One
La Causa
1
WESTCHESTER COUNTY,NY
SEPTEMBER 20
A good walk spoiled, Patrick Sullivan thought as he
trudged toward the rough where his slicing golf ball had disappeared. Somebody
had got that right.
Patrick didn't actually hate
golf, but he suffered from a condition he'd come to call GADD-Golf Attention
Deficit Disorder. Nine holes and he'd had it. Maybe that was because during his
first nine holes he racked up more strokes than most golfers did in eighteen.
But today he was playing with Ben Armstrong, CFO of the Jarman department store
chain and a valued client, who, although even less skillful than Patrick on the
links, seemed immune to GADD.
Maybe it was the clothes.
Armstrong, a florid-faced fellow in his sixties, sporting a neat goatee the
same steel-gray shade as his hair, had decked himself out in a
blue-and-raspberry-striped shirt, raspberry pants, and white golf shoes.
Patrick wasn't into sherbet shades; he wore a white shirt, navy slacks, and tan
shoes.
Golf or not, he was having a
good walk on a bright September day among the luxuriously verdant rolling hills
of upper Westchester where the Beacon Ridge club nestled its links. The air was
redolent of fresh-mown grass and money.
Christ, he wanted into this
place. Not so much for the golf, but because golf was such a great way to do
business.
Like today. Armstrong, a
club member, had asked Patrick out for a two-some. Wanted to get caught up on
the upcoming negotiations with the sales-clerk union. Patrick's specialty was
labor law, and though he worked both sides, lately he'd found himself billing
more and more hours to the management end.
Beacon Ridge was packed with
heavies like Armstrong. A goldmine of potential clients and billable hours.
Patrick's firm loved billable hours-little else mattered at Payes &
Hecht-and if he could tap into this mother lode...
A sudden screech from ahead
and to his left drew his attention. His caddie was pointing at the ground.
"Here, sir, here! I find! Here!"
"Good eye, Nabb,"
Patrick said as he walked over.
"Yessir," Nabb
said, his head bobbing as he grinned broadly at the praise. "Good eye,
good eye."
Typical of the Beacon Ridge
caddies, Nabb was an average size sim, about five-three, maybe 130 pounds; he
sported a little more facial hair than most sims. Armstrong's caddie, Deek, was
a bit different-beefier, and seemed taller, although that might be due to
better posture. They looked like hominids yanked from the Stone Age and
wrestled into the Beacon Ridge caddie uniform of lime green shirt and white
pants, but they moved with a certain grace despite their slightly bowed legs.
Beacon Ridge had introduced
sim caddies a couple of years ago, the first golf club in the country to do so.
Caused quite a stir at the time, but the club members seemed to enjoy the
status of being pioneers in the transgenic revolution. Other clubs soon
followed suit, but Beacon Ridge remained famous for being the first. By now
sims were practically part of the scenery around the links.
"Come on, movie
star!" Armstrong called from the green. "You can do it!"
Movie star...on their first
meeting he'd said Patrick reminded him of Axel Sommers, the latest digital
heartthrob. Patrick figured Armstrong needed glasses. Sure, they both had blue
eyes and slightly wavy blond hair, but Sommers looked just a little too pretty
for comfort.
Patrick waved and turned to
Nabb. "Let me have the five wood."
The sim's dark brown eyes
shifted between the ball nestled in the rough against a broad-leafed weed, and
the green a hundred yards away atop a slope.
"Seven better,
sir."
"That five's especially
made for rough"-Christ knows I'm in it enough-"and this is as rough
as it gets."
Nabb pulled out the seven
and handed it to him. "Five too far, sir."
"What makes you think
you know my game?" Patrick said, trying to keep his annoyance out of his
tone. He'd take golf advice from just about anyone, even a sim, but he knew his
own limitations. "This is the first time you've caddied for me."
"Nabb watch Mist
Sulliman before."
"Really?" He
didn't get to play here all that often. How could this creature know his game?
The sim thrust the iron
forward. "Seven."
Patrick snatched the club.
"Okay. We'll do it your way. But if-I should say,when -it falls short and
rolls back down that hill, I'm gonna have your hide."
Nabb said nothing, simply
stepped back to give Patrick room.
Patrick took two practice
swings, stepped up to the ball, and whacked it. The ball sailed high, sailed
straight, and plopped out of sight somewhere atop the slope.
Armstrong started clapping.
"Nice shot! Less than a dozen feet from the hole!"
Patrick turned to Nabb and
had to laugh when he saw the huge grin on the sim's apelike face. "Don't
say you told me so!"
"Nevsay, sir. Just want
Mist Sulliman win."
Wants the nonmember to win?
Odd. But who could figure what went on in an animal's head.
Patrick one-putted and
birdied the hole-an event rare enough to warrant a victory jig, but he resisted.
Armstrong's caddie seemed as pleased as Nabb.
As they strolled toward the
next tee, Patrick noticed swelling and bruising around Deek's right eye.
"What happened to
you?"
"Bump door, sir."
"Deek ver clums,"
Nabb said. "Always bump self. Not watch where go."
"Quit jawing with the
help, Patty," Armstrong said. He laughed. "Next thing you know you'll
be trying to unionize them."
Nabb dropped Patrick's golf
bag.
"Sorry, sir," he
said as he knelt to gather up the clubs. "Sometime Nabb too ver
clums."
2
Patrick won the round by a single stroke, so Armstrong
would have to buy the drinks. Before heading for the bar, Patrick slipped Nabb
a ten-dollar bill.
Armstrong snatched it from
the sim's fingers and handed it back to Patrick. "No tipping sims. That's
a no-no."
"I always tip my
caddie."
"If he's human, sure.
But what's a sim gonna do with money?"
"Buy candy bars, or
maybe a bottle of Cuervo. Who cares?"
"Better not. Holmes'll
have a fit."
Patrick knew all about
Holmes Carter: club president and a notorious pain-in-the-ass stickler.
Patrick winked at Armstrong.
"You ever caddie?"
"Me? Naw."
Of course not, Patrick
thought. You were probably getting private golf lessons instead.
"I did. Right here,
before anyone ever heard of sims."
And I don't care if he's
human, sim, or some kind of robot, Patrick thought, I willalways tip my caddie.
When Armstrong turned toward
the locker room, Patrick rolled up the bill and palmed it to Nabb.
Inside, they had a corner of
the bar to themselves, and while they were talking and drinking-Armstrong a
Gibson up and Patrick a Rob Roy on the rocks-he had the odd feeling of being
watched. But whenever he looked around he saw only the sims bustling about. The
wait staff was human, but sims did all the bussing.
Patrick listened to
Armstrong's idea about opening negotiations with the clerks by demanding a few
choice give-backs from the full-timers' benefits package. Figured that would
put them on the defensive. What an asshole. The idea sucked, truly and big time.
Not because of the give-backs-nothing Patrick liked better than putting the
screws to the opposition-but because the clerks' negotiator was a bitch on
wheels who'd take that kind of opening salvo personally. From there on
negotiations would go straight downhill.
But he said, "The
idea's got merit, Ben. Let me think on how to approach it."
No sense in miffing a
deep-pocketed client.
Patrick ran a hand over the
polished mahogany of the bar and looked around at the well-heeled members
gathering in clusters on either side or filtering into the adjacent dining
room. He wanted to belong here so bad it made his gut ache. Wander in whenever
he damn well felt like it, set his foot on the brass rail, and hang with the
high rollers, trolling, setting his hooks, reeling them in.
But he'd already been turned
down three times.
While Armstrong was ordering
another round, Patrick headed for the men's room. After he washed up, the
white-coated sim attendant handed him a towel.
"May sim speak, Mist
Sulliman?"
Patrick glanced at him in
the mirror. An older sim, touches of gray at his temples and above his large
ears. Patrick had been here often enough to recognize him. His brass name tag
read "Tome."
"You know my
name?"
"Read you in paper, see
play golf-"
"Wait-wait-wait. Read
in paper? Sims can't read."
"This sim read."
That jolted Patrick. The
world was still trying to get used to talking animals, but reading-sims weren't
smart enough. Or at least they weren't supposed to be.
"How'd you learn to
read?"
"Taught self,
sir," Tome said, puffing his chest. "Not good, but can do."
Patrick stared. "This
is amazing! Why haven't you told the world?"
Tome shook his head.
"Other sim name Groh learn read. Tell evyone. Mans come take way.Nev more
see Groh."
"Really?" Who
could that have been but SimGen? But why recall a reading sim? Unless it was to
see how they could replicate the ability.
"Please not tell."
"Okay. Mum's the
word." But a reading sim...he shook his head in wonder. "So what'd
you want to say?"
"Mist Sulliman lawyer,
yes?"
"Yes." Patrick
grinned. "This isn't going to be a lawyer joke, is it? Don't tell me you
do stand-up too."
"No, sir. You lawyer
for union, is true?"
"Some days, yes; some
days I'm for management. Where's this going, Tome?"
"Sims been talking
and..." His voice trailed off.
Impatience nibbled at
Patrick. Out there on the bar the ice in his drink was melting.
"And what?"
"And..." The words
rushed out: "And sims want you start sim union."
Patrick's jaw dropped-he was
looking in the mirror when it swung down and he saw it hang open like a
trapdoor. Slowly he turned.
"A sim union? Have you
been nipping at the aftershave, Tome?"
"Have money," Tome
said. "Have saved. We give you make sim union."
"Wait a minute...wait a
minute..."
Patrick suddenly had a wild
thought. He looked around for a video camera. When he didn't see one, he
checked the stalls-all empty. Laughing, he came back to Tome.
A reading, AFL-CIO sim.
Sure.
"All right, who put you
up to it? Armstrong?Rogers ? Come on, who?"
"No, Mist Sulliman. We
know you. Want hire."
Could this cloned ape be
serious?
Patrick sighed. "Tome,
you have no idea what you're saying. Unions are for people. Sims aren't people.
That's the law."
"Yessir, but Mist
Sulliman lawyer. Lawyer change law. You-"
Just then the door swung
open and Holmes Carter waddled in. About Patrick's age-mid-thirties-but he
looked older and had a commanding lead in the gut department. A bulbous
forehead and no lips to speak of, and where Patrick's hair lay thick and fair,
Carter's was dark and thinning; his scalp gleamed through his comb-over. Soon
he'd be a chrome dome.
Or maybe not. Looking at
Carter's hair now, Patrick noticed that it was thicker; didn't appear to be a
rug or a weave either. Must have gone and got himself a splice to replace his
baldness gene. You ol' devil, you.
Too bad the genemeisters
couldn't do anything to reduce his fat. Scalps were easy: a limited number of
cells to splice. Fat was a whole other deal-trillions of fat cells in a body.
But fat, thin, bald, or
pompadoured, Carter would always be a first-class dork. No splice for that. But
he was also third-generation Beacon Ridge and first in line to inherit the
family's string of car dealerships. In his teens Patrick had caddied for the
two preceding generations of Carters and they'd been pretty decent. But Holmes...Holmes
must have been fashioned from what had collected in the skimmers of their gene
pool.
Although Patrick qualified
for the club professionally and financially-at least on paper-he hadn't been
able to squeak past the membership committee. The blackball rule was alive and
well here, and he was pretty sure Holmes Carter had used it to keep him out.
Probably couldn't tolerate the idea of a former caddy hobnobbing with the
members.
"Talking to yourself
again, Sullivan?" he said, baring his teeth in what passed for a smile.
"You might not believe
this, Holmes, but Tome and I were just..." Patrick noticed a sudden
fearful widening of the sim's eyes "...having a little chitchat."
Carter swung on Tome.
"You know the rules! No talking to people-even if it's a nonmember. You
are to be barely seen andnever heard!"
"Yessir," Tome
said. He turned away and hung his head.
Patrick spotted the ID
number and bar code tattooed on the nape of the sim's neck.
"Lighten up,
Holmesy," he said, then eyed the man's gut. "In more ways than one.
What's he supposed to do when I talk to him? Ignore me?"
Carter bellied up to the
urinal. "If it's you, yes. What's the matter? Can't get any people to
listen to you?"
"I guess I like sims
better than some people I know-present company included."
Carter had that shark grin
again as he returned from the urinal and began rinsing his hands. "You
never learn, do you, Sullivan. Why do I keep seeing you around here? When are
you going to quit cadging rounds of golf from our members and bamboozling them
into sponsoring you? Didn't you get the message when the committee turned you
down? You're not wanted around here."
That stung. But Patrick hid
the hurt and said nothing, simply stared at him.
"What's the
matter?" Carter said as he dried his hands. "Cat gotcher
tongue?"
"No," Patrick
said. "Just wondering why you sprang for a hair splice and passed up one
for a personality." Figuring he didn't have to worry about burning
nonexistent bridges, he added: "Also wondering why I'm standing here
listening to a used car salesman-"
"They'renot used!"
"-who has to use a
homing pigeon to get his belt around his waist."
Carter's pie face reddened
toward cherry. "You think you're funny?"
"I'm no Bill Hicks, but
I have my moments."
"Keep it up, Sullivan.
I hear you tipped a caddie today. Just keep it up and I'll have you banned from
the grounds, so no matter how many friends you have here, you'll never step on
our course again."
He threw his towelette at
Tome and stormed out.
Patrick waited for the door
to close, then turned to Tome.
"When do you get
off?"
"Club close ten,"
Tome said.
"I'll meet you then.
You may have found yourself a lawyer."
3
Patrick buzzed around in his new Beemer 1020i, more car
than he cared for, but if you wanted to snag the big clients, you had to look
like you didn't need them. As he drove he pondered how to tackle this sim union
thing, and wondered why he was attracted to it. He smiled, realizing the two
things he most enjoyed in his professional life were making money and pissing
off people he didn't like-in that order. And when he could combine the two,
that was heaven. Better than sex. Well, almost.
A bid to unionize the Beacon
Ridge sims would be a definite two-fer.
As he wound through the back
streets of Katonah he tried to organize what he knew about sims. They weren't
news anymore but they hadn't been around long enough to be taken for granted.
He was old enough to remember the uproar when Mercer Sinclair introduced the
first sim at an international genetics conference inToronto .
He shook his head. He
remembered how at the time it had been all anybody talked about. Religious
groups, animal rights groups, and branches of the government from the FTC to
the FDA had raised holy hell. You couldn't turn on a TV or radio without
hearing about sims or the Sinclairs.
Everybody knew the Sinclair
brothers' story. Sims hadn't been their first brush with genetic notoriety.
Ellis and Mercer started gene-swapping while grad students at Yale, published
some groundbreaking papers, then quit and went into business for themselves.
Their first "product" had been an instant success: a dander-free
feline pet for people allergic to cats. They used the enormous profits from
that to start work on altering apes.
What they came up with was a
creature more than chimpanzee and less than human. As Mercer Sinclair, the
brother who seemed to do all the talking, had tirelessly explained on every
show from Leno to Letterman to Ackenbury, and anyone else who had an audience,
they'd settled on the chimpanzee because its genome was so close to a human's-a
ninety-eight-point-four percent match-up in their DNA. As Sinclair liked to
point out, there was far greater genetic difference between a chimp and a
gorilla, or between the different species of squirrels running around the
average backyard.
One-point-six percent,
Patrick thought, shaking his head...the difference between me and a monkey. If
ninety percent of DNA was useless junk, how many genes was that? Couldn't be
many.
With so much shared DNA, it
hadn't taken a whole lot of germ-line engineering to produce a larger
skull-allowing for a larger brain, greater intelligence, and the intellectual
capacity for speech-and a larger, sturdier, more humanlike skeleton. That took
care of functional requirements. Smaller ears, less hirsute skin, a smaller
lower jaw, and other refinements made for a creature that looked far more human
than a chimp, one that might be mistaken for aHomo erectus , but never for
aHomo sap .
The result was the sim: a
good worker, agile, docile, with no interest in sex or money. Not an Einstein
among them, but bright enough to speak a stilted form of whatever language they
grew up with.
To manufacture and market
the product-Mercer Sinclair insisted from the get-go on referring to sims as a
product-the brothers had formed SimGen. And SimGen got the government to agree
that the creatures were just that: a product.
