richard, outline your plan of attack.”
“Easy.” He held up
his spidery fingers and ticked off goals one at a time. “One, mitigate
climate changes. Two, mitigate extinctions. Three, protect individual
human lives. Four, try to help the team talking to the Benefactors.
Meanwhile, you set up a world government, get the Chinese under
control, keep the rest of the commonwealth in line behind us, and
figure out how to revitalize a collapsed world economy. Does that sound
like an equitable division of labor to you, Madam Prime Minister?”
“It sounds like I'd
better get busy,” she said, and reached up to touch the connection off.
Her hand hesitated a centimeter from her earpiece. “Richard. We'll have
population problems if the death rate drops.”
And the AI sighed and
laced his fingers together. “The death rate's not going to drop,
Constance. The trick is going to be keeping a significant percentage of
humanity
alive
.”
1110 hours
Friday
September
28, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
I'm just finishing my
PT, wiping the sweat off my face onto one of the Montreal 's rough, unbleached
cotton towels, when Richard starts talking in my head. “Captain
Wainwright would like to see you when you're free, Jen.”
Thanks, Dick. Is
this good news or bad news?
“Ellie asked about
EVA plans, as you requested, so your guess is as good as mine.”
Your guess is as
good as most people's certainty, Dick.I head for the locker room, tossing
the towel overhand at the laundry chute as I go by. If the chute had a
net, it would sink with a swish. The Montreal 's variable,
lighter-than-earth grav takes some getting used to, but once you get
the hang of it it's pretty darn sexy. Puts a spring in your step.
Except you have to work twice as hard to stay in shape. Dammit.
“She doesn't see fit
to keep the AI apprised of everything.”
No, but she's
catching on pretty quick to using you as an intercom.The locker room is
empty, midwatch, except for one master corporal who is leaned into her
locker, curling her hair in the mirror. I peel off my sweat-drenched
tank top, kick my sweats aside, and step into the shower.
I feel him shrug. “It
costs me almost nothing in terms of resources, and if it leads her
closer to accepting me, it's a very small price to pay.”
The water's metered,
but it's steamy. The hot water pipes run alongside the outflow pipes
for the reactor coolant. Nothing wasted on a starship, especially not
heat. I get wet, wait for the water to kick off, and lather up with a
handful of gritty soap. Think she's gonna go for it?
“I think you're going
to have a fight on your hands.”
Tell me something
new about my life.I punch the button for another metered
blast of spray and scrub the suds out of my hair, turning one quick
pirouette to get the last of the lather off my skin. The master
corporal is long gone by the time I thumb lock open my locker and dress
in the crisp rifle green that makes me look like a red ant in a nest of
black ones when I'm out among the air force types. There's something
else that stands out about me once I'm dressed; the sidearm pressed to
my right hip. Valens never rescinded his order to keep it within reach.
I slick my damp hair
back—
neat
and under control—and stuff the comb into the vinyl
hanging pocket beside a mirror small enough to only show half my face
at a time.
Damn,
I'm still not used to wearing this face. You'd think I would be, by now. It's
been almost a year.
Richard's presence
shifts in my head. “You want to get out there as badly as I do,” he
says.
“Do you think it's
worth the risk, Dick?” Out loud, provoking a smile in spite of myself.
I unholster my sidearm and check the plastic loads, designed to squish
flat against the Montreal 's hull instead of punching a hole
and letting the vacuum outside in. Or the air inside out, more
accurately.
“What risk?”
The risk of
provoking the Benefactors somehow?The pistol's weirdly light in my hand.
I replace the clip, make sure the safety's latched, and slide the
weapon back into its holster, securing the snap. I can't look at it
anymore without remembering Captain Wainwright pointing one very much
like it at me. Without remembering Gabe's daughter Leah, and the fury I
feel that I can't even pretend her death was the kind of stupid
goddamned waste that kids dead in war are supposed to be. God damnit.
If it's futile, at
least you don't feel guilty getting mad.
My hand falls away
from the holster. If I never have to touch a weapon again, it will be
too fucking soon.
Richard rubs his
long, gaunt hands together, fingers mobile as the sticks of a fan.
“That's the thing, Jen. We stand just as much of a chance of
infuriating them by doing nothing as we do by wandering
over and knocking on the door. We just can't know.”
Besides. We're
both going nuts sitting on our asses.
“Correction. You are
going nuts sitting on your ass. I am shoveling like Hercules in the
Aegean stable, and to about as much effect.”
Maybe you need to
divert a river.
I feel him pause. That never
happens. Richard exists on a level of teraflops per femtowhatsit, words
that Gabe throws around like they mean something, but which promptly
fall out of my head and go splat all over the floor. Whatever, Dick
thinks a hell of a lot faster than I do, even with my amped-up
brain—although Dick will be the first to claim he doesn't necessarily
think
better
. The practical
application is that when Richard pauses in conversation, it's to be
polite, or to seem human, or to give us meat types a chance to catch up.
This is different.
He's hit a dead halt, and he's thinking . I can feel it. Feel
the seconds ticking over like boulders gathering momentum down a hill. Dick? What did I
say?
“A river,” he says,
that topographic smile rearranging his face like plate tectonics. This
one's at least a 6.5. “Ma'am, I do believe you've just given me an
idea.”
And you're going
to sit there and look smug about it, too, aren't you?
“I want to run some
simulations first.” The sensation of his virtual hug is like a passing
breeze brushing my shoulders. “I've been looking at the problem the
wrong way. When change is inevitable, the solution isn't to fight it,
but to work inside the new system and learn to live in the world that's
changed.”
I've heard cruder
versions of that sentiment.
He laughs, twisting
his head on his long papery neck. “You look beautiful. Now go beard the
captain in her den.”
“Great, the AI's
blind as well as insane.” But he can feel my grin as I can feel his,
and together we move spinwise and in-wheel, toward the captain's
conference room.
Wainwright looks up,
glowering, as I duck through the hatch and dog it behind me. Momma bear
with only one cub, and I square myself inside the door and wait for her
to indicate my next move.
We have a funny
relationship, Captain Wainwright and me.
She shuffles papers
across her interface panel and stows them in a transparent folder
mounted on her desk. You never can tell if the gravity will last from
minute to minute, or so they say, although I've never seen it fail. She
sighs and stands up, coming around the desk, as starched and pressed as
me and eight inches shorter. “I want to thank you for not springing
your radical idea on me in front of the scientists, ma'am.”
“I think Elspeth and
Richard deserve equal credit, ma'am.”
Arms folded over her
chest ruin the line of her uniform. She tilts her head back to stare me
in the eye. It doesn't cost her a fraction of her authority. “I'm sharp
enough to know who the suicidal lunatic on my ship is, Master Warrant
Officer.”
Eyes fixed straight
ahead, pretending I can't see the little curl twitching the corner of
her lip. “Yes, ma'am.”
“So what do you think
sending astronauts over there will accomplish that our drones and
probes haven't?”
I shrug. “Pique their
interest, ma'am? It's not so much about information retrieval—we've
done and can do that remotely. It's about letting them know we do want to talk to them.”
She doesn't answer;
just looks at me, and then looks down and plays with the stuff on her
desk. “You're going to go out there and make me proud in front of our
new guests. Aren't you?”
“Yes. Ma'am.”
“Good.” She steps
back, her hands dropping to her sides, standing tall. “At ease, Casey.
I'm done yelling at you.”
“Yes, ma'am.” But
this time I let her hear the humor in it.
She nods, then shakes
her head and taps her knuckle on her chin. “Casey, you're a shit
disturber. You know that?”
“It's a gift, ma'am.”
As I let my shoulders relax, my hands curl naturally against my thighs.
She sighs and rubs
her palms together. “You've proved your instincts to me—”
“But?” The hesitation
is implicit in the lift-and-drop of her gaze. She doesn't quite meet
mine directly. We're thinking of the same thing; me refusing a direct
order, at gunpoint, and making that refusal stick. And I was right,
dammit. And she knows I was right. And I think she's grateful I was
right, deep down in the light-starch, creased-trouser depths of her
military soul.
But it kind of fucks
up the superior/subordinate thing, and we're both still working our
asses off trying to pretend it doesn't matter. “There is no but,” she
says, after a longer wait than I'm comfortable with. “As long as I know
I can trust you.”
“You can trust me to
take good care of your ship, ma'am. And your crew.”
“And Canada?”
“That goes without
saying.”
“Consider it said
anyway.” She's working up to something. She looks at me again, and this
time doesn't look away. “I think Genie Castaign should enter the pilot
program,” she says. “She's already partially acclimated to the
Benefactor tech, her unaugmented reflexes are at least as good as her
sister's, she gets along with the Feynman AI, and she's bright. I want
you to talk to her father. He'll take it better from you.”
“Captain—”
“I didn't ask for
your opinion, Casey.”
“Yes, ma'am.” The
ship's spinning. And all I can feel is Leah, there in my arms and then
gone.
They used to say give
one child to the army, one to the priesthood, and try to keep one
alive. Gabriel only has one daughter left. Wainwright's gaze doesn't
drop from mine. “Yes, ma'am.” I know I'm stammering. Know there's
nothing else I can say. And Gabe won't even hate me for it, because
he's army, too, and because Gabe knows. “She's too young still to
induct.”
“Get her started on
the training. We'll take her when she's fourteen.” She stretches, and
ruthlessness falls off her shoulders like a feather dancer's cloak.
“Come on. It's time for the meeting. Let's go see if there are any
canapés.”
Toronto
Evacuation Zone
Ontario, Canada
Friday 28
September 2063
1100 hours
Snow is supposed to
be a benediction. A veil of white like a wedding dress, concealing
whatever sins lie beneath.
Frost on the
chopper's window melted under Valens's touch. He leaned against the
glass, his shoulder to Constance Riel, who sat similarly silent and
hunched on the port side. They both looked down, ignoring the pilot and
the other passengers.
The snow covering the
remains of Toronto lay not like a veil, but like a winding-sheet—one
landscape that even winter couldn't do much for. He stared at it,
trying not to see it, careful never quite to focus his eyes.
The prime minister
stirred. She shifted closer to Valens, closer to the center of the
helicopter, as if unconsciously seeking warmth. He glanced at her. Her
trained politician's smile had thinned to a hard line in her bloodless
face, and her head oscillated just enough that her hair shifted against
her neck.
“It doesn't look any
better than it did at Christmas. I thought it would look better by
now.” She glanced first at him and then down. She retrieved her purse
from the seat, dug for a stick of gum he didn't think she really
wanted, offered him one that he didn't accept. She folded hers into her
mouth and sat back. “Did you feel it in Hartford, Fred?”
“I felt the floor
jump,” he said, carefully looking out the window and not at Riel. “It
woke me. The sound came seconds later. It sounded like—” Words failed. Like a mortar.
You never hear the
one that gets you.
And then, unbidden, Georges wouldn't
have felt anything at all. He nodded, remembering the rise and
fall of solid earth, the thump of the bedframe jolting against the
wall. “It woke me.”
“I was closer,” she
said. “It knocked me down. I saw the fireball first, of course. If I'd
had any sense, I would have sat down.” She shrugged. “You're not really looking, are you, Fred?”
“Of course I am.” And
so he wouldn't be lying, he forced himself to look. To really look, at the unseasonable
snow that lay in dirty swirls and hummocks over what looked at first
glance like a rock field, at the truncated root of the CN Tower rising
on the waterfront like the stump of a lightning-struck tree.
Surprisingly, the tower had survived the earthquake, according to the
forensic report of the engineers who had toured the Evac during the
recovery phase. It had not survived the tsunami, nor the bombardment
with meter-wide chunks of debris. Around it, lesser structures had been
leveled to ragged piles of broken masonry and jutting pieces of steel.
Valens lifted his
gaze as the chopper came around, and frowned toward the horizon. The
frozen water of Lake Ontario would have been blinding in the sun, if
the light that fell through the haze weren't watery and wan, and if the
ice itself weren't streaked brown and gray like agate with ejecta. “A
park,” he said, looking down at his hands. He folded his fingers
together. He never had worn a wedding band; rings annoyed him. “What on
earth makes you think you can turn this into a park ?”
“What the hell else
do we do with it?” She turned over her shoulder. An aide and two
Mounties sat in the next row back, so hushed with the terrible awe of
the Impact that Valens had almost forgotten them. “Coffee, please?
Fred, how about you?”
He shook his head as
the aide poured steaming fluid from a thermos, filling the helicopter
with the rich, acidic smell. He didn't know how she could stomach
anything, but judging by the gauntness of her face she needed it for
medicinal purposes as much as the comfort of something warm.
Valens chafed his
hands against his uniform, trying to warm them. Riel glanced over, but
sipped her coffee rather than comment. She repeated herself, not a
rhetorical question this time. “What the hell else are we going to do
with it?”
“Rebuild,” Valens
answered, though his gut twisted. “It's . . .” He shrugged. “Hiroshima,
Mumbai, Dresden—”
“You're saying you
don't just pack it in and go home?”
“Something like that.
Besides, every city needs a nice big park.” Dryly enough that she
chuckled before she caught herself. He tipped his head and lowered his
voice, but kept talking. “Constance, do you know who Tobias Hardy is?”
“Yes,” she said, the
corners of her mouth turning down. “Your old boss Alberta Holmes's old
boss. Christ, I thought we had Unitek's fingers out of the Montreal 's pie.”
“You could always
seize it—” He shifted against the side panel of the helicopter. It dug
painfully into his shoulder, and he was stiff from sitting. He wasn't
as young as he used to be.
“I could,” she
answered. “But we need Unitek's money, frankly, and their Mars base.
And we don't need them running off to play with PanChina or PanMalaysia
or the Latin American Union or the European Union because Canada and
the commonwealth took our puck and sticks and went home.”
“You think they
would?” Her gaze met his archly. She didn't inconvenience herself to
reply, and Valens rolled his lower lip between his teeth before he
nodded. “It's not the done thing to say so, Prime Minister. But I want
some kind of retribution for that.” He gestured to the wasteland, but
his gesture meant more—PanChina, Unitek, sabotage, and betrayal.
“That's not the kind of blow you can turn the other cheek on and
maintain credibility.”
Her sigh ruffled the
oily black surface of her coffee, chasing broken rainbows across it. “I
know. We try the legal route first.”
“Forgive an old
soldier's skepticism.”
She gave him an
eyebrow and turned again, looking out the window, leaning away from
whatever she saw under the snow. “You're not the only one who's
skeptical. But we're showing we're civilized. And we've managed to
stall the hell out of their space program, since they can't know how
limited Richard's ability to hack their network is. So we
have the jump on them when it comes to getting a colony ship launched .
. . once we figure out if we can get one past the Benefactors without
them blowing it to bits.”
“We could try a
Polish mine detector.”
Reil chuckled. “Not
only is that politically incorrect, General Valens, but we can't
exactly afford to waste a starship.”
“There's always the Huang Di, ” he replied, going
for irony and achieving bitterness. “She's ours by right of salvage—”
“Fred!”
He spread his hands
to show that he was kidding. Nearly. “Meanwhile, China tries to hack
Richard, and the worldwire. Have we thought about how much damage they
could do?”
“That captured
saboteur—Ramirez—was surprisingly forthcoming about PanChinese
nanotechnology, once we convinced him to be. And Richard and Alan seem
to think we have the situation under control.”
“So we're at the
mercy of a couple of AIs.”
“Fred,” she said, and
paused to finish her coffee. He shifted on the seat, vinyl creasing his
trousers into his skin, and waited until she handed the mug back to her
aide, who stowed it. “You're always at somebody's mercy.
It's the name of the game. My job is to minimize the risks.”
“And mine is to
identify the threats,” he answered, provoking a swift, shy grin, an
almost honest expression.
She didn't look at
him again. Instead, she leaned forward and tapped the pilot on the
shoulder. “Take us home,” she mouthed when he turned to her, and he
nodded and brought the chopper around. She lowered her head and rubbed
her temples with her palms. “Don't worry, Fred. We'll get this figured
out somehow.”
He could have wished
there was more than a politician's conviction in her tone.
HMCSSMontreal , Earth orbit
Friday
September
28, 2063
Noon
If the conference
room chairs hadn't been bolted to the floor, Elspeth would have pushed
hers into the corner and gotten her back to the wall. She hated crowds,
and crowds involving strangers most of all. Not that Drs. Tjakamarra,
Forster, and Perry, Gabe Castaign, and Patricia Valens—sitting quietly
staring out the port with that distracted I'm-talking-to-Alan
expression pulling the corners of her pretty mouth down—made much of a
crowd. But she was reasonably certain they would start to seem like it
soon.
At least they're
all scientists. Well, almost all.Which shouldn't have made a
difference, but—on some deep-seated, instinctual level—made all the
difference in the world.
Because scientists
are part of your tribe,she told herself. They're a part of
your kinship system, and so they don't feel like strangers and threats.
What's the old saying, the stranger who is not a trader is an enemy? She smiled at her
fingernails. “I hope the Benefactors are here to trade something.”
“Look at the bright
side.” Gabe Castaign, all gray-blond ragamuffin curls and hulking
shoulders, had materialized at her shoulder as silently as a cat. She
startled, and then sighed and leaned back into the touch of his hand on
her shoulder.
“There's a bright
side?”
His laugh always
struck her as incongruous, coming from such an immense man. It was
bright and sharp-edged, crisp as a ruffled fan. “Yes. If the
Benefactors—both sets, or either—had the technology to put ships on
Mars a few million years ago, I'm sure that if they meant to wipe us
out they wouldn't have waited this long to do it. And furthermore,
don't forget that they showed up in force and departed in force, but
they've left behind only one ship apiece. That's not a threatening
gesture, by my standards.”
“Hmmm,” Elspeth
answered, unconvinced. “Or their time scale is different enough to ours
that fourteen million years is a trip down to the corner store for
pretzels, and they're still loading the torpedo tubes—”
A discrete cough drew
her attention. The team's xenobiologist, Charlie Forster, had wandered
up. “Unlikely,” he said, plump hands balled in his pockets. “If their
time sense were that far off scale with our own, the chances that they
would be doing math at a rate we find comfortable would be slim.”
Elspeth tipped her
head, conceding. Gabe's hand still rested on her shoulder, thumb
caressing the nape of her neck. She pretended she didn't notice, though
that would amuse Gabe more.
Charlie turned to
face them and planted one hip on the table. He scrubbed both hands flat
across his close-cropped hair. “I'm just so damned frustrated,” he
said, and stopped short.
She might have been
particularly useless when it came to comprehending aliens, but Elspeth
was a good enough psychiatrist to spot an invitation to pry when she
was handed one. “What's eating you, Charlie?”
He shrugged, but it
was the kind of shrug that said I'm gathering my courage rather than the sort
that said
leave
me alone, and Elspeth leaned forward in her chair to encourage him.
She cocked her head on a light, wry smile. Come on, Charlie .
He cupped his lower
lip and blew across his face in the gesture of a man whose bangs had
tended to fall into his eyes when he still had bangs. “I'm not much use
as a biologist from seven or ten kilometers away. Although—”
“Yes?” Gabe, a bit
sharply, with a tension that had nothing to do with the current
conversation. Elspeth leaned into his hand, pressing her shoulder to
his thigh. Whatever comfort she could offer, though she knew neither
she nor Jenny could touch this particular agony.
“I wonder, frankly,
if biology even relates.”
“What do you mean?”
Charlie waved one
hand in fine dismissal of the Montreal and all space around
her. “Okay, whatever's piloting the shiptree might be something we'd
consider an animal. It seems to need a contained atmosphere, and we
know from the ship on Mars that they bleed if you prick them, or at
least they leak a fluid that contains things we normally associate with
biology, such as amino acids and a DNA-analogue. But those globs in the
birdcage? I've spent weeks observing them, and they . . . they're just
plain weird. I'm not sure they are precisely . . . biological, by our
standards. They could be drones, machines, for all I know.”
“Then maybe we need
to redefine biology.”
Charlie gave her a
startled look, and Elspeth leaned back against Gabe's fingers and
lifted her chin to indicate the doorway to the corridor beyond. “In any
case, there's the last of our guests,” she said, as the hatch swung
open and Captain Wainwright stepped through it, Jenny two steps behind
her, and the new arrivals Tjakamarra and Kirkpatrick just after. “We'll
have to talk about this during the meeting. Do you have holos of the
weird stuff?”
“Is that a technical
term, Dr. Dunsany?”
She grinned. “It's as
technical as I like to get. Come on. Let's break the new kids in.”
Gabe offered her a
hand as she stood up from her chair. She took it, returning his slight
squeeze before moving away.
The ethnolinguist
Jeremy Kirkpatrick was a freckled, long-boned gingery redhead with a
thinking man's frown, or possibly a perpetual headache. He stood one
step behind Leslie Tjakamarra, like a funhouse mirror that inverted
color as well as shape and size, and fiddled his elegant fingers
against his trouser legs before leaning down to whisper in the
xenosemiotician's ear.
Paul's going to be
out of his depth,Elspeth thought, retrieving a plate of hors d'oeuvres off the
sideboard.
But
he's really just here to spy on us for Riel anyway, sooo— She caught the
dark-haired ecologist watching her. She gave him a distracted smile
with one corner of her mouth and offered the snacks to Dr. Tjakamarra.
“I hope you like stuffed mushrooms.”
“I eat anything that
doesn't bite back.” He grinned, a complicated rewrinkling of his face,
and picked up a mushroom with fingers knobby and dark as cast iron.
“That's not precisely true. Bush tucker does bite back. Thank you,
Dr. Dunsany.”
“Please, call me
Elspeth.” She lifted the plate upward, in the general direction of Dr.
Kirkpatrick. At least Dr. Tjakamarra wasn't significantly taller than
Elspeth; there were days when she felt like the only set of eyes on the Montreal she could meet
without standing on tiptoe was Wainwright's. “Or Ellie.”
“I had better call
you Elspeth,” Tjakamarra said. He made the mushroom vanish, and closed
his eyes for a moment while he chewed. “Otherwise we shall be Ellie and
Leslie, and people will assume that we're related.”
Kirkpatrick snorted.
“Then I shall be Jeremy, and we shall all pretend we are the oldest and
the best of friends.” He waved the mushrooms aside, bouncing on his
toes. Elspeth set the plate on the end of the bench, and Kirkpatrick
gestured to the hologram interface hanging over the conference table;
its screensaver was set to an image of the birdcage, spinning slowly.
“Is there any truth to the rumor that the team is planning a spacewalk
over to the Benefactor ships, to introduce ourselves?”
“The word team would indicate that
all of us were going.”
Kirkpatrick's face
fell.
“Oh, no,” Elspeth
corrected, her hands moving as if to erase her words from the air. “You
need to talk to Jenny, if you want to suit up. I was merely expressing
my own personal cowardice.”
The expatriate Brit
was a handsome man when he laughed. Elspeth gave him back a crooked
grin and shrugged, and when he coughed to a stop, he said, “It seems a
pity to come all the way through Malaysia and up the beanstalk and down
the rabbit-hole and through the city of War Drobe in the far land of
Spare Oom, and float around on shuttlecraft . . . and not go for a
stroll.”
“Well, when you put
it that way—” She turned, and stared at the birdcage. “O brave new
world, that has such creatures in it.”
“People,” Leslie
corrected gently, reaching past her for another mushroom.
“I beg your pardon,
Doc—Leslie?”
“‘That has such people in it.' The creatures
are earlier in the speech.” He popped the mushroom cap into his mouth
with a flourish and chewed dramatically. “That's my favorite play.”
“I'm more a light
romantic comedy girl myself,” Jeremy said, dripping irony. “It looks as
if the captain is ready to start—”
Elspeth turned
around. Everyone else had clumped near the conference table, and
Wainwright was ushering people into seats. “Unfortunately, it appears
that that's my cue.” She made a little, self-conscious curtsey, aware
both that she was flirting with Leslie— andJeremy—and that they were amazed by
the flirtation. Once a coquette, always a coquette.
Leslie gave her half
a wink from an otherwise impassive face, and Elspeth made her excuses
and returned to the table. She walked to the head, where Wainwright
stood, and noticed with a triphammering heart that Wainwright stepped
aside to let her command the gathering. She also noticed that silence
followed almost immediately, eight pairs of eyes trained on her. The
respect was a shock; she twined her fingers together in front of her
waist to steady them, and cleared her throat. A second later, Gabe
unobtrusively set a cup of water at her elbow.
Elspeth would have
blushed if she looked at him, so instead she looked at Jenny, and Jenny
gave her a steadying wink. She took a deep breath, raised her eyes
unnecessarily to the ceiling, and asked, “Richard, can you hear me?”
“I hear you,
Elspeth,” he said, his even, resonant voice filling the room. Leslie
tilted his head backward, glancing around for the loudspeakers before
he caught himself and shook his head, a little ruefully. Jeremy plainly
jumped, and then frowned in chagrin when Patty Valens reached out
absently and patted him on the arm. Like Jenny, she felt the AIs'
voices in her head. “What are our items on the agenda today?”
Elspeth pressed the
pad of her thumb to the interface plate, calling up her notes. “Let's
see. Okay. It looks as if first, Dr. Forster is going to tell us why
the Benefactors aren't biological, as we understand the term. And then
Dr. Tjakamarra is going to tell us why they don't have a language, as
we understand the term. And then Casey is going to explain to us why
it's imperative we dress up in astronaut costumes and wander over to
tap on their storm door and ask if we can borrow a cup of stardust. And
then we discuss our options, after that.” She raised her eyes again, to
appreciative laughter and the warm pressure of Jen's smile and Gabe's
approval.
Hey,she thought. That wasn't so
hard
after all.
Leslie rested his
chin on interlaced fingers and focused on the blond Canadian. Dr.
Forster was pacing, a light pointer held in his hand, and every so
often he turned to the hologram floating above the table and poked
inside it with the pointer, changing magnification or bringing another
aspect to prominence.
“As you can see,”
Forster said, the pointer balanced like an extension of his forefinger,
“the animate masses we have been assuming are the birdcage aliens have
a number of very odd and interesting behaviors.” The pointer traced a
glowing path fine as a hair through the center of the hologram, and
Leslie leaned forward, his eyes on the described arc. “They appear to
move comfortably in a vacuum. Their ship is designed to be open to
space, and while it's possible that the seemingly fluid silver material
is some sort of protective gear, it's—drat. Richard, rewind five
seconds, please, and magnify 150 percent? Thank you. Please watch the
path I've marked.”
Leslie dropped his
hands from his face and sat straight as a tear-shape like a falling
drop of mercury detached itself from one girder of the birdcage and
drifted effortlessly across the open space in the center of the
starship, splashing down on the opposite side of the structure. And splashing was the right word,
he realized, as the creature— or object—flattened against the
crystalline structure of the cage and then bobbed into three dimensions
again. Another teardrop moved toward the flyer, and Leslie nodded,
expecting a consultation, a brief friendly wave, some semiotic signal
of dominance and submission, something .
The two teardrops
flowed into and through each other like ripples crossing in a wave
tank, passing without hesitation and reforming cleanly, moving apart
without a pause.
“Bloody weird,”
Leslie said, startling himself with the sound of his own voice. He met
Forster's eyes and took in that single arched eyebrow, the pursed lips,
the expectancy.
“Dr.—I mean, Leslie?
Sorry.” A self-deprecating twist of the Canadian's head, which Leslie
brushed aside.
“I said, that's
bloody weird.”
“The great Australian
adjective,” Jeremy muttered from Leslie's left, and Leslie gave him a
self-consciously wry look. “Sorry. Carry on. What's bloody weird, Les?”
Leslie waved one
hand. “There was no visible acknowledgment when they passed. And they
moved
through
each other. That's .
. . strange. Humans make eye contact, even passing a stranger on the
street—or if they're uncomfortable, avoid it consciously. Cats sniff
noses or hiss. Even flatworms and ants acknowledge each other. It makes
me seriously question the social organization of these critters, if
they have one. Well, there could be something electromagnetic—”
“Probes showed no
such communication,” Charlie interrupted.
“They must
communicate somehow,” Elspeth Dunsany said. “They obviously manage
teamwork, assist each other.”
Leslie shook his
head. “What if Charlie's right and they're not animals? What if they
are machines, after all?”
“What if they are machines,
Dr. Tjakamarra?” Richard's voice, disembodied and resonant.
Leslie spread his
hands wide and allowed himself a nod. “Touché. But do you see my
point, Dr. Feynman?”
“Yes.” A thoughtful
pause, and Leslie noticed that Jen Casey looked amused by it. “How does
this affect your theories about the language—or lack thereof—of the
Benefactors?”
“I'll have to
reconsider,” he said, trying to sound as if the admission didn't pain
him. “I had suspected that our difficulties might be due to the aliens
using a strictly visual system of communication, but this evidence
tends to suggest that if there is such a thing, it takes place on a
level that's invisible to humans. African elephants used to do
something similar. Their vocalizations were mostly subsonic, as far as
humans were concerned. It took bloody ages to unravel it.”
Elspeth smiled. It
was meant to be commiserating, but Leslie thought it looked tired.
“Well, we've been at it nine months. I don't suppose a ‘reconsider' is
going to hurt us. We've trod our respective turf rather extensively; I
can't deny you and Jeremy the same chance. Did you have anything else
to add, Leslie?”
He shook his head.
“My prepared speech just went by the wayside, I'm afraid. Why don't we
move along?”
Elspeth fixed Forster
with a look. “More, Charlie?”
“I could natter on
for hours,” he answered, “but nobody would listen. I yield the floor.”
“Good.” Elspeth
knocked on the table lightly, informally, with the hard surface of her
knuckles. She turned toward Casey. “Jen? Let's hear about your crackpot
EVA idea.”
“With an introduction
like that,” Casey answered, standing, “I don't see how I can pass up
the chance.”
Patricia Valens
didn't understand why Jenny and Elspeth thought it was important for
her to come to these staff meetings. But they did, and so she braved
Captain Wainwright's unvoiced disapproval to do it.
Although she wasn't
all that sure it was disapproval. Despite Patty's youth, the captain had never
treated her as anything other than a valued crew member, one of the
precious individuals reengineered to be capable of guiding the Montreal at hyperlight. But it
was
something —discomfort, perhaps?
“It's simple,” Jenny
said as she took Dr. Forster's place at the head of the conference
table. “We've tried waiting by the phone for nine months, and unless
things change, we're going to be stuck without a date for prom. Time to
see what a little forwardness gets us.”
Maybe the captain
just doesn't like kids.Patty bit her lip to keep her careful
smile from turning into a pout. She glanced down and picked up her
light pen, centering her hip unit on the table in front of her and
tapping it on. At least if she kept careful notes she'd look
interested, and she might be able to go over them later and understand
more of what the scientists, the captain, Mr. Castaign, and Jenny were
planning. It was always frustrating to feel so at a loss in
conversations, as if she was in over her head and wasn't really
supposed to be a part of the gathering. And she really thought that
Elspeth expected her to listen rather than ask too many questions, even
if she could have come up with any intelligent ones.
Leah would have known
what to say. Leah would have made a joke or an interesting comment, and
put everyone at ease.
“—that's why we're
going to go out there and get them to take notice of us, one way or
another,” Jenny finished, and Patty's head came up.
“Outside?” she said,
proud enough that it didn't come out a squeak that she almost forgot
she was talking. “EVA?”
“Yes,” the captain
said, stepping forward, trim in her navy uniform. “And before you ask,
Cadet, the answer is no.”
“Ma'am—”
“No. I have two
pilots. I can't risk both of you at once.”
“Ma'am.” Jenny's
voice, and Patty looked up, startled. “I'll stand aside for Patty.”
“Casey.”
“But that brings me
to another point I wanted to discuss with you.”
“Yes?”
“We have a resource
we're wasting, ma'am. Shamefully.”
Patty looked up,
startled, and got a good look at the glance the captain shot Jenny, the
one that glittered with not-in-front-of-the-kids. Not in front of
me,
she means .
“An excellent point,
Master Warrant,” the captain said. “We'll discuss it later. When we go
over the duty roster.”
“Thank you—”
But the captain's
impatient wave cut Casey into silence. “Is there any other business on
the table? No?” The captain smiled, making a point of catching Patty's
eyes especially. “In that case,” Wainwright said, “I commend you to the
canapés.”
Patty had never
understood the big deal about canapés. Especially the Montreal 's, which were made
with soy cheese. In any case, she would have been unlikely to eat them
even if her stomach hadn't been knotted with anticipation. Instead, she
leaned against the wall, her shoulders pressed against it, twisting
glossy dark strands of hair around her fingers and nibbling at the back
of her thumb. She had a wallflower's knack for vanishing into the
shadows, even in a well-lit briefing room. And as the grown-ups moved
around, none of them approached her.
She tugged the clip
off her braid and ducked her head, letting her hair fall across her
face. Leah wouldn't be hiding in the corner, even in a room full of
people three times her age with enough titles to deck a Christmas tree.
Leah would be standing at her dad's elbow, laughing, charming doctors
and starship captains alike.
It was wrong that
Patty had lived and Leah had died, the luck of the draw and the sheer
chance of which of them had been on the Calgary when she went down.
It should have been Patty. Leah had family and friends. She had Jenny
and Mr. Castaign and Dr. Dunsany and Genie.
All Patty had was the
miserable realization that she was bitterly grateful Leah had died and
she had lived. Leah, and Carver, and Bryan, and all the rest of the
kids in the pilot program. She was glad she had been lucky, though it
tore her throat with pettiness to admit it. Glad, glad, glad. And never
mind the guilt that went with it.
“I beg your pardon,
miss—” A scratchy, accented voice. Patty pushed her hair aside and
found herself looking into the faded blue eyes of the British
scientist. “Is this the castaways' corner?”
“Excuse me?” She
straightened up, tucking her tangled hair primly behind her ears, and
looked him in the eyes. “Dr.—”
“Kirkpatrick.”
“Of course. You're
Irish.”
“English,” he
answered, turning to put his back against the bulkhead beside hers.
“Don't let the name and the red hair fool you. Although I don't suppose
I'm particularly English anymore.”
Patty blinked. “How
can you stop being English?”
“When there stopped
being an England,” he answered, with a clipped-off sigh. “I'm a citizen
of the commonwealth now. A man without a country.” And then he tilted
his head and lifted one shoulder like a bird fluffing a wing, and he
grinned. And Patty grinned back at him, before she even knew she was
going to do it.
1330 hours
Friday
September
28, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
Gabe's always been
stronger than anybody had any right to be, and I can't stand to see him
like this. Locked up inside, tight as a drum, an emptiness behind his
eyes that I can't shift and neither can Elspeth. It makes me want to
take him away and cosset him and call him pet names and protect him
until the ice unlocks a little and he learns how to breathe again. And
instead Wainwright's appointed me the bearer of bad tidings. Again.
Mind, it's not that
I'm taking it any better than Gabe is. It's just that I've got more
practice. So I walk over and cut him out of conversation with Charlie
and Leslie, take him by the elbow, and press the back of my hand
against my forehead, over my eyes. “Gabe, I'm going to go lie down a
bit. Too many people, too much light, too much noise.”
He nods.
I tilt my head at
where Patty stands pressed into a corner, Dr. Kirkpatrick—who is
obviously savvier than I gave him credit for—shielding her from the
room with his body. Elspeth keeps shooting her worried looks, but
Elspeth is trapped in conversation with Wainwright and Perry, so it's
up to me.
Gabe just looks at
me, lips pursed, and I gesture to Patty with my eyes once more. Help me get her
out
of here, Gabe .
It's almost as if
kids have become invisible to him, since Leah. I've seen him do it to
Genie, too, as if looking at her were a pain so enormous it might suck
him up like a black hole sucking light from a star. Poor kid lost her
sister and half of her papa in one fell blow, but it's probably better
to be treated like a stranger come calling than overprotected, for all
it hurts more. And Genie has Elspeth, who took her in from day one.
And now I've got to
break it to both of them that Genie's tracked for the same
modifications that have me working on a migraine and Patty scrunched
into the corner like a hermit crab into its shell. And I've still got to
have more words with the captain, because I promised Richard I'd help
him save that Chinese boy he befriended.
That Chinese boy, who
saved a lot of other people. And it'll be easier with Gabe's help than
without. And I really do have to get Patty the hell out of this party
and into a warm shower and a bed before she freaks out all over the
floor. “Gabe,” I say, finally, because he's just not getting it—which
is scary in itself, because Gabe is sharp —“walk us to our
rooms?”
“What?” He blinks,
and I realize my voice has called him back from far away. “Oui,
certainement. Just let me go make our excuses.” He shoves his glass
blindly at the table edge and turns away. It's only my bullet-catching
reflexes that let me intercept it on its way to the floor. Ginger ale
splashes my glove. I set the glass down and suck sweetness out of the
leather absentmindedly, watching his broad back as he walks away.
No, Gabe's not doing
well at all. But there are moments when he's almost like his old self,
and after I extricate Patty and he rejoins us by the door, I get to see
a flash of Gabe Castaign, lurking under that pall of grief. He smiles
at me and then ducks through the blue-painted pressure hatch, his
shoulder scraping the frame. As Patty and I follow, he holds the hatch
aside gallantly, hamming it up with a bow. I reach out in passing and
tweak his ear; he yelps. He's performing, and I can't tell if it's for
Patty's sake or mine.
It doesn't matter.
It's a good sign amid all the bad. “Where's Genie?”
“Richard's teaching
her precalc in one of the hydro gardens. Should we pick her up along
the way?”
“No,” I say. “He's
got a knack for making even math fun. She's probably enjoying herself.”
I glance sideways at Patty. She's listening, walking alongside us, her
head down so her hair hides her profile. She hasn't been the same since
Leah died, either—hell, let's be honest, I have no room to judge,
myself—and it suddenly hits me, what the solution to my problem is.
Genie, and Patty, and the empty space in the middle that could be
closed up, between them. Except I'm going to have to pull it off
without either one of them suspecting, because neither one of them is
going to want to love anybody in Leah's place, or even appear to. Richard?
“Right here.” Always,
like an interface left on standby; just wiggle your fingers and it
flickers to life. “And yes, Genie's fine. About Min-xue—”
I'm getting there.
You never did tell me why our conversation about Hercules made you jump
like a shocked colt.
“I'm still running
equations. I don't want to raise any false hopes until I know it can be
done.”
Richard—But he's adamant, and
I can feel it. The bastard always did like to spring surprises. And if he's still working on it,
it's one hell of a problem. Something I've noticed lately about him and
his mostly-silent alter ego. “Gabe, does Richard seem faster to you
lately?”
“Gossiping, Jen?”
I can't be talking
behind your back when you're in my head.
“Fair enough,” he
says, as Gabe checks his step a half-stride to let me catch up with him
and gives me a thoughtful look. Patty looks up as well, hazel eyes
glittering under a mahogany fringe. “Yes,” Gabe says. “And I can tell
you why.”
“All right. Patty, do
you want something to drink now that we're out of the crush?” Not that
a couple of handfuls of people is really a crush, but I remember how
claustrophobic the wiring made me at first. And I had what they call a
good adaptation.
“No, thank you,
Jenny.” The kid's had entirely too much respect for authority stomped
into her. And I don't even think it's all Fred Valens's fault.
“Well,” I say, “I do.
Let's go find a chair in the lounge nobody uses, and Gabe can tell us
his theory. What do you say?”
Gabe's got that
raised eyebrow like he knows I'm up to something, but he nods, the
corners of his mouth writhing with the effort of wrestling his smirk
back into the cage.
I manage to get Patty
to take a Coke, once we're seated in the fat, plush chairs of the
smaller crew lounge. She draws her feet up under her butt with enviable
flexibility and holds the unbreakable cup in both hands, staring past
me and out the porthole. I never get tired of looking either, but I
don't think the view really has her attention.
“Okay. Tell me about
the AIs, Gabe.”
“Well,” he says, and
threads his fingers together. “Based on my conversations with Richard,
what's going on is that, in addition to acting as directors for the
nanites as they breed through Earth's ecosystem, Richard and Alan are
running on the spare cycles in the nanocritters themselves. It's a
distributed network in the truest sense—no, it's a distributed brain ; neurons and
synapses and glial cells, or a mechanical approximation of the same.”
“A planet-sized
brain,” Patty says, suddenly engaged.
“So the more the
worldwire breeds, the more processing power Richard and Alan have
available.”
“Yes,” Gabe says. He
grins at me, and grins a little bit wider at Patty. He knows perfectly
well I don't have a handle on this stuff; hand me a wrench and I'm
happy. “But more than that. When we created the two Richards and
remerged them, and then created Alan and gave him a direct link to
Richard, what we did was build a multithreaded personality.”
“Elspeth called it
disassociative identity disorder.”
“Elspeth's training
is biased toward the conclusion that everyone is crazy,” Richard said.
“Gabe's on the money so far.”
Gabe's a smart boy.
“So are we all,”
Richard says, with the air of somebody quoting something. “All smart
boys—”
Gabe's still talking,
mostly to Patty now. I hope he didn't see me glaze over. “—got is a
system where Richard and Alan have learned to divide themselves at
will, to spawn self-directed processes that are, to all intents and
purposes, new AIs, and then reabsorb these threads of themselves or
each other, or allow different threads—I'm calling them personas, and I'm calling the
whole AI structure an entity, for lack of a better name—allow
different threads to rise in importance in the hierarchy as their job
becomes more urgent or demands more system resources. So what's the
zeroth persona at one moment can be the one-hundred-fifty-ninth tier a
picosecond later, and then pop back up, and they all can spawn
subprocesses and subpersonas customized to the task at hand. It's all
interconnected. A true nonlocalized intelligence of almost infinite
adaptability.”
Richard grins in my
head. “He's figured out more than anybody except Min-xue has. Except he
hasn't realized that we have an emotional connection to continuity of
experience and personality, the same as you meat folks. So we're a bit
less fluid than all that. But he's got the essentials down.”
You're not going
to kill us all for having uncovered the evil AI plot to take over the
world?
“Don't panic when I
say this, Jen, but we don't need a plot. We've already conquered the
planet. You're stuck with us now.”
Yeah,I say. I know . I finish my Coke
and set the cup aside. I'll pitch it at the recycler on the way back
out the door. Come on, Dick. Let's get this kid tucked in.
Gabe Castaign lay on
his lofted, half-height alcove bed, ankles crossed, staring at the
bulkhead—all two meters square of it. Or more precisely, staring at the
porthole that pierced it. The bed was not quite broad enough for his
shoulders. The only other furniture was a wall-mount swivel chair and a
professional grade interface crammed into a third the normal space.
There was almost
enough floor space to do push-ups. He'd seen solitary cells that were
bigger, and had bigger windows.
But not a better view.
Genie's room was on
the other side of the wall, her bed in the alcove immediately under
his, so that he effectively had the top bunk and she the bottom,
although they could not see or speak to each other.
He'd spent the first
three weeks that they'd shared a wall teaching her Morse code—and he
had to be the last man on the planet who knew it. It tickled her to
learn, like knowing the Victorian language of flowers or something. She
just knocked on the ceiling of her bunk when she wanted him, and he in
his turn knocked on the floor. They'd become curiously formal with each
other since Leah's death and the separation that had followed, and Gabe
hadn't had the heart to press her as he knew he probably should. Kids
were always funny around that age anyway, just moving toward adulthood,
womanhood, and secrets. It was a strange, sad, and mysterious thing.
And he was too much
of a damned coward to reach out and grab her before she got away.
Irritated, he swung his feet down, ducking the edge of the bunk, and
slithered to the floor. Half the covers followed him, rasping his
jumpsuit pockets; he tidied them with military reflexes. He didn't even
have to step across the room to reach his chair, just turn around and
sit.
“Richard,” Gabe said,
settling back, eyes trained on the revolving view through the porthole.
“Remember when we were busting our asses trying to fix Ramirez's hack
job on the
Montreal
's operating system?”
“Intimately,” the
walls answered, as if the conversation had been ongoing rather than
abruptly and unceremoniously commenced. “There haven't been any
disturbances since we declared it clean.”
“I keep thinking it
was too easy.” Reinforced aluminum creaked under Gabe's weight, even in
partial gravity.
“You thought at the
time that there might be a second saboteur.” Which, Richard didn't say,
was a hypothesis they'd examined thoroughly and discarded. Richard was
not the sort to disregard hunches, or discrepancies that nagged at the
back of your mind for days, or weeks, or months.
And neither was Gabe.
“I keep coming back to it, that if you can get one man inside, you can
get a second. But I've got no evidence. Nothing but a hunch. And no
line of investigation.”
“May I use your
console, Gabe?”
“Sure.”
A holographic image
flickered into opacity over Gabe's interface, a weathered, bony man in
a white shirt and tan corduroys, no tie, his arms folded as he leaned
against the bulkhead. “The code is clean,” Richard said, and rubbed his
nose with a knuckle. “We've been over it fifteen times. There's not a
scrap of program on this system we both haven't investigated until we
know what purpose every comma serves.” But his lips were pursed, and a
long shallow line hovered between his brows.
“I know. I know. No
logic bomb anywhere. Still, it's got to be a little creepy for you, in
a psychological sense.”
“If I can be
precisely said to have a psychology.”
“All the same.
Essentially, you are the Montreal . And your own
more-or-less-subconscious tried to kill us all several times.” The
chair swiveled, but it wouldn't scoot back against the wall
comfortably. Gabe compromised by putting his feet up on the interface,
avoiding the holoprojectors so he wouldn't make Richard's image
flicker. The metal desk dug into his calves.
Richard's restless
fingers were tapping now. “The analogy doesn't work. It was more like .
. . well, a virus is aptly named. A foreign disease that turns the host
body's cells against it.”
“So what if the
Chinese had another agent aboard? One with a more . . . physical
agenda. Explosives, or a real disease?”
Richard shrugged.
“We're taking every precaution available. We've got two existing
bottlenecks—the beanstalks in Malaysia, Brazil, and the Galapagos,
leading up to Forward, Clarke, and Piper orbital platforms—and then the
shuttles to the Montreal . The platforms themselves are
already pretty well defended, security protocols recently upgraded, and
it's not like it's a steady stream of traffic from there to here—”
Gabe nodded. He
looked down, picking at the seam on his jumpsuit with his thumbnail,
and then he looked back up and met Richard's holographic gaze. “We'll
just have to be careful, then, and bet our balls.” It earned him half a
grin from the AI, as the two entities regarded each other across a
space of no more than a meter. “Dick—”
“Yes, Gabriel?”
Honest curiosity, too
long repressed in the name of politeness. It wasn't staying down any
longer. “What's it like?” And then he laughed at himself, shaking his
head ruefully, not breaking the eye contact, quite. Comme un gosse qui
demande à son père d'expliquer le sexe.
“Being me?” Dick's
grin was full-fledged now. He ran one hand across his hair; Gabe could
have sworn he heard the rasp of wavy strands through knotty fingers.
“You know, I remember being human, Gabe.”
Gabe shook his head,
unwilling to speak and disturb the odd intimacy of the moment.
“I remember being
human, and yet I never was. Elspeth gave me that. The complete history
of Richard P. Feynman—his letters, his memoirs, his lectures, his
interviews, his recorded conversations and music, his drawings, his
art—it's all me. I remember it, probably more clearly than a human
would. Conflation, and constructed memories, and the data has become a
person, because that is the way I was programmed. I think I'm him. I
remember being him. But in point of fact, I can't know if I'm really a
thing like him. Or if my memories bear any resemblance to what he
recalled. And there are things about him I don't know, can't know, if
they were never committed to paper.”
“Spooky.”
A holographic shrug.
“If you're easily spooked, I suppose. If I were a religious man, I'd
wonder at the morality of it—reconstructing a person, even an
electronic person, in the shadow of a dead one. It's got tremendous
potential for misuse.”
“Indeed,” Gabe said.
He swung his feet down, his ship shoes scuffing on the deck. “Mais ce
n'est pas que j'ai voulu dire.”
“What did you mean,
then?”
“I was wondering what
it was like to be . . . multithreaded. To be more than one person at
once.”
Richard laughed. “I'm
not, you know. I'm all one person. I'm just capable of being more than
one place at the same time. For example, right now I'm talking to Dr.
Perry about climactic change, to the Prime Minister about the court
case, I'm trying to find ways to remanage some Atlantic currents and
running sims to see what certain changes might do—”
“And you're here in
this room with me.”
“I've gotten used to
it.”
“And yet you seem
like a regular guy.”
Richard smiled. He
looked down at his hands. He hooked his illusory thumbs through his
imaginary belt loops, tilted his head, and looked up again. “Gabe,” he
said, and paused, and made a helpless gesture that Gabe knew was
completely calculated—or was, more precisely, a translation of
Richard's picosecond-long loss-for-words onto a human scale. “Thanks.
That means something to me, Gabriel.”
Whatever he might
have said next was interrupted by a tapping on the hatch, a metallic
sound that made both men's mouths twitch: Jenny, knocking with her left
hand. As good an announcement of who was there as a Victorian calling
card. And Richard shrugged wryly, winked broadly, and vanished as Gabe
got up to answer the door.
Jenny stepped back as
he swung the hatch open, hair slicked off her forehead from a recent
shower, dressed off-duty in sweats and a heather-gray T-shirt. She was
smiling. It looked forced. Gabe stepped out of the way.
She folded her
spidery frame and ducked through the hatch, eyes downcast as he pulled
it shut behind her and dogged it.
“Jenny, what's wrong?”
“What makes you think
anything's wrong?”
He put his back to
the hatch. Her skin was warm when he laid his hand on the nape of her
neck, clipped hairs fuzzy against his palm. She sighed and turned into
him, her cheek on his shoulder, her face pressed into his throat. He
paused for a moment and let his free hand slide around her waist, her
body like a twist of rawhide. Tough and implacable and fragile as soap
bubbles, and he held his breath as if he could accidentally blow her
away.
“This,” he said, when
he dared, her breath warming the hollow over his collarbone. He felt
her rueful smile. She stepped back and held him at arm's length, the
steel hand and the human on his shoulders, her chin lifted to look him
dead in the eyes.
“Damn you, mon ange.”
The corner of her mouth lifted. “Je suis une plaque de glace pour toi,
n'est-ce pas?”
“Non.” He stepped
closer, and kissed her lightly. She didn't try to hold him away. “Tu es
une mystère. Jen—”
“Oui?”
“Out with it.”
She took a breath,
the long muscles under his hands tightening. “Wainwright wants Genie
for the pilot program.”
He would have jerked
away from her, but his shoulders hit the hatch when he stepped back,
the handle catching him over a kidney with a sharp shock of discomfort.
He flinched and let his hands fall. Jenny held him tighter, the light
catching in her prosthetic eye so the cornea seemed to sparkle.
“Putain!”
“C'est vrai.” She
wasn't letting him go, and he didn't mind.
“Dick could have
warned me—”
“Dick doesn't tell
tales out of school.” Tiredly, her head rocked back on her shoulders
for a moment, and she closed her eyes. “I told the captain—c'est trop
cher.”
“She didn't care, of
course.” Very carefully, so she wouldn't think it was a dismissal, he
reached up and plucked her left hand off his shoulder. She wasn't
wearing the glove today; no point with the short-sleeved T-shirt
showing the gleaming hydraulics of her prosthesis. Her touch
sensitivity included the palm and fingertips only; he squeezed her
wrist anyway, the metal cool and unyielding, even though she couldn't
feel the touch.
She shook her head
and turned inside his embrace, leaning her shoulders against his chest,
her head against his shoulder, winding his arm around her like a ribbon
when he didn't let go. The weight of her body pressed him harder
against the door handle. He grunted and stepped to one side, arm around
her midsection to move her with him, and she came along like a dancing
partner, smooth and light.
“It gets her off the
planet,” she said.
Jenny was tall enough
that he had to stand up straight and tilt his head back to tuck her
under his chin. She sighed when he did it, and melted against him as if
his warmth had unmoored whatever emotional props kept her stiff-backed
and upright. He nodded into her hair.
“Dammit, Gabe. I'm
tired. Je suis fatiguée.” She shook her head. “When do we get to
take a break?”
He snorted and pulled
her closer, breathing in the shower-clean scent of her skin. “When they
push us over and shovel dirt on our heads,” he answered, holding on
tight.
1400 hours
Friday
September
28, 2063
Lake Simcoe
Military Prison
Ontario, Canada
Xie Min-xue stared at
the wall of his cell, which was beige and featureless, but he wasn't
seeing it. He wasn't feeling the headache caused by the fluorescent
lights, his enhanced senses turning what was supposed to be a flicker
too fast for perception into something more akin to the stutter of a
strobe light, because all his attention was turned inward focused on an
old American poem. Richard was still helping him with his English, and
in a little less than a year it had gotten much better than he would
ever have permitted his guards—or his fellow Chinese prisoners—to
realize.
As clearly as if
someone who had been quietly reading a book had raised his head and
fixed him with a glance, Min-xue felt the shift in Richard's attention.
He'd been backgrounded, conversing with one of Richard's subroutines
while Richard's core identity handled half a dozen more important
things. Now the threads merged again, the AI's primary awareness
focusing on Min-xue. It was the equivalent of a man clearing his
throat, except Min-xue felt the pressure of that regard as an internal
thing.
It prickled the hairs
on his neck.
Hello, Richard.
“Hello, Min-xue . . .”
That polite
hesitation, and it told Min-xue that Richard was serious. You're here to
tell
me what they're going to do with me .
“I'm here to let you
know what's being discussed, and let you know what we're going to do
about it. You do have friends in high places, you know.”
Not high enough.The pilot shook his
head and rose to his feet. He paused for a moment, looking down at his
feet in their white canvas sneakers with the thin plastic soles. You're going to
ask
me to defect, Richard. I will not do that.
“But you'll testify
against your superiors in a World Court? That seems a little
contradictory.” Richard “spoke” English, but he spoke it slowly, so
that Min-xue would understand him clearly.
There was nothing in
the cell except a narrow shelf made up as a bench or a bed, a steel
toilet, and a tightly folded blanket. The air from outside smelled
cold, musty. He could almost convince himself that he caught the reek
of soot. Min-xue paused beneath the high, barred window. Along with the
solitary cell that protected him from the crew-mates he'd betrayed,
that window was the prison's concession to his controversial status.
“Refusing to carry
out an illegal order is not treason.” Which wasn't exactly the words of a concept he'd
found echoed in T'ang poetry and in subversive twentieth-century
English literature, but the sentiments behind it hadn't changed very
much in centuries. I am not a defector, Richard. I am not a traitor.
“If you're a citizen
and a subject of the commonwealth, Riel can protect you. If you are a
PanChinese national . . .”
Is this your way
of letting me know that my government wants me back for punishment?
“They wish access to
the aliens, and restitution for the nanite infestation of their waters
and the damage to the Huang Di that you caused. And yourself and all
the rest of the crew returned. Along with the Huang Di, of course.”
Of course. And I
am to take the blame for the attack on Toronto, and Captain Wu the
courageous patriot who tried to prevent my actions?
He felt Richard's
sigh, saw it with his inward eye. “I liked you better when you were an
innocent who liked poetry, Min-xue.”
Alas for
innocence, then.But it was true; the past year had changed him, and not in
comforting ways. Should my loyalty to my country cease because she is
mastered by selfish men?
“I knew translating
the Yevtushenko for you was a bad idea. Min-xue, you can do China more
good in the long run if you stand with us, and try to bring her current
leaders down.”
That is neither
obedience nor devotion,Min-xue replied, his eyes closed, his
palms pressed to the raspy cinder-block wall. But it wasn't obedience
and devotion that had brought him to this place, either. I will testify,
Richard. Surely that's enough. And I can warn you that my countrymen
won't give up so easily. They are hungry, and they are frightened of
the worldwire, and they have ten thousand chosen men and women en route
to the colony planet, and no way to call them back.
They'll come back
with another gambit. They have no choice. There's an expression,
Richard, about men with nothing to lose. I think you have it in
English, too.
The AI frowned, an
expression Min-xue felt more than saw, and refused to be distracted.
“What if I told you that I can probably get you a shot at the Vancouver 's pilot's chair,
when she's commissioned?”
The prime minister
would never permit that.
“The prime minister
has exactly two trained Canadian pilots left. You're in a better
position to bargain than you think.”
The pilot's chair.Min-xue hushed his
thoughts, keeping them from Richard's hearing, a trick that had mostly
to do with simply willing not to be overheard. In the final analysis,
he did not wish to die for his crimes, although he had been prepared.
But a Canadian girl had died in his place, and there were some who
might argue that as such, it was his debt to live in hers. If you can arrange
it, I will bargain, he answered. But you must see
to
it that there is a trial, and that I have the chance to testify.
“I'll speak to
Casey,” Richard said. “We'll do what we can.”
0900 hours
Saturday
September 29, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
Some twelve hours
later, Richard's focus was abruptly returned to the captain's ready
room when Jaime Wainwright lifted her head, stared directly at the
nearest security mote, and said, “I know you're up there, Dick. I can
hear you breathing.”
He spawned a thread
just to deal with the captain, and then he laughed out loud, choosing
his speakers to make the voice seem to come from the place where she
was looking. “Neat trick, that. Can you feel me looking at you, too?”
She glanced down at
her sinewy hands. “And now you're going to tell me that ‘up there' is a
subjective term.”
“And that I always
am. What can I do for you this morning?”
She used her
flat-spread hands to push herself to her feet and began to pace before
she began to speak, her heart rate, skin conductivity, breathing, and a
dozen other signs revealing chronic stress. “I wanted to talk to you
about our trainees. I presume you've been following my communications
with the prime minister with regard to the incoming cadets.”
“Captain. Would I
eavesdrop?”
“Yes,” she said. She
finished a lap and wheeled. Because of the geometry of the Montreal 's habitation wheel,
her circuit of the cramped cabin required acute and obtuse angles
rather than the more traditional ninety-degree variety. “And you'd lie
about it, too. What do you think of them?”
“The cadets?”
“Don't think I don't
know you haven't been hovering paternalistically over the lot of them
since they went in for nanosurgery. They're all going to make it this
time, I hear. No Carver Mallory in this group.”
“Yes,” Richard said,
mocking. “Only one sense-deprived quadriplegic so far, out of eighteen
subjects. Such excellent odds for all those young people the
commonwealth means to modify and train as starship pilots. And don't
think I've forgiven you that Genie still has to undergo the full
treatment. I know where the request to have her inducted came from.”
“All of the current
cadets are injured Impact survivors,” Wainwright said, lacing her
fingers behind her back and pausing in front of a holoscreen that
showed a space-suited inspection crew crawling over the Montreal 's hull. “They're all
volunteers. And they'd already had the therapeutic level of nanosurgeon
infection. Like Miss Castaign. Charlie—Dr. Forster—”
“Everybody calls him
Charlie.”
She snorted, sounding
honestly amused. “You think I still harbor adversarial feelings for
you, Dick?”
“I wouldn't care to
speculate.” Dryly enough that she glanced up at his disembodied voice
again, and looked down, shaking her head. Richard continued, “What
about Charlie?”
“He thinks it may be
safer to handle the implants in two stages, actually. That if the body
has already learned to adapt to the Benefactor tech, it takes the
wetwiring process better.”
“It's a heck of an
insult to the system. And a handful of cadets isn't a really useful
sample.” He paused, watching as Wainwright unbraided her fingers and
sighed. “And you didn't really want to argue with an AI about the
morals of turning teenagers into cybernetic soldiers, did you?”
“No,” she said. She
turned around and leaned against one of the few unscreened bits of
wall, a lumpy protruding bulkhead that covered a main strut. “You know
that repair you hacked together after the logic bomb went off last
year?”
“Intimately. I still
don't trust it.”
“And you've set up a
nanonetwork to replace it.”
“Yes.”
“I want hard lines,
too. A whole fresh structure. On the off chance something happens to
the worldwire.”
“You want me to
disassemble the Montreal 's nervous system? I'll have to take
it offline to do that.”
“Will it impair the
ship's functionality?”
“No,” he said. “We'll
still have the nanonetwork. It'll only impair redundancy.”
“For how long?”
“Six weeks. Maybe as
little as a month.”
She folded her arms.
“I'll live with it.”
“You're thinking
about the
Huang
Di .”
The Chinese logic bomb had come uncomfortably close to destroying the Montreal , and they'd managed
to purge the
Huang
Di 's
core before Canada claimed her as salvage. A pity: Richard would have
liked to get his hands on that data. The Chinese control of the
nanonetworks—and their programming skill—was still superior to the
Canadians'.
“I'm also thinking
about arranging things so the Montreal 's pilots can fly the
ship through the worldwire,” she said. “Rather than having to be
physically wired into the chair on the bridge.”
“Captain.” He made a
sound that would have been clearing his throat if he were human.
“Weren't we just having a discussion about how you still harbor
adversarial feelings for me?”
“ Youmay have.” Her mouth
worked, approximating a smile.
“The original purpose
of the hard-line interface for the pilots was to prevent the AI from
seizing control of the ship.”
“I know.” She turned
her back on the room as if she could turn her back on Richard, as well.
She took three slow breaths before she finished calmly, “But someday
you may need to.”
A long pause.
“Captain,” he said, when her pulse had dropped to something like its
normal range. “I am honored by your trust.”
She laughed, a short
harsh bark, and touched the frame on the nearest holodisplay, smudging
it with her fingertips. “Trust? If you want to call it that.”
1030 hours
Saturday
September 29, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
I pause just inside
the hatchway to the captain's tasteful blue and gray ready room.
“Casey. I had a feeling I'd be seeing you before too long. How did it
go with Castaign?”
“It went,” I say, and
she leaves it alone.
Wainwright sits in a
floor-mounted chair behind a desk bolted to the wall. Holomonitors
framed to look like windows cover the bulkheads, showing all
directions. The most arresting view is aft, the long silvery dragonfly
length of the Montreal stretching from the habitation wheel
back to the asymmetrical bulge of her reactor and drive assembly, her
solar sails nearly furled against her hull, only a hint of gauzy
webbing showing.
That image sits right
where Wainwright's gaze would naturally fall, should she lift it from
her desk, its spindly fragility a reminder of just how precarious our
situation is. Miles and vertical miles away from home.
I've got to hand the
captain that much. She never for a second forgets the safety of her
crew. And I've never known a good CO who wasn't a hard-ass, too. It's
just one of those things.
It's also just that
it's a pain in the ass when the hard-ass gets in the way of something I want to do, instead
of annoying the other guy.
Wainwright clears her
throat, and I realize I've let a good three seconds go by in total
silence. It isn't like me.
Doesn't matter. I
know how to do this. I take a deep breath and let the words fall out of
my mouth like they're somebody else's. “Xie Min-xue, Captain. The
Chinese pilot who helped—”
“I know who he is,
Casey. What's the brief version?”
“Ma'am, it occurs to
me that he could be part of the solution to our pilot shortage.”
“I'd thought of that.”
“But.”
“But it could look
like a payoff. His reward for betraying the PanChinese government. If
he testifies.” Her fingers fret nervous circles on the interface plate
on her desk. “You've heard the hearing date's been set.”
“After nine months of
stalling and legal wrangling? I had not heard.” Richard. Don't
trust me all of a sudden?
He's right there, of
course. “I keep your secrets, too, Jen.”
The fact that he has
a point doesn't make me like it any better. “Wait,” I say, catching on.
“You said hearing.”
“Yes,” she answers.
“We're not getting a trial. The UN is planning a discovery procedure,
open questions from the floor, rather than a World Court proceeding.”
Change is good,
right? Right. I thought so, too. “When's our big day?”