How they accomplished that
feat remained a mystery to Patrick and lots of other folks. President Bush the
Second had come out against the whole idea, calling it "Godless
science," and the Democratic congress, with its hands deep in the pockets
of the very anti-sim Big Labor, was ready to put the kibosh on the whole thing.
SimGen stock was in the toilet.
But somehow anti-sim
legislation kept getting deadlocked in various committees; for some
unfathomable reason, union bluster tapered off.
Instead of waiting for the
ax to fall, SimGen started cranking out sims for the unskilled labor markets.
Common consensus was that the Sinclair brothers had lost their minds and very
soon would lose their shirts. Who'd want transgenic laborers during a global
recession with millions of humans out of work.
The Bush administration,
wrapped up in the seemingly endless war on terrorism, failed to pass any
regulatory bills. And then came the boom of the mid-oughts, making the nineties
look like a pop gun and tightening all the labor markets. Suddenly sims weren't
such a godless idea after all. In fact, they made good economic sense. They
even allowed theUS to compete withAsia in the textile markets. The result: A
lot of senators and congressmen who previously might have been expected to vote
against, came out in support of pro-SimGen legislation.
Patrick remembered how
animal rights activists had cried foul and said the fix was in, but nothing was
ever proven, and in those days SimGen hadn't anywhere near the money to buy off
so many legislators.
Now was a different story,
of course. SimGen had been raking in the megabucks for years. As the darling of
mutual funds and small investors alike, its market cap value was soaring.
All of which made Patrick
feel like a microminiature David. Because the real heavyweight opposition to
organizing the sims would come from the SimGen Goliath. The last thing they'd
want was someone unionizing their property.
What he needed were allies.
But who? The religious fundamentalists would be no help; Orthodox Jews,
Moslems, and Christian Born Agains had found common ground in their opposition
to sims, but they wanted sims abolished, not unionized. The animal rights
groups like PETA and Greenpeace were a possibility, but they seemed to be in
disarray; they'd tried guerrilla tactics like raiding piecework shops and
"liberating" the sim workers; but the sims, unused to freedom, and
lost and confused in the big wide world, wound up returning to the shops on
their own.
Patrick could see that he
was going to be all alone out there.
On the other hand, maybe
SimGen wouldn't bother to lift a finger. Maybe they'd know what Patrick knew:
that he didn't have a kitten's chance in a room full of pit bulls. But what he
could do was raise a ruckus and embarrass the hell out of Beacon Ridge, then
settle out of court for a nice piece of change. That was what he'd aim for.
But after that...what? What
would the Beacon Ridge sims do with their money? Maybe Patrick could convince
them to start a practice of tipping thegolfers . He smiled. Wouldn't that be a
kick.
He checked his watch: 10:14.
Time to meet with his new clients.
He parked on a side street
near the creek that ran through the grounds. Yellow legal pad in hand, he
stepped out, found an opening in the high privet hedge, and for some reason
thought of his father.
Mike Sullivan was a retired
steamfitter who had been a diehard union man all his life. He'd raised his
family within earshot of the Rensselaer rail-yards outsideAlbany until Patrick
was twelve, then moved them to Dobbs Ferry. Patrick remembered how proud he'd
been when his son became the first member of the family to graduate college.
But he hadn't been so crazy about Patrick's idea of a career in law. He
couldn't afford to send him, so Patrick had paid his own way through Pace Law.
If he'd gone on to become a champion of the labor movement, Dad might have
bragged about his son the lawyer; but Patrick had shied away from the crusader
role, opting to join the lumpen proletariat of the profession in a medium-size
firm, and scratch his way up through the ranks.
Dad had been able to live
with that. But would he be able to live with the idea of his son as a labor
organizer-of sims?
Do I really want to do this?
Patrick knew he should give
himself a little more time-maybe a lot more time-to weigh the pros and cons. He
had an impulsive nature which he managed to control at the bargaining table,
but it had put him in hot spots more than once. Did he want to start this fire?
Damn right he did. Hell hath
no fury like an attorney scorned. Beacon Ridge didn't want him? Fine. They were
going to regret that. Not only was there a buck or two to be made, but instead
of seeing less of the man he'd blackballed, Holmes Carter was pretty soon going
to feel like he was married to Patrick Sullivan.
Here comes the bride,
Patrick thought as he stepped through the hedge onto Beacon Ridge property.
4
Beacon Ridge quartered its sims in a long barracklike
building in the low corner of the club grounds, a section that flooded during a
heavy rain. The lights were on, the windows open, and music filtered out into
the cool night air. Patrick stopped and listened. Was that...?
"Ma-gic...mo-ments..."
Perry Como?
He saw a sim silhouetted in
the lighted doorway. It pointed to him and ducked back inside, crying, "Is
him! Comes now! Just like said, he come!" A babble of voices arose from
within.
What am I? Patrick thought.
The messiah?
Tome met him at the door and
motioned him inside. "So happy come you, Mist Sulliman. Welcome to sim
home, sir."
Patrick stopped and looked
around. The two dozen Beacon Ridge male and female sims who carried the golf
bags on the links, set and cleared the tables in the dining room, washed the
dishes and peeled the potatoes in the kitchen, and cut the grass and weeded the
flower beds, stood gathered before him in the front room of their quarters.
Overhead fluorescents shone on scattered stuffed chairs, long mess-hall style
eating tables, and industrial carpeting. Two TVs, one in each far corner, were
on but no one was watching; soft music crooned from the radio.
Patrick had once visited a
client in a mental hospital; this reminded him of that institution's day room.
"What's behind the
wall?" he said.
"We sleep."
With most of his fellow sims
trooping behind like lemmings, Tome led Patrick to the dormitory section where
triple-decker bunks lined the walls. A toilet and shower area lay beyond the
next wall. Patrick wondered about the coed living conditions, then remembered
reading that in addition to being sterile, sims' libidos were genetically
suppressed.
Back in the front room, Tome
led Patrick to a graying female sim seated in one of the easy chairs.
"This Gabba, sir,"
he said. "She oldest. Like mother here."
"Yessir." The
aging female started a slow, painful rise from her chair. "So pleased
meet-"
Patrick waved her
back-probably take the arthritic old thing ten minutes to stand and another ten
to sit down again. "Don't get up. I'm gonna sit anyway."
He looked around, found an
empty chair, and lowered himself into it. The rest of the sims gathered around
in a circle. He spotted Nabb but didn't see Deek. He'd never been this close to
so many sims at one time and was struck by how similar they looked. You didn't
notice when you saw them singly or in pairs, but crowded together like this...
He'd read where SimGen made
minor variations in the genomes as they cloned them so sims wouldn't look like
they'd all been cast in the same mold. Maybe this crowd didn't exactly have a
cookie-cutter appearance, but no question they'd all been baked from the same
batter.
Now, here, with their pidgin
English and weird looks and odd way of moving, he felt as if he'd dropped in on
a colony of simple folk of a different race and culture.
But these folk wereowned .
He could not allow himself to forget that. Anything he'd read about SimGen
credited two moves for its success: First was the company's patents on nearly
all the viable recombinant chimp genomes, guaranteeing the field to itself;
second was the Sinclair brothers' decision not to sell their product, but to
lease it instead.
A sim lease was too pricey
to allow it to be a common household servant, but the creatures were a huge
bargain as unskilled labor-no social security taxes, no pension plans, no
compensation or unemployment insurance. And when one got hurt or too infirm to
do the job, SimGen replaced it.
As a result, more and more
businesses all over the industrialized world were lining up for sims.
And since the creatures were
all genetically sterile, preventing black-market types from growing their own, SimGen
had an absolute lock on the market. Special legislation had classified sims as
neither humans nor animals; since they did not occur naturally, and since
SimGen owned the patent on their genome and, in a very real sense, manufactured
them, they were deemed a product, a commodity-property-and SimGen owned every
damn one of them.
He leaned toward Gabba.
"Okay, the first thing I have to ask is where the hell you came up with
the idea of a union?"
"See TV," Tome
said.
Patrick had expected Gabba,
the apparent matriarch of the group, to respond, but obviously Tome was the
spokessim.
"Read also paper,"
Tome added.
"Yeah, that's right.
You can read." He still couldn't quite believe it. "How about the
rest of you?"
"Only Tome read,"
the sim said.
"Okay, so you came up
with this idea of starting a union. That means you want something you don't
have. To tell you the truth," he said, looking around, "compared to
other sims who work in sweatshops or on production lines or digging ditches,
you've got it pretty cushy here."
Never failed. With humans,
and now apparently even with sims: The more you have, the more you want. But
maybe he should be careful here. Didn't want to change their minds.
He quickly added, "But
that doesn't mean, of course, that your living conditions can't be improved. So
what are our demands gonna be? More food? Better quarters?"
"Sim want family,
sir," Tome said.
Patrick felt as if he'd been
slapped. Talk about coming out of left field...
Family? Uh-uh. No way that's
gonna happen.
"You don't mean like
becoming wives and husbands and having children, and all that, do you? Because
if-"
"No, sir," Tome
said, waving his arms around at his fellow sims. "This family."
"I don't get it."
"Sims grow up large
group, no mommy, no daddy, just child sims. Get know others, make friend, then
take away. Come here, make friend, then take away. No want take away. Want stay
together. Want family."
"I see," Patrick
said slowly. "Family...interesting concept."
He looked around at the
intent faces of the creatures encircling him. The faces were definitely simian,
but far less so than any monkey in the wild. They'd been retooled from
chimpanzees, a creature genetically damn near human. But pure chimps had
mothers and fathers and a family structure. Sims were even closer to humans yet
they were raised like cattle and leased out as soon as they were fit for work.
And then they were traded in or swapped around like used cars.
Nowhere along the line did
they have any semblance of a family.
Patrick felt a twinge of
discomfort, almost like sympathy. He brushed it away. Never get emotionally
involved. Stick to the facts.
But hey, if I feel
something...
This was good. Oh, this was
very good. He could use this. He could embellish this a little and tug like mad
on all sorts of heartstrings.
He began scratching notes on
his pad: Poor lost sims, raised without parents or siblings, cast out into the
cold cruel world to work long hours for no pay. They weren't asking for wages,
not for anything material, they just wanted a little personal continuity in
their lives...the right to keep certain close-knit groups of sims from being
broken up...allowed to live together and work together...as a makeshift family
of sorts...
Ilove it!
Maybe he could even start up
a nationwide Sim Legal Aid Fund.
This was looking better and
better.
"Okay. That kind of
family just might fly. So that's what we'll shoot for. Let's do it."
Tome's eyes lit. "Is
yes? Mist Sulliman do?"
"That's what I
said."
Tome pumped his long arms in
the air and the rest of the sims began screeching and jumping about, capering
in circles, leaping in the air. Only Gabba remained seated, but she was
clapping and grinning.
Patrick had to smile. What a
rambunctious crew. Something innocent and almost childlike about them, like
early humans might have been before hundreds of generations of social
conditioning turned them into the uptight species they were today.
Tome raised his fist and
screeched, "La Causa!"
The rest of the sims took up
the cry, turning it into a chant.
Patrick raised his hands to
calm them.
"Where did you pick up
'La Causa'?" he said when he could hear himself.
"From Jorge," Tome
said.
"Who's Jorge?"
"He cook kitchen. Ask
him union. He give smile and do fist and say, 'La Causa.'"
Again exuberant jumping and
running and chanting.
When finally they calmed
down, Patrick said, "The best way to approach this may be to demand a
union and then settle for all of you staying together as a group."
"Settle?" Tome
said, frowning. "That mean no union?"
Don't start going Cesar
Chavez on me, Tome.
"A union could be a
long shot, I'm afraid," Patrick said. Like to the moon and beyond.
"I'm telling you this up front so you won't be disappointed if we lose on
that one." Never raise a client's expectations. Always low-ball the
outcome. "But I think we could possibly walk away from this deal with a
family and some cash."
"Cash?"
"Money. It's called a
settlement. I figure we ought to be able to get the club to concede on the
family issue plus squeeze them for a nice piece of change in return for our
shutting up and leaving them alone. And then we'll split the money
fifty-fifty."
"Mist Sulliman get
half?" Tome said.
Aw, we're not going to
haggle are we?
"Sure. When you
consider how much time I'll be devoting to this, and strictly on a contingency
basis, you-"
"No," Tome said.
"No?"
"No half for Mist
Sulliman. Take all."
Patrick blinked, too shocked
to speak. Never in his life had he expected to hear those words pass a client's
lips.
"All? But what about
you guys?"
"Money not want."
"Of course you do. You
could use it to fix up this place, buy one of those big picture-frame TVs,
better furniture..."
...start tipping the
golfers...
Tome was shaking his head.
"All money for you."
"And all you want is
this family thing?"
Tome nodded.
"Family...any one thing other."
Patrick poised his pen over
the pad. "Shoot."
Tome's big brown eyes bored
into him. "Respect, Mist Sulliman. Just little respect."
Patrick felt his mouth go
dry. Talk about a tall order. But he recovered and wrote it down.
"Okay. Respect. Maybe
we can get into the specifics of that at a later date. Right now, the first
thing we do is formally petition the club to allow you to form a union. They'll
refuse, of course. When that happens, we go before the NLRB."
"Enell...?"
"National Labor
Relations Board."
That was when the shit would
really hit the fan. Patrick rubbed his hands together in a dizzying mix of
anticipation, dread, and glee.
5
MANHATTAN
SEPTEMBER 28
Romy Cadman sat at her desk in theNew York branch of the
Office for the Protection of Research Risks, skimming through the animal
welfare report on the rat-testing protocols in Rast Corporation's
psychopharmaceutical lab. The lab was testing the amphetamine potentiation
effect of a number of compounds with antidepressant properties. Everything
seemed to be in order.
Her phone double-rang. The
British-style ring-ring meant the call was incoming on her direct line; an
outside call, bypassing the switchboard. She picked up immediately.
"D-A-W," she said.
If callers didn't know that meant Division of Animal Welfare, they could ask.
"Good morning, Ms.
Cadman."
Romy immediately recognized
Zero's deep voice on the other end. No surprise. She'd figured he'd be calling
soon.
"Good morning
yourself."
"You've heard, I
assume."
"About the sim union
thing?" What else would he be calling about. "Seems it's all people
here are talking about."
"We should talk about
it as well. Soon. When is good for you?"
"I was about to break
for lunch anyway. I can be there in twenty minutes."
"Fine."
Where was not discussed.
Romy knew.
She closed the report on her
computer screen and straightened her desk, repositioning a brass paperweight inscribed
withR. Cadman in large black letters; a gift from her mother years ago. Mom had
wanted the engraver to use her full name but Romy had protested. She'd always
hated "Romilda" and didn't want to see it every time she stepped into
her office.
She ran a brush through her
close-cropped dark brown hair, slipped into the jacket of her gray pants
suit-cut to show off her long slim legs and tight, firm butt-and grabbed her
shoulder bag. On her way through the cubicle farm of clerks and secretaries she
stopped at her boss's office and stuck her head inside.
"I'm heading out."
Milton Ware, a spry little
man with bright blue eyes and a shock of white hair, looked up from his desk,
then glanced at his watch.
"A little early for
lunch."
"I've got some errands
to do."
"When will you be back?
I want to go over that Rast report with you."
"Later."
"When is 'later'?"
"After sooner.
Bye."
She offered her sweetest
smile and left him with the perplexed, frustrated expression that was becoming
his trademark when dealing with her. Milt was one of the world's most uptight
men, always worried about his performance rating. He needed to lighten up.
Really, what did either of
them have to worry about? OPRR was a division of NIH. All federal money. Didn't
Milt know how hard it was to lose a federal job, especially one that no sane
person would want?
Romy had been ready to quit
not too long ago. Sims had always offended her. Not the creatures themselves,
but the very concept of a recombinant species of primates created to be slaves.
She'd waited year after year for legislation to address the situation-if not
outlaw them, then place sims under the aegis of OPRR's Division of Animal
Welfare. The original classification of sims as somewhere between animal and
human had blocked her division from having any say in how they were treated.
Bills to change that had been introduced in committees in both houses of
Congress over the years but not a single damn one had ever reached the floor
for a vote.
She'd been typing up a
scathing letter of resignation when she received a call, just like today, and
first heard that deep voice on the other end of the line. It suggested that she
might feel better about her job if she accepted an opportunity to moonlight in
a related field. Intrigued, she'd agreed to a meeting. Turned out to be the
best move she'd ever made.
Down at street level, Romy
crossedFederalPlaza at a relaxed pace, enjoying the admiring stares from the
other government drones. She worked hard on her body, and not simply for looks.
She needed top fitness for her ballet classes. Not that she'd ever perform in
public. The dancing itself was what pleased her. The resultant grace,
coordination, and body tone were happy bonuses.
She glanced briefly at the
graceful spire of the new World Trade Center, finally completed after so many
years of squabbling over its design, and turned uptown, stretching her long
legs as she strolled Broadway for a couple of blocks, then turned left onto
Worth Street. She stopped before the soaped-up windows of an empty storefront;
ideograms identifying the previous owner, a Taiwanese toy distributor, still
graced the windows. Romy pulled out a key, unlocked the door, and entered.
The dust on the floor was
tracked with footprints-her own and an indeterminate number of others.
Which ones are Zero's? she
wondered. Or does he have a private entrance?
She strode to the rear and
unlocked the door to the basement. This was the part she didn't like. Had to be
rats down there. She'd never seen one, but that meant nothing. She'd seen
plenty of their clean, docile, many-times-removed albino cousins, the lab rat.
Those she didn't mind, felt sorry for most of them, actually. But she was not
at all anxious to meet a Norwegian brown in its natural habitat. She'd handle
the situation if it arose, but she'd rather not have to.
The basement was a dusty, dim-lit
space with water dripping in one of the dark corners. A long folding table
stretched across the far end. Zero sat behind it. Romy had never arrived before
him, so she assumed he called her from here. Back-lit by a low-watt
incandescent bulb that reduced him to a silhouette, he was dressed as usual in
a bulky turtleneck sweater, a knit watch cap pulled low to his eyebrows, dark
glasses, and a scarf wrapped around his lower face all the way up to and over
his nose. She'd gauged his height at around six-two, and despite those broad
shoulders he appeared to be thin.
She'd almost bolted on her
first visit. She'd been anxious-no, make that dry-mouthed, heart-pounding,
what-the-hell-have-I-got-myself-intoterrified-but his calm, soothing voice had
eased her jangled nerves. And just when she'd begun to relax, he'd jarred her
with how much he knew about her: her BS in Biology from Georgetown, her
doctorate in Anthropology from UCLA, the intense lobbying she had done for
protective legislation for the sims, the furious letters to the editor she'd
written, even the fact that she was on the verge of quitting OPRR.
But then he'd really floored
her by revealing what he knew about her wild youth-the arrests for DWI, the
shoplifting and assault-and-battery convictions, the month she'd spent
institutionalized. He also knew how the doctors had cured her...or thought they
had.
How had he found out?
Juvenile court records were supposed to be sealed, and medical records were
supposed to be privileged.
But Zero didn't care about
her past. He was looking to the future and he offered her a way to work for her
cause,their cause, behind the scenes. He said he had the money, now he needed
the people.
For Romy it had been a dream
come true, but she'd hesitated. Zero knew all about her, but what did she know
about him? And why all this melodrama with the cellar and the hidden face and
the corny code name?
Necessary, he'd told her.
Absolutely necessary.
Okay, she could handle
that-for a while. But one thing she couldn't handle was terrorism. She told him
she wasn't going to help blow up office buildings or shoot up SimGen trucks or
any of that stuff.
Not that she had qualms
about destroying SimGen real estate. She was simply afraid that a certain
hidden part of her would enjoy it so much she wouldn't be able to stop.
Zero told her then that the
whole idea behind his organization was to wage war against SimGen and its
allies in the government without their ever realizing a war was on. That was
why their organization would have no name, no logo, would write no letters,
make no bragging phone calls. Its style would be covert; its field of battle
would be the interstices-infiltrating, instigating, creating a fifth column in
society, within the company itself. Whatever it did to sabotage SimGen's plans
and operations would appear to be random or, ideally, accidental.
The ultimate goal? Shut down
the sim pipeline by making sims unprofitable for both the lessor and the
lessee. Wake up the world and turn it against anything fashioned by slave
labor, even if the slaves weren't human.
Sign me up, she'd said.
Excellent.
Then Zero had asked her why.
Good question. Romy couldn't
say exactly. She wasn't trying to make up for some past failings, had no hokey
memories of an animal she'd mistreated as a child or a beloved pet who'd died
because of her neglect or carelessness.
It was wrong, she'd said. As
wrong as wrong could be. A stain on humanity that needed to be scrubbed away.
How could she describe how every fiber of her being howled at the shame, the
disgrace of it?
Fair enough, Zero had said.
He wanted her to stay in
OPRR. Her position in the Division of Animal welfare would explain her repeated
presence in areas sensitive to the cause. She might not have a legal right to
be there, but as a representative of a government organization-an overzealous
representative, perhaps, but a representative nonetheless-she'd have a
plausible excuse.
That had been two years ago.
Gradually, as she'd proved herself, she'd been allowed to learn more and more
about the organization. First off, it was bigger than she'd imagined, and well
financed. She knew only a few of its income sources-one of them had surprised
the hell out of her-but the source of the bulk of Zero's money remained a
mystery.
So did Zero. Romy had done
her damnedest to pierce his veil of secrecy. She knew from his voice-he didn't
use a distorter to disguise it-and from glimpses of pale skin at his throat and
between his gloves and cuffs that he was a white male. But his age was
indeterminate; twenty, thirty, forty-it was a guess.
One thing she knew for
certain: He was intimately connected to SimGen.
He possessed information
about the company only an insider could know.
As Romy slipped into the
folding chair opposite Zero, she noticed a slim briefcase on the table between
them.
"Two questions,"
she said. "First: Don't you think it's about time I saw your face?"
She was used to the mask by
now, but that didn't lessen her frustration. Her early awe had given way to
admiration, and each encounter increased her need to see the face of this
remarkable man.
"Not until SimGen stops
producing sims."
"Somebody in the
organization must know who you are. Why not me?"
He shook his muffled head.
"No one knows. It wouldn't be good for the organization."
"Why not?"
"It might
prove...disruptive."
"Disruptive?
How-?"
"Next question,"
he said. "Which will be the fourth, by the way."
Romy sighed. She'd have to
wait. "All right. Did we instigate this sim union thing?"
"No."
"Think it's
legit?"
"I fear not."
"Well, doesn't matter
anyway. Legit or not, there's not a chance in the world a sim union will happen."
"I agree. But I don't
want a circus, and I don't want a shyster collecting donations from sympathetic
people and then disappearing with the cash. It will set a terrible precedent
and very likely undermine support for a legitimate case when it arises."
"Do weknow he's a
shyster?"
"No, but I've
researched him and find nothing that leads me to believe he has the sims' best
interests at heart."
"Who is he?" Romy
asked, liking this less and less. "And where on earth did they find him?
Attorney World?"
Zero lifted the briefcase
lid and removed an eight-by-ten glossy color photo. He handed it to Romy.
"Patrick Sullivan."
She saw the head and
shoulders of a decent-looking guy-not a hottie, but not bad-in his mid-thirties
with wavy blond hair and bright blue eyes. But he was an attorney, a member of
that vast slick crew using the letter of the law to circumvent its spirit.
"When was this
taken?"
"Two days ago."
She gave him a questioning look and he added, "Part of the
backgrounding."
She repressed a chill,
knowing Zero most likely had had people on her trail, photographing her before
he'd made contact.
"He's a ruthless
negotiator, willing and able to go for the jugular, with no sign of regret
afterward."
"That's good, isn't it?
I mean, as long as he brings that to the sim case."
"So one would think.
But what disturbs me is his apparent lack of any guiding principles. He'll
represent a union this week, management next, and be an equally passionate
advocate for both. His voter registration says he's an independent. A string of
women have passed through his life with no lasting relationships. No pets. He
subscribes to law journals, news magazines, andPenthouse . He has never given a
dime to charity."
"So Patrick Sullivan is
a guy with no passions and no commitments. Doesn't sound like a man who takes
up a cause."
"Not unless it pays
well."
"Probably has the
ethics ofE. coli ." Romy could see why Zero was concerned. "What do
we do?"
"We don't interfere-at
least not yet. Just as great literature can be created by an author writing
simply to pay his rent, great good can sometimes be accomplished by people with
less than exalted motivations. This Patrick Sullivan may simply be trying to
turn a buck or looking to garner some cheap publicity. If that's his goal,
we'll follow the progress of the case and see if we can turn things to our
advantage along the way."
"And if he's an
out-and-out crook?"
"We'll be keeping a
close watch on him. At the first sign of any funny business, we move."
"Move how?"
"I'm not sure..."
The remark disturbed her.
This was the first time she'd ever detected uncertainty in Zero.
"Something else I
wanted to tell you," he said. "You'll be receiving notice soon that
OPRR has succeeded in obtaining a court order allowing it to inspect the SimGen
facility."
Stunned, Romy could only sit
and stare.
"Something wrong?"
"How...how did you
managethat ? We've been trying foryears to get a look in there."
"Vee haf vays," he
said in a bad German accent, and she could imagine a smile behind the
protective layers.
"No, seriously.
How-?"
"By employing the same
tactics that SimGen has used to stall the inspection: bribery, cajoling,
intimidation, the whole nine yards."
Romy frowned. "Is that
the way we want to be?"
"It's the way we have
to be. And even then it was pure luck that the petition came before a judge who
was retiring and didn't give a damn about whatever pressure SimGen and its pet
politicos were bringing to bear. He said to hell with it and signed the
order."
"This is
wonderful." Her admiration for Zero climbed to a new high.
"It's a start. The
order allows a one-time inspection of the entire research facility."
"No follow-up
visits?"
Zero shook his head.
"Sorry. But at least it's a foot in the door. We've pierced their
armor-now we get a chance to look into the SimGen abyss." He slid the
briefcase on the table closer to her. "Take this with you. It contains
various miniature spycams. Use them on your inspection tour, especially in the
basic research facility. Be sure to ask for a full explanation of their
security procedures-because you're interested in how well the sims are
protected, of course."
"Of course. And who
knows? Maybe I'll get a face-to-face with the Sinclair brothers."
"Don't count on it. But
even if you do, prepare to be unimpressed."
Another shock. "You've
met them?"
"Yes. A number of
times."
"Then theyknow
you?"
"Yes...and no."
"I don't get it.
What-?"
He raised his gloved hand,
palm out: a stop sign. "We can't get into that now."
"When?"
"Maybe never."
Zero rose and extended his hand across the table. "Good luck."
Romy shook his hand, peering
closely at him, thinking: He knows the Sinclair brothers. Who is he? I'vegot to
find out.
6
SUSSEX COUNTY,NJ
OCTOBER 3
"And I tell you, my brothers and sisters, that SinGen
is doing the work of the devil his own self. Yes! The devil's work! As surely
as I am standing here, Satan himself sits in those corporate offices, guiding
the hand of the SinGen researchers, inspiring them to fashion beings that the
Creator never intended to exist, creatures that are an abomination in the sight
of God. It must be stopped or we all-and Idomeanall,not just the SinGen
sinners, but all of us who abide that company's evildoing-will be called to
account on the day of Final Judgment!"
Mercer Sinclair, a tall,
lean, youthful-looking fifty-two with dark eyes and dark hair that had yet to
show a trace of gray, sighed in disgust as he turned away from the plasma TV
screen hanging like an Old Master on his office wall. He jabbed theOFF button
on his desktop and banished the Reverend Eckert's florid face.
Stepping to the tinted
window that took up most of the western wall of his top-floor office, he gazed
out at the green rolling hills, mist-layered and glistening with morning dew.
All SimGen's, as far as the eye could see.
Using proxies and dummy
corporations, buying up little parcels here and there, Mercer had accumulated
this massive chunk of northwestNew Jersey for damn near a song. He could have
bought more land for less in theSunbelt , but that would have placed him too
far from the action. Yes, he was in the boonies here, but these boonies were
only a twenty-minute helicopter ride from Wall Street, while the isolation
afforded a form of natural protection from prying eyes.
Closer in, nestled in this
tight little valley, stood the gleaming glass and steel offices, the labs and
natal and nurturing centers that fed the world's ever-growing need for sims.
Here they were bred and housed until ready to be shipped to training centers
all over the globe. Here beat the heart of SimGen's-Mercer's-far-flung empire.
He opaqued the window and
turned to the three other men in his office.
"'SinGen'? I wonder who
thought that up for him."
His brother Ellis, two years
older, taller, grayer, and almost gaunt, slouched on one of the black leather
sofas to the left, far from the desk. Mercer expected no reply from Ellis, and
received none.
Luca Portero, SimGen's chief
of security, remained silent as well. Compact, muscular, in great shape for a
man in his early forties, he stood with feet apart, arms behind his back;
despite the blue blazer and tan slacks, he looked every inch a soldier.
Mercer hadn't picked
Portero. He'd beenassigned to SimGen as security chief. But he'd looked into
the man's background. A self-made sort, starting off as a street urchin with an
Italian first name in a mostly Mexican border town in Arizona, father unknown,
mother of very dubious reputation-oh, hell, why not say it? The town whore. As
soon as he was old enough he joined the Army and apparently found his métier.
And like a good soldier, he
rarely spoke unless spoken to. That was the only thing Mercer liked about the
man. Portero had always struck him as more snake than human. He didn't walk, he
glided. On the rare occasions when he spoke, it was barely above a whisper. And
those cold dark eyes...always watching...like a snake. Mercer often wondered if
Portero had indulged in a trans-species splice or two before joining
SimGen...something reptilian. The heart, perhaps?
"Don't underestimate
Eckert," the third attendee said in a thickAlabama drawl.
Mercer glanced at Abel Voss,
SimGen's general counsel. In his mid-fifties, with longish silver hair and
twenty extra pounds packed around his waist, he filled the seat on the other
side of the desk. Which didn't mean he was close-a string quartet could have
set up and played on the vast gleaming ebony surface of Mercer's desktop. Only
two colors here: furniture either black leather or ebony, carpet and curtains
all a uniform light gray.
"You know him?"
"No, but a few years
ago nobody'd even heard of that boy, and now he's a household name."
Voss liked to come on as a
slow-witted, somewhat bemused good ol' boy. He used it to lull opponents until
he sprang and crushed them with one of the sharpest corporate law minds in the
world. Mercer liked that. The crushing part.
Mercer grunted. "And he
galloped there onmy back."
"Yourback?" Ellis
said. "How about my back as well? I wind up being painted with the same
brush as you, something I donot care for."
Well, well, well, Mercer
thought. Look who's speaking up.
He couldn't understand why
his brother bothered with these meetings. He'd arrive, slump in a chair without
saying a word to anyone, stare into space without participating, then leave.
Ellis had been in an
emotional tailspin for years. Mercer had heard that only a complex
antidepressant cocktail enabled him to get out of bed these days. Somehow he
dragged himself to meetings, and managed to maintain a decent work schedule in
his lab, but his productivity was zilch.
Today he'd actually offered
a comment. Hallelujah. Maybe Ellis had finally found a combination of drugs
that worked.
Mercer turned toward his
brother. "That's what happens when you're the co-founder."
"ButI'm the co-founder
who has kids. What's said about me reflects on them. They go to school and have
to hear that their father's in league with the devil!"
Ellis's kids...Robbie and
Julie. Good kids. But Ellis didn't get to see them much since the divorce.
Truth was, they seemed to prefer their Uncle Mercer to their downer dad. Mercer
liked playing uncle, but he lived alone; always had, always would. Robbie and
Julie were the closest he ever intended to come to parenthood.
But the divorce hadn't
caused Ellis's depression-no, it had been the other way around. Who could live
with someone in Ellis's state of mind?
"Don't blame me, bro.
Blame Eckert."
"I know who to
blame," Ellis said with a glare.
"Gentlemen," Voss
said, "this can be saved for another time."
Mercer turned toward the
lawyer. "I didn't call you here about the Eckert matter, but we might as
well address it. It seems every time I turn on the damn TV I see his
face."
"That's because the
boy's syndicated. He does one show a day and it's farmed out to local stations
all over the country. The local station managers plug it into a slot where they
think they'll draw the most eyeballs."