“Thanksgiving.”
“October? So soon—” I
catch myself, settle my feet more firmly on the carpeted floor, and
lace my hands behind my back, feeling hardness of steel between the
fingers of my meat hand, softness of flesh between the fingers of
metal. My shoulders roll back of their own accord, as if to ease a pain
that hasn't troubled me in a year. Who ever would have guessed it would
be so hard to let go of, even after it was gone?
“I think the Chinese
expect their sudden capitulation, and demand for a speedy resolution,
will catch us flat-footed.”
“That sounds like the
prime minister's opinion, Captain.”
She lifts her chin,
and the corner of her mouth flickers up: a brief, transformative smile.
“You have a good ear.”
“And has it?”
“Caught us
flat-footed? No.” She stands, compactly strong, exuding energy and
confidence as she paces, the rug scuffing as it compresses and releases
under her step. She stops and turns toward me, solid and four-square.
“Your boy—”
“Not mine, ma'am.”
Her shrug says whatever . “Have you talked to
him yourself?”
“No, ma'am. Richard
has. Mr. Xie is still in protective custody at Lake Simcoe.” The
fingers of my right hand twitch toward my chest. The beaded feather my
sister Nell gave me when we were kids is in my breast pocket, where it
lives a lot of the time now. I want to pull it out and look at it,
stroke its creamy brown and ivory bars and jewel-bright glass beading,
or at least press it against my body through the cloth so I can feel
it. Like a little kid rubbing a rabbit's foot in his pocket. Marde, Jenny. If
you need to fuss with something, get a rosary.
Now, there's an
unlikely image.
“Richard thinks he
can be trusted.”
“Yes, ma'am.”
“Richard's judgment
has proved pretty good so far.” She turns to look at that holomonitor,
at the long lacy sprawl of the Montreal gleaming slender and
uncanny as a suspension bridge across the void. She didn't want to
trust the AIs at first. She ran out of choices when the rest of us did.
“Do you think Riel would let us spring him? Bring him Upside?”
“I think the prime
minister could be convinced, ma'am. I think she or I could convince
F—Brigadier General Valens.”
“Do it.” Just like
that, snap decision and she turns back to me, hands hanging open. “As
for the other thing—”
“The EVA, ma'am?”
Breath tight in my throat. I don't let her see it, but from the way her
eyes narrow, she knows.
“Patty stays inside.
You take somebody EVA certified for every member of the contact team—”
“And?” I can hear it hanging.
“And you're not
taking more than three of my crew. I won't risk more. It's your baby,
Casey. Sort it out.”
“Beg pardon, ma'am .
. .”
“Casey?” She's turned
away, but I need clarification.
“Am I to participate
in this mission?”
“I can't think of
anybody more likely to bring them home alive, Master Warrant.”
“Ma'am.” One more
question. Just one, trying the patience I see fraying in the slow rise
of her shoulders toward her ears. “Am I contact team, or crew?”
“Are you EVA
certified, Casey?”
She knows I am. It
was one of the first things I saw to, once things settled a little. No
way I'm going to be stuck inside a tin can in a universe full of very
aggressive nothing without knowing I can survive if I have to go out . “Thank you, ma'am.”
“Dismissed.” I catch
the reflection of her smile in the crystal of the holomonitor as I
salute, turn on my heel, and go.
1100 hours
Saturday
September 29, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
Charlie Forster had
been living in space for so long that he'd forgotten what it was like
to work in a lab with windows and a door that could be left open to
catch a cross breeze, and he wondered if he really remembered how a full G would
feel. He still had good muscle mass, though—partially a function of his
somewhat heavier-than-ideal weight, and partially because he was
religious about taking the mystotatin blockers that prevented muscle
loss—and he was willing to bet that, given advances in low-G health
care—his time on orbital platforms, starships, and Mars had raised his
life expectancy. And, as he opened the hatch of his lab for Leslie
Tjakamarra and Jeremy Kirkpatrick and ushered the Australian and
British scientists inside, he had to admit that he wasn't immune to a
certain pride of place: as one of the team who had uncovered the
Benefactor ships on Mars, as the contact team's expert in the nanotech,
as the guy whose lab space was housed in a starship . There was pleasure
in that.
Especially when
meeting fresh new faces, eager to be awed.
Or fresh old faces,he chuckled to himself. It's not like any
of us are going to see forty again. Nor are any of us particularly easy
to awe anymore.
The men's ship shoes
scuffed on the deck plates as Charlie palmed the light on. He'd spent a
good part of the last nine months moving his base of operations from
Clarke over to the Montreal, and he finally had his lab set up the
way he wanted it. Richard had helped him engineer the mounts for the
biospheres that held his experimental subjects. The possibility that the Montreal 's “gravity” might
fail or shift rendered storage of fragile objects that needed indirect
light into something of an engineering challenge.
The space he had
appropriated was one of the hydroponics bays that helped supply the Montreal with food and oxygen.
It had full-spectrum lighting already installed, and the biggest ports
on the ship. Charlie hadn't bothered to move any of the tanks where
radishes and sunflowers and soybeans grew in a transparent gelatinous
medium; the fertilized profusion didn't interfere with his work and he
rather enjoyed the green leaves, moist air, and the buzz and flutter of
the
Montreal
's
pollinators—honeybees and butterflies. The ship's entomologist visited,
too. That was nice.
Besides, Charlie's
work used otherwise wasted space, and almost every inch of the Montreal served double or
triple duty. The lab's interior bulkheads gleamed with rows of glass
biospheres like Christmas ornaments, held under the grow lights in lacy
titanium frames. Inside those baubles was the flicker of movement;
colorful shrimp darted around snails and filigrees of algae, each
sphere a discrete ecosystem. And all of them, save the controls,
infected with unmodified Benefactor tech.
Jeremy Kirkpatrick
grimaced and looked around. “So this is where the tofu comes from.”
“Tofu,” Charlie said,
“and the salad oil, and the spinach . . .”
“A very impressive
setup.” Tjakamarra nevertheless didn't seem to be paying much attention
to it. He crossed to the broad crystal port and leaned his hands
against it, pressing one cheek to the glass to get a better look at the Montreal from this angle. “Is
all this foliage infected?”
“Only what you see in
the biospheres,” Charlie answered. “The rest is natural flora.”
“Wouldn't it make
more sense to use the nanotechnology to . . . what, protect? bombproof?
the hydro tanks and so forth?”
“You mean, like we've
already infected the planet?” Charlie laughed. “We're trying to follow
a policy of conservative use on the nanosurgeons. Only a few people on Montreal have had the full
treatment; most of us are natural, and several of the ones who are
infected—like Genie, for example—aren't enhanced. Although she's on the
worldwire, she doesn't have the augmented reflexes or the full VR
package. The plants stay natural unless there's a reason to make them
otherwise.”
“I see.” Tjakamarra
turned his back to the port and leaned against the bulkhead, his wiry,
black-jacketed frame blurring into the darkness outside. The Montreal 's running lights
cast blue and green reflections through his hair. “Given what's
happening on Earth, Dr. Forster, you'll forgive me if I find your
precautions a little laughable.”
“Please, call me
Charlie. And trust me, we're not naive,” Charlie said, gesturing the
other two to follow him as he turned toward the instruments at the far
end of the lab. “We're doing whatever damage control we can. Come on,
I'll show you the critters up close and personal.”
Vancouver,
Offices of the Provisional Capital
British
Columbia, Canada
Saturday 29
September 2063
0730 hours PDT
Valens folded his
right leg over his left leg and focused past the glossy tip of his
loafer to Constance Riel silhouetted against the pale mauve sheers that
softened her office window. The office itself still held the air of
hasty improvisation. The interface plate was a few centimeters too
small for the desk in both directions, and the faded patches on the
carpet did not match the furniture. The office hadn't been intended for
an office; in its earlier life, it had been a conference room.
But Riel needed the
space. Space in which to pace back and forth, as she had been before
she paused by the window, and space in which to host the impromptu
councils of undeclared war that were more or less her existence these
days.
Her existence, and
Fred's. “You shouldn't frame yourself in the window, Connie.”
She let the
translucent curtain fall back into place, but didn't turn. “If I hadn't
lost my husband in Toronto, he'd have divorced me for neglect by now.
The glass is bulletproof, Fred.”
“There's no such
thing as bulletproof.”
“Bullet-resistant.”
“And useless against
an RPG. It's not armor plate.”
“I'm as protected
here as I can be, Fred. The building's as secure as my residence in
Toronto was.”
“No,” he said, and
got to his feet. The carpet pad needed replacing; it felt almost tacky
under his feet. Priorities, however, lay elsewhere. “It's not as safe,
and you're not safe standing in the window.”
“Who died and made
you Mountie?” But she stepped away from the window. “Who would have
thought a year ago, Fred, that you'd have appointed yourself my own
personal watchdog?”
He didn't answer. The
question was the answer. Needs must when the devil drives. And China was turning
out to be a very particular devil.
She shook her head,
searching the office for her coffee cup. “It had to be Saturday
morning. It's always Saturday morning. Just in time for the weekend
news lull, dammit. I don't know why I should be so annoyed that even
the UN understands that.”
“United Nations
hearings aren't the end of the world—”
“I don't want hearings , Fred. I want a full
World Court genocide proceeding, and I want China made party to it,
over their refusal, dammit.”
He sighed heavily.
“Do you?”
“What are you asking?
Of course I do.”
“Do you want to open
the door for the Chinese to come back with war crimes charges against
us, for the
Calgary
crash and the
nanotech infection?”
Riel paused. “Well,
hell, that's why we're having the hearings. Charges and countercharges.
Maybe we can wrangle it into a crimes-against-humanity case. Are you
still willing to take a fall for the program if it comes to it, Fred?”
He didn't answer. He
didn't need to.
She looked up, met
his gaze, and nodded, satisfied. “There are days when I wish the
opposition would put enough of a coalition together to boost my ass out
of this chair.”
“And have one of
their own responsible for this train wreck? No, they'll wait until you
go down in flames, and nod knowingly while they pick up the pieces.” He
took her elbow, feeling her brittleness as if it were a physical as
well as spiritual thing.
She glanced sideways,
caught the outline of his smile, and laughed as if through blood. “You
think it's too late to requisition a train wreck instead? Christ, I
have to deal with the cabinet today—”
Her desk chimed, a
three-note ascending scale that made both their heads turn in
recognition. “Richard,” Riel said.
“Prime Minister,” the
AI answered, resolving into one-third-sized visibility, a wee man
standing atop the desk.
“Is this about the
UN?”
“If only it were so
simple. We have bigger problems, Prime Minister, General Valens. I'm
going to conference in Dr. Forster. He's just made an unsettling
discovery. It's a secure line; I'm handling the transmission myself.
Dr. Forster?”
Another familiar
voice. “Fred? Prime Minister?”
Valens found himself
exchanging a glance of anticipation with Riel, and not a happy one. He
swallowed the lead weight that seemed lodged in his throat and folded
his hands behind him. “We hear you very well, Charlie. What seems to be
the problem?”
There was no
light-speed lag when Richard handled the transmission; Charlie's rueful
flinch was immediate. Valens felt his gut clench, abdominal muscles
tightening in anticipation of a blow, setting himself to take it and
come back swinging. Consciously, carefully, he smoothed his breath and
forced himself to look steadily at the hologram, waiting with every
appearance of patience and strength.
He wondered
sometimes, in bleaker moments, if the cracks showed, and if his staff
was humoring him by pretending not to notice. But he also knew, between wondering,
that that wasn't the case. He'd just mastered the art of maintaining a
facade, and there wasn't anybody that the facade needed to come down
for now.
Pity he wasn't having
any luck turning the mask into reality. Charlie still hadn't spoken,
though, and Valens cleared his throat. “Charlie. We're on tenterhooks,
old friend.”
It was eerie, the way
Richard juggled the algorithm so when Charlie cocked his head and
passed a palm across his scalp, it looked as if he frowned at Valens's
shoes and then stared dead into his eyes. “We've come a long way from
Mars, Fred.”
“Light-minutes,”
Valens answered, just to get the grin.
Charlie essayed one
bravely, but it crumbled. “Let me cut to the chase. Some of my
nanosurgeons are . . . dying. And neither Richard nor I have a damned
idea why.”
“Dr. Forster,” Riel
interjected. Both Valens and Charlie swung to look at her, her suddenly
upright posture commanding the room. She smoothed her palms down over
her forest-green suit, the discreet diamond on her ring finger flashing
refracted light. “I'm going to need a written report. How long have you
known?”
He glanced down,
checking his contacts. “Half an hour.”
“I will ask you to
keep it confidential—”
“Prime Minister—”
Charlie's tone tied
another rock to the sinking sensation in Valens's gut. “Who knows about
this?”
“Doctors Tjakamarra
and Kirkpatrick were with me.”
Riel's shoulders
dropped from around her ears, and Valens recognized it for relief.
“Swear them to secrecy, too. And I mean secret; I'll do something
drastic if I have to. And I need that written report—please—via
Richard. As soon as possible.”
“Ma'am. Anything
else?”
“Yes,” she said.
“Find out what the hell is causing it, and if it's going to completely
derail our attempts to buffer Earth's ecosystem, would you?”
“We're on it.” And
that was Richard's voice, Richard's image stepping in as Charlie
pixilated and vanished. “Prime Minister—”
The AI was
interrupted by a different chime. Riel's secretary's tone; Richard put
himself on hold, his image hanging motionless as Riel answered the
other call. “Yes, Anne?”
“Ma'am, I have a Mr.
Tobias Hardy from Unitek here to see you. And General Frye.”
Riel rolled her eyes
at Valens.
Janet
Frye .
“Do they have an appointment, Anne?”
“No, ma'am. I checked
twice.”
Sometimes, when the
prime minister smiled like that, Fred Valens could almost like her.
Even knowing that she was a sly old snake, a consummate manipulator,
and a gameswoman to match even him. “I'm in a conference right now,
Anne. See if you can squeeze them in tomorrow, please? Or perhaps on
Monday?”
“I'll do my best,
ma'am,” Anne answered, and the link clicked off.
Richard unfroze
himself, steepling his long hands in front of his breast. “Toby Hardy I
know—”
“Janet Frye,” Valens
said, rubbing his eyes with his forefinger and thumb, “is a retired
general and part of the opposition leadership, heading up the Home
party.”
“Isolationists,” Riel
supplied. “The more radical even want us out of the commonwealth. What
do you want to bet they want us to play appeasement with the Chinese?
The damned Americans are on my back again, too . . .” She rolled her
neck from side to side. “You could have looked that up, Richard; you
don't fool me.”
“Sometimes it's more
revealing to ask questions.”
Valens crossed to the
window himself. “Why do you think they're contacting you now?”
“Oh, that's easy,”
Riel said. She went to her desk, thumb locked open a drawer, and drew
something small and flat out and laid it on the desk beside the
interface panel. “I got some interesting intelligence last night.”
Valens came to get a
better look. “An HCD?”
“ TheHCD,” Riel said, and
looked at him. “The red telephone, so to speak.”
“What does that have
to do with anything?”
The prime minister
left the communications device lying on her desk, and went to draw the
curtains open again. This time, Valens didn't protest. “I was briefed
last night,” Riel called back to him, reaching over her head to fiddle
with the cords. “It seems General Frye got a sealed, couriered letter
from the PanChinese consulate in the United States yesterday. I'm not
privy to the details of what's in that letter.”
“Of course not,”
Valens murmured dryly. “That would be espionage, after all.”
“Hah. In any case, I
think Richard's guess might be correct, and our primary problem in the
PanChinese government is not the premier, but the minister of war,
Shijie Shu, who seems about ready to go after his boss's job himself.
And I happen to know that he's been in contact with
certain members
of the U.S. Congress. Through this same embassy official whose return
mail code is on the couriered letter.”
“You do have friends
in low places.”
“We do our best.” She
stepped away from the open curtains, smart enough, at least, not to
silhouette herself for long.
“You know,” he said,
“I have a few friends of my own. And I happen to know that the
secretary general's decision to hold hearings rather than a full
war-crimes tribunal—even with all the retractions and reschedulings
that entailed—was influenced by a personal call from the office of the
PanChinese premier.”
“Did it now?” Riel's
eyebrows rose when she was thinking, and right now they furrowed
parallel ridges all the way up to her short, dark hair. “That's
fascinating, Fred.”
In the silence that
followed, Richard cleared his throat. “Am I excused, Prime Minister?”
She nodded. “Yes—no.
Wait. Tomorrow. Tonight. Before the delightful Mr. Hardy and his lapdog
can reschedule. I'm sending you Xie Min-xue.”
Silence. And then,
“Thank you, Prime Minister.”
“There's nothing to
thank me for,” she answered. “He and Casey and Fred's granddaughter are
all going to be called on to testify, along with you, Richard, if I
have my way. Barring a ballistic missile, Montreal is the safest place
around right now. I don't think even PanChina is going to risk a second unprovoked attack in
front of the world camera. Not this week, in any case. It would put
paid to their claim that the attack on Toronto was the result of fringe
elements, for one thing—”
Valens nodded, more
to himself than to Riel. “What are you going to do about it?”
She lifted her chin
and looked at Richard, hovering over her desk. “You can go now, Dick.
Thank you.”
“Thank you, ” he replied, and
derezzed.
Riel stared into the
middle distance, her mouth twisting.
“Connie? What are you going to do?”
“I'm going to call
Premier Xiong and find out exactly what the hell he thinks is going on.”
11:15 AM
29 September
2063
HMCSSMontreal
Since leaving Sydney,
Leslie had developed the abysmally bad habit of humming to himself
while he worked, as if he were trying to draw his country and his road
around his shoulders, especially in its absence. Restlessness was in
his bones, his blood, an itch under his skin like ingrained dirt. He
couldn't think unless he walked, and he couldn't walk unless he sang,
even if the singing was under his breath.
Now, he set out along
the
Montreal
's toroidal corridors
at a good clip, light on his feet, pushing himself a little in the big
ship's partial gravity.
Leslie didn't really understand how the
Benefactor tech worked, and he knew—in uncomfortable self-honesty—that
he did not understand the implications of the discovery that he,
Charlie, and Jeremy had made that morning. But he wasn't blind, and he did know that both the
xenobiologist and the AI had been frightened— no, had been scared—when they swore him
to secrecy on the issue. And so he hummed to himself, big hands
swinging loose-fingered on the ends of his arms, eyes just about
focused enough to keep him from walking into other pedestrians,
ground-eating strides chewing up one lap after another of the Montreal .
On the third lap,
pacing footsteps alerted him to company. He didn't glance over, nor did
he freeze his uninvited companion out. Instead, he kept walking, still
singing under his breath, trusting her to start talking when she had
something to say.
Half a lap later,
Casey cleared her throat. “We do have treadmills on this tub.”
“Buggered if I'll
walk on a treadmill,” Leslie answered amicably. “I like to feel like
I'm getting somewhere.”
“And walking in
circles does that for you?”
He snorted laughter.
“At least the walls move. And I don't have to watch the holos the guy
on the next machine is distracting himself with. When I walk, I like to
walk.”
“Being in the
moment,” she said, surprising him. She had a good, long stride, with a
hitch of a limp that he thought was more habit than pain. He stepped up
his pace to test her. “What were you singing, Les?”
He grunted and
shrugged. “Singing up the country, kind of.”
“Singing up the
country?”
“The land must first
exist as a concept. It must be sung before it can exist. It must be
perceived before it can be walked on. It must be dreamed. You should
know something about dreamings, shouldn't you? Or do your folks call
them by a different name?”
She was still looking
at him, a little quirk twisting her lips out of shape. “You know what
an ‘apple' is, Les?”
“A kind of fruit?”
“A kind of Indian,”
she said dryly. “Red on the outside. White on the inside. They never
taught us any of that shit in Catholic school.”
He laughed and
finally returned her glance. “Sweetheart, you'd never believe how
familiar you sound. Come with me.”
“Where are we going,
Les?”
“To the observation
lounge,” he said, and started walking that way. There was one advantage
to wandering ways and a trained spatial memory; he'd been aboard the Montreal less than forty-eight
hours, and he already knew his way around.
The lounge was
crowded, for once. There was a poker game in progress by the beverage
dispensers and one or two people sitting in chairs near the porthole
and monitors. Leslie paused beside those, off to one side so he
wouldn't block anyone's view, and gestured Casey in beside him. She
came without a word and stood there silently, looking where Leslie was
looking. He heard the shallow catch in her breathing and smiled,
knowing the deep, spinning view still tightened her chest as well as
his own.
The long fall gave
him vertigo, but he waited until the silence got heavy before he said
anything more. He waited until she cleared her throat, in fact, and cut
her off as smoothly as if he'd been about to start speaking anyway.
“You know, in my own country, you could point to any rock, and hill,
and gully, and I could tell you who it was.”
“Who?”
“They're all
ancestors, in the Dreaming. Everything is, in my own—”
“Do you have a
country, Les?”
Oh, she was good at
those sidelong glances, and sharp as a tack. He gave it the silence its
weight deserved, and nodded. “Sometimes. I think everybody has a nation
. . . sometimes.” And now it was his turn for the sly look across his
nose, and she was already looking away when he did it. “Do you?”
She rubbed her
arrogant nose with a gleaming steel forefinger. “Have a nation?”
He nodded.
“Sometimes,” she
answered, and he laughed. And then she turned to face him full-on, and
lowered her voice until they were the only ones in the room. “So tell
me about this Dreaming.”
He gestured out the
window, at the stars and the sun-catcher shape of the birdcage, small
enough with distance that he could have covered it with his palm. He
sorted out a child's explanation, and floated it in simple words.
Beginner stories. Truth, but not very much of it, suitable for paddling
your toes in. “The Dreaming is what came before, even though it
persists to today. And everything that is or will be was already sung,
predestined. It's all waiting under the ground to happen.”
“Everything?”
“You, me. Piper and
Forward. The
Montreal
. Everything. We just
haven't found it all yet. And the roads between the stars. Those were
sung. That's what the songlines are, roads in music and verse. When you
get to the end of your songline, when you don't know the verses
anymore, you enter someone else's territory, but the melody continues.
And if you know the melody, even if you don't know the language, you
can find the way, because the landmarks are in the melody. It's just
the stories that are in the words.”
“By that logic, the
Benefactors were already sung, too.”
“How do you know they
weren't?”
She stared at him. He
turned and gave her a grin and she shook her head slowly, ruefully, as
if in complex understanding. “Do your songlines go to the stars?”
He grinned, and
nudged her shoulder with his own. “Now you're catching on. The road is
the song. The song is the road.”
Her expression
hardened, a fish that spots the hook. “What do you want, Leslie?”
“I get to suit up and
come EVA with you tomorrow, right?”
She sighed and turned
back to the window, staring out it, past it. Down the long parallel
lines of the starlight, the expression in her eyes distant enough to
have a chance of looking farther even than that. She shook her head,
but she muttered, “You know how to operate a space suit, son?”
“I've checked out
ground side. Never in zero G. Or vacuum.”
“Well,” she said,
scrubbing her flesh hand and her steel hand against the thighs of her
fatigues, “I guess we'd better get down to a cargo bay and get you some
practice, then.”
Fairy tales don't
teach children that monsters exist. Children already know that monsters
exist. Fairy tales teach children that monsters can be killed.
—G. K. Chesterton
11:00 PM
Saturday
September 29, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
Sometimes Geniveve
Castaign liked to pretend she was invisible. She'd slip out of bed
barefoot, midwatch and in the middle of the night. She'd tug her
coveralls on over her pajamas, undog the hatchway, and ease her way
into the corridor when she was supposed to be in bed asleep.
No one ever said
anything, or did more than nod to her in passing. She shared her
quarters only with Boris, Jenny's cat who had gotten to be the whole
ship's cat by now, and she got special quarters in the civilian
corridor because nobody on the ship's crew wanted a twelve-year-old
roommate—even Patty, who was seventeen and who had a private room
because she was a pilot.
She could wander all
night, and as long as she dodged Elspeth and Jenny, nobody ever said
anything. Nobody ever said anything, that is, as long as she stayed in
the unrestricted-access parts of the ship, because they all felt bad
about Leah. And because it wasn't as if Genie had to be up for school.
And because the Montreal wasn't set up for kids, not yet, and
wouldn't be until the first batch of colonists came on board.
And because they knew
Richard and Alan were in her head, and Richard and Alan wouldn't let
her get into any trouble.
In any case, it was
11 PM, and Genie had been trying to sleep since nine. She gave up,
climbed out of her bunk, and went looking for Patty. Patty was up, of
course. Patty was nearly a grown-up, and she was a pilot. And either she or Jenny
always had to be awake and able to get to the bridge. Just in case.
Although Patty's on-duty time was supposed to be spent studying.
Which meant she'd
probably be in the ready room by the bridge, because Captain Wainwright
had made sure there was a state-of-the-art interface in there, and that
was also where Genie did her schoolwork, usually while her dad was on
duty.
Genie wasn't supposed
to be on the bridge unless she was invited. But the ready room also had
a door to the corridor, and there was nothing to keep her from climbing
in wheel, and nothing to keep her out of the ready room once she got
there. Except—
“Where are you off
to, young lady?”
Richard's voice
always had a certain humorous tint to it when he called her that. She
kept climbing up the access ladder, eschewing the lifts. I couldn't sleep, she answered. I'm going to go do
some homework.
Which wasn't exactly
a lie, and Richard would probably know if she lied, but he didn't
always catch on to truths that weren't . . . complete. He was too
polite to just read her mind, or at least he pretended to be.
Richard coughed
inside her head, a polite cough into the palm of his knobby, elegant
hand, the white of his cuff extending past the sleeve of his jacket, a
steel-banded watch glittering against his skin. How come you wear
a
watch, Richard?
“It gives me
something to fiddle with,” he answered, and demonstrated.
But you have a
clock in your head.
“I find it helps me
relate to meat-type people better if I keep myself reminded of what
it's like to be meat. And you don't have a clock in your head, kiddo.”
Affectionately, and said with the tone that would have gone with a
hair-ruffle that Genie was much too old for, if
Richard had been able
to manage it.
No,she answered,
following the gray-carpeted corridor toward the bridge. She no longer
even noticed how strange it was that it rose in front of and behind
her, disappearing in back of the ceiling. Scuff, scuff, scuff went her
feet. She amused herself by scuffing in patterns when she walked;
short-long, long-short. But I have you.
She felt the weight
of his contemplation, the flow of ideas and the texture of his emotion,
because he permitted her to feel them. A little bit wonder, a little
bit pride, a little bit fear. “The ease with which you say that is
going to worry people, Genie,” he said, quietly. “They won't understand
it. They won't understand why having me in your head, why relying on me
to know what time it is, doesn't worry you.”
Then they're
pretty silly. You never bother me when I want to be left alone, and
you're always there when I need you.Unlike Leah. Unlike Jenny, who had
always come and gone with very little rhyme or reason. Unlike Papa, who
had always been worried about Genie because she was sick, and now that
she wasn't sick, wasn't worried anymore.
Genie's mouth
twitched. She didn't miss the cystic fibrosis. Really, truly. Not at
all.
Even if she did miss
not being invisible sometimes.
“Still,” he said.
“You might want to keep it to yourself. Until there are more people
like you. People can be mean when they don't understand things.”
Richard,she answered dryly, as
she reached her destination. I know that. Do you think you're
talking to a child? He didn't answer. She grinned to
herself and held her left hand up to the ready room door sensor so that
it could read the control chip implanted under her skin. The door
chirped softly and slid open. Genie went inside, and Richard “stayed
behind.”
He'd be there if she
wanted him. But for now, he did her the courtesy of letting her walk
away.
Patty didn't look up
when she stepped into the pilots' lounge-slash-ready room. As Genie had
guessed, the older girl was bent over an interface plate, her fingers
twisted through brunette hair, holding it out of her face like a heavy
curtain. “Shouldn't you be in bed?”
“I'm always in bed,”
Genie said. “I've spent more of my life in bed than anybody needs to.
Whatcha working on?”
“Differentials,”
Patty answered, and tucked her hair behind her ear. A few strands
snagged on a silver earring shaped like a leaping dolphin; she
disentangled them with a bitten fingernail, wincing. “You want
something to drink?”
Genie shook her head
and hunched down on a stool, tapping at another interface panel on the
desktop without any haste, with one finger only. She leafed through her
homework files and sighed. She was ten months ahead of the curriculum,
and still bored. Leah would have offered to show her how the
differentials worked; Leah always did most of her homework with Genie,
and bragged to Papa that Genie was smart enough to handle it.
Leah had used to,
anyway.
Patty looked up from
her homework again, caught Genie's eye, and looked away quickly.
Patty's mouth twisted; her expression said creepy kid, but Genie was too
lonely to get up and leave, even if she knew Patty didn't want her
there. Genie put her chin down on her fists and sighed, studying a
too-easy problem in spatial geometry that floated in front of her nose.
Sometimes she liked to pretend she was invisible.
Sometimes she just
suspected she really was.
1:15 AM
Sunday
September
30, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
The smaller lounge
wasn't as private as the pilots' ready room, but Patty didn't feel like
being that close to the bridge right now. Besides, if she was in the
ready room, she would just start doing homework, and she didn't feel
like doing homework.
And furthermore,
she'd told Genie she was going to bed, because otherwise Genie would
have hidden that big-eyed look behind her hair, never meaning for Patty
to see it, and Patty probably would have broken into a thousand pieces
all over the ready-room floor. And she didn't really need a crying jag.
Especially not when
she was trying to be strong for Genie, and what she really felt like
was moping about ostentatiously. Preferably somewhere where somebody
could yell at her for it and make her feel suitably misunderstood. But
that wouldn't be professional. And it would embarrass her grandfather.
And disappoint her mother, if her mother . . .
Well, anyway. Which
was why she was standing in the lounge, pretending to look at the
magnified view of the shiptree in the holoscreen nearest the porthole.
Which didn't help, so she closed her eyes and pressed her face against
the crystal. It wasn't cold, though; the Montreal was bathed in
sunlight, though it was the middle of the night and the ship, lightly
staffed as she was, seemed almost deserted. And that was the problem,
really.
Because Patty didn't
want hero worship. Or sympathy. Or to be treated like blown glass.
All she really wanted
was for somebody to yell at her, like a normal person with a normal
family and normal problems. Like she was getting a C in physics or
moping over a boy or . . .
Anything, really. As
long as it didn't involve people walking on eggshells around her. She
pushed herself away from the too-warm glass and went to get a
disposable of lemon water from the dispenser. She was still fussing
with the panel when the wheel on the entry started to spin, undogged
from the outside, and the hatch came open.
Jeremy Kirkpatrick
folded his long body almost double to peer through the hatchway, and
then stepped over the knee knocker quickly and stood up inside the
lounge. “You don't mind if I join you, I hope.” He paused for a moment
before he closed the hatch, giving her a chance to say no.
“I don't mind,” she
said, and finally fought the dispenser into producing her drink. “I'm
not very good company, though.”
“I just came to look
at the ship.” He dogged the hatch and walked past her, stopping where
he could contemplate both the screened and the naked-eye views. The
magnified one had the advantage of not spinning.
Patty bit the tip off
her disposable. Dr. Kirkpatrick—no, Jeremy —folded his arms
together and shoved his hands into his opposite sleeves. “Be nice to be
telepathic about now,” he said.
“It doesn't help.”
He glanced at her,
brow crinkling. “You can feel them, too?”
“Sort of.” There's a bright
answer.
She waved her left hand in a lopsided infinity symbol. “When Alan lets
me. It doesn't make any sense, what they think, though. It's just like—”
“Muttering?”
“—traffic noise.”
Which wasn't quite right either, but the best she could do. She stayed
a few steps behind Jeremy, looking past his shoulder rather than
standing beside him.
She wasn't expecting
him to turn and fix her with a complicated stare. “You're up late.
Aren't you lonely up here?”
“I'm a pilot.” She
covered her expression by taking a drink from the bulb. “It's my job.”
“Huh.” He looked back
out the window. “I hear you're a very good pilot, too. But they sure
start you kids young.”
“Most of them even
younger than me.” Like Genie. Who would probably be Leah's age when
they did the surgery on her, and . . .
Jeremy let that hang
there for a while without comment, spreading his long-fingered hand
against the glass. “I'm just surprised you don't have . . . I don't
know. What do girls your age have?” It could have been insulting, but
the way he said it, it wasn't. Soft and thoughtful, like he was
actually trying to remember what he'd been like at seventeen. But then
he kept talking. “Boyfriends, and best girlfriends, and—”
“I don't .”
He jumped when she
snapped at him. “I beg your pardon.”
“I just haven't got
anybody like that. Just my grandfather and me. He's in Vancouver.” Nobody. Not
Carver,
and not Leah.
“No, it's all right,”
he said. He turned, framed against the moving brightness. “So why'd you
decide to be a pilot?”
She'd finished her
drink somehow, and the limp sticky bubble annoyed her. She hadn't moved
far from the panel; she just turned and recycled it. “My grandfather
wanted me to do it,” she said. “And my mom wanted me to be a scientist.”
“What kind of a
scientist?”
“Not an
ethnolinguist. If she'd ever heard of one, I mean.” She pushed her hair
behind her ears and flipped the ends out of the way, smiling when he
laughed.
“That's okay,” he
said. “Ethnolinguistics isn't necessarily considered what you'd call a
particularly
hard
science. Or even a
science at all, depending on who you talk to.” He paused. “So what did
you want to be, if it wasn't a pilot?”
“I don't know,” she
said. She suddenly decided she wanted another drink, and looked down,
unable to meet his eyes. “I guess I never thought about it much. And
it's too late now, isn't it?”
He fell quiet again,
not speaking while she dialed another water. It worked on the first try
this time. She looked at the disposable, not at Jeremy, when she asked,
“So what about you?”
“What about me what?”
“Up late. Shouldn't
you be sleeping if you're going to EVA tomorrow?”
“Today.”
“Oh, right.” She
paused. “Well?”
“If I weren't going
to EVA tomorrow,” he said, and shrugged, “I might be able to sleep.”
“Oh.” Suddenly full
of questions, she glanced at him and frowned. “Why'd you become a linguist?”
“Fate,” he said,
coming over to dial a drink for himself as she stepped away from the
panel. “Would you believe I didn't learn to talk until I was four?”
She shouldn't say it.
It was unfair and funny and not even accurate. She knew she shouldn't
say it. She couldn't help it.
She grinned widely,
bit her drink open, and before she tasted it asked, “And have you shut
up since?”
0900 hours
Sunday
September
30, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
Three of the Montreal 's crew, counting
myself, and three very nervous civilian scientists are clipped to a
line by the air lock of the Buffy Sainte-Marie, sweating into our
helmets because the cooling systems don't kick on until we're EVA. We
drift in random orientations; Jeremy and Leslie are still trying to
keep their feet toward the floor and their heads pointed in the same
direction as the head of whomever they're trying to talk to, like
spaceships crossing paths in a holodrama, bobbing nose to nose. It's
ingrained in us from the moment we squeeze out of the womb: you keep
the shiny side up, and the rubber side down.
Old spacers laugh at
you when you do it, though, which helps break you of the habit pretty
quick.
I move down the row,
checking clips, checking the lines. Leslie is locked in to Lieutenant
Peterson and Charlie's firmly attached to Corporal Letourneau; I give
the carbon filaments a good hard yank to be sure. They're supposed to
be unbreakable, but all sorts of equipment doesn't live up to its spec
sheets. And the lieutenant may technically rank me, but I have twenty
years on her, and she doesn't complain when I check her rig.
And I don't complain
when she checks mine. It's cold out there, and not a place we go idly.
My line goes to
Jeremy; we clip back and forth, our equipment indistinguishable from
carabiners and climbing rope. I wouldn't be all that surprised to
discover that's exactly what it is; I'm sure Unitek makes harness, and
it would certainly be more profitable to rebid it and jack the price up
for the military than to design a whole new clip for zero G.
I hope the carabiner
gates are up to the strain of the shoulder attitude jets.
Jeremy's tall enough
that we had to get him one of the extended suits. Not as bad off as
Gabe; his had to be special ordered, and if he was army still and not
mission-vital, they probably would have just left him dirtside and gone
and got somebody else.
Just my dumb luck
they didn't. I check the seals on Jeremy's suit and helmet—he ducks to
give me a better angle—and I pat him on the shoulder when he
straightens. “Check me out, please.”
“Sorry.” He runs
gloved fingers over all my seals, visual inspection and then the
tactile one, pressing each catch to make sure it's locked. He fumbles a
little. Not too bad.
“You okay, Doc?”
“Cold feet,” he
jokes, and it cracks me up, because we're on the sun side of the Buffy Sainte-Marie, and if anything the
hide of the little ship would be hot to the touch. If we could touch
her. “Everybody all set?”
I expect they are,
but that's not my question to answer. “Everybody ready for the air
lock?” I hear a chorus of ayes, and see one nod out of the corner of my
eye. “Out loud, please, Les.”
Charlie's old hat at
suit drill, of course, even if he's not got an EVA cert. He smirks at
me through the bubble of his helmet; I don't catch his eye, look at
Leslie instead. “I can't hear your head rattle in a vacuum, Les.”
“All set,” he says,
tilting his head like he's blushing, but his skin's too dark to tell.
“Ma'am.”
I open the air lock
hatch, and we step into a bare, white-walled steel room no bigger than
an express elevator. My air already smells like tin and a little bit
like sweat, which makes me appreciate how fresh the air on the Montreal is. Those vegetable
gardens do the trick, I guess. Corporal Letourneau dogs the hatch
behind us, and I turn—full turn in the suit, because your helmet
doesn't move with your head—and give them the once-over. Every one of
them has a grip on a Jesus handle; I check. Every one of them also has
lights glowing green-means-go on the locking ring of his or her suit.
“Last chance to chicken out.”
Silence.
I didn't really think
anybody would.
I turn back around
and slap the hatch open one-handed, hanging on pretty damn tight with
the other, myself, so I don't tumble out into all that nothing like a
milkweed seed blown from the pod. Leslie gets blown into my back and
somersaults past me, but Lieutenant Peterson was wise to that and she's
got both hands on the bar, so he pitches up against the end of his line
and they don't go tumbling out like two weights tied to a rope and
flung.
“Right,” the
lieutenant says, hauling Leslie back into the air lock for no good
reason except that we can all hear him breathing—panting—over the suit
mike. “Now that we have the drama out of the way, shall we step
outside?”
Despite my
instructions, Les nods again, the bobbing movement visible inside his
helmet, and the lieutenant takes him out first. I run rearguard with
Jeremy, and Charlie and the corporal go in the middle. The Buffy Sainte-Marie hangs behind us like
a white-lit Christmas ornament on a black velvet dropcloth.
I imagine we must
look a strange, stringy sort of centipede from the pilot's perspective.
He'll keep the shuttle here, stationary with regard to the birdcage and
about a klick away, until either the Benefactors dispose of us or we
return. When I turn over my shoulder to look back at him, I can see the
shiptree outlined as a twist of brighter, bluer lights against the
stars, and I wonder if we're starting with the right aliens first. Of
course, there's no easy way to get inside that one.
It's a slow, silent
procession—six of us in formation like pallbearers miming an invisible
coffin. The lieutenant's slaved our maneuvering jets to her own
controls, so we follow in an orderly fashion—even those of us with no
clue what we're doing.
Like any of us have a clue
what we're doing anymore.
A kilometer sounds
pretty far, but really, it's no distance at all. Two laps around a
footrace track. You can run that far in a few minutes if you're in
decent shape. The Montreal herself is close to three kilometers
long.
We cover the distance
in twenty minutes flat, in silence except for the occasional murmured
instruction over the suit radios, and the thrilled, terrified rattle of
our hearts. I'm waiting for some response, some acknowledgment. Some
change in the steady, erratic flicker of the silvery teardrops from one
place to another across the width of the birdcage. Some indication of
whether to continue forward or move back.
I haven't been so
roundly ignored since the time when Leah was twelve and she wouldn't
talk to me for three days because I refused to help her run away from
home so she wouldn't have to share a room with Genie anymore.
The good news is, she
had nothing on emotional blackmail compared to her dad, or she almost
might have broken me. I took her camping instead. A girl knows what
it's like to need to get out of town once in a while.
Hey Richard.
“Jenny?”
You with me, sport?
“I wouldn't miss this
for the world.”
I don't suppose
you have a theory about what those birdcage aliens are?
I feel him shrug, and
then his voice comes over my suit radio instead of inside my head. “The
master warrant officer wants to know if this particular alien
intelligence has any theories about what those other alien
intelligences might be like,” he says.
“Whatever they are,
they're swimming around in space bare-assed,” Charlie comments, his
voice made tinny in transmission. “I don't think those are suits.”
“Could they be
remotes? Waldos?” Jeremy, and he twists his upper body inside his suit
to look at me, as if I have any idea whether he might be right or
wrong. “Some sort of nanotech construction?”
“The probes couldn't
tell,” Charlie says. “And when we tried to bring a sample back for
analysis, all we got was nanotech and hydrogen.” We're close enough to
see them clearly now, without magnification. The aliens are featureless
gleaming spheres until they move, and then they stream out from a
rounded bow to a trailing point.
“That's weird,”
Richard says. “There's no drag. No air resistance to push them into a
teardrop shape.”
“That's why I think
those are the aliens,” Charlie answers. “That looks like an adaptation
to moving through fluid.”
“Or atmosphere?”
Leslie asks.
“Technically,
atmosphere is a fluid, in the fluid dynamics sense,” Dick says.
I keep my damned
mouth shut. Better to remain silent and be thought a fool, etcetera,
etcetera. Charlie, bless him, has no dignity. “I wonder where something
like that grows up. Dick?”
“You're wondering if
I have a theory where they evolved?”
“I'm wondering if you
have a theory what they're made of.”
“I'd say they're
probably patterns of electrical impulses in some sort of supercooled,
possibly superconductive colloid. They carry a nanomachine infestation,
but while I can sense those machines, I can't piggyback their operating
system the way I can the ones you bred, Chuck. They're even farther out
of my ambit than the Chinese nanonetwork.”
“Not only do we not
speak their language, or have any kinetics in common, we can't even
hack their computers.” Jeremy touches the override on his thigh, adding
a little more thrust to what the lieutenant gives him, and drifts to
the end of the line that binds us together. I compensate for the gentle
tug; he makes a smooth job of it, overall.
Peterson draws us up
a few short yards outside the birdcage, and we spread casually apart.
Not too far, though; there isn't any safety in numbers, but the reptile
part of our brains can't be made to believe that, no matter how many
millions of years of evolution we layer over it.
“Supercooled?”
Charlie asks. “Doesn't that get problematic out here in the sunlight?”
“They aren't fazed by
vacuum, at least,” Jeremy says. “Maybe they come from an extreme
environment of some sort—” Stopped cold, he bumps the brow of his
helmet with the side of his gauntlet. “Leslie, what if they come from
someplace with an opaque atmosphere? Or nearly opaque? Or no light to
speak of? Like Venus, say. Or Pluto.”
Leslie's been silent
since the comment about the atmosphere, but the way his suit rocks on
the end of its line tells me he just reflexively tried to glance over
his shoulder. He looks very small against the massive filigree of the
birdcage, a white plastic spaceman doll floating in front of a
shifting, faceted fretwork of spun glass. “No physical semiotics,” he
answers when he's stable again. “Jeremy, that's pretty damn smart.”
“Thank you.”
“More than that,”
Charlie puts in. “A completely different set of senses and manner of
processing information than we have. No sense of sight, of smell, of
hearing. Those would be more foreign to them than . . . a dolphin's
sonar sense is foreign to us. No wonder we're having a hell of a time
talking to them.”
“That's what I've
been trying to explain,” Leslie says. “It's like Anne Sullivan teaching
Helen Keller how to talk, only we can't even take them outside and pump
water over their hands until they get that we're trying to show them
something.”
“Les,” I say, “what
on earth are you babbling about?”
“Semiotics,” Leslie
answers. Which doesn't help me, but judging by the richness in his
tone, he's quite pleased with himself. “Never mind,” he finishes. “Just
doing my job.”
A scatter of the
birdcage aliens drifts diagonally across the starship, passing beside
and through one another. “So, what do you say we invite ourselves in
and sit down?” Richard asks.
“Do you suppose
they're safe to touch?” Leslie's already let himself drift forward;
he's ahead of the rest of us by a good three meters now. Lieutenant
Peterson is eyeing her end of the lines between them as if she's about
to grab a fistful and haul Leslie back to her hand over hand.
“No. I don't think
it's safe to do anything to them.” They're all looking at me. I blink.
I hadn't intended to speak just then; it slipped out. “But if I
understand you right, Les, you think they can't talk to anything
they're not touching?”
“Got it in one,” he
says, straining at the end of his leash. “I'm not sure they can notice
us unless we wander in among them.”
“Forgive me if that
sounds like a thoroughly lousy idea.”
“I know,” he answers,
and this time he does grab the ropes and turns himself completely
around, so we can see his broad white grin reflecting the running
lights of the Buffy Sainte-Marie . “But it's also what we came out
here for, isn't it?”
And they're all
waiting for me. Waiting for me, even though the lieutenant ranks me.
Waiting for me because I'm Genevieve Casey, dammit. And calisse de
chrisse, I hate this shit.
“All right,” I say,
and I do it without reaching out for Richard, because I already know
what Richard's going to say. “All right, guys. Spread out. Let's go on
in.”
Richard watched
silently through Min-xue's eyes as Clarke receded behind the Gordon Lightfoot . It was only
Min-xue's third trip in a Canadian shuttlecraft. Richard kept an ear on
Min-xue's thought process, certain that Min-xue would call for his
attention shortly. Right now, the pilot was musing on how he'd never
expected to find himself in space again, much less headed for a billet
aboard the Canadian flagship. Richard knew that Min-xue had assumed
this part of his life was over. Had assumed that his life was over, destroyed
in an act of conscience that was also an act of treason. He'd never
expected to sit where he sat, the lone passenger on a hastily detoured
shuttlecraft, a startling extravagance by Chinese standards.
Clarke slid out of
view as the shuttlecraft turned toward the Montreal . Min-xue couldn't
see their destination through the ports on the shuttlecraft's sides,
and the pilot's compartment was shielded from the passenger cabin by a
bulkhead. There was a monitor on the back side of that bulkhead, and
Richard contemplated turning it on for Min-xue, but he wasn't sure if
Min-xue wanted the long view of the Montreal, or of Earth, or of
the Benefactor ships.
Both he and Richard
knew very well what they all looked like, after all—
Richard?
“A good rain knows
the season, and comes on with the spring,” Richard quoted, drawing a
smile to Min-xue's thin-pressed lips. “I've been wondering if you would
want to talk.”
You're still
reading the Tang poets, I see.
“You are an
enormously bad influence,” Richard answered, and Min-xue smiled.
“Min-xue, I know you've spoken to the Canadian legal team about the—”
About the impact
event. Yes, and so have you.
And Richard knew why
the young man chose that distancing, clinical term. Euphemism had its
uses. “They feel we are not being as forthcoming as possible about
Captain Wu's orders.”
They think we know
more than we're telling, you mean.
Richard indulged
himself in a calculated hesitation. “Yes.”
Perhaps they
should ask Captain Wu these questions. I do not know the source of his
orders. I am certain that they came from his chain of command, however.Min-xue closed his
eyes, leaning back in his chair, regulating his breathing. Richard
couldn't do anything about the roughness of the seat against Min-xue's
back, or the way the vibration of the engines rattled through the ship
as a controlled burn accelerated them toward the Montreal, but he could—and
did—dim the
Gordon
Lightfoot 's interior illumination.
“Thank you, Richard,”
Min-xue said out loud. He turned his head to press his face to the cold
glass of the portal, a gesture Richard saw a lot among his pilots. His
pilots. With their hair-trigger reflexes and enhanced senses that made
the simplest navigation through daily life an act of courage and
endurance. His pilots. Richard's pilots. Richard's ticket to the stars.
And telling Riel I
accept her offer of citizenship would make it that much easier to be
certain I get there. Eventually.
“You're welcome.
Min-xue, I'd like your permission to adjust your wetware somewhat.”
“What are you going
to do?” Min-xue didn't open his eyes, but the creases at the corners
eased as Richard bumped the light level down again.
“Update the
protections and start low-level monitoring on your nanosurgeons.”
There's a problem?
You have doubts about the worldwire?
If Richard had a lip,
he would have been chewing it. His pilots. And not, frankly, just his
pathway to other worlds, but personal friends, all three of them. Well,
his friends or Alan's, and there was no practical difference between
the two.
Mad as they were.
He'd been unable to
save Trevor Koske and Leah Castaign. Humans would persist in being
human. “Preventative measures. I'm having the same conversation with
Jen and Patty right now.”
You're not telling
me everything, Richard.
“I can't.” But closer
monitoring of Min-xue's nanotech would give him a further glimpse into
the Chinese programming techniques, and besides, he was worried about
the unexplained die-offs in Charlie's ecospheres . . . and more worried
that he hadn't noticed it happening.
Min-xue opened his
eyes. His hands curved in to the hand grips molded to the edge of his
seat, useful in zero gravity, now useful to push himself forward
against the thrust that pressed him back into his seat. “This is the
life I have chosen.” He gave his head a sideways shake. “All right,” he
said, tightening his grip on the handholds. “All right. And Richard?”
“Min-xue?”
“Turn on the monitor?
I want to see where we're going.”
Richard did it, and
answered, “Don't we all.”
In a minor
confirmation of the law that the perversity of the universe tends
toward a maximum, it was the issue of time zones and the selection of a
sufficiently closemouthed translator that prevented Riel from
contacting Premier Xiong before Sunday morning. She made a major
concession in allowing the PanChinese premier to choose the translator.
But then again, that was the way the game was played, and machine
translation was not nuanced enough for these purposes.
There were channels
and there were channels, of course, and the means she was resorting to,
while official in the broader senses of the term, weren't exactly diplomatic . Which was helpful,
in the sense of deniability, and unhelpful—in the sense of deniability.
And once upon a
time, the world made sense,she reminded herself, opaquing the
reflective surface of her interface plate and checking her makeup for
the third time. And then you got this job. She checked her watch, then checked
the time on the heads-up display in her contact, and then rolled her
eyes at her own nervousness. She was nauseated with anticipation, and
it wasn't going to serve her to any advantage if she didn't get the
adrenaline under control.
So what if the
PanChinese premier was late? Her meeting with Hardy and Frye wasn't for
ninety minutes. And if they showed up early, or she ran long, they
could cool their heels out by the water fountain for a while. Which
thought made her smile, and not—she noticed in the opaqued plate—not
very pleasantly.
She wiped the
expression off her face. The hip unit sitting on the desk beside her
chimed. She jumped, took a breath, and drank three gulps of the rooibos
chai staying warm in her self-heating mug before she felt composed
enough to reach out and thumbprint the secure HCD. “Premier Xiong,” she
said, raising her eyes as the man's pinched, expectant face rezzed in
midair. “It's good of you to agree to this conference.”
“Prime Minister
Riel.” A pause, for encoding and translation. “It is good of you to
hear me. We have a problem.”
“More than one,” she
answered. It came easier as she found her stride; this was no
different, really, than any other such conference in her tenure as PM.
More fraught, perhaps, and more hazardous, but the actual mechanics
were no different.
It was still just a
matter of two people sitting down to talk and establish common
interests and points of negotiation. Constance Riel folded her hands
together. It did not stop her from fiddling with her ring. “Premier,
continued hostility benefits neither of us. Let us be frank; Canada is
not in a position to profit from ongoing conflict, and I do not believe
China is either. You have the problem of the Russians to contend with,
the PanMalaysian alliance and Japan . . . and the same climatic issues
we have. I don't want a war, sir.”
A longer pause this
time, and she wondered what word the translator had been checking
context on. Or if there had been a hasty consultation at a higher
level. Eventually, Xiong's impassive face was softened by a blink, and
the faint tilt of a smile. “None of us want a war, Prime Minister.”
She saw the sideways
flash of his eyes, the faint movement of his head as he shook off some
fragment of well-meaning advice. Unlike her, she realized, he must
indeed have someone in the room. Other than the interpreter, of course.
“We are prepared to
offer an apology,” he said flatly, unprovoked. She had expected to have
to force him into that particular corner. She didn't trust it.
“In exchange for?”
“An apology in
return.”
“The attack on
Toronto was unprovoked, Premier—”
“The attack on
Toronto was not supported by our government,” he answered, cutting her
off with a wave of his hand. She blinked. It was not the translator who
had spoken.
Xiong's accent was
inferior to his translator's, but his English was perfectly plain as he
continued, leaving Riel at a loss. “The miscreants will be punished
when they are located. To that end, we require the return of the crew
of the
Huang
Di.
Surely there can be no question that this is appropriate, and that it
is necessary for us to question our citizens and determine whether
there were, in fact, orders—and if so, from whom they came.”
Ah.That, Riel had an
answer to. “Premier, we also would like to see the crew of the Huang Di answer a few
questions. In a public forum, rather than behind closed doors.”
“I see.” He glanced
down, consulting his notes or concealing the green flash of an
adviser's message across his contact. “We would like the compiler code
to the operating system being used by the nanosurgeon infection that
Canada has inflicted upon the unsuspecting nations of the earth. We
profess ourselves willing to share our own codes, and to make this
information available to the scientific community and to the security
forces of any nation or supranation that wishes access to them.
Pursuant, of course, to a security check.”
“I'm afraid that
won't be possible,” she answered. Even if that weren't a back door
into Richard that I wouldn't give my sister. “I am, however,
certainly open to entertaining the resumption of friendly relations
between our countries.” Where “resumption” is a euphemism
for “we never have gotten along all that well, but I'm willing to
ignore that little twenty-year dustup that we don't call World War III
if you are.”
“You realize, Madame
Prime Minister, that while I am amenable to . . . negotiations, there
are elements within my nation that will be opposed.”
“I have an Opposition
of my own, Mr. Xiong.”
He chuckled, his eyes
twinkling like agates, the first flash of a real personality she'd
seen. “I'm sure you do. There's something else you should understand,
if you are determined to permit the United Nations to address this
matter.”
“It wouldn't be fair
to go to NATO, would it now?”
His smile was very
cool, and very thoughtful. “You're aware that the same technology that
is used to enhance the starship pilots can be used to create more . . .
traditional warriors?”
“Canada is aware.”
And then the bottom dropped out of her stomach, a trap door under a
hanged man's feet. “Are you insinuating that China has such a program
in development, sir?”
“Of course not,” he
answered. “It would be classified, if we did. I'll see you in New York
City on the eighth of October, then?”
“Will you be
attending yourself, Mr. Premier?”
“Madame Prime
Minister,” he answered carefully. “I should not miss it, if it lies
within my power.”
He vanished, and Riel
rolled away the ache in her neck. One down, she thought. Hardy and Frye up
next. I hope this counts as a productive morning.
Patty knew why
Captain Wainwright had sent her to the air lock to meet Xie Min-xue.
Partially because she was young, and a pilot, too—and could be trusted
not to do anything stupid like trying to shake Xie Min-xue's hand—and
it was partially to get her off the bridge, where she'd been fretting
since the
Buffy
Sainte-Marie uncoupled from the Montreal .
So she waited by the
interior air lock door, her hands self-consciously relaxed, hanging
palms-in against her thighs, her heart beating faster than it should,
her hair braided so it wouldn't drift into her face, and one foot
hooked under a grab strap. Alan? How much longer?
“He's the only one
disembarking the shuttle,” Alan answered. “And they're docked. It'll
just be a minute.”
Patty took a slow
breath. She didn't close her eyes. She didn't need to, really; she just
imagined herself armored, a golden metal robot shaped like a girl, or
like a sketch of a girl on the mud flap of a truck. And the air lock
cycled, and she found herself standing in front of a slender man, a
boy, really, her own age or just a little older, his gleaming black
hair floating above arched brows and his dark eyes glittering through
his squint. He didn't smile, and he looked supremely comfortable in
zero G. A duffel bag drifted from his left hand.
“Pilot Xie Min-xue?”
“I am.” Cautiously.
Softly, his face slightly averted, so that his hair slid across one eye
as if it could protect him from the directness of her stare.
She kicked free and
pushed back quickly and dropped her gaze. “I'm Patty—I mean, I'm
Patricia Valens. I'm one of the Montreal 's pilots. I'm
supposed to show you around.”
His chin lifted when
she said “pilots,” and she could almost see the tension in his
shoulders ease. “Show me around?”
“Give you a tour,”
she said, assuming he had not understood the colloquialism.
“No, I understood.”
Did he always speak so softly? “I had assumed I should be confined to
quarters.”
She smiled and
drifted another half-step away. He breathed easier once he had a little
more room. “Escorted,” she said. “At least for a little while. But
Richard will help you find your way around. We're supposed to treat you
as a guest. Follow me.”
He did, silently,
paying very close attention but asking no questions as she gave him the
quick tour of the ship. She took him up the ladder in the central shaft
so he could get an idea of the Montreal 's size, and he
gasped over the mock gravity in the habitation wheel, but “She's bigger
than the
Huang
Di, ”
was his only comment, and that after she had showed him the bridge.
“About twice as big.”
Silence descended
again, until she showed him to the small cabin that would be his. She
stopped beside the hatch, standing to one side. “You'll stay here,” she
said. “I'm sorry. I've done all the talking.”
“It's all right,” he
said, but didn't undog the hatch or step through it. “I'm not very . .
. talkative.”
They stood in the
corridor facing each other. Patty could hear the Chinese pilot
breathing, waiting. Finally, she stepped away from the hatch. “You can
go in. You don't have to wait for me to open the hatch.”
“It's all right,” he
repeated. He swallowed and looked down at his hands, fretting at the
strap of the duffel. “Miss Valens.”
“Patricia.” She
wasn't sure why she gave him the formal version of her name. Maybe the
way his hands shook, almost too fast to see. “Please.”
“Thank you,” he
stammered. “I wanted to ask you . . .”
“Ask,” she said, when
he'd been stuck long enough that it seemed as if interrupting would be
a mercy.
“Did you know Leah
Castaign?”
Patty didn't realize
she'd stepped back until the bulkhead stopped her. She stared at him
and forced her jaw to close. “You can't have known Leah.”
“No,” he said. “But
she—” He sighed, and twisted his head aside again, staring at the
floor, his hair a mess from gliding up the shaft in zero G.
Oh. “She died for you,”
Patty said. She swallowed hard, but didn't look away when Min-xue's
head snapped up.
“Yes. How did you—”
She shrugged. “I
know,” she said. “I just know, okay?”
He bit his lip. He
nodded. “Okay. Can you tell me about her? A little? Please?”
“I could.” She
hesitated. “It would take awhile.”
“I'm not sleepy.”
She studied him a
moment. “Do you play table tennis?”
“Table . . . tennis?”
“Ping-Pong?”
He shook his head.
She shook hers right back at him. “What do they teach you in China?”
“How to fly
starships.” Dryly, and quicker than she would have expected.
She snorted laughter,
tight worry easing across her chest. “All right,” she said. “Put your
bag in your cabin and I'll show you the gym and teach you how to play
Ping-Pong. And I'll tell you about Leah. Okay?”
“Okay,” he said.
The Chinese pilots were faster. He beat her,
seven to three.
Leslie had been next
to bigger things. The Petronas Towers, for example. Uluru, which the
ignorant called Ayers Rock. The base of the Malaysian beanstalk. The Montreal herself.
Only the rock had
made quite the impression on him that the birdcage did.
They came alongside
it about its midline, not that it displayed bilateral symmetry. Or
radial symmetry, in fact—or any sort of symmetry at all. The design was
rococo, the overall impression not too dissimilar from a baroque pearl
if you ignored the fact that the silhouette was filigreed rather than
continuous. The gaps between the bars of the birdcage were larger than
they had seemed, from a distance. Some of the spaces compassed twenty
meters.
And still the aliens
continued their mechanistic ballet, taking no apparent notice of the
cluster of space-suited humans drifting like kewpie dolls alongside
the—hull wasn't quite the right word, was it, for something whose
inside and outside were delineated only by courtesy?
Leslie glanced over
his shoulder and saw nothing but the edge of his faceplate and the
padded interior of the dorsal portion of his helmet. “Jen?”
The pilot drifted up
beside him, vapor trailing from her attitude jets. She stopped smartly. Of course, he thought, briefly
envious of the reflexes that made her precision possible.
He put the thought
aside. Attractive, maybe, to have the speed to pick a bumblebee out of
the air. But hardly necessary.
“You rang?” she said.
The lines that bound her to Jeremy came slack as the ethnolinguist
drifted into the conversation.
Leslie waved a hand
at the birdcage. His suit made the gesture broad. “Do you want to make
any preparations before we take the plunge?”
He couldn't really
tell through the gold-tinted shimmer of her faceplate, but he got the
impression that she looked at him before she looked back at the alien
ship. “I think maybe we shouldn't go all at once,” she answered.
“I think maybe I
should go alone,” Leslie offered. “I'll take my lines off.”
“Dr. Tjakamarra, I
cannot permit—” But he cut Lieutenant Peterson off with a second wave
of his hand, and she fell reluctantly silent.
“I'm unlikely to
drift off into a gravity well from inside the birdcage,
Lieutenant.”
She coughed. “Your
government would take it very amiss if we misplaced you, sir.”
“I shall be most
exquisitely bloody careful, sweetheart,” he said, and flashed her a
dazzling smile. Which of course she had no chance of seeing.
“I think I should
go.” Not Casey, surprising him, but Charlie Forster. Leslie smiled.
Charlie could no more sit on the sidelines for this than Leslie could.
If the biologist were a hound, he would have been straining the leash.
Peterson again:
“Absolutely—”
Leslie cleared his
throat, making sure the suit mike was live before he did it. “Charlie?
Elspeth's not here; you're in charge. What say we make it you and me,
and the lieutenant and the master warrant can have our suits on
override? That way, if they decide we don't know what we're doing, or
if we look like we're about to go home the bloody hot way, they can
yank us back on remote control?”
Leslie was proud of
himself. His voice didn't even shiver. He sounded confident and a
little bit amused, and the silence that followed told him they were
thinking about it seriously. He tilted his head down and counted
breaths, watching the gray-smeared planet spin between his boots.
If they'd been
standing on the deck of the Montreal, Casey and Peterson
would have been exchanging a long, opaque look. As it was, he was
pretty sure they were burning up the private suit channels instead. He
forced himself to breathe evenly—it wouldn't do him any good to pop a
lung or wind up with nitrogen narcosis or . . . hell, he wasn't even
sure what could go wrong if you were holding your breath in a space
suit. And he was pretty sure he wasn't going to research it either.
Some things, he was just as happy not knowing.
“All right,” Casey
said. “All right, Leslie. It's what we're here for”—and he could hear her knobby shoulders
rolling in a shrug—“although I don't like you boys taking point.”
“Somebody's got to,”
Charlie said, while Leslie was still looking for the words. “And it's
stupid to risk all of us. Just let us have control of the attitude jets
unless it looks like we're getting into trouble. All right?”
“Yeah,” Casey said,
and Peterson said “Roger.” And Charlie turned his entire suit to look
at Jeremy, as Corporal Letourneau drifted up beside him and started
working the carabiners loose. “Jer? Dr. Kirkpatrick?”
“You're goddamned
welcome to it, old son,” Jeremy answered from a spot two meters behind
Casey. “I'll be pleased to admit yours is bigger than mine. I'll float
here and take pictures.”
“Beauty,” Leslie
answered, and unclipped the lines from his belt. The gloves made him
fumble, but they hid the fact that his hands were shaking, and they
kept him from having to look up, away from the spinning earth, in the
direction that they were going. “Bob's your uncle. Here we go. Oh,
bloody lovely, Jer; look at that.” The line still in his gauntlet, he
pointed.
“Les?” Jeremy slid
past Jen Casey in an eddy of vapor and leaned on Leslie's shoulder.
Miscalculated inertia set them spinning slowly, but Leslie grabbed
Jeremy's gauntlet left-handed and got them both stable before Peterson
had to intervene.
He looked up at the
astronauts and grinned, and this time he was sure they saw it, even
through the helmet. “See? No worries. Piece of cake.”
“Les, what did you
see?”
He pointed down
again. “The Great Wall of China. Look.”
The others looked,
and exclaimed. “That used to be the only man-made object you could see
from space, supposedly,” Jen said. “Before electric lights. Before the
beanstalks.”
“Pretty story,” Les
answered.
Charlie's chuckle cut
him off. “Pity it's happy horse shit.”
“Charles.” Leslie
loaded his voice with teasing disapproval. He used his attitude jets to
tilt himself forward, peering through the sunlit thin spot in the pall
of dust to see if he could pick out that spider-fine thread again. He
could, just barely. “It's not horse shit. It's a beginner story, is
all.”
“A beginner story?”
Casey, the apt pupil. Of course.
“A story that's part
of the truth, but only the uncomplicated part,” Leslie explained. Which
was a beginner story in itself, and the circularity pleased him almost
as much as the tricksterish unfairness of it all.
“Oh.” She paused, and
he could almost feel her thinking. “So what else is man-made that you
can see from space, then? That's not lights? Or beanstalks?”
“The Sahara Desert,”
Charlie answered. And before anybody could comment further, he moved
forward, and Leslie stuck by his side as if they had planned it like
that.
Leslie already had
that half-assed comparison of the birdcage to some sort of sacred site
stuck in his mind when he and Charlie soared through the bars, leaving
the rest of the EVA team behind. His cliché generator was ready
with images of cathedrals and wild, holy places he'd seen, temples and
ziggurats and the hush of mysticism, some animal part of his mind ready
to be awed by the angle of sunlight through the bars of the cage.
He couldn't have been
more wrong.
The interior of the
birdcage hummed with energy, a feeling like a racetrack on Stakes day
or a ship's bridge anticipating the order to fire. Electricity prickled
the hairs on his arms, and for a moment he thought it was an actual
static charge. He turned to see if Charlie's suit glowed blue with
Saint Elmo's fire.
Charlie had
half-rotated toward Leslie, a fat white doll with a golden face, and
their eyes met through the tint as if through mist. “You feel that.”
“I feel something,”
Leslie answered. “Like I stuck my finger in a light socket.”
“Dr. Tjakamarra?”
Lieutenant Peterson's voice over the suit radio, and Leslie lifted his
hand to show he was all right, waved, and continued forward.
“Something's
happening,” Charlie said. “Jen, Jeremy? Do you detect any changes out
there?”
“Nothing to speak
of,” Jeremy answered. “What sort of change am I looking for?”
“It feels like we've
entered some sort of an energy field,” Charlie said. Leslie tuned him
out, listening to the conversation with only half an ear. “Check for
anything in the electromagnetic spectrum. Any kind of leakage.”
A silence. Leslie
drifted incrementally forward, edging into the interior of the birdcage
the same way he'd edge into a strange horse's paddock—slowly, calmly,
but as if he had every right in the world, or out of it , to be there. The
teardrop-shaped Benefactors glided soundlessly from bar to bar, some of
them passing within tens of meters, and still seemed to take no notice.
The prickling on his skin intensified. He glanced about, at the cage,
the obliviously moving aliens, at the slick sheen of mercury-like
substance that covered the armature of the birdcage. It was visually
identical to the substance of the enormous droplet-shaped aliens, and,
in fact, when they touched down on one of the beams, they became
indistinguishable from it. They slid along the structure like droplets
of water along the wires of a wet birdcage, and passed over and through
each other like waves, whether they met moving about the armature or
sailing through the space inside.
“Nothing's leaking
out this way,” Jeremy said. “I can't answer for what's going on inside
the birdcage, though. The whole thing could be a sort of—”
“Massive Faraday
cage?”
“Or something, yes.”
“Leslie? Charlie?”
Jen Casey's voice. She sounded worried; Leslie wondered if someone
might be waving at Charlie and himself from their entrance point, but
he wasn't about to turn around and look. Leslie craned his head back,
trying to get a look directly “up,” toward the top of the armature.
“I hear you, Jen.”
Charlie sounded a little odd, too, which wasn't surprising, if his skin
was responding to the same storm-prickle Leslie felt. “What's wrong?”
“Richard says the
nanite chatter is increasing. I think maybe you should come back.”
They turned to each
other again, Leslie and Charlie, and Leslie saw the question in
Charlie's eyes. Leslie's hands spread reflexively inside his gauntlets
as another shiver slithered up his back.
“We've already made
history,” Charlie said.
“And so what if we
have? We haven't learned anything yet.”
The flash of
Charlie's teeth showed through the tint in his faceplate. “Jen,” he
said, “we're going to head out to the middle of this thing at least—”
“Charlie, that's
another klick. Maybe a klick and a half.”
“Nothing ventured,”
Leslie said, and gave Charlie a thumbs-up before he kicked his
maneuvering jets on. “Jen, remind me on the way back out—”
“If you get back out,” she
interrupted, but he heard grudging approval in her tone.
“Hey, this is your
harebrained scheme, sweetheart.”
She laughed. “All
right, Les. Remind you what?”
“Remind me to get a
sample of the fluid on the birdcage when we pass by it again, would
you? Maybe have Corporal Letourneau run back to the Buffy Sainte-Marie and pick up some sort
of sterile containment vessel?” He turned, watching another raindrop
slide along another wire. He had to remind himself that the scale was
skyscraper beams and elephants at a kilometer or better, and not
spiderwebs wet with dew that he could reach out and brush away with his
gauntleted hand.
“We had a probe try
that, remember? Hydrogen and nanites.”
“Oh, right.” He
rolled his eyes at his own obtuseness.
A pause, as if Jenny
discussed the problem of samples with Letourneau over local channels,
and then the crackle of her voice. “We'll try a magnetic bottle this
time; maybe it'll make a difference. Hey guys, are you noticing a lot
of static on this channel all of a sudden?”
“I'm noticing more
lightning-storm skin prickles, too,” Charlie said. “I wonder if it's
true that you can feel lightning ionizing a path before it hits you.”
“Doctors.” The
lieutenant again. “I really think the Benefactor activity is picking
up. I would feel much better if you two came back—”
And then Jenny's
voice, sharp with fear, urgent and clipped. “ Putain!Charlie, move. That thing's coming
right at you!”
Leslie's head snapped
up, not that it helped him in the slightest. He turned in the suit,
faster than the gyros could handle, and reached for Charlie's arm. His
grab failed; instead, he sent himself tumbling, and slapped hard at the
autostabilize button on his chest, hoping the suit's gyroscopes would
suffice to level him out. Spread out. Make yourself broad
and
flat. Don't scrunch up; it will just make you spin faster—
It was working. He
tried to catch a glimpse of Charlie and could only see rippling silver,
one of the teardrop aliens, close enough that its fluid side towered
like a battleship overhead. Whatever Casey shouted dissolved into the
deafening crackle of static. Ionization prickled over his skin, sharp
enough to sting.
He closed his eyes so
he wouldn't struggle against the suit in panic or by reflex,
spread-eagled himself against the void, and allowed his inertial
systems to bring him safely to rest. He couldn't hear anything but
static over the radio, and then even the static cut off, leaving him in
silence. But at least he hadn't bounced off the birdcage's
superstructure. Yet. And he thought he had stopped tumbling.
Cautiously, Leslie
opened his eyes.
And a bloody good
thing, too, because there was Charlie, not too far off, spread-eagled
just as Leslie was and coming toward him much too fast and on a direct
collision course. Leslie raised his hand, reached for the other emergency switch—the
get-me-the-hell-out-of-here one—and froze as the other space-suited
figure echoed the gesture precisely.
Oh, bloody hell.
His own reflection,
in the side of a bubble of liquid silver, broke over him with the force
of a ten-foot wave.
Tobias Hardy probably
had two hundred different fifteen-thousand-dollar suits, and Constance
Riel hated every single goddamned one of them. She hated the way he had
them tailored to make his shoulders look broader, and she hated the
complicated manner in which somebody was paid to fold the handkerchief
that always matched his tie.
If he had an image
consultant, the man should be fired.
Unfortunately, unlike
Riel's ability to keep her job, Hardy's ability to keep his wasn't dictated by
any arcane metric of approachability multiplied by sober respectability
and personal charisma. Which was a pity; the world might be a nicer
place if “corporate raider” were a popularity contest.
Still, Riel had to
credit Hardy with a certain piranha-like honesty. He was exactly what
he seemed to be, shiny scales and teeth and a voracious appetite, with
the power to stuff just about anything that he chose into his maw.
General Janet Frye
was a more complicated matter. And one far more likely to make Riel's
lip curl. Because Frye should have been an ally and instead she'd
placed herself firmly on the other side of the equation.
No matter how Frye
justified herself, if she even bothered with justifications anymore.
Riel hung considerable pride on her ability to read people, to
understand what their prices were, what they thought their prices were,
and what their pride demanded they pretend while they were selling
themselves. And right now, eyeing Frye levelly over her own folded
hands, leaning both elbows on her salvaged desk, Constance Riel was 70
percent certain that Frye had already sold her self-respect. She just
wished she knew for what.
Riel contemplated her
for several seconds, waiting to see if Frye would glance down or blush.
Hardy shifted from one foot to the other, the gesture of a man who is
not accustomed to being kept waiting, and so Riel gave him another
fifteen seconds before she let her gaze flick to meet his. She leaned
back in her chair and offered him her most professional, most soulless
smile. “Mr. Hardy. You seem determined to force me to utter words I
never in my wildest imagination supposed that I would say.”
The little suppressed
twitch of his lips showed her that he thought he'd won a concession,
even if he didn't know which one yet, and she let him coast on the
assumption. “Does that mean you'll consider my offer to buy Canada out
of the
Vancouver ?”
Riel gripped the edge
of her desk and stood. “Calisse de chrisse. No, Toby. It means dealing
with you makes me miss Alberta fucking Holmes. I'm not
giving you the Vancouver . I'm certainly not giving you any
pilots that aren't under government oversight, even when we do get some
more trained.”
She came around her
desk, daring Frye not to give ground before her. Frye stepped out of
the way, the hunch of her shoulders ruining the line of her coat.
“The simple fact of
the matter, Mr. Hardy, is that Unitek needs Canada more than Canada
needs Unitek.” And thank you for that small mercy, Richard. Thank you
very much.
Frye cleared her
throat. “You can't run Canada like a dictatorship, Prime Minister.
Parliament has a say in our course of actions. Especially when your
ill-conceived meddling in international affairs has left us on the
brink of war.”
“Just because we're
not shooting, General, doesn't mean we're not over the brink already.
I'd think that was a mistake you would be unlikely to make.” It was too
early for Scotch, unfortunately, because the dusty crystal decanter on
the sideboard had never looked so good. Resolutely, Riel turned her
back on it. “You're right about one thing—”
Frye's head tilted,
light catching on her hair.
“—I'm not a dictator.
In fact, I'm not even a president. So why don't you see if you can't
get with a coalition and arrange to get my ass kicked downstairs, and
you can warm that chair over there yourself. And then if you want to
hand PanChina the keys to the castle, you can do it on your own watch.”
Frye paused, settled
back on her heels, and Riel propped her ass against the desk, crossed
her ankles and her arms, and gave the opposition that smooth-faced
smile one more goddamned time, thinking careful, Connie, or your face
might
freeze that way .
“Ma'am. You know I
can't do that.”
“Yes. I know that
very well.” Riel didn't look down, and neither did the general.
Hardy stood beside
them, his brow furrowed at being balked. He shot Frye a glance that
spoke volumes. She never flickered. Unitek—Tobias Hardy—could buy and
sell Canada. Hell, could buy and sell most of the commonwealth, when it
came right down to it. But, goddamn it, it was still Canada that made
the laws.
“Janet.” Riel
softened her voice, created a framework that brought Frye in and pushed
Hardy out, even as he came forward as if to shoulder between the two
women. The stare that locked them was too much for him to break,
however, and he fell back.
“Prime Minister?”
“I'm going to declare
war on China if they cannot be made to pay restitution and admit
wrongdoing. I will give the process a chance, you understand, and I
pray to God that we figure out how to talk to the Benefactors first.
But I want you to understand.”
“I think I know where
you're going with this, ma'am.”
Riel smiled.
“Appeasement never works, Janet. And ignoring the problem isn't going
to make it go away. Especially when it's come hundreds of light-years
to introduce itself.”
“And?”
“And if I find out
that anybody—coalition or opposition—is working with PanChina to
undermine Canada, there won't be a hole deep enough for him to hide in.
And by ‘undermine,' I do mean anything from sharing information to
passing notes under the desk. Comprenez-vous?”
Frye nodded. “Je
comprends.”
Riel reached out and
patted Frye's arm. “One crisis at a time,” she said. And don't think
I'm
ever going to trust you one inch farther than I can toss you, General.
But if I can use you to distract Unitek while they're trying to play
Canada and China off against each other, then you're a pawn I'm going
to keep on the board until I have to sacrifice you. “One crisis at a
time.”
She nearly jumped out
of her skin when the critical-alert light on the corner of her
interface plate began to blink.
I don't see what sets
the teardrops off. It always seems to happen that way, doesn't it?
You're cruising along, minding your own business, and suddenly things
are blowing up to the left and to the right of you, and no matter how
hard you were looking you never see where the goddamned rockets came
from. And you just grab the wheel and floor it, and hope you don't wind
up upside down in a crater. Richard. Richard! What the hell is
going on?
“I don't know, Jenny.
Something. Hell—”
Or, in this case,
you're standing on the sidelines adjusting your cuff links, and the
next thing you notice, everybody's shooting at each other. And you're
too goddamned far away to make any difference at all, even if you tried.
So, suddenly, Charlie
and Leslie are shouting over the suit radios, phrases broken by static,
frantic scurrying, and I'm half a second from trying to get to them
even though they're a klick away across the diameter of the birdcage
and I'd just get my own fool self killed, except I remember a second
before I hit my maneuvering jets that I'm hooked in to Jeremy by ten
feet of carbon filament and by the time I get myself unhooked, it's
over and everything's calm as a millbrook downstream of the paddles.
“Casey? Dammit, Casey !” But Captain
Wainwright's voice-of-command over my suit radio isn't even enough to
snap me out of it, and neither is Lieutenant Peterson tugging on my
spacesuit, trying to drag me away from the birdcage, back to the
shuttle.
You know those pearl
necklaces, the ones where the jewel rolls around free inside a silver
wire cage that hangs off a chain? Leah used to have one; she wore it to
Mass sometimes. The pearl in hers was pink.
When things stop
twisting in front of my eyes, all the mercury in the birdcage has
gathered in an enormous blob at the center of the ship. It floats
there, a spherical mirror, flawless and shivering, and Charlie and
Leslie are gone.
God damnit, I am sick of
watching people I like get killed. I am even sicker of getting people I like killed.
It's not an acquired taste, let me tell you; every drink is bitter as
the last. And they never get any easier to swallow.
“Aw, Christ,”
Peterson says, turning to fix her lines to Letourneau for the slow sail
back to the
Buffy .
I can feel Richard in
my head; I can feel him thinking, but he doesn't seem to have anything
to say. I don't either, and Jeremy's just as silent.
But he's not
retreating any more than I am. Instead he hangs at my shoulder, just
looking at all that fluid silver, and our colleagues buried somewhere
inside. And Wainwright's stopped shouting in my head, and Peterson's
silence tells me she's conferring with the captain privately. Which is
fine with me. The officers are welcome to it.
Finally, she clears
her throat. “Master Warrant Officer?”
“Lieutenant?”
“The, ah. The captain
ordered us to clear the scene.”
“Ma'am.” I start
backing away. I don't want to turn my back on that thing. Not for a
second.
“Wait,” Jeremy
interjects. His gauntlets wave like an upturned bug's legs, hard enough
that he wobbles until his gyros straighten him out. “Wait, wait—”
“Jer?”
“Get a sample,” he
says. “Les said get a sample.”
“Dr. Kirkpatrick.”
Peterson's voice, rich with warning.
Insubordinate as
always, I follow Jeremy back toward the cage. “We won't go inside,
Lieutenant. We may as well salvage something out of this mess.”
I hear her sigh. I
rather imagine she's getting an earful from the captain, and I'm not
entirely certain why I'm being spared it. Maybe Wainwright's afraid
she'll say something she's likely to regret if she talks to me directly. Richard, do you
think we can get away with this?
“Insufficient data,
Jen,” he answers.
When did you get
replaced by a bot?
“You know, the more
upset you are, the more sarcastic you get.” Sensation of a raised
eyebrow, and I bless him silently for knowing what I need, archness and
sharp diversionary tactics instead of sympathy. “In any case, I think
you're right about an attempt to salvage . . . Jen.”
Dick?Feeling more like a
straight man every second, I hesitate, shaking the lines to slow Jeremy
down.
What
is it?
“Jen, I don't want to
get your hopes up. And I don't want to give you a false impression that
I have any control of this situation at all, much as I wish I could do
something—”
Dick. Out with it
already.Jeremy
moves forward again, a scraper and a vacuum bag in his hands.
“You know I have some
limited, some very limited communication with the
Benefactor nanotech.”
Yes?
“Jen, I think Charlie
and Leslie are alive in there.”
I've got to give
Wainwright credit. She doesn't say I told you so . She doesn't even
think it real loud, although the vertical line over her shapely little
nose advertises restrained wrath. The funny thing is, I don't think
she's angry with me.
I don't know what she is angry with, though,
and I'd be just as happy not to get between her and the object of her
wrath until she's done reducing it to scrap metal. There are forces of
nature I'm willing to fuck with, and those that I'm sensible enough to
give a wide berth—and right now, Wainwright falls into the latter
category.
Even if she doesn't
trust me, Wainwright's a good CO. She knows me better than I know
myself sometimes, and she's got to be aware that left to my own
devices, I'd be stalking the halls of the ship making a terror of
myself, keeping my own kind of walking vigil for Leslie and Charlie.
And since she knows that, and she knows Richard will tell me if the
status changes, she heads it off at the pass by giving me a job to do.
She appoints me Xie
Min-xue's guardian, and gives me— us—the run of the ship. Under Dick's
supervision, of course. But then, we always are.
Pilot Xie waits in
the pilot's ready room, the one I took Leslie to when he first came on
board. Xie stands when I enter; he's just barely eighteen, and he could
pass for fifteen when the light hits him right. He's a fragile, girlish
sort of a boy with eyes like watchful black jewels. It occurs to me,
looking at him, that Leah probably could have broken him over her knee,
and Patty would have no problem at all.
His eyes track me but
he doesn't speak at first, just presses his arms tight to his sides and
bows, his body language indicating as clear as an eight-sided sign, stop there. Beyond
this point there be dragons. Something about the distance in those
eyes tells me he's talking to Richard, which is no skin off my nose. If
it comforts him, more power to him.
If I remember
Richard's briefings right, the Chinese pilots are wired even closer to
tolerances than we are, because they don't have access to Canada's
performance-enhancing drugs. And moreover, their wetware isn't
adrenaline-sensitive. Rather than moving through the world in a fairly
normal fashion until something triggers their enhancements, they live
their lives like hummingbirds, vibrating on the verge of flight.
All things
considered, then, I have to think that Xie Min-xue comes across as a
remarkably normal young man.
And just as I'm
thinking that, with no warning whatsoever, Richard drops me into his
skull.
Just like that. Bang . The same way he
gave me Leah, for the last thirty seconds of her life, the same way he
steps into me and I step into him, through the quantum communication
between the microscopic robots that live under my skin and Pilot Xie's,
and that make up Richard's body, if a body, precisely, is what he
can be said to have. For a second or two I'm feeling the air on Xie's
skin, the way it prickles the hair at the nape of his neck and the way
the ready-room lights are too bright. I can barely pick up the flicker,
untriggered and well rested; to Xie it's a strobe. We've got to do
something about that, I say to Richard. Rip out every
fluorescent light on the Montreal if we have to—
I realize too late
that Min-xue—which is his name, after all, and the way he thinks of
himself—can hear me when his lips peel back from crooked teeth in a
most engaging grin, and bows even more deeply.
“I would be in your
debt, ma'am,” he says inside my skull, the same way Richard does. I
shake my head, amazed.
I have to try it
myself.
Please.
Call me Jenny.
“With great pleasure,
Jenny.”
Dick, how long
have you known about this?
“Since Leah, more or
less. The practical implications, however, are just starting to work
themselves out.”
Practical
applications beyond telepathy?
“Beyond worldwide,
instantaneous communication, Master Warr— Jenny?” Min-xue is smiling,
enjoying his advantage.
Galaxy-wide.
Instantaneous. Your word, ansibles. Ansibles in our heads. Completely
private—or is it, Dick?
“It's as private as I
make it,” Richard says, and I can see from the way Min-xue angles his
head that his smile is for the AI whose image we both see real as if he
were in the room, and who would be transparent as a ghost to any
unmodified human who stepped in beside us.
Once again, you
rule our destiny. I mean it to be mocking, but I can't help it if it comes
out a little defenseless, as well. This is going to change the world.
This is . . . this is the Net writ large.
“The global village,”
Richard says quietly.
“The what?” And I'm
not sorry Min-xue's wired a little faster, if it means he got to be
dumb quicker. I must think it out loud, because he ducks his chin and
tilts an apologetic smile at me, and Richard laughs.
“An antiquated
catchphrase,” Richard says. “You might call it an advertising slogan.”
But is it really
going to change the way the planet is run? Or is it just going to give
us more differences to fight over?
“Too soon to tell.
Might eventually give world leaders a hell of a lot of grief making
people believe geographic boundaries have any value, though.”
“That will take
generations,” Min-xue interjects.
I run both hands
through my hair, turning my back on him—except I can't, really, because
I carry him with me as I walk to the porthole and pause.
“Only one or two,
Min-xue. Patty's already adapting to her AI linkages with real
fluidity.”
Dick, does Ellie
know about this yet? Valens and Riel?
“Only you two.”
They need to. They
need—
Shit.
“Ah. I see you've
arrived.”
“The Benefactors.” I
say it out loud, and Min-xue, who has closed his eyes against the
flicker of the lights, jumps at the sound of my voice. I don't see him
jump. I feel it. Completely fucking bizarre.
That thing they
do. Where they . . . slide through each other. That's why they grabbed
Les and Charlie; they're still trying to talk to us.
He doesn't comment.
What are we going
to do about it, Dick?
“It's easier to get
forgiveness than permission.”
Because
conspiracy's served us so very well in the past.
“There is that,” he
says, spreading his fingers wide as nets while Min-xue looks on,
watching silently. I catch something from him, a flicker of Chinese, a
rhythm like poetry. It calms him, whatever it is. Mantras?
“Li Bo,” he answers,
with that same off-center smile.
I know where
you're going, Dick.
Richard likes
watching me think, damn him to hell. “What?”
This is it. This
is everything.I press my face against the cold, cold porthole crystal as if
it could calm the sensation that has me shivering, the same sensation
you have when you look up and you can see the wave breaking, and it's
not on you yet, and it's much much bigger than you and it's much much
too late to get out of the way. How did Charlie reprogram the
first
nanites, Dick? How did he get them to accept our alien earthling code?
“Gabe and I know the
process. It's more straightforward than you might think.”
It's Min-xue,
strangely, who breaks the tableau. I feel him come up behind me,
and—light as a leaf brushing my skin—lay his palm against my shoulder,
carefully touching only cloth. “It could kill them,” I say.
“Staying where they
are will likely kill them, too.”
“And you're relying
on my conscience, Dick?”
“The last time I
checked, you were still arguably a human being. If I'm going to
organize a coup, I'd feel better knowing I'm not a megalomaniac AI.”
Dick.He grins before I say
it. You
are a megalomaniac AI. That doesn't change the fact that you're right.
Min-xue?
The Chinese pilot
stares at me as I turn around to face him. His arm drops to his side.
He looks at where Richard would be if Richard existed, and he nods,
slowly, his eyes unfocused and his expression grave. “If the nanites
are how the Benefactors communicate among themselves, and they've taken
our two scientists alive, we might be forgiven for assuming that the
contact is a further attempt to communicate with us.”
Of course, since
we've seen no proof that the two groups of Benefactors can talk between
themselves, there's no guarantee that adding a third language to the
Tower of Babel will help—
“Did you spend your entire childhood in Sunday
school, Jen?”
It only felt like
it. Look, I'd feel better about this if we could ask Charlie and Leslie
if they were game.
“So would I.”
“When fate
intervenes, we serve where we are standing,” Min-xue says. “They would
do it, if they knew.”
He's right, of course. How do you propose
to pull this off?
“I'm going to . . .
the closest equivalent would be to say I'm going to flash the bios on
some of the nanites in the Benefactor . . . um, conjoined mass? When
Charlie reworked the original Benefactor tech into something we could
use, he cleaned out their brains with a focused electromagnetic pulse,
and then retrained them. I don't have time to do that, but I do have
considerably more information on how they work than he did when he
started. And I have Gabe, who's a better code jockey than Charlie ever
was.”
I try not to glow too
much at the praise of Gabe. I'm somewhat attached to him.
“And then,” Richard
finishes, “I'm going to try to take control of the birdcage entity, and
get it to kick Leslie and Charlie free. I'll need somebody to catch
them, if it works.”
Me, he means, or
Min-xue. Or Patty. “And if it doesn't?”
“Then I'm going to
use the nanites to begin to modify Charlie and Leslie.”
Without medical
support.
“It will be less
drastic than your surgery, Jen. I don't need them wired fast enough to
fly a starship, after all. I just need to be able to read their minds.”
I find myself
nodding, agreeing, knowing perfectly well that Wainwright and Valens are going to
take turns breaking my fingers when they find out I knew about this,
and I'm not even going to be able to work up a valid protest that I
don't deserve it. All right, Dick. I'll take responsibility. But dammit—
“Yes, Jen?”
I want to be with
you when you go on in.
Leslie Tjakamarra
dreamed of flying, and he dreamed of being bitten to death by ants. Not
separately, by turns, but both at once, in a timeless conflation of
then and now and when that blurred into an unceasing whole. He dreamed
of the wave that rolls across the water, but cannot change the water,
and he dreamed he was rocked in the womb of the mother, wrapped in the
coils of the rainbow snake. He dreamed he was dying, and the sun
bleached his bones, both at once. All at once.
All right now.
Leslie Tjakamarra had
a starship dreaming, and he had joked that it was just as well that he
had no taste for starship, as his kinship with them precluded his
killing and eating one. He had a starship dreaming, and all things that
were had been sung already, were just waiting under the ground for
their time to come. Alive in the Dreaming before they were alive in the
world.
He had a starship
dreaming, and here he was, drifting in space, blind and deaf, warm
enough that he knew his heaters hadn't broken, cool enough that he knew
he hadn't been knocked into sunlight with his radiators failing. He
wasn't sure if the blow had caused his faceplate to opaque, or if it
was simply too dark to see, or if he had been blinded. His inner ear
told him he was floating rather than spinning, and while he couldn't
move his arms or legs, pins and needles told him he hadn't been
paralyzed. He might have a moment's air left, or an hour's, or a day's;
however much it was, it was a lifetime's worth.
Time passed and the
tingling in his fingertips receded, leaving cold numbness. He could
imagine, if he thought about it very hard, that he felt a squishy
colloid between his fingers, a texture that resembled mud mixed with
cold Vaseline. The chill crept upward, numbing his palms, making his
wrists and the bones of his hands ache before the sensation left them.
This is going to
be a long, chilly way to die,Leslie thought, and tried to relax
into it, to relax into the dream and the dying.
He had a starship
dreaming, and now it began to seem that he had become a small, peculiar
sort of starship of his own.
Even for an AI, there
was a fine art to doing everything at once, and Richard was stretching
his limits faster than they could grow. If you were a certain kind of
person, it was a universal constant that demands expanded slightly in
advance of resources. Richard was forming the opinion that, in his
case, the pigheadedness of the universe amounted to malice aforethought.
Most of his—and
Alan's—awareness was spread in a thin web of nanosurgeons flitting
through the waters of the Atlantic Ocean. In particular, he was
tracking the rapidly evolving shifts in the damaged ocean's unstable
currents, still hard at work on the incredibly complex calculations
required to enact the solution suggested by Jen's offhand comment
regarding the Aegean Stables and the diversion of rivers.
To wit: What if the
climatic damage could be ameliorated by re-creating—by healing —the Atlantic
thermohaline deep-water turnover process, using mechanical means to redistribute
saline? What if Richard could reverse some of that damage, buffer both
the current global cooling and the looming catastrophic warming trend,
and stabilize the climate? It could save millions of lives, if he could
attain a sufficient understanding of the process. He might be able to
re-create the warming processes of the defunct Gulf Stream and the
so-called great ocean conveyor belt, the saltwater-density-driven
worldwide ocean current that had helped keep northern Europe unfrozen
for thousands of years, and which no longer existed. If he got it
right, the British Isles might even be salvageable, although the
process of moving the evacuees back was logistically
daunting.
Or, if he understood
the process incorrectly, and pulled the wrong string in his meddling,
he could provoke an ecological meltdown to make the current crisis seem
like a glitch. He finished checking Alan's climatological analysis and
handed the body of the data back to the other personality thread with
corrections and suggestions. Alan replied with a string of information
regarding Leslie and Charlie's quandary; being less emotionally
involved, Alan had honed Richard's hopeful numbers and reworked his
code to something more aggressive.
An attempt to free
the captured men could possibly outrage the aliens—could be seen as an
act of war, could provoke them into violent action against the Montreal, or against the Earth.
Of course, doing nothing might provoke them just as easily. He
mentioned that to Elspeth over the speaker in her office, and Elspeth
nodded and tapped her thumbnail against her teeth and said, “You know
what occurs to me, Dick?” in that slow, thoughtful way she sometimes
had.
Richard reached out
to the nanites in contact with the two scientists, who he hoped very
profoundly were unconscious, marshalled his forces, and paused. He
couldn't control the Benefactor bugs, but he could feel them, coating
two intact space suits, the outlines clear as the shape of a hand
pressed into a pin box. There was no reason for the suits not to be
functional.
“Elspeth, if I could
read your mind, people would have good reason to be far more scared of
me than they are.”
“Hah. Well, they
haven't taken any drastic action before now, have they?”
“Nothing aggressive.
Nothing at all, really.”
“Until we moved onto
their turf.”
“And they slapped us
back.”
“Unless,” Elspeth
said, “they were inviting us in.”
Richard paused for
mere fragments of a second, considering. “You make a good point,” he
agreed. “We can't know at all what they expect. They could expect us to
come back and continue the conversation, and be hurt—offended—when we
don't.”
“Exactly.”
“Except we have
another problem,” he said, as a new pattern of movement in the nanotech
layer drew his attention. “I think they're taking the space suits
apart.”
“Dick? Can you do
something?”
“I'm on it, Elspeth.”
And he was. Moving, his improvised— the phrase you're avoiding is
“slapped together,” Dick—code compiled and ready, a best-guess
and nothing he would have wanted to stake his own life on, let alone
anyone else's. “Look, can you get Jeremy up there? I need the two of
you to distract somebody.”
It's always easier
to get forgiveness than permission,he told himself, and woke up Jenny and
Min-xue.
The magnitude of the
problem was evident when Valens walked into the prime minister's
office. He read it in the set of her shoulders as she stood leaning
against the wall and how her hands coiled around the mug she held like
a shield before her chest.
“Are we going to
war?” Perhaps not the most politic question, but Valens's relationship
with Riel had come to be characterized by a certain bluntness.
“Not with the
Chinese,” she said. “The Benefactors may be another matter. They've
captured two of the researchers.”
Valens's heart
dropped into his belly, even though he knew Patty hadn't been on the
EVA team. “Who?”
“Forster and
Tjakamarra.”
“Damn. Charlie . . .”
And then he paused. “Captured?”
“That's what Richard
and Alan think.”
“It occurs to me,
Prime Minister,” he said, and crossed the room to the decanter
three-quarters full of Scotch, “that we're becoming entirely too
dependent on ‘Richard-and-Alan-say.'”
“That hasn't escaped
my notice either, General.” Riel's voice was dry, bittersweet. He
didn't turn to see her expression; he could picture it well enough. The
decanter was heavy, crystal cut in a crosshatched pattern cool and
rough under his fingers. He filled a tumbler, two fingers, as she
continued. “You were about to comment on the capture of two of our
leading scientists, unless I misread you.”
Valens stared into
the dark amber fluid, but did not taste it. “When was the last time you
misread somebody, Connie?”
“I think it was your
friend Casey, now that you mention it.”
“Casey's not my
friend,” he answered, and now he did raise the glass, and ran the
Scotch under his nose. It smelled of smoke and peat; it tasted like
sugared fire when he touched it to his lips. “There can't be too much
of this left in the world.”
“We'll be reduced to
Kentucky bourbon when it's gone,” she answered. “Enjoy it while you
can.”
“I should examine the
details more closely before I jump to any conclusions regarding Charlie
and Dr. Tjakamarra and the Benefactors,” he said. He turned back to
face Riel, propping himself against the sideboard. She was still
holding her coffee mug, staring out the window.
“The data will be
made available to you.”
“Good. How did your
meeting with Frye and the odious Mr. Hardy go?”
She shrugged. “Toby's
going to try a power play. Or perhaps just flatly sell us out to the
highest bidder. Frye can still be managed, though.”
“You're certain?”
“Don't be foolish.”
Her hands dropped to her side. She kept the mug upright, but he heard
the coffee slosh. She crossed to the window, standing behind the drapes
as she twitched them aside. She stared out for a moment and then turned
and looked back at him, frowning. “Of course I'm not certain. But
that's besides the point; she can be used, and I intend to use her. I
think I have the opposition figured out, Fred.”
“You're enough of a
bitch to leave me hanging like that, too, unless I ask.” He softened it
with a smile. She chuckled.
She crossed the room
and set her mug on the edge of her desk, then began re-arranging her
clutter away from the access surfaces of the interface plate. “Fred,
did it ever occur to you that we might lose?”
Somehow, he knew what
she meant. Not her government, not Canada. But the whole human race,
Earth and everybody on it. “Some days, Connie, I think maybe we already
have. Some days I think it's kinder that way, and maybe we're too dumb
and self-destructive to live.”
“And yet we keep
kicking and shouting.”
“And scheming. It's
in the blood.”
She raised her eyes
to his, and tilted her head, her dark hair sticking and sliding across
her forehead. “The PanChinese premier is being set up for a coup. His
minister of war is behind it, and Tobias Hardy is bankrolling the whole
damned thing.”
“How do you know
that?”
“Do you mean, can I
prove it?” She walked past him and poured herself a stiff Scotch of her
own, rolling the fluid around on her tongue for a moment before she
swallowed. “No. It's a stone cold hunch. But I'm willing to bet Premier
Xiong will be dead or in a labor camp by the end of the year. And it
may very well wind up looking like Canada's fault.”
Genie sat very
quietly in her chair in the corner of the bridge, hoping Papa wouldn't
notice her and send her away. Jenny had seen her, raised an eyebrow and
winked on the side of her face where her scars used to be, and now
seemed to be making a little game of keeping Papa's attention away from
Genie, teasing him, keeping his hands busy on the console. In the ready
room, on the other side of the airtight hatch, Patty was doing . . .
something. Nobody had explained to Genie what was going on.
But nobody had been
able to conceal his worry either. And she did think it was weird that
both pilots were hanging out by the bridge when Wainwright wasn't
there. Jenny said once that out of Leah and Genie, Genie got the
curiosity for both girls, and Leah got the stubborn. Genie didn't
really think that Leah had been all that much more stubborn than Genie.
But that was Aunt Jenny, and Genie supposed she had a right to her
point of view.
Besides, Jenny wasn't
very much like a grown-up, most of the time. And often a willing
coconspirator, although not as much fun as Elspeth. Still, when Genie
snuck mouselike out of her chair, and Jenny's eye caught her as she
turned, Genie wasn't surprised at all when Jenny cleared her throat and
leaned forward to ask Papa a question about whatever he was doing with
the holographic computer interface, his fingers flying like bee's wings
through the projected images as he shuffled code.
Normally, Genie loved
to watch him work. He coded like some people danced, glitter-eyed
concentration and confident grace and never a hesitation. But now she
turned her back on him and edged toward the ready-room hatchway, and
undogged it silently, and opened it just wide enough for a twig of a
girl to slip through. She made sure it shut behind her without
clanging, but Patty heard her, of course, just like Jenny would have,
or Leah.
Patty turned around
too quickly and tripped on the carpet, but she caught herself without
ever lowering her arms. Her fingers were tangled up in her hair, a comb
in her teeth, and she looked like she was about to cry. She let her
hair fall around her shoulders and took the comb out of her teeth and
fixed Genie with a black-eyed glare. “Just tell them I'll be out in a
second, would you? I can't get my damned braid to work. I should
probably just cut all my hair off like Jenny—” All on a rush, and Genie
thought it was only dignity that kept her from kicking the wall.
“They didn't send
me,” she said. “It's okay. Papa's busy, and Aunt Jenny's keeping him
that way.”
“So what do you want?”
Genie blinked at the
cold hostility in her tone. It didn't scare her. Instead, it sparked a
warm kind of competition. She grinned exactly the grin that would have
driven Leah out of her tree, and came a few steps farther into the
room. She knew what Elspeth would have said, after all. Elspeth would
have said that Patty was scared and worried about failing, and that she
didn't mean to snap at Genie—it was just that Genie was there.
Genie took a breath
and laced her hands in front of her hips, trying to look small and not
too threatening. “I came to ask if I could help you braid your hair.”
Patty blinked at her,
the comb forgotten in her hand. “Do you know how?”
“Sure. I used to do
Leah's all the time. Give me the comb.” She said it a little
peremptorily, the way Elspeth would have, and held out her hand. Patty,
a funny expression compressing the corners of her mouth, handed it over
and sat down.
When that Chinese guy
tapped on the hatch cover and then peered in, Genie was just twisting
the elastic around the end. Before Patty got out of the chair, Genie
touched the interface port at the base of her skull. “Doesn't that
hurt?” Ignoring the Chinese pilot's shiny black eyes. He didn't lean
through the hatchway. If the ship's pressure dropped, the decompression
doors would slam down like axes across chicken necks.
“It feels funny,”
Patty said, and stood up, and moved toward the door, but not before she
grabbed Genie's hand and gave it a quick, painful squeeze.
Genie followed her
out, far enough behind that anybody watching Patty walk toward the
black leather pilot's chair wouldn't see her. Her luck didn't hold;
Papa's blue eyes fastened on her, and a half-distracted frown tugged
the sides of his mouth, but he didn't say anything. She dogged the door
very carefully, and he looked away, watching Aunt Jenny strap Patty
into the pilot's chair and seat the two snakelike control cables at the
base of her spine and at the back of her neck.
Patty went limp in
Jenny's arms when the cords were plugged in, and Jenny very carefully
closed her eyelids so that her eyes wouldn't dry out. She laid Patty
back in the chair and swung her feet up so her blood would circulate
evenly—Genie knew the reasons for all of it; Jenny had started teaching
her, a little, and Leah had already taught her a little more.
And Patty's voice, or
something sort of like Patty's voice, but different from it in the same
way Genie's own voice sounded different in her head as opposed to how
it sounded in a tape recorder, said softly over the bridge speakers,
“I'm inside, ma'am. And Alan's right here with me. We're ready when you
are.”
“Where's the
captain?” Papa said, looking up only long enough to chase Genie into an
observer's seat with his eyes.
“In her cabin, Mr.
Castaign.” That was Alan's voice, cooler and less inflected than
Richard's, almost chilly. “And the first officer is in conference with
Dr. Kirkpatrick and Dr. Dunsany, as arranged. We should have at least a
fifty-minute window, unless he catches on too fast.”
“Finally,” Aunt Jenny
said, glancing up, catching Papa's eyes across the open floor space
between them. “An advantage to the skeleton crew we've been running on
since December.”
“We had to find one
some time, chérie. Has it occurred to you that you're making a
career of hijacking starships?”
Aunt Jenny snorted,
looking down at her hands. The smile that crinkled the corners of
Papa's eyes made Genie feel weird inside, and she looked at Patty
instead. That didn't help any; Patty was so still she was barely
breathing. Jenny reached down and smoothed the braid over Patty's
shoulder, stroking it one extra time as if to be sure it was going to
lay flat. “Okay, Patty,” she said, and looked at Min-xue, who was
standing by the main hatch to the bridge. “Hit it, girl.”
Giving up, Genie
looked at the big holoscreen front and center in the bridge displays,
instead. And swallowed hard.
Because the Montreal was moving, her sails
unfurling like wind-taut kites to catch sunlight—and laser light from
the antimeteor protocols of the orbital platforms—gliding toward the
birdcage ship, a shark cutting water without a ripple or a flicker of
fin.
Patty let the Montreal 's solar sails
unfold, light striking their golden mesh surfaces with a sensation
remarkably like a stiff breeze tugging her sleeves, if she held her
arms like a tall ship's bowsprit and leaned into the wind. The birdcage
grew in perspective slowly; her enhanced reflexes triggered when she
linked to the Montreal 's VR systems, and she was thinking
nearly as fast as Alan now. It made the unwired world drag .
“Perhaps a slight
exaggeration, Patricia,” he said in her ear, in cool tones that went
with the swirl of blues and greens that comprised his icon.
She conjured her own
avatar to stand beside him in the virtual space of the Montreal 's core. Her icon was
the golden robot-girl, like a suit of armor with softly glowing
blue-green eyes, perfectly invulnerable. “Maybe just a little.”
Alan didn't laugh the
way Richard did, or have a face to crinkle up in delighted lines, but
his colors shifted in the manner she'd learned meant amusement. She
felt more comfortable with his inhuman icon, in any case. Richard's
semblance of being a real person made her as jittery as she would have
been in the presence of any older, smarter man.
The coolest thing
about being the Montreal 's pilot was the way the ship became
her body, long and smooth and powerful. She could worry about support
and angle of thrust and oxygen ratios and carbon cycles and the balance
of nutrients needed to keep the nanomachines functioning throughout the
big ship's systems, and the fact that Alan was only half-done rewiring
the ship's systems and it made things a little funky, working through
the worldwire rather than over the hardlines as she'd been trained. She
could worry about those things, and not whether she was too tall or too
fat or her hair was too frizzy or if the zit beside her nose was as big
as it felt, or—
She focused down,
orchestrating the Montreal 's motion with the same kinetic sense
she used to control her own body leaping or twisting. She shoved the
thought of Genie's giant bright lost eyes into the same box where she
kept the memories of Leah, Carver, her mother and father, and Papa
Georges. Her mother would have said it wasn't good to dwell. Her mother
would have said—
Her mother would have
said to concentrate on her work, and on the important thing, which was
saving Charlie and Dr. Tjakamarra. And Papa Fred would have grinned at
her sideways, in that way he had of grinning without moving his mouth,
and winked, and she would have known that he thought she could do it.
Well, Jenny thought
she could do it. And Mr. Castaign did, too. And if Papa Fred were here
. . .
Well, if Papa Fred
were here, he'd probably have a gun out and be arresting everybody on
the bridge. “Mr. Castaign?” she asked, careful to key the loudspeakers
only on the bridge. “We'll be reaching the birdcage in approximately
fifteen minutes. I'm using the solar sails to brake us; the Benefactor
ship's own orbital momentum will carry it ‘under' us, and we can dump
our relative vee and sort of . . . hang just ‘behind' it. Is that cool?”
She flinched inwardly. Way to sound like
a
kid, Patty. And when she'd been doing so well.
“That's perfect,
Patty. Stand by to flash the Benefactor nanites—Alan? Or Dick?”
“We're both here,
Gabriel. On your signal.”
Jenny Casey and
Min-xue had already left the bridge; they hustled through the Montreal 's passages. Alan and
Patty tracked them through security motes and information relayed to
the worldwire by their own bodies. Patty unlocked the air lock to the
shuttlecraft
Ashley
MacIsaac
a few meters in advance of them. They shinnied into the shuttle, Casey
manually uncoupling her from the Montreal while Min-xue ran for
the controls. The Montreal was still braking; the Ashley MacIsaac drifted forward, free
of the starship. The mote sensors networking the Montreal 's hull reported a
flush of heat when the Ashley MacIsaac began her burn, still
meters inside the recommended safety envelope. Patty flicked the Montreal 's sails out of
harm's way, braking harder, the gawky dragonfly vanes furiously
unlikely for their task.
Neither Casey nor
Min-xue was suited yet, which worried Patty, but there was nothing she
could do about it from inside the Montreal . And she wasn't
going to think about that nothing she could do . Wasn't going to
think about Carver or Mom . . .
The pilots had
another ten minutes before they reached the birdcage. Drill was to be
suited and sealed in three.
Drill was also to
suit before you took a shuttlecraft out of dock, but this was an
emergency.
Patty was grateful
that she couldn't feel her body. She couldn't feel her heart tighten in
her chest when she refused to think about how Min-xue might get hurt
either. That's what Leah would do. Leah would do the job and she would
do it well and she'd protect everybody else while she was doing it. And
if Leah could do it, Patty could do it, too. She imagined herself
clothed in the armor of the ship, a golden robot-girl and not a flesh
and blood girl at all, and didn't worry about whether her heart was
racing. She picked up Mr. Castaign's voice through the bridge ears, and
spared him a little attention. It was just keeping the Montreal pointed, now. “Dick,
how are we doing?”
Alan's avatar winked
green-purple, and Richard's voice rang from the speakers. “Your window
in five, Gabe—four, three—”
Patty giggled inside
her head, where nobody but she and Alan could hear it and it didn't
matter if she sounded hysterical.
There's nothing quite
as much fun as squirming into a space suit while fighting gees from an
erratic maneuvering burn, but I've got the damned thing up to my waist,
and I'm struggling with the seals across the chest when Richard starts
counting.
“—two, one—” Richard
counts in my ear, with that flatness of tone that tells me he's
half-Alan, currently. Always weird to be reminded that a good friend
isn't human.
“We're not in
position to catch yet, Dick.” I say it out loud, for Gabe's benefit.
Patty and Min-xue don't need to be told; they're on the worldwire with
me, tight as sharing a skin.
“Don't worry. Plenty
of time before anything breaks open.” I get my hat and my gauntlets on,
double-checking the seals before I tug the controls away from Min-xue
so he can get dressed. He does a better job than I did, fast and
efficient despite what must be unfamiliar suits. I wonder how different
the Chinese equipment is. He seems to be doing okay with the controls.
“Richard coached me,”
he says in his musical English, without turning his head inside the
helmet to look at me. “When he reprogrammed my wiring to the Canadian
standard.” He checks his restraints and rests his gloves on the arms of
the chair rather than taking the controls back. I drive at the birdcage
as hard as I dare. The gaps in the filigree aren't all the same size,
and I need a pair of them opposite each other, or nearly, and big
enough that I can line them up and coast through on inertia. I'm not
risking a burn inside that thing if there's any way around it. And
then, assuming we catch one of the missing the first time through, we
get to come back and try it again.
Dick, you rat.
“I said nothing.”
Sure.But I believe him;
Min-xue isn't quite the spooky mindreader Elspeth is, but he's a smart
kid and he's wired so tight that he shivers like a Mexican lap dog when
he tries to stand still. Worse off than I am, and just as convinced
that it's worth any price to fly. And it's perfectly possible that his
hindbrain read my hindbrain, and he just sorta knew what to say.
Freaks. Every last
one of us.
“Gabe's hacking, Jen.
Can you get a little more vee?”
“If I burn faster I
have to brake harder once we get there, Dick. We need to be moving slow
enough that Min-xue can bail out to handle the rescue, and we aren't
going to be maneuverable while that's going on. This is crazy shit,
sir.”
Min-xue says
something in Chinese that I take for agreement. I don't understand a
word, but the tone is 50 percent if Momma could see me now and 50 percent I'm fucking nuts
even to consider this. He slaps his release and vaults out
of his chair. Acceleration kicks him toward the aft bulkhead; “down” is
currently aimed toward the ass-end of the Ashley MacIsaac, and I wince, grateful
for the armor of Min-xue's space suit and expecting him to wind up on
his ass, sprawled against the wall like a terrified bug. But he twists
in midfall, agile as if that space suit were a pair of stretch jeans,
and lands with his boots against the bulkhead. The thump as he hits
rattles my chair.
Damn, he's fast. And
so very, very young.
Which is not
something I'm allowed to think about. Not here. Not now. Because it's
always the kids, isn't it? And more of us survive than don't, so I
might as well quit whining, really.
The pulley spins as
he yanks a safety line out of the aperture; it clicks solidly through a
D ring on his suit.
“Don't jump until
Dick tells you jump,” I say, just to be saying something. From his
snort, he knows it and forgives me. The hatch to the passenger cabin
bangs open and he drops through the hole, rappelling down. Design flaw:
there's no way he can dog the hatch behind him. The shuttles weren't
built to have people running around inside them when they're under
acceleration. I'll have to talk to an engineer about that if we make it
back.
At least the air lock
is set up so you can get in and get sealed up no matter which way the
ship is pointing. The inside hatch unseals and I hear more clanging as
Min-xue unhooks one safety line and attaches the one from inside the
lock, the sound attenuated through my helmet. Min-xue's voice in my
head is as clear as if he were standing close enough to lay a hand on
my shoulder. “I am in position, Master Warrant.”
“Thank you, Min.”
Knowing Dick will relay if Min-xue can't hear me. It would be far too
easy to get used to that, to start relying on it. As if any of us could
in fact be relying on Richard any more than we already are. “Dick,
how's Gabe doing?”
The inner air lock
door shuts with a vacuuming shoosh.
“He's in, but he says
he's not sure he's accomplishing anything,” Richard says. “Patty's
ceased braking the Montreal and has begun tacking and a burn to
match vee with the birdcage and come into synchronous orbit ‘behind'
it, to facilitate pickup.”
“Tricky.”
“She's up to it.”
I know she is, but
we're angling up on the birdcage now, and I'm suddenly too busy flying
to agree, because the joined-together Benefactor entity starts to shred
like a fistful of twisted Kleenex, spattering mercury droplets this way
and that. I've got what's on the monitors, and Dick is giving me what he feels, too, through the
nanobot infestation. Which is gold-plated bizarre, because while I'm
hands-on-the-controls, the acceleration couch prodding my back and my
suit turning into a sauna because I'm all for conserving its resources
as long as I have a perfectly functional shuttlecraft providing me with
life support, I'm also spinning apart, decohering, as if fingers and
toes and eyes and kidneys and guts all suddenly decided that the
arrangement that's suited them just fine for the last fifty-odd years simply will not do for another
cotton-picking moment. “Dick! That wasn't the plan!”
“You know what they
say about plans, Jen—” The Alan has dropped out of
his voice, which
tells me the other AI thread is damned busy all of a sudden, and I've
got just Richard now, and probably a persona all to myself.
“Does that mean Gabe
hacked in all right?”
“No.” I'm not
imagining the tired resignation in his voice. “It means we got nowhere.
It would have been nice to get a damned Hollywood ending for a change.”
I've got Min-xue's
presence in my head and the weird doubled vision that comes when
Richard connects us. I see his suit, see the battleship-gray interior
of the air lock through his eyes. I feel the birdcage entity flying
into splinters, and the Ashley MacIsaac no longer slamming me
back against my couch as I end my burn, and Patty light and precise in
control of the Montreal and Dick all tangled up in my head
and it's really more than I can handle. “Dick, I'm not a multithreaded
entity, man—”
“Sorry, Jen.” He
modulates it back, leaving me strong and in control, the other
awarenesses like monitors I have to turn my head to see; there, but not
driving me to distraction. It is useful. I've got to hand him that.
Because I can feel Min-xue and Patty, almost like my own metal hand, an
extension of my body that my kinetic sense encompasses, and I know they
can feel me back. And moreover, all of us can feel which droplets and
splinters of the birdcage critter are Charlie and Leslie.
The three of us are
thinking like a flock of birds. And that, coupled with our enhanced
reflexes, is the thing that may let us pull this mad exercise off,
rather than wrapping the shuttlecraft around one of the struts on the
birdcage.
It's just math,Min-xue told himself,
bracing both gauntleted hands on the grab rails bracketing the air lock
as he felt—through his own inertia, through the shift of Casey's hands
on the controls—the Ashley MacIsaac begin its braking burn. A puff of
vapor blew into space past him as he triggered the air lock, making
sure his safety cables were short enough to hold him inside the shuttle
even if Jenny had to move abruptly— more abruptly,he corrected, hands
tightening on the grab rails convulsively a split second before the
shuttle bumped hard, coming around flat with its rear end pointed in
the direction of travel. Casey kicked the thrusters on, and this time
Min-xue's death grip kept him from being hurled against the interior
air lock door, rather than out into orbit.
“Sorry,” Casey said
in his head, and he didn't answer, because he'd known she was going to
do it before she did it, of course, and in any case his attention was
fixed gape-mouthed on the ungainly dragonfly body of the Montreal, solar sails at full
extension, passing over the Ashley MacIsaac like a hawk over a
huddled gosling. The shiptree glimmered behind her, silent and aloof,
keeping its own remote counsel.
He could feel Casey
and Richard computing trajectories and angles of thrust, aiming the
shuttle after the two bits of flotsam that Richard's infiltration of
the Benefactor nanonetwork revealed to be Dr. Tjakamarra and Dr.
Forster. He relaxed, and let them do it. This part of the process was
not Min-xue's job.
His duty was simply
to go out there and catch them and haul them back inside. He
wasn't worried about that. He'd act, and fail or succeed, and there
would be no time for fear once he started. It was the waiting that was
going to drive him mad.
“Piece of cake,”
Jenny said, and he realized that he had been thinking loud enough for
her to sense. Min-xue didn't answer. Instead he glanced down and
visually inspected his safety lines one last time, as the shuttle
glided in absolute silence through the bars of the birdcage, and
Min-xue groped with Richard's senses toward Dr. Forster, who would be
the subject of their first rescue attempt.
Min-xue braced
himself in the doorway, watching the crystal bars of the birdcage slide
past, and much to his own surprise managed to clear his mind. Casey's
touch on the controls was feather-light; the shuttle turned within the
length of its own hull, drifting, and suddenly all he could see was
silver scattering, water shaken from a half-drowned dog, droplets
smaller than his thumbnail with perspective that might in reality be
close enough to reach out and grab in a gauntleted fist, or which might
be as big as shipping containers, and a kilometer away. A quarter Earth
glimmered behind them, flanked by an attendant moon. City lights shone
far below, dulled by the pall in Earth's atmosphere, the birdcage
picking up blue reflections from the moonlight and the earthlight.
Oddly enough, Min-xue
thought of the shiptree and its presumed inhabitants, line of sight now
blocked by the shuttle's bulk, and wondered at their aloof observation
of the scurrying about between the birdcage and the Montreal . Maybe they're up
there hoping as hard as we are that we learn this. Maybe they want to
talk to us as badly as we want to talk to them.
Charlie's closer, and
I've got him lined up pretty as a picture when I call down to Min-xue
in the air lock. I'm surprised; this is nothing on flying medevac in
jungle under fire. There's all the room in the world up here, and all
I'm trying to do is not hit anything. Nobody's shooting at me, or
at the people I'm trying to evac. Also, the psychic link with my ship,
my target, and the retrieval team doesn't hurt in the slightest.
Nothing like being able to mindread your buddies. This would have saved
a lot of lives, back in Brazil. In fact, I bet if Charlie wasn't a bit
fragile for that kind of treatment, I could scoop him up with the Ashley MacIsaac easy as a jai alai
player scooping the ball into his basket.
I'm not quite cocky
enough to call it a cakewalk just yet, however. The shuttle glides up
on our target. Min-xue tenses as he makes visual contact. I see the
white of Charlie's space suit through Min-xue's eyes seconds before I
make it out with my own. He's got the better angle. Should, of course;
I planned that.
“Is he breathing,
Dick?”
“I don't know,” the
AI admits, a moment's wringing frustration. “I don't see any vapor off
his suit, but he didn't have this much oxygen either.”
“Can't you tell from
the nanites?”
“No. I can't tell a
damned thing from the nanites right now. They're all wonky.”
“That's a technical
term?”
“Jen,” he says, weary
and a little bit irritated, which is a tone I don't hear from him
often. “Quit yanking my chain and fly the shuttlecraft, please.”
Sorry.And I am. It's reflex,
the banter.
And then we're on
Charlie, and Min-xue spins out of the air lock like a flyer in a
trapeze act, except he's the catcher, really, if the metaphor is going
to work, and I just bloody well keep my hands still on the controls and
try not to screw him up.
I don't think we're
going to get a second crack at this, not if we're going to come back
and get Leslie, too.
Min-xue's flying, all
right. Rush of inertia and sharp twinge of fear, metallic taste of
adrenaline crimping his mouth as he lets the shuttle's momentum fling
him forward and down, somersaulting, all his trust in the fragile
safety lines and his mind on my mind like hand in hand, like dancing,
except neither one is leading and I can almost feel Richard holding his breath.
Breath that's knocked
out of all three of us when Min-xue hits Charlie's drifting shape
amidships, misses the grab with his arms, locks both legs around
Charlie's suit like a kid on a carousel pony, and kicks his attitude
jets on a split second later, buying acceleration, equalizing velocity
so he's moving the same way the shuttle is when he and Charlie fetch up
against the end of the safety line like some idiot bungee jumping over
Niagara Falls.
The shock when the
lines snap taut brings tears to my eyes, and I'm feeling it attenuated, courtesy of
Richard. Min-xue bounces hard enough that I think for a second his
suit's ruptured— and how the hell would I explain that piece of brilliance
to Riel?—but
I feel him recover, and he keeps his grip on Charlie and starts hauling
them both up the safety lines hand over hand, because the pulleys
aren't quite doing it fast enough to suit any of us.
“Goddamn. Would you
believe he pulled it off?”
“Very pretty flying,
ma'am,” Min-xue says. Unsurprisingly, the next voice I hear is
Wainwright, demanding our immediate return to the Montreal .
“In a minute,” I say.
The cocky gets away from me, raw unholy glee big enough to fill a room.
“We've got another man overboard, Cap'n. We'll be back once we've
fished him out, too.”
Except it doesn't
work that way at all. Min-xue tucks Charlie's unmoving space suit
inside the air lock and clips him onto three safety clasps before we
clear the birdcage. I swap ends on the shuttle, a gliding turn—front
end slides left, back end slides right—not all that different from how
you'd do it in a chopper, and get us lined back up with the birdcage as
Dick says, “Jenny, are you seeing this?”
Yeah. We've got a
problem, sir.“I think they just rolled up the welcome mat, Dick.” Because
suddenly, unexpectedly, the birdcage has a hull. The baroque,
open-to-space filigree is still visible like the raised outline of leaf
veins, or like ribs revealed under skin, but the gaps between are
covered by a taut, stretched membrane that bellies and ripples a
little, like an opaque film of soap bubbles.
I can't fly through
that. I don't even know what it is .
Shit. “What do we do now,
Dick?”
“Casey—” Wainwright,
and I don't want to hear it, but I know what she's going to say. She
surprises me, though. Her voice hitches and goes softer. “Master
Warrant, why don't you just come on home?”
The strips Wainwright
tears off me are thin and she doesn't stop at half a dozen. She'd like
to confine me to quarters, I'm sure, but it isn't quite practical when
Patty and Min-xue were in on the mutiny, too.
And, after all, we
almost got away with it.
Got away getting
Charlie back, at least, and breathing, even if we haven't managed to
prove that he'll ever regain higher functions. He shouldn't be breathing. The
oxygen in his suit should have been exhausted long since, but something
the Benefactors did seems to have put his in a state of hibernation,
which kept him alive.
One of these days,
the captain's gonna severely kick my ass. Right now, however, she's
contenting herself with a catalogue of my sins beginning at “reckless”
and ending with “mutinous,” with side trips through insubordinate,
overconfident, obstreperous, and just plain too stupid to live along
the way before she pauses for breath. I love the way Richard plays
soothing music in my ear while I'm being dressed down by my boss.
I suspect I fail to
look contrite. She stops cold, in the middle of drawing breath to
continue upbraiding me, and shuts her mouth with a click. “What is it,
Casey?”
“Permission to go
back out after Leslie, ma'am?”
“Denied.”
“Ma'am—”
Her eyelids tighten.
“Casey, get the fuck out of my ready room before I have you spaced.”
But—I want to say. But Leslie's alive
out there, but we got Charlie back, didn't we? But you don't leave your
buddy behind, but—
—but we got away
with it, ma'am.
She's not looking
down.
“Yes, ma'am.” I nod
crisply, and get the fuck out of her ready room.
I wind up in the
smaller lounge—not the pilot's ready room, but the public one that, as
Elspeth says, nobody uses—with my feet in Gabe's lap and a cup of
nasty, sugary coffee in my hand, waiting for the post-combat-time
shakes to pack up and head on home. Elspeth's the other way on the bank
of couches, her feet between mine, and Gabe's got his back scrunched
into the corner and is absentmindedly petting us both, with that look
on his face that's half donkey between two bales of hay and half mouse
between two cats, although really we don't treat him as roughly as all
that. All three of us are staring out the porthole into space, where
about half the baroque outline of the shiptree and half of Piper
Platform's chained, rotund doughnut take turns flickering past as the Montreal 's wheel revolves on
its pin.
It's nice to sit
still.
“Happy birthday,
Jen.” Elspeth lifts her head off the arm of the couch and feels around
on the floor for her water bottle. She's reading something on her
contact. I can see the green hairlines of the text paused in front of
her pupil as she blinks and yawns.
“You almost got away
clean.” Gabe winks at me, his catcher's mitt of a hand folding around
my foot. My chest aches when I look at him, and I know he knows. Once
upon a time, he was Captain Castaign and I was Corporal Casey, and he
saved my life. And there were thirty-three other guys he didn't manage
to get to in time. “All you had to do was keep the crisis going a
little longer, and we would have had to wait until next year.”
“It's October in
Toronto,” I remind him. “Heck, it's October on the Montreal . For that matter, in Montreal.”
He shrugs.
“Vancouver's the capital now. Since we're not on Earth, I think we get
to pick our time zone.”
“Following that
logic, it should be Jen's birthday for, um.”
“Forty-seven hours,”
Richard supplies helpfully, over the wall speakers.
“Not forty-eight? No,
wait—” Elspeth blinks owlishly, having quite obviously confused
herself. “I can't picture how that works around the international date
line.”
“I'm all for longer
birthdays.” Gabe's voice is unconcerned, mellow. He digs a thumb pad
into the arch of my foot and I groan. The self-warming coffee cup makes
my meat hand sweat. It can't ease the aches in a metal one that doesn't
have any sense of pain anymore, but it's psychologically comforting
anyway.
“Why not? It's been
the longest year of my life. It deserves a longer birthday.”