"I can't believe people
watch him day after day. He's got one goddamn issue and he beats it to
death."
Voss shrugged. "Them
Bible humpers've had it in for you two since sim one. Eckert is just more
aggressive in grabbing the reins of that wagon."
"And he's been riding
it for all it's worth ever since." Mercer rapped his knuckles on his
desktop. "Can't we get anything on him?"
"Tried that. Took a
look-see into his business affairs and personal life. Lives high but not too,
too high. No bimbos, or if there are, he hides 'em well. On the surface he
appears clean. No obvious belly-crawlin like Swaggart or Baker. Sockin away all
those contributions until he's got enough to set up his own satellite network
to-as he likes to put it-'spread the word to the world about the sin of
sims.'"
"So let's probe a
little deeper," Mercer growled.
"Gotta be careful with
that sort of thing. The Rev's got a bunch of real loyal eggs around him. You
try to crack one of them, you could wind up with yolk on your face. I'm talkin
a tar-and-feather overcoat in the PR department. I say give it time. These
preacher boys, most of them got this sort of arc, y'see-they rise fast, then
they fall back. And meantime, if he's like most other preacher boys I've seen,
all that money he's pullin in will somehow find its way into his own pocket
instead of being used to mess with us. You just be patient, son."
Usually Mercer didn't mind
when Voss called him "son"-just one of the man's Alabamisms-but today
it irritated him. With his mother dead since his Yale days, and his father DOA
with a cardiac arrest two years ago, he was now no one's son. His own man,
answering to no one.
"Patient! Do you know
he's scheduled to be on Ackenbury tomorrow night?Ackenbury at Large ! Millions
who've never even heard of the creep will see him do his anti-SimGen rant.
What's Ackenbury thinking? Don't we buy enough time on his lousy show?"
"Hey, it's all show
biz, you know that. That boy gets hold of the most controversial folks he can
find. That's why he's rackin up better numbers than Leno and Letterman. I know
we got a buncha cow flop flyin at us at once now, what with Eckert, the
unionization thing, and havin to open our doors for an OPRR inspection, but I
wouldn't let this rattle you."
"I'm not rattled,"
Mercer said.
But he wasn't particularly
comfortable either. He didn't mention his growing uneasiness, a sense of
malevolent convergence. If he believed in fate or astrology, he might have said
he felt the stars aligning against him.
Utter nonsense, of course.
You made your own destiny. You grabbed what you could and then did your
damnedest to keep it. And if you lost it, that was because someone else
outsmarted you. Flaming gasballs floating millions of light-years away had
nothing to do with it.
But if the stars weren't
aligning against him, then who?
"Good," Voss said.
"Glad to hear it. 'Cause there's nothin here to get rattled about. Take
this damn fool unionization thing, for instance. You have to be human to be in
a damn union, sores ipso loquitur , the suit can't succeed. It's a sham, a PR
stunt for this nobody shyster who-"
"PR," Mercer said.
"That'swhat I'm worried about. PR that's good for him and bad for us. We
can't have people thinking of sims as anything more than brighter-than-average
animals. Nobody talks about unionizing race horses or seeing-eye dogs. But
start connecting the word 'union' to sims and you open a Pandora's box. I can
just see this shyster-what's his name?"
"Sullivan," Voss
said. "Patrick Sullivan."
"I can see this
Sullivan character portraying sims as some poor mistreated underclass, when
it's just the opposite. We've never sold a sim, we lease them. Why? So we can
limit how they're used and oversee how they're treated."
"And, coincidentally,
maximize profits," Ellis said acidly.
"Nothing wrong with
profits," Mercer replied through his teeth without looking at his brother.
"You're preachin to the
choir, son."
"No, I'm telling you
the message we need to get out: We are a humane corporation that looks out for
these creatures. We created them and we feel responsible for them."
"Humane," Ellis
said in that same tone. "Now there's a concept."
Mercer wheeled on his
brother. "Are you going to contribute something or just sit there and
snipe?"
"Thatwas a
contribution, Merce," Ellis said, leveling a soulful gaze at him. "A
very relevant one."
Mercer turned back to Voss.
He couldn't stand Ellis's holier-than-thou stance. "We can't take any
chances with this, Abel. I've heard of crazy things coming out of these NLRB
hearings-especially where the regional office inManhattan is involved. The
wrong kind of decision and you'll be using your stock options for toilet
paper."
"Don't have to worry
about no labor relations shenanigans. Sullivan thinks he's got an edge because
the director of NLRB's Region 2 is a maverick. Well, I've already seen to it
that he never gets to the NLRB."
Mercer abruptly felt his
mood lighten. "How did you manage that?"
"Had myself a talk with
Beacon Ridge's attorney-bright kid named Hodges-and told him to seek a
declaratory judgment in Federal court. He'll argue that since Congress has
designated sims as property, they cannot be humans. And if they're not humans,
then they're not employees, and therefore not protected by the statutes of the
NLRB."
"Ilike the
argument," Mercer said. "But what if the judge doesn't?"
Voss puffed out his chest.
"He will. I've seen to it that the case comes up before Judge Henry
Boughton."
"Is he one of
ours?"
Voss shook his head.
"We don't own this one. Don't have to. He's our kinda guy-least so far as
this union thing goes. Conservative with a capitalC . Hates unions. Probably
one of Reverend Eckert's loyal listeners to boot. He'll toss this case in two
seconds flat."
"Abel..." Mercer
shook his head, grinning. "You are amazing."
"That's what you boys
pay me for-to be amazin."
"That leaves the OPRR
inspection."
"We've been discussing
that," Luca Portero said.
The sound of the security
chief's soft voice never failed to rattle Mercer. "Really. All by
yourselves?"
Portero went on as if Mercer
hadn't spoken. "We decided that I'll be the tour guide."
Good idea. OPRR would get
nothing out of Luca the snake.
"Excellent
choice."
Voss rose and straightened
his suit coat. "Knew you'd like that. Matter of fact, Mr. Portero and me
are gonna have us a little sit-down right now in my office. I'm gonna lay out
the legalities we're up against, and how we're gonna slide around 'em."
"What about my
lab?" Ellis said. He'd come out of his crouch now, sitting up with a rigid
spine. "I won't allow them in my lab. And as for the sealed section-"
"Hey, ain't no one from
OPRR or anywhere else gonna be anyplace we don't want 'em to be. Mr. Portero
will see to that."
Portero only nodded.
"Thank God," Ellis
said.
Voss and Portero headed for
the door. "Talk to y'all later," Voss said.
When they were gone, Mercer
turned and found his brother on his feet, a small smile playing about his lips
as he approached the desk.
"Hear them?" Ellis
said.
"Hear what?"
"The trumpets. They've
started to blow. And the first cracks are starting to show in the walls of
yourJericho . Soon this will all come tumbling down. And then where will you
be?"
"Nothing's going to
happen. You heard Abel-everything's under control."
"No, Merce.
Everything's spinningout of control. Can't you feel it?"
"You're breaking with
reality, Ellis." The worst of it was that he was echoing Mercer's own
inchoate fears. "You need to adjust your meds."
Ellis had reached the far
side of the desk where he continued that wide-eyed stare. "Knowing what
you know, Merce, how do you sleep at night?"
Not this again.
"I sleep just fine. If
you've got such a problem with the company, why don't you simply turn your back
and walk away?"
"If it weren't for
Robbie and Julie, I would-and go straight to the networks and blow the lid
off."
Spicules of ice crystallized
in Mercer's veins. Ellis was just unstable enough to do something like that.
Probably thought he'd find some sort of redemption in self-immolation. But he
couldn't burn alone. He'd drag Mercer into his auto-da-fé. And his children as
well. Thank god Ellis loved Robbie and Julie too much for that.
"You wouldn't be
blowing the lid off just SimGen, Ellis," he said softly. "It's not
like we're in this alone."
"You think I don't know
that?" Ellis cried.
"Then you should know
that the walls could have ears."
Ellis blanched and leaned
against the desk. "I hate this, hate this,hate this!"
"Well, any time you
want to sell out, brother, you know my offer."
"We're both
multi-billionaires. What would I want withmore money?"
"You could go off, buy
yourself an island somewhere, declare yourself king, and-"
Ellis straightened again.
"And leave the company under your sole command? Not yet. Not till I've
finished what I started out to do."
"Meaning what? Treading
old ground we've covered too many times? You should be working on projects that
will move the company forward instead of wasting your time on sims."
"It'smy time and I'll
decide how I spend it. Once I've perfected a sim-mysim-and we start putting
them out there, then I'll sell out to you, Merce-in a heartbeat. But not a
second before."
"We'vegot sims, damn
it!"
Ellis glared at him.
"How do you live with yourself, Merce? How?"
Mercer sighed. "How? By
being a realist. By knowing what is and what isn't. By facing the hard cold
fact that life is chemistry, nothing more, nothing less. When the chemicals are
reacting, life goes on. When the reactions stop, so does life. That's it, and
that's all it is. I am a collection of reacting chemicals; so are you; so are
sims. To view existence as anything else is mysticism, romanticism, a myriad other
isms, but it isn't real. Only the chemistry is real. Everything else is
self-delusion."
He felt a pang as he
considered his brother's flushed face and blazing eyes. It hadn't always been
like this. He remembered their days inNew Haven , inseparable, spending late
hours in the labs, unafraid, pushing the limits, trying the impossible. Then
the university had become too interested, looking for a piece of the action.
Forget it: They'd dropped out, started their first venture to market no-shed
house pets, and were on their way.
He could still visualize in
perfect detail the day the Nakao team decoded the chimpanzee genome. He and
Ellis immediately printed out a copy and unfolded it along a hallway; then they
synched up a printout of the human genome next to it, and together they walked
along, comparing, pointing out the uncanny parallels and match-ups.
Mercer remembered stopping
and gazing at his brother, finding Ellis staring back at him across those
printouts, realizing that Ellis was thinking what he was, seeing in his eyes
the shared rapture of knowing what could be done, and that they could do it.
Heady times, those. The joy
of discovery, the sense of the pulse of the world throbbing under their
fingertips, the near omnipotent feeling that anything was possible.
And now, the hour-to-hour
reality of managing one of the hottest new corporations in the world, of
fighting day by day to catch up with the Microsofts and GEs of that world
consumed him. He would not rest until SimGen was number one.
But that was his dream, not
his brother's. At some point along the road of years he and Ellis had parted
ways.
Mercer knew the exact
moment. He'd deceived Ellis. Just once. A crucial matter, true, but only that
once. He'd hoped to carry the secret to his grave, but truth will out. Ellis
had never forgiven him. Or himself.
If I could go back, he
wondered, would I do it all over again?
Yes. In a New York minute.
Because without that one deception, SimGen would be just another also-ran in
the gen-mod field.
"The genie's out of the
bottle, Ellis. And now it's grown too big to fit back in. I've accepted that.
It's about time you did too."
"No!" He wheeled
and headed for the door, yanked it open, and strode through. "Never!"
7
WESTCHESTER COUNTY,NY
OCTOBER 4
Pamela's voice and her fist pounding on his back wrenched
Patrick from slumber.
"Patrick!" she was
shouting. "Something's burning outside!"
"Huh?"
And then a crash-breaking
glass-an object smashing through the window only a few feet away, and he was
awake, sitting up, his heart jackhammering in his chest as he looked around his
dark bedroom. His alarm clock read 1:04. Outside he could hear a car burning
rubber as it pulled away.
"What happened?"
"Look!" Pamela
said, her voice hushed with fear. "Out on the lawn!"
Flickering light through
broken glass...Patrick swung his legs toward the floor.
"No!" Pamela
cried. "You'll cut your feet!"
Good thinking. He reached
down, felt around till he found his loafers, then slipped them on. He hurried
to the window, glass crunching under his soles, and looked out on his front
yard.
His lawn was on fire.
"What the hell?"
He blinked. Well, not the
whole lawn, but a circle of it along with some of the grass inside the circle
blazed in the night. He was reaching for the phone to dial 911 when he heard
the sirens. Apparently one of his neighbors had called the cops or fire
department or both. So he reached for the lamp switch instead.
"Oh, shit, what's
happening?" Pamela cried. "What's happening?"
He glanced at her. She
crouched on the bed, blinking in the light like a fawn caught in the middle of
the road. Pamela was his latest pseudo-live-in, meaning she owned her own place
inNew Bedford but had spent most of the last eight months at his place here in
Katonah. Worked as a broker for Merrill Lynch; a few years younger than Patrick
but her accumulated year-end bonuses put her far closer to early retirement.
Dark hair, big blue eyes, and a dazzling bod that she was now shielding to the
neck with the bed sheet.
Pamela...terrified. In spite
of the flames and the sirens and the broken glass, that was what gripped him.
So out of character. The ultracompetent Pamela was even more driven than he;
give her a goal and she became a heat-seeking missile. She'd never shown him
the little girl who lived inside her, the one who could be frightened.
"I don't know," he
said, reaching across and giving her trembling shoulder a gentle squeeze.
"But it's all right. We're okay."
He hoped.
Patrick was dressed only in
boxer shorts, and the cool fall air flowing through the window raised goosebumps.
Maybe it wasn't just the air. He straightened and did a slow turn, checking out
the glass-littered floor until he spotted a bottle on its side against the far
wall. He crunched over and retrieved it. A Fruitopia bottle, empty but reeking
of gasoline. And a piece of paper rolled up inside. He fished it out.
"What is it?"
Pamela said.
"A note."
With trembling fingers
Patrick unrolled the wet piece of blue-lined loose leaf and held it up to the
light. The gasoline had acted as a solvent, running the ballpoint ink, but the
words were still legible. His gut crawled as he read them aloud.
"Forget about a sim
union or next time it won't be empty."
"Oh, Christ!"
Pamela cried. "Who'd do something like this?"
"Not signed."
A threat. He had trouble
rereading the message because his hands had begun to shake. Jesus, he'd heard
of things like this happening, but never dreamed...
He forced his racing brain
to slow so he could examine the possibilities. SimGen popped into his head
immediately, and just as quickly he discarded it. This was hardly their style,
especially since they knew they couldn't lose in the long run. One of the
anti-sim hate groups? Could be. He'd seen them on TV, mostly losers who
resented animals taking human jobs-Wake up, guys: Machines have been doing that
for a couple of centuries-but he hadn't heard of any in the area.
He didn't want Pamela to see
how rattled he was. "One of your old boyfriends, maybe?"
"This isn't funny,
Patrick! Someone just threatened your life!"
Just then a couple of
Katonah's finest screeched to a halt at his front curb.
"Sorry." Couldn't
she see he was just trying to break the tension? "Bad joke." He
looked around for his pants. "I'm going to go out and talk to the
cops."
"What am I supposed to
do?"
"Get dressed and stay
out of sight. You're better off not being involved in this."
He pulled on his slacks and
a shirt, and hurried toward the front door.
...next time it won't be
empty...
What the hell had he got
himself into?
8
It was a little after nine when Patrick arrived at his office
at Payes & Hecht, but he felt as if he'd already put in a full day.
The fire trucks had arrived
on the heels of the first patrol car and doused his flaming lawn. It looked
like the vandals had tried to burn some sort of message into the grass but
whatever it said had been turned to steaming mud by the time the fire hoses
finished their work. The cops took his statement, bagged the Fruitopia bottle
and note, and promised to have the patrols make extra swings by his place.
All fine and good, but it
had left him with a sick, sour stomach and an adrenaline hangover. At least he
was in better shape than Pamela who seemed totally freaked by the incident.
He'd tried to explain that the threat had been against him, not her, but still
she'd been afraid to leave the house.
Finally he'd put her on a
train to the city, then made it to White Plains where he was surrounded as soon
as he stepped into the Payes & Hecht reception area. News of the attack had
been all over the TV and radio; the firm was medium size, consisting of
twenty-two attorneys, and everyone knew everyone. The associates and staff were
shocked and concerned and wanted to know all the details. But before he could
get into it, Alton Kraft, the managing senior partner, pulled him aside for a
one-on-one in his office.
"You all right?"
Kraft said.
His blue eyes looked out
from under thick eyebrows that matched his salt-and-pepper hair. He had a lined
face and looked grandfatherly, but he could be a buzzsaw with any associate who
strayed off the beaten path. Patrick was up for partnership next year and Kraft
was one of his main supporters.