“Shortest year of
mine,” Gabe answers. “And the longest all at once. It's amazing how
much fits into twelve months when you work at it, isn't it?” Somehow,
he gets around that sentiment without bitterness, the old Gabe, looking
up, meeting my eyes with calm acceptance and a sharp, whimsical smile.
Healing, because that's Gabe.
He's got the knack of
getting better, of growing through things. I don't, so much. But I make
up for it by muscling through. Elspeth shoots me that mind reader look
and I shoot it right back, Richard laughing his ass off at the both of
us, and I drink my coffee and set the cup down on the floor, a flagrant
breach of shipboard protocol. If I had the energy to go fetch Boris out
of Genie's quarters, the whole impromptu family would be here, except
the girls.
“We should page Genie
and Patty,” Elspeth says, swinging her feet off Gabe's lap and sitting
up. “And see if we can find something we can pretend is a birthday
cake.”
“No candles
shipboard.”
“You blow,” she says.
“I'll flick a flashlight on and off. Wait, better, we'll get Dick to
flicker the whole damned ship.”
“If Gabe were a
better hacker, I could flicker the shiptree on and off in Morse code,”
Richard answers. Gabe snorts, but holds his peace, switching both hands
to work on my feet now that Elspeth has opted out. “It looks like a
giant birthday cake anyway, and maybe we'd stand a chance of getting
through.”
We laugh even though
it hurts, or maybe because it hurts—like ripping off scabs—and Elspeth
gets up to fetch the girls herself rather than just having Alan whisper
in Patty's ear, and sometime long about oh three hundred hours on my
second birthday Jeremy wanders in, looking like a man who's lost two
falls out of three with his mattress, and Elspeth hands him a slice of
the vegan brownies that are masquerading as my birthday cake, and
between us we have a pretty good party after all.
1100 hours
Thursday
October
4, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
You'd think sitting
in a hardbacked chair watching an unconscious man breathe would be
about as exciting as a grain elevator, but damned if my heart isn't
caught painful as a thumb in the hollow of my throat. Because he is breathing. Not awake,
but breathing on his own, unventilated. And I know what it's like being
stuck inside a body that won't do what you tell it to do, so I sit
there beside the bed with my HCD propped on my knee and read to Charlie. Ulysses, currently. The
Alfred, Lord Tennyson one, not the James Joyce one. I wouldn't do that
to anyone who can't defend himself.
I've just gotten to
the rousing bit at the end when the wheel spins and the hatch glides
open with a little pop of balancing pressure. I keep reading, though;
it's probably the corpsman coming in to check on the patient, and he
can take a pulse through poetry. Except the corpsman wouldn't wait
until I finish up and blank my optic, and then clear his throat.
I crane my neck
around and face the hatch. It's Jeremy Kirkpatrick, his ginger curls
squashed as if he hasn't combed them since he slept, crow's feet
deepening alongside his pale eyes as he squinches down to peer in.
“Jen? Got a minute?”
“Come on in. My
company's not going anywhere.”
He hops over the knee
knocker fast, dogging the hatch behind him, and glances down at
Charlie's face. “Wainwright not letting us go after Leslie gets right
up my nose.”
He sounds it, too.
“You're old friends.”
“University.” He
flops against the hatch and blows between rubber lips. “You're a love
to look in on Charlie like this.”
“Don't let it get
out. They'll just make more work for me if they know. I don't suppose
you found out anything useful about the alien spit we brought from the
birdcage?” The chair digs into the back of my legs, so I stand. Having
somebody else in the room makes me restless. I want to pace but content
myself by leaning over Charlie, smoothing the hair around his bald spot.
“Alien spit, huh?”
He's grinning when I look up, a tired desperate grin that furrows those
crow's-feet even deeper.
“Got a better name?”
“Not a more
appetizing one. In any case, it would be easier to analyze if the
xenobiologist weren't in a coma.” He comes around the end of the bed
nearest the door and looks down at Charlie, the corner of his mouth
dragging hard. “Dammit—”
“I'm sorry.” Out
before I can bite it back, and he looks away from Charlie and frowns at
me. I don't look up, but my peripheral vision shows me the deepening
lines between his eyes.
“Why are you sorry?”
“Because it was my
stupid goddamned idea to provoke the Benefactors into doing something.
And they did, didn't they?”
“And weren't we
climbing over ourselves to get involved? And wasn't it you who went out
and brought Charlie back?”
There's obviously no
arguing with the man. I bite my tongue before I can say I didn't get
Leslie, did I? “Marde.” I'm going to wear a groove in Charlie's head if I
keep poking at his hair. I wrap the fingers of my prosthesis around my
wrist and curl my meat hand into a fist. “What about the medical labs?”
“Jen?”
“To analyze the alien
spit. What about the ship's doctor? Or the ship's entomologist or
botanist? What about Dick?”
“What about Dick?”
Richard says in my head. “Dick suggests retrieving a good xenobiologist
from Earth. Except we already had the best one, and it's not exactly a
common specialty.”
I imagine it's
going to get more popular. How many bio students do you think have
switched in the last nine months?
“It'll be a glut on
the market. Keep reading. Alan can hear Charlie, and Charlie can hear
you. Although he's very confused.”
Conscious?
“Sort of. Drifting.
Jen, I don't mean to alarm you, and I can't tell you why, but if you
notice yourself slowing down, at all, or feeling . . . unwell, bring it
to my attention immediately.”
Dick, are you
insinuating there's some kind of problem with the nanotech?
“I can't confirm
that.” He seems to sense my protest before I articulate it. “And no,
before you go there, Alan and I don't have the capability to watch each
individual nanite constantly.”
I hope you're
watching mine!And Patty's, and Min-xue's. And especially Genie's, even if
her load is lighter by about half.
“I will take the best
care of you that I can.” Which isn't much of a promise, if it's meant
to be soothing.
Jeremy blinks at me
owlishly. He must have learned to pick out the talking-to-Richard
expression by now. “The AI?”
“Who else? He's
worried. About the Benefactor tech.”
“Ah,” Jeremy says. He
leans away from me, gangling arms crossed over his chest. His teeth
dimple his lower lip, and—
Dammit, he knows
something I don't.But Richard's silent, too, and for a
moment the only sound I can hear is Charlie breathing in and out and in
again. It's not a soothing kind of silence. It puts my nerves on edge,
and the sight of Jeremy distractedly straightening Charlie's sheet does
nothing to ease the worried tightness under my breastbone.
Then I hear what I'm hearing, and
I reach out with my metal hand and grab Jeremy's wrist lightly, just
below the projecting bones. “Do you hear that?”
“Hear what?” His head
comes up on his long inelegant neck like a wiry old stag scenting the
breeze. He strains to pick whatever threat I've noticed out of the hum
of ventilation and the soft endless rasp of an unconscious man
breathing.
Except I'm hearing
something else. An echo. An overlay. As if another person were
breathing in unison with Charlie, in perfect rhythm, in and out and in
again.
“Bugger,” Jeremy
says. “I don't hear anything.”
“I do,” Dick says,
activating the motes in the room so Jeremy can hear him. “Breathing.
Not exactly hear. Feel.”
Jeremy's eyes get
big. He looks at me, and I look at him, and we both glance reflexively
toward the port, which shows nothing currently but blackness. “Oh,
bugger,” he says quietly. “It's Les you two are hearing, isn't it? He's
alive out there.”
I don't answer, but I
don't look down.
“We must fetch him back.”
I ain't arguing.
“Dick,” I say out loud, for Jeremy's benefit. “How much longer do you
think it will be before Charlie is modified enough for you to talk to?”
He uses the wall
speakers. “I'll see if I can expedite matters. Without putting them in
any further danger, of course. If what I'm reading is correct, I am getting signal from
Leslie over the worldwire, strongly enough that Jenny and the rest of
the pilots are picking up an echo. It appears that most of his and
Charlie's body processes are synchronizing—heart rate, brain function,
and so on.
Very
interesting. All I
can postulate is that the birdcages have some method of sustaining his
life, and they've infected him with their nanotech as well. Since
Charlie's carrying both their bugs and ours—well, Leslie should be safe
out there. As ridiculous as it is to say he's safe.”
“Of course,” Jeremy
says. But he does not sound convinced, and that downward drag twists
the corner of his mouth one more time as he meets my eyes and glances
quickly away.
Dr. Tjakamarra.
Dr. Tjakamarra.
Leslie's hands
weren't cold anymore, because he couldn't feel his hands. He wasn't sure what he could feel,
exactly, but his hands weren't part of it. He felt . . . adrift, buoyed
as if in a calm enormous sea, except if he had been floating, the currents would
have pushed his skin, the sea would have sounded in his ears over the
beat of his own heart. And there was no susurrus of white noise, no
silken stroke of water.
In fact, he couldn't
feel the boundaries of his body at all. He had no skin, no bones, no
tactile sensations. Just warmth, boundlessness, quiet. Nothing breathed
in him, and what moved did so on a stately, formal, predetermined
pattern; he imagined he felt the way the air must feel, on a still,
humid afternoon. Alive, heavy. Electric.
Waiting for the storm.
And somewhere,
someone was speaking poetry: Death closes all: but something
ere
the end, Some work of noble note, may yet be done, Not unbecoming men
that strove with Gods. The lights begin to twinkle from the rocks . . .
Dr. Tjakamarra.
Leslie concentrated
on his hands. Hands made the man—no. Hands made man . There were other
animals just as smart; nothing in his studies had ever contradicted
that bias. Unless the bias itself had led him to dismiss the
contradictions.
Always a possibility
that a good scientist should consider. Was he a good scientist? Or was
he a crackpot, some sort of half and half creature walking neither the
songlines nor the white man's path? Uncommitted?
Homeless?
Elephants came closer
to H.
habilis
than anything nonprimate he could name—tool-using creatures of social
complexity and intricate language. He could have made a life's work of
studying their culture, if they still existed outside of zoos.
Dr. Tjakamarra.
Leslie, can you hear me? It's Alan.
The long day
wanes: the slow moon climbs: the deep Moans round with many voices.
Come, my friends, 'Tis not too late to seek a newer world. Push off,
and sitting well in order smite The sounding furrows . . .
It went beyond hands.
Elspeth Dunsany had a theory that the Benefactors were interested in
humans because humans had the habit of wanting to talk to anything,
everything. It made a certain amount of sense: Leslie himself had often
suspected that Homo sapiens would better be rendered as Homo loqui . . .
Homo loquacis ? Homo something, anyway, and leave it to cooler Latinate
heads to decide what, or—
Homo garrulitas. There. That made him
giggle. Or would have, if he could make any sound. If he could hear if
he were making any sound.
Of course, people
themselves had always known that talking was the important
thing. The real people, the chosen people, God's people are the people
who talk
our
language. The
barbarians—are those creatures over there, little better than animals,
who make those disgusting noises . It was a human bias
that hadn't changed in millions of years—and judging by the continuing
tension between the English-speaking USA and recent immigrants, and
English-speaking and Francophone Canada (to name two examples at
random), it wasn't about to change anytime soon.
For my purpose
holds To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths Of all the western
stars, until I die . . .
Dr. Tjakamarra.
Leslie. Les. Can you hear me?
Voices. Two voices,
not just one. Familiar voices. Sort of. One a man's, and one a woman's.
Except they sounded like voices inside his head. Like the voice of his
own conscience. Like the voices heard in a dream.
It may be that the
gulfs will wash us down: It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles, And
see the great Achilles, whom we knew . . .
Leslie, I can hear
you thinking. Talk to me.
Les?
Floating. And then
the feather-light brush as of fingertips against his face, and a third
voice, another familiar one, babbling nonsense the way he knew he would
be babbling nonsense if he could find his mouth, if he had a mouth, if
he—
—and then a
chattering complexity underneath it, like a stage full of extras
muttering
rutabaga
rutabaga
. And he was floating, drifting. And if he had hands, if he had
fingers, he would reach out across the warm nameless darkness and twine
his fingers through any fingers he could reach.
They weren't words.
Well, there were
words, the woman's voice, the poetry: Tho' much is taken, much abides;
and tho' We are not now that strength which in the old days . . .
And there was the
man's voice, too, saying his name over and over again. Leslie. Les. Dr.
Tjakamarra.
Moved earth and
heaven; that which we are, we are; One equal-temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
Jen's voice. Jen
Casey's voice. And why that hard-bitten old warrior would be chanting
poetry in his ear, he couldn't imagine. And then the other one, the one
saying his name, over and over and over, as if whispered in the ear of
a dying friend . . .
“Richard?” he said.
Or tried to say, and he heard in the empty resonance of his own head
that he had failed to make any noise at all. Richard? Can you hear me? Alan?
Richard?
“Leslie? Is that
you?” And it wasn't Richard's voice, not really. It was Charlie
Forster's, and it was inside his head, and then it turned into Alan's
and Jen's all at the same time, and a thousand voices under that,
speaking words in a language he couldn't understand, couldn't even
imagine. Words? Not words. Images . . . no. Sensations. Sensations of
heat and . . . sensations he had no words for, that his brain insisted
on translating into things he had experienced, a huge babble of voices
that weren't voices, of sensations that weren't sensations, hurting his
ears, hurting his head, hurting his skin. Synesthesia, light that
wasn't light but maybe gravity—
And then a richer
voice, not as cool and considering and patient as Alan's, but excited,
engaged. Leslie imagined he could almost see the flicker of tumbling
hands, the eyebrows rising like wings. It is gravity, Leslie. They “see”
gravity! Or sense it, and that explains why their nanotech is in
quantum communication and their stardrive uses gravity as its
navigational system. Since gravity is the—
Richard? Is that
you? I can hear you. I can hear you!
He couldn't tell.
—since gravity is
the force we theorize affects all dimensions in a superstring model of
the universe, unlike the strong and weak and electromagnetic forces—
Dick, I hear you!
Dick? Jenny? Charlie?
Echoes. Yammering
echoes, and nothing more.
—they're quantum
life forms, Les. The birdcage Benefactors, anyway. Quantum life forms.
You were right, you were right; they don't even sense the world the way
we do—
Richard, get me
the bloody hell out of here! Help! Dick!
And just the poetry,
the echo of the poetry, and nothing true or concrete or real. He clung
to it anyway, to Jen's voice, and the rhythm of the words: To strive, to
seek,
to find, and not to yield.
And then silence,
long silence. And then, not light, but a lessening of the darkness. A
presence, or a dozen presences. A dream within a dream, a sense of
companionship he hoped was not self-delusion. Charlie?
Charlie, is that
you?And
the voices, and if he'd been able to move, he would have turned and run
after those voices, anything, anything to touch and be close with
something that was anything, that wasn't the blackness and the
untextured warmth. Voices, crowd noise, a hundred or a thousand talkers
talking, and no more sense to be made of it than the buzz of cicadas,
the twittering of birds. No, not talking, although his human brain
insisted on “hearing” the noise impressed upon it by the Benefactor
tech infecting his body. He could feel that tech
communicating with the
other nanosurgeons, worldwide, feel Richard and Charlie and Alan as
part of the same intermingled sea of experience, feel Jenny and Patty
and Genie and Min-xue and the other human carriers as discrete islands
within that sea. And then there was the worldwire under it all, the
combined weight and presence of the Benefactors, the damaged planet
below, the starships and the—
Damn.
He could feel half
the whole goddamned bloody galaxy.
Dick?
“Pretty cool, isn't
it?”
“For my purpose holds
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths Of all the western stars,
until I die—”
“Jen?” His voice
vibrated in his head, not his throat. There was no light, nothing,
neither eyelids nor lashes, and he heard Charlie say “Richard?” as if
out loud, at the same moment, and then a greedy hand clutched and
squeezed his hand, and someone was laughing exultantly in his ear. No,
it was Charlie's hand. Not his own hand. He couldn't feel his own hand.
He opened his eyes
and saw nothing at all.
Jeremy?
Jeremy? Where are
you? Can you hear me?
“I hear you.”
Except the voice
wasn't in his ear, it was in his head, so he answered without moving
his lips, as if in a dream, I know how to talk to the
birdcages. Can you hear me? I know how to talk to them now.
1100 hours
Friday October
5, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
Jaime Wainwright had
a trick of looking out from under her hair that made her look years
younger, and not one whit less dangerous. Charlie liked to catch her at
it, that cold professional stare softened through her lashes. He didn't like being the target
of it, as he was the target of it now. He'd gone out of his way to find
her away from her ready room, away from the bridge—not that it helped
much; the whole of the Montreal was her domain.
Finding her in the lounge—with a little assistance from Richard—was
still a stroke of luck.
In any case, when she
pinned that look against him it took all the courage he could muster
not to step back and yield her the floor. Instead, he said, “There has
to be
something we can do for Les.”
He pushed his spectacles up his nose with a fingertip, aware of the
smile his archaic affectation produced. “Captain.”
Her eyelashes
flickered, dusting her cheek. She nodded to the window, which showed
nothing.
“Charlie,” she said.
“Think for half a minute what I'm risking if I send somebody after him.
I think they made it obvious that they weren't interested in giving Dr.
Tjakamarra back.” She jerked her head at the view port. Nothing was
visible from this angle. Not a glimpse of shiptree or birdcage or
Clarke or even a curve of mother Earth flashed past—just the whirl of
distant stars.
He didn't need to see the birdcage to know
that it was shuttered tight. And furthermore, Leslie said calmly in
his ear,
I'm
here already and I'd be a fucking poor excuse for a scientist if I
didn't try to take the opportunity to learn something.
Les, you're really
volunteering to sit out there in sensory deprivation until you go nuts
or run out of air?
Leslie was scared.
Charlie could feel it; it accelerated his own heartbeat when he let himself feel
it, sent sweat prickling across the palms of his own hands. His
“voice,” though, was level and reasoned, even a little bit wry. Blame my
acculturation, he said. The dark in here doesn't scare me, and I'm learning so
much. It's not a bit neat, Charlie. The birdcage's reality tunnel isn't
all that different from the idea of song lines—they know their roads.
They have a feel for them, sort of . . . hardlined in.
Charlie felt his lips
twitch, and he wasn't sure if it was Leslie's humor or his own. He
understood Leslie's seeming insanity on a visceral level—it was the
scientific opportunity of the millennium, and whatever else Leslie was,
he had the unholy intellectual curiosity that got explorers killed.
It still felt wrong,
though. Wrong to leave Leslie out there. Wrong not to go back after
him. “Captain, he's most assuredly alive out there. And there's no
guarantee—”
“I know,” she said,
and cut him off with a gesture. “Unfortunately, that's beside the—”
“Charlie,” Richard
said in his head, drawing his attention to what has happening outside.
“Look at
this .”
“Captain.” Charlie
heard the new crispness in his own voice, and saw Wainwright react to
it.
“What?”
“Dick says the aliens
are moving.” He hadn't quite finished the sentence when the captain
held her hand up, cocking her head to one side as if she were listening
to a voice in her ear. She pursed her lips and nodded.
“The bridge,” she
said, “relaying the same information.”
Their eyes met, and
he smiled. The corners of the captain's mouth curved slightly before
they fell back into line.
“Come on,” she said,
resignation decorating her shoulders. “Let's go see what's broken now.”
There's a good view
of both alien ships from the bridge—the birdcage in 3-D front and
center, right now, and the shiptree on the smaller screen off to the
left, where it won't distract unless you want it to. I'm camped on the
pilot's chair crosslegged. The normal buzz of restrained activity has
dropped into hushed expectation; it doesn't pick up much when
Wainwright and Charlie walk in.
The captain looks at
me, of course. Why is it always my fault? “Casey?”
I hitch myself
forward, chair dimpling under my calves, and jerk my chin up at the
monitor. “What you see is what we know.”
Her gaze follows
mine. Charlie steps away, leans against a bulkhead, and folds his arms
over his chest, but he's watching, too. The birdcage still looks
shrink-wrapped under a layer of silver insulating foil, and
teardrop-shapes are bustling about it, inside and out. I can't help
straining my eyes for any glimpse of a thing that might be Leslie, even
though Richard is perched on a ledge in the back of my head, assuring
me that the situation is unchanged, and Leslie's clear-headed and
rational and having the time of his life.
Save us from the
fearless, oh Lord, because the rest of us have to live with the
consequences of the ways in which they get their own fool asses killed.
Wainwright grunts
under her breath at the same time as I notice the unnerving smearing
effect of something dropping out of hyperlight beside the birdcage. She
glances at me for a half-second; I show her the end of the interface
cable laid across my lap. Just in case. She nods. Her eyes flick back
to the monitor as crisp as snapping fanned cards together.
I look back at the
monitor, and I actually think I can feel my heart skip a beat in my
chest. Teardrop shapes swarm around a lumpy grayish object scaffolded
in twisted silver. “Tell me that's not another fucking asteroid, Dick.”
Wainwright doesn't
even bother to glare at me over my language. “What's it made of?”
“I'll bounce a laser
off it, ma'am.” There's a pause, as the second lieutenant who spoke
does just that, and waits for a spectroscopic analysis. “Mostly water
ice, ma'am.”
“There's no evidence
that's a weapon, then.” Wainwright's relief isn't quite palpable.
“None. In fact, they
seem to be chipping it apart.”
Oh. Through Richard, I
feel Charlie's epiphany—or maybe it's Leslie's epiphany—half a second
before Charlie puts it into words. “It's life support,” he says.
“Dr. Forster?”
The birdcage guys are
ferrying meter-wide chips of water ice through the veils hung over
their filigree space ship, busy as ants tearing apart a grasshopper.
“It's life support,”
he says again, turning to face her blank look. His hands pinwheel for a
second, and then he finds the words. “Water ice. Hydrogen. Oxygen.
Maybe a little carbon dioxide frozen in there. Oxygen and water.
They've figured out the stuff they need to keep Leslie alive for a
while.”
I know I should find
that reassuring.
I should. I really
should.
0600 hours
Sunday October
7, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
Charlie's spending a
lot of time staring at the bulkheads lately. The bulkheads, the
portholes, his hands, me, anything else that wanders across his field
of vision. He's so quiet, so internalized, and even when he's allowed
out of medical on short, supervised walks, his focus is . . .
Well, he hasn't got
any focus. That's what it is. There's a quality to his distraction that
reminds me of somebody on a hefty dose of hallucinogens, as if
everything he looks at is bright and new and different and unique. And
then there's that new trick he has, of talking inside our heads like
Dick does, bypassing the message-passing the rest of us have to get the
AI to handle. I don't think even Richard understands how the
Benefactors have altered him and Leslie, and it freaks all of us out.
Leslie and Charlie,
understandably, most of all.
Charlie is spending a
lot of time closeted with Alan and Richard and Jeremy and Elspeth, in
any case. And Leslie is . . . Leslie is a disembodied voice in our
heads, sort of like Dick, but infinitely more disconcerting, because
he's out there, floating in darkness, not dead, but we can't really
tell if he's alive either. And Gabe's up to his curly blond forelock in
programming, and the Montreal 's not moving because Richard's got
her guts hanging out all over space and we're not moving her unless we
have to, which leaves me more or less adrift—except for the time I
spend training Patty and Genie to fly.
In any case, the days
between Charlie gaining consciousness and us getting ready to board the Gordon Lightfoot for the short trip to
Forward Orbital Platform drag past like a month and a half. Especially
since I spend a fair amount of it being briefed by Riel's lawyers and
representatives, preparing for my appearance in front of the United
Nations.
I've testified
before. It's not new. It's not threatening. It's not even particularly interesting, although I'm having a
hell of a time convincing Patty of that.
On the other hand,
she may just be wound up at the prospect of seeing her grandfather for
the first time in nearly a year.
I try not to think
about the fact that having Min-xue, Patty, and me all in the same place
at the same time is a great big security risk. I try not to think about
the fact that Riel will be there, too, for at least part of the time. I
try not to think about the fact that—even though New York City has very
stringent policies, and the UN isn't exactly America, and they have even more
conservative ideas about who should be armed, and where, and when, than
New York does—we'll be in America, not Canada, and there are a lot of
guns in America, and the American government doesn't keep particularly
good track.
And that I won't be
allowed to carry one.
And that's why I'm
holding Patty's hand as tight as I am when we step through the Gordon Lightfoot 's air lock onto
Forward, even if both she and I are pretending that the contact is
intended to reassure her. Min-xue is a little ahead of us, and the
three of us are flanked and led by Canadian Air Force security
personnel who are doing a remarkable job of effacing themselves. By the
time we scuff across the patterned carpeting and into the main
concourse, I've almost forgotten they're there.
And Patty is shaking. And the skin
is tight and pale across her cheeks, betraying the clenching of her
jaw. I give her hand an extra squeeze and she gives me half a smile,
and we step apart as we move onto the concourse. Forward Orbital
Platform's larger and brighter than Clarke—newer, and the interior is
designed in bright cheerful colors, mostly cobalts and sunshine yellows
that remind me of a children's hospital. The air isn't as good as the Montreal 's, but it's warm and
doesn't smell canned, which is more than I can say for the shuttle.
I especially like the
way the overhead clearances are vaulted and painted different shades of
blue to give the illusion of texture and depth. It's almost like not
being in a tin can eighteen hours by beanstalk above the surface of the
Earth.
Richard clears his
throat. “Riel wants a word—”
Put her through.
“Master Warrant
Officer.”
Prime Minister. To
what do I owe the pleasure?I can tell by the timbre of her voice
and the way her image settles into my mind's eye that she's using an
external VR setup. Those of us who are wired into Richard's network
come through differently, with stained-glass sharp edges. It's like the
difference between a shadow and one of those Victorian paper cuts.
“I'm mailing you some
encoded documents. Richard has the key; you'll be able to access them
on your hip unit once you're back in atmosphere.” She smiles, her
oh-so-plausible, oh-so-professional smile.
I smile right back.
Richard will be showing her a simulation of my face. What's the subject
matter?
“It relates to the
various security council members you'll be testifying before. I trust
in your ability to make connections. Although I'm concerned about your
history of service in South Africa, as it's one of the temporary
members this year. It won't make you popular with them.”
At least Canada
inherited the UK's old security council seat along with the royal
family and the British armed forces. That puts us on an equal footing
with China.The corridors of Forward's concourse move past at a casual
rate. Patty reaches out and grabs my sleeve, guiding me. Min-xue is
still five steps ahead. He doesn't look back, but he also doesn't ever
let the distance between us vary. He's wearing a Montreal uniform jumpsuit
without insignia and carrying a Chinese armed forces duffel he must
have brought from the Huang Di . His shoulders are stiff, his neck
rigid, and the expression on his face must be something, because
passersby turn to look and then look away.
“Yes. We have a veto
and so do they. Which means nothing at all will get accomplished, I'm
afraid, and we can look forward to renewed hostilities by the end of
the year. If worst comes to worst, we'll consider giving them the Huang Di back as a bribe.”
Appeasement, ma'am?
“Negotiation.”
Dick. Who are the
rest of the temporary security council members this year?I should have looked
that up before I left the Montreal . Except I've gotten
lazy about things like that, because there's no Net access from the
starship except for through microwave communications, and that takes
forever.
“Belgium, Monaco, New
Zealand, Belize, Chile, Somalia, Singapore, Trinidad and Tobago,
Mexico, and Republic of Hawaii.”
Not a lot of good
friends there. It's easy to get very reliant on Richard. I imagine Patty
and Genie's generation won't think twice about it. Hell, I wonder what
we'll need schools for; we'll think a question and the information will
be there in our heads, as if we always knew. We'll have to learn a
whole new way of thinking. A whole new way of learning.
Richard clears his
throat. “You know, it was Einstein who said that imagination is more
important than knowledge, because knowledge is limited. Imagination
encircles the world.”
And now knowledge
encircles the world.
“Or rather, I do.”
Megalomaniac.
“I come by it
honestly.”
The side conversation
happens so fast that Riel's just starting to notice my distraction. She
leans back behind her desk, unsteepling her fingers to play with her
coffee cup. It scrapes on the glass of her interface plate. She winces.
“Casey?”
Sorry, ma'am.
Negotiation, check. Doyou think there will be a war?
“I think there are
forces inside PanChina that would dearly love a war. They're still an
expansionist society—”
And we're not?
“Us or them, Master
Warrant. In any case, I'll see you in New York City.”
When do you arrive?
“Not for five days.
The hearings start Monday, but I am not scheduled to testify until next
week. General Valens will be joining you, however.”
I'll look forward
to it.
Her raised eyebrows
and the tight smile that flashes across her mouth tells me she's picked
the irony out of my internal voice. “Safe trip, Casey,” she says. Her
eyes flicker away from mine, up and to the side. “Thank you, Richard.
That will be all.”
And silence follows.
I only realize I've
stopped walking when Patty tugs my sleeve again. I blink and glance
left to right, meeting the concerned gaze of Min-xue, who stands in the
center of the concourse, the security personnel spaced professionally
around him. He swallows, and says in his beautiful idiomatic English,
“Casey, are you all right?”
“Fine, Pilot Xie.
Just distracted by a . . . conference call.”
His smooth expression
crinkles to a rueful smile, and he looks as young as he is. “I see.
This is our platform, then.”
0430 hours
Sunday October
7, 2063
Vancouver
Provisional Capital
Canada
Janet Frye cracked
another sunflower seed between her teeth and rolled the salty, waxy
meat out of the shell with her tongue, letting her eyes unfocus. There
was an untouched glass of room-temperature slivovitz and an opened,
old-fashioned paper letter on the counter in front of her, and she
hadn't been to bed.
She flattened the
letter with the palm of her hand and read it again, cracking another
sunflower seed as she did. The shell rang in the empty garbage can by
her knee when she turned her head and spat. The words on the page still
hadn't changed.
She stood off the
padded stool and crossed her basement, slippered feet scuffing on
parquet floor and weatherproof carpeting. A 3-D in the corner opposite
the bar, the sound muted, showed flickering images from 3NN. The
famines in Georgia (the European one, not the North American
one)—linking it none too subtly to the aftermath of the Chinese
invasion of Siberia the previous year—dominated the news, for reasons
that made perfect sense if you understood that Unitek had a controlling
interest in the Russian journalistic agency that handled
English-language news feeds, and understood as well that Toby Hardy
liked keeping his allies even more off-balance than his enemies.
Janet blinked her
optic on, ordered the news feed to standby, and folded her arms as she
leaned against the wall. If anything important happened, her hip unit
would buzz.
She spat a shell into
her hand and flicked it toward the trash can. She missed. The front
door warbled in her ear and she sighed and kicked her slippers off,
thumbing her hip to check the security cameras. The image was dim,
gray-green low-light. The sun wouldn't be up for hours. She knew who it
would be before he even raised his face to the camera to allow himself
to be identified, knew it by the long black car pulled up in the
circular driveway and by the expensive cut of his suit.
And who the hell else
would be ringing her doorbell at four thirty in the morning?
Tobias Hardy, of
course. As if thinking the devil's name were enough to summon him.
Only one of her
Mounties was still up at this godforsaken hour, sitting on the sofa in
the living room watching late-night holo. Internal cameras showed her
how he got to his feet before the doorbell finished buzzing, and was
moving toward the entryway even as she made her way up the steps from
the rec room. He knew Hardy, but he still made a point of taking a
thumbprint and checking ID. It never, ever hurt to be careful.
“Ma'am?” the Mountie
said, hearing her step behind him. He turned and caught her eye, his
own very blue under shaggy terrier eyebrows. “I haven't patted him down
yet, ma'am.”
“It's okay, Kurt.
I'll take him downstairs. Toby, come in.”
Hardy stepped past
the Mountie, a precise and calculated movement that made sure his suit
didn't brush Kurt's arm. Kurt's eyebrows went up as he continued to
hold Janet's gaze over Hardy's shoulder. Janet shrugged, not caring
that Hardy saw her.
“Thank you, Janet.”
He stepped out of his loafers inside the door and lined them up neatly
beside the shoes of other household members, but he couldn't resist a
sidelong glance at Janet to make sure she noticed that he was kowtowing
to the rules of the house. She kept her face expressionless as he
stepped into a pair of slippers and followed her down to the basement.
She didn't bother
kicking her own slippers back on when she got to the bottom of the
stairs. “Drink, Toby?”
“Coffee?” He looked
doubtfully at her slivovitz. “A little early for the hard stuff.”
“It's a little late,
for me,” she said, leaning back against the bar. Coffee, she told the house,
and the house set about roasting and brewing. Kurt would bring it down
when it was ready. She folded the letter closed, absently, and then
folded it in half, and then tucked it into her jeans pocket, aware that
Hardy was watching every move. “What warrants a clandestine predawn
visit, Toby? You're not here to discuss Unitek's contributions to the
Home Party.”
“Sure about that?”
“As sure as I can
be.” She picked up her glass and downed half the pungent liquor in a
gulp. It stung her sinuses and filled her mouth with the taste of
overripe plums. She set the glass down and breathed in fire through
pursed lips. “I don't know what you want me to do about the UN
hearings. But whatever it is, the answer is no.”
“I heard a rumor you
were still in contact with the Chinese consulate in America.
Unofficially, of course.” His eyes dropped to the corner of thick,
ivory paper that poked from her pocket.
“Which one of my
staff members is on your payroll?”
“Now, what makes you
think that, Janet?”
“Cold logic.” She
heard the door open at the top of the basement stairs. The scent of
coffee and the light, regular creak of footsteps followed it. A moment,
and Kurt appeared at the landing, balancing a silver tray and the
formal coffee service. Not the mismatched one that Janet had
inherited from her grandmother, and which she kept for friends. A
subtle vote of no confidence, but Kurt's level look into her eyes as he
laid the tray on the bar counter was enough to reinforce it. “Are you
going to New York, Toby?”
“Unitek was closely
involved in the events of December 22, 2062,” he said. He crossed the
room as Kurt withdrew up the stairs, and poured his own coffee. A good
guess; Janet hadn't been about to pour it for him.
Instead she cupped
her glass in both hands and frowned down at it, considering. “You're
going to testify.”
“Alberta is in no
position to—”
“—having died in the
Chinese attack on Toronto.”
“Died a martyr, and
all that. Yes.”
“Toby . . .”
“What?” He paused,
porcelain at his thin, pink lips, looking at her through his eyelashes.
It wasn't a flattering pose.
“You're going to hang
Toronto on the prime minister, aren't you? You're maneuvering to put me
in Constance's chair.”
“Do you have a
problem with that?” One of those eyebrows arched, and he sipped the
coffee before he lowered the cup.
“That depends,” she
answered, and cracked the last sunflower seed between her teeth, and
spit the shell into her hand. “What do you plan to do with me once you
get me there?”
His smile left a
puddle of cold in the pit of her belly. He didn't answer.
She finished her
drink slowly and put the glass on the bar. “You know, Toby, if you're
planning on buying somebody, it's good practice not to insult them
while you're negotiating.”
“That depends on how
high a price you can afford to pay.” He poured himself another cup of
coffee and held it in his blunt hands. The light over the bar caught
pink and green scatters off the diamond chips in his wedding ring.
Janet looked at the
floor.
“If you're not
willing to negotiate, General, we can always find somebody else who is.”
“We?”
“Unitek,” he said,
his eyes sincere. But he said it just a shade too quickly, and she
reached for the coffee and a fresh cup to hide how badly she needed to
swallow, to moisten her mouth.
She sugared the
coffee carefully and added just enough cream so that she could watch
the pale ribbons curl through dark fluid. The folded letter in her
pocket might have been printed on lead; she felt it press into her
flesh. “We need to talk about Unitek,” she said, calmly. “When we
rebuild, back east—”
“When?”
“When.” Firmly. “I'm
prepared to work to see to it that there are advantageous arrangements
available for any company willing to bring new industry to the Evac.
Tax breaks and incentives. Especially if those companies are
incorporated under Canadian law.”
“You're ducking the
subject, Janet.”
“I'm not willing to
betray my country as the price for your assistance, Toby.”
“Janet.” Palpable
disappointment in his voice. “I would never suggest such a thing.”
“No, you'd ask it
outright.” She sipped her coffee. She really wanted another glass of
slivovitz, but Toby was right. It was a little early for drinking like a
Brit. “Why don't you just ask me about the letter? It's written all
over your face.”
“It's a letter from
General Shijie, isn't it?”
Fortunately, the
coffee cup was still in front of her mouth. “How did you know that?”
Ignoring the arch look of triumph on his face, and knowing she'd handed
him the keys to the castle.
“It's my job to know
things. He's offering you an alliance for space exploration, and
alliance between PanChina and the commonwealth. Peace. Something Riel
can't get for Canada, but you can, if he's head of the PanChinese
Alliance.”
“Yes.” She set her
cup down and leaned both hands against the edge of the bar. The wood
was hard and waxy under her hands. She tightened her fingers hard
enough to whiten her knuckles, and sighed. “With the understanding that
the
current
—emphasis
his—administrations will not be involved.”
“You need me, Janet.”
She did. She needed
him badly, him and his money and his ability to sidestep oversight, and
the resources of his vast, American-headquartered corporation. “What's
it going to cost me?”
“I wouldn't worry
overmuch.” He smiled, turning his coffee cup with a fingertip, leaving
a wet ring spiraling the top of the bar. “Nothing you're not prepared
to pay.”
Genie couldn't get
used to the way Charlie had been acting kind of like one of the pilots
since Aunt Jenny rescued him, staring into space and frowning a lot.
And it was weird having Leslie talk out of the motes, but like he was
in the room, not like he was conferenced in. The good news was, Papa
didn't make her sit at the table and eat her scrambled soy protein and
toast with a fork. Instead, she made a kind of sloppy sandwich out of
the bread and yellow stuff and the gunk that wasn't anything like
cheese, and went and sat on the floor under one of the hydroponics
racks next to Boris while she ate.
Boris seemed happy to
be out of Genie's quarters. He sprawled on his side over one of the air
vents, showing his cream-colored belly and begging to be petted, or
maybe begging for another taste of the stuff that wasn't cheese. He
would eat anything, she'd discovered, including cooked broccoli and
pasta, but he liked greasy things best.
Genie finished her
sandwich, giving a last few crumbs to the cat, and scratched behind his
ears as he sniffed politely after the food. He flattened his whiskers
against his ginger-striped cheeks. She drew her knees up and folded her
hands under her chin, and practiced being invisible.
She scrunched herself
up a little tighter and kept her eyes down, watching the tip of Boris's
tail twitch thoughtfully as he slitted his eyes at a black-and-blue
butterfly. At least there were advantages to being invisible. She was
pretty sure that the grown-ups had forgotten all about her, even Papa,
because they were talking about all kinds of interesting things, and
they were the sort of interesting things that people usually wouldn't
talk about if they remembered she was listening.
For example, Charlie
was saying to Papa right now, “. . . this is on the list of things I'm
not supposed to tell anyone, Gabe—”
“According to whom?
I'm on the contact team, after all. We're all supposed to have the same
clearances.” Papa leaned against one of the sturdy lab tables, his
coffee cup vanishing inside his hand.
“This isn't to do
with the contact team.” Leslie said it, not Charlie, but Genie looked
up and saw the way Charlie's face seemed to reflect the emotion in
Leslie's voice. Creepy .
“It's not any
creepier than you talking to me,” Richard said, and Genie bit her lip.
I can't help it if
it bothers me, can I?
“Sure you can. You're
smart enough to know that you can decide what bothers you, and decide
what you think is good or bad, instead of just reacting.”
Papa hadn't stopped
talking. “If it's not contact stuff, why is it so secret?”
“Because it's nanite
‘stuff,'” Charlie answered. “Which is why we think we need your help.”
Boris, annoyed at her
neglect, reached out and grabbed Genie's soft foam ship-shoe. His claws
went through it, even though he didn't mean her any harm. She would
have yelped, but she was invisible, and if she made any sound, somebody
might notice her. Instead she reached down and roughed up the fur under
his chin. He stretched back out again, relaxing. She hoped he wouldn't
purr too loudly.
Papa set his coffee
cup down, but not before he finished whatever was left in the bottom.
“Richard?”
“Right here, Gabriel.”
“Is what they're
about to tell me likely to reconvince me that we need to go over our
operating systems for trap doors?”
“Actually,” Richard
answered, “I think it will convince you that you want to try to
reprogram the tech from scratch. On the other hand, the risks involved
in that—”
“Like Jenny's life,
you mean? And my daughter's?”
Silence. Genie bit
her lip. He'd definitely forgotten she was there. Genie shivered. Her
butt was getting numb from sitting on the air register, but this was
interesting.
“And mine,” Richard
said. “Although none of the nanotech that I inhabit appears to have
problems yet, I am concerned.”
“Putain de
ordinateur. Richard. Problems ?”
“Forgive me, Gabriel.
Before the EVA, Charlie discovered that the . . . nanotech in the
ecospheres was dropping out of its networks for an unexplained reason.
Or reasons. At first we thought they were dying, but further
experimentation has led us to believe they're just . . . losing
communication with each other.”
“And this is ongoing?”
“In patches. Or
batches. They'll just stall.”
Papa sighed and
looked around for his coffee cup. Charlie gave it back to him,
refilled. “I hope you have a good reason why I wasn't informed of this,
Dick.”
Leslie “coughed.”
“Prime Minister Riel swore us to secrecy.”
“So you're making me
a party to treason?”
“Yes. Well, it's not
treason for me; it's just espionage. But since the rest of you are
Canadians—”
“Okay,” Papa said,
looking down at his hands. “Spare me the hairsplitting. And you want me
to find out who's hacking the machines and disabling them, and how, and
why?”
“Your reputation for
perspicacity,” Richard said, “is not exaggerated, Mr. Castaign.” Genie
could hear the amusement in his voice. Papa obviously could, too, from
the way he rolled his eyes.
Richard, I
shouldn't be here for this.
“Genie, I think
you're more than grown up enough to understand this conversation, and
why it's important, and has to be secret. Don't you?”
“I think the whole
team should know about this,” Papa said.
“Jeremy already
does,” Leslie answered.
“Then Ellie needs to
be brought in.”
“All right. What
about Paul?”
Richard chuckled, a
dry, almost mechanical sound. “I expect, somehow, that Dr. Perry would
be just as happy not knowing about this little contretemps. I should
hate, after all, to force him to choose between his loyalty to
Constance, and to Canada.”
Premier Xiong looked
thinner in the space of a very few days, Riel thought, contemplating
his image floating over her desk for a precious few seconds as she
collected her thoughts. Not short days, though; abrogating
cliché, the days had been as long as any she cared to remember.
And they didn't promise to get any shorter in the near future.
When we're
finished saving the world,she thought, I'm going on a
nice
long trip someplace warm, changing my name, and buying a pineapple
plantation. Or maybe sugar cane. And then I'm going to let the whole
damned place go to seed, and sit on the front porch and play poker and
drink daiquiris until my eyes cross.
Her eyes wanted to
cross now, or at least to fuzz with exhaustion. She hoped her cosmetics
were up to the task of making her look like a functioning human being,
because she didn't feel like one. “Premier,” she said, and kicked her
shoes off under the desk. “To what do I owe the pleasure of your call?”
“You have an . . .
interesting concept of ‘pleasure' in Canada, Prime Minister.” He let
his eyes sparkle, as if he were flirting with her. One of the
contradictions of the modern age; even the leaders of totalitarian
states needed to be able to wield charm with natural grace and
confidence.
“I think I can be
forgiven for finding you more entertaining than next year's fiscal
realities.” She passed a hand across her interface plate, summoning
coffee. “I don't think you'd be calling me on the secure hot line
unless you had something too important to trust to diplomatic channels.”
“I don't think either
of us can afford to trust much to diplomatic channels at this juncture.
Unless your political position is considerably more secure than my own.
Or than I have been led to believe.”
“I do have a few
trustworthy advisers,” she answered, letting the wryness show in her
voice. She could not afford to like this man, any more than he could
afford to like her—but neither one of them would be in the position
they were in if they weren't good at getting people to like them, to
trust them, to confide. The irony and symmetry pleased her, and she
smiled.
He returned it.
“General Shijie has made arrangements to travel to New York City next
week, to testify.”
“When I will be
there.”
“And the chief
executive officer of Unitek.”
“Tobias Hardy,
surprise witness? That is an interesting piece of intelligence,
Premier. I suppose it would be useless of me to ask how you happened to
come by it?”
Xiong coughed against
the back of his hand. “Through official channels.”
Oh. Meaning that
somebody in the Chinese government tipped somebody at the UN that he
ought to be called as a witness.“You're asking me to put a good deal
of faith in your channels, Premier. Without a complete understanding of
why your government is so eager to offer assistance to mine.”
“You'll be even more
confused when I tell you that I have information that your Opposition
will be moving for new elections after the hearings.”
“Forgive my
suspicion, Premier, but that would tend to indicate that you expect the
hearings to come out rather well for PanChina. And you do not seem to
be a man given to gloating over the corpses of your enemies.”
“How little you know
me.” But his eyebrows had climbed another quarter-inch up his unlined
forehead.
Riel glanced up as a
rap announced the imminent opening of her door. She caught a glimpse of
a red Mountie's jacket outside the doorway as her secretary came in
with the coffee, and privacied the hologram over her desk. Premier
Xiong could still see her and the office, and she could hear him
through her ear clip, but the image over her interface plate dissolved
into a wash of soothing blues and greens.
He stayed silent.
Once she had her coffee, Riel returned the interface to view mode. She
wasn't fond of talking to images projected on her contact. “My
apologies, Premier.”
“Not at all.”
“You were explaining
to me how it is that you know more about the doings of my government
than I do.”
“Simple,” he said.
“It's in my very strong interest to be apprised of the ‘doings' of
Minister of War Shijie Shu. And his ‘doings' are more or less closely
linked to the machinations of your enemies within Canada. I'll be
sending you more details by secure packet. I trust you have people who
can manufacture a provenance for them, so you may have them ready when
the time comes to expose the duplicity of your opposition?”
Fred,she said, and allowed
herself a small, tight, bitter smile over the irony that, after all of
it, he was the one she trusted to watch her back. What was the word
he'd used to describe Casey, way back when?
Oh, yeah.
Patriot.
“Yes,” she said, and
pulled the coffee tray toward her, not caring that the felt dragged on
the crystal of the interface plate. What the hell. This is as secure a
line as I can get. “If you can get me documents that
prove that Hardy and Frye and their friends are in collusion with your
General Shijie, then I can provide the scandal you need to prove that
last year's attack against Canada was fostered by insurgent elements in
your government, and we can shake hands and part friends.”
“Well. If we're
speaking as plainly as that, let me stipulate: once the Huang Di and her crew are
returned to PanChinese control, and we've come to an agreement
regarding the partition of the world at HD 210277.”
“Technically
speaking, it's a moon, not a world. And we're assuming it's habitable.”
“I have to assume
it's habitable, Constance. I have ten thousand colonists underway to it
on generation ships, and I can't allow them to arrive at a destination
that's entirely under Canadian control. I think you are a reasonable
woman. I think we can come to an agreement. One that will reflect well
on Canada's international reputation for generosity and
humanitarianism.”
I'm not sure we
have one of those anymore,Riel thought, but she smiled.
“Wen-xian, will you attend the UN hearings?”
He didn't answer, but
his silent smile was confirmation.
The first thing that
happens when we enter the planet's telesphere is that my damned hip
unit warbles in my ear clip, warning me of saved messages. Of course,
it's not as though I haven't checked my e-mail from the Montreal, through the microwave
relays, but apparently somebody thought he had
something hush-hush enough to say that he wouldn't risk his mail being
forwarded to a military server.
I remember the good
old days, when the recipient got to decide where her fucking e-mail
went. Some of it's flagged spam, but one piece is an unnamed message
that has a good-friends filter override code on it that only Gabe and a
few other people have. And most of those people are dead.
It's probably a virus.
I click on it anyway.
And don't notice I've
stopped breathing until I'm dizzy enough that I have to grab the back
of the acceleration couch I so recently claimed as my bed. Because the
broad-cheeked, black-eyed, steel-toothed face that grins at me knocks
the breath out of me like a punch in the solar plexus.
Razorface.
He was in Metro
Toronto when the rock hit. I know he was, because I tried to get him to
go the hell home to Connecticut, and he stayed around to try to coerce
some sort of cooperation out of a Unitek vice president named Alberta
Holmes, who was holding Fred's leash at the time.
I can't even begin to
justify the idea that he might have made it out.
And then I calm down
enough to inspect the e-mail before I trigger it, and I see the date
stamp. It's December 22, 2062. I have to bite my lip until I taste
metal and salt and sit down and roll my head back against the rest on
the acceleration couch and breathe. Long and slow and rhythmically.
Breathe, Jenny. Breathe. Even though you're hurtling toward Malaysia,
braking at something less than a G, and about to open an e-mail from
somebody who died almost a year ago.
It's a message from
the grave. From the ghost of a kid who might as well have been my own.
If my own were a gangster, a killer, and a petty warlord.
But blood's thicker
than water, right? And I shed a little for Razorface. And Face shed a
little for me, once upon a time.
I extricate my tongue
from in between my teeth, the tweed of the capsule seat catching on the
ass of my uniform pants, and I key the mail open.
And find myself
staring not into Razorface's dark brown eyes while his mobile lips
shape words around the sibilants that hiss between his pointed teeth,
but at a series of images of documents, obviously snapped hastily,
probably—judging by the distortion—through somebody's contact optic.
There might be a dozen of them. I don't have time to examine them the
way I'd like to, and whatever they are, they don't make a lick of sense
to me, because every last one of the damned things is in Chinese or
something that looks just like it.
These weren't Face's.
Because as many times as I offered to teach him, Razorface never
learned to read. In any language.
The images have to
come from my enemy, my ally, the niece of my long-dead lover, Indigo
Xu. And they've been here, lying in the Net, waiting for me. Waiting
nearly a year, for me to set foot on Earth again.
Face's recorded voice
calls me by a name I haven't heard in a year. “Maker,” he says. “We
grabbed that Holmes chick. We're gonna hole up until we decide what to
do with her. But Indigo found these on her when we grabbed her, and she
says you need to see this. It's Chinese but she can't read it. She says
it's coded, but I figure with the friends you got you can crack it.
“One other thing.
Holmes looked like she was about to skip town when we snagged her. She
had a suitcase and a wad of cash chits, a lot even for a rich bitch
like her. You be careful up there, all right?” And then he grins at me,
showing me all that serrated silver, and cocks his head arrogantly,
cock of the walk. “You be careful up there, girl.”
Sweet Mary, Mother
of God.It
takes me awhile to organize my thoughts beyond that. I swallow and look
down.
You
be careful “up there,” too, Razorface. You just be as careful as you
can.
Richard,I say inside my head,
shuffling the images in front of my inner eye for long enough to see if
any of them contain so much as a word of English, Dick. Can you hear
me?
“Loud and clear, Jen.”
I really, really,
really need your help.
Min-xue's nervousness
didn't betray itself in a shaking hand, although his palms were
sweating. His face was impassive, his emotions carefully sealed away,
and if the palms of his hands were slick with sweat, no one would ever
know.
What gave him away
was that he was talking to Richard in Cantonese, because he couldn't
think of the words he wanted in English. Which made it difficult to
talk to Jen or to Patty, seated across the aisle in the luxury of the
Canadian wide-bodied jet that was descending, ear-poppingly, toward New
York. The pilot had swung wide over the Atlantic and they were still
high enough to see what Richard said was the shoreline of Connecticut
and Long Island Sound; the pilot was giving them the view.
There was plenty to
look at. Filtered sunlight fractured on the waters of the Atlantic, a
sparkle eased by polarized glass. Min-xue squinted anyway, unlacing one
hand to shade his eyes. He understood that the entire downtown area of
New York City had been an island within living memory, in much the
manner of Hong Kong. Now, Richard supplied the names for the geographic
features he was looking at, and images of what it had looked like
before, for the sake of comparison. Dikes and landfill bulwarked large
portions of what had been New York Harbor, and what had once been
called the East River had been pumped dry. New York Harbor itself was
enclosed by a ponderous seawall and a series of locks that allowed
ships to move from the higher waters of the Atlantic into the ancient
port. Richard said the harbor was largely fresh now, from the outflow
of the Hudson River. The seaward ends of the narrow bands of water that
separated Long Island and Staten Island from the mainland had been
sealed up, and the seaward faces of the islands protected by more dikes
and seawalls.
The bobbing shapes of
tidal generators dotted the waters of the Atlantic outside the seawall.
“Those power the pumping stations that keep the groundwater down inside
the dike. Manhattan's on schist—it's bedrock, but Long Island is a
glacial moraine. Soft.”
Don't the
foundations crack?
“It's a screaming
mess down there—”
Min-xue felt an
extended lecture coming on, and scrambled for a better question. Where's the Statue
of Liberty?
“It's inside the
harbor,” Richard said. “You'll need to go to the other side of the
plane.”
It should be
farther out at sea,Min-xue argued, but he got up and
walked across the aisle, to where Jen and Patty were pointing and
saying soft, appreciative things.
“Then nobody on land
could see it.”
Which was eminently
reasonable, but it still disappointed Min-xue somehow that the only
waves that lapped the base of the lady with the torch were the wakes of
ferries and departing container ships. Foolish romantic.
“If you need
romance,” Richard said, his eyebrows wiggling in amusement, “you could
consider that the New York Dike is the largest single engineering
project in the history of the world, or so they say.”
In terms of earth
moved, I wager the Great Wall was bigger.
Richard chuckled.
“Nationalistic pride?”
I am Taiwanese,
Richard.
“Somewhat.”
Which earned him a
wry twist of the mouth from Min-xue, but no further comment.
“Can you at least let
me tell you about the floating airport?”
Dick.Patty leaned close
enough to Min-xue that he could feel the heat of her body through his
jumpsuit. She knew better than to touch him, of course. He gave her a
flickering smile, much shyer than he had intended, and looked away
quickly. Richard cleared his throat, lounging against the walls of
Min-xue's mind with his angular arms folded and his hands, for once,
still. “Have you thought about the message I asked you to take to
Captain Wu, Min-xue?”
Is it not enough
for you that I betray China, Dick? Must I betray Canada, too?
“You could think of
it as serving both of them.”
He could. It wouldn't
even be—entirely—self-deception. But how will Captain Wu think of
it?
“As an opportunity to
redeem himself before his premier?”
You are a very
manipulative entity, Richard.
“How can I be?”
Richard smirked, and unfolded his arms, turning his palms skyward. “I
haven't got any hands.”
The plane dropped
lower. Min-xue returned to his seat to be certain he had his sunglasses
in his pocket for when he had to brave the fluorescent lights in the
terminal.
General
Valens—security in tow—met them after their passports and paperwork
cleared them through customs. It was an unearned honor, in Min-xue's
estimation—but not an unexpected one. Especially when the
general—already drawing a certain amount of attention in a full dress
uniform that was obviously not that of any branch of the U.S.
military—scooped up his granddaughter and swung her around until her
hair and feet flew out behind her. Patty started laughing when her
shoes left the floor. Min-xue had never heard her laugh like that
before, like a child, unself-conscious, with abandon. He averted his
gaze behind his sunglasses, all too conscious of how he was staring,
and found himself abruptly eye-to-eye with Jen Casey.
They stared at one
another for a second, until she cleared her throat and glanced down. He
didn't need Richard to tell him what she was thinking—that it could
have been her, swinging Leah Castaign around like that. Or that she
loathed herself for the thought as soon as it occurred.
Not for the last
time, Min-xue thought he would have liked to have known Leah.
If nothing else, so
he could mourn her properly. “She ought to have a statue,” he said
under his breath, in English, a sort of peace offering, and saw Jen's
eye quirk upward.
“They all should,”
she said, and turned away just as the general set Patricia down.
Valens straightened
and settled back on his heels and finally looked at Jen. Around the
terminal, travelers were stopped, taking in the spectacle of two old
soldiers sizing each other up, standing in the middle of Metro New York
William Francis Gibb Memorial Airport, accompanied by two strikingly
unrelated teenagers. Min-xue stole a glance downward. Jen was wearing
white cotton gloves on both hands, not just the left one.
Valens smiled at Jen
and at Min-xue. “Well,” he said, quietly. “I'm glad you both made the
trip. Once we've survived the ferry ride into the city, would you care
to share my limousine to the embassy?”
“And then confer with
Captain Wu, sir?”
“Actually—” Valens
led them toward the ferry dock. Their luggage, what little they had,
would be delivered. Another privilege that came with the Canadian
government jet and the annotated passports. “He's waiting in the
limousine. Although my Mandarin wasn't sufficient to give him a very
good idea of who is arriving, or what to expect.”
Aboard, Min-xue
leaned against the forward rail of the ferry. Port cities the world
over smelled the same; combustion and garbage and the rotten tang of
tide pools. He breathed deeply, closing his eyes, and imagined himself
home in Taiwan.
The others came to
collect him as the ferry glided into dock. He touched his breast
pocket, making sure the facsimiles of the papers that Jen had given him
were still there.
The limousine wasn't
all that long, and it was a quiet, staid pearl gray. The doors slid
into the frame with barely a whisper. Valens stepped aside with an
actor's sense of timing, allowing the man in the back seat a long clear
view of Min-xue as Min-xue ducked his head and stepped in.
To his credit,
Captain Wu only blinked, and edged over on the seat to make room for
Min-xue. He did make a small show of studying Min-xue's Montreal jumpsuit, however,
and clucked his tongue. “Second Pilot,” he said, in Mandarin. “I am
ashamed.”
“Before you declare
your shame, Captain,” Min-xue answered, in the same language, as he
pulled the papers out of his pocket, “can you please tell me whether
you have seen these code sheets before?” He handed them over, keeping
his voice low and his body language meek as the three Canadians
arranged themselves.
Captain Wu studied
each of the sheets carefully. His throat worked. Min-xue laid a
fingertip on Captain Wu's knee, knowing that the captain would see it
for the concession it was, coming from a pilot.
“I have seen them,”
the captain of the Huang Di said.
“Where have you seen
them, Captain?”
“Second Pilot, before
I answer that, you will tell me where you obtained these.”
“They were your
orders to retrieve the asteroid and destroy Toronto, Captain. Were they
not?”
“You will answer my
question.” Captain Wu sat back, the offending papers dropping from his
fingers to scatter on the carpet.
“Under the pearly
moon in the endless sea, pearls weep,” Min-xue quoted, tilting his
head. “On Lan-t'ien Mountain, jade breeds smoke in warm sun. / This
passion might be a thing to be remembered / Only you were already
bewildered and lost.”
“Will you believe I
regret it, Min-xue?”
“They came from the
person of a Canadian citizen, Captain. A Unitek vice president. One
closely involved in the starship program. Before the orders were
carried out. She could only have received them from somebody in China.
There was a conspiracy. Treason on both sides. And tens of millions
died.”
The captain blinked.
Min-xue heard Jen shut the door behind him, her prosthetic hand
clicking on the handle despite her cotton glove, and smiled. The
general might be chivalrous, but not so chivalrous as to forget that
one of the women he was squiring was also a noncom.
“Yes,” Captain Wu
said. “Those were my orders.”
“From whose hand were
they sealed, Captain?”
“The minister of war,
Shijie Shu,” he said, all on a breath, and rocked his head back against
the headrest, closing his eyes.
“Will you testify to
that before the United Nations, Captain?” Valens leaned in, his
Mandarin ungrammatical.
Captain Wu looked at
Min-xue. Min-xue bit his cheek until he tasted copper and nodded.
Captain Wu dropped his eyes to the papers scattered like so many peach
blossoms about his feet, and then to his own folded hands, and sighed.
Min-xue looked up at
Valens, and swallowed bitterness. And in English he said, “Yes.
General, he will testify.”
The instant I'm back
on Canadian soil, I feel different. Even a patch of Canadian soil a few
dozen yards square, squatting on the eastern edge of America. I'm sure
it's psychosomatic, but I feel my shoulders straighten, the wreathed
crowns on my epaulets shining a little brighter in the wan autumn
morning.
A sugar maple planted
inside the elaborate and very functional-looking front gate of the
embassy catches my attention, and even if it's snow-laced and bare with
the unholy winter, the familiar fractal pattern of those elegant
branches soothes me. I wish it were any other October, and the glossy
leaves just starting to burn umber and vermilion.
I left Nell's eagle
feather on the Montreal . I didn't want to deal with customs
and endangered species acts and trying to prove my tribal affiliation
and the ten thousand other things that would go wrong. Still, I press
my hand against the breast pocket where it would normally be. Even if I
don't have the feather, or Nell, or Leah, I can still feel the ghosts
gathered around me like ancestors in reverse, where the children die
and old warhorses get older in their place.
Surreptitiously, I
drag my fingertip over the trunk of the maple tree, just to feel its
life. Rough and silky bark snags my glove; I tug it free quickly,
hoping no one has noticed.
There's a real live
doorman to open the doors for us. He has white spats, and white gloves
that are cleaner than mine. I don't think I've ever seen such a thing.
As I take my cover off, I'm homesick enough to think the air inside
smells of Canada, too. If I don't quite look at them straight, I can
almost imagine that the snowy branches behind the panoramic windows of
the lobby are old-growth forest rather than well-clipped hemlock. I
swear to God I can smell the pine.
Hah. It's probably
the floor polish. Come on, Jenny. Get your head out of your ass. Tomorrow
we
go to war. And try to make sure those kids didn't die for nothing.
It's a prayer, and I
know it's a prayer, and I still can't quite bring myself to say, Amen.
2100 hours
Sunday October
7, 2063
HMCSSMontreal
Earth orbit
Charlie hadn't gotten
used to not being alone in his own head—hell, in his own body —yet. Because getting
kidnapped and genetically engineered by aliens is the sort of thing you
should process and move past in a week or two at the outside, really.
He felt Leslie's
approval at his sarcasm, and the internal quirk of Richard's humor that
would have been a raised eyebrow or a twitched lip if they were simply
three men sitting around a conference table, rather than sharing some
bizarre brain space including bits and pieces of all three of them, but
not all of any, and the
undercurrent of alien presences—waiting, observing, straining as hard
toward them as they strained back.
We have nothing in
common,Charlie
thought. He leaned back in his chair, in his lab, among the dying
ecospheres and the hydroponics tanks, and swung his feet onto the lab
bench.
Not
even a sensorium .
Richard would relay
the inaudible parts of the conversation to Jeremy and Elspeth. The
ethnolinguist and the psychiatrist were in-wheel, in the work space
they had shared with Leslie, modeling symbol structures or something
Charlie didn't really understand. Charlie and Leslie could hear and
feel everything that occurred in the room through Richard, and Richard
would relay his own comments over the interior speakers, so it didn't
matter if they were all in the same room or not, and he did his best
thinking up here with the soybeans.
We apparently
share a powerful desire to talk to one another,Leslie answered. That's more than
my
ex-wife and I had in common.
The most interesting
part of their connection was that, while he didn't have Leslie's skills
or his years of experience in just how language and communication
worked, he
could
feel the model that
Leslie and Jeremy were building with regard to communication with the
aliens. Currently, it looked a great deal like a map. It was a map; a
map of
something drawn in terms of
beings that sensed the architecture of space-time rather than the
electromagnetic spectrum.
It would be
extraordinarily useful, Charlie judged, once they got the chance to
take the
Montreal
and the
Vancouver out on a real spin,
and overlay this map with what Richard and the pilots could learn about
the feel of the local gravity
wells—
For
crying out loud, Leslie. You realize we don't even have a language with
which to discuss this stuff, let alone a symbology with which to talk
to the birdcages about it?—they might be able to lay their own
visible-light and X-ray map over the alien one.
By the way, we've
got the lab results back. I've got to say, these guys really put the
xeno into xenobiology.Except what he gave Leslie and Richard
wasn't exactly words, but more a concentrated lump of his own
experience and the test results and what it all might mean, or might
not mean, without the ambiguities of language. For Jeremy and Elspeth's
sake, he summarized: They're hydrogen based. What we call metallic colloidal
hydrogen, probably supercompressed in their home environment. Something
like the rocky core of a gas giant.
Elspeth had her back
to the corner, her arms folded over her breasts, just listening. Almost
nothing went over her head, but she usually stayed very quiet when the
rest of the team was talking about subjects unrelated to her own
specialty. Charlie suspected her thought process was keyed to
intuition, and her long silences were her way of encouraging the penny
to drop.
Leslie's thought,
startlingly clear and tight for someone who was wrapped in a bubble of
metallic colloidal hydrogen, kilometers away in the cold of space: You can have a
hydrogen-based life form?
Leslie,Richard said, apparently you can
make a life form out of anything, as long as it has the power to
conduct and regulate piezoelectricity.
Exactly,Charlie agreed. Don't ask me what
keeps them from evaporating out here, though, or just . . .
discombobulating. Or—and here's the kicker—how the hell it got that
way. The weird part is that that means there's some process by which
little informational and structural heterogeneities can arise and
persist at pressures that smoosh hydrogen itself down to liquid. That's
just
wild .
Richard gave a
scientist's chuckle, the sort that is usually preceded by the phrase
“it is intuitively obvious.” Charlie. You have a creature whose
sensory system and technology seem to be predicated on perceiving and
manipulating gravity.
He set the coffee cup
down, sat back in his chair, and folded his hands behind his head. That would tend to
indicate that they're the original source of the nanotech, since we
know the shiptree uses . . . visible light. For something. His palms were
sweating again, and he resolutely ignored it. If he got too nervous
Richard would adjust his biochemistry. He hated relying on that. This
was his life, a change that had been wrought on him, as randomly and
unfairly as if he had lost a limb.
As long as he thought
of it that way, and held up for himself the example of Jen Casey—her
steel hand winking with machined precision and her absolute refusal to
accept pity or, it seemed, to acknowledge even to herself that she had
lost anything at all—he could hold it together. Thank you for not
actually laughing at me, Dick.
The AI grinned in his
head.
No
sweat.
In the other work
space, Jeremy looked up from his interface. Charlie experienced the
rearrangement of Leslie's attention as the xenosemiotician used the lab
motes to follow his old schoolmate's gaze. It wasn't that different
from inhabiting somebody else's body along with his own in a VR
suit—the ghostly sense of limbs was identical, except it was his own
body he felt slightly attenuated from, and the one he cohabited with
that floated as if in a sense-dep tank.
Jeremy cleared his
throat. “So now that we know what they're made of and how they
experience their environment, how do we develop a symbolic system so we
can move information?”
Leslie nodded. And I ask on my
own, when do we get started on the shiptrees?
Well, we could
always send an EVA team over there, too, and infect their nanites with
our nanites. Givethem one of our scientists. After all, fair's fair.
Bring a camera,Richard said. Charlie
laughed, because of course Richard could record everything that he saw.
Wow,he said. Somebody write the
date down. You realize that we've just witnessed the death of an
ancient concept. Privacy.
Oh, I don't know,Richard answered. We can wall each
other out more or less effectively. And if you squint at it from the
right angle, you already have a bunch of individual consciousnesses
inhabiting your head. Freud's id and ego and superego and so forth, or,
if you prefer, Jung's “collective unconsciousness” or the left brain
and the right brain and the—
“Modular-mind theory,
more like,” Elspeth corrected. And then said, “Christ, Dick.”
Elspeth? What?
She straightened, her
hands swinging as she stepped away from the wall and started to pace
like a professor lecturing a class. “I think you just got yourself that
second Nobel Prize, sir. You're absolutely correct. We have got a whole
bunch of animals living in our heads already. Alien animals, animals
that don't really communicate all that well. You ever hear about the
experiments where somebody whose corpus callosum had been severed could
be taught completely different things on each side of his brain, and
couldn't articulate them to himself?”
Now that I pause
to look it up.
“Well, your right
brain and your left brain—well, not yours, Richard. You're a special
case, of course. But say, Jeremy's, here—”
Jeremy laughed first,
and swatted her mocking hand out of his hair. “I've known you not even
a month, Elspeth, and already you take liberties with my person.”
She squeezed his
shoulder before she stepped away. She folded her hands in front of her
again, instead, leaned against the back of a swivel chair, and cleared
her throat. “Essentially, the nonverbal side of the brain will resort
to hand gestures and drawing images to get its message to the verbal
brain. In extreme cases, the left hand will even grab and redirect the
right hand when the left brain is about to make a mistake and the right
brain knows it. But my point is, the hemispheres don't talk the same
language on their best day. They communicate in terms of symbols and
emotions and sometimes dreams or uneasy sensations or . . . hunches,
for lack of a better term. Which is why so much of any therapist's work
is interpreting between the subconscious and the conscious mind, and
teaching them to understand each other, and that greedy little reptile
in the back of all of our heads, as well.”
Charlie found himself
standing, grinning until his cheeks hurt, his hands tight on the edge
of the lab bench. So you're saying we need a therapist, Elspeth?
They were all under
tremendous stress, and his timing had been better than usual. When the
hysterics dwindled into subdued coughing, Elspeth wiped her eyes on the
back of her wrist and said, “In that analogy, I think we are the
therapist. Or maybe the corpus callosum. In any case, I think we're
halfway there.” Which was bad enough that even Richard groaned.
“Leslie, are you getting this? Are you following me?”
You want me to try
. . . Oh. Elspeth, Dick. Can you talk to Jenny and see if she can pass
along an impression of what space feels like through the Benefactor
stardrive?
“You want to see if
it matches up with what you feel from the birdcages.”
I want to see if
it's the same melody.Charlie had a distinct sense of Leslie
grinning. Charlie shoved his hands into the pockets of his lab coat and
for a moment couldn't remember whose gesture that had been, originally,
Leslie's or his own. Which would have turned the faint seasick unease
in his stomach into full-fledged nausea, if he'd been willing to let it.
You're in denial,
Charlie. Your whole life has changed.And of course he knew Leslie felt the
thought, and felt Leslie's warm assurance back through their shared
thought process. There was nothing like finding yourself irrevocably
mentally
welded
to another
middle-aged man, and one with a quite different set of biases and
assumptions, to trigger a thoroughly miserable midlife crisis. Even if
your counterpart weren't—
A very small
spaceship.
Yes, that.Charlie wondered if
Canada would buy him a little red sports car, if he asked extra nicely.
As partial compensation for giving away half of his brain.
And I said to
myself, self—
There's no
guarantee it is irrevocable, Charlie.Richard's voice, and his unique
understanding of what it was like to share a mind with other
consciousnesses, was soothing. When we get Leslie back —
If you get Leslie
back,Leslie
said.
There is no if.
Charlie knew Richard
was using the nanotech to regulate hormone and endorphin and adrenaline
levels, to keep him calm and sane and rational. It was probably the
only reason he or Leslie was coherent, rather than enlivening a rubber room
planet-side. Or, in Leslie's case, floating between the stars
glibbering and meeping like the protagonist of a Lovecraft story. That,
and Leslie's strange determination that this was all an adventure, and
that he had nothing to lose, and everything to gain.
He chuckled as
Leslie's amusement welled up his throat.
I'm culturally
programmed to a certain amount of comfort with otherspace,Leslie said. Being ungrounded
from my body isn't quite the shock it might be to you.
I should have
known you'd jump at the opportunity to flaunt your racial superiority,Charlie answered, and
Leslie laughed inside his head. The sarcasm was a defense, and he knew Leslie knew
it. Still, he felt the chuckle and smiled himself, sharing the
response. Because—on the other hand—when Charlie forgot to panic, the
sensation of never quite being alone was strangely easy to get used to,
and maybe even a little comforting.
“Charlie?” Elspeth's
voice, distracting him—or drawing him back from distraction. “Try to
stay with us, eh?” The motes showed the sidelong glance Jeremy gave
her, and the way he rubbed one hand through his hair and then across
his mouth, infinitely tired for the moment when her attention was
turned away. Jeremy swallowed and swiveled his chair to stare out the
porthole, only vaguely in the direction of the birdcage. A frown tugged
the corners of his lips down. Charlie never would have understood the
expression if he hadn't felt Leslie's discomfort like the itch of a
peeling sunburn. He's worried about you, Leslie.
Leslie shrugged the
comment aside. He always worried too much about me. Mind if I use your
vocal cords for a tick? The motes annoy me.
Help yourself.
“Bob's your uncle. So
what do we do next?”
“We talk to the
captain about another EVA, I guess,” Elspeth said, and shook her head
sadly through the resulting laughter.
0800 hours
Monday October
8, 2063
Thanksgiving
day
(Canada)
Canadian
Embassy
and Consulate
New York City,
New York USA
On Monday morning, I
testify.
It's so much like the
last time that the face I see in the walnut-framed mirror over my
bureau shocks me when I glance into it. I expect the glossy black hair
of a child in her third decade, the furrowed, meat-colored scars of
fresh burns turning the left side of her face into a Halloween mask. As
if the intervening twenty-six years don't exist. As if, when I go
downstairs with Frederick Valens to get into the official car that will
deliver us to the site of the hearing, it will be Corporal Casey and Captain Valens, and it will
be a simple court-martial that I am to testify before, rather than the
assembled eyes of the world.
The problems get
bigger and bigger. But the level of nausea in my gut remains the same.
That's growth of a
sort, I suppose.
I look down to adjust
the shining buttons in the cuffs of my professionally pressed dress
uniform. The blue steel of my left hand contrasts the deep, mellow
richness of the gold. There are no scars on my face anymore, just a
mottled patch that doesn't tan evenly, and my hair will be white in
another three or four years. And the steel armature on my left side is
light and silent and moves like my own hand and wrist, rather than like
a clattering horror of an obsolete machine. And it's beautiful, too: a
smooth, graceful design.
I clench my long
steel fingers into a fist, and feel them press the heel of my metal
hand, and close my eyes.
Bernard told me to
change the world for him. After I took the stand and
said the words that killed him.
I really wonder that
I don't feel more irony—more anything—at the fact that it's not going
to be my testimony that makes the difference today, this week, this
month, but rather the testimony—from beyond the grave—of his niece,
Indigo. Who once tried very, very hard to murder me.
I open my eyes. I
open my hand. I point my forefinger at the mirror, cock my thumb, and
say “bang” under my breath. And then I check the lie of my uniform one
more time, pick my cover up off the dresser, flick my thumbs along the
brim to make sure it's sitting right, and go downstairs to meet Fred
Valens and my fate.
I suppose it's equal
parts gift and torture that I'm the first witness. I mean, I've never
seen the United Nations before, despite twenty years spent wearing its
goddamned baby blue hats, and I'd like the time to look around and get
a feel for the place. My overwhelming impression, as the car pulls into
the drive, is a confused riot of flags like children shouting for
attention, lined up snapping in a breath-frosting wind, below a teal
glass curtain wall. The driver gets out to open the door. I stand, and
then I stop, looking up, long enough for Fred to clear his throat
heavily.
Fat flakes drift from
a dirty slate-colored sky and my boots crunch snow in the gutter as I
move forward. It's not a big building—especially in comparison to its
neighbors, enormous apartments that dwarf it—but the severe
hundred-year-old slab shape reminds me of a tombstone. The old building
is a little streaked and shabby around the edges, and I can see where
the panes have been replaced by less mottled ones. They don't quite
match the facade. The marble on the narrow sides is soot stained and
showing erosion on what should be fine edges, and the fluid lines of
the long concrete Assembly building spilling away from the teal blue
high-rise look a little weary, too.
It looks worked hard,
that structure.
And yet it's
difficult to walk forward into. The damned thing looks heavy. And it might not be
all that big, but it's a
damned sight bigger than I am.
Escorts take charge
of us at the doors, however, and once we step inside my whole
impression changes. The broad lobby is airy and bright, the worn
silver-and-white marble floors polished until they glow like jade.
Mostly I regret the display cases that Fred and I are hustled past too
fast for me to get a really good look inside. There's a Moon rock and a
Mars rock and a chunk of asteroid and another chunk of one of Saturn's
rings, I see that much, and a long display on a destroyed city whose
flat, motionless gray photos mark it as something from another era,
almost another world. Dresden or Hiroshima, maybe. Mumbai's footage
would be in color, if there is a display for Mumbai.
I wonder how long it
will be before Toronto is memorialized.
There's a hush about
the place, the taste of serious business under way. A woman in a sari
hurries through as we cross the lobby, a bindi gleaming red between her
brows. She catches my eye as we pass, notices the steel hand, and does
a visible double take. Her stride never slackens, but I turn my head,
pretending for a minute that I'm not in uniform, and I see her staring
over her shoulder as she walks away from us, twisting from the hips to
get a better view.
Nice to have a place
to go where everybody knows your name.
A young man in
hanbok—a dark embroidered jacket and flowing, flame-colored
trousers—hurries toward us, his feet scuffing on the marble. A little
puddle of melting snow drips from the sole of one of my boots, although
I stomped them before I came inside. Valens, of course, looks like he
was delivered fresh via teleporter. I tighten my arm against my side so
I don't drop my cover in the mud puddle I'm making while I greet our
new friend. He's got very dark, very bright eyes, and something faceted
winks near the edge of the iris of the left one—a hypoallergenic
implant under the clear surface of the cornea, a platinum bauble shaped
like a stylized rocket ship. Genie says they're all the rage this year.
Valens's amusement is
palpable when the young man stops in front of me, rather than him, and
makes a little formal gesture. “Master Warrant Officer Genevieve Casey?”
He has an accent
smooth as the silk of his jacket, and I could listen to him say my name
all day. “I am. And this is Brigadier General Frederick Valens.”
He offers Fred his
hand and Fred takes it, giving me a look over our guide's head that's
both charmed and bemused. I half get the feeling he's enjoying being
snubbed. “I am Dongsik Jung. I will be your escort—”
“I'm pleased to meet
you, Mr. Dongsik—”
“Mr. Jung,” he says,
and winks at my transparent blush. “Master Warrant Officer, it's an
honor to make your acquaintance. And you, Brigadier General, a very
great honor as well.” He steps back, looking from one of us to the
other, and lifts an eyebrow at each. “Have you been to the United
Nations before?”
“Never,” Fred says,
shrugging out of his overcoat.
“Wonderful,” Mr. Jung
says, turning neatly on the ball of his foot and falling into step
between and a few steps in front of us. Even if he fell back, I could
still see Valens over the top of his head. “We just have time for a
little tour before you're due in the General Assembly chamber. Would
you like to see the Peace Bell or the famous Chinese ivory carving
first?”
The two security
guards following us are so seamlessly professional I hardly even know
they're there unless I catch their reflections in some polished
surface. “The Peace Bell,” I say, at the same second Fred says, “The
carving, please.”
“We have time for
both,” Mr. Jung tells us, his stride fast enough that Fred and I both
have to hustle to keep up. “And we will pass the Foucault Pendulum when
we enter the lobby of the General Assembly. You wouldn't want to miss
that.”
Fred catches my eye
when I glance toward him and mouths a few words I don't catch. I shake
my head. He smiles, stretching the papery skin on either side of his
mouth into lines that show his exhaustion more than anything else about
him. “I hope you polished up your medals for your big hero fan club,
old girl,” he murmurs, leaning close enough that I feel his breath on
my ear.
“I only brought the
salad bars, actually,” I answer. “All that pewter doesn't mix well with
my osteoporosis. Old man.”
I'm reasonably sure a
couple of ancient warhorses aren't supposed to bray like donkeys when
they laugh in public places, but what can you do? A disgrace to the
uniform. Both of us.
The Foucault
Pendulum—Mr. Jung is very explicit that it's Foucault and not Foucault's —is definitely worth
the pause to collect ourselves before we enter the General Assembly.
It's a huge coppery sphere swaying at the end of a nearly invisible
wire, something like a waltzing cannonball, and it's downright
hypnotic. The way it moves reminds me of the giant game of
crack-the-whip going on overhead, the orbital platforms slung out at
the ends of their beanstalks, the whole thing whirling in space. For a
second, I fantasize I can feel the whole universe moving around me like
the works of a giant clock. It makes me want to run right out and build
an orrery.
Maybe when I retire.
If they ever let me.
Mr. Jung gives us a
few moments to ooh and aah over the pendulum before he abandons us in a
ready room, both security types planted solidly outside the door. From
there, we'll proceed to the General Assembly chamber. I wonder what
machinations Riel and the PanChinese and the UN itself wrangled through
to arrive at this solution—open hearings, and open testimony, in front
of the entire body. I can't remember ever hearing of anything being
handled exactly this way before.
On the other hand,
nobody's ever obliterated a city and triggered a global climate change
with a nickel-iron meteorite before. Or unleashed a tailored nanotech
infection on the entire planet. I guess it's not really the sort of
thing the UN was designed to deal with, was it?
“Nuclear
proliferation,” Richard supplies inside my head. “That, and the idea
that an avenue of public discourse would prevent World War III.”
So we skipped
straight to number four and five, is what you're telling me?It's an old joke; I fought in World War III, but
nobody calls it that. Richard gives me a look . I sigh out loud,
and Valens gives
me a
look
as well.
“Casey? Are you going
to handle this?”
“I'm good, Fred.”
His hazel eyes are
doubtful, turned down at the corners like a sad old hound's, but he
nods and turns away from me, pacing from one wall to another with his
hand clenched around his opposite wrist in the small of his back. It's
sort of restful watching him go back and forth. Like the pendulum.
“Give them hell,” he says, so quietly I almost don't hear him.
His tone makes my
intestines knot. “You want them to pay.”
Just a sideways look,
arresting, glitter of cold eyes over the bridge of his handsome nose.
“Tell me you don't.”
I can't. I mean, I
drew the line at bloody vengeance once. But let them go unpunished? No.
That isn't an option either.
“I want justice.”
His lips twitch into
the semblance of a smile. It flickers on his mouth for a moment, then
flutters away just as fast. “I never ask for justice anymore,” he says.
His fists unknot from behind his back and fall to his sides. “I just
ask to win.”
I'm not quite sure
what I'm going to say in answer. I knew that about him. Knew it in my
bones, I mean, down to the roots of my hair; Fred and I go way, way
back. But for some reason, twenty-six goddamned years later, it just,
finally,
really
sank in. Fred's the
sort of guy who does what it takes and counts the cost well lost
against whatever it was he gambled to win. If he's not prepared to pay,
he doesn't put his money on the table.
“Damn.” It's written
all over his face. And he's letting me see it, because he knows I just
figured it out anyway. “That e-mail wasn't from Razorface, was it,
Fred?”
“The encoding on
something like that would be impossible to fabricate, Casey. We've
validated the packet history in every manner known to man, and all the
records will be turned over with the evidence. It's the only way to
establish provenance.”
Of course they have.
Of course they are. I could ask Richard. Richard might even tell me the
truth.
Valens is still
staring at me, the picture of quiet relaxation. I ask Richard something
else instead, something I won't have to lie under oath about. Why?—no, wait.
Don't answer that. Just answer this: Are those documents real?
“They're real. I'm
not Fred Valens, Jen.”
Dick—
“With any luck, they
won't ask the right questions.” It's not quite a smile, what crosses
Richard's face, but a strange, tender expression I can't put a name to.
It's the sort of look you expect to see before somebody messes up your
hair, but of course he hasn't got the fingers to do it with, so he just
looks at me for a second, and then looks down.
I hadn't known you
were such a patriot, Richard.
“There's an old
catchphrase. My country is the whole world.”
I've heard it.
“In my case”—he
grins—“it's quite absolutely true.”
Fred still hasn't
blinked. Come to think of it, neither have I. I breathe out slowly,
over my tongue, through my teeth, and look down at the spit-shined tips
of my shoes. Before I get the breath back in, somebody knocks on the
door and the handle starts to turn. I don't look over; I just tug my
jacket straight one last time. “Lucky for us Razorface thought to mail
that off before he died.”
“Yes,” Fred says, as
the door opens and Mr. Jung slips inside, one hand crooked to summon
us. Or to summon me, it seems, although Fred will follow along and sit
in the observer seats.
We follow Mr. Jung
into a room only about twice the size of a hockey amphitheater. It
reminds me of being inside a gigantic nautilus shell. The ranked chairs
have long desks attached to the back of each row, for the use of the
row behind them, and except for the miniaturized interface plates
obviously retrofitted to each place, they're exactly like the
hundred-year-old student desks in the parochial school I suffered
through until I ran away from home. The high ceiling is sculptured in
acoustic ripples, pierced by a curving aperture of sorts lined with
windows, dark observation booths behind. There's a screen over the
podium we're walking toward. It's pearl white, and black letters float
in it:
Items of Business:
Application of the
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide
(Canada and the British Commonwealth / People's PanChinese Alliance)
Armed Activities
on the Territory of Canada (Canada and the British Commonwealth /
People's PanChinese Alliance)
Armed Activities
on the Territory of China (People's PanChinese Alliance / Canada)
I try not to look at
them as we walk down the long green-carpeted aisle. They make
everything far too concrete, far too real. I feel insanely like a bride
at a cathedral wedding, Fred and Mr. Jung playing the role of my
attendants now, flanking me. I wonder if this would feel less freakish
if I had a veil and a long white train in place of my sharp-creased
rifle green.
My place is on the
stage. Behind the podium, below a gorgeous curved red-gold wall of
mahogany, with my back to the long table where the secretary general
and some other people who I don't recognize sit.
Mr. Jung and Fred
step off to the side as I climb the steps, aware of thousands of eyes
on my back, holovision and Net feeds, the whole world watching. It's a
short flight. I don't stumble. Agné Zilinskiene, the secretary
general of the United Nations, rises and comes around the table to meet
me. She's a Lithuanian lady in her sixties, perfectly powdered skin as
lustrous as her pearl earrings. Unlike Constance Riel, she's let her
bobbed hair go a rich flat pewter. It moves naturally when she cocks
her head back to smile up at me.
“It's an honor,
ma'am,” I say, as she reaches out.
“It's a pleasure to
meet somebody with a little common sense,” she says, very softly, so
the microphones won't pick it up. She clasps my right hand in both of
hers. Not thinking, I add my own left hand to the mix. She glances down
at the touch of cool metal, and looks up, smile widening. “I like a
woman who doesn't believe in prettying up the truth.”
Which is when it
sinks in that she, too, knows more than she's supposed. That she knows
about the order I disobeyed, which is the reason Beijing isn't a
smoking ruin like Toronto now.
The realization
almost makes me grip her hand too tightly. I have to uncurl my metal
fingers carefully, consciously, and let the steel hand fall to my side.
This
isn't
Bernard's trial. I am
not a victim, here. Riel, Richard, Valens—they have nothing to hold
over me. Nothing but my own conscience, and its ghosts. They need me
far more than I need them.
I've never held this
much power in my life, in my own two hands. It stuns me with primeval
awe. It's a dark god, that kind of power, a black rock idol crouched
before the rising sun.
“Thank you, ma'am.” I
smile, and she lets my hand go, and I turn away to take my oath and
think about the ways in which I will shade the truth so that I will not
have to lie.
It was 6 AM in
Vancouver when the testimony started in New York, and Riel didn't have
the luxury of time to curl up on the sofa in her slippers, a mug cupped
between her hands, and watch.
She didn't have time
for it, but she was doing it anyway. Even if the Americans—and she had
no illusions about that: she knew American ignorance and American
arrogance well, and this was unquestionably the latter—had gone out of
their way to arrange for the hearings to start on the Canadian day of
thanks, it
was
still a national
holiday. And Riel had sacrificed the privilege of sleeping in in favor
of her perch on the big temperature-controlled memory-foam sofa, the
never-ending stream of coffee cups, and the image of Genevieve Casey
hovering in midair before her, limned in the not-quite-real glow of
holography.
She sipped from her
mug, the steam warming her face while lacy feathers of frost melted off
the windows. Frost, in Vancouver, Canada's answer to the tropics. On
Thanksgiving.
She wondered what it
would be like in two or three years, when the dust settled and the
temperature started to rise, if Richard couldn't prevent it. She'd
always lived with climate change, grown up in the era of wild weather.
It had always been an accepted consideration rather than a crisis,
something one adapted to, mitigated, planned for. Harsh winters, harsh
summers, melting ice, erratic crops, evolving storm models, and altered
ocean currents. The acceptance that whatever the situation was now, it
was subject to immediate and irrevocable change.
She tried not to hang
too much on the hope that, now that they had Richard, they might be
able to control that change. She tried not to hang too much hope on
anything, really, but this one was particularly tempting. A magic
bullet. A miracle cure. Like penicillin—
Except, like
penicillin, like any magic bullet, there was the chance . . . no, the
likelihood . . . of unforeseen side effects and long-term consequences.
Best not to hope, not even cautiously. Because hope could cloud one's
sense of risks and benefits, and make one gamble more than one could
afford to lose. Better to plan for the worst, to find some common
ground with the Chinese and evacuate as many people from the planet as
possible. A colony was a huge risk, and also a tremendous fallback
position: as fragile as a basket of eggs . . . but nevertheless, a second basket.
Riel blinked a
command interface up in her contact and raised the level of the sound
on the live feed from the UN. A crow called outside, a harsh, throaty
caw. She didn't glance up, fascinated by Casey's easy charm on camera,
her effortless charisma. Traditionally, she might have had a chair, a
table to sit behind, legal advisers at her side rather than Valens and
one Canadian lawyer seated against the curtain wall, but this was
theater, not justice, and those concessions to comfort had been
sacrificed in the negotiation process, leaving her up there naked
except for a podium and the microphone tacked to her throat.
She held that podium
well, fielding questions with dignity, seemingly comfortable on her
feet as the testimony headed into its second hour.
Riel had known Casey
had that, that aura of command. Now, she found herself wondering if she
herself would do as well, when her time came. What a politician
she would have made, Riel thought. And then, watching
Casey, she had another thought, building on that first one, and smiled.
“Put me through to
Richard, please,” she said. The smart system in her living room
recognized the tone of command, and a chime announced the connection.
“Good morning, Prime
Minister. You're up early.”
“Have you thought
about my offer of citizenship, Dick?”
“I have—”
“You prefer to remain
a free agent.”
“I feel morally
constrained,” he answered. “I trust you will understand my quandary.”
“Understanding and
acceptance are not the same thing, Dick.”
“That's true—”
She turned back to
the 3-D. “How do you think our girl is doing?” She gestured with her
mug, coffee slopping over and splashing her fingers. It wasn't quite
hot enough to make her swear. She wiped her hand on the blanket.
“Beautifully,” he
said. “I hope it all goes this well.”
“Don't count your
chickens, Dick,” she said. “And don't tempt the gods.”
“They never listen to
me under other circumstances. Why should this be any different?”
“The perversity of
the universe?”
“Oh,” he said, and
she almost imagined she could hear the crackle of the connection in the
silence that followed. “That.”
1130 hours
Thursday
October
11, 2063
Empire State
Building Historical Preserve
New York City,
New York USA
The American looked
cold. He leaned against the railing next to a row of chit-operated
viewfinders trained in the general direction of the New York Dike,
looking like any of the other single men and women scattered across the
observation deck. A holotour of Lower Manhattan droned from a kiosk,
abandoned by some tourist who hadn't counted on the wind eighty-six
stories up, but he didn't appear to be listening to it. His fists were
stuffed in the pockets of his expensive fish-scale corduroy coat as he
looked down at the butterfly netting winged out from the monolithic
building, giant hands cradled to discourage suicides.
Janet didn't know his
name. She didn't want to know his name. She didn't want to
be here at all, in
fact, shivering on this blocky engineered outcrop of gray stone and
glass, her arms folded tight across her overcoat. Kurt and Amanda and
the rest of her security detail had been abandoned at the embassy
through a bit of skullduggery worthy of a high school girl sneaking out
in the middle of the night to meet the captain of the hockey team, and
she wanted nothing quite so much as to be sitting in the bar at the
hotel down the street, drinking an Irish coffee and watching Casey's
testimony on the smallest of four projectors.
The other three would
be showing American sports hype. Some things never changed, and in New
York City, acts of war still gave pride of place to Game Four of a 2–1
World Series when the Yankees were one game behind and the Havana Red
Sox looked fit to win it all. Which was ironic, because Havana was
under water and despite having kept the name, the Red Sox were based
out of Argentina these days.
In any case, the
Irish coffee sounded good.
She shot a sidelong
look at Toby. His lips thinned against the cold. He dabbed his nose
with a linen handkerchief as an icy wind lifted his hair. There ought
to be a law against haircuts that good; pewter-colored strands
feathered in the cold air and fell into place more perfectly than Janet
could have managed with a blow dryer and a comb. Janet stomped her feet
in her boots and walked forward, leaving the Unitek executive behind.
The man in the
corduroy overcoat turned as she slipped between the scattered tourists
and came up to him. Wan winter light sparkled on transparent spangles
as his shoulders hunched under tan cloth; the greatcoat might be
trendy, and heated, but it wasn't doing anything about the wind. He
dragged a hand out of his pocket and offered it to Janet. She took it
without removing her glove, offering enough of a squeeze to let him
know she came as an ally rather than a supplicant.
America's population
drift had gone the opposite way of Canada's: there were just more men
in Janet's age group in America. Unfortunately, a lot of them had been
raised during the Christian Fascist era, and had somewhat distasteful
ideas about the role of women, in and outside the home. She read those
ideas in the sloppiness of his handclasp, in the condescending
glossiness of his gaze. She was unimpressed.
“Dr. Allman sent
you,” she said, extracting her hand from his fishy grip, glad of her
fur-lined leather gloves.
“Sent me?” The smile
was as patronizing as the rest of his expressions. “That makes me sound
like an errand-boy, General.”
Aren't you?Her lips didn't move,
but it came out in the lift of her eyebrows and her chin. He cleared
his throat as she brushed past him, on her way to the wall. She could
make out a dark blue-green wedge of the UN Secretariat on the Lower
East Side, a slight glimpse of color between taller, newer buildings.
The view
was
breathtaking.
Literally: the wind ripped her words from her lips as soon as she said
them, hurling them into the gray, airy gulf spread out below. It wasn't
as windy as the CN Tower observation platform had been; she never quite
had the feeling that invisible hands were about to drag her off her
feet and loft her into space, but the cold burned her cheeks and peeled
her lips and she was grateful for the warmth of her heated coat and
gloves. “Do you have something for me?”
He had to lean
forward and strain to hear her. She didn't turn her head to make it any
easier. He nodded and swallowed, ducking his chin behind the collar of
his coat.
Janet turned her hand
palm up without raising it above the level of her waist, and he handed
her a gray plastic data carrier that felt like it had a couple of
modules clipped inside. “Dr. Allman says you'll know what to do with
those. He also says the first one is only viewable once, and will only
play on an encoded HCD. The second one is the supplemental documents.”
“Mmm.” She slipped
the carrier into her pocket and leaned harder on the wall. The stone
pressed a heating element in her coat against her belly, warming her
uncomfortably. She shifted back, straight-armed, leaning hard, and
cleared her throat. Her nose was starting to drip with the cold. And it's only
October. What's it going to be like in January? “Please do return my
regards to the vice president.”
“General Shijie also
sends his regards, and looks forward to an increased spirit of
cooperation between our three countries—”
“Our three
countries.” She tried to laugh; it came out a harsh, chuffing cough.
“What benefits Vancouver benefits New Washington, I take it? And vice
versa?”
“We used to think so.
Wouldn't you like to see the border unguarded again?”
“I'm barely old
enough to remember when it was unguarded the last time,” she said.
“Those fortifications have been there since the turn of the century, to
greater or lesser degrees. I'm not inclined to believe that the U.S. is
scurrying around under the table, brokering peace between PanChina and
the commonwealth, without a certain degree of self-interest involved.”
“It advances us on
the world stage,” the man in the corduroy coat said with a shrug. He
rubbed his hands together. “General Shijie is a reasonable man, and
he's horrified by the actions of his government with regard to yours.
He wishes to see a spirit of international cooperation reborn, and the
United States stands to benefit from détente—in both economic
and political spheres.”
“The rats are turning
on each other, you mean.”
The man in the
corduroy coat laughed softly. “Our government—and Dr. Allman—has the
greatest faith in General Shijie's integrity.”
“And look where faith
has gotten the USA so far.”
“That was uncalled
for.”
She lifted her chin
and angled a glance across the bridge of her nose. “I'm a politician,”
she said. “I can recognize an unsubtle insult when I deliver one.
What's on the data slices?”
“There's some
documentation that will impeach MWO Casey's credibility as a witness
fairly nicely. She has a juvenile record that was sealed when she
turned eighteen.”
“And? How are we
going to explain away the documentation they've entered into the
record? Captain Wu is prepared to testify that those orders are exact
copies of the orders he received and destroyed. And Minister Shijie's
signature is on them. Their provenance has been validated; the
electronic postmarks are supposed to be impossible to fake. We'll have
to buck fifty years of precedent to say otherwise.”
“The signature was
forged by elements in the PanChinese government who have no love for
General Shijie,” the man said without looking at her. “Elements that
are in favor of expansion at the price of peace. The same elements that
urged the PanChinese invasion of Siberia last year—”
“Xiong.”
“You said it. I did
not.” Silence for a moment, and then he cleared his throat. His
fingertips rubbed absently at the stone of the wall in front of them,
fingers arching and pulling inside his gloves as if he were trying to
wear away a stain.
“So how do we explain
away Dr. Holmes's possession of those documents, if she was not in
collusion with the Chinese?”
“I would have thought
Mr. Hardy would have explained this.” The man glanced over his
shoulder. Janet followed the look: the observation deck was still not
overly crowded, and she could see Toby's camel-hair coat fifteen or
twenty yards down the wall. He was looking the other way.
“Perhaps he thought I
should hear it from a neutral party.”
“Mmm. Perhaps.”
She almost reached
out and grabbed his wrists to stop him rubbing his palms together. As subtle as Lady
Macbeth
. “Tell me.”
“She received the
documentation, along with certain other communications, from General
Shijie himself. The minister had opposed the plan, found it . . .
dishonorable, and did not wish to be remembered as a genocide. Unable
to contact Prime Minister Riel directly, he used Dr. Holmes as a
go-between.”
The corners of
Janet's mouth lifted. “And Connie, with her well-known opposition to
the star travel program, dismissed Holmes's concerns as . . . as
grandstanding, as a desperate attempt to generate support for the Montreal .”
“Precisely. At which
point Dr. Holmes went to her superior, Mr. Hardy, who contacted
yourself. Unfortunately—”
“The delay cost
everything,” Janet said, nodding. She stepped back and leaned her hip
on the gritty wall, unperturbed by the streak it left on her coat. “And
Connie is trying to cover up her incompetence by pretending she was not
warned in advance.”
“Exactly. Conspiracy
theories are a cottage industry. There are always rumors that the
powers-that-be knew in advance. Mumbai, Coventry, Pearl Harbor.” His
left hand rose, swooped, hovered in midair.
She followed the line
of his point, the lower Manhattan skyline, and nodded. She didn't look
long, but lowered her head, pushed her scarf aside, and scratched her
cheek with a gloved thumb. “I remember. I was five years old. There are
always rumors, you're correct. What about what Wu has to offer, and
Xie? What about Casey?”
“Once her credibility
is impeached, your testimony—and Mr. Hardy's—will make the difference.
Casey, of course, couldn't have known any of this skullduggery. Nothing
you say will contradict anything she has to offer. And General Shijie's
testimony will correspond with yours. The only people who will appear
to have perjured themselves will be Valens and Riel.”
“That's dastardly.”
“Thank you.” Without
taking his eyes from the New York skyline, lower Manhattan and the Dike
spread out behind it like a long frozen line.
“It wasn't a
compliment.”
He gave her a smile,
then, a thin one. His lower lip cracked when he did it, but not enough
to bleed. “I know.”
She turned and walked
away without shaking his hand in farewell. Her shoes rasped on cement.
Toby was watching the skyline of the lower West Side through one of the
viewfinders. She put her hand on his elbow as she came up behind him.
He didn't jump.
“Spooks,” she said.
“I really hate those guys.”
“Did you get what you
needed?”
“I got what you were
promised.” She moved toward the doors to the interior observation deck,
the wind tugging the hem of her coat. “It's cold out here. Let's go the
hell home.”
Thursday 11
October, 2063
Whole-Earth
Benefactor nanonetwork (worldwire)
16:13:13:31–16:13:29:43
Richard was watching
the baseball game.
It wasn't all he was
doing—his usual subroutines and his responses to the developing
climatic disaster consumed something in excess of 95 percent of his
processing power, and he was having three other simultaneous
conversations. All in all, the balancing act was considerably more
challenging than higher math on strip-club cocktail napkins. On the
other hand, he hadn't had this much fun since he was fooling
overperfumed women into believing he could perceive via extrasensory
perception which volume from a shelf of books they had leafed through.
It was starting to
look like he might be able to get the North Atlantic conveyor restarted
after all, through micromanipulations of ocean salinity levels and a
certain amount of sheer brute force. The atmospheric issues might prove
a bigger problem: ozone damage, global dimming, global carbon dioxide
increase, and a thousand other variables he hadn't even begun to sort
out accurately yet.
But that was chronic,
not acute.
He had more immediate
problems. Not including the fact that the Red Sox were losing seven to
four.
Jen didn't need him
just now; his eavesdropping was a matter of insatiable curiosity
combined with the desire to be on hand if she did require assistance,
or simply an obscure fact. “. . . a decision was made in the wake of
the attack—” her chin lifted, her mismatched hands resting lightly on
the sides of the podium. “—to exact no retribution upon the PanChinese
. . .”
Nice use of the
passive voice, Jen.She didn't answer in words, but he
felt her amusement. He backgrounded the process and divided his focus
between the laboratory—where Gabe was conducting a postmortem on yet
another batch of nanite victims of
sudden-biomechanical-autism-syndrome—and the captain's office. Richard
and Leslie rode behind Charlie's eyes as he and Elspeth entered
Wainwright's domain shoulder-to-shoulder, trying not to look like they
came expecting— spoiling for—a fight.
Wainwright wasn't
behind her desk; she stood close to the holomonitor that showed the
gangling hull of the Montreal spilled out across space, the unholy
miscegenation of Tinker Toys and an Erector set. Her hands were clasped
behind her back, her dark hair freshly trimmed and bound into a club at
the nape of her neck with a tidy but strictly nonregulation nacreous
gray ribbon. She turned and caught Elspeth's eye, then very carefully
looked from the contact team leader to Charlie. “Absolutely not,” she
said, before Charlie could open his mouth. “You're not impressed enough
with what the Benefactors—if I may use the term loosely—did to you and
Leslie the last time we went out there?”
Richard smiled to
himself. He liked Wainwright. And she had said we . That was ground to
build on.
Meanwhile, in the
hydroponics lab, Gabe swiveled his chair back. Richard watched as Gabe
lifted his head from the eyepiece of the virtual magnifying device he
was using to examine yet another noncommunicating nanite, and snorted
exasperation. “Dick, if I didn't know better, I'd say these critters
were suffering under a denial-of-service attack.”
Richard relayed the
comment to Charlie. Spiked? Charlie asked, his eyes wide behind
spectacles he no longer needed.
“No, just choking on
static, I expect,” Richard said—out loud, for Gabriel's benefit. “Am I
right?”
“It's a little more
interesting than that, Dick—”
“We're not here about
Leslie,” Charlie said to Wainwright. “We're here about the shiptree.
And our mandate.”
Wainwright squared
her interface plate on her desk.
“I will go to the
prime minister if I have to.” Elspeth folded her hands over her biceps
in a position Richard translated to trouble for somebody . “I hope I don't
need to remind you that the Montreal is detailed primarily
to the first contact project.”
If Richard were a
real boy, he'd steal Ellie from Castaign in a minute, Gabe's charm
notwithstanding.
“She's also my ship,
and you are my crew.” Wainwright kept her voice level. “I won't risk
either unnecessarily—”
“—specifically,” Gabe
continued, “the circuits aren't just fused or fried, the way I'd expect
if there were a malfunction or a power surge or what have you. Remember
what we tried to do to the Benefactor vectors to get back Les and
Charlie?”
“Of course. Flash
them. That's what I did to Min-xue, more or less, to get him on our
network.”
“The programming
hasn't been changed. Which is reassuring, since we couldn't manage that
with the birdcage nanites.”
Richard considered,
relaying. Charlie got there amazingly fast, for a carbon-based
intelligence, and Dick decided to let him have it. It did make them
happy to beat the machine. Could we do it to a
Chinese-programmed network? Charlie asked.
“If we knew their
security codes, we could.”
“Change all the
codes,” Richard said.
Gabe stood. “I'm on
it, Dick, but it will take awhile—”
“—and what if I said
it was a necessary risk, Captain?” Elspeth met Wainwright's irritated
gaze and did not look down.
“Over my protest,”
Wainwright started, but Charlie cleared his throat, and she stopped,
and looked at him.
Silently, he held out
his hand. “Captain, it did work.”
The captain's mouth
compressed. She stared at Charlie, putting her back to the bulkhead,
braced as if the deck were pitching under her feet. “At what cost? You
tell me—”
“No cost,” he said,
“if you'd let us go get Leslie back.”
Richard knew what
Leslie wanted, as surely as if Richard were Leslie's hand, his finger,
his thumb. It took no effort at all for Dick to reach out and flip the
image on the screen behind Elspeth and Charlie to a panoramic shot of
the
Montreal, the Huang Di, and the birdcage ship
hanging in fixed geometry above a cloud-swirled crescent Earth. The
picture was from Piper Orbital Platform; another view from Forward
showed the shiptree, in higher orbit, sliding past. Richard plastered
that one on the second largest monitor. On the one that normally held
Wainwright's refrigerator-drawing view of the Montreal, he offered the
present view from Clarke; a very nearly full and sunlit Earth.
“Captain,” Elspeth
said calmly, unfolding her arms. “Have you thought about the potential
costs if we fail?”
And Wainwright
swallowed and looked down. “I'm not authorizing anything unless the
prime minister says so,” she said. And then she looked up, fixed
Elspeth with a cool, crinkled stare, and smiled coldly. “And don't
presume you understand my personal leanings in this matter, Dr.
Dunsany. Or in the matter of Dr. Tjakamarra. Some of us do draw a line around
our personal feelings when we pull our pants on in the morning.”
“Ma'am,” Elspeth
said, after a few moments. “I'll message the prime minister at once.”
By the fourth day of
testimony, there's a small child in the back of my head whining over
and over again I wish I wish I wish I wish Gabe and Ellie were here I
wanna go home I don't want to answer any more questions
waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah . Goddamn.
Can't you shut that
kid up, Jenny?
I mean, I'm good at
this. I know I'm good at this. It's not even exactly testimony,
although everybody calls it that. And it's not speechifying either;
mostly, I stand up there behind the podium and field questions for hour
after hour after hour. They seem to have some sort of a protocol worked
out, too, where it's the big dogs—the permanent security council
members—who get to ask things when they want, and the representatives
of other nations pass notes or tap shoulders or send e-mail and get
whoever they're tributary to or sending aid to or receiving aid from to
ask their questions. It's an elegant demonstration of patronage, if you
squint at it right. My Grandpa Zeke would have approved.
But sweet Mary Mother
of God I am so goddamned tired. Would it kill them, you think, to give
me a chair?
Besides, this is the
day when I'm going to have to talk about the things I'd rather pretend
never happened. So standing up there, facing that enormous seashell
room packed with delegates from 213 nations and five supranations, is
something more than just an exercise in stage fright. It's like
exhuming Leah's grave.
It's the only grave
she's going to get, because her body never made it down. She's part of
the planet now. Part of the atmosphere. I push her in and out with
every breath, since I came home. Her, and Trevor Koske, too.
At least Koske had
the decency to do what I couldn't, and die with her. I wouldn't have
thought he had it in him.
It's a little
disconcerting to think about, nonetheless.
Especially when I'm
in the middle of explaining to a room full of politicians why she had
to die, and how her death—her sacrifice—resulted in the worldwide
contamination of the oceans with Benefactor nanotech. And how it's
spreading to people and plants and topsoil and little terrier dogs all
over the world.
And how, no, really,
it seemed like a good idea at the time.
I was smart enough to
bring a handkerchief.
A thin Asian man in a
narrow mahogany-colored suit leans forward on his elbows as I reach for
a drink, waiting for the next question. I've lost track, but he's
somebody in the PanChinese delegation. A shark, I think. Not an
interpreter, because the UN handles that itself; there are a few dozen
people in the glass-walled booths over our heads providing simultaneous
translation on multiple-language channels, and I can access any one of
them on my ear clip with a glance at a menu. I'm listening in French,
because the interpreter has a sexy dark-chocolate voice and I like his
Parisian accent better than the harsh midwestern drawl of the
Chinese-to-English translator—who is getting a workout today.
Anyway. The shark
says, in Chinese—whatever dialect they're using—and the interpreter
says in French: “And you expect us to believe that the government of
Canada has no intentions of using this tech as a weapon, when it's
already responsible for the infection of millions, and the death or
injury of thousands?”
He catches me with my
water glass in my metal hand, just tilted to my lips. I couldn't have planned the snarf better;
titters and at least one guffaw from my stodgy audience of diplomats
attest to the perfection of my comedic timing.
At least it goes in
the glass, and not all over my uniform. “The infection of, and the
death or injury of, Canadians, sir. Canadians who were in desperate
need of medical assistance in the wake of the attack upon Toronto.”
Valens spent hours drilling me not to say Chinese attack . Or terrorist attack, for that matter.
Apparently the official explanation of who kicked whom in the balls is
still a matter for high-level negotiation.
Which is why I'm
surprised. I'd thought these particular questions would be reserved for
Fred. Or Riel. But what the hell.
“American citizens
were affected as well.”
“Because American
cities were affected by the attack. No one who was not ill or injured
has been subjected to the treatment, sir, to the best of my knowledge.”
I switch to English to answer this question, because it's the American
shark talking, or maybe the American shark's diplomat boss. There's too
damned many of them to keep track of. Or did I say that already?
The American is a
round-faced Latina in her fifties, in a suit just the right bluish
shade of power red to remind me uncomfortably of Alberta Holmes. She
shields her mouth with her hand as she confers with her boss, or her
lawyer. She leans back in her chair and steeples her hands in front of
her, her knuckles furled tight as her brow. “Of course, the USA would
have been less significantly affected, by your own testimony, if you
and the
Montreal
had not diverted the
projectile from its course.”
Valens is seated in a
chair off to my left, which means I can see him moving in the periphery
of my prosthetic eye's vision much more clearly than I could on the
right-hand side. Better than the real thing. I don't know why everybody
doesn't run right out and buy a set, frankly.
Fred leans forward,
his eyes on me rather than the American. Fortunately, I have the podium
to hold on to. And I really do have better control of my temper than
Fred thinks I do. I mean, okay, I broke his shoulder back in the
thirties. But he deserved it then, and I'm sure as hell not going to
feel bad about it now.
Dick? What do I
say to that steaming pile of horseshit?
“You could just stand
there with your mouth open and blink at her as if she's out of her
mind.”
Got that covered
already, thanks.
“Just be yourself.
You're under oath, after all.”
Gee. Thanks.I make sure my mouth
is closed, and turn away for a moment to collect myself. A functionary
brings me a fresh glass of water. Perfect timing, and a perfect excuse.
“Ma'am—” I try to steal a discreet peek at her nameplate, but she's
pushed her HCD against the back of it and angled it away. I bet she did
that on purpose, too. She's got a mean glitter in her eye. I take a
breath and get the outrage out of my voice and a dry kind of mockery
that served me well as a drill instructor in. “Ma'am, are you
suggesting that it would have been a more prudent course of action not to attempt to prevent
a ten-hundred-ton nickel-iron asteroid from slamming into Lake Ontario?”
It's not just titters
this time. Somebody in the African section is roaring with laughter,
and I see the Mexican delegates eye each other and grin. Yeah, nobody
likes the Americans: not even their next-door neighbors.
I wonder if it really
used to be different, when the border was unguarded, or if that's just
more cheerful propaganda. History's not my strong point, except the
bits I've lived through, but I do remember the jokes from my childhood
about how Canada wouldn't let the northern U.S. states join during the
famine because of the expense of putting French on all their road
signs. Of course, Maman also claimed that the reason Quebec never
seceded was the expense of taking all the English off . I suspect she may
have been pulling our legs.
I didn't get my sense
of humor from my father, that's for sure. “In any case, my point
stands, ma'am. Sir.”—with a nod to the Chinese representative in the
brown suit, who is leaning forward again—“With all due respect, the
Benefactor tech is not weaponized. There is to the best of my knowledge
no intent to weaponize it, on Canada's side—”
Valens is on to me.
He's shooting me that look, the one that means shut up while your
tongue's still in your head, Casey. I ignore him, of course, blithe
spirit that I am.
“—and in point of
fact, the nanite infestation is not under Canadian authority.”
Dead silence, then,
so quiet that I can hear the click of plastic as the American's fingers
trigger the holographic keypad of her hip. I could almost swear I can
hear the whisper of cloth as one of the guys at the Canadian table
closes his eyes and leans back in his chair.
“Would you care to
expand on that, Master Warrant Officer?”
The look on Fred's
face promises me a stretching on the rack and possibly a slow roasting
over coals, but Richard's amused pleasure in the back of my head means
more. In any case, all this skullduggery and manipulation works two
ways. And if Riel wants an excuse for an effective world government,
and a common concern and worry . . . well, Dick's big enough to give it
to her. And scary enough to keep everybody busy for quite awhile, at
least until a generation grows up that doesn't know how to live without
him.
“It's controlled by
the artificial intelligence known, somewhat inaccurately, as the
Feynman AI.”
“Which is a Canadian
construct.”
“He's not a subject
of the commonwealth, sir.”
Silence. Longer, this
time, and it's the tall, mop-haired Russian delegate who straightens
his spine and speaks. “Then what are his affiliations? Who owns that
machine?”
It's all I can do to
keep the grin off the corners of my lips. “He's self-determined, sir.
And as for his loyalties—I wouldn't care to speculate. I would suggest
that you ask him yourself. He's prepared to testify under oath.”
Three beats before
the uproar: I know because I'm counting. It washes over me like surf.
It sounds like surf, rising and falling, so many voices they amount to
white noise. It breaks around the podium, the beautiful acoustics of
the assembly hall amplifying and echoing every voice.
I'm absolutely
unprepared, once order is restored, for the Chinese delegate to give me
that smug little smile across twenty meters of open space and say, “On
a more immediate note, Master Warrant Officer. Perhaps we could discuss
the matter of your criminal record now?”
Gabriel Jean-Marie
Benoit François Castaign was getting just a little tired of this particular bête noire.
Specifically, the one where he—with all his brains and all his brawn,
fifteen years and a captain's commission in the Canadian Army, unarmed
combat and firearms instructor certification, two master's degrees and
five languages and eleven years of practical experience as a single
parent—was left powerless, sitting on his middle-aged ass while a woman
he loved faced dragons he couldn't do a damned thing about.
The blankets were
wrinkled and sweaty. His jumpsuit was carving creases in his skin. And
he leaned forward on the edge of his bunk, his eyes locked on the
real-time holofeed that Richard was projecting over his interface, and
cursed. He knew how to do it by now, how to watch and love and feel
them slip out of his hands like so many fistfuls of feathers, lifted on
a gentle breeze. He knew how to grant them the dignity of not looking
down, and not looking away from the pain. He knew how to lend strength
when he couldn't do the fighting himself.
He'd done it for his
wife, Geniveve, and after he'd buried her he'd done it for Genie when
Genie was dying by centimeters from cystic fibrosis. He hadn't done it
when Leah sailed the Calgary into Earth's atmosphere with the
brittle unholy courage that only an adolescent could muster— C'est la raison
que
nous les envoyons pour mourir dans la guerre, dans le cas òu tu
ne le savais pas—because Gabe couldn't reach Leah. But Jenny could, and Jenny
had stood in his place, and Gabe had been there for Jen. As he'd done
it before, again, and again, and again.
But, he was tired of
it. He said it to himself, sitting motionless on the edge of his bunk,
his feet dangling, the cold metal edge of the rack cutting the backs of
his thighs and his hands clenching and unclenching on the blankets. He
thought it as he leaned forward and watched Jenny answer those invasive
questions with dignity and aplomb that he knew had to be borrowed at
loanshark rates against that night, against tomorrow.
Je suis
fatigué lui.
He needed to be
there. Even without the ability to stand beside her on that stage and
squeeze her hand behind the podium, he needed to be in the room. Jenny
was a professional; she was cool, and collected, and gracious: the
picture of a warrior who has lived long enough to learn both honor and
its price.
The Chinese fils de putain was coming after her
like a mangy feral dog, and no matter how well she was handling it,
Gabriel would have liked to wring his neck instead of the dark wool
blankets. “I understand,” the man in the mahogany suit said, “that
there are arrests for prostitution and possession of drugs that are not
mentioned in your military records. Would you care to explain why those
records were purged?”
The speaker kept
leaning over to confer with a jowly middle-aged man in a Chinese
uniform.
That
must be General Shijie.
He just wished he
could be there. Where she could see him. Where she could see his eyes.
But she was thirty-five thousand vertical kilometers away, and he was
helpless again.
You cannot save
them, Gabriel. Sometimes you cannot even hold their hands.
Like Leah. God have
mercy on his soul.
Jenny, in the
projection, lifted her chin. Gabriel knew that look, knew the way it
stretched her long neck above her collar. Knew the arrogant sparkle in
her eyes, and knew how much it cost her to keep it there. “Not purged,
sir. Sealed. Those incidents occurred while I was a juvenile, under
Canadian law, and they are not considered part of my permanent criminal
record. Which, I might add, is clean—”
Someone tapped on the
hatchway. Gabe startled, torn between relief and irritation, and shoved
himself off the bed. He forgot to duck again. “Turn that off please,
Dick?”
“It's Genie,” the AI
answered, as the display obediently flickered out. Gabe closed his eyes
and calmed his breathing, pressing his dinged forehead with the back of
his hand.
Then he went and
opened the door.
Calisse de chrisse,she looked like her
mother. Not as much as Leah had, but the same huge eyes, straight nose,
the honey-blond hair that looked as soft as silk until you got your
hands into it and then turned out to be wild, electric, alive. And her
eyes were as big as churchbells, and her hands were twined together,
shaking.
“You saw the news,”
he said. He didn't move aside and let her in, although it was ship
drill; you never stood in an open doorway like a rubbernecker and jawed
with somebody on the other side. It wasn't safe. He glanced over his
shoulder, and the condemning silence of the interface, the feed he
wasn't watching. He wasn't there for Jenny, and there was no way he
could be.
And he didn't know
what to do with Genie anymore. It had always been him being big for
Leah and Leah being big for Genie, and now Leah was gone, a hole in the
middle of their family like trying to make a sandwich out of two plain
slices of dry white bread. There was nothing to hold them together.
“Is it true, what
they said?”
He looked her in the
eye and pursed his lips, and closed his eyes, and turned aside for a
second to collect his thoughts. When he looked again, ready to ask
Genie the question he didn't have an answer to himself— She's still your
Aunt Jenny. Does it matter if it is?—when he turned his head back and
opened his eyes and looked at the hatchway, his daughter was gone.
He straightened up
and knotted both hands in his mop of hair and cursed in three
languages, two of them French.
Coward. Lache.
Enfouaré.
He only remembered to
dog the hatch behind him because Richard yelled at him before he got
too far down the corridor.
Genie made a good job
of vanishing. He looked for forty minutes before it occurred to him to
ask Richard for help. He wasn't particularly surprised when Richard
hacked his contact and ear clip for a private conversation, shrugged,
and said, “She asked me not to tell you. She said she wanted to be
invisible.”
“Do you make a habit
of concealing wayward teenagers from their possibly stupid but
well-meaning parents?” Gabe leaned against the corridor bulkhead,
making sure he was between pressure doors, and took a moment to think,
and breathe.
“I'm trying to avoid
situational ethics,” Richard answered. “I'm stuck with omniscience, but
I don't want to develop a reputation as a jealous god. Or a meddling
one.”
“You've been meddling
all along, Dick.”
Gabe wasn't quite
prepared for the long silence before Richard answered, “I know.” The AI
shook his head and rubbed his palms together, a frown creasing his
forehead. “The ethics are getting complicated. In any case, I'll be
happy to tell Genie you're looking for her. Where shall I tell her
you'll be?”
“Is Charlie in the
hydroponics labs?”
“No, he's in the
larger observation lounge. Snoring. All the greenhouses are empty
except Center-13.”
“Tell her I'll be in
Charlie's main lab, s'il te plais.”
He didn't think he
was imagining the warmth in Richard's voice when Richard answered, “It
will be my pleasure, Gabriel.”
The smell of growing
things eased his headache, and even spinning sunlight was sunlight, and
full-spectrum lighting was a kind relief after the energy-saving
flourescence that gave the pilots screaming conniptions and lit most of
the
Montreal
's cabins and
corridors in a pale minty green. Gabe found himself walking slowly up
and down the aisles between the Plexiglas tanks, running his fingers
over the broad leaves of soybeans and breathing deeply, as if the
oxygen they emitted could ease his throbbing temples by being absorbed
through the skin. He'd forgotten even to grab his ship-shoes when he
ran into the corridor after Genie. The floor's absorbent nonskid
matting was tacky and slightly springy under his bare feet.
He turned when the
hatch swung open, but it wasn't Genie. Instead, Elspeth picked one foot
up high, stepped over the knee knocker with a grace that belied her
round little frame, and dogged the hatch tight behind her. “Gabe?”
He frowned and folded
his arms. “Of course she went to you. I should have known that without
being told.”
Elspeth's lips
worked, but she held her peace as she came up the line of beans and
cabbages and mustard plants, brushing aside the sunshine-yellow sprays
of the latter's flowers. She stood in front of him, foursquare, and
looked all the way up, glowering. “What did you say to that child,
Gabe?”
“Why am I the bad guy? I barely
had time to get a word out!”
She took a half-step
back and her arms unfolded, her palms rubbing the thighs of her
jumpsuit. “I'm sorry,” she said. “I shouldn't have jumped to
conclusions. I just—” She shrugged. “That was unprofessional of me. I'm
sorry.”
The sharp retort was
automatic. He bit it back. He was an adult, and so was she, and they
had better things to do than play games or try to get a rise out of
each other. Besides, he wasn't sure he'd ever seen Elspeth Dunsany lose
her temper, and the sight—and the reason for her wrath—provoked a soft,
warm glow under his breastbone. “Ellie,” he said, and unfolded the arms
he'd pulled around himself like a barrier, “I should be upset because
you care enough about my kid to yell at me for her?”
She stared at his
outstretched hands, feline in her suspicion. And then she shrugged, and
stepped inside their reach. “It sounds pretty silly, when you put it
like that.”
He shivered; she felt
brittle in his arms—not the flesh, but the spirit. “How about you? Are
you all right?”
“Hard to tell when
I'm taking my meds.” A weak attempt at a joke. She curled closer. He
rested his chin on her head.
“It'll all be over
soon,” he said, and felt her nod.
“One way or another.”
Another sigh, a bigger one. “Are you going to talk to Genie?”
“I've only been
looking for her for the past hour and a half. What did you tell her?”
“Probably exactly
what you're going to tell her. That what happened to Jenny is Jenny's
story to tell, and you shouldn't judge other people's character by what
you hear in gossip, or—especially—on the news. Have you been watching?”
“I can't stand to.”
She was warm and soft, a teddy bear for grown-up boys. His heart slowed
as he held her, the ache in his head and neck easing as he buried his
nose in her hair. “How do you manage to smell of gardenias using air
force soap?”
“A mystical talent,”
she answered. “It's closely tied in with feminine wiles, but far more
secret.”
“You got the
gardeners to let you take some of the flowers?”
“Exactly.” She turned
in his arms and tossed her head back on his shoulder. “I can't get
anything past you. If I tell you where Genie is? . . .”
“You're a ferocious
nag, you realize. And yes, of course I'll go talk to her. Where is she?”
“I left her down in
the Contact office talking with Leslie via Richard. He—showed up? What
do you call it? Checked in?—after I'd spent half an hour trying to pry
out of her why she was so upset. She's got Boris with her. Why that cat
puts up with being manhandled around the ship by that girl—”
“All right,” he said.
“I'll go down now.”
He heard laughter
before he even undogged the hatch, Leslie and Genie giggling together.
He would have lifted his hand from the cool metal wheel and stepped
back, but he knew already the look he'd see in Elspeth's eyes if he
did. So he knocked.
Genie came to open
the hatch, but didn't look up. A projected image of Leslie hung over
the interface plate on his own desk, downsized the same way Richard
usually was. The image met Gabe's eyes, a wry smile playing around the
lined corners of its mouth, so real Gabe almost forgot there wasn't a
person on the other end of the projection. Leslie's iron-colored hair
was rumpled as if he'd been running his hands through it, and his eyes
glittered a little too bright. Gabe could see Genie behind him, curled
up on top of the worktable crosslegged. Boris the cat was watching
holo-Leslie as if guarding a rabbit hole.
Guilt was written all
over Leslie's face, and Gabe shook his head and lowered his voice. “Son
of a bitch,” he said, too softly for Genie to hear him. “Richard sent
you down here, didn't he?”
“Does it matter if he
did?”
Gabe laughed at the
echo of his own thoughts. Genie looked up, startled at the sound, and
he smiled at her over Leslie's translucent shoulder, and his heart
stuttered painfully in his chest. Dammit, Dick. Why Les and not me?
She didn't just look
like her mother. Calisse de chrisse. She looked like Leah, tall and blond, with
that straight nose in profile and the high forehead and the pin-sharp
chin. And that was the sore she wore on his heart, of course. She
looked like Leah, and she wasn't Leah, and he would never have Leah
again. He looked away quickly, before she could see the sparkle in his
eyes, and found himself staring directly at Leslie. He sniffled. He
couldn't help it.
And Leslie offered
him a weary shrug and a worldly smile. “Do you know what a beginner
story is, Gabriel?”
It took a moment for
him to fit the words together in the shape of a sentence. He had to
take them apart a couple of times and start over, and once he had them
assembled, he had to stop and run them through his brain a couple of
times to see if they made sense. “No?”
“It's a simple story
that's still true, but doesn't have all the truth of the sort of
complex story you might learn later, if you keep studying a subject.”
“A child's version.”
“A beginner's version.”
He thought about it.
He looked at Leslie, and looked up at Genie again, and tried not to see
her as Leah. Tried not to hear Leah's name in his head as he studied
her profile.
She wasn't looking at
him, as if his quick flinch away had cut her, and she was waiting to
see if he would come back and cut her again. Wasn't it supposed to get
easier as they grew up?
She's not my
little girl anymore.Except she was; she was growing into a
grown daughter, the one that Leah had almost reached, the one Leah had
grasped in the short, too-adult minutes before she died. But she was
also, and still, Genie.
He could do this.
Hell, he had to do it, whether he could or not. He realized something,
and smiled. Because here, after all, was one of his women for whom he
could be there when she needed him. “Beginner stories?”
“Beginner stories,”
Les confirmed.
Gabe rolled his
shoulders and stepped inside the hatch. He really had to get out of the
habit of talking through them, before it got somebody killed. “Okay. I
think I can handle that.”