"I'm fine.
Really."
The two of them had hit it
off from the first brief Patrick had prepared for one of Kraft's cases. He'd
said it was the best he'd seen in years, and had taken Patrick under his wing.
"Good. I want to talk
to you about this sim union thing. I'm not sure it's consistent with the image
of the firm."
"It's pro bono,"
Patrick said. "Aren't we always being encouraged to take some pro bono
cases? This is one of mine."
"That's all fine and
good, but I don't like seeing the firm's name mentioned in connection with fire
bombings."
Patrick stiffened. He was
well aware that when Alton Kraft said "I" he was speaking for the
senior partners.
"Alton, believe
me," Patrick said, smiling in the hope of lightening things up, "I
like it even less when it's my own name mentioned in connection with a fire
bombing."
Kraft grinned. "I can
imagine. But Patrick..." The grin faded. "You're an excellent
attorney and you've got a big future with this firm. I admire your
tenacity-when you're handed a problem, you stick with it until it's
solved."
Tenacity, Patrick thought.
Better than "stubborn as a mule," which was how his mother used to
characterize him.
"But that same tenacity
cancause problems too. When a situation looks like trouble for you or the firm,
you have to know when to back away and cut your losses."
"I hear you,Alton .
Loud and clear. But I'm sort of stuck with the sims for now."
"Not for long,
fortunately."
"What do you
mean?"
"Oh, I guess you
haven't had time to sift through your messages yet. Judge Boughton has been
assigned to decide on the declaratory judgment."
"Henry Boughton?"
"The one and
only."
Patrick felt as if he'd been
punched. Shit. What else could go wrong today?
"I think I'd better go
talk to my clients."
9
Tome answered Patrick's knock at the barrack door. His
large dark eyes widened at the sight of him. His grin was pure joy.
"Mist Sulliman! You all
right? You not hurt?"
Doeseverybody know?
"I'm fine, Tome. I just-"
"Look!" Tome
cried, turning to the nearly empty room where half a dozen off-duty sims were
either clearing the breakfast plates from the long mess tables or lounging in
front of the TV. "He comes. He safe!"
The other sims jumped up and
began screeching. They rushed forward and crowded around, some reaching out to
touch him, as if to reassure themselves that he was real. Patrick was touched
in another way-they must have been genuinely worried about him.
"We see TV," Tome
said. "See burn. Say men who hate sim hate you."
"Well, we don't know
that for sure."
Tome cocked his head and his
dark eyes stared at Patrick from beneath his prominent brow. "Why men hate
sim?"
"Justsome men, Tome-a
very small number. Dumb men. Let's not worry about them. We've got a bigger
worry."
"More fire?"
"No. A judge, a very
tough judge, has been assigned to our case."
"No problem for Mist
Sulliman. Him best lawyer world."
Patrick had to grin at that.
"You keep thinking those good thoughts, Tome. But this is very bad news
for our case."
"No problem for Mist
Sulliman."
"Yes, problem. Big
problem."
How to explain this to a
nonhuman? Patrick wasn't all that familiar with Judge Boughton's positions,
opinions, and decisions outside the labor relations arena. He did know he was a
crotchety old fart who thought too much court time was being wasted on
trivialities at the expense of more serious legal matters; woe to the attorney
who showed up in Boughton's court with a case the judge considered
frivolous-which covered a lot of territory in Boughton's field of vision. He
was the terror of unions, notorious for his loathing of the picket line.
And not only is this a union
case, Patrick thought, but one he'll consider inherently frivolous.
The Beacon Ridge lawyers
were seeking a judgment to terminate the suit and Boughton would do just that-with
relish and extreme prejudice. Probably have bailiffs waiting at the courthouse
door to give him the old heave-ho as soon as he set foot inside.
Patrick had been counting on
extended hearings as an avenue to the public's ear and pocketbook, an
opportunity to generate ongoing press coverage and daily sound bites on the
evening news, all of which would-he hoped-lead to contributions to the defense
fund.
At present, the sim war
chest was pretty bare. He'd set up a website and a toll-free number-1-800-SIMUNION-with
an answering service to accept contributions, but the phone hadn't exactly been
ringing off the hook. A little money had come in during the initial flurry of
publicity when he'd filed his suit, but nothing compared to what he'd hoped
for. Now it looked as if the case would be over before it began.
Which would delight Pamela
and please Alton Kraft. Ben Armstrong would be happy too. He'd called as
Patrick was leaving the office, ostensibly to express his concern over the
incident at the house, but soon got around to the real reason: Could this sim
union matter be distracting Patrick, preventing him from devoting sufficient
attention to the negotiations with the Jarman clerks' union, set to open next
week? Patrick had assured Ben it was not.
Looked like everyone would
be happy when Boughton pulled the plug. Patrick glanced at the surrounding
sims. Well, not everyone.
"Let's just say that
Judge Boughton will not be our friend."
Tome cocked his head.
"Him hate sim, like men who burn?"
"No. He's not like
them. I'm sure of that. He's just-"
Tome turned and pointed to
the television playing in a corner. "Like TV man?"
"Who?"
Tome moved away, motioning
Patrick to follow. He led him on a winding course through the seats clustered
before the TV set.
"This man," Tome
said, pointing to the sweaty, multi-chinned face that filled the screen.
"...and I say to you,
good people, that those cute creatures they call 'sims' are our tour guides
along the road to hell. The Bible tells us, 'Thou shalt not suffer an
abomination!' And that's exactly what we do when we allow the evildoers at
SinGen to go on populating the world with these godless creatures. That's
Satan'splan, you know. Yes, it is. I've had a vision and I've seen the world
overrun by these soulless caricatures of humankind. And where will that leave
man, the pinnacle of Creation, fashioned by the Lord himself to have dominion
over the creatures of the earth? Gone! Supplanted by these unholy hybrids. And
then Satan will have won. The earth will be his, populated byhiscreations
instead of the Lord's!"
He then launched in a plea
for pledges to finance the fight against the evil spewing forth from
"SinGen."
"Simnev hurt man,"
Tome said, pointing at the screen. "Why man not like sim?"
"Oh, I'll bet he likes
you just fine," Patrick said.
In fact, he thought, I'll bet
the Revloves sims. He should. Sims are his meal ticket.
"Then why say sim
bad?"
"Just a way to make
money."
And I'll bet he's making
lots of it. Cleaning up.
Then Reverend Eckert said
that he was scheduled to be onAckenbury at Large tonight. He urged all his
regular viewers to tune in and watch him "spread the truth about SinGen to
the unenlightened."
And that gave Patrick a
wonderful idea.
10
SUSSEX COUNTY,NJ
Ellis Sinclair sat in his office in the basic research
complex and searched for calm while he waited for Harry to bring in the sim. He
toyed idly with the ExecSec plant on his desktop, brushing his pen against the
leaves and watching its tendrils whip around the shaft and hold it in place.
Then he'd tug on the pen and the tendrils would release it. Back and forth,
give and take, noting with pleasure how the plant rotated use of its tendrils
to avoid fatigue.
He sighed and let the plant
keep the pen as he leaned back in his chair. The ExecSec had been a modest
success back in the days before SinclairGen became SimGen. He wished they'd
stuck to harmless little gimmicky products like this instead of going for the
killer app. They wouldn't be fractionally as wealthy, but how much money can
you spend?
And there'd be no sims
wandering the earth.
He rubbed his cold palms
together. The artificial sunlight streaming through the frosted panes at his
back did nothing to warm him. More and more lately he craved a real window.
Just one. But that was out of the question. Basic research's windowless design
was his own doing, for he knew as well as anyone that a window to the outside
was also a portal in. So he had allowed not a pinhole through the walls of this
lead-lined box of steel-reinforced concrete.
To keep the place from
looking too much like the Berlin Wall, mirror-glass panes had been set into the
exterior to simulate windows and, perhaps, to tempt industrial and media spies
to bounce the beams of their snoop lasers off the glass in vain attempts to
hear what was being said on the other side.
Ellis could not allow anyone
to know the reasons behind what he was doing here. Not even his assistants
knew. Only Mercer. And then there was the sealed section, with its separate
staff who were ferried in and ferried out with no one ever seeing them. If the
truth about either ever leaked...
He shuddered.
He heard the door open and
looked up to see Harry step through, followed by a handler leading a young male
sim by the hand. He'd asked Harry to bring in the highest scoring sim from the
latest batch of the special breed.
"Here he is,"
Harry said. "F27-63-at your service. We call him Seymour." He turned
to the handler. "I'll take him now." The handler stepped out.
Harry Carstairs, chief of
sim education, had trained more of the creatures than anyone else presently
with the company; a big man, six-four at least, and probably weighing in at an
eighth of a ton. He towered over the sim.
Ellis glanced down at his
desktop memo screen. F27-63-yes, that wasSeymour 's serial number. He had
longer arms and looser lips than the average commercial sim. Smaller too.
"All right," he
said. "Let's see what he can do."
"Sit in the red
chair,Seymour ," Harry said gently. He stood with his hands clasped in
front of him, staring straight ahead as he spoke, allowing the sim no hints or
cues from his body language.
The sim looked around,
spotted the dark red leather chair against the wall, and loped over to seat
himself.
"Good. Now turn on the
lamp on the opposite side of the room."
The sim rose, crossed in
front of Ellis's desk, and stopped before the lamp. He looked under the shade,
found the switch, and turned it on.
"Very good," Harry
said. "Now-"
"I'm satisfied with his
comprehension," Ellis said. Comprehension had never been the problem; he
was anxious to cut to the chase. "What about his speech?"
"It's getting
there."
"Gettingthere?"
"He's a great
signer."
"I'm sure he is."
Sims started ASL lessons in
infancy because signing stimulated development of the speech cortex; this
helped enormously with vocalization later on.
"Want to see him
sign?"
"No," Ellis said,
balling a fist in frustration. "I want to hear him speak." He turned
to the sim. "What is your name?"
The creature looked at Harry
who nodded encouragement.
The sim's thick pink tongue
protruded between his yellow teeth as he said, "Thee..." in a
low-pitched voice.
Ellis was about to say that
"Thee" wasn't a name when the sim continued, laboriously pronouncing,
"Mmmm...mmmm..." And then he seemed to run out of gas.
He glanced uncertainly at
Harry who smiled and nodded. "You're doing good. Go on."
"Mmmm...,"
saidSeymour , picking up where he'd left off. But he seemed stuck on the sound.
Ellis held up a hand.
"All right. He can't say his name. Whatcan he say?"
Harry turned to the sim.
"Did you have breakfast?"
The sim nodded.
"Eth."
"Are you hungry
now?"
A head shake.
"Oh."
Ellis waited but gathered
from the look on Harry's face that the show was over.
"That's it? He's your
best and his entire vocabulary consists of two incomplete words and half his
name?"
Ellis tried to keep the
anger from his voice-none of this was Harry's fault-but still he heard it slip
through. Because damn it, hewas angry. When was he going to see some results?
The sim sensed his emotion and shrank back a step.
Harry rested a reassuring
hand on the creature's shoulder. "Seymour's doing the best that he
can."
Ellis wanted to beat his
fists on his desk and scream,It's not enough! Notnearly enough! Instead he
sighed and leaned back in his swivel chair.
"You don't work them
hard enough." Maybe Harry had been around sims too long. An inherently
gentle man, maybe he was identifying with them too much, cutting them too much
slack. And maybe Harry was thinking about another sim, a special long-ago sim
who was gone. "You're too easy on them."
"What do you want me to
do?" Harry said, his face darkening. "Whip them?"
"No, of course
not." What an awful thought.
"NotSeymour 's fault if
his hyoid's not up to par with the main breed's."
The hyoid-always the damn
hyoid. The little arch of bone that supported the tongue and its muscles was
crucial to human speech. Ellis's new lines all lacked a fully developed hyoid
bone.
That wasn't the only thing
not up to par. "Ever hear of evolutionary synergy, Harry?"
The big man's brow furrowed.
"I don't recall..."
"You wouldn't have.
It's a new theory I've developed as a result of my recent work. It's the
subtle, as yet unquantifiable cooperation between genes that have evolved
together. It's so subtle that I can't prove it, but I know it's there, I know
it's true."
"What's that got to do
withSeymour ?" Harry said.
"Everything."
"I don't
understand."
"I know."
He saw Harry glance at the
plastic pill organizer on his desk-three compartments labeledAM ,AFT, andPM .
Ellis always left it in plain sight, to maintain his image as a heavily
medicated eccentric. But the pills were for show. He'd been off medication for
quite some time now.
Harry led the sim to the
door, signaled for the handler, then closed it after them.
"Mr. Sinclair," he
said, approaching the desk. "I work your new breeds harder than the main
breed, and-"
"I know you do,
Harry." Ellis stared at his hands, bunched into fists. "It's just
that it's so damn frustrating."
"Youthink it's
frustrating? How about for me and my staff? We slave with these new breeds day
after day and get nowhere. And we keep asking ourselveswhy ...why does the
company keep developing breeds that are inferior to the one we already
have?"
Not the company, Ellis
thought. Me. Just me.
"I can't go into that,
Harry."
"Then can you tell me
what's wrong with the main breed that you want to correct?"
Everything!Ellis wanted to
shout.Every fucking thing!
"I'm afraid I can't go
into that either."
"It has something to do
with the sealed section then." A statement.
The sealed section...only a
handful of employees in the basic research building knew it existed, and even
they didn't know that most of it was underground. No access through the main
areas; the only entry and exit was through an enclosed loading dock on the
northwest corner of the building. Sealed staff never mixed with other
employees; they ate and slept where they worked, leaving only on weekends in
enclosed trucks.
This he could answer
truthfully. "No, Harry. It does not."
Harry stood silent a moment.
"Then what? I would think that I've proven myself loyal enough by now to
be entrusted-"
"Please, Harry,"
Ellis said, holding up a hand. "It's not a question of trust. It's a
matter of..." Of what? What could he say? "A matter of deciding which
way the company should go in the future. We haven't agreed-haven't decided on
which way that will be. But when we do, I assure you, you'll be the first to
know." Ellis noted that this seemed to salve Harry's wounded pride.
"But until then,"
he added, "bear with the frustration. I promise you, it will be well worth
it in the end."
IfI succeed.
Harry's smile was lopsided.
"I'll trust you on that."
Harry left and Ellis was
alone with the chrome-framed faces of his children staring at him across the
desktop. Robbie and Julie...God, he missed them. Somewhere along the course of
his consuming monomania he'd forgotten about them. He didn't know exactly when
he'd metamorphosed from husband and father to something other, something
distant...obsessed...a shadow...a ghost drifting through their lives, through
his own life as well.
But Judy and the kids hadn't
been able to live with what he'd become, and so he'd lost them.
He wasn't bitter though.
Just lonely. Didn't blame Judy. He'd deserved to lose them. But he was working
toward getting them back-earningthem back.
And when he deserved to have
them call him father again, he knew he'd win them back.
But not until he'd fixed
SimGen.
11
MANHATTAN
The green room of theAckenbury at Large show was neither
green nor roomy, but Patrick had it to himself. Half a dozen upholstered chairs
surrounded a maple table that had seen better days; a small refrigerator
against the wall sported a fruit bowl and a coffee maker. A wall-mounted
monitor leaned from a corner near the ceiling; Patrick repeatedly glanced at it
as he paced the beige carpet.
Reverend Eckert was running
his line for the late-night network TV audience, but in a far lower key than on
his own show. Instead of working himself into a red-faced, spittle-flecked
frenzy, he was coming on as a calm, intelligent man with a mission: SimGen was
doing evil by producing sims, and so it had to be shut down. Any products made
by sims were the devil's handiwork and all God-fearing people should shun them.
Not good, Patrick thought,
drying his moist palms on his slacks.
That was the role Patrick
had planned to play-a calm, reasonable, compassionate counterpoint to Eckert's
frenzy.
Now what?
Maybe this hadn't been such
a good idea.
Upon leaving the sims this
morning he'd placed a call to Ackenbury's offices. After being shuttled around
for a good ten minutes, he'd finally found himself on the line with one
Catherine Tresor, assistant producer. She didn't recognize his name, but when
he explained that he was the attorney for the sims union, she jumped all over
the idea of putting him on tonight's show. She said she'd have to run it by
Alan first, but she'd get back to him right away.
She wasn't kidding. Less
than five minutes later his car phone rang and he was scheduled for the show.
But she told him not to trumpet the news. Alan wanted to surprise the Reverend
Eckert.
As a result, Patrick had
been ushered into an empty office when he'd arrived at six-the show was
recorded hours before air time-and kept out of sight until the Reverend had
gone on. After a quick trip to makeup, he was led to the green room and left
alone.
He wished Pam were here.
He'd asked her to come along but she had to work late. She was involved in
somePacific Rim deal that would tie her up till midnight. She'd promised to
watch at her office, though. She sounded as though she'd recovered from this
morning. Patrick was glad for that.
"Mr. Sullivan?"
Patrick looked up. In the
doorway he saw a short, owlish, clipboard-toting woman with large round
glasses. She extended her hand.
"I'm Cathy
Tresor."
"And I'm wondering if
this was such a good idea," Patrick said, shaking her hand.
She squeezed his fingers.
"You're not backing out, are you?"
"It's not as if you
need me," he said, wondering at the panicky look that flashed across her
features. "I wasn't even on the horizon until I called this morning."
"We do need you,"
she said. Her blue eyes looked huge through her thick lenses. "Ineed
you."
"I'm not
following."
"I pitched your
appearance with the Reverend as my own idea."
Patrick stared at her.
"Let me get this straight: You take my suggestion, pitch it to your boss
as your own brainstorm, and pocket the credit?"
She bit her upper lip.
"Well...yeah." She looked away. "Sorry, but it can be hard to
get noticed around here."
"Sorry!" He
laughed. "Don't be sorry. I love it! Just remember the name: Patrick
Sullivan. You owe me one."
She smiled. "I'll
remember."
"You do that."
Patrick liked her. Then he glanced at the monitor and sobered at the sight of
Eckert's face. "And while you're at it, figure out a way for me to steal
that guy's thunder."
"Best way is to get
under his skin. Goad him."
"You don't mean
that."
"You kidding? We'd love
it. 'Let's you and him fight'-that's the Alan Ackenbury philosophy of quality
TV."
Patrick jammed his hands
into his pockets and did a slow circuit of the green room.
Goad him...how?
Patrick's gaze came to rest
on the fruit bowl and an idea sparked...a last resort if nothing else worked.
"Almost time,"
Cathy said, glancing at her watch. "You go on after the next break. Let's
get you in position."
He followed her down a hall
and to a spot behind a curtain just off stage. Patrick's eyes fixed on the
blank monitor.
"You've got one
segment," she whispered as they came out of the commercial break.
"Make the most of it."
"For your sake or
mine?"
"For both of us, but
more for you than me. Think of this as an audition of sorts. If you make sparks
fly, Alan will want you back, and that will be good for your cause."
My cause? Patrick thought,
then realized she was referring to the sim union. He'd never thought of it as a
cause, just a case, a job.
He said nothing, though,
because his gut had begun to twitch as Alan Ackenbury reappeared on the monitor
screen. He opened the segment by saying that a last-minute opportunity had
arisen to bring on a guest who could provide a counterpoint to the reverend's
views.
Eckert muttered something to
the effect that he'd understood he'd be the only guest. Ackenbury didn't seem
to hear, or pretended he didn't, and introduced Patrick.
He felt Cathy's hand against
his back, pushing him toward the stage.
"That's you," she
said. "You're on!"
And then Patrick was out in
the open, feeling the heat of the lights, hearing polite applause from the
studio audience.
The first few minutes were a
blur...Patrick had always consideredAckenbury at Large a punning reference to
the host's Orson Welles-class girth, and in person Alan was even larger than he
appeared on screen. He didn't rise, but extended his hand across the desk as
Patrick arrived. Instead of the traditional desk and couch set-up, the
Ackenbury show seated guests on either side of its host who could then mediate
the fray when they went at it. The barrier also prevented guests from coming to
blows if the discussion became too heated.
Patrick was aware of
Reverend Eckert pouting and sulking on the far side of the desk as Alan asked
questions about the coming court battle to unionize the Beacon Ridge sims.
Patrick didn't mention that the case was as good as stillborn with Boughton on
the bench, simply reeled off the canned responses he'd spouted to the press
since the news first broke.
He felt as if he were on
automatic pilot at first, answering the questions by rote. But as minutes
passed-minutes in which he noticed Alan Ackenbury's growing dissatisfaction
with his flat, tempered answers-Patrick felt himself begin to relax. He
remembered to mention the toll-free number and the website, www.simunion.org,
and was casting about for a way to juice up the proceedings when his fellow
guest did it for him.
"Admit it," the
Reverend Eckert said, pointing across the desk. "You work for
SinGen."
"Absolutely not,"
Patrick said. "In fact, I expect SimGen to do its damnedest to stop
me." He quickly added: "That's why contributions to 1-800-SIMUNION
are so vital."
"You have no idea of
what's really going on, do you? Or who is chairman of the board of
SinGen?"
"Mercer Sinclair."
"No! It's Satan! Satan
himself-his very own self! Satan calls the shots in SinGen! And Satan has
defiled the exalted holy clay of man by mixing it with the life stuff of a
monkey. Through SinGen, Satan has defiled the pinnacle of the Lord's
creation!"
"Depends on how you
look at it," Patrick said. "You're seeing the glass as half-empty.
Why not look at it as half-full? Why not see sims as a lower life form that's
been improved?"
"Improved? You cannot
improve on God's work! You can only defile it! Especially when you take the
life stuff of man, the only being in the universe to possess an immortal soul,
and degrade it by injecting it into a lesser being!"
"But a being with a
shared ancestor."
"Are you talking
evolution? That's blasphemy! God created mande novo -that means completely
new!"
"Then why do humans
share all but one-point-six percent of their DNA with the chimps that sims are
made from? If God made humans 'de novo,' as you say, and wanted us to stand out
from the crowd, wanted us to be the shining star atop the Christmas tree of his
creations, you'd think he'd have come up with a new and special kind of
'clay'-not stuff borrowed from primates."
"He did! He-"
"No, he didn't.
Genetically we're ninety-eight-point-four percent chimp-which means we're far
more ape than human."
"Speak for yourself,
sir."
As the audience laughed,
Patrick grinned and gave the Rev a thumbs-up. "Good one. But it doesn't
alter the fact that only a few genes separate us from the trees. And even fewer
separate us from sims. If chimps are our distant cousins, then sims are our
nieces and nephews."
"I will not tolerate
this!" He turned to Ackenbury. "Is this why you brought this man on
tonight? Had I known I was to share the stage with a blasphemer who would mock
my beliefs and the beliefs of my followers, mock the Lord Himself, I never
would have agreed to appear."
"No insult intended,
Reverend," Ackenbury said. "Just a fair airing of all sides of an
issue. You have your beliefs, and Mr. Sullivan has his."
"No! My beliefs are
supported by the Word of God!"
And then the Rev was off on
such a tear that not even the host could get a word in edgewise. Patrick's mind
raced, at a loss as to how to salvage the situation; then he remembered the
bananas he'd snagged from the fruit bowl in the green room.
His original idea had been
to offer one to Eckert in an ostensibly friendly gesture, assuming no one would
miss the reference to their shared simian ancestry. But subtlety wouldn't fly
here; he'd have to fire all barrels at once to break the Rev's filibuster. And
he had an idea of how to do that. Question was, did he dare? This could
backfire and leave him looking like a grade-A jerk.
What the hell, he thought.
Go for it.
Slowly, Patrick raised his
legs until his feet were on the chair cushion.
Squatting on the seat, he
pulled out one of the bananas and, with exaggerated care, began to peel it.
Neither Ackenbury nor the
Rev noticed at first, but the audience did. As laughter began to filter in from
the darkness beyond the stage lights, Ackenbury turned to him; his eyebrows
shot up in surprise, then he grinned. The Reverend Eckert followed the host's
stare. His tirade faltered, then stopped cold as his jaw dropped open. The
audience roared.
It had worked-the Rev
finally had shut up. But Patrick couldn't jump into the gap because his mouth
was crammed full of banana. He did the only thing he could think of. Returning
to Plan A, he pulled the second banana from his coat pocket and handed it to
Ackenbury.
"For me?" the big
man said as he took it.
Patrick shook his head and
pointed to Eckert.
"Of course,"
Ackenbury said, winking at Patrick, and handed the banana to the Rev.
Eckert shot to his feet and
batted the banana away, sending it skittering across the desk.
"This is an outrage! I
did not come here to be mocked! I refuse to stand for another minute of
this!"
So saying, he wheeled and
stormed from the stage.
"Reverend?"
Ackenbury said, calling after him but with little conviction.
"That's okay,"
Patrick said after swallowing the last of his mouthful of banana. "I'm
sure he's just hurrying off to phone in his donation to 1-800-SIMUNION before
the lines get jammed."
Ackenbury was laughing as he
turned to face the camera. "I'm afraid that's about all we have time for
tonight," he said as if nothing the slightest out of the ordinary
happened. "As usual, I hope you were entertained, and I hope you learned
something as well. Until tomorrow night then."
As the outro music began,
Ackenbury picked up the spurned banana, peeled it, and took a bite. The studio
audience went wild. He leaned toward Patrick and extended his hand.
"You, sir," he
said, grinning, "have a standing invitation to return anytime you
wish."
Patrick didn't know how true
that was, but he pretended to take it at face value. "I may be taking you
up on that."
"Do. Just call Cathy
Tresor."
As a stagehand came over and
helped the host haul his huge frame out of the seat, Patrick felt a hand on his
shoulder. He turned and saw Cathy beaming at him.
"You didgreat !"
"I hope so," he
said. "I'm sort of new at this."
She fairly bounced along as
she led him backstage and seated him in the green room, which he again had all
to himself. She told him she'd find someone from makeup to stop by and clean
him up-better that than run into the Reverend in the hallway.Ackenbury at Large
liked to confine its conflicts to the onstage area.
As he sat alone, wondering
if any of this would have a beneficial effect on the sim defense fund, he
sensed movement in the doorway. He turned and found the Reverend Eckert, backed
up by a steroidal slab of beef with 'bodyguard' written all over him.
Oh, shit, Patrick thought.
He's come to mess me up.
"You've got cojones,
Mr. Sullivan," Eckert said, hands on hips. "I'll have to give you
credit for that."
"Hey, now listen,"
Patrick said, backing up a step. "None of that was personal. I
didn't-"
But the Rev surprised him by
grinning and thrusting out his hand.
"Course you didn't.
It's all show biz. I understand that. Quite a scene stealer you pulled at the
end there. Yessir, stole my fire good. But I'm not mad. I had my say. In fact,
the reason I stopped by is I'd like to thank you for what you did."
"Thank me?"
"Yes! Just got a call
from church headquarters. Our prayer lines have been ringing off the hook!
Praise the Lord, never have we had such an outpouring of support. The money is
all but flying through the window. And all because of you."
Hope my line is doing the
same, Patrick thought. But was Eckert crazy?
"Why thank me?"
"'Cause caller after
caller's been saying they want me to keep spreading the word that they ain't
monkeys." He shook his head, beaming. "The Lord works in mysterious
ways, don't he. I thank Him every day, but tonight I want to thank you too. God
bless you, Mr. Sullivan."
"No hard feelings
then?"
"Not a bit. Hard to be
mad at someone who reminds you so much of yourself. You get tired of this
lawyering and unionizing business, you come to me. I promise to have a place
for you."
He gave Patrick's hand
another squeeze and then he was gone. Patrick stood dumbstruck. Probably looked
like Eckert had when he'd spotted him with the banana.
What a strange man. Patrick
had expected a punch in the nose; instead he'd received a handshake and hearty
thanks and a job offer. To do what? Take their act on the road and charge
admission?
Hard to be mad at someone
who reminds you so much of yourself...
The words echoed jarringly
in Patrick's head.
Like you? he thought. Not a
chance. I'm nothing like you.
But was he so sure? The
possibility made him queasy.
12
BROOKLYN
Romy lay in bed in her apartment in the Cobble Hill
section ofBrooklyn . TheAckenbury at Large closing credits had just begun to
roll when her PCA chimed.
"Are you alone?"
said Zero's voice.
"Aren't I always?"
"You really need to get
more of a life, Romy."
"Maybe I'm waiting for
you to take off that mask."
"It's off."
"And if I were there,
would I like what I saw?"
"I doubt it very
much."
She laughed. "Come
on-"
"Romy..." He
sighed. "You don't seem to be enjoying life."
"You sound like my
mother."
She and her mother still
spoke three or four times a week. Her parents divorced when she was a teen-her
fault, she knew-and her mother had never remarried. But she had a job, men
friends, women friends, a bridge club. In other words, a life.
So do I, Romy thought. Sort
of.
She had her job at OPRR. She
had her ballet-she'd spent two hours working out on the bar tonight and had the
sore hips to prove it-and she had Zero and the organization. But beyond that...
Friends were a problem.
Always had been. She'd had no girlfriends growing up-her wild mood swings saw
to that-and still had trouble being one of the girls. As for men, she had
plenty of offers, and she'd had her flings, but most of them seemed tissue
thin. Nobody with a fraction of Zero's substance.
Shehad a life, damn it.
Getting justice for the sims-wasn't that enough?
But it was so frustrating.
She'd read up on the civil rights movements of the fifties and sixties, looking
for inspiration. But that had been different. Those seeking justice then had
been human, and could march in the streets to demand it. Sims weren't human,
and the idea of joining a movement or even a single protest march was
completely beyond them.
So people like her and Zero
had to work behind the scenes.
"Were you
watching?" Zero said.
"Of course."
Usually she did the
early-to-bed/early-to-rise thing, but tonight she'd stayed up to see how
Reverend Eckert came across; like everyone else, she had been stunned by
Patrick Sullivan's sudden appearance.
"What did you
think?" Zero said.
"First tell me if you
knew Sullivan was going to appear."
"Not a clue. But I'm
glad he did."
"So am I...I
think."
"He said things that
needed saying. And anyone who pushes sims closer to humans in the public
consciousness does us a service. SimGen is always pushing the other way."
"But squatting on the
chair and eating that banana...do you think he went too far?"
"You mean, how did he
play in the bleachers?"
"Exactly."
"Well, only time will
tell. But I have to admit that Patrick Sullivan has risen in my
estimation."
"Why? He's still a
quick-buck artist. Did you hear how many times he managed to mention his 800
number?"
"But he projects a good
image, plus he's audacious and thinks well on his feet. I like that."
Romy had to admit that Zero
had a point. Sullivan had come across well-more like a crusading attorney with
a wild sense of humor than a zealot or opportunist.
"I still think he'll
cut and run as soon as the opposition stiffens," she said. "And if
what we hear about this judge assigned to the case is true, he's going to run
into a brick wall next week. And then it's sayonara sims."
Zero sighed. "You're
probably right. But I've learned, sometimes to my delight, sometimes to my
chagrin, that people aren't always as predictable as they seem. Patterns of
behavior can be misinterpreted. And tonight I thought I caught a glimpse of something
in our Mr. Sullivan, a spark of stubbornness that may work to our advantage.
We'll simply keep a careful eye on him and watch for developments."
"I guess we don't have
much of a choice, do we."
"Unfortunately
not." Zero paused, then, "Are you ready for tomorrow?"
She'd scheduled the first
leg of OPRR's inspection tour of SimGen's main facility to begin at 1:00P .M.
"I suppose so. I just
hope it accomplishes something. After all, you've had people in SimGen itself
for years, and they haven't been able to learn much."
"That's because they're
low-or mid-level employees, and because SimGen's cellular corporate structure
reduces crossovers between divisions. They see only a tiny piece of the
picture. That's been our problem all along. Everything about that company has
been designed for maximum security. Look at where it's located: The hills
protect it from ground surveillance, and a fly-over offers only a momentary
glimpse. If we had access to a spy satellite we might learn something, but we
don't."
"How about a hot-air
balloon?"
"A couple of reporters
tried that, remember? SimGen's copters buzzed them so much they damn near
crashed."