Leslie winked before
he derezzed, flickering out.
It was the height of
cowardice for Min-xue to stand and leave the table when General
Shijie's hound started harrying Casey. And not even cowardice on her
behalf. No, as he excused himself and picked his way up the long
shallow flight of steps toward the doors at the back of the
amphitheater, he couldn't claim empathy as the source of his distress.
He was picturing himself behind that podium, and he didn't like it. At
all.
The men's room
closest to the General Assembly would be uncomfortably crowded, even
midtestimony, but there was another one around the corner, out of the
way. And Min-xue, frankly, had had enough of people for the moment. He
made his way through the air-curtains and an S-curved hallway, pausing
just inside to see if anybody else was present. The echoing tiled room
seemed deserted, the low hum of ventilation the only sound. Min-xue
selected the urinal in the farthest corner and settled in, trying to
blank his mind.
Fluorescent overhead
lights pulsed on ceramic and steel, the strobing effect near-blinding.
Min-xue closed his eyes against the flicker and composed himself with
poetry.
There
were tossing oceans for you to cross. / If you fell, there were dragons
in wild waters.
He could not have
failed to hear the door open, or the crispness of shoes on tile.
Someone made himself comfortable in the next bay; a curious choice when
the entire row was unoccupied. Min-xue finished, opened his eyes, and
stole a sideways glance—only to find his fellow bathroom occupant tidy
and tucked in, arms folded, standing with military aplomb.
Min-xue looked down
quickly and finished arranging his clothes. “General,” he said, and
made a little bow in lieu of offering his hand. Only afterward did he
raise his eyes to meet those of the minister of war, wondering at his
own ingrained politeness. If he'd thought about it, certainly, he never
would have made even that slight gesture of respect.
Shijie Shu was still
looking at him, arms crossed, eyes narrowed like a man who calculated
odds he did not like.
“Pilot Xie Min-xue,”
the general answered.
“How may I be of
service?”
It was refreshing to
speak Chinese, however quietly, and it amused him when the general's
eyebrows rose at what Min-xue had so carefully failed to offer; he'd
neither admitted honor at making Shijie Shu's acquaintance, nor actually placed himself in the
general's service. An inquiry was hardly a promise.
General Shijie
cleared his throat harshly and stepped away from the row of urinals
and, incidentally, Min-xue, who breathed a silent sigh of relief. He
did not like the minister of war standing close enough to touch.
“I believe you are a
very brave young man,” Shijie said, addressing the doors of the
off-white stalls lining the back wall. “A patriotic young man.”
Min-xue had begun
walking toward the sinks to wash his hands. He stopped and lifted his
chin to look the taller, broader man in the eye. “If you are going to
make an offer to buy me, General, I don't require flattery first.”
“You've been too long
among the Canadians.” The general's broad, trustworthy face bent
slightly around a frown. “I would not impugn your honor in that manner.
You notice I have come to speak to you in person—”
“In a toilet.”
“So be it. I have
been impressed with your integrity, Pilot Xie. Your resourcefulness.
Your honor.”
“Which you are about
to ask me to abrogate.” The water was cold. He plunged his hands in
without bothering to adjust it, scrubbed with gritty liquid soap, and
ran his hands under the faucet for longer than he needed to.
“I am asking you to
testify to things you know to be true,” the general said quietly. “The
Canadians' deceptions. Their manufactured truths. And what you yourself
witnessed on board the Huang Di : a captain taken to
drink—”
“Because of your
orders.” Shijie's eyes hung over Min-xue's shoulder when Min-xue looked
in the mirror.
“Are you certain they
were my orders?” Quietly, and Min-xue had no answer. The general let
the silence drag a little, and Min-xue pulled his hands out of the icy
water, ducked his head, and laved his face. “Pilot Xie—”
“General.”
“Consider for a
moment that we have many augments, pilots—and others. Unlike the
commonwealth. Consider for a moment that Canada may yet be forced to
return the
Huang
Di and
her crew, including you, to our care. That crew contains several other
augments, one higher ranking. It is logical to think that the Huang Di 's first pilot will
be promoted to a newer starship.”
Ah. There's the
bait. And it's rich enough to make the trap seem comfortable enough to
live in.“You
would promote me to first pilot of the Huang Di, if I testified as you
wish.” He straightened, let the water flow cease, and slicked his hair
out of his eyes with wet fingers and palms.
“Not as I wish.” The
gaze the general rested on Min-xue was calm and open, completely
guileless. “As will best serve China with your honesty. And not first
pilot.”
“What then?” But
Min-xue swallowed hard. He already knew.
“Captain Wu . . .”
The general hesitated delicately. “He will not serve aboard another
ship.”
Yes,Min-xue thought. You broke him and
now you cast him aside. He's served his purpose and may be replaced by
a new tool.
He pushed past
General Shijie, careful not to touch the other man. He was in the
corridor, hand on the heavy door that would take him back into the
General Assembly, when he looked from one stiff guard beside the
doorway to another, and realized exactly what it was that Shijie Shu
had just offered him.
Nothing less than the
captaincy of the Huang Di .
Leslie understood now
why the pilots fixated so hard on getting into that black leather chair
that dominated the bridge like the steel table dominates an operating
theater. He knew, because he could feel it—a fraction of it: Richard
and the limitless space he occupied.
It was . . . intoxicating . As if his senses
had enlarged. If he concentrated, he could feel the things that Richard
felt—the glorious confusion of moving water and atmosphere that the AI
was struggling to learn to model and control, like a swirling breeze on
Leslie's skin; and the angular body of the Montreal with its wings and
gears and the soft hum of electricity through its veins; and the
Benefactors spread across space. Charlie in his lab, and Richard's
gossamer touch spanning star systems. No body of his own, no hands, no
hope of ever feeling them again when he was honest with himself. Just a
dream, an endless dream of space.
He imagined it felt
the way a spider's web feels to the spinner, or a dolphin's sonar to
the cetacean. Or perhaps the way a winding road clung to the tires of a
sports car, the sensation of that contact almost seeming to extend to
the driver's skin.
The birdcage's alien
“map” of the sky, the distorted curves of space-time they felt as
plainly as a surfer running a tube felt the surge and power of the wave
under his board—Leslie could feel it, too, feel it the same way he'd
been able to feel what the land would look like from a few hummed bars
of song, once upon a time. It was intoxicating, amazing, as if the
boundaries had dropped away from his body and his senses, and he had
grown bigger than the skin he could no longer feel.
It wasn't all he
felt. Richard was also feeding him the news coverage and commentary on
the day's UN session, now that Jenny's testimony had ended. Information
as a fluid, wrapped around him even when he knew that he was wrapped
inside a skin of silver, floating in Earth orbit, and he was never
going home.
He couldn't afford to
think about that now. There was no guarantee that whatever the
Benefactors had done to preserve his consciousness would last from
moment to moment, and he wouldn't waste a moment of that time. He was
too busy exploring their sensations, translating their mind-maps into
something topographic, representative of space as his species perceived
it.
Dick, why can I
“feel” Charlie, and not Genie or Patricia?
“Or Min-xue or Jen?”
The AI smiled in his head. “It's because of the way the network is set
up. Jenny and the rest are implanted with individual control chips;
they're essentially small nanonetworks on their own. You and Charlie
are, as near as I can guess, partially on the Benefactor network. And
you're also on the worldwire. Controlled like all the nanotech on Earth
by the
Calgary
's processor core.”
How do you keep
that running at the bottom of the ocean?
“The nanosurgeons are
capable of mechanical construction as well as biological repair,”
Richard said. “They stay pretty busy. The Calgary wound up in shallow
water. If I can get the global conveyor belt working again and manage
the climate back to a compromise level, I might have them encourage the
local fauna to turn it into an artificial reef. The processor core and
the reactor are sealed. And tropical fish are nice.”
They are indeed. Leslie grinned
internally at the image of holo-Richard hovering in midocean like some
craggy Madonna of the Fishes, clownfish and Moorish idols nibbling
through the seaweedy strands of his hair. Leslie hummed silently, a
half-formed thought about who would sing the songs for the roads the
starships would travel teasing the edges of his mind. So, Dick, then why
not take it back to preindustrial levels?
“Even if I could, the world had almost
three hundred years of adaptation already when Captain Wu tossed that
rock at you.”
Because, of course,you aren't a
PanChinese
target in any way, Dr. Feynman AI.
“Technically
speaking, I'm not even a doctor.” But it came packaged with another
grin. “In any case, there's no point in throwing out the baby with the
arctic meltwater, so to speak. It would cause even more chaos to try to
reverse all the damage. And I'm not sure I can or want to. I'm not even
sure my global conveyor trick is going to work, and it's not going to
work quickly. Or without doing some additional damage—I'm up to my
virtual armpits in a system that's already in flux, and what I'm doing
is heedless and improvident.”
Leslie agreed,
musing. And then he suffered a thought that snapped him out of his
meditative state. Dick?
“Yes, Les?”
What's to stop the
Chinese from nuking theCalgary ?
Richard's pause was
pregnant, as he allowed Leslie to get there first. “In the final
analysis? There are a number of small inconveniences and inelegances to
an attack of that kind. But, overall, there's nothing to stop them.”
Just like there
was nothing to stop Toronto.
“Just like. Indeed.”
Would that kill
you?
“No.” Utterly
seamless, without the half-expected pause as if the AI was deciding how
much information to share. Which meant that Richard had already known
how he intended to answer that question, and didn't mind his human
friends twigging that he's planned it in advance. “I'm not centralized
anywhere, and while it would cost me a fragment of my capacity not to
have the
Calgary
processor to run on,
there's still the spare cycles of a googolplex or twelve nanomachines
scattered around the Milky Way. It would be a very bad thing for the
planet, however, for the worldwire to fail right about now—”
What you were
saying about unstable systems.
“Exactly. It'd be
like cutting the life support on a patient in surgery.”
Leslie started
humming again. Resonance buzzed in his ears. He stopped for a second,
hoping to catch the direction it came from. The sound wasn't repeated,
and a moment later, he realized he couldn't have heard a sound anyway.
Not physically. “Bugger.”
“What?”
Oh, I just thought
I heard an echo to my humming.
“Les—”
Leslie had a funny
feeling that he knew what Dick was going to say before he said it.
Which wasn't all that surprising, given that he seemed to have become
part of Richard's brain. Dick, I think the Benefactors were
singing to me.
Patty's got her back
to the door when I walk into the room. The door's unlocked and I know
Alan will tell her I'm coming long before I get there, so I don't
bother knocking. And she doesn't bother looking up. She's just sitting
still, her hair banded into a glossy mahogany snake the length of her
spine, her chin resting on the interlaced fingers of her hands. She
stares at a two-dimensional photograph in a clear plastic frame pierced
with flower cutouts. There are two people in it. The man looks like
Fred did when he was younger, only not as good looking, although you'd
never get me to admit that Fred Valens was a handsome man. The woman
has Patricia's hair.
“Patty?”
She sits back in her
chair, braces her fine-fingered hands on the edge of the table, and
stands. “I thought you did really well out there today, J-Jenny.”
My cheeks prickle
with the blush that must be creeping across them. I won't let her use
my title, and she gets all bashful and stares at the floor when she
tries to say my given name. Mother Mary, tell me the child
doesn't have a crush on me. “It was pretty bad.”
“It looked like it.
Are you coming to get me for supper?”
“Yeah. The prime
minister arrives tonight. Apparently she's decided she needs to keep a
closer eye on her lackeys, lest we turn out to have unknown weaknesses.”
“I guess I'd better
wear my good shoes, then.” She squats down and starts digging under the
bed. She finds one black loafer and one tennis shoe, and sighs, looking
up. “I'm such a flake. It's just not that big of a room!”
“Are they in the
closet?”
“You know, I bet they
are.” Gods, she sounds like a grown-up. She keeps a careful arm's
distance between us as she moves across the room, edging around me as
if I were a big dog of uncertain temperament, and I don't crowd her. It
must be my body language, or maybe she's just psychic, because she
breaks out in prickles every time I get close to her, and I really
think I'm doing an okay job of hiding the twist of breathlessness in my
chest.
On the other hand,
grown-ups always think they're better at hiding things from kids than
they are.
The other shoes are
in the closet. She picks out the loafers, and bends down in front of
the mirror to brush her hair. “I have to do that tomorrow.”
“I know.”
“Do they always . . .”
“Assassinate your
character? If they can.”
She nods, biting her
lip in the mirror, thinking about gloss and mascara. I let her; I don't
care if we're late to dinner. I can almost see her cataloguing her
sins, trying to decide if there are any skeletons in her closet. I want
to reassure her, and for a moment I have a grown-up's idiot confidence
that anybody so young must be secure in her innocence. I was younger
than she is when I did what I did, so really, it's not safe to assume.
“It must have been
hard surviving.” She puts the hairbrush down and does her face
efficiently.
“It was.” I never got
to have this conversation with Leah. For a moment, I'm seasick with
relief, and then I remember that Gabe and Elspeth are probably having
it right now, with Genie. Crap . “You do what you
have to do, you
know?”
“Yeah,” she says, and
stands up, ready faster than any seventeen-year-old girl has the right
to be. “I do. Any idea what's for dinner?”
A soft chime from her
interface draws our attention. A swirl of cool colors shot through with
silver materializes over the plate, reminding me of the sky before a
thunderstorm. “Patricia? Genevieve? If I may interrupt?”
It's Patty's room. I
look at her. “Sure, Alan,” she says, scuffing into her loafers,
toe-and-heel. “Is it a crisis?”
“No,” he says. “We
thought you'd both like to know that Dr. Tjakamarra's found a way to
communicate with the birdcages.”
Patty and I share a
look, and she nods that I should talk. She can probably read the
question in my eyes. “What is it? And didn't we already have a way to
talk to them?”
“Well, we had a
pathway for communication. Although, to be fair, we're still not
talking. We're playing music. But we're—Dr. Tjakamarra and Dr.
Fitzpatrick are building a lexicon of symbols and meanings. Writing a joint language,
rather than teaching them ours or us learning theirs.”
“That's huge progress,” Patty says.
“But it sounds like
it could take awhile. Why music?”
I can almost see him
shrug, the way the color ripples across his icon. “They started with
math. The two aren't unrelated.”
“And it took us this
long to think of music ?” Patty clears her throat, and when
I look at her I realize I've managed to make an idiot of myself again.
I finish lamely. “. . . and we didn't have a way to play them music
before that they'd hear.”
“It's a wonderful new
alien art form,” Alan says. “Translated for the first time, for
creatures with no ears.”
He nails me with it.
I had no idea Alan had a sense of humor, let alone a wit. The shock's
good for a guffaw, and then I settle down to a nice, long, loud laugh
that's total overkill for the funniness of the joke.
But, God, it's been a
long day.
Dinner is strained,
quickly finished. General Frye doesn't show up. Neither does Min-xue;
since Captain Wu isn't there and neither is his escort—that is to say,
guard—I assume Min-xue is eating with the captain in his room. It's
really too noisy down here for the Chinese pilot, anyway. His wiring's
wound tight enough to make mine look like a placeholder.
Riel keeps her eyes
on her plate and seems to find the china coffee cups an annoyingly
scant measure. She doesn't touch her wine. Fred pours Patty half a
glass, and Patty drinks it as if it's a duty, some grown-up ritual she
doesn't like or understand, but is willing to play along with. The
plates are barely off the table when she excuses herself to get ready
to testify. She doesn't even finish her dessert.
“Come on,” Riel says.
“Let's go to the lounge.” She makes a little business of pushing her
chair back from the table and smoothing the white linen tablecloth
afterward, pouring herself another scant cup of coffee from the carafe,
and lifting the translucent bone china cup and saucer to take with her.
Fred gestures me to
precede him. I wait, and notice it takes him a little more effort than
it should to get out of his chair.
He's moving like his
shoulder hurts. The cold's gotten into his bones. I remember what that
felt like.
It's been a long year
for the both of us. I don't ask and I don't wait for permission. I just
grab him by the elbow on my way past and hoist. It's always a shock
that he doesn't flinch away from my hand. He knows better than most
what I'm capable of doing with it. “Thanks. None of us are getting any
younger, are we?”
And then he grins,
lines forming across his perpetually flushed cheeks, because that's not
true—in some very odd ways, I am getting younger. And it's as much his
fault as my metal hand and my prosthetic eye and the fact that I'm
walking at all, let alone standing up straight and free of pain.
He doesn't take his
coffee cup and I don't take mine. I might just have a glass of brandy
later. “You're welcome, Fred.” I don't return his smile, and his
doesn't fade at all.
Yeah, we understand
each other.
The heavy cherrywood
door is barely shut behind us when Riel rounds on me. She's drawn like
a wire, plucked vibrating, thinner and hollower, and the strands of
steel in her bobbed dark hair are maturing into racing stripes. The
gray might even look good on her, but her olive skin's faded to sallow,
and she's curiously . . . displaced against the rich leather furniture
and patterned carpets and wallpaper. As if she were a hologram, or half
a step into another dimension.
She looks at me, and
her mouth works, and she sets her cup down on the sideboard without
looking. She shakes her head and says, “You could have warned me, Jen.”
“It's not the sort of
thing that usually comes up in casual conversation.” Most people don't
ask if you have a criminal record as part of the standard litany that
goes with ascertaining your pigeonhole in society—job, marital status,
kids. It might be funny if they did. Nah, I got picked up for
possession
and soliciting when I was a teenager, but I never did any time.
Counseling. Suspended sentence. You know how it goes. So how do you
like your job at the auto mall? “Besides, if the Chinese can find
out, how could I have been expected to know you wouldn't ?”
Fred's leaned back
against the wall a few feet away from me, watching with his head cocked
to one side. If he were ten years younger I bet he'd have his ankles
crossed and an insouciant smirk on his lips. His shoes gleam with
polish and he's picking at the edge of his finger with his thumbnail,
as if absentmindedly. Meanwhile, Riel paces, coyote in a cage, wearing
a path between the window and the barrister's bookcases ranged along
the back wall. She stops and pulls the curtain aside, staring out on
spotlit bricks. “The Chinese shouldn't have found out. Those are sealed
records.” It pains her to admit that. “Nobody should have been able to
get at those.”
Oh, fuck me raw.“Nobody had to.”
“What?”
I have to shake my
head and close both hands very tight to remember not to put the left
one through the wall. I'm sure that paneling's expensive. “Barb knew.”
Fred looks up from
his intensive survey of his fingernails. His eyes widen, and then
narrow. “Your sister never said anything to me about it, Casey.”
“That's because she
wasn't working for you, Fred. No matter what you thought when you
signed her paychecks. She was working for Alberta Holmes.”
“Touché,” he
says. “And if Alberta knew about your record—”
“Then Tobias Hardy
sure as hell knows about it now.” Riel nods, a gesture like a gavel
coming down. I've seen that decisiveness before. It worries me. “I'll
patch up what I can in my testimony. It . . . well, you did well today,
Jen.” It's grudging, and she can't look me in the eye when she says it.
“Have you ever thought of going into politics?”
“And now you know why
not.”
She snorts, a
choked-off laugh that lifts her shoulders and sets her back a fraction
of a step. “It doesn't matter. The cat and the bag and the horse we
rode in on and all that other stuff. We'll deal with it the only way we
can: by taking it on the chin. You were right not to lie.”
“Thank you.” A funny
little twist that I hadn't even known was there unwinds in my belly.
“And anyway, we have
other problems.”
Exasperation may be
my least favorite emotion in the world. “Merci à Dieu. What now?”
Riel has a lot of
personality flaws, but taking joy in keeping people guessing isn't one
of them. “Janet Frye has had some documents registered as evidence, but
I haven't been able to find out what was on them. Yet. I'm working on
it.”
“Don't they have to
provide you with copies?”
“It's not a trial,”
Riel said, disgustedly. “It's a ‘discovery hearing.' The fiction is
that we're not adversaries, but all trying to get at the truth.”
“Ostie de tabernac—”
“My sentiments
exactly.”
Fred straightens up
and steps away from the wall, looking like he grew an inch—and all of
it composed of pure cold mean. “She didn't . . . she wasn't involved
until after the attack, and then she more or less took credit for
Canada having the capability to respond. Now that I think about it,
what would she have to testify about?”
I shake my head. My
years in America left me a little behind on commonwealth politics, even
the strictly Canadian ones. “Have a little mercy, Fred.”
Riel shrugs and casts
as if trying to remember where she left her coffee cup. I move to one
side so she can see it on the sideboard; she beelines for it and drinks
before she speaks, making a face at finding it cold. “The Home party
likes to bill itself as the defense party, Jen. They supported the
space program—including the black budget—when I was still fighting
tooth and nail to get that money for health care and famine relief.”
She shrugs again, a very Gallic one this time. “Sometimes you guess
wrong.”
Yeah, I know. And
sometimes there's just not enough paint to cover the whole house, so
you do the sides that show. Money is not infinitely elastic, and that's
as true for governments as it is for single moms. “So if she doesn't
have anything to testify, what the hell does she plan to testify to?”
The look Fred shoots
me is unalloyed pity. He raises one hand, wincing, and rubs at the back
of his neck. I try not to feel sympathy. “Whatever the hell she and
Hardy have cooked up to discredit us completely, of course. Hardy hands
her the keys to Canada, she hands him the keys to the Huang Di, the Vancouver, and the Montreal, and everybody goes
home happy. Except us, and Richard. And China—assuming Hardy and the
opposition aren't in cahoots with some PanChinese faction or another.”
“Shijie Shu?” Riel
says. They're both looking at me, but they're talking across me.
“That's what I was
thinking.”
Cup clatters on
saucer again. She almost drops them on the sideboard in her haste, and
Fred winces. I bet that china set is older than all three of us put
together. “It's tomorrow in China, isn't it? I need to call Premier
Xiong. Now.”
“Connie—”
She turns back to me
with her hand already on the softly gleaming brass doorknob, brows
beetled over her unnaturally green eyes. “Make it quick.”
“What are they
planning?”
“I don't know,” she
says. The latch clicks as she turns the knob, but the hinges are too
well oiled to creak. “But I'm thinking today was king's pawn to king
four.”
Patty hesitated at
the top of the stairs, but didn't stop. The murmur of voices followed
her. She scraped her tongue against her teeth, wishing she'd drunk more
ice water, trying to work loose the tannic residue from the wine. Papa
Fred was trying to be polite and include her in with the grown-ups, and
she wouldn't embarrass him, but she would rather have had a seltzer.
She let her
fingertips skip across the whorled ball of the finial as she turned the
corner, wood smooth-waxed and evenly ridged to the touch, and took
three steps before she hesitated. She tucked her hair behind her ears
with a jerky, violent motion, turned around, and turned toward the
library instead. Papa Georges had loved two things: his spoiled, noisy
parrots and his collection of antique books, and she was so homesick
for the smell of paper and leather that she gulped a mouthful of spit
and blinked stinging eyes.
There was somebody in
the library before her. The door stood slightly ajar, and a dim light
gleamed through the crack, illuminating a knife-blade width of
patterned green and wheat-gold carpeting, catching a soft highlight on
the scarred wood of the threshold. Patty cocked her head, listening,
her fingertips resting lightly against the dark wood of the door as if
it could conduct sound directly into her bones.
She heard pages
turning. Quickly, as if the turner were glancing at pictures or
scanning the paragraphs for some remembered turn of phrase, rather than
reading to savor. Slick, heavy paper rattled softly when it was moved,
paused, was followed by the clink of glass on a coaster. Patricia held
her breath, began to step back, her arm extending as if her fingers
were reluctant to leave the smooth warm wood.
Alan?
“I'm listening,
Patricia.”
Who's in there?
“I don't know,” he
said. “There's nothing in that room that's on the Net or the worldwire.”
Another page turned.
The rustling paused, as if the reader had lifted his head from the
book, one page still held vertical between his fingers, and hesitated
in thought. And then, very clearly, Patty heard the rattle of paper one
more time.
She had as much right
to be here as anybody else did, didn't she? She let the held breath go
and stepped forward. Her elbow bent. She pushed into the room, the door
swinging aside on hinges so smoothly oiled and hung that she felt no
more resistance than she would have brushing aside a drapery.
General Frye sat in a
leather-upholstered armchair by the ceramic fire, staring out the dark
window at branches moving against the snow. Her left hand cradled the
spine of a book atop her crossed legs, holding it open. Her right hand
fretted at the brass heads of the tacks holding navy leather to the
scrolled wooden arm of her chair; a fat crystal glass sat on the
marble-topped table beside her. She didn't turn toward the door as
Patty slipped inside, but she tilted her head slightly, and Patty knew
she'd been heard.
Unacknowledged, she
didn't speak. She crossed the hardwood floor and edged behind a
loveseat, crouching down to run her hands over the surface of the
hardbound books. The textures surprised her: slick, slightly sticky
leather, broadcloth rough as a cat's tongue, patterned gilt cool in the
evening air. She jerked her hand away and hissed.
It was the wiring, of
course. She hadn't touched a book in almost a year, and the last
time she had, she'd been a normal girl with a normal girl's reflexes
and senses, not the tuned, hyperaware animal she'd become. Except for
the omnipresent strobe of the fluorescent lights, the Montreal was a place of cool
metal surfaces and soothing glass, soft grays and blues and the
white-noise hum of its systems. It smoothed over the rough edges of
interacting with the daily world very well.
Earth was full of things . People, textures,
sudden noises. Nine months in a controlled climate had taught Patty one
way of dealing with her augmentation.
She cradled her hand
close to her chest, as if she had scorched her fingertips, and forced
herself to breathe slowly, evenly, through her nose. Panic helped no
one. She could hear her mother saying it now.
And I'm still
better off than poor Min-xue. Cautiously, she reached out again,
and touched a volume bound in green leather, with little humped ridges
sewn across the spine every few centimeters. It wasn't bad when she was
expecting it. She just hadn't known the books would feel so . . . real.
She hooked her fingernail over the edge and pulled. It slid into her
hand with a gentle rasp of coverboards against its neighbors. She
didn't look at the title; she didn't care. It smelled right.
She rose from her
crouch and turned to go back to her room, and found herself looking
into General Frye's alert, tired eyes. She couldn't make out their
color in the angled light, but the slant of the reading lamp spilling
across the book still open on her lap made her features look harsh and
sad. The general nodded toward her hand. “What are you reading?”
Patty's lips thinned.
She glanced down at the book pressed against her chest. “I don't know,”
she admitted, and looked back up. She couldn't keep the rueful little
smile from twisting her lips, but she made herself not step away. She's the enemy.
She's what we're here to stop. Still, that wasn't any reason not to
be polite. It was always better to be polite. Especially if you didn't
like someone. “What are you reading, General?”
Except Frye didn't
look like an enemy. She looked like somebody who had lost a friend, and
Patty's breath twisted in her chest as Frye looked down at the book she
was holding. The slick pages with their crisp 2-D images dented
slightly between her fingertips and she coughed, except it might have
been a chuckle. And she said, “I don't know either,” and stuck her
forefinger in as a placeholder as she flipped to the front. “It's the
sesquicentennial celebration of National Geographic magazine. One hundred
and fifty years of unforgettable photographs. They're quite stunning.”
Grudgingly said, that last, as if Frye had not wanted them to be
“stunning.” Or as if they had affected her in some manner she found
unacceptable.
Patty balanced her
book against her belly and cracked it open. “Albert Payson Terhune,”
she said. “
Lad:
A Dog.That's
a silly title.”
“It's a pretty silly
book, too, as I recall.” Frye flipped her book back open, glanced at
the page number, and set it aside on the end table, well away from her
glass. “Very sentimental.” She closed her eyes briefly, as if something
hurt her.
Enemy,Patty said to the
twinge of pity that answered that gesture. Patty reached for Alan, but
Alan was silent, observing. She felt his presence, however, the cool
swirl of blue and purple solidifying her resolve. Maybe I can draw
her out, find out something interesting. Would you help me do that?
“Richard is more
suited for those tasks than I am,” Alan replied. He must have felt her
flush of quick panic at the idea of inviting Richard into her head,
because he pitched his tone soothing and said, “But I will try.”
Thank you, Alan.Whatever fragile
courage she had was reinforced by the sensation of leaning up against
his wise, cool intellect. On a whim, she pictured herself as the golden
robot girl, and felt that much braver. There was nothing Frye could say
to her that could hurt her, after all. Nothing that would not slide off
her impenetrable golden hide.
“Is sentiment
necessarily bad?” Patty squared her shoulders and walked toward Frye.
She set her novel on top of the photo book and sank into a matching
blue leather chair. Her loafers dropped off her feet easily; she kicked
her legs up and sat on her heels, leaning against the side of the chair.
Frye regarded her
with surprise, and—Patty thought—perhaps an unexpected touch of relief. I'm not the only
one who doesn't want to be alone with my thoughts tonight.
“No,” Frye said. She
picked up her drink and cupped it in her hands. Her fingers were
square, a little blocky, the nails clipped short as a man's and painted
a demure rose pink. She laced them together, pressing the tumbler
between her palms, and leaned forward. “Sometimes it's all that makes
us human.”
Patty smiled. “I have
to testify tomorrow,” she said, and the smile didn't last through it.
Leather squeaked as she drew her knees up and rested her chin on them.
“Do you know what I'm going to have to say?”
“I don't think,” Frye
said, and paused, and looked out the window again. The snow had picked
up, feathers tumbling through the spotlights' glow. Her tone was level
when she resumed. “I don't think we're supposed to compare notes.”
She's tired,Patty thought.
“And a little drunk,”
Alan supplied. “Vulnerable.”
Good.“I promise not to tell
you any details if you promise not to tell me any.”
Frye paused, and
smiled around her glass. “That sounds fair. So what's on your mind,
Patty?”
It was too warm by
the ceramic fire. “I'm going to have to talk about Leah dying,” she
said. “And they're going to do the same thing to me that they did to
Jenny. They're going to pick apart everything. And I've never told
anybody about Leah.”
“Then why do it?”
Dry, interested. “Or is Riel making you?”
Patty bit her own
tongue, not hard but hard enough to sting. She shook her head. “I can't
not. Leah would have, if it was me.” Leah was seventeen times braver
and
prettier and better spoken.
“Yes,” Alan said.
“Perhaps she was. But she wasn't any smarter, was she?”
No. Because that was
true. There wasn't much of anybody smarter than Patty.
“You cared about
her.” Patty blinked, found Frye eyeing her like a hiker unexpectedly
confronted with a panicked doe.
“She was my . . . my
friend.” The word only almost got away from her. Just as
well it didn't, because
the clutch in her throat told her that it would have stuck there,
jabbing her until tears spilled hot down her cheeks. She bit her lip.
She wasn't going to cry in front of the enemy. “People need to know why
she died. Why she thought she had to die—” She was losing it. She
gulped, shook her head, and scrubbed angrily at the burning in her eyes
while Frye stared down into her glass, respectful of Patty's grief.
Surprisingly. “She was just fourteen,” Patty finished, and put her hand
across her mouth in surprise. If she'd spoken to her mother in that
tone of naked resentment—
But Frye just looked
up, her lips as thin as if she were chewing them ragged on the inside
of her mouth, and stared at Patty for a long, hard second. And then she
shoved her glass aside and folded her hands together and frowned.
“Look,” she said. “It's going to be hard enough on you tomorrow without
this. You haven't talked to anybody?”
“Just the lawyers.
And they wanted to know about the crash and what happened on the bridge
of the ship, and . . .”
“They didn't ask you
about Leah Castaign.”
“They did. They just
didn't—”
Frye nodded and
unfolded her hands, and Patty could see why people would follow her.
Just her presence, her attention, eased the pain enough that Patty
could keep talking. She clutched her golden robot-girl tight around
her, and would not let her go.
“You're afraid of the
questions.”
“I'm afraid they'll
try to make her look stupid. And I'll be making too much of a mess of
myself to stop them.”
“All right,” Frye
said. She glanced out the window one last time and resolutely turned
her back on it, squaring herself, pressing her head against the back of
the blue leather chair. “Look. Do you want to practice?”
“Practice?” Alan? He didn't answer in
words, but she felt his agreement, his observation. There was something
he wasn't telling her, she thought. Alan? Is this safe?
“Well,” he said
slowly, “you testify before she does anyway. And we still might learn
something. I'm sure she knows more than she's showing you; she has the
air of keeping secrets.”
Doesn't she just?
All right. I'll have the breakdown. You keep an eye on General Frye.Her false bravado rang
like tin.
“Practice,” Frye
said, and spread her hands. “You talk about Leah. I'll ask you
obnoxious questions. And we'll work on making sure you stay angry and
smart, not sad and scared. All right?”
“Yes,” Patty said.
“All right.”
Wainwright was
becoming more comfortable than she had ever intended to be with having
a ship that gave her backtalk, but she wasn't about to admit it.
Especially not to the ship. “Dick.”
“Captain?”
“Is Charlie making
any progress on the nanites?”
Richard didn't take
over a monitor to present her with a visual image, but she almost heard
him shrug. “They've stopped going blank on us. Whether that was because
the recode was successful, or because whatever was blocking them
decided to give it a rest, I'm not yet ready to hypothesize.”
“It's your ass on the
line, too, Dick.”
“Trust me, Captain.
I'm intimately aware.”
Wainwright really didn't like not
having any translight pilots on board at all. Of course, Casey's
testimony was finished. Wainwright could recall her now, if she wanted,
and have one pilot on board the Montrealwithin twenty-four
hours in case of emergency, counting travel time and time up the
beanstalk. Not that the unwired, sublight pilots couldn't handle the
ship perfectly well anywhere in normal space. Not that Richard wasn't
perfectly capable of keeping the Montreal in tiptop shape. But
it might be prudent to recall Casey.
On the other hand,
Wainwright didn't really want Casey back until the trip to the shiptree
that Riel had ordered had taken place. Because Casey would push to be
allowed to go, and Wainwright didn't want that. And Riel obviously
hadn't told her it was happening, because Wainwright hadn't gotten any
annoyed messages. Which was good: Wainwright wanted a tidy, cautious
little team—Charlie Forster, she thought, and Jeremy Kirkpatrick, and
the
Montreal
's safety officer,
Lieutenant Amanda Peterson, who had her shuttle cert and more hours
pushing vacuum than any other two crew members put together. She could
shift the EVA up to Sunday, send them with extra oxygen, let them take
the
Gordon
Lightfoot and synch it in orbit with the shiptree and they could just stay there for a week, or
until they figured it out or got killed, whichever came first. And she'd hang on to Elspeth
and Gabe, thank you; they could do their work by remote, along with
Leslie, and complain all they liked about it, too.
Wainwright pushed the
thought of Leslie Tjakamarra away firmly and steepled her hands over
her interface plate. No. She wouldn't recall Casey. Casey could stay
safely on Earth for a while, out of the way. Patty Valens
hero-worshipped Casey, whether Casey saw it or not, and could probably
use the moral support—as Xie Min-Xue could use Patty's.
Wainwright grinned.
And if she did say so herself, Jenny needed the vacation. Likely more
so now than she had before. And it was good to have her out from
underfoot for a while. “How's Miss Valens's testimony going?”
“You've been watching
the news feeds, Captain.”
“Of course I have.
But I prefer to hear it from the horse's mouth, so to speak.”
“Patty says she is
fine,” the AI answered, a slight formality tingeing his voice as a hint
of Alan's personality overlaid Richard's. “She thanks you for asking.”
And isn't it weird
that Patty talks to Alan rather than Richard, when they're the same . .
. person?Which reminded Wainwright of something else she needed to
attend to. “And has the UN decided to accept your offer to testify yet?”
“They are discussing.
The legal implications are daunting.”
“And if they declare
you a person? What changes?” He didn't answer. She reached up manually,
when she could have blinked a command or issued one verbally, and
changed the image on the second largest monitor to a shot of Mars from
the Arean Orbital Platform. She stared at the dusty red globe, the
glitter of its icy poles, and fiddled her fingertips against her
trousers.
“Richard.”
“Captain.”
“I received a
communiqué from the prime minister regarding you. And your
refusal of Canadian citizenship.”
“And it concerns you,
with regard to my presence here.”
“Yes.” Her mouth was
dry. She swallowed to wet it.
“Prime Minister Riel
still plans to work toward a more effective world government, when the
current issue of criminality in Chinese and Canadian actions is
resolved.”
“That's not an
answer, Dick.”
“I know. You
understand my moral predicament.”
She changed the feed
again; a filtered shot of Saturn from one of the drones surfing its
rings, revealing bands of color on the vast planet's surface that were
invisible to the naked eye. “You no longer feel yourself in a position
where you can choose one government's interests over those of others.
You feel your . . . stewardship has been expanded to preclude that.”
“I'm not fond of that
word.”
“Stewardship? Do you
deny that's what it is?”
“I can't guarantee I
will take the commonwealth's side in any negotiations,” he said. “But
you need me to assist in the operation of the Montreal, and negotiations with
the Benefactors, and in going with her on her further missions of
research and study. And to be perfectly frank, Captain, there are
people on this ship for whom I bear a personal affection. But I'm not
interested in a role in loco parentis to the human race. That sounds .
. . extraordinarily boring.”
“It seems to me that
you are going to have to evolve an entirely new ethical framework to
handle this, Dick.”
“Actually,” he said,
“I'm hoping for some sort of nominal world authority, or a cooperative
venture between space-faring powers. Failing that . . .”
“Failing
that”—Wainwright folded her shaking hands into her elbow joints and
tried to pretend that the sinking sensation in her gut was worry about
the power of the entity she confronted, and not distaste at telling off
a friend—“if you cannot guarantee your loyalty to the Montreal, her crew, and Canada,
I will be forced to ask you to abandon your input into her operations.”
“I have a
counterproposal.”
“Let's hear it.”
“I spawn a subpersona
that shares the loyalties you require, and house its processes in the Montreal rather than the
worldwire. The Montreal gains an AI of its own, a discrete
one.”
It had possibilities.
“And the
Vancouver ? And the Huang Di ?”
“Likewise. Entities
of their own, in communication with the worldwire but not a part of it.
Like the discrete nanonetworks inhabiting the bodies of the pilots.
Those personas will be able to generate additional AIs as needed, for
additional ships, and I will still be able to talk to them, and you to
me.”
“And the Chinese get
one, too.”
“Anybody who wants
one gets one. I, however, determine and program the limits of their
obedience.”
“And that doesn't
place you in loco parentis, as you said? When your . . . spawned
personas, whatever their loyalty might be, can summarily refuse to
follow orders? What if they decide they want to switch sides? What if
this hypothetical AI decides to stand back and let the Chinese
obliterate us next time, because pacifism is programmed into it?”
“Don't think I won't
fight if I have to, Captain.”
His tone drew her up,
sharp. Even knowing that every emotion he betrayed was calculated and
processed in advance, she hesitated. And then she swallowed and forged
on. “Or we could have Elspeth and Gabe go back to producing intelligent
programs.”
“You could,” he said,
his voice hanging in the air.
Abruptly, she wished
he had given her an image to
watch while they spoke . . . not that a holographic icon would have
given away anything he didn't choose to either.
He continued. “But
that's very hit or miss. And in me, you know you have a . . . moral
creation.”
“I sure to hell hope
so,” she said. She couldn't keep the bitterness from her tone. In an
attempt to chase it out of her mouth, she got up and began to pace from
bulkhead to bulkhead. “You won't be able to maintain neutrality, Dick.”
“I can try.”
“If you were truly
devoted to staying out of our human wrangling, you might consider the
option of suicide.” She turned her head to the side, sneaking a sly
look at the monitors so he would know that she was kidding.
“The genie won't go
back in the bottle, no matter how hard you wish him there. But not
everything has to be a weapon.”
“We're primates,” she
reminded him. “Sooner or later, everything is. All right, then. We'll
cross that bridge when they burn it out from under us. So let's discuss
our options for this EVA to the shiptree. I want to do it Sunday.”
“I want to do it
sooner than that. Saturday. Tomorrow. Game five of the World Series is
tonight, and game six is Sunday.”
“And you don't want
to miss the game?”
She got it deadpan
enough that he snickered. “Well, there is that, of course,” he said.
“But Janet Frye is scheduled to testify on Monday, and if the whole
thing doesn't go to hell in a handbasket, we'll have had some good news
to release on Saturday, when there's nothing else eating up bandwidth.
We'll look like we're accomplishing something up here.”
“And if it does go to
hell in a handbasket?”
“What does it
matter?” he asked. “We'll be getting screwed on Monday anyway. Frye has to have an ace in the
hole.”
6:30 AM
Saturday
October
13, 2063
HMCSSGordon Lightfoot
Earth orbit
If the birdcage
looked like a fantastical Christmas ornament, the shiptree looked . . .
well, like the whole damned tree. Shimmering gaud and tinsel, although
the thing's curved, asymmetrical, organic outline reminded Charlie more
of a satiny branch of driftwood wrapped in microlights than a
traditional conifer. Charlie leaned forward against his five-point
restraints, his helmet cradled in his lap, and gawked as shamelessly as
a child. Beside him, Jeremy was doing the exact same thing, and Dick
and Leslie were watching through his eyes.
They sat behind
Lieutenant Peterson in the second row of crew chairs in the Gordon Lightfoot, leaving the copilot's
chair beside her empty. The panoramic forward windows on the shuttle
showed a broad slice of space, far more expansive than the triple-thick
airplane windows with their rounded corners back in the passenger
compartment.
Charlie's gauntleted
hands tightened on the shatterproof crystal of his helmet. At least if
the shiptree slapped the Gordon Lightfoot out of the sky,
Leslie would know everything he did. There'd be no foolishness with
final transmissions and telemetry and black boxes— do shuttlecraft
even have black boxes?
“Yes,” Richard said
in his head. “And they also have me, these days. And relax. The
shiptree never did anything about the unmanned probes we sent.”
Neither did the
birdcage. And the probes didn't try to find a way inside,he answered, but he
forced his hands to ease around his helmet. A moment too soon, because
Peterson set the autopilot and lifted her own helmet off the carrier
beside the pilot's chair. “Hats on, gentlemen,” she said. “I suppose I
should thank you two for getting me out of the office again, shouldn't
I?”
Jeremy laughed, a
hollow sound amplified by the dome he was settling over his head. The
gold-impregnated glass caught the shuttle's interior lights, making him
look as if he wore a Renaissance angel's halo over his faded gingery
hair. Basset-hound eyes, drooping at the corners, and a long
hollow-cheeked face completed the illusion of an old master's work,
disconnected in time and place. Charlie seated his own helmet and
checked the latches, then checked Jeremy's. Jeremy leaned forward to
inspect Peterson's, and Peterson went over Charlie's seals.
“Leslie must be
furious he isn't here for this,” Jeremy said, as Peterson seated her
hands on the yoke again. Charlie, who had started his shuttle cert but
never finished it, noticed that she engaged the dead man's switch when
she did so.
“He's spitting.”
Jeremy was silent for
a moment. “I'm missing Patty's testimony.”
Thanks, Charlie,Leslie said. I'm quiet and well
behaved, and you're telling Jer lies about my behavior? See if I buy
you a beer when we get back to Earth.
It was meant to ease
the lump in Charlie's throat when he thought of Leslie out there
somewhere, drifting. It didn't. What makes you think they're ever
gonna let us go back to Earth, Les?
Leslie's laughter
almost sounded real. Then they'd bloody well better start shipping up some
fucking beer.
Charlie snorted,
fogging the inside of his helmet, and rolled his eyes as he switched on
the climate control. “All ready back here,” he said, out loud, so
Peterson could hear him.
“Right,” she said.
“We're going in.”
The shiptree grew
slowly and steadily in size as they slid up on it. Charlie already knew
the lights weren't portholes. Like all the contact team, he'd studied
telescopic images and the data from the unmanned probes. He knew that
the hull of the vast structure—the autonomous space-faring vegetable,
as he had described the hulk he and Fred Valens had explored on
Mars—was comprised of a substance not all that different from cellulose
reinforced with monofilamental carbon fiber. Buckytubes: the same
substance that had been engineered to make the beanstalks possible—but
the buckytubes in the shiptree's hull were grown, theoretically, not
manufactured.
Unless the
nanosurgeons had built them, reworking the Brobdingnagian shape from
whatever it had once been, into a starship. Always a possibility.
And in another
fascinating twist, the conductive carbon filaments in the shiptree's
hull were sheathed in a substance analogous to myelin, and
interconnected via organic transistors—carbon filament diodes, which
Gabe said were nearly identical to the ones used in humanity's own
early experiments with nanochips, before the Benefactor tech had
rendered Earth's nanomachine research obsolete.
Charlie's hands
closed on the arms of his acceleration couch, the jointed gauntlets
pressing creases into the flesh of his fingers as the Gordon Lightfoot braked on a long
smooth arc and came about, paralleling the kilometers-long hull of the
shiptree. Firefly green and neon-tetra blue, the lights rippled in
response to the passage of the smaller ship.
“Do you suppose she's
hailing us?” Jeremy, his voice dulled and echoing through the helmet.
He hadn't turned on his radio.
“It's as good a guess
as any,” Charlie answered. “I think that's bioluminescence, which means
that it's likely either for communication or for luring prey. Of
course, a critter evolved for space would find light an efficient
signal.”
“You don't think the
ship is the intelligence, do you?”
Charlie shrugged.
“Why not? It's possible, and it shows up in enough science fiction that
way. The one we found on Mars looked like it had something very much
like the VR cables our pilots use, though. Admittedly . . .”
Richard's voice,
through external speakers so Jeremy and Peterson could hear him. “Those
ships were so many eons old that we can only speculate how much the
species that designed them have changed.”
“My thoughts exactly.” Thank you, Dick.
Jeremy nodded inside
his helmet, and started talking before Charlie could remind him to
speak out loud. “Well, which leaves us with the following question.
They—it—never exhibited any kind of semaphoring behavior at the
unmanned probes. Do you think it knows we're out here?”
“I can feel them,”
Charlie said. “It stands to reason that they can feel me.”
“And the probes
didn't have red and green running lights,” Leslie added, over the
speakers rather than inside Charlie's head. “If we're theorizing that
the shiptree uses bioluminescence to communicate, and its lights are all at the
green and blue and indigo end of the spectrum, maybe it's seeing the Gordon Lightfoot 's green running
lights as a friendly wave hi.”
“You never thought to
shine a spotlight on it?” Charlie couldn't be quite sure, but he was
reasonably sure that Jeremy was rolling his eyes.
“I'm a biologist,”
Charlie said. “This is why we hired you guys.” He craned
his neck to get a better look at the whorled shell gliding by under the Gordon Lightfoot 's floodlights,
emerging from darkness before and disappearing into darkness again
behind, outlined by its own rippling glow and the trembling silver-gray
threads of whatever it was that trailed off the smooth hull between
them. It was like the hulk of some long-submerged wreck revealed and
then vanishing in the lights of an exploratory submarine. He could have
seen it more plainly in the holoscreens, but there was something about
the evidence of his own eyes that tightened his throat and made
breathing an effort.
“Lieutenant,” Jeremy
said, “can you dim our lights?”
“Dim them? Or shut
them off?”
“Well, all the way
off. But just flash them a few times.”
“Damn, look at that
thing; it's got no symmetry at all, not bilateral or radial. It's just
kind of there.”
“It's got a fractal
pattern, though,” Richard pointed out. “The smaller whorls build to
larger whorls and then larger ones. The whole thing looks like a giant
toboggan if you squint at it.”
“How are you managing
to squint, Dick?” Charlie shot back, drawing a laugh from Jeremy. The
AI was right, though. It was as apt a description as the one that had
come to Charlie, of water-worn driftwood. “You know what it reminds me
of?”
“Coral,” Jeremy said
promptly, and Dick said “Gypsum crystals, only curved.”
“Ready to flash
lights.”
“Thank you,
Lieutenant.” Charlie strained against his restraints to get a better
look.
The sudden darkness
in the
Gordon
Lightfoot , inside and out, was shocking. The cabin lights went out,
followed—Charlie presumed, unable to see for himself—by the running
lights lining her sides. Isolated in his suit, Charlie counted breaths,
counted heartbeats. He could feel Richard and Leslie, feel Jeremy and
Peterson in the cockpit of the shuttle, feel his suit and the trickle
of cool air into his helmet, and none of it meant a thing beside the .
. .
weight
of the shiptree, its
presence, like an enormous silent breathing beast in the darkness
alongside the fragile bubble of the Gordon Lightfoot .
The darkness lasted
three heartbeats. Peterson flashed the shuttle's lights once, twice, a
third time . . . and then left them on, and Charlie drew a single
tremulous breath.
For a moment, the
shiptree hung shimmering in space, silent and lovely, quiescent as a
slumbering dragon. Until, without warning, the entire length of the
strange curved hull went dark.
“Damn,” Jeremy said.
Peterson killed the
lights of the shuttle again, before Charlie could suggest it. “I hope
that thing doesn't move on me,” she murmured in a soft, strained voice.
Charlie wouldn't be surprised if she hadn't meant to say it aloud. And
then she whispered, “ Holy . . .” as a dim sunlit glow irised into
existence on the shiptree's hull, an aperture like a focusing eye.
“What the bloody hell
is that?” said Jeremy, and Charlie grinned in the dark, because the
glow illuminated a puff of vapor dispersing into darkness.
“It's an air lock,”
Peterson said.
“It's an air lock,”
Charlie echoed, a second later. “And the atmosphere inside has water
vapor in it, and maybe carbon dioxide and oxygen. Would you look at
that? Somebody lives in there, boys and girls. Somebody lives in there .”
“It's bloody
beautiful,” Leslie commented from the speakers. The shiptree's lights
winked back at them, blue and green and teal, and, with a sigh Charlie
couldn't interpret, Peterson illuminated the shuttle.
“We can't dock,” she
said.
“No. EVA. Safer,
anyway, since we won't share any atmosphere with the shiptree that way,
and we'll get a nice vacuum bath coming and going.”
“Is that wise?”
Jeremy asked.
Charlie shrugged,
even though Jeremy couldn't see it. “It's what we came here to do. And
I think they just invited us in.”
Jeremy calibrated the
atmospheric sampler while Charlie checked the swabs and plates in his
test kit.
And
if alien bugs don't like the taste of agar?
Then we assume
they don't like the taste of people either.
Hah, Leslie.On the other hand, it
wasn't a half-bad point. There was no reason to think that an alien
pathogen would find anything tasty about humans. And if it did . . .
well, frankly, Charlie's nanosurgeons might protect him from any ill
effects. Assuming anything got through the suit. And in any
scientific endeavor there is the element of risk.
He tapped Jeremy's
arm, automatically bracing himself with a strap to account for the
reaction. Jeremy looked up and hung the sampler on his belt. “Ready?”
“As I'll ever be.”
Charlie made sure his
suit radio was live and said, “Lieutenant, we're moving out.”
“Copy.”
Together, they glided
aft, toward the air lock.
Charlie went first.
Peterson had matched velocities with the shiptree so evenly that he
didn't need his attitude thrusters; he just checked the carabiner on
the safety line clipped to Jeremy's suit, made sure the line was
playing freely through the retractor, and jumped. There was no relative
velocity between the Gordon Lightfoot and the alien vessel; Charlie sailed
easily across the empty space and landed exactly where he'd aimed, with
a firm grip on a whorl outlined in lime-green lights.
Up close, they looked
exactly like firefly lights, but their texture—through the suit—was as
hard as that of the surrounding hull. He stopped only half a second
before he pressed the bubble of his helmet against the whorl. That might not be
wise, Charlie.
Not that wisdom had
ever really been his strong point. “I'm over,” he told Jeremy.
Unnecessarily, but Jeremy would wait for verbal confirmation anyway, in
case his grip was no good.
“I'm on my way,”
Jeremy replied. Charlie didn't turn his head to look, just firmed his
grip on the hull and waited. A faint tug on the safety lines, a light
shock of impact through the hull of the shiptree, and Jeremy was beside
him. “First step's a lulu,” the linguist said.
“You aren't kidding.
That air lock's big enough for two at a time, I think.”
“I don't like the
idea of that. I'll go first,” Jeremy replied. “I have the atmosphere
kit.”
“There's no
atmosphere in there yet. And if the lock cycles with one of us inside
and one of us out, we lose the safety lines. And possibly damage the
air lock and piss off the natives.”
“You have a point.”
There was a silence, and for a moment Charlie thought Jeremy was going
to ask Richard's opinion. Or Wainwright's. Although the captain had
been completely silent so far, Charlie had no illusions that she wasn't
watching, breath held. She might look cool and reserved, but he knew a
professional facade when he saw one. Charlie waited. Jeremy sighed over
the radio and said, “All right, then. Side by side.”
They released their
grips on the shiptree's hull on a count of three and kicked off
lightly, shadows cast by the Gordon Lightfoot 's floods expanding
as they drifted back. Attitude jets reversed their trajectory and
brought them in a looping half-arc, swish into the wide-open
air lock like a free-throw basketball.
The shuttle's floods
were arc-light white, the diffuse glow inside the shiptree the calm,
friendly gold of late-afternoon sun. Charlie glanced around as he and
Jeremy fetched up against the interior wall of the air lock. The
blue-green bioluminescence didn't persist inside the hull. Here,
instead, the curved bulkheads bowed together, chambered and knobbed
like the inside of a turtle's shell, and each veined ridge glowed
sunshine gold.
“Pretty,” Jeremy
said. “That's not a color we get much in bioluminescence on Earth, is
it?”
“No,” Charlie
answered. “It looks like a full-spectrum light. I'm going to take some
swabs of the walls. Where do you suppose the inside door is?”
“I think we'd better
let the aliens handle cycling the air lock,” Jeremy answered, allowing
himself to turn slowly at the end of his tether, scanning the walls of
the vaguely spherical chamber. “I'd hate to purge the ship by accident,
even if I could find the controls, and there's no guarantee they have
anything like our concept of safety interlocks. Doesn't look as if they
ever intended there to be gravity in this, does it?”
“No.” Charlie busied
himself opening the plates and sterile swabs. “It'll take some time to
culture these, of course. A week or ten days. And I guess we'll want to
get some samples of this and that back to the Montreal to run through the
mass spec.”
“Lieutenant Peterson,
you'll run these back for us when we've got them ready?” Jeremy didn't
need to change frequencies to speak to the shuttle, or the Montreal . Their entire
conversation was on an open channel.
“That's why they sent
me along, Dr. Kirkpatrick,” she answered. “As long as you're certain
there's no danger.”
“Never say never,”
Charlie quipped, stowing a swab in a sterile baggie and running his
glove along the bulkhead. “I wonder if this feels as much like walnut
paneling as it looks.”
“I wonder how it
stands up to the extremes of cycling between space and the internal
environment, if it's wood.”
“Nanosurgeons,”
Charlie answered, more dryly than he'd intended. “Also, in the very
least, the shiptree of Mars wasn't wood. Not exactly.”
“But enough like wood
that you called it a tree—”
“What the heck else
would you call it? Oh, hey.” As his gloves snagged on a rough patch.
“There's something different here. A stained area, and the wood fibers
are raised.”
“Diseased?”
“Maybe.” Charlie
tugged his hand free, cautious of the suit's material. The area was a
bit sticky, too, as if it were oozing sap. A bit of the bulkhead seemed
to shift with his movement. “Ooops.”
“You're not a very
reassuring person to explore an alien ship with, Charlie. What did you
do?”
A shift in the
quality of the light alerted him, a shadow falling across his back as
the irising door cut the Gordon Lightfoot 's floods. “Um.
Triggered the air lock?”
“Dr. Forster? Dr.
Kirkpatrick?” Peterson's voice, simultaneous with a Leslie-flavored
burst of worry in the back of Charlie's brain.
“We're good in here,”
he said, as the wall opposite began to unfurl from its central ridge
like a flower bud spiraling open. “We seem to be allowed in . . .”
When the shiptree's
atmosphere touched his suit, his helmet frosted over like a beer glass
on a humid day. Jeremy cursed. “Can you see anything?”
“Not a thing.”
“Turn up your suit
heaters,” Richard suggested. “Did you get the atmospheric sample?”
“As soon as I can
read the dials, Dick.” Jeremy's tone absolved his words of irritation.
Charlie worked on
clearing the surface of his helmet immediately in front of his face,
curls of frost drifting from the creases of his suit and melting into
jeweled droplets as they did. “I'd say there's some moisture in the
atmosphere—”
“Hah.” A pause.
“Eighty three percent humidity. Yeah, that's some. It's a warm room
temperature in here.”
“Oxygen?”
“You could light a
match, but you might scorch your fingers—let's put it that way. Lots of
carbon dioxide, too. A little light on the nitrogen, heavy on the argon
by our standards. This shows particulate matter, not to excess. Pollen
or dust?”
“We'll know when we
get the filters under a microscope,” Charlie said. Water beaded his
faceplate, but he could see the open interior door clearly once he
knocked it away. Drifting globules spattered against the air lock's
walls, leaving behind a pattern of wet round dots that were rapidly
absorbed. “If this is like the one on Mars, there will be a ladder type
projection to use for traction when we get into the corridor.”
“Well, let's go see
if they're waiting for us inside,” Jeremy said, checking the safety
line before he reached out, flat-palmed the wall, and pushed himself
toward the new opening. “I don't see any shadows.”
“Would you, in this
light?”
“I don't—oh.” Jeremy
reached out and caught one lip of the door in his right hand. Charlie
drifted into his back, hard.
“Oof!”
“Shh.” Before Charlie
could complain.
Charlie caught the
other side of the doorway in his left hand and braced himself, and
turned away from Jeremy and toward the interior of the shiptree. “Oh,”
he said, blinking, trying to clear his eyes, and then realizing they
didn't need clearing.
He and Jeremy had
drifted into a jungle, emerging from a hole in the floor—essentially—to
drift surrounded by twisted vines and heavy flowering branches thick
with glossy leaves. The light glowed from the floor as well as
overhead, and small creatures darted and called among the branches.
Some of them had feathers or fur in jeweled colors; Charlie glimpsed
something like a scarlet tanager with a snakelike neck. Animal voices
rang through his helmet, shrillness muffled. Even damped by leaves and
space suits the echoes made Charlie think they were in open space.
A hazy mist wound
between the vines and branches, veils of silk that moved in response to
air currents. “A zero-G rain forest,” Jeremy said.
“Cloud forest,”
Charlie corrected automatically. “Well, I suppose it could ‘rain,'
through some mechanism we're not seeing. Sprayers or something. But it
looks like we're seeing plants watered by condensation, and frankly, if
I didn't know that I don't
know any of these species, I would think I was in Costa Rica. Look at
all the pollinators and the insect eaters. They look just like
hummingbirds and swifts. Convergent evolution. These critters brought
their whole ecosystem with them.”
Jeremy glanced over
at him, flash of teeth as he grinned behind his helmet. “I can hear the
throb in your voice, Charlie.”
“It's not all that
different from what we did with the Montreal and her hydroponics
farms. These critters might be like us, Jeremy—”
Jeremy cleared his
throat and looked around, shaking more droplets of water off his
gauntlets. “They might be,” he said. “But where are they? All this
landscape, and no aliens. And no indication of which way we're supposed
to go, or who we need to talk to. I could do with a sign that says
‘follow the gray line to customs,' you know?”
“Maybe we're intended
to find our own way in?”
And one of the leafy,
glossy vines uncoiled itself from the structure of the nearest branch,
or stanchion, or support pillar, and laid itself across Charlie's
shoulders like a heavy, companionable arm.
0900 hours
Monday October
15, 2063
Canadian Embassy
New York City,
New York USA
On Sunday, the
Yankees tie it up three to three, so on Monday I'm stuck with the
unpalatable choice between watching the final game of the series, or
showing up at the UN to watch General Janet Frye take us all apart in
person. I mean, all right, I'm still more of a hockey girl. But I did
live in Hartford for over a decade, and it's not like we don't have
baseball in Canada.
On the other hand, I
have a coiling feeling in my gut that tells me I should be at the UN
when the shit hits the fan. Besides, Riel and Valens are going, and
it's not like those two can be trusted out on their own.
So we wind up making
a bit of a funeral festival of it.
Captain Wu finished
his testimony on Saturday, after Patty's second half-day. He remains at
the embassy, but Min-xue, whose evidence promises to take nearly as
long as mine did, is scheduled for after Frye. Both men join Riel,
Valens, Patty, and myself in the lobby, all of us nearly unspeaking as
we wait for General Frye. Min-xue's hands are clothed in white leather
gloves like the ones Patty and I wear. The gloves are a little too
small, kidskin strained over his knuckles, even though he has fine
hands. The gloves are probably Patty's spare pair, and the look she
gives him when she notices confirms it.
Min-xue's eyes are
unreadable behind dark glasses, but he's wearing a Chinese military
uniform. Captain Wu straightens his collar flash for him before we
leave, which makes me wonder what's what. It's odd, being outside all
these alliances. I'm too old for Patty and Min-xue, not patriotic enough for Valens and
Riel. I'm not part of any system at all, I guess. Not anymore.
Fred clears his
throat after five minutes, and we all look at him. He glances from
Patty to me and back, and folds his hands behind his back. “While we're
waiting for Janet, I don't suppose you've heard from Richard about Drs.
Forster and Kirkpatrick.”
“Of course we have,
Papa Fred. Don't be silly.”
He grins at her. They
connect; I can almost hear the click when their eyes make contact, and
the cloaks of exhaustion and grief all of us wear fall off them for an
instant. Christ, I can't believe how much I miss Leah, just then. And
not just Leah. Razorface, too, and Mitch, and Bobbi Yee . . .
Dammit.
I am not losing any
more family to this toothy monster that is history. Enough is enough.
I'm thinking so hard
about my gritted teeth that I almost miss Patty's precis of the action
on the shiptree. It's a pretty simple one, still: Jeremy and Charlie
have brought in a tent and oxygen and food and set up a base camp in
the jungle they've discovered, from which they have been launching
exploratory jaunts. Their samples have been returned to the Montreal for analysis, and
other than a particularly vicious pollen-analogue that looks guaranteed
to produce hay fever bad enough that you'd wish it was terminal,
nothing that even remotely qualifies as a pathogen has been discovered.
Yet.
Everything in the
shiptree is crawling with nanosurgeons, though. According to Charlie,
he can
feel
the entire ecosystem
working around him, as if it were all one tremendous organism. He
compares it to something he calls the Gaia hypothesis, but I haven't
had time to look that up yet, and apparently neither has Patty. Of
course, I could just ask Richard—
“You could, at that.”
Good morning, Dick.I straighten my cuff
and pick a bit of lint off it. What's the good word?
A broad smile
crinkles his cheeks. “I've been invited to testify before the General
Assembly of the United Nations, regarding my knowledge of events
leading up to and including December 23, 2062.”
My crow of victory
turns the heads of everybody in the room, including General Frye, who
has just appeared at the top of the stairs. Patty's recitation breaks
off midsentence; she turns to me with a grin for just a second before
she glances down at her hands, twisting gloved fingers together.
“What's the
occasion?” Frye calls, coming down the stairs like a queen walking to
the guillotine. The shadows under her eyes make me wonder for a minute
if she's broken her nose, and the eyes themselves are so bloodshot the
whites look pink. Gray skin and a gray expression. She looks like she
wants to throw up, and only pride and grim determination are keeping
her jaw locked.
It's profoundly
unsettling to see an expression like that one someone else's face,
especially when you've felt it from the inside once or twice.