"I was only
kidding." Romy took a deep breath to ease the growing tension in her
chest. "So it's all on me."
"You'll do fine. Even
if you uncover one tidbit over the next few days, one little thing that OPRR
can use to call the company's practices into question, it could lead to slowing
or even stopping their assembly-line cloning of sims. If nothing else, this
inspection has to shake them up a little. So far they've managed to insulate
themselves from regulatory oversight. This is a first for them. They'll be
nervous."
"And I've planned
something that just might add a little extra rattle to their cages."
"Good. Maybe they'll
slip up."
"We can only
hope."
"I'll call again
tomorrow night-on the secure PCA I'll have delivered to your apartment in the
morning."
"Why? Are you worried
about a tap?"
"Not yet, but after you
begin sticking your nose into SimGen's sanctum tomorrow, I'll bet they'll want
to learn everything they can about you."
Romy shook off a chill
creeping over her shoulders. "Thanks. That's a pleasant thought."
"Sleep well,
Romy."
"Sure."
She hung up, told the TV to
turn itself off, and lay in the darkness. But sleep wouldn't come. Instead of
throttling back, her mind raced along, veering in all directions.
She wondered at the turn her
life had taken and if she might be courting futility. It didn't seem possible
that Zero and the organization had much of a chance of denting SimGen, let
alone toppling it, and yet he persisted. And so did she. But sometimes she felt
like one of many Sancho Panzas helping this enigmatic Quixote tilt at
windmills.
She'd have to be on her toes
at SimGen tomorrow, staying alert not simply to what was going on around her,
but to what was happening within her. She might encounter something that upset
her and she didn't want it to set her off. She had to be the picture of
professionalism.
The doctors had said her
bipolar disorder was cured, but she knew better. She'd had no violent outbursts
since her treatment, but that didn't mean she hadn't come close.
There'd been two Romys in
the bad old days-the studious, compliant, Reasonable Romy, and the fierce,
wild, Raging Romy. Raging Romy was supposedly gone, but Romy still heard echoes
of her footsteps down the corridors of her mind.
She closed her eyes and fell
into a dream dredged from an incident in her childhood. Romy had been an Air
Force brat with an American pilot father and a German mother. They moved around
a lot and it always seemed as soon as Romy just started getting used to a new
place, her father would be transferred to another base in another state.
The dream involved the time
when she was nine or ten and came upon a couple of the local boys throwing
rocks at a lame old dog who'd dared to bark at them from its yard. But it
wasn't a dog in the dream-it was a sim. Her dream rage was as fresh and hot and
sudden as it had been all those years ago when she'd charged into those boys
with flailing fists. That had been Raging Romy's debut. And in the dream, just
as in real life, she sent one of the terrified boys running home with a bloody
nose, and had the other on the ground, bashing him with a rock and screaming at
him,How do you like it? How do you like it? and not stopping until someone
pulled her off.
In real life he'd told his
parents, who threatened Romy's folks with a lawsuit if they didn't "do
something about that girl." The first of many such threats during the
years to come.
And in real life the owner
had come out of the house to thank her. But here in the dream, the owner came
out, but it wasn't old Mrs. Moore, it was Patrick Sullivan. And there, right in
front of her, he sold that old sim to a man from the university to be used in
medical experiments...
Romy awoke sobbing.
13
SUSSEX COUNTY,NJ
OCTOBER 5
"I understand what you're saying, miss, but I can't
find your name on the list."
The young guard at the gate,
so young his face still sported a few pimples, looked flustered as he stood
outside his kiosk, staring at his hand-held computer; he pushed buttons and
stared again, shaking his head.
Romy felt sorry for him but
couldn't let that show. She'd shoved the court papers in his face, demanding
entrance, and now she glared at him from the driver's seat of her car.
"Then call someone
whocan find my name," she said through clenched teeth, "or I'll shut
this whole damn place down and you'll be lucky if you find a job pumping gas in
downtownPaterson !"
He ducked inside his kiosk
and made a hurried phone call. A moment later he stepped out and pointed to a
small parking area to her right.
"Pull over there,
please. Someone's coming down."
Muttering unintelligibly
under her breath, Romy complied. Then she turned off her engine, leaned back,
and smiled. This was working out just as she'd planned.
Minutes later a small
four-seater helicopter lifted over the wooded rise dead ahead and buzzed toward
her. It set down in the field on the far side of the road. A man stepped out of
the front passenger seat and strode toward her. He didn't duck as most people
do while under the whirling blades, didn't have to clutch a hat to his head
because he was bareheaded, didn't have to worry about the vortex mussing his
hair because it was cut too short to matter. He walked erect, purposefully, but
with no sense of urgency, as if he knew within a centimeter the locations of
the blades slicing the air above his scalp.
The wordmilitary flashed in
Romy's brain like a neon sign as she took in his broad shoulders, measured
step, straight spine. Or at least ex-military. She put him in his early
forties. And judging from his skin tones, black hair and eyes, Romy bet on a
heavy Latino ancestry. Not a bad-looking man. Attractive in an animal sort of
way.
"Ms. Cadman," he
said as he reached her car. He didn't smile, didn't offer his hand. "We
weren't expecting you so early."
"According to your gate
man you weren't expecting me at all."
"He only has the
morning list. Your arrival is scheduled for one o'clock."
"One o'clock?" she
said. "Ridiculous! Why would I waste half a day?"
He pulled open her car door.
"Step out, please."
He said it like a cop. Romy
saw no reason why not, so she swiveled in her seat-giving him a good shot of
her legs before she adjusted her skirt-and stood before him.
Maybe that had been a
mistake. A shiver ran over her skin as his eyes raked her blazer, blouse, and
skirt. She'd seen eyes like that before. On a crocodile. She felt naked.
"You'll want this next,
I suppose," she said, fumbling for her OPRR ID card and handing it to him.
"You read my
mind," he said as he took the card. A smile tugged at the corners of his
mouth but didn't quite make it to his eyes. "That could mean
trouble." He handed it back. "Welcome to SimGen, Ms. Cadman. I'm Luca
Portero, Chief of Security here."
"The head man? Should I
be flattered?"
She'd read up on a number of
the key people in SimGen, and Luca Portero was one of them. She'd never seen
him, but knew his folder: Army Special Forces, decorated inAfghanistan ,
honorable discharge with the rank of sergeant after twenty years in; hired by
SimGen within weeks of his discharge.
"A visit from OPRR is
an occasion."
"Get used to it,"
she said. "If I have my way, we'll be here every week."
His smile froze, then faded.
"We'll use the copter to take us to the center of the campus. It's
faster."
"I'm here today as
vanguard for the full inspection team; to do that I must see the facilities
firsthand-from ground level."
"Of course. We'll pick
up a car at center campus and continue from there."
Once inside the helicopter,
conversation was impossible, especially with Romy in the rear and Portero up
front next to the pilot. The security chief spent the time talking into his
headset, and did not look happy.
So Romy took in the scenery.
The trees were showing off their vivid fall colors but she could not let that
distract her. She was looking for concealed roads, hidden installations,
anything not visible in the aerial photos that might escape OPRR inspection.
But she saw nothing.
Romy caught her breath as
the copter cleared a hill and the center of the SimGen campus flashed into
view. The glass sides of the buildings, none taller than six stories, picked up
the hues of the neighboring hillsides and made them their own, integrating the
manmade structures into their surroundings. As much as she hated the company,
she had to admit it appeared to be a beautiful place to work.
She knew the layout of the
campus by heart and immediately identified the taller executive and
administration buildings. She wasn't interested in those; her inspection team
would be focusing on the natal center, the sim dormitories and training
centers, and the two research buildings-general and basic.
Zero had told her he was
particularly interested in the basic research facility. He'd mentioned
mysterious shipments in and out of an enclosed loading dock near its northwest
corner, and that only a select few were allowed anywhere near the place. But
was that all he knew? Was the basic research facility so secret even his
high-up contacts didn't know what went on inside...or wouldn't tell him? Or did
Zero already know and want OPRR to expose it?
What could they be doing in
there that was so sensitive? Her mind flashed lurid images of experiments on
human subjects, or Doctor Moreau-type vivisections, or hideous failed splices,
locked in cages with their claws or tentacles reaching through the bars. She
doubted it was anything that exciting. And she'd find out soon enough, wouldn't
she.
Squinting against the glare
of the morning sun, she located the building and spotted a medium-size delivery
truck backing into a shedlike structure jutting from its flank. She reached for
the binoculars in her shoulder bag-the set with a spycam concealed within-but
changed her mind. She might find a better use for them later-no sense in
letting Portero know now that she'd brought them along.
As she watched, a corrugated
steel door rolled down, sealing the truck in the shed.
Romy could understand the
need for an enclosed loading dock on a windy winter day, but the weather was
positively balmy this morning. The only other purpose would be to conceal what
was being loaded or unloaded.
When the copter landed,
Portero led her to a blue Jeep Geronimo, one of many wheeling through the
campus.
"Do you buy these by
the dozen?" she asked.
"Four-wheel drive is
not a luxury here, especially in the winter. When it snows in these hills,
itsnows ."
Once they were seated within
he gave her another penetrating up-and-down look. "Are all the OPRR
investigators so beautiful?"
Puh-leese! Romy thought. She
wanted to tell him to save his imagined wit and charm but decided it might be
best not to acknowledge the compliment.
"I'm considered OPRR's
plain Jane," she said brusquely. "I'd like to begin with the research
facilities."
Portero started the engine.
"They're not ready for you yet. We'll start with the natal center."
"I prefer research
first, then natal. It's a more natural progression."
"If it was up to me,
I'd take you anywhere you want to go," he said.
Why don't I believe that?
He went on: "And if
you'd arrived at your scheduled time, I'd be wheeling us there right now. But
the powers that be say that if you insist on starting with research, you can
wait in one of our empty offices until one o'clock and start then. But if you
wish to get to work immediately, natal is available."
Score one for you, Romy
thought, hiding her frustration. After all, she was a professional.
"Very well. Natal it
is."
But don't look so smug, she
thought as she watched Portero put the Jeep in gear. The game has just begun.
14
The Natal Center-intellectually she'd been prepared for
it, but emotionally...
Anne Twerlinger, associate
director of the center, was a reed-thin middle-aged redhead who stank of
cigarettes, wore retro pointy-framed glasses, and spoke with what Romy could
only describe as a sniff in her tone, as if convinced that at any moment her
nostrils might be assailed by a noxious odor.
Portero had stayed behind in
Twerlinger's office, making phone calls, while she started the tour by leading
Romy down a narrow corridor. The right wall was glass from waist to ceiling,
and looked in on the natal center's cloning lab.
"I'm sure I don't have
to tell you about the sim genome," Twerlinger said, then proceeded to do
just that. "As everyone knows, it consists of twenty-two chromosome
pairs-one fewer than humans, two fewer than chimps; much of the junk and
non-functioning genetic material has been removed, leaving it one of the
cleanest mammalian genomes in existence. Sims don't mate, mainly because we've
genetically reduced their sex drives to nil; but even if they did, no offspring
would be produced because their ova cannot be fertilized."
"Why not have just one
sex?" Romy said.
"Because we're all
conditioned to view work as gender specific: We're comfortable with females
cleaning houses, males loading trucks. And SimGen is nothing if not sensitive
to the marketplace."
"Why should the females
have ovaries at all?"
"We'd rather they
didn't, of course, but we've found that a regular hormone cycle is necessary to
their accelerated maturation process." She waved tobacco-stained fingers
at the masked and gowned workers on the far side of the glass. "New sims
are cloned by nuclear transfer from a bank of identical cells, and implanted in
a special class of females we call breeders. Breeder sims are as sterile as
their sisters, but exist for one purpose: to incubate new sims."
They came to the end of the
corridor. Twerlinger pushed through into a much larger space: wide, long, its
low ceiling studded with recessed fluorescents. The place was huge-the size of
a football field at least, and filled with beds. It might have been the world's
largest homeless shelter except that it was filled with sims instead of humans.
Pregnant sims.
"My God," Romy
said. "And you have three floors like this?"
"And two more identical
buildings with a fourth under construction. We can't keep up with the demand.
We've begun building natal centers abroad now. The one inPoznan is almost
complete."
They ambled among the beds,
arranged in clusters around common areas with sinks and toilets. Twerlinger
pointed to partitioning walls rising not quite to the ceiling throughout the
space.
"We divide our breeders
up by how far along they are. Early, middle, late gestation: eight months
overall." She spread her arms. "OPRR will find nothing to complain
about here, Ms. Cadman. Breeders lead lives of pampered ease. They do not do a
lick of work their entire lives."
"But they engage in
labor of another sort."
A sniff. "I suppose you
might put it that way."
Most of the mothers-to-be
Romy passed were either napping or lounging together on sofas, watching TV.
"They look bored out of
their minds."
"Breeders are provided excellent
nutrition and get adequate exercise," the assistant director said as if
she hadn't heard.
"And what of labor and
delivery?"
"Would you like to see
a delivery? I can guarantee that a number are in progress as we speak."
"I'll leave that to the
team. But how does labor go?"
Twerlinger shrugged.
"The breeders rarely need sedation, but if they do, they get it. Our
breeder sims receive better obstetrical care than a lot of humans, Ms.
Cadman."
"And after delivery?"
"It's usually single
offspring, but we're beginning to have some success with increasing the
incidence of twins. Once we perfect that we can double output."
"I'm surprised you
don't simply clone them and incubate them ex-utero."
"We tried that. Believe
me, we tried that every which way imaginable, but the resultant offspring were
much less tractable and far less emotionally stable than the ones gestated in
utero. That's the one thing we guarantee our lessees: stable and dependable
workers. So..." She smiled here, a fleeting flash of yellowed teeth.
"...we do it the old-fashioned way."
"And you still allow a
mother to stay with her child?"
Twerlinger nodded. "For
a year; we find the offspring adapt faster in that year when the breeders are
around to help train them. And we encourage all breeders to nurse because that
seems to make for healthier and more emotionally stable offspring."
"And then what?"
"We immunize them
against the usual diseases. Chimps get polio and hepatitis and HIV, though they
don't develop AIDS. Sims are even more susceptible. Then the offspring are
PRC'd and moved on into the dormitories to start their training."
"Pee-are...?"
Twerlinger touched the nape
of Romy's neck. Her fingers were ice cold. "Tattooed with their serial
number bar code. You've seen them, of course."
"Of course." She'd
just never thought of babies being tattooed.
"It's the only way we
can accurately monitor inventory."
"And the mothers?"
"Breeders, please. It's
tempting to anthropomorphize them, but we discourage it. Counterproductive, you
know. Certain segments of the public get all caught up in their superficial
human characteristics-"
"Well, they aren't
exactly white rats."
"True, but when you
come down to it, sims arelivestock , nothing more."
Romy looked around at the
bored, hopeless expressions on the...breeders. "Nothing more."
"As for the breeders,
after a year with their offspring, they're rotated back to be impregnated
again."
Romy ground her teeth,
biting back a tirade. She wanted to shout that they were too close to human to
be treated as walking, talking incubators, to have their children-not
offspring,children! -torn from them and then be impregnated again...and
again...and again...
But she couldn't let on how
she felt. Zero had warned her about that: Never let them know, or your status
in OPRR could be compromised.
She let out the breath she'd
been holding. "That means every twenty months or so-"
"Yes, that's the cycle.
A hearty breeder can go through ten to twelve cycles before she's
retired."
"Or just plain
tired."
What an existence, Romy
thought as she looked around at the lethargic breeders. Most sims in her
experience tended to be full of life and energy. These seemed barely able to
move. And suddenly she knew why.
"They're
depressed," Romy said.
Twerlinger arched her thin
eyebrows. "I wasn't aware you had training in sim psychology."
No, but I know depression,
lady-firsthand and big time.
"Don't need any to
realize it's an unavoidable emotional fallout from being repeatedly separated
from their children."
"Ridiculous."
"Chimps, orangutans,
gorillas-all mourn the loss of a child. Why should sims be any different? In
fact they'd bemore likely to mourn."
Twerlinger sniffed. "Do
animal emotional states fall under OPRR's aegis?"
They didn't. They both knew that.
Disappointed, Romy followed
Twerlinger back to her office. She hadn't found a thing. Maybe the full-team
inspection would come up with something, but she'd struck out.