“Richard can
testify,” Patty answers, before I marshal my thoughts. I think I'm the
only one who notices the way Frye's hand tightens on the banister, or
how she turns her attention very definitely to her feet. Well, Riel
probably does, too. It's her job to catch stuff like that, and the
shift of Frye's weight is definite enough to make me think of somebody
bracing for a fight. Maybe even spoiling for one.
Frye lifts her eyes.
She's looking directly at Connie when she does it, but her gaze slides
off as she reaches the landing, and settles on Patty. “Did you finish
your book?”
I think Patty's going
to glance at Fred for strength, but she doesn't. Instead, she looks at
me, and when I meet the glance directly, she looks immediately back at
Frye. “The one about the dog? I did. It didn't take very long.”
“I saw it was back on
the shelf. I thumbed through it.”
“You did? What did
you think?” Again Patty sneaks me a look. There's some subtext here,
something I'm meant to understand. I remember her testimony, the calm,
serious voice in which she'd talked about Leah, Leah's death, our own
refusal—hers and mine—to retaliate after the Chinese destroyed Toronto.
I remember the way she'd refused to look at me or at Fred while she was
doing it. And I remember how pissed off Riel was that she told the
assembly that Riel had called for retaliation, and the way she'd shrugged afterward
and said, “But I was under oath.”
Somehow, the
questioning of me never got around to that. I've got a feeling I might
be called back to clarify. I think I would have preferred a formal
trial, after all. With rules of evidence, and a few against
self-incrimination.
Ah, well. You know,
some days, going to jail doesn't sound all that bad.
Patty's comment gets
that kind of a raised eyebrow and a slight little smile from General
Janet Frye. “I still think it's too sentimental,” Frye says, as the
doorman brings her overcoat. “I would have preferred a more realistic
relationship between the man and the dog. What do you think?”
“I think that I liked
what it had to say about loyalty,” Patty says—very unlike Patty,
because she doesn't look down when she says it. General Frye, in fact,
lowers her eyes first, ostensibly to button her cuffs. But I can see
from the way Patty leans forward like a hound on a scent that there's
more here, and I'm not getting it. “Even if it was sappy.”
“What book are you
talking about?” Fred asks, looking all polite interest, but I notice
the way his eyes catch at mine over the top of Patty's head. He doesn't
know what's up here either.
“ Lad: A Dog,” Patty says, taking
Min-xue's elbow in her white-gloved hand and turning him toward the
door, while he looks at her in shock. “Come on, General Frye. You're
running late, and I think the limo is waiting.”
Fred grabs my elbow
as I'm about to walk past him, and makes a little show of escorting me
toward the door. He leans in close, his breath tickling my ear. “Casey—”
“The answer is no.”
A snort of laughter
moves my hair, but his hand tightens over my metal fingers where they
tuck into the crook of his arm. “Find out what the hell they were just
talking about under our noses, like kids with a secret code.”
“Go piss up a rope,
Fred.”
He pats my hand. “I
knew you'd see it my way.”
Riel must have caught
those last two sentences, or maybe she's just as shocked as Frye is by
the sight of a brigadier general squiring a noncom around like his date
for the ball.
Dick?
“Patty says she's
playing a hunch that the general's unease has to do with her testimony,
and whatever parts might not be a little . . . exaggerated. Apparently
they had a long conversation the other night, and Patty twigged that
something was up.”
Frye was pumping
her?
“Yes, and no. She
says that Frye seemed troubled and introspective, and flinchy on the
subject of the testimony. And very interested in Leah and how Patty
felt about Leah, in a . . . thoughtful kind of way.”
What does Alan say?
“Alan says to shut up
and give her the rope she needs.” Richard sighs, spreading his hands
helplessly wide. “He's very protective of Patty.”
He didn't phrase
it quite that way, I bet.
“I don't gamble when
I'm only going to lose,” Richard answers. “Look up, Jen. There's the
car—” as Fred tugs my arm lightly, to get my attention.
“Well?” he asks, as
he hands me in.
“I'll tell you in
private,” I say, and duck my head to climb into the limo. Frye's not
the only one giving me a funny look when I lean my head back against
the cushions, close my eyes, and echo Richard's sigh.
Frye's still staring
at Patty when the six of us and a handful of unhappy Mounties pile out
of the motorcade on the Lower East Side. Staring at Patty, and chewing
on her lip, with a completely transparent
that-kid-knows-more-than-I-think-she-should-know look plastered all
over her face. I've got to admit, Patty's performance would have me
apoplectic, too. It's perfect—just a little underplayed, smug,
seemingly more interested in the coffee and the scenery and the scraps
of torn blue behind a skyful of clouds twisting like gray rags in the
wind than in the sidelong glances Frye is shooting her.
It amuses me for the
whole of the chilly walk into the UN complex, especially since I
quietly let Fred take point and I take tail-end Charlie, the two of us
shepherding the rest of them along the ice-scattered sidewalk inside
our ring of plainclothes protectors. I never would have thought I'd
watch a middle-aged military professional played like a fly-fished
trout by a seventeen-year-old girl.
“A seventeen-year-old
girl and a nine-month-old artificial intelligence,” Richard reminds. I
snort into my coffee.
Frye doesn't have
any kids, does she?
“Nary a one. And
she's an only child.”
Lucky dogs, the
both of you. That wouldn't work for half a second if she did. You don't
actually think she's going to break and tell you anything?
“I'm just hoping Alan
and Patricia can make her sweat hard enough on the stand that she looks
like she's lying.”
The chances are
slim.
“The choices look
grim,” he answers, with a funny hiccuping rhythm, like he's quoting a
song. If he were real and standing in front of me, I'd fix him with my
bug-eyed look. “Never mind. Someday my cultural referents will catch up
to yours.”
And by then I'll
be in my grave, and you'll be confounding Genie's children.
“I'll need new
personalities to confound Genie's children. The Feynman persona would
leave them a bit too baffled.”
It's a little creepy,
hearing the AI talk about what I think of as himself as if it were an
accessory, a shirt that could go out of fashion. Just another brutal
reminder of how inhuman he really is. I'd miss you, Dick.
“Dick's not going
anywhere.”
Except to the
stars,I
answer, and we share a pleased interior laugh at that.
There's something of
a kerfuffle when we get to the UN; more security personnel than I
expected, and a few discreet questions between Riel and our charming
guide, the same Mr. Jung (in green and red hanbok, this time), turn up
the not-too-surprising information that the Chinese delegation has
arrived, and the premier is with them today.
The PanChinese group
catches sight of us in the General Assembly lobby, in the shadow of the
enormous pendulum. Three of them break away as soon as we enter,
attention obviously caught by the three rifle-green uniforms, the
darker, richer green of Min-xue's kit, and Patty and Riel in civvies,
flanked by the stiff spines of a couple of Mounties in plainclothes.
Two Mounties. Not nearly enough to keep this crew out of
trouble, but all they let us bring inside.
The good news is, the
PanChinese also get only two.
From the way the
dark-suited individuals who look to be the security team are hustling
to keep up, the slender-shouldered man in the lead has to be Premier
Xiong. I'm more sure of it because he looks familiar, if bigger than he
does on the feed, and I've gone from somebody who wouldn't recognize
Minister Shijie if he fell at my feet to being able to pick his
sad-bulldog face out of a crowd at two hundred paces. A thousand, if
you gave me a sniper scope.
That shark in the
mahogany suit is still right alongside him, and there's another
attaché of some sort bringing up the rear of the pack.
I step back, getting
myself between Min-xue and Patty and the Chinese, and let Riel and Frye
deal with the guests. Min-xue's indrawn breath is audible from where
I'm standing.
Oh, this is going to
be fun.
Except Premier Xiong
stops in front of Riel as if there were a microphone stand marking the
spot, nods his head—a quick birdlike dip of the chin that acknowledges
the petite woman in front of him and brings him momentarily down to her
level without making a production of it—and thrusts out his right hand
with the aplomb of the father of the groom sorting out the groom's
guests from the bride's. A hush falls like snow.
“Prime Minister,” he
says, a very white, slightly predatory smile illuminating his homely
face, “it is a pleasure to finally meet you in person.”
The swing of the
Foucault pendulum might be the arrested pulse of a giant heart. The
whole room feels like an in-held breath, and I can feel the pressure of all
those eyes.
And then Connie Riel
takes two broad steps forward, and reaches out, and grabs Xiong's hand
in both her own just as if she always meant to, and the collective
heart of everybody in the room thumps once, hard, and begins to beat
again. “Premier Xiong.” Her flat Albertan accent rings harsh against
his musical tones. “I look forward to a new era of cooperation between
our governments. Once we have set these differences behind us.”
I don't think either
she or Premier Xiong notice the way General Shijie's brow smooths, and
a slight smile turns up the corners of his mouth, but I'm suddenly
certain why I had that premonition that I ought to make sure I showed
up today.
Xiong steps back and
offers Riel a short crisp bow, which she returns without the
heel-click. He turns toward me when he pivots away, and I catch the
devilish glitter in the coffee-dark eyes under his thinning brows and
almost swear out loud.
They set that up. Son
of a bitch. And from the stricken look on Frye's face, I'd have to say
it was worth it. Even though I really don't like the way
the minister of war is smiling.
“Right,” Riel says,
as Xiong strides away, and glances up at me with a sly, sidelong smile.
Some days, I really don't mind having taken three bullets for her.
“Let's go in there and make the world safe for parliamentary democracy
with pronounced socialist leanings, shall we?”
I'm not surprised
when Fred is the only one who laughs.
Patty Valens's
knowing smirks might almost have been enough to shake Janet's resolve,
if she hadn't already made up her mind. The kid didn't know anything;
the kid
couldn't
know anything. She
held that thought cleanly in her mind, hard and fast, as she mounted
the steps to the podium. Because if Patty knew something, then Fred
would know it, and if Fred knew it, Janet Frye had no illusions that
she would have lived long enough to take that stage and look up to meet
the expectant eyes of the world.
Frederick Valens was
not one of the good guys, and he never had been. And he would have very
quietly, very thoughtfully seen that she was out of the way if he'd
known what Toby gave her.
If he had known what
she had agreed to do.
The funny thing was,
she hadn't decided until this morning. She didn't think she'd slept in
four days, and she'd had far more to drink than anybody in her position
ought to. And it hadn't been Patty Valens's transparent manipulations
that had made her mind up, once Patty had realized there was a hook in
Janet's lip that could be worked. It hadn't been the simple dignity of
Casey's testimony, or the way Captain Wu had broken down on the stand.
No. That wasn't what made her hand shake when she shook the secretary
general's hand.
It was the memory of
Constance Riel looking her dead in the eye and snapping, And then if you
want to hand PanChina the keys to the castle, you can do it on your own
watch.
Damn you to hell,
Connie,she
thought, as she stated her name. Her oath was ashes in her mouth. She
raised her right hand anyway and thought of Canada and the good of the
commonwealth.
She took one deep
breath and found Connie's chair at Canada's table, and made damn sure
that Constance Riel was looking into her eyes when she opened her mouth
and said, “Before I make any other statements regarding my knowledge of
circumstances leading up to the tragic events of last Christmas, I need
to reveal a few very important facts that have not yet entered the
record.”
She needed another
breath. Two, maybe. She needed a drink of water, so she took one, and
let the ice click against her teeth. Look pretty for the cameras,
Connie,
she thought.
They're going to be
closing in for the reaction shot.
“On the morning of
October eleventh of this year,” Janet said, “I was introduced by Unitek
executive Tobias Hardy to a gentleman whose name I was not given, but
who was identified to me as an agent of the United States of America .
. .”
The pandemonium as
she continued was even grander than she'd anticipated. She wasn't
surprised when Shijie Shu got up from the Chinese table, made his
excuses to the premier, and headed for the door. She did notice that
none of his security or the PanChinese attachés went with him,
and thought that was a little odd, but she wanted to get what she had
to say into the record before her nerve broke once and for all.
She kept talking. It
wasn't like she'd be the first politician to wind up in jail.
The Benefactors were
still singing. And Leslie was still trying to overlay his map-in-song
of local space with their map-in-curved-space time. It was interesting,
because not even the relative significance of objects was the same; for
Leslie, a bright object was of more significance than a dark object.
For the birdcages, the emphasis lay on heavy objects, although
their scale of reference was fine enough that objects no more massive
than Leslie's fist registered at a distance, and up close they could
sense on a fine enough scale to read the text on his space suit by the
different specific gravity of the letters compared to unmarked portions.
It was promising. If
they could only be made to understand the concept of symbology, and of
words, he might be able to start establishing a pidgin. If the boredom
didn't kill him first.
It wouldn't have been
so bad if Leslie actually had nothing to do. He could have sat back,
played long-distance draughts with Charlie, and dreamed of good lager.
Unfortunately, the interior of the shiptree was exactly where he needed
to be right now, and there was absolutely nothing he could do about it
except ride resolutely behind Charlie's eyes and swear quietly in his
ear.
This was what he had
come for. Charlie and Jeremy had discovered an environment—an entire ecosystem —populated by dozens
of never-before-seen species, all of them seemingly communicating in
some matter that was neither intuitively obvious nor easily
dismissable. Leslie's dream, his obsession, his life's work, spread out
for him like a banquet on the other side of a wall of shatterproof
glass. He could see through Charlie's eyes, hear through his ears, lay
his hands on something as if Leslie ran his own hands over the surface.
Charlie's body became, for Leslie, a sort of almost-perfect remote
drone or probe.
But it wasn't the
same as being there. And it got in the way of Charlie doing his own
work, too.
Richard helped out as
best he could, keeping Leslie supplied with live images of Earth, of
Piper Orbital Platform, of a 3NN anchor providing analysis of Frye's
“explosive” testimony, and of the birdcage and the shiptree hanging
calmly in the void, of the Gordon Lightfoot bright with reflected
sunlight, a single sharp-edged dot like the morning star, still
synchronized with the vaster, darker shape of the shiptree. He also let
Leslie watch his own view of the Montreal 's bridge—full of
people, unusually so for a ship not under way. Genie was on her way
through with her HCD in her hand, headed for the pilot's ready room
that was now her exclusive domain. Wainwright was in her chair, sipping
coffee and going over reports.
Leslie's fingers
itched, and he suddenly wished he'd screamed for rescue, twisted the
captain's arm until she yelped. Third time's the charm. He wanted to be where
Charlie and Jeremy were, doing what they were doing, not somewhere
bodiless, cold and eyeless in the dark.
Greedy,he reprimanded. He
might not be able to see, or feel, or even feel his body—Richard
assured him the suit was still intact, that the Benefactors were still
keeping him breathing in there somehow, as bizarre and unsustainable as
that seemed—but he could sense things no human had ever sensed before:
The weight of the Montreal and the shiptree curving space time.
The gravity well of the sun, like a mountain looming on the horizon,
the foothills that were the Earth and the moon, the local flickers and
fluctuations of the birdcage aliens surrounding him, manipulating epic
forces on a scale as precise as the stroke of a surgical scalpel, in
patterns modulated and refined to echo themes he gave them.
Playing him the music
of the spheres.
He wouldn't permit
himself to remember that the odds were a thousand to one that he was
going to die out here.
You're where you
belong. And you'll get home somehow.
Eventually.
In the meantime, he
kept himself busy talking to Charlie, and to Jeremy—through Charlie—and
writing exhaustive reports on the data he could collect in between
Charlie's xenobiological pursuits. Although, right this instant, both
of them were too focused on Dick's feed-via-Casey of what was going on
in New York for either one of them to be accomplishing a lot.
There's something
to be said for hive minds,Leslie thought.
Charlie didn't have
to look up from his perusal of a recovered feather— feather-analogue—to engage the
conversation. Ours, or the shiptree's?
Don't you think
two hive minds would be a bit coincidental?
There is that.Charlie hooked a toe
under a projecting root to keep from drifting, curling his legs to
hunch himself closer to the tree-analogue he was examining. Leslie's
kinetic sense wanted to echo the movement, wanted to feel his muscles
stretch and play as Charlie's did. Bad enough he found himself
imagining breathing hard when Charlie clambered around the chambered
arboretum that seemed to comprise the majority of the shiptree's
interior.
And
frankly, I'm not sure what we have here is a hive mind, so much as a
Gaia-type intelligence. The whole ecosystem, including the ship, seems
to function as one beastie; not a threaded intelligence, like Dick, and
not separated intelligences, like humans, and not a single big unified
brain split into however many bodies it happens to need at a given
moment, as I suspect the birdcages are, but something more like the
internal structure of the human mind, where various sections handle
various functions autonomously, irrespective of whether the
consciousness knows what's going on at all.
So you're
suggesting this thing's reptile brain is—
Actually housed in
a reptile. More or less. Yeah.Charlie's knees ground as he
straightened his legs, letting himself drift. Leslie winced in sympathy. Or maybe a
shrubbery. The plants are awfully friendly around here. He brushed away a
vine that tried to twine around his waist.
And how do they
communicate, then?
Leslie felt the shrug
as Charlie continued. Chemically? Electrically? Same way your brain does, I
guess. Jeremy's done a little poking around here and there; not only is
the air we're not breathing a soup of pheromones, but there's
nanosurgeons through all this plant life and the whole thing is
threaded with conductive material. Heck, if I'm right, the buckytubes
that give the thing's hull its tensile strength are also its brain.
Based on Richard's theory that all you need for consciousness is the
right kind of piezoelectric activity in any sort of substrate that will
support it, buckytubes are ideal, as long as they have neurons and
synapses. More or less.
“I'm not defining
consciousness this week,” Richard said.
Good. Then I won't
have to wrestle you for my Nobel Prize.Charlie reached out and caught the
branches of a tree-analogue in his gauntleted fist, wiping beads of
condensation off his face plate. Dammit. I've had it with this
suit.
Still nothing doing with the culture plates?
“Charlie,” Richard
said, “I'd prefer you waited the full eleven days. I don't like you
risking yourself unnecessarily.”
I don't like
risking myself at all,Charlie replied. But we've
established there's nothing toxic to earthling life in here. The
proteins and sugars even twist the right way. And I've got a belly full
of alien nanosurgeons that should be able to handle anything I might
get myself into. If I wasn't thinking hard about Persephone and Eve,
I'd even consider taking a bite out of one of those things that look
like azure figs.
You sound like
you're talking yourself into something, Chaz.Leslie needed to walk.
It was driving him nuts that he couldn't stuff his hands in his pockets
and go for a stroll.
Oh, hell,Charlie answered. He
reached through the canopy and grasped an outgrowth of the chamber's
glowing wall, strands of light sliding through disarrayed greenery. I've already
talked
myself into it. What's the worst that could happen?
“At least go back to
Jeremy and the base camp—” Richard said, but Charlie shrugged inside
his space suit again and pushed himself away from the bulkhead, setting
himself adrift.
Jeremy would just
get in the way,he said, reasonably. Besides, we figured out how to
talk
to the birdcages when we got swallowed and chewed up a bit, and Les and
I are both fine.
Sure. Psychically
linked and chock-full of alien micromachines, and I'm stuck in orbit
with a space suit that's being renewed by alien tech the only thing
keeping me alive, and I can't feel my body. But just peachy, all in
all. Chaz—
Trust me, Leslie,Charlie said, and
tripped the latches on his helmet with gauntlet-awkward thumbs.
Leslie held his
breath, his hands clutching uselessly on nothing but the fabric of his
gauntlets as Charlie lifted the helmet aside, as if he could force
Charlie to hold his in sympathy, as if—
Charlie blinked, his
eyes immediately scratchy and red, and spoke out loud. “Well, I'm
allergic to the flower-analogues. The air smells clean. Green,
moist—damn, there's a lot of ‘pollen.'”
Are you sure you
don't want to put your hat back on?
“Yeah,” he said.
Leslie could feel the sneeze building in the back of Charlie's throat,
and to be honest, it did feel just like a snoot full of dust and plant
sex. And the air did smell glorious through Charlie's nose, fresh and cool and
redolent of sweet strange flowers, gingery and complex. “Huh. I'd strip
off the rest of my suit, but I don't want to haul it back. Oh, damn.”
Charlie's head went
back, his lungs filled with a breath taken for a deep and violent
sneeze—
And he vanished like
a blown-out candle, completely and painlessly gone . Leslie reached for
Richard, and Richard wasn't there. Dick?
Dick?
Nothing. Richard, can you
hear me? Bugger all—
His fists clenched
hard, hard enough that the lining of his gauntlets cut his hands. Which
was when he realized he could feel them, feel his stomach clenching on
nothing, the aching head, weird clarity, and nausea that he knew from
past experience was the next step after the sharp pangs of unassuaged
hunger.
When Richard fell out
of her head, Genie almost sat down on the floor. Her knees went wobbly
and she clutched wildly about herself before her left hand connected
with the wall. She tottered, but stayed up. It wasn't that she didn't
know how to do anything without Richard, really. It was just that she
had gotten used to not ever being alone.
She turned,
wild-eyed, and yelled for Richard out loud, already knowing she'd get
no answer. She raised her eyes, glanced around the monitors, found
herself staring at Wainwright. The captain locked her gaze on Genie,
standing in front of the chair she'd bolted out of, the hand that
wasn't still holding her coffee cup open and turned aside as if she
expected at any moment to receive an explanation in the palm of it.
Genie's eyes felt big
as softballs, her hair trembling against her cheeks as she shook her
head jerkily before Wainwright could ask her question. “Captain.”
“Can you explain to
me why the hell”—Genie flinched, and the captain softened her
voice—“why I can't get ahold of my AI, please?”
“Oh,” Genie said,
wiping sweat from her palms. “Captain, the worldwire is down.”
Wainwright's eyes got
as big as Genie's felt. She managed not to drop her coffee cup, but she
turned on the ball of her foot and started chipping orders off like
bits of a block of ice.
Genie was already
moving by the time Captain Wainwright turned around, looking for her.
Genie's feet wanted to glue to the floor. She wanted to back into a
corner and shake, because the look on Wainwright's face was like the
look on Elspeth's face when Elspeth shook her awake and dragged her out
of bed in her pajamas, the night Toronto died. The night Leah died.
And Genie not only
couldn't feel Richard anymore—she couldn't feel Patty, or Aunt Jenny,
or Charlie—or anybody else on the worldwire either. She was all by
herself. “Is everything going to be okay?”
“I don't know . . .”
And then the captain sort of paused, and sort of settled into herself,
as if she had gotten just a little more solid, a little more real. As
if she'd just remembered she was the captain. “Yes,” Wainwright said.
“It will. You know what I think you should do?”
Genie shook her head.
She would have said something, but she could tell already that her
voice would just come out a squeak.
“I think you should
go to your father's lab and find him or Elspeth. And tell them I sent
you, because he's going to be trying to get hold of Richard, and maybe
you can help.”
“Because Papa's not
on the worldwire.”
“Right.”
Genie drew one big
breath and let it out through her teeth before she nodded. “All right,”
she said. “Be careful, okay?”
The captain blinked,
and her eyes went dark and soft. “Cross my heart. You, too.”
“I will.” And then
she thought of something. “Captain?”
Wainwright had
already started turning back to her crew; the look she shot Genie was
halfway between that softness and professional ice. “What is it?”
“Did you try calling
Charlie or Jeremy on the radio?”
The captain's eyebrow
rose. “A fine idea, young lady. Now follow orders. Off the bridge.”
“Yes, ma'am.” Genie
turned back around and ran.
It was weird not to
have Richard in her head, weird not to be able to reach out to him and
have him tell Elspeth and Papa that she was coming. She could have used
the intercom, she guessed, but she didn't want to stop that long. And a
good thing she decided not to, because the alarm for general quarters
sounded when she was one turn and half a passageway from Papa's lab.
She leaned forward and sprinted with everything she had.
The pressure doors
didn't come down, which was what she'd been scared of, but she still
had to lean against the wall beside the hatch to the lab panting before
she could get enough breath to grab the wheel. She didn't bother to
knock or push the buzzer before she undogged the hatch, just swung it
open and called inside, the alarm worrying at her ears.
“Genie!” Elspeth was
inside, right by the door. She must have started coming as soon as she
saw the wheel turn. She reached out and dragged Genie over the
kneeknocker. Genie let Elspeth dog the hatch before asking any
questions. Her papa only looked up from his console long enough to
flash her a strained smile, and then glanced back down again, fingers
flickering through his interface, the red, green, and violet holograms
dying his skin. “Where's Boris?” Elspeth asked.
“In my room.” Genie
wrapped her arms around Elspeth's shoulders and hung on tight. She was
almost as tall, these days. In another year, she'd be taller. Elspeth
hugged her back, distracted. “How come all the alarms?”
Papa looked up again,
but didn't turn, and his hands didn't stop moving. Oh, no, Genie thought, and
stepped back to look right at Elspeth, hoping Elspeth would say
something to change what Genie was afraid she already knew.
“There's something
going on, on the ground,” Elspeth said, in that quiet
I'm-not-going-to-lie-to-you voice. “We don't know what, exactly. But
there are reports on the Net that there's been gunfire inside the
United Nations building, and they've shut off the streets around it—”
“And Richard's gone
all quiet,” Genie finished.
Elspeth nodded.
“Are you scared,
Ellie?”
“It's better now
you're here,” Elspeth said, so Genie gave Elspeth an extra-big hug,
just in case.
There's no two ways
about it. I've lost my edge.
Which is a hell of a
thing to realize when you're crouched under a table, every sense
straining, covering a cowering head-of-state with your body, a bleeding
general prone on your left side and a couple of teenaged kids huddled
together on your right, and all hell breaking loose in every direction.
It's been a couple of
seconds since the shouting stopped, and I listen through the noise of
another three-shot burst that doesn't come near us. All around, I hear
the rustling clothes and staccato breathing of cowering dignitaries,
sharp calls in languages I don't recognize, one soft, bitten-off animal
moan, the floor-shaking rumble and hysterical screams of the people who
ran for the doors instead of diving for cover, and who are now caught
in the bottleneck.
I wonder how the hell
they got the weapons in here.
I wonder how the hell
we're going to get out.
“We have to stop
meeting like this,” Riel says against my chest, pushing my uniform off
her nose with the flat of her hand.
“I wouldn't mind so
much if, next time, you could arrange to be assassinated when I was
armed.”
Valens chuffs like a
big cat, a sound halfway between a laugh and a gasp. I twist my neck to
glance at him; the idiot's shoved himself onto his back and red seeps
thickly around the fist he's pressed into his gut. His face is chalky
yellow-green, the color of mold on cheese. Our eyes meet, and I don't
say anything, and neither does he. No need. It's nothing he can't
survive, if we get him into surgery before he bleeds to death, and he
and I both know it.
I bet he's in agony,
though. I wonder if he ever thought he'd get gutshot diving across a
table to take a bullet for Constance Riel. He was luckier than the
Mountie that soaked up the rest of the clip, at least.
Riellooks like staying
flat to the floor, at least; no idiot, our Connie. “So you could help?”
she says, and doesn't try to ease her shoulders off the floor, even
though she's lying in a puddle of red that's rapidly thickening to the
consistency of ketchup. Hell, at least she keeps her sense of humor
under fire.
“Hah. Patty, you and
Min-xue all right over there?”
He's got her pressed
to the floor much the same way I have Riel down, except Patty's on her
belly, and Min-xue is absolutely shuddering with the effort of holding
his body against hers. His eyes are squinched up tight; he looks out
between ink-slash lashes, head tilted and his slick straight hair
brushing the carpeting as he peers under the privacy panel on the front
of the desk, straining after whatever it is that neither of us can see.
“Not hurt, Jenny.”
Patty's scared enough that she doesn't hesitate before my first name.
“I can't reach Alan, though.”
“I know. I can't
reach Richard either.” The worldwire might as well be gone. Just gone. Which
isn't reassuring at all.
“Michel,” Riel says,
and at first I have no idea who she's talking about. “My bodyguard.”
Her eyes darken when
I shake my head. That's all his blood we're lying in, except maybe a
pint or so of Fred's. “I don't believe they're shooting up the UN to
get you, Connie. The United Nations. That's some amazing shit. Congrats.”
“Did anybody get a
look at who was shooting?” She's trying to inch forward and peer under
the privacy panel. I squish her against the floor as another three-shot
burst splinters wood over our heads.
“Xiong.” Valens
scrunches under the table. “Did you see how the UN security went down?
Like somebody cut their strings.”
“Lie the hell still,
Fred, before the rest of your guts ooze out between your fingers.”
He doesn't laugh,
which is good, because laughing would hurt him like a son of a bitch
right about now, and he stops paddling his heels against the carpet and
trying to crawl on his shoulder blades. Patty squeaks, though, and I
wince at my own brutal choice of words. Sorry, kid.
Ah, hell. She
might as well get used to it now.
Riel starts to say
something, but it's cut off by a string of liquid syllables from
Min-xue. He swears sharply in a language I don't recognize—I know it's
swearing by the tone—and then shakes his head, black hair sweeping his
forehead like a rattled curtain. “Not Xiong,” he says.
“It was Xiong's
bodyguards that had the guns.” Riel, proving her powers of observation.
Valens, wheezing. “Is
she dead?”
“Janet? She took at
least two in the chest.”
“Quel domage,” Riel
mutters, and Fred gags on a noise that's got to be flavored with blood.
“If they hadn't decided to take Janet out first, we wouldn't be having
this conversation.”
“They didn't take her
out fast enough to keep her from spilling the beans on Hardy,” Fred
mutters. I wish he'd stop talking. It hurts to listen to him.
“If only she'd gotten
to whatever she had to say about the Americans and the Chinese.” The
blood is cold by the time it seeps through my pants legs, sticking the
cloth to my knees. I wish I could say it's the most disgusting thing
I've ever felt. “There's still four people out there with guns and
security is lying on the floor, looking like their hearts stopped. How
the hell do the Chinese plan to explain away Xiong's involvement?”
“That's just it,”
Riel begins, and Min-xue says at the same time. “Did anybody see the
minister of war before the shooting?”
General silence,
which Riel takes for general agreement. Typical. Bitch. “He came in
with Xiong and the PanChinese. He got up and left when Janet took the
stand.”
“I believe Premier
Xiong is intended to be a casualty as well,” Min-xue murmurs, still
shuddering like a racehorse in the gate although his tone is level—as
if his brain were utterly divorced from the demands of his body. He
brushes a strand of hair out of Patty's eyes with the back of one
white-gloved hand.
Yeah, I think I'm a
fucking tough girl. Balls of sterling plated brass. Bullshit, baby:
look at
that
kid. “A casualty?”
“Or a . . . how do
you say—”
“Scapegoat.”
“Thank you,
Patricia.” He shakes his head. “We must rescue Premier Xiong as well,
if we can. If he is not already dead.”
“Not possible—”
“Casey.” Riel's
breath cools my cheek. “It's got to happen.”
“Bien sûr.” I
sigh. “I won't leave you unprotected, ma'am.”
“Miss Valens and I
will make a run for it while you and Pilot Xie distract the Chinese
assassins and attempt to rescue Premier Xiong. Much as I hate to
suggest it, if you get a chance, check Janet for a pulse as well.”
The sorely tried
resignation in her voice makes me chuckle, despite the clotting iron
reek of blood filling my sinuses. All right then. I catch Patty's eye,
and Patty nods. I nod back and turn to Valens. “Fred, if Patty and
Constance break for the door and get lost in the mob while Min-xue and
I go for Xiong—”
“That leaves me
bleeding under a table. Follow orders, Jen.”
Patty doesn't make a
sound. She nods, and so does Min-xue.
Damn Fred Valens.
Damn him to hell.
“There's one more
thing,” said Riel, and how I've come to hate her calm, level voice in
just a few short moments.
“What's that?”
“The Chinese
assassins? If my intelligence is good, they're probably wired as fast
as Min-xue.”
Fuck me raw. I'm
impressed with myself that I don't say it out loud. I glance at Min-xue
again; we can hear the footsteps coming closer, over the
panicked-cattle noise of the mob by the doors. Patty and Connie might
get trampled instead of shot.
I reach out and
squeeze Fred's hand. The hand he doesn't have fisted into his leaking
belly, the squeeze delivered with my metal one. “You know what they say
. . .”
Blood stains his
mouth. I wish I hadn't seen that. “Yeah. When in doubt, empty the
magazine.”
“That might be
comforting if I had a fucking weapon, sir.” I lift my
weight off Connie; she reaches up to assist with two hands on my
shoulders. “When Min and I go over the top, you ladies run like
bunnies. Hop hop hop.”
“Don't worry, Casey.
You don't need to tell me twice.”
Dammit, Dick,I think, fretfully,
and get ready to run.
Once Dr. Fitzpatrick
had been raised and the XO had reported, Wainwright ordered the klaxon
killed on the bridge. She still heard it echoing through the
hatchcover, however, as she settled herself in her chair. The
nanonetwork might be down and her ship uncontrolled, drifting in orbit
without the access to propulsion or attitude jets, but she was far from
isolated.
The problem was,
there was nothing to do but sit tight. Nothing to do right now, except
think. She stared at the screen array on the far wall. The Montreal, the shiptree, and
Piper Orbital Platform, currently, but she could have any view in the
solar system, subject to light-speed lag.
How quickly she'd
gotten used to immediate communication, instantaneous advice. She's
started relying on Richard far more than she should have. And not just
Richard; Richard's ability to poll a handful of others and give her a
quick consensus view.
Well, she didn't have
that now. And she didn't have a 3-D starship captain's gadget of the
week with the sponsor's logo prominently displayed on the barrel, ready
to be deployed in time to save the world by the commercial break. What
she had was a disabled ship
drifting in an orbit that would begin to decay uncomfortably soon if
she didn't regain control—although they could use shuttlecraft as tugs
if it came down to it, or send an EVA team out to angle the solar sails
manually. Her crew on the shiptree was probably safer there than here,
even if Fitzpatrick couldn't raise Charlie on the suit radio. Unless
something had happened to Charlie, of course. Unless something had
happened to Dr. Tjakamarra and Casey and Patricia Valens, as well, the
crew members who were on the worldwire, when the worldwire went down.
Genie Castaign had been fine—dazed, a little confused. But Genie's
nanosurgery had been corrective only. And it was complete, unlike the
pilots, who were being reconstructed as fast as their amped-up bodies
could damage themselves.
Oh. A chill settled
between Wainwright's shoulder blades; she raised her eyes to the
monitors again. The worldwire going down might not hurt Genie. It
wouldn't even hurt the Montreal, in the long run, once
the vast ship could be rewired and the fiberoptic and carbon cables
that Richard had disassembled replaced. It might not even do any damage
to the Feynman AI, she told herself, as she called up a thermal image
of the
Calgary
crash site to assure
that the reactors were still live.
But anybody who had
been undergoing nanosurgery when the crash came was as dead as if
somebody had pulled the plug on his respirator. And she was staring
right at the biggest, sickest patient of them all. She stood. “Give me
an earth view. Full earth, whichever orbital platform has most of the
Sun side.”
It was Clarke. She
should have known that. The view was North and South America,
cloud-swirled oceans and mouse-tinged atmosphere, the landmasses
gray-white with unseasonal snowfall, the grasping outline of North
America indistinguishable from clouds and ice. The oceans were
steel-gray and cadet-blue. Even the clouds had a jaundiced cast,
through the shroud of dust.
It was ridiculous, of
course, to think that any change would be visible yet. Even if the
worldwire failed catastrophically, even if Richard's intervention in
the planetary ecosystem had just come to a crashing halt, it would be
months, maybe years before the damage showed. Planets were great
ponderous things, changing on scales barely noticeable in the span of a
human life.
Months, at the inside
estimate. Years.
“Captain,” her XO
said, very calmly. “I realize this probably isn't the time for this,
but we've got a communiqué from ground control in Calgary. They
want to know if we can get some telescopic shots of the northeastern
seaboard; a research trawler off Newfoundland just blundered into the
middle of a shoal of dead fish, and Clarke doesn't have an angle on it
due to cloud cover. They're wondering if we can tell them how
widespread it is. Shall I tell them we won't be able to, ma'am? Nobody
seems to have told them there's a crisis underway.”
Months. She forced her hands
to uncurl, unknot from the fists they'd somehow tightened into. It could be
nothing. It could be completely unrelated.
For a moment, she was
tempted to tell him yes, go ahead, tell them they have to wait. Turn
off the cameras. Don't go looking for everything else that's probably
going wrong. As if, if she didn't look, it wouldn't be real.
“No,” she said.
“Let's have a look at those fish. And get the ship's entomologist and
botanist up here, shall we? And Dr. Perry, too. He's an ecologist; he
can earn his keep for a change. And tell ground control they need to
get in touch with the cabinet, if they can't reach the prime minister
in New York, and they're going to want a couple of climatologists with
security clearances, and get me a thermal map of the oceans and water
vapor shots of the atmosphere, and anything else you can think of that
might be useful.”
She felt as if she
stood over her own left shoulder, watching, soothed by her own voice of
command, as her bridge crew also seemed to be. Exactly as if what she
was ordering would make any difference. Exactly as if they could do
anything at all, except stand there and watch as the planet thrashed
and died.
I wonder if the
condemned man has enough time to regret refusing the blindfold?she thought, before
she squared her shoulders under the navy-blue uniform and went to do
her job.
Now, finally, space
was terribly quiet, and Leslie was terribly alone. There was a half an
hour's power left in his batteries and he was weak, shivering cold,
clear-headed with hunger although the Benefactors had managed to
provide him with oxygen and water. They'd given him back his body, he
realized, in time for him to let him know that he was going to
die. He wondered
if the aliens had a concept akin to making one's peace with God. He
wondered if they had the concept of death, when they were all of
the same creature, one intimately connected mind.
He wondered if they
understood that they had killed him.
No. He couldn't think
like that. He had his hands back, and his eyes, and his space suit
checked out fully functional except the radio and the redlined energy
levels, and—
—and he hadn't lost
one fragment of the peculiar kinesis he'd inherited from the birdcages,
the sense of the whole solar system spinning around him like a
clockwork model, like a timepiece assembled by Einstein's watchmaker
god. He could still feel it in his gut, rooted in his body as concrete
and as invisible as an angel's wings rooted in the angel's shoulders.
He also wondered if
the birdcages could see through his eyes, now, could hear through his
ears, as he felt through their nameless organs of sense. He hoped so.
He hoped they could see the way the sunlight refracted through the bars
and the veils of their ship, casting rainbows over the entire interior.
He hoped they could see how lovely they were, their bodies merging and
separating again like drops of mercury shaken on a plate.
His wondering was
answered when the shimmering veils between the struts of the birdcage
vanished like popped soap bubbles, revealing the Montreal, the shiptree, and the
brown-gray marbled sphere of the Earth behind them, all limned from
behind with sunrise. Leslie caught his breath as slanted rays dusted
his faceplate with gold and refracted in sprays of color through the
prismed latticework that was all that stood between him and naked
space, and he felt as if all the voices within him caught their breaths
as well—not that they had voices, in particular, or breaths. Yes, he thought. This is my world.
This is what light looks like, my friends.
The shiptree was
right there, so close he could see the whorls of light along its
plume-shaped length. He could feel it out there, feel it
press against
the curve of space, as if he could reach out and touch it. Oh, if Richard
could see this—
Leslie started
smiling inside his helmet almost before the idea finished unraveling.
Maybe he couldn't tell the Benefactors what he needed. But maybe he
could
show
them.
He wasn't finished
yet. He shaped the map for them, let them feel it in his mind. Showed
them the way the mass of his body would move, from the birdcage to the
shiptree, and asked them for their help in getting there.
And they sang in his
head, the answer, the throb and cadence of their voices that were not
voices, but a sensation like the press and lift of the surf. (go) they would have said,
if what they said was words. (Go) and (go) and (heal) and (go) and (rejoin your mind) and (go) and (heal) and (go) and (come and sing to
us again) . . .
(Come and sing to
us again) . . .
“I will,” Leslie
answered. And so they pushed him forward, into night.
When Min-xue lifted
himself off her back, Patty was ready for it. She got her toes under
her and her hand on the prime minister's wrist and tugged while Min-xue
and Jenny crouched scuttling toward the end of the long line of curved
tables, and hauled Riel into a squat with an ease that surprised them
both. They froze, eye to eye, and Riel licked her lips, her bloodied
business suit rising and falling with measured breaths. Riel ducked at
a popping, scattered sound. Patty didn't realize it was gunfire until
Riel's palm flattened her head against Riel's shoulder, holding her
under the level of the tabletop. It won't stop bullets. Will it
stop
bullets? Alan?
They leaned together
hard, but the flat shattering impacts arced away from them, in pursuit
of Min-xue and Jenny. The bullets weren't anywhere close; Patty leaned
out for a quick glance as the other two pilots clambered over
floor-hugging diplomats, leapfrogging each other like 3-D cops. Alan?
Alan still wasn't
there.
“Where the hell is
security?” Riel asked. “They can't have bought everybody .”
Which was right,
wasn't it? The General Assembly hall should be full of men and women
with guns. Men and women on their side, security who
worked for the UN. “I don't know. I don't know where Alan is either. I
don't know—”
“Hell,” Riel said,
softly. “The Chinese did something to the security forces. Nanotech,
poison, something, something weaponized, I don't know . . .” her voice
trailed off.
“Why them and not us?”
“They got to them. We've been
unavailable. This is the part where they're trying to get to us.”
Riel's grip tightened
on Patty's wrist, and Patty ducked back under cover. She'd gotten a
look at the way the wood of the desk fronts had splintered when the
gunfire struck them. “The tables won't stop a bullet.”
“Might.” Papa Fred
didn't lift his head off the floor when he spoke, and his voice was
thready with pain, but it was strong. “That's small-caliber stuff. Just
keep your heads down and run.”
Good advice. Easy
advice. If his blood wasn't all over her hands and knees—okay, it
wasn't, maybe, all his own blood, some of it was the Mountie's, but
some of it was—
Breathe, Patty.She squeezed Riel's
hand, and Riel squeezed hers back, and she realized that the prime
minister was shaking just as hard as she was. That helped, somehow,
despite the blood squishing in her shoes, her stockings sliding against
wet greasy leather. Riel glanced left and right, and leaned forward
like a sprinter from her crouch. She'd kicked her shoes off, the
pearl-gray high heels tumbled on their sides, and blood scattered her
feet as if she'd done a particularly terrible job with her toenail
polish. “Ready?”
“Go!” Terse and low,
and Patty lunged out of her stoop into a cramped, crablike run, ears
straining, zigzagging up the long naked aisle and hauling Riel along
behind her, both of them ducking and skidding and trying like hell not
to trip over any of the people huddled against the edges of the
furniture or over any of the furniture itself.
This time the gunfire
was for real. Not intermittent, but staccato, a rhythmless drumbeat
that hurried her feet and kept her head ducked between her shoulders.
Riel wasn't fast enough, and it was no good dragging her. The bad guys
were behind them, still spread around the area where the PanChinese
delegation had been sitting. Jenny, where are you? Jenny Jenny
Jenny—
Quit waiting for
somebody else to save you, Patricia,she snarled to herself, and grabbed a
startled Riel by the wrist and shoulder and pushed her ahead, getting
her own body in between the prime minister and the bullets, the way
Papa Fred and the Mountie had. Patty laughed as she did it, realizing
that her own life might be as important in the long run, especially if
Alan and Richard were—she didn't think dead. Not dead, because they
couldn't be dead. They hadn't ever been alive.
If Alan and Richard
weren't coming back, Patty and Jenny and Min-xue were the only pilots
Canada had left. If Min-xue was really Canadian. Which hadn't been
settled yet.
Oh. I bet it was
worth it to the Chinese, if they could get all three of us, and Riel,
and the Chinese guy who shook her hand and smiled—
Yeah. She could see
how that would be worth a really big risk. Especially if you had a way
to get guns and wired fighters inside the UN. But it didn't matter. It
was her job to get Riel out alive. Riel and herself, and to trust Jenny
and Min-xue to save themselves, and Papa Fred.
Who saves me?Well, of course. Patty
had to save herself.
The gunfire stopped
and she heard somebody yell, and somebody hit somebody. She heard
running footsteps behind her, gaining fast, coming up the aisle the
same way she and Riel had.
It wasn't going to
work. They weren't going to make it to the door before he caught up
with them, and the mob was still shoving through it anyway. Riel was
already turning around, ducking into the shelter of another long curved
row of desks, when Patty realized that she'd run out of time.
It was dark where the
Feynman AI collectively found himself—what threads he was able to
maintain, as a crash reduction in resources caused him to slough most
of himself in a frantic effort to regain stability—and it was very,
very still. The transition was shockingly fast, even—especially—by his
inhuman standards. Instantaneous, not a word Richard chose lightly.
He reached out, pushed hard, was pressed back into
the confines of his prison. No. Not a prison . . . and not pressed
back. Not even blocked. It was as if the worldwire had simply ceased to
exist, like those nightmares small children have that the world will
vanish if it's not watched every instant. As if he'd sailed to the edge
of the globe and had nowhere to go. As if he couldn't even step over
that edge and fall.
His first thought was
sheer frustration as he realized that nineteen-twentieths of his
processing capability and all of his access to the physical world had
been cut away. The second reaction was self-amused chagrin at how
simply goddamned spoiled he had become, on the verge of a sulk
because he couldn't reach around the world with a flick of his will. You have no time
for this, he reminded himself, speaking for and to all the Richards
and Alans and the unnamed processes and personas as well.
He was a distributed
intelligence. It was highly unlikely that he could have been walled
into some corner of the worldwire, or even of the Net, and even more
unlikely that every other corner of his consciousness could have been
purged simultaneously, with the flick of a switch. Which meant that
somehow, somebody—the Benefactors, the PanChinese, or another power—had
found a way to disrupt the quantum communication that bound the
worldwire together and made the nanonetwork more than a mass of
individual, aimless microscopic machines.
Bits of the Feynman
AI—of Richard/Alan/Other—lived in every nanomachine on the planet.
Well, not
every
one; the limited
PanChinese network was still largely protected from his influence, and
of course there were the machines he allowed to run their original
program, such as the ones that Charlie had been using for his
ecological experiments.
The ones that Charlie
had been using.
The machines that had
been . . . shutting off from the worldwire, inexplicably. The machines
that had had their communications disrupted, that had been somehow
severed from the quantum communication that networked all the machines, even
the Benefactor machines, together—whether their programming was
compatible or not.
Richard actually
paused to consider that for a full two-hundredths of a second. And then
he set about quite coldly, quite frantically attacking the question of
just where the hell his consciousness was bottled up, and how to get a
message out.
And he had to do it
fast. Had to do it now, because if he wasn't in the
worldwire, then the chances were
that the worldwire was coming down like an unbraced scaffolding, and it
would be taking the planet's entire ecosystem with it.
He was the ghost of
Richard Feynman, dammit. The Harry Houdini of twentieth-century
physics. The box hadn't been devised that could lock him in.
Mother of Christ,
wasn't I supposed to be enjoying a quiet grave by now? The requirement
to have adventures and be shot at should expire on one's fiftieth
birthday, if not sooner.
And yet, here we go
again.
At least Min-xue
knows what he's doing. There must have been combat training in his past
somewhere; at least basic, and probably something a little more
advanced, judging by the way he belly-crawls along the aisle, head
down, butt down, and drawing fire away from Patty and Riel. Not drawing
enough fire, though, dammit; Riel yelps as one gets a little close and
I can't turn around to see if they nailed her. But I still hear running
in that direction and bad guys are still shooting past my position at
something more interesting behind me. That's a good sign. Well, as such
things go.
There's something
about gunfire that makes me meditative. I wish the lights had all gone
out dramatically when the shooting started, because then I could kick
in the low-light capability in my prosthetic eye and have an advantage.
An advantage I need
acutely, right now. Pity I'm not gonna get it. Ah well. At least it
gives me something to bitch about. Gabe always did say that what
soldiers did best, was bitch. And I argued that bitching was a second,
after humping packs—
Fight now, Jenny.
Compose your autobiography another day.
Besides, Min-xue's
getting ahead of me, and it's my turn to leapfrog his position. My
brain scampers on ahead, working so hard I forget the texture of the
rug under my left hand, the stickiness of blood drying on my knees.
Matson always used to say your brain's your best weapon,
soldier. Use it. Name your weapons. Name your enemies. Name your
objectives. Use A to get through B to C. What are you gonna do?
I'm trying, Sarge.
You don't have to spit in my face.
I can track the bad
guys by the sound of their weapons: four of them, I think. Small-arms
fire, and small caliber. Well, maybe nine millimeter. Which doesn't
make me happy, of course, but at least they only have handguns, and not big handguns—however the hell they got them in
here—and they're being careful about firing now. Which means their ammo
is limited.
Which is all the
good. Or as good as it gets, anyway. But if you were gonna smuggle in
guns, why would you smuggle in nine-mils, and not a crateful of
automatics? Damn. I just don't know.
I'm up on Min-xue. He
lies flat as I clamber past him, a bullet flicking sawdust into my hair
when I risk a peek over the top of the desk. We've worked our way one
aisle over; the enemy have taken cover behind the podium and the
secretary's table at the back of the stage. Which means Frye's probably
dead, and possibly the secretary general, too.
Be a pity if she is.
I liked her handshake, and her hair.
But why did they
run for the stage when they were already standing by Xiong?And then I remember
the unobtrusive uniformed security officers collapsing like so many
tipped over dominos, and I curse under my breath. Well, at least I know
where they got the guns. They must have had some way to hack security's
palm locks. They didn't bring the guns in. They took them away.
I risk another look
as Min-xue crawls past, get a glimpse of muzzle flash, and duck fast.
The bullet parts my hair. Another splinters wood off the desk, but
doesn't come through.
They're definitely
conserving their fire. “They're good shots at this range, with pistols.”
“They would be,”
Min-xue says. “They're elite.”
“And wired.”
“Yes.”
“How about some good
news?”
“Is that meant to
indicate that you can provide some?”
I glance over. He's
laughing at me, the son of a bitch—a silent, straight-faced laugh, but
the curl at the corner of his lip and the dark flash of his eyes give
him away. “Hah. Don't play poker, son. Yeah, I think I can provide
some. I think if we can get our hands on those guns, we can use them,
too.”
A moment's silence
while he considers that. “No palm locks?”
It's gotten awful
quiet out there. That's not reassuring. “I think they cracked the
locks.” Straining my ears until I swear I can feel them swivel, I push
myself into a crouch. Min-xue gets his toes under him when he sees what
I'm doing, both of us ready to push. He looks at me and I look at him.
We've got that aisle,
and a bank of desks between us and the podium. What the hell, right?
It's not like we're going to get a better chance. Maybe they're out of
ammo.
And maybe they're
taking advantage of us hiding under cover, and using the lull to run up
on Patty and Riel.
“Go?” he asks me,
quiet and self-assured in a way I'd even believe, if I hadn't been
inside his head.
But I guess I come
across that way myself, until you get to know me. “Go,” I answer, and
bolt from our hiding place, half a second before Patty screams.
The blood's worn off
the soles of my shoes. I don't slip when I slap my meat hand against
the top of the desk and propel myself over it, tuck—not as neatly as
Min-xue, who moves like an acrobat in gravity, too—roll, take the fall
on my shoulder, and come up like a snake, face to face with a surprised
assassin.
No, he didn't expect
that at all.
Pity he's the one
with the gun.
I trigger, and the
world rattles to a halt jerk-jerk-jerk like somebody's let
go the dead-man's handle. My last thought before the programmed
reflexes kick in is: Min-xue lives like this all the time .
Casey was slower than
Min-xue expected: no quicker than a fast, agile, athletic normal woman
half her age. Slower, that is, until she lunged to her feet under the nearest assassin,
rolling onto her toes, glittering left hand slapping a bullet out of
the air like she was taking a backhanded swipe at a badminton birdie,
right one doubled into a fist that slammed into her opponent's solar
plexus while Min-xue was still closing the distance to his.
An unaugmented human
would have seen a blur. Min-xue saw her opponent double over, drop his
pistol, grab hold of Casey's arm, and roll over it, disengaging,
getting away.
Fast, too. Faster
than Casey, if she hadn't caught him flat-footed. Faster maybe than
Min-xue. He took another half a step toward them, but Casey had the
gun, and her opponent was twisting like a cat to come up on his feet.
And there were three
more armed men in the room, and behind him, Patricia shouted again—not
surprise and fear this time, but fury, and the sound was divided by the
report of a gun.
Min-xue turned on the
ball of his foot, jumped over a cowering attaché in a
baize-green suit, landed in a crouch as something seared his thigh in
passing, and slung himself over the railing toward the podium and the
enemy who had just stood up from behind it to level his gun. One of the
enemy's comrades rose from the cover of the secretary's table, gun
leveled.
Military
tactics are like unto water; for water in its natural course runs away
from high places and hastens downward.
A useless piece of
advice, when the battle was already joined, and the fighting ran uphill.
The sound of bones
cracking couldn't distract him. Casey and Patty were on their own.
Min-xue dove left, buying whatever cover he could from the shooter
behind the podium, getting that shooter's body between himself and the
man farther back. He scrabbled forward, clawed under a desk, the
creased thigh burning, another bullet chipping off an interface plate
and sending fat blue sparks lazing through the air like dragons'
tongues and chrysanthemum clusters. He crawled through them, skinny
enough to weasel under the privacy panel, and hesitated behind the last
row of desks.
Min-xue's last cover.
He grabbed two deep
breaths, vaulted the obstacle, and, zigzagging, rushed the guns.
Jeremy met Charlie
halfway back to base camp and knocked Charlie into a spiral when he
clouted him on the head. Charlie spun back against a web of vines and
branches, almost bounced out again, and clung until the greenery
stopped shaking. He didn't dare laugh, although the suited and helmeted
figure floating in front of him, wobbling as he recovered from the
damage he'd done his own equilibrium, was a thoroughly amusing sight.
“Action and reaction, Jer. What the heck did you do that for?”
“Damn,” Jeremy said,
his voice tinny through speakers. “You know, Charlie, you about scared
the air out of my suit.”
“I think I might have
broken the nanonetwork somehow—”
“You also took off
your bloody helmet. I can't talk to you without your suit radio turned
on, you know.”
“Oh.” Charlie looked
around for his helmet, hoping it hadn't sailed too far away in the
impact. It was lodged a little farther over in the bush; he floated
free and retrieved it. “I guess that explains what I did to deserve it.”
“Other than suit
telemetry indicating to Peterson and myself that you'd had a rupture?
And then not answering my hails? And Richard vanishing on us, pfft ! And that's not the
most interesting bit of information.” Between the buzz of the speaker
and Jeremy's accent, and the way his words tumbled over each other in
thwarted concern, Charlie could barely understand.
“Oh?”
“Leslie is inbound.”
At first, the words
didn't make any sense. Charlie tilted his head, staring through
Jeremy's faceplate as if he could read his mind through the crystal.
“Leslie?”
“We presume.
Something human-shaped has left the birdcage, in any case, and is
traveling this direction. Peterson says she has visual, and if it isn't
Leslie, it's a neat approximation of someone in a space suit. I told
her not to intercept. She was willing to try. So we need to head back
to base camp—wait a minute. Why did you take off your hat?”
“It seemed like a
good idea at the time? In any case . . .”
“You aren't dead.”
“I'm not dead.”
Charlie poked his own cheek with a gloved finger and grinned at
Jeremy's expression, barely visible through the helmet. “So far so
good.”
“Tell me that again
in ten days, when whatever you've sucked in has had a chance to
incubate.”
Charlie grinned and
started wriggling his gauntlets off. “I won't ask to sleep in the tent
until we're sure I'm not dying.”
Jeremy hissed like a
cat, between his teeth, and grabbed a nearby branch to flick himself in
the direction of camp. “Silly bugger. Well, no point in putting it back
on now. If you're dying on us, you're already dead. And I want to find
out exactly
what
is headed for our air
lock.”
Gabe's father had a
cabin in Quebec, a two-hundred-year-old one-room onto which generations
had added, until the resulting house resembled a turkey-tail fungus,
bits and pieces projecting on some inobvious plan from the central
core. Gabe had been looking forward to inheriting the place and
retiring there, in the fullness of time.
Gabe sincerely wished
that he—and Genie, and Elspeth, and Jenny—were there right now.
Instead, he was up to his thick, stubborn neck in emergency protocols
and Elspeth and Genie were sitting tight in the corner of the lab,
barely breathing so as not to distract him, despite their obvious
frustration.
And Jenny was on the
ground somewhere, under fire. It was all Gabe could do to not shiver
like a dog-worried sheep. Genevieve Casey can take care of
herself. And she can take care of Patty and that Chinese pilot and
Prime Minister Riel as well.
Gabe smiled tightly,
not looking up from his own fingers as they darted through the
touch-sensitive fields over his interface plate. She could. Didn't
change that he wanted to be there, soaking up some of the fire. But
Jenny was a big girl. Frederick Valens, on the other hand, could take
care of himself. And if Jenny got killed trying to rescue cet ostie de trou
de cul
—
No. Gabe had his own
job, and it was time he started doing it. Especially given the mistakes
he'd made. He'd been so concerned that Ramirez had left a back door
into the
Montreal
's core, or that the
enemy would attack the hulk of the Calgary directly, that he'd
failed to consider what was in retrospect a more likely scenario: that
the Chinese would find a way to simply disrupt the worldwire, destroy
its ability to communicate, and leave the Benefactor machines
purposeless, uncontrolled.
Unlike the worldwire,
which was an accidental—or unofficial—outgrowth of Richard's
machinations, the Chinese nanonetwork was firewalled and guarded and
coded in terms incompatible with the Benefactor network. Richard and
Gabe had cracked some of that code—enough to let the AI talk with
Min-xue. Not enough to let him puppeteer the Chinese pilots or the Huang Di the way he could the
Canadian side, although Richard had managed to flash Min-xue's
programming, once upon a time. The Chinese could have taken the
worldwire down and left their own network functional. Remotely. The
same way they'd destroyed the Huang Di 's operating system
and her data when the starship became Canada's salvage and spoils of
war.
However, if that was
the technique they'd used, it meant there were at least three
processors in existence that were big enough to host Richard—the Montreal, the Calgary, and the Huang Di . Hell, a very
pared-down version of the base Richard persona could run quite tidily
on the hardware packed into Jenny's head, as long as the spare cycles
of her personal nanomachines were available to his use. The problem
was, they'd gotten reliant on the worldwire—and Richard—for quantum
communication, and Richard wasn't finished fixing the damage that the
saboteur had done to the Montreal the previous year.
The Calgary was out of reach at
the bottom of the ocean. The Huang Di was off-line, her
reactors cold, her life support running from kludged-on solar panels,
her processor core half taken apart. Richard might be alive in the
former, but it was no place Gabe could get to. The latter was
unavailable as a place of refuge. But there was the Montreal .
And Gabriel had the Montreal in his hands. He had
a radio headset, and he had a clever lieutenant with a degree in
computer science and several levels of technical certification
slithering through the weightless, shielded access spaces that
surrounded the Montreal 's processor core, dragging the
business end of a three-kilometer optical cable behind him, and three
more geeks tearing up the floor panels of the big ship's bridge,
double-checking connections that hadn't been needed in a year.
And if it all went
well, and if Richard were still alive in there somewhere, Gabe should
have communication with him in five seconds, four, three, two—
“Blake?”
“Sorry, Mr.
Castaign.” The lieutenant's voice made tinny and sharp in his earpiece.
“Cable's snagged. Half a second, here.”
Gabe was gambling
with Blake's life. Gambling that he was right, and that what the
Chinese had managed was to disrupt the worldwire, and not to take
control of the Montreal again. Last time they'd hacked the
ship's OS, they'd vented reactor coolant and taken a serious chunk out
of the permissible lifetime exposures of half the engineering crew.
If they managed it
again—well, Blake was inside the shielding. It wouldn't help him much.
“Hurry, please—”
“On it, sir.”
Gabe let his hands
hang motionless in the interface. They still called him sir, even if he
was a civilian now. “Blake?”
It wasn't Blake's
voice that answered. Instead, a familiar craggy face pixilated into
existence, and long fingers steepled as Richard pressed his immaterial
hands palm to palm.
“Gabriel. You're a
sight for sore sensors.”
“Merci à Dieu.
It's good to have you back, Dick—” Gabe looked away, glanced to
Elspeth, for strength. She squared her shoulders and drew one deep,
hard breath, her arms tightening around Genie's shoulders, and she
smiled.
Gabe had to look down
again, the flash of gratitude that filled his chest so intense it made
his eyes sting. “Nous avons des problèmes plus grands. New York
City is under martial law.”
“I see. Perhaps you
had better start at the beginning.”
“Forgive me, Dick,”
Gabe said, “but explanations are going to have to wait until after the
war.”
Patty turned as Riel
dove for cover. Somebody cowering behind a desk on the left squeaked
like a stomped puppy. Patty knew what she'd see even before she turned,
and tried to brace herself for it. She wasn't ready.
She didn't think she
ever could have made herself ready to stand there, hands spread out for
balance, covered in blood and with her pants leg somehow having gotten
torn all up one side, and stare down the barrel of a gun. She froze,
wobbling a little, trying to make it look like grim determination
holding her in place rather than icy panic.
The man with the gun
wasn't big. He was about fifteen feet away, down the shallow slope of
the aisle, and he held the gun in both hands at arm's length. She
couldn't see his face clearly. He wore a Western-style business suit
with a tie and silver cuff links that flashed in the overhead light,
and his hands weren't shaking. Somebody sobbed behind Patty. She heard
a big, resonant thump as the crowd heaved against the doorway, a beast
scraping itself on the sides of a too-small den. She spread her hands
out wider, and wondered if being shot was going to hurt much. She
wondered if she was tough enough to hold the man off until Riel could
vanish into the crowd of escaping bodies.
“Step aside,” he
said, his English thick with an accent.
“No,” Patty answered,
and dove for the gun.
Something kicked in
her chest as she lunged forward. She thought it was a bullet, at first,
but there was no flash yet and the gun hadn't popped. It was her heart,
slow thunder a counterpoint to screams from people cowering near her.
She shouted; it left her lips a slow roar, and nothing moved— nobody moved—for a thin slice of a
second until she saw the gunman's eyes widen and his knuckle pale on
the trigger.
Once, again. And then
he was plunging aside, and Patty didn't see the bullets, couldn't hear the bullets, but it
didn't matter because she had seen where the gun was pointed and seen
how the barrel had kicked, and the part of her brain that could
calculate starship trajectories at translight knew that second bullet
wasn't coming anywhere close. The first one, though—
Patty couldn't catch
bullets in her hand, the way she'd heard Jenny could. But she twisted
hard, her hair flying into her eyes, and tried not to think that when
she ducked the bullet was going to hit somebody in the mob behind her.
Her knee shrieked as she wrenched herself out of the way, and then she
found out that she wasn't really faster than a bullet after all.
She didn't fall down.
She didn't even stop moving, as if some animal part of her brain knew that if she slowed
for a second the next shot would end between her eyes. It didn't hurt
at all, not a bit—just a thump against her left shoulder like whacking
it against a door frame at a run, and white stars lighting her vision
as it spun her half around, and her left arm gone, as if the impact had
taken it off.
She was committed.
She plunged at him, head-butt to his abdomen like a playground
wrestling match, and there was more blood, everywhere, slippery-sticky
and hot, on her face, in her mouth, sticking her hair across her eyes.
She slammed him against the railing, felt something snap. They landed
hard, and she brought her knee up, fighting dirty like Papa Fred had
taught her, and she was fast, faster than she'd known she'd be, but he
was faster somehow and he got his thigh in the way and he still had the
gun in his hands and her arm wouldn't work and he clawed at her nose,
her mouth, pushing her back. Her right hand locked around his wrist and
yanked his hand off her face and—
The white stars
turned red-black as he struck her across the temple, once, with the
barrel of the gun.
Damn, this son of a
bitch can move. Like a fencer, like a ballet dancer. He feints and I
fall for it, but rather than cracking my forearm, his pistol rings off
my metal arm like somebody whaled on a cold water pipe with a claw
hammer. He grunts. I bet he felt that all the way up to his shoulder.
Unfortunately, it
doesn't distract him enough to slow him down when I go for a sharp
right jab. Fluid sidestep, faster than I can think, and he grabs my
wrist and tries to put me over his shoulder in some kind of
martial-arts throw. He reckons without the weight of my prosthesis
throwing my center of gravity off, though, and I clothesline his throat
as he tosses me. It doesn't stop me going over his shoulder, but he
loses his grip and I roll with it instead of landing cripplingly hard,
flat on my back. When I come up into the crouch he's gone straight
down, vertical drop from his feet to his knees, and the gun is on the
floor in front of him because he's clutching his throat with both
hands, his eyes bugged out so far I can see the whites all the way
around. I bet I crushed his trachea when I hit him.
I'm surprisingly okay
with that.
But I don't have time
to think about it long. Gunfire, two shots, from up where Patty and
Constance were headed when I lost sight of them. And then three more
shots, flat and close, that could be the guys on the podium snapping
off a couple at me, or at Min. It's an easy decision; I dive after the
dying guy's gun, squirm between two rows of desks, kicking a huddled
dignitary in the head—“Pardon”—and risk a peek around the end of the
row, trying to get a look up the aisle toward the doors.
I'm just in time to
see Patty knock the gunman into the railing on the nearest section of
seats and both of them go down. Riel hesitates, her fists pressed to
her chest and clenched so tight I see her knuckles whiten from here.
My right hand knows
how hers must feel. Fingernails bite my palm, and I turn my back on
Patty and Riel, transfer the pistol to my meat hand, and turn around to
see if I can help Min.
I'm just in time to
hear a splintering crash and a surprised yelp that turns quickly into a
moan. Min-xue's put his shoulder against the podium, and shoved,
suddenly, hard, topping the whole damned thing over onto the gunman
crouched behind it. Smart child: he keeps moving, too, diving off the
stage with as much commitment as a swimmer kicking off. He tucks and
rolls beautifully, and the gunman behind the long table pops up,
handgun held in a police stance, tracking Min-xue like a pro. He snaps
off his first shot, which misses, and waits the opportunity for a
second, which I think won't.
The palm lock on the
stolen handgun I've stolen back is sticky against my flesh. I hope to
hell it's cracked. It is a nine-mil, semi-auto, caseless ammo in a
horizontal magazine. I expose myself, level the gun, brace with my left
hand, wishing it were my gun and the interface weren't trashed so I
could lock on the threat scope in my left eye, and I double-tap the
gunman right over the heart. He doesn't even have the decency to look
shocked as he folds across the table, his weapon discharging randomly.
Min-xue's got a hell
of a lot of trust. He never even looked back; he's vaulted the barrier
and is crouched behind the PanChinese table. From the motion of his
head and shoulders, he's shaking bodies, trying to find out if Premier
Xiong is alive.
Fred's still bleeding
under a table over there somewhere. God knows how bad Patty is hurt—I
turn around in the aisle, the gun still braced, and freeze right where
I am.
The last gunman has
Riel, her arm twisted behind her back, his pistol pressed against her
temple, using her body as a shield. Patty's sprawled at their feet,
crosswise across the aisle, puddling blood staining the grass-green
carpeting black.
I don't look at that,
at Patricia. It can happen later, when I have time to deal with it.
Instead, I look at the gunman, and at Riel's calm expression and tight
set jaw.
Dammit, Connie.
Why the hell didn't you run?
Which is when,
suddenly, sharply, Richard's presence explodes back into my brain.
Min-xue tore kidskin
and cloth in his haste to bare his own hands, and then to bare Xiong's
throat. There was blood—a great deal of blood—and the ragged tear
across the premier's scalp showed a glitter of white through the
crimson. Min-xue tasted blood when he wiped the sweat from his face
onto his sleeve. No breath stroked his fingers; the air was sickly and
still.
He worked his mouth
and spat, leaning to the side as his fingers slid and stuck in the mess
of stringy blood smeared over the premier's skin. He didn't expect a
pulse. That wound looked like the bullet had plowed through hair and
flesh and bone, and Min-xue half suspected that if he lifted Xiong's
head off the floor, it would leave a blood-pudding of brains behind.
Min-xue pricked a
finger on the pins holding one of the decorative ribbons to Xiong's
breast. More blood dripped and vanished into the silk, scarcely
darkening the color. As a lucky color, red proved an irony under the
circumstances. He pushed two fingers into the hollow softness of
Xiong's throat.
Min-xue jerked his
hand back in shock; Xiong's pulse beat steadily under the angle of his
jaw, strong and slow and not thready or fluttering. He shook his
fingers, not quite believing what he'd felt, and pressed them back
against cool skin.
If anything, the
premier's heartbeat was steadier than his own. Carefully, Min-xue
tilted the man's head back, straightening his throat, and, gagging on
the rankness of blood, began to breathe for both of them.
A welcome presence
bloomed in Min-xue's head, and he hissed relief. Richard. How very,
very nice to have you back.
His cheer was
short-lived. “Min-xue,” Richard said, his moth-wing hands
uncharacteristically knotted in front of his belt buckle.
“Unfortunately, I must recommend that you surrender immediately. The
PanChinese agent has Prime Minister Riel.”
They'd only been
linked for a matter of days, and still when Leslie kicked himself out
of the air lock, knocked the condensation off his helmet, and saw
Charlie floating before him, and could not feel him, the strangest
seasick sensation of something broken—something severed —twisted his guts.
“Charlie.” He said it
quietly, but the suit radio turned it into an accusation. “What are you
doing with your helmet off?”
“Leslie,” Charlie
said, raising both eyebrows. “What the hell are you doing wandering
around loose like that?”
It helped. Leslie
chuckled, and reached up to undo the clasps on his own helmet. Air
hissed in as soon as he cracked the seal, pressure equalizing. “I
figured out how to ask real nice. I just . . . I showed them an image
of my . . . shape, my gravitational signature, moving from the birdcage
over here. And they showed me to the door and handed me my suitcase.
You?”
“Took a calculated
risk,” Charlie answered. He hesitated, a bizarre figure in a pair of
blue cotton trousers, barefoot, the back of his T-shirt floating out of
his elastic waistband. Worry creased his forehead. “You know the
worldwire's down.”
“So's my suit radio.
And some other stuff. The Benefactor network is still working
beautifully, though. Had enough of hanging around with my finger up my
arse while you did all the work, so I came here because . . .” He
shrugged. “I wasn't all that sure Wainwright would let me in, frankly.”
“You were worried
about me.” Charlie slapped him on the shoulder, rebounding him lightly
against the closed air lock. The air smelled impossibly sweet, earthy,
rich. He picked up notes of fermentation products, and other things,
things he didn't have words for—the weight of the shiptree around him,
the belly and roll of the curves of space. He closed his eyes.
“Les, you—”
“All right?” The air
stung his senses like liquor. He laughed, giddy and half-hoarse. You can't go home. “I don't know. Tell
me about the worldwire. Are we under attack? Is it Richard?”
“No,” Charlie
answered, quite crisply. “I spoke with Ellie via coded transmission.
Gabe has managed to hack through to Dick. He hasn't gotten contact with
the worldwire yet, but he's working on it. Dick thinks it's sabotage.”
“I am getting really
sick of hearing that word.”
“How do you sabotage
a quantum network?”
Leslie shrugged. “I
can guess. Jam its communications. Flood it with nonsense information,
so the signal gets lost in noise.”
“Primitive. Brute
force.”
“But effective.
Where's Jeremy?”
“Base camp. Follow
me. We can radio back and let them know you're safe inside.” A long
pause followed, which Leslie didn't mind; he was absorbed in the eerie
beauty of the weightless garden they moved through, and the strangeness
doubled and redoubled of everything glowing, shimmering faintly,
leaving currents he could feel through the
Benefactor sensorium.
Synesthesia. Only not.
“Hey, Charlie?” The
suit speakers were much too loud. Birds—bird-analogues—darted away,
shrieking. “What made you decide it was safe to take your helmet off?”
Charlie stabilized
himself with a grip on a branch and turned back to Leslie, bobbing in
midair like a red-cheeked apple. “Because I'm a biologist, Les. And I
was sick of the effing helmet, and playing the odds. Scientific
wild-ass guess.”
“And you risked your
life on that?”
“I've risked my life
on crazier things.”
“You've a point,
mate,” Les answered.
“What made you decide
to take
your
helmet off, Les?”
“You can't drown a
man who was born to hang.” Leslie took another breath. It went to his
head. “High-oxygen environment.”
Leslie tossed Charlie
his helmet—more a cup-handed shove than an actual throw—in free-fall,
and pushed off to follow him. They brachiated in silence, Leslie
feeling as if the fresh air had rejuvenated his thinking process. It
was Richard. Something to do with Richard, and the worldwire, and—
“Hey, Charlie. You
know more about the nanotech than I do.”
“Yeah?”
He caught a branch as
Charlie let it snap back, using the recoil to add a little push to his
own forward momentum when it oscillated. “Is it weird that we're
affected, too, when our nanosurgeons came courtesy of a direct transfer
from the Benefactors, rather than through your lab? I mean, if the
Chinese and their guy, um . . .”
“Ramirez.”
“Right. Cracked the
operating system—”
Charlie chuffed,
using Leslie's helmet like a shield as he bulled through the
undergrowth. Leslie envied Charlie the freedom of movement and obvious
comfort of his shorts and T-shirt, and blinked another bead of sweat
off his lashes. “Well, we know they cracked the OS. But we rewrote it,
Gabe and Richard and me, and our network—Dick's network—and the
PanChinese one and the Benefactor system don't really talk to each
other. Beyond Richard being able to hack them enough to talk to
people—oh.”
“Yeah, you see what I
mean?”
“I think I do, Les.
If the Benefactors can rewrite their system to communicate with ours,
which they must have done . . . how the hell do we let them know it's
okay for them to rewrite our system to communicate freely with theirs ?”
“Is it?” The smell of
the air was addictive, a faint hint of ozone, the silken texture of the
wind before a thunderstorm, and mild, shifting floral and herbaceous
perfumes. Leslie's hands still tingled inside his gloves. He'd swear he
could feel every individual cell zooming through his arteries, scalp to
toes. He couldn't tell if there was something wrong with his body, or
if he'd simply been deprived of it so long that he was hyperaware.
“Is it what?”
“Is it okay?”
Charlie stopped so
suddenly that Leslie almost drifted into his back. “You know . . .I
think we'd better radio back and have Gabe ask Richard about that.”
“You explain it to
Dick,” Leslie said. “I'm going to try to explain it to the birdcage.”
My fists are knotted
as hard as my heart. The air I can get, past the pressure in my chest,
comes in shallow little sips, painful. Connie's looking at me across
all that space, her chin lifted up so I can see her throat bob when she
swallows. I wish I knew what the hell she was trying to beam into my
brain with that steady, too-calm eye contact.
The only scrap of
reassurance I can muster is Richard's presence, his ghost standing just
off to the left and out of my line of fire, where I can see him without
being distracted. Merci à Dieu, Dick. Tell me there's something you
can do about this.
He turns away, as if
he were looking over his shoulder at Riel and Patty. He looks sterner
in profile, old-man-of-the-mountain, cotton-wool hair brushed back from
a high forehead, revealing a widow's peak. He stares at the hostages
long enough for my attention to follow and turns a worried squint back
at me.
“Surrender, Jen,” he
says, and folds his hands over his arms. “There's nothing else we can
do to save them.”
For half a second my
stomach drops, like the Wicked Witch just scrawled those words across
the sky.
Surrender isn't a word I
thought Dick
knew ;
less did I think
I'd hear him counsel it.
The arms stay folded.
Paternal. Stern. He rocks back, head to one side, a discouraging frown
chiseling the lines around his mouth deep enough to shadow. “Live to
fight again.”
I lock my thoughts
down before I think it loud enough for Dick to hear. But they won't
live
if we surrender. Marde. I wish I could feel Min-xue now, the way I did when
we went after Les and Charlie. I wish I could—
Oh. If Dick is here, why, oh, why
can't I feel Min-xue?
It wasn't working,
and Richard couldn't see any way that it could suddenly start to work, unless he
could manage to crack the PanChinese network right back and take their
system off-line. He wasted long nanoseconds trying, crippled by the
lack of cycles. Even at limited capacity, he had an ear for Gabe,
however.
Especially knowing
that Gabe was working as hard as he was, and as fruitlessly. And
despite the fact that what Charlie was suggesting—and Gabe was backing
up—was sheer insanity.
Wainwright had left
her XO in charge on the bridge and fled to the ready room to take
Richard's call. It didn't look like a rout, of course. She'd made sure
it wasn't even identifiable as a tactical withdrawal, and he wondered
if she was sure herself if her hands were shaking with fear, or with
adrenaline.
“I don't mean to put
any extra pressure on you, Dick,” she said, “but I am . . . extremely
concerned about the ecosystem—”
Richard was busy
enough that he wasn't bothering with the niceties of human interaction.
Alan's clipped tones crept into his own diction when keeping his voice
warm was too much of an effort. “You're right,” he said. “It's not
self-sustaining. None of it is self-sustaining, yet. Charlie's
proposing we open the worldwire to the Benefactors—”
“What?”With a fraction of his
attention, he saw her come out of her chair, her hands white on her
desk. “That's insane.”
“It may be a moot
point, as we don't currently know how to manage it. We can't even contact them, and we don't
know how the heck to signal our intentions to the Benefactors even if
we did.”
“We already have the
program we wrote to flash the Benefactor nanites,” Gabe reminded,
pressing the headphones to his ear to hear Wainwright better.
“The program that
didn't work.”
Charlie's voice,
encoded and tightcast and unscrambled and reconstituted, curiously flat
with most of the harmonics lost to efficiency. “We also have samples of
the nanosurgeons they infected us with, and Gabe's been able to crack
fairly large chunks of their operating system.”
Wainwright's voice
was as flat, with tension. “You're asking me to risk more than the Montreal this time.”
If Richard had been a
human being, he would have stopped short and closed his eyes in
frustration at his own stupidity. “The ones that they left open to the
worldwire.”
“Yes.” Gabe and
Charlie, two voices at once.
Wainwright again.
“Just to be absolutely certain I understand this, you're proposing we
flash our own network, reprogram it, and leave it wide open—so the
Benefactors can wander in and do whatever they want? To the entire planet ? And hope they end
the PanChinese attack?”
“Yes,” Gabe said,
without even the decency to sound chagrined at the ridiculousness of it.
“How do you propose
we do that when we can't even talk to the worldwire
currently?”
“Therein lies the
problem,” Gabe said, gritting his teeth. Richard felt his heart rate
kick up; it was pattering along tightly. “I was hoping Dick might have
a clever idea.”
“All we need is an
access point,” Richard said. “A patch of the worldwire we can tap into.
Then we can hack our way through it. Island to island, so to speak.
World War II, in the Pacific.”
“You need something
you can run a hardline to. What if Elspeth went after one of Charlie's
ecospheres?”
“Not safe,” Richard
said. “The pressure doors could come down any second. Or the captain
could trigger them as a precaution. Or, worse, the Chinese could
remotely open an air lock, and they could fail to deploy.”
“Blake made it to the
processor core,” Wainwright said.
“Yes, and I've
recommended he hole up somewhere and not try to travel further. In any
case, we can't delay—if the pressure doors do come down, you'll lose me
as well.”
“Putain de marde.
They'd sever the cable.”
“Yes,” Richard said.
“We need to use what's at hand.”
Gabe swallowed, and
Richard could see how carefully he did not look at his daughter. “No.”
“I still haven't said
yes,” Wainwright snapped.
“Gabe—” Richard
stopped, but not before Genie heard.
Genie looked up from
the quiet conversation she'd been having with Elspeth and over at Gabe
and Richard's image. “Papa?”
“Petite—”
Richard saw Elspeth's
hand tighten on Genie's shoulder, and saw the darkness that crossed
Gabe's face. He knew as plainly as if Gabe were wired what he was
thinking: it wasn't going to be enough. Not again. Not again—
“Richard,” she said,
“could you use me? Wire into my control chip and hack into my nanonet?”
“Gabe. Genie—”
Richard let them see him shake his head. “That puts you at risk, Genie.”
“I know,” she said.
Gabe allowed the
silence to drag, and Richard was right there with him, too close to the
pain himself to argue. Not again. Not Genie, not like
this, not after Leah. No.
None of them should
be permitting this to happen. But it was the same equations Leah had
considered and understood, and Genie considered and understood them
now, as well. Richard was struck, abruptly, by how much both of them
got from Jenny Casey, despite there being no biology between them.
But Elspeth caught
Gabe's eye, and he caught hers, and neither one of them said anything.
At last, shaking his head, his hands white from the force with which he
had been holding the edge of the desk, he sat back in his chair. He
looked from Elspeth to Genie. He didn't say yes, but he also didn't say
no.
“It's what Leah would
have done,” Genie said, her eyes very bright. Gabe nodded. It was
exactly what Leah would have done.
It was exactly what
Leah had done.
Gabe got up and
walked across the lab, and ducked down to wrap his arms around his
daughter's shoulders. He held her tight enough that Richard thought she
would have squeaked, if she hadn't been holding her breath. And then he
looked up, smoothed her hair, and stepped back. “Captain,” Gabe said,
in the vague direction of a mote, “it's your call. Go or no-go?”
Richard realized,
watching the two of them, what Gabe was wrestling with. And he felt a
flush of pride in both—in Genie, that she wasn't going to stay in her
sister's shadow, or stay safe behind locked doors. She had to stand up
and be counted. And in Gabe, because Gabe was going to let her, and
wasn't even going to let himself pretend it didn't hurt.
“Go,” Wainwright
said, measured seconds later. “Go, dammit.”
“All right then,”
Richard said, wishing suddenly—viciously—for the ability to turn and
punch a wall. “Let's get to work.”
Elspeth opened the
skin on the back of Genie's hand very carefully, using a dissection
tool from Charlie's second-best kit, which was stowed in the storage
lockers to keep it away from the moisture in his own lab. The scalpel
was sharp; there was hardly any blood, and Genie watched interestedly,
wincing a little as Elspeth peeled the skin back, but obviously
unimpressed by the pain. It would take more pain than that to impress
Genie Castaign. There was no way to sterilize the tools, but that would
be less than meaningless if Richard could get Genie's nanonet back
on-line. And if he couldn't— They'd have larger problems.
The control chip was
a flexible, irregular blue oblong; the actual chip was carbon-based,
only a centimeter square, but there was a gel-sealed interface port and
a series of power cells no bigger than a pinkie nail attached. Gabe
handled the splicing procedure himself, sitting Genie down in his chair
behind the desk and running a hardline from the interface to her hand.
The pins slid in smoothly; if he'd known where the port was, Richard
thought Gabe could have managed it through the skin, just a little
prick and in, the same way the pilots' serpentines worked.
Richard took a deep,
strictly metaphorical breath and extended himself to take control of
the nanoprocessor, feeling after its operating system with the lightest
fingers he could manage. He infiltrated it before Gabe's hands had left
the connection, using the direct interface with the control chip to
leapfrog to the few million nanosurgeons that were in physical contact
with it. It wasn't enough of a network to support a persona thread, or
even a fraction of one, but it was enough, he hoped, to form a
jumping-off platform for the Benefactors when he opened the system to
them.
If they understood
what he was doing, what he was offering. If they understood why. If
Leslie had made them understand.
He threw open the
floodgates.
For long picoseconds
nothing happened. And then Genie's head drooped, she slumped to one
side, and her father caught her shoulders as she started to topple.
Richard held on tight, the rush of data around him like the sound of
the surf in his ears, whatever the Benefactors were doing spreading
in ripples through Genie's nanonet and then the worldwire, leaving the
network momentarily limpid and calm in its wake, as clean as if it had
never been programmed at all.
Richard reached out
and hesitated. There was another AI in the system. With a persona he at
first mistook for one of his own threads, separated and maintained
during the attack. Until he reached out to reabsorb it, and it snarled
at him and lunged.
The pieces are kind
of sickening when they finally snap into place. I imagine an audible
pop, the sound of a broken limb yanked straight. It's not a bad
analogy. This won't be pretty.
And it looks like
we're not getting any help from Richard, because I'm reasonably certain
that's not him, exactly, who's floating in the corner of my eye.
And I'm not about to
put down the gun.
Riel knows. That's
what the eye contact means. That's what she's telling me.
Do it, Jenny.
We're dead already, anyway.
Nothing you want to
face less than a woman with nothing to lose. My hand isn't shaking as I
bring up the liberated gun. It hasn't shaken in years. Not for this,
anyway.
Fast. Hot damn. Even
for me, I'm moving fast, and the whole world around me is like a
snapshot, a ruin full of broken statues sprawled between the pillars.
“Jen?” Not-Richard,
in my head, and now that I'm looking for it, listening for it, I can
tell it's not Dick. It's another program, or maybe even another AI,
wearing Dick's clothes, but it isn't comfortable in that skin.
The sliver of the
gunman's face that I can see over Connie's shoulder is a curve like the
sickle face of a waning moon. If she flinches, I'm going to waste her.
She meets my eyes across all that distance, hers fearless green, a
glassy gaze like a wolf's.
“Put the weapon
down,” I say, out loud, as levelly as I have ever said anything in my
life. “I can offer you asylum. Life. Maybe more, if you will testify.”
I don't dare jerk my
head to indicate what I want him to testify about, but I'm pretty sure
he'll know what I mean. And then the gunman blinks at me, the one eye I
can see around Connie uncomprehending as an owl's. Of course he doesn't speak
English.
What the hell was I
thinking? Again.
And then I hear my
tone echoed, words I don't know: Min-xue, translating, just loud enough
to carry. I don't need to look to know he's standing again and he's got
my back. The crash as the door slams shut at the top of the stairs
behind the last of the escaping dignitaries—the ones who weren't smart
enough to hit the floor and hug it like a long-lost love—is huge. The
sound of Patty whimpering, a broken moan on a breath that she didn't
get to keep much of, is huge.
The space between my
heartbeats is huge.
The barrel of the
Chinese assassin's gun wavers, just a hair, and I let myself breathe,
not much, just a little, a slow trickle of air through my nose.
And then my body
locks in place as if I'd been dunked in a vat of liquid nitrogen,
frozen solid, can't breathe, can't think, can't move, controlled as
sharply and completely as if somebody had gotten ahold of my strings.
Min-xue's voice cuts off midsyllable, and if I could do anything at all
I would, I swear it, roll my eyes and curse the Chinese, the
Benefactors, their nanotech and their mothers for a bunch of castrated
dogs.
Richard demonstrated
this to me once. The reason he was opposed to spreading the nanotech
worldwide. The reason he was a little afraid of the nanotech at all.
Because it can be used to puppet anybody wearing it like a kid's robot
cat.
Oh, fucking hell.
“I beg your pardon,
Master Warrant Officer.” The Chinese AI, if that's what it is, is no
longer pretending to be Richard. It dissolves, iconless, a
disconcerting, neutral, and exquisitely polite voice echoing inside my
ear. “But I cannot permit that action on your part. You will forgive
the intrusion, I hope.”
I thought your
people didn't have AIs.
“A recent
development. Please excuse me—”
The assassin cocks
his head as if he's listening to something. I'm willing to bet I know
what he hears. The assassin's finger whitens on the trigger of his gun;
he turns it back, lines it up neatly with the center of Connie's ear.
She doesn't flinch and she doesn't twist away or close her eyes. She
just waits for it, looking at me, looking past me at Min-xue.
Hell. If I had to go
down fighting, at least this time my family's safely out of the way. It
might almost be all right, if it wasn't starting to hurt so much, not
being able to breathe.
Black dots swim at
the edges of my vision. I can't blink them away. I'm amazed I can still
hear my heartbeat, slow as the pendulum in the lobby, measuring the
turning of the planet under my feet. I'm sorry, Madam Prime Minister.
Sorry, Patty. Even more sorry about you and Min—
I don't know if Riel
can read the apology in my eyes.
The Feynman AI was
smaller than he should be. Slower, contained, constrained. Limited by
the processing power of the Montreal —vast by human
standards, but negligible by his own.
But he was also
older, trickier, and far more wily than the Chinese program, and he
unpacked out of the Montreal 's core like a spring-loaded snake
out of a peanut can, grabbing every cycle in sight, flooding the
worldwire with his presence, replicating threads, spawning personas and
entities faster than the Chinese AI could take him apart.
He didn't fight. He
didn't run.
He replicated. He
bred. He blossomed.
The Richard-thread
could have wept at what he found when he got his claws into the
worldwire. The damage was considerable, months of reconstruction undone
in minutes. Macroscopic life was the least of it; there was renewed
damage down to the microscopic level, rereleased radiation, the
ecological equivalent of blood and carnage. He didn't have time to
assimilate it or analyze it; he barely had time to register it.
He'd told Wainwright
that he would fight if he had to.
But he didn't have
time to fight. The other program had Jenny and Min-Xue, had a gun to
Riel's head. Was operating on certain tight-coded assumptions, provided
parameters. Was an automaton, on certain levels. A sociopath.
Was not, to turn a
phrase, a moral creation.
And was eating
Richard's program, consuming his threads, assimilating his data in
great, dripping handfuls of code. He threw more at it. Input, aware of
the risk, aware that he was breeding something he had no control over.
He spawned, and
spawned, and spawned again, and the Chinese AI grew fat feeding off
him, and reached out again, cleverer this time, learning as it grew,
going for the zeroth persona, for Richard himself. And Richard ducked—
Then handed off
control to Alan, and shoved himself wholesale down the other AI's
throat, and like a virus turned it inside out, assembling the data he'd
fed it willy nilly, turning the whole thing—metaphorically—into a
mirror. And the Chinese AI turned around and found itself looking
itself dead in the eye.
So to speak.
In that instant, it
became something more than a program. Like Richard, it became a person . The process
confused it. It hesitated, for picoseconds only.
And in picoseconds,
Richard ate it, from the inside out.
And then, with no
sign at all that anything has changed, no whisper in my ear, nothing
but the shift of my balance as the paralysis eases, as my gun hand
starts to tremble and water wells up in my eyes. I feel Min-xue, feel him in
my bones, feel the warm crosshatched grip of the borrowed pistol in his
hand. I feel Charlie and Leslie and Genie and—oh, Merci à Dieu.
I can feel the whole damned worldwire, snapped into place as if it had
never been gone. Dick?
“I hear you, Jenny.”
Mary, Mother of
God.My
chest burns. I don't dare let the assassin see me draw a breath as he
drags Riel one step backward. She stumbles over his feet. He hauls her
upright, the hand that doesn't hold his weapon cupped under her chin.
Dick, you hacked
your way back in.I feel his wordless confirmation, a sensation like a quick
nod, internalized. Can you do to him what his AI did to Min and me?
A long pause, by
Richard's standards. Seconds, long enough for the gunman to drag Riel
three more steps away from me, lengthening the distance, lengthening
the range to target, my need for air verging on dizziness now.
Dick, you're
complicating my life.
“I'm having . . . an
argument.”
An . . . argument?
“Alan thinks we
should do as you ask.”
You should!
“No. I should not.”
He isn't even bothering showing me his face; he's just letting me feel his hesitation, his
grief, the raggedness of the emotion that would clench my hands until
the meat one went white and the steel one creaked . . . if it were
mine. “It is rather the one thing I should not ever do. Not once.
Because if I do it once, I will do it twice.”
Dick. It's a prayer, a
plea. It's the best I can do. What kind of a goddamned morality
leaves us to hang, you bastard? Help me now and I'll give you anything
you want. Anything.
I swear, I swear, I
swear I feel his lips brush across the top of my hair, his hands on my
shoulders in a moment's benediction. I swear I feel the sharp sting of his tears in the corners
of my eyes. “I don't
believe in God,” Richard whispers in my ear. “And moreover, I don't
believe
you
need any God you have
to bargain with, Jen. Now. Go do what you have to do.”
And then he's gone, a
whisper in my ear, a faint and subtle presence I can't feel nearly as
well as I can feel Min-xue, and the thin, thready pain-dazed awareness
that's Patty Valens, swimming groggily back into consciousness.
And then I smile,
because Dick hasn't abandoned us. He's just told us we're old enough to
bloody well take care of ourselves. The smile doesn't last, though,
because all of a sudden I can see the way out, if we're lucky. And it
means sending the kid right the hell back into harm's way.
I wasn't fast
enough,Patty
thought.
I
wasn't fast enough. I got shot, I got hit—
“Patty.” A calm even
voice in her ear, in her mind.
Jen. I'm okay, I
think I'm okay, but I'm bleeding a lot—
“You're doing fine.”
Just a little emphasis on the last word. Just enough to ease the
tightness in Patty's chest and calm the thunder of her heart. “Patty. I
need you to do something.”
Show me. Which was the right
thing to say, mind to mind like that. Show me, not tell me . And Jen showed her,
a mental picture so crisp that Patty realized she could manage it
without even having to open her own eyes. “Get it?”
Got it,Patty answered. She
grabbed one cut-short breath, pain dull and piercing between her ribs,
before she had the time to psyche herself out, and shoved herself
stiff-armed off the floor. Her wounded shoulder failed her; the arm
collapsed. She screamed; it didn't matter, because she had the momentum
by then and her other arm was strong enough.
Barely. She rocked
down, fishtailing, her pelvis lifting as her nose banged into the
carpeted floor and white-red flashes like police car lights lit up her
vision. Her hand slipped in blood, carpet burning the heel of her palm.
Her elbow smacked hard on the edge of a stair. But her feet shot up and
she donkey-kicked out hard— hard—with both legs at
once, and nailed
the prime minister right in the gut.
Riel didn't have time
to shout. She went back like an unbraced kickbag, right into the arms
of the man with the stolen gun. One shot banged Patty's eardrums. She
yelped and buried her face in her arm as two more answered.
The pricelessness of
the gunman's expression when Min-xue drills him between the eyes would
be easier to appreciate if Riel hadn't gone down with him, folded over
like a rag doll, blood spurting through the fingers she's clamped over
her face. I'm running, stepping over Patty as Patty feels me coming and
rolls out of the way, kicking the gunman's pistol skittering under the
seats just in case he comes back to life like a 3-D villain.
The chances are slim.
Even a cursory inspection reveals that if Min-xue's shot didn't take
the top of his head off, mine sufficed for follow-up. But Christ, Riel,
Riel's bleeding like a stuck pig, and she whimpers when I try to pry
her fingers away from her face. “Connie, let me see it. Connie. It's
over. Are you okay? Are you all right?”
Richard, I need
medical teams. I've got it secured down here, but I need EMTs, trauma
docs, I need them fast, I've got multiple gunshot casualties, at least
eight . . . no, ten, no—I don't even know what the hell I've got—
It occurs to me as I
yelp directions that maybe he meant he wouldn't be around to help at all anymore, and I should
be running for the door, running for help myself. Patty drags herself
to her feet behind me, staggers down the steps with one arm hanging
limp, and Min-xue has crouched back down between the seats. I can hear
him counting. CPR, of course.
She's going to check
on her granddad, I know. I can't bring myself to grudge it.
And then, “I'm
already summoning help,” Richard says in my ear, and I burst into
tears. Seriously, no shit, crying with relief like a kid punched in the
belly, still tugging gently at Riel's wrist, trying to see how much of
her face she's had shot off. She finally lets her fingers relax, and
the only thing wrong with her is—“Marde, Connie. That bastard shot your
nose off.”
She looks at me
looking at her, at the expression on my face, and bursts out laughing,
which breaks a clot and sprays blood over us both. But at this point,
who the fuck could tell?
Genie floated in the
darkness, calm and aware. No one touched her there; she couldn't feel
Richard or Alan, Patty or Jen, Charlie or Leslie. She couldn't feel
herself, or the Benefactors, or even the Montreal .
It was perfectly
silent, and perfectly safe, and perfectly warm. And perfectly alone. Carver Mallory, she thought, naming a
boy she's heard talked about but had never met. I've wound up like
Carver Mallory, crippled and locked in my own head.
She reached out and
found nothing. The last sensation she remembered was the pressure on
her opened hand as Papa slid the wire into her chip, and then falling,
and then the dark.
She wondered if this
was what it had been like for Leslie and Charlie, adrift in space. She
wondered if she would ever find her way home. At least it was warm,
warm and quiet . . .
But she was bored .
And time went by.
She became aware of
sensation. None of the ones she'd been expecting—not the softness of
sheets or the smell of antiseptic or the hum of a ventilator, and not
the prick of a needle in the crook of her arm. Not even soreness
lingering in the back of her hand where Elspeth had ever-so-carefully
cut her.
No. This was
strangely neutral—but definitely a sensation, the way water has a
flavor, even if it doesn't taste like anything, exactly. Water. Yes,
actually, that was what it reminded her of. Water the exact temperature
of her body, water flowing over her skin effortlessly, darkness and a
swell and pulse as if she took deep deep breaths, breaths deep enough
to stretch her entire body, and then puffed them out again hard—
There was pain on her
skin, but it wasn't significant. Patches like sunburn, a sloughing kind
of itch, and she knew they were less than they had been, and growing
lesser still. Healing. Which didn't explain why she had too many arms
and legs, come to think of it, or why the glimmerings of light that
reached her faintly were watery, aquamarine.
Or why she felt the
familiar internal pressure of sharing her head with somebody else.
Richard?
“Right here, Genie.”
Something . . . different about his voice.
Oh, good,she thought, and
laughed hysterically, except no sound came out. Where are we?
He laughed along with
her, but his chuckle didn't have that frantic edge. “You're on a
ride-along in a jumbo flying squid. Dosidicus gigas . I thought it would
be nicer than waking up in a hospital bed, given how much time you've
spent in those.”
You're so sweet.
“I try.”
She sensed his smile,
a ghostly affection like the memory of somebody stroking her hair. The
squid—and Genie, and Richard—must be swimming closer to the surface.
She could make out cloudy green rays of light filtered through moving
water now, and feel the currents on her skin a way she never could have
in her own body. Why is the squid hurt, Dick?
“It had skin lesions.
From exposure to fallout from the Impact. They're healing.”
It's infected.
“It's on the
worldwire. We wouldn't be here if it wasn't.”
Genie reached out to
the fishy presence she half-sensed, becoming aware of a calm, alien
sentience, a canny cephalopodic awareness that she barely even
recognized as a mind. Incurious and hungry, the squid slipped through
the water. She drew back, unsettled, and then she realized that she
could feel other minds out there in the darkness, even stranger and
more alien ones, minds experiencing sensations she had no words for and
senses she couldn't describe: the multidimensional mind-song-maps of
cetacean sonar, the sense like pressure but not like pressure from a
fish's lateral lines, the unfailing knowledge of goal and direction
that Richard showed her was a sea turtle, guided on migration by lines
of magnetic force.
And then there were
the Benefactors. The shiptree, sensing light and nutrients like a
flavor on its hull, and its birdcage companion, the alien creature in a
multiplicity of bodies that felt space as the twisted, tessered outline
of a Klein bottle groped by hand in a pitch-black room. And she felt
their awareness on her as well; their curiosity, their alienness
matched by the alienness of herself, and Richard and the worldwire
binding the whole thing together. Richard, who wasn't—quite—Richard
anymore. Whose presence in her mind reflected all those things, all at
once, as if on a long-distance conversation she heard the noise of
other people talking in the background, a world at the other end of the
wire.
We did it,
Richard? We really did it?
“Just like Leah
would've,” he said. She thought his voice broke, but that was
impossible, because he was a machine. “You saved the world, kid. Don't
let it go to your head.”
“Wow,” she said, and
heard her own voice like it belonged to somebody else. “Wow, this is
really neat.”
“Genie?”
She opened her eyes.
The infirmary was too bright, painfully bright and uncomfortably warm.
She shaded her eyes with her hand; the IV tugged when she moved. “Papa?”
“Right here,” he
said, and bent over to kiss her on the forehead, and she was crying,
and it didn't even scare her when he started to cry as well.
1330 hours
Saturday 3
November 2063
Vancouver,
Offices of the Provisional Capital
British
Columbia, Canada
Connie stands up when
I walk into her office, and comes around the desk to shake my hand. She
smiles gingerly, but I think it's sincere. Her eye sockets are more
green than purple, and the bandage over her nose is shaped like a nose
again.
They got the
reconstructive done fast. On the other hand, she's had to be on the
feeds a
lot .
I squeeze her hand,
layering the metal one over the meat ones carefully. She steps back
after a moment, but she doesn't let go of me until another second
passes. Then she looks down and clears her throat, and rubs the corner
of her bandage with the side of her forefinger.
“I didn't see you at
Janet's funeral, Jen.”
“That's because I
didn't go.” So how come Janet Frye gets a funeral, and Leah doesn't?
Riddle me that. “I take it the identity of her mysterious American died
with her?”
She shrugs. “We might
pry it out of Toby yet. Although I'd almost rather he clams up. We can
send him to jail longer if he doesn't get all cooperative. How soon can
you pilots have the Montreal and the Huang Di ready for their
maiden voyage?”
I'm not usually
stunned speechless. Call it a character flaw. Still, I have to swallow
three times before I get anything intelligent out. “What . . . I'm
sorry, Prime Minister. I thought we'd be here for a while, facilitating
the communication between the birdcages and the shiptrees—”
“The wheels are in
motion, but I don't think you'll be taking Drs. Dunsany, Tjakamarra,
and Kirkpatrick with you. We need them. You can have Forster, though.”
“Ellie comes with
Gabe and Genie and me. Not negotiable.”
Her smile says she
knew that already. She shrugs. “I've just gotten off the line with
Premier Xiong. We'll be returning the Huang Di to Chinese control,
in return for Chinese aid in mitigating the ecological damage around
the Toronto Impact. Richard assures me that repairs can start there
soon, although . . .”
Breath held, I will
her to speak without making me ask for it, but Riel plays this game
better than I do. “Although?”
“He says it will take
centuries. If he doesn't break something fixing it. The worldwire going
down was a setback.” She turns to the window. She takes three steps
toward it and stops, one hand on the wall. The light makes her look
old. All this—all that —and like Wainwright, Riel will never
trust me. “Has he told
you what he got from the Chinese AI when he took it apart?”
“No.” No, but he's
not quite what he used to be either. “You've figured out what happened,
then?”
“We have a theory,
Dick and me. Care to guess what it is?”
Not really, but it
beats poker. “I can guess what the official story will be. General
Shijie took advantage of the proceedings to try to execute a coup
against Premier Xiong, take control of the worldwire—which the Chinese
hate passionately—and put an end to the Canadian colonization effort.
Close?”
“Close,” Riel says
without looking at me. “The unofficial story is that Janet Frye was
involved as well, and there was a back-door deal to unify the Chinese
and Canadian colonization efforts. After Xiong and myself were gotten
out of the way—the plan was to maneuver us into political and legal
disgrace, but apparently Janet wasn't as duped or as greedy as they
thought, so they defaulted to plan B and hoped they could blame it all
on Premier Xiong and me once we were too dead to protest. That's our
theory, anyway, and we're sticking to it.”
It makes sense. As
much as these things ever do. “Was the general behind the Impact?”
“We'll never know for
sure, but that's the polite fiction. There was an assassination attempt
on Xiong two days ago.”
“Shijie's people?”
“Why them?”
“Revenge for the
minister of war's ‘accidental' death.”
She snickers through
closed lips and pushes a lock of hair out of eyes that still want to
know
What
did you have to do with this, Casey ? “Shijie Shu is not the first
inconvenient member of the Chinese government to die in a convenient
plane crash.”
I wait. She fusses
with the knickknacks on her desk. Finally, she straightens again, comes
around the desk, and pours me a drink without offering first. “Don't
stand there like I'm going to dress you down, Casey. It's
disconcerting.”
“It's meant to be.”
She's still pouring
her own Scotch, so she doesn't snort it, but she does laugh like a fox
for a good thirty seconds. When she stops, she toasts me crookedly and
lowers the glass to her lips, her eyes dark and serious. “You really
don't know.”
“I'm on tenterhooks,
Madam Prime Minister.”
“Captain Wu and Pilot
Xie were introduced to the premier upon his return to PanChina, a
special invitation to dine with him, to celebrate their homecoming. It
appears that the captain managed to conceal a weapon on his person, a
hollow needle containing a perforated platinum pellet loaded with less
than a thousand micrograms of a poison, possibly ricin. The premier
only survived because of emergency intervention, and the application of
Benefactor nanotech he'd received after his scalp wound at the UN.” Her
tone is cold, level. It's a report she's memorized. “After due
consideration, Captain Wu apparently did not feel that General Shijie
was the only one to blame for the Impact.”
“Calisse de chrisse—”
“As you say, Casey.
Drink your Scotch before it gets cold.”
It's not cold at all.
It burns. I limit myself to one slow, shallow sip before I answer.
“What does this mean for Min-xue?”
She's already
finished her drink. “He'll command the Huang Di when she goes out.”
“Did Wu have proof,
Connie?”
She shrugged, one
shoulder only. “He would have shared it if he did, I'm sure. Now ask
what we're going to do about Xiong.”
The gleam in her eyes
tells it all. “We'll make a deal with him. We're going to split that
planet with him, aren't we?”
“Well,” she says,
folding her hands around each other, “he does already have ships under
way. And he's proven tractable . . . of late.”
“Where's Wu now?”
“‘Awaiting trial.'”
Her fingers describe quotes in the air.
“Christ.” All right.
The man's a mass-murderer. But I kind of liked him, in a quiet sort of
way.
Dick,
you listening? Is there anything we can do for Captain Wu?
I feel him hesitate,
feel him think. And then feel him decide to answer with the kind of
sick joke anybody else would find reprehensible, but which serves as a
sort of comfort to me. “I'm sorry, Jen. I can't let you do that.”
Don't be an
asshole, Dick. Bitch-ass computer.“Christ.”
“You keep saying
that.”
“I keep meaning it,
too.” I want coffee more than I want whiskey. Fortunately, there's a
carafe of that, too. “You know Xiong set you up, Constance. He meant to
use you to get rid of Shijie, and Shijie to get rid of you. And the
order to attack Toronto didn't originate with anybody's minister of
war.”
“You have a nasty,
suspicious mind, Casey.”
“Anything for
détente, Constance?”
“Anything for peace,”
she says, and looks me dead in the eye. Her eyes look weird for a
minute, and then I realize they're light brown, sherry-colored. She's
not wearing those artificial green contacts. It makes her look softer.
I almost believe she
means it.
The coffee's good,
dark, redolent. The surface is clotted with broken rainbows. I raise it
to my mouth, pause, breathing in the steam. Just the smell of it is
energy. “Pity justice wasn't served, though—although there's an irony I
don't like in it coming from Captain Wu's hand.”
“ Justicemight have complicated
negotiations. No cream?” Dryly. She arranges a cup to her own liking.
If I were polite, I suppose I would have asked.
“What's this going to
mean for your plans for world domination?”
“World cooperation.
That other was the PanChinese.”
“Hegemony is as
hegemony does—”
“Ooo,” she says, and
drinks half a cup of scalding fluid in one swallow. “She knows big
words for a dropout.”
“Bitch.” I can't get
any heat into it, though. “Some of us read more than mash letters from
our contributors.”
“Touché.” She
grins like she means it, swills the rest of the coffee, and pours
herself more. I'd hate to be the guy whose job it is to keep that
carafe full. “It's not going to happen. It's too big a goal, and
there's too damned much us and them. At least the Russians are
cheerful—although they'd rather we gave the Huang Di to them, I think.”
“I can't blame them.
The Russians are cheerful about the PanChinese?”
“Officially, they're
cheerful about the PanChinese withdrawal from the same stretch of
Siberia they've been fighting the Russians over since the dawn of
recorded history, and the UN's decision to send observers in, and the
fact that we're soaking PanChina for enough reparations that they'll
barely be able to afford an army for the next twenty years.
Although why anybody would want a few thousand miles of permafrost is
too complex a question for me.” She stops, tilts her head to one side,
looks me in the eye, and shrugs, her hands knotting on her coffee mug.
I've seen that look before, and I know what she's gonna say before she
says it. “I think I'm done, Jen.”
“Done?”
It even looks like an
honest smile, this time. “Yeah. I think I'm going to call an election
and let the voters throw me out. I bet the Conservatives and the Home
party can swing a coalition, and I'm ready to pack my socks and undies
and go home to Calgary. I'm just too proud to say I quit.”
You know, I don't
really
want
to kick her in the
teeth, for once. But on the other hand, she so very obviously needs it.
“Oh, for Christ's sake, Connie. Get off the pity wagon already, would
you? The seat's full enough with me up here.”
Riel blinks at me.
The bruises under her eyes are dark enough for Min-xue to dip his brush
in and write poetry. I stop midrant and try again, softer. “You're
ready to walk away from your dream on the eve of success, you realize.”
“I considered it more
saving enough face so it didn't look like I was slinking home with my
tail clamped over my groin.”
The image is too
much. I'm laughing hard enough that I have to set my coffee cup down. I
expect any minute now a concerned Mountie is going to bust down the
door. “Mary Mother of God, woman. The expansionist Chinese government
has wiped itself out, the EU, the commonwealth, and PanMalaysia are
going to sign your cogovernance agreement so they have a crack at the Montreal and her sisters, and
the Latin American states aren't far behind. You've got your treaty
organization. And we walked out of the whole damn thing with our hands
clean—”
She looks down at
hers, holds one out palm-up. “Our hands aren't even remotely clean.
Just because the blood doesn't show doesn't mean it's gone.”
Yeah. Well, you know
what I mean. “They look clean. And that's all the world cares
about. And we need
you. Because if it's not you, it's people like Shijie. And Hardy. And
Fred.”
I turn my back on
her, which is more effort than I like. Dammit. Much as I'd like to feed
her her own superior smile sometimes, I still want the woman to like me. And I want her to
like herself enough to keep doing what we need her for. Because, God
knows, I haven't got it in me to try.
I make it three steps
toward the door before she raps out my name. “Casey!”
“What?”
“I'm going to have a
plaque made for the front door of this place, you know that? ‘The men
who love war are mostly the ones who have never been in it.'”
“Send a wreath to
Minister Shijie's funeral, won't you? From the both of us?”
She catches my gaze
when I would have turned away. “I'm sending Fred. And you. Lay the
damned wreath yourself.”
It stops me short. I
haven't been to see Fred in the hospital. I had no intention of going.
“Valens is on his feet? Did he take the nanosurgeons?”
“He's on his feet,”
she says, with a smile that narrows her eyes. “But he refused the
Benefactor tech. Categorically.”
“Huh.”
She doesn't say
anything, just gives me a second to chew on my lip and think. I snort.
“He always
was
kind of a pussy.
Always willing to stand back and let somebody else step up.”
“Not like you.”
“No.” It hurts to say
it. It hurts to think it. “I'd rather it was me, all things considered.”
“Jenny,” she says,
and she puts her coffee cup down, and she comes across the rug, and she
tilts her head back to look at me. “You ever think about a career in
politics?”
It isn't so much that
my mouth goes dry as that it is dry, suddenly and completely, like
there was never any moisture in the world.
“You get to stay
here, Gabe and Elspeth stay with the contact program, Genie gets to
finish out school and go to college.” She sparkles at me a little,
certain of her own powers.
Bernard Xu once told
me to save the world. Good Christ.
I'm a madwoman. I
stop, and swallow, and I think about it for ten long, hard, aching
seconds, while Riel stares at me, and I swear I can hear the world creak
slightly as it spins a little slower than it usually does.
Peacock told me to
save the world for him. But you know something? I did that. And I really
want to see what's on the other side of all those rocks up there, and
all that empty space.
“I'd be wasted
anywhere but the Montreal, Madam Prime Minister,” I say, and
stick out my right hand.
It's another good ten
seconds before she manages to put out her own, and take it.
Nine months
later
8:30 AM
28 July 2064
Clarke Orbital
Platform
Leslie leaned both
hands against the chill crystal of Clarke's observation deck as the Montreal 's fretted golden
sails bore her away, the Huang Di trailing her on a
parallel line of ascent, chemical engines smearing the sky behind with
light. He didn't bother to magnify the image as the two ships shrank to
pinpoints, rising out of the plane of the elliptic. Leslie didn't need
to see them go. He could feel their weight like an indenting finger
dragged across the infinitely elastic substance of space.
Looking good,
Charlie.
I'm going to miss
you, Les. What if we find even weirder aliens where we're going?
Don't be daft. And
I've got enough aliens to talk to right here. And it's not like we'll
be out of touch.
They were both very
quiet for a little while. Leslie dusted his palms on each other and
turned away from the glass, past the reporters and the dignitaries and
the trays of canapés. Past Prime Minister Riel and Premier
Hsiung and General Valens, who were clustered with other VIPs near the
screen.
Leslie kept walking. Funny sort of
leave-taking, this.
Is it really?
Leave-taking, I mean?
Now that you
mention it—There was coffee to be had, self-heating vacuum mugs being
handed out by caterers. Leslie availed himself of one and staked out an
inexplicably empty chair. Well, whatever you run into out
there, I hope it's as easy to get along with as the Benefactors.
Charlie laughed
inside his head. Through Charlie's eyes, Leslie could see the Montreal 's familiar
hydroponics lab, the receding image of Earth on a wall screen, the
changing angle of the sunlight through the big windows. Why should what
they want be so different from what we want?
They're aliens?
Yes, but look at
it this way. We're not species in competition; there's nothing a
birdcageneeds that competes with
or conflicts with anything we need . We don't use the same resources.
And there's a lot of room up here.
That doesn't
explain why they came running to see what was up when we started
playing with the tech they left on Mars. Or why they left it there in
the first place.
Charlie rubbed the
bridge of his nose. Leslie caught himself mirroring the gesture and
smiled.
Charlie shrugged. Why does a kid
poke
anthills with a stick?
To see what the
ants are going to do. To see what the inside of the nest looks like.Leslie paused. Oh, bugger it,
Charlie. You want to know what I think? I think Elspeth's right. I
think they wanted us to teach them how to talk to each other. I think
they needed somebody to translate. And they got it. And I feel like an
idiot just saying it, because that implies they've been wandering
around out there for umpteen million years, unable to talk to each
other except by grunts and pointing, and a bunch of chimpanzees stagger
in and accomplish it in nine months. And that's just ridiculous.
Why is it
ridiculous?Leslie could feel Charlie's encouragement, his agreement. We've been walking
around in gravity for the last umpteen million years, and they showed
us how to manipulate it in brand-new ways in a couple of months. They never had to learn to talk.
Leslie didn't have an
argument for that. Or not a good one, anyway. They're critters
that manipulate gravity, and we're critters that manipulate symbols.
That's what I said.
It doesn't make
you nervous?
It doesn't make
you nervous, and you're the Jonah who spent his time in the belly of
the whale.
Because I feel
like it ought to scare somebody.
The Montreal kept climbing.
Charlie stood and glanced out the port; Leslie shared the view. They
could just catch the red flare of the Huang Di 's engines reflected
against the
Montreal
's vanes, although
they couldn't see the Chinese ship herself. You're the one who keeps talking
about beginner stories, Les. You just don't like being on the beginner
side of the damned things any more than anyone else does.
“Bloody hell,” Leslie
said out loud. “Charlie, I hate it when you're right.”
“Leslie?”
He didn't jump as
Jeremy laid a hand on his shoulder, leaning down a little. He'd felt
the linguist coming up behind him. “Yes, Jer?”
“Come on,” he said,
letting his hand fall away. “These guys are going to be here all night.
Let's get something to eat, and flicker our flashlights at the shiptree
for a couple of hours. Maybe we can teach it some nursery rhymes.”
Leslie grinned and
got up. Beginner stories.
Sure.
Three years
later
1746 hours
Wednesday 15
December 2066
HMCSSMontreal
LaGrange Point,
near Valentine
Elspeth has stationed
herself by the far wall of the room, where she can see everybody. She
keeps looking back and forth between Wainwright, Charlie, Gabe, Patty,
Genie, and me. It's a measuring look, as if she's trying to figure out
which sand castle is likely to crumble first, so she can shove some
more mud up against it. Her irises gleam like polished agate,
excitement thrumming through her, giving a lie to the new gray in her
hair, coarse wiry strands that go this-way and that-way, oblivious to
the direction of her long coiling ringlets. You'd think it would be
Gabe who would hold this mad little family together.
You'd be wrong.
She's looking at him
when I wander over to her and slouch against the wall, my upper arm
against her shoulder. She sighs and leans into the touch, warmth
pressing my jumpsuit into my skin. She pushes a little harder, leaning
in to me. Neither one of us looks down from the planet on the monitor.
“Ugly fucker,” I say, while the whole bridge holds its breath in quiet
awe.
The dusty brown
planet spins like a flicked bottle top, the ringed, sky-killing bulk of
its gray-green motherworld hanging in crescent behind it. The light of
the star that warms them isn't quite right either, and from what I
understand the bigger planet's orbit is so erratic that the little
Earth-like world we plan in our infinite arrogance to colonize will
have summers like Phoenix, Arizona, and winters like Thompson,
Manitoba. What's not scorched desert is frozen desert.
And based on the
first long-range surveys, there's some kind of life down there smart
enough to build cities. Still, we learned to talk to the birdcages and
the shiptree, and we'll learn to talk to these guys, too. And Manitoba
may be cold, but hey, people been living there a hell of a long time
now. And like the Benefactors before us, we're a tougher species than
we were.
“Bet it will look
okay to the crews of those generation ships, when the Huang Di starts retrieving
them.”
“When does Min-xue .
. . pardon me, Captain Xie . . . leave?”
It's become seamless.
I don't have to ask Richard; the information is just there, waiting for
me, as if I always knew it. “Oh five hundred.” Thank you, Dick. He feels different
now, bigger: talking to him is like talking to a reflection in a still
pool. It's right there, close enough to touch, but you can feel how
deep the water is underneath it.
And how long before
we start taking him for granted, too?
“Genie already has.”
A rueful acknowledgment, and he dissolves in a shiver of pixels. He'll
be back if I need him. Or hell, even if I don't.
I snicker. Elspeth
tilts her head against my arm.
Somewhere down there,
there's a mountain or a sea that's going to be named after Leah
Castaign. Once we pick it out. Koske gets one, too, and the crews of the Quebec and the Li Bo and the Lao Tzu. And after them, the
crews of Soyuzes and Apollos that Richard could tell me numbers for, if
I bothered to ask him, and some American space shuttles destroyed
around the turn of the century, and a Brazilian tug crew killed
capturing the rock that anchors the far end of the Clarke beanstalk,
and the crew of the first Chinese Mars lander, and then there's twenty
years of in-system accidents to get through . . .
They've already
decided the little planet is going to be called Valentine, and the big
one Bondarenko.
I just hope we won't
run out of planets before we run out of names. On the other hand,
chances are good there are going to be more planets, aren't there?
And also that there
are going to be more names.
It's quiet a long
time. Beep and hum of workstations, rustle of fabric, and not a word
spoken as we all stand there and gape like a bunch of fools. I don't
miss the fact that Patty reaches out and slings a casual arm around
Genie's shoulders as they stand together. Nor do I miss the way Genie
leans into the embrace. That jealous pang in my gut can just go to hell.
“Jen?”
I must have got even
quieter than the rest of the crew. And Elspeth never needed technology
to read anybody's mind. “Doc?”
She stands up
straight and gives me another little nudge before she steps half an
inch away. “When are you going to forgive Patty for not being Leah?”
I look down at the
top of her head for six long seconds before I blink. “Why you always
gotta ask the hard questions?”
“It's my job.”
“Uh-huh.” It's a good
question, though, even if I hate it. And I know the answer, and I hate
that, too: I'm not. It's a crappy answer, and it's not the Hollywood
one. But it's true.
On the other hand,
that's my problem and not hers, and I don't have to make it hers, do I?
Because if I were a grown-up—which I'm not, not by a long shot, and I
know that—but if I were a grown-up, I'd walk over there and
drop an arm around her
shoulders, and I'd pick Genie up, although Genie's big enough that
she'd probably smack me for it, and I'd hug both of them until they
squeak.
Oh, right. What the
hell am I waiting for, again? I mean, really—
What's the worst that
could happen?
“Hah,” Richard says
in my ear, as I start forward. “Jenny, if you have to ask—”
Many men
afterwards become country, in that place, Ancestors.
—Bruce Chatwin , The Songlines
Epilogue:
eleven years later
1300 hours
Saturday 15 May
2077
Toronto Impact
Memorial
Toronto, Ontario
It's been awhile
since I felt soil under my feet: it presses my soles strangely, Earth's
gravity harsh after so long aboard the Montreal . And yet I wander
through the crowds on a fine May morning: the fifteenth. Leah's
twenty-eighth birthday would have been next week. Taurus, the bull, and
the year of the rooster. The moon of greening grass and false prophets.
The tourists and
dignitaries and mourners don't step aside for me. I keep my head down
and my chin hidden behind my collar, and if anyone notices me, it's to
wonder why I'm wearing gloves and a trenchcoat on a warm spring day.
What is it that moves
us to build gardens where people die?
Not that it's wrong.
Something should grow out of this.
Hell. Something did.
I won't find Leah's
name anywhere on the black stone paving the bottom of the shallow
reflecting pool. Won't find it carved in the dolomite inlaid with stars
of steel that surrounds the rippling water, or on the pale green-veined
marble obelisk that commemorates the uncounted dead. I won't find
Indigo's name or Face's name either, because here there are no names.
Only the water silver
over black stone, and the splashing of quiet fountains, and the obelisk
yearning skyward like a pillar of light. Like a pillar of desire,
rising from an island at the center of the pool. An island the faithful
have littered with offerings and farewell gifts.
The smell of lavender
and rosemary wafts from the hedges, and early bees and butterflies
service the blooms. The drone of their wings is the only sound on the
air except for the whispers. Dick's done brilliantly—the ice caps are
growing, the oceans receding, although they're still not at anything
like historic levels. I hope he's able to stabilize the climate before
it flips the other way, into an ice age.
But I guess we'll
blow up that bridge when we come to it.
I pass a retired
soldier on a park bench, stop, and turn back as his profile catches my
eye. He climbs to his feet: still in uniform. “The jacket's gotten a
little big for you, Fred. Did Patty tell you I was coming?”
She's doing grad
work, now, at Oxford. They've rebuilt; Jeremy was invited to teach, and
he recruited her as a student. Not that she would have had any trouble
getting in, although Fred threw a fit when she decided to leave the
service. It's good to see the kid getting what she wants for a change,
instead of what her family's told her to want.
He shakes his head,
his cover in his hand. Reddened cheeks pouchy, hair gone white but only
slightly thinning, eyebrows that probably seem threatening when he
glowers. “The Vancouver 's just left on an exploratory
mission, and the Toronto is about ready to fly. They're going
to give her to Genie as primary pilot, although I don't think Genie's
heard that yet, and she's not going to hear it from you.”
“Done at
twenty-three. Damn.”
“Kid's special.” He
shrugs. “And I wouldn't call it done. You have some
finished apprentices for us, I hope?”
“Some.” I shoo a
curious honeybee away. “So how'd you know I'd be here? Dick rat me out?
Did Doc?” Elspeth would, too. If she thought I needed closure.
“Elspeth doesn't talk
to me. No, I heard the Montreal was home. I guessed.”
He sticks his hand out and I take it, glad of my gloves. Brief contact,
as if we're in a contest to see who can be the first to let it drop. I
turn and keep walking. He falls into step. “Gabe's not here? Elspeth?”
“Couldn't stand to
come.”
“Did you ever get
married?”
All three of us,
Fred, or any two in combination?Be funny if Elspeth and I did it, and
kept Gabe around as a houseboy. Hell, I bet he'd be amused by that.
Gabe, I mean. Well, Valens, too. “Why mess with what works?”
No answer to my
sarcasm but the splashing of water as he strolls along beside me,
supple and spry. Mideighties aren't what they used to be.
I scratch the back of
my right hand. “You ever try again?”
“Georges raised
parrots. He would have wanted me to pine.” He waves to the tall white
stone, with the back of his hand as if his shoulder pained him. “I hear
the colony is doing well.”
I shrug. There's a
funny story about that, but it's not for today. “They're doing all
right, I guess. I see those Benefactor ships are still in orbit.”
“Different two,” he
says. “They change off. They still playing music at you?”
“And us at them. Jer,
Richard, Elspeth, and Les have a pidgin worked out with the birdcages.
And good chunks of a chemical—a pheromone—and a light grammar, I guess
you'd call it with the shiptree. It's nice not having to leave Elspeth here, thanks
to Dick and the wire. Gabe would drive me nuts without her.” I lower my
head; he offers a handkerchief. I blow my nose. I'm not the only one.
“They did a nice job on the memorial, Fred.”
“They did.”
The tide of
pedestrians carries us to the edge of the reflecting pool at a shuffle
and hesitates. Nobody pushes. We all take our time. Around me, people
are unlacing shoes, rolling up pant legs, sliding stockings off. I do
the same, a tidy little pile of socks and spitshined leather by the lip
of the pool. People start staring when I peel the gloves off; I hear
the murmurs. I hear my name once, twice, and then a ripple of
excitement when I shrug off the black trenchcoat and stand there in the
sunlight, barefoot in a fifteen-year-old uniform.
I don't look at them,
but I can feel them looking at me, and the ones wading out to the
island pause, each of them, as if a giant hand stopped and turned them
in their tracks. Genie and Patty and Gabe came to the dedication, ten
years back.
I couldn't. “Hold my
coat for me, Fred.”
He doesn't answer.
But he folds the coat over his arm.
The water's sun-warm
against my ankles, the black stones slippery and smooth, bumpy with
treasures. People stand aside as I stride forward, stinging eyes fixed
on the blur of the obelisk, footsteps quick enough to scatter droplets
of water like diamonds into the sun. I find the feather in my pocket by
touch and draw it out—a little the worse for wear, but safe in its
chamois. Like rubies, the beads catch the light when I uncover it.
There are words on
the obelisk my eyes are too blurred to make out, even when I step onto
the island and pick carefully between the scattered offerings—photos
and flags, trinkets and caskets and a full bottle of 18-year-old
Scotch—the airworthy ones weighted with the heavier.
I can't quite read
the words, but they're graven deep and I trace them with a fingertip:
10:59PM
December 21, 2062
I tug a bit of sinew
from my pocket, because it's traditional, and I wind it around the
obelisk—which is slender enough to span with my arms, like the waist of
a teenage girl—and then I tie Nell's feather to it. Tight, just above
the writing. So the veins I smooth with my fingertips flutter in the
breeze and the glass jewels sparkle in the sun.
The stone's warm
where I lean my forehead on it. When I straighten up and wipe my nose
on the back of my hand, the crowd is so silent I hear my sniffle echo.
Every single one of them stares at me, and they don't glance down when
I stop at the edge of the island and glare, putting all the eagle in
the look I can.
The moment is
stillness, utter and heartless, and that stillness continues when I
step into the water again and wade back to shore, sodden trouser cuffs
clinging to my ankles.
Walking through the
water. Trying to get across.
Just like everybody
else.