She found Portero waiting
for her.
"Finished here?"
he said.
"For now. Research
next."
His smile tried to look
sympathetic as he shook his head. "As I told you, research is scheduled
for this afternoon. The dormitories and training centers are next on the
list." He gave a helpless shrug.
Somehow, helpless didn't fit
with Luca Portero.
As she followed the security
chief back to the Jeep she wondered if the judge had lowered the boom on the
sim union yet.
15
WESTCHESTER COUNTY,NY
Patrick felt no tension, no sense of suspense as Judge
Boughton prepared to make his judgment. He'd been in a blue-black mood since he
and Maggie Fischer, his secretary, had entered the federal courthouse inWhite
Plains . As far as anyone was concerned, it was a done deal. Tony Hodges, the
attorney for Beacon Ridge, had submitted well-researched motions that would
have swayed a neutral judge; for a union hater like Boughton, they were like
tossing gasoline on a bonfire. Add to that the amicus brief filed by SimGen on
the club's behalf, and the opposition had a slam dunk. The company's legal
howitzer, Abel Voss himself, looking like a cat about to be served a plateful
of canaries, was seated two rows behind the defense table.
Maggie gave him a reassuring
smile. A matronly forty-five, with curly brown hair and a hawklike nose, she
sat straight-spined with her pen poised over her yellow pad. She was agreat
legal secretary and he hoped her two boys stayed in college forever so she'd
never be able to quit.
"It will all be over
soon," she said, sounding like a dental assistant before an extraction.
That was what the firm
wanted, and so that was what Maggie thought he wanted. And as much as Patrick
loathed the idea of defeat, a traitorous part of him was looking forward to
Judge Boughton's inevitable ruling. It didn't know why he'd got himself into
this, and now it wanted out.
But losing didn't sit right.
Never would.
The donation hotline already
seemed to have called it quits. It had experienced a nice twenty-four-hour
spike after his Ackenbury appearance, but then dropped to barely a trickle.
Then he'd had a call from
his father after the Ackenbury show-a long message on his answering machine he
hadn't returned yet-that could be summed up as:My son wants to unionize
monkeys!?!?!?
And the cherry on the soured
whipped cream of this unwieldy concoction was the precarious state of his
relationship with Pamela. She hadn't found his stunt onAckenbury at Large the
least bit amusing-"You made an ass out of yourself, Patrick!" She
wanted him out of the sim case too. She'd decided to sleep at her own place
last night. He hoped to coax her back tonight. After all, the window was fixed,
and the cops were keeping an eye on the house.
He tried to imagine how
things could get much worse.
He looked up as he heard the
judge clear his throat. Boughton's wrinkled hatchet face reminded Patrick of an
aged Edward Everett Horton stripped of any trace of humor.
"I'll make this short
and sweet, gentlemen, since we all have busy schedules."
Here it comes, Patrick
thought.
"I have read the
arguments, such as they are, that have been presented to the court, and
although my personal beliefs lean the opposite way, I have not been
sufficiently persuaded to grant Beacon Ridge a declaratory judgment."
Patrick was reaching for his
briefcase, preparing to gather up his papers and slink away when the key word
sunk in.
Not? Did Boughton say,not ?
He saw Maggie's stunned
expression, glanced over at the defense table and saw Hodges on his feet,
protesting to the judge, and Abel Voss seated behind him, pale with shock.
He did! Boughton denied the
judgment!
Fighting the urge to pump
his fist in the air and cheer, Patrick focused on Boughton's response to
Hodges.
"No sense in getting
your blood pressure up, Mr. Hodges," Boughton was saying. "I
sympathize with your position, and concur on many of your points, but I believe
larger issues are at stake here. At the very heart of this matter lies the
question of the legal status of sims. We accord animals certain rights in this
society-protection against cruelty and neglect, for instance-and if sims were
mere chimpanzees, they would be covered by those laws. But sims are something
more than chimps; sims did not exist when the laws protecting animals were
framed; sims are not a product of normal evolution or natural selection. So how
do we classify them?"
"I believe the United
States Congress directly addressed that when it passed legislation-"
"I'm well aware of that
legislation, Mr. Hodges. But I believe areas exist within current law that
remain open to interpretation. And I believe there might even be questions as
to whether congress overstepped its bounds when it passed that law. That sims
are something more than animals is, I believe, beyond question; and yet because
they are decidedly less than human, they cannot automatically be accorded those
inalienable rights guaranteed by the Constitution. So where do they fit? What
rightsdo they have?"
"If it please the
court," said Abel Voss, standing now. "Sims are a commercial product,
owned by SimGen Corporation. They are private property, your honor."
"As were slaves in the
Old South," Boughton said, gazing askance at Voss over the top of his
reading gasses. "But that changed, didn't it."
"Sims are not human,
your honor, so how can they form a union?"
"If you did your
homework, Mr. Voss, you'd know that the NLRB statutes-written long before the
first sim was created-refer to 'persons.' The word 'human' is never mentioned.
Of course sims are not human, but does that automatically mean they are not
persons? An interesting question, don't you think? One that will have to be
decided by the NLRB and, eventually I have no doubt, by the Supreme Court. Sit
down, Mr. Voss."
Boughton looked at Hodges,
then shifted his gaze to Patrick. He shook his head and smiled.
"Look at those
confounded expressions. What a shame. If you'd read my rulings a little more
carefully, you'd have seen this coming. You will find I am nothing if not
consistent."
He rapped his gavel and
began reeling off a list of dates that Patrick couldn't follow. Good thing
Maggie was here. At the moment he was too stunned to hold a pen. He glanced
over and saw Hodges and Voss with their heads together, undoubtedly planning an
appeal.
This was going to be a
protracted fight, but amazingly he'd won the first round.
Later, on the way out of the
courthouse, Maggie said, "What are we going to do?"
Good question. A defeat
would have solved so many problems, and yet...he felt exhilarated, downright
jubilant.
"Do? As long as we're
still alive, we're going to run with it, as hard and fast as we can."
"Really? But the
partners-"
"I'll handle
them."
He already had an angle
worked out. He'd explain to Kraft that as much as he wanted out of the case, it
would look bad for Pecht & Hayes if they dropped the sims on the heels of a
favorable ruling.
But the truth was, this
morning's victory had energized him. He wanted to see how far he could take
this. Not just for the settlement-which had just moved a few steps closer to a
real possibility-but for thedoing itself.
"I'm glad," Maggie
said, touching his arm. "Those poor things have no one to speak for them.
This is a good thing you're doing."
"Yeah," he said,
warmed by the motherly approval in her eyes, "I guess it is." He
looked around for a reporter-from a newspaper, radio, TV, anything-but found
none. That would change. "When you get back to the office, send out a
press release: The unionization of the Beacon Ridge sims is going forward...and
don't forget to mention the donation hotline."
"You're not going
back?"
"I'll be in after
lunch. I'm going to stop off at the golf club and tell my clients the good
news."
But when Patrick arrived at
the barrack he found the sims already celebrating.
"You've heard about the
ruling already?" he said when he found Tome.
"No," the old sim
said, his eyes bright.
"Then why the
party?"
"Gabba go D."
"Is she hurt? What
happened?"
Tome laughed, a wheezy
sound. "No, she fine. Go D: no can wash dish now. Hands too hurt. Move old
sim home."
"Oh," Patrick
said. "You mean she's being retired."
"Yes-yes. Retired.
Retired. Go D."
D...Patrick had read
somewhere that the expression to "go D" had come from the clause in
the SimGen lease agreement that allowed lessees to return any sim that became
defective, disabled, diseased, or decrepit for a fresh replacement.
Defective, disabled,
diseased, decrepit...which one was Gabba? One look at her gnarled fingers and
hunched back told the story. Arthritis was having a field day in her joints.
And then a thought struck
Patrick like a blow-obviously the club hadn't thought of it yet, but what if
they decided to declare all their sims "D" and turn them in? How
would that impact the case?
Or what if SimGen issued a
recall that just happened to include the Beacon Ridge sims, and removed them
all?
As he approached Gabba where
she sat on one of the sofas, Patrick made a mental note to prepare preemptive
injunctions to head off any such maneuvers. Had to be on his toes. He was
playing with the big boys now.
"So, Gabba," he
said, dropping into the chair opposite her. "Looking forward to
retirement?"
The old sim shook her head.
Her brown eyes were moist. "No. Gabba want stay."
"But winter's
coming," he told her. "Those old joints will be much more comfortable
inArizona ."
Years ago SimGen had pulled
a public relations coup by transforming a tract ofArizona desert into a
retirement community for sims who were "D." The company did it to
reassure the public that sims no longer useful in the workforce were not
destroyed. Instead they lived out their years in warmth and comfort. Reporters
from all the media were toured regularly through the community, returning with
videos and photos of disabled sims lounging in sunny tranquillity.
"No friend there.
Friend here."
"A nice old girl like
you? You'll make friends in no time."
"No want new friend.
Want here friend."
Good lord, was that a tear
slipping down her cheek? Did sims cry?
Wanting to change the
subject, he looked up at the other sims crowding around. Time for an
announcement.
"One thing you will
miss, Gabba," he said, letting his voice rise, "is all the excitement
that will be going on here during the next few months because"-he shot his
fist into the air-"the judge has decided to hear the case!"
The sims began capering
about and yelling.
"Is true?" Tome
said, grabbing his hand.
"Sure is. I just came
from there."
He let out a screech.
"Mist Sulliman best!"
And then the sims took up a
chant: "Sulli-MAN! Sulli-MAN! Sulli-MAN!" Stamping their feet,
clapping their hands, pounding on the tables until the barrack shook with the
chant. "Sulli-MAN! Sulli-MAN! Sulli-MAN!"
They love me, Patrick
thought. No bitching about bills or unreturned calls. They think I'm the
greatest.
He realized that these were
the best damn clients he'd ever had-and most likely ever would.
16
SUSSEX COUNTY,NJ
"It's the greatest job in the world," said the
bear of a man guiding her through the dorms.
Romy liked Harry Carstairs.
She felt herself respond instantly to his gentle eyes, his soft manner, and the
warm shake from his huge hand. As for the young sims-gangly, three-foot-tall
versions of the adults, dressed in overalls color-coded for age-well, they
obviously adored him, crowding around, murmuring his name, touching him as he
passed as if he were a god. He cradled a yellow-overalled two-year-old female
on his hip now as he showed Romy around.
"How so?" she
said.
"Look at them." He
gestured to the crowded dorm as they walked among the seemingly endless rows of
bunk beds. "So full of life and energy. It's almost contagious. I get a
buzz just walking through here."
Romy had to admit the young
sims were fun to be around-a positive tonic after the breeders in the natal
center. She signed "hello" to a few of the older ones and they shyly
signed back.
She wondered how Carstairs
could reconcile the obvious affection he had for them with the fact that they
were all destined to be slaves.
"How do you channel all
that energy?" she asked as they edged toward a quieter corner. "How
do you get them to sit still long enough for training?"
"We've developed a
whole system of operant conditioning, routines of Skinnerian techniques but
with no punishment-only positive reinforcement."
"I'm glad to hear
that."
Romy had heard that SimGen
treated its "product" well, but she'd wanted to see for herself. It
seemed true. Not, she was sure, because the company was particularly humane; it
simply had learned that a benign atmosphere during development resulted in the
best workers.
"We start off with the
social basics," Carstairs said. "Toilet training is numero uno."
Romy smiled. "I can
imagine."
"Next it's how to dress
and care for themselves, then the manual skills necessary for the kind of work
they'll be leased out for, and of course we stress all along the most important
skill of all; language. We start with signing and move to vocalization as quickly
as possible. They're not all that intelligible when they leave here, but they
can comprehend what they're told and take instruction."
She noted that he failed to
mention the idea that was drummed incessantly into young sims' brains
throughout their upbringing: that they existed to work.
"How long does all this
take?" she asked-she already knew the answer.
Carstairs' gaze drifted
away. "About five years, depending on the sim."
Romy mimicked shock.
"You're sendingfive-year-olds out to work?"
"The ones that are
ready, sure. Don't forget, they've been genetically altered for accelerated
growth and development."
"Which shortens their
life spans and leaves them old before their time."
"We're working on that.
We had to crank out sims fast in the early days; now we're getting to the point
where we have the facilities to allow us a longer view. Longer lives are
obviously better for the sims and, coincidentally, better for SimGen."
"So you won't have to
send five-year-olds off to work."
"Only chronologically
five. With the hormonally enhanced diets they receive here they're physically
into their late teens when we let them go."
"But up here..."
She tapped a finger against her head. "...they're children. How do you
feel about sending children into that cold, cruel world out there?"
"Am I on trial or
something here?" Carstairs said.
"Of course not."
Be professional, Romy reminded herself. Cool and professional.
"SimGen does its
damnedest to see that a sim's world is neither cold nor cruel. That's why we
don't sell them. They always belong to SimGen-that way we can protect
them."
"They're still just
kids," Romy said, fighting to keep the bitterness out of her voice.
"Just kids."
The rest of the dorm tour
was a little tense.
"I think it's time for
lunch," Luca Portero said with a grin as they once again seated themselves
in the Jeep. "There's this sweet little restaurant just a few miles from
here where they have the greatest..."
Not gonna happen, she
thought as she closed out his voice. I'll eat in the employee caf.
As they passed the two
buildings that made up the research complex, she interrupted him. "When we
get into the research centers, I think I'll start with the basic facility, and
then move on to general research."
Portero shook his head and
heaved a dramatic sigh. "I'm sorry."
"What now?"
"You will not be
inspecting the basic research facility."
"Of course I will.
That's what it says in the order-'all research facilities.' What part of 'all'
is causing confusion here?"
Another helpless shrug.
"If it was up to me-"
"Cut it. We'll have
SimGen back in court first thing tomorrow morning."
"That will be up to
you. But the powers that be consider the basic research experiments too
sensitive and proprietary to allow inspection. They're worried about industrial
espionage."
"Nonsense! Every member
of my team-"
"We will allow you to
inspect every other facility on the campus," he said, his voice taking on
an edge. "But under no circumstances do we allow outsiders in that
building. We will go to the Supreme Court to protect our basic research."
Romy did not miss the sparks
in his crocodile eyes. So now it's "we," is it?
She knew damned well that
SimGen could barrage the courts with motions ad infinitum.
She was wearing two spycams
and had been saving them for the basic research facility. Now, damn it, she
wouldn't get a chance to use them.
With frustration burning
like a hot poker against the back of her neck, she turned toward the window.
Don't lose it...don't lose it...
As she glared through the
glass she noticed a truck pulling out of the basic research building's enclosed
loading dock. She couldn't tell if it was the same one she'd seen earlier, but
so what?-she wanted a closer look at it. But by the time it reached the road
they'd be well past it.
Finding the window button
she jabbed it with one hand while she rummaged through her shoulder bag with
the other. She pulled her notebook free, then let it flutter from her fingers
and out the window.
"Stop!" she cried.
"My notes!"
Portero hit the brakes. As
soon as the car stopped-and before he could shift into reverse-Romy hopped out
and ran back. She retrieved the notebook, then stood and studied the truck as
it reached the road.
It looked brand-new, dark
green, about the size of a UPS delivery van, but with no lettering on the side
panels, no indication anywhere that it belonged to SimGen or anyone else. As it
turned and roared away, she used a spycam hidden in one of her suit jacket
buttons to photograph itsIdaho plates.
Idaho?
And then the Jeep was
backing past and skidding to a halt in front of her-directly between Romy and
the retreating truck.
"Find it?" Portero
said, bounding out from behind the wheel.
"Yes," she said.
"Good." He trotted
around and opened the passenger door for her. He seemed anxious to get her back
in the car. "Now, about lunch..."
Romy stepped to her right so
she could see the truck again, and pointed to it. "What's in the truck?"
she said so innocently, as if asking what octane gas he used in the Jeep.
"Truck?" He looked
around with equal innocence as if just noticing it. "Oh. Just delivering
supplies."
"Where's it going? The
gate's the other way."
"I don't know. I don't
keep track of delivery schedules."
A bend in the road swallowed
the truck. Romy saw no point in standing out here any longer, so she stepped
past Portero and slid back into her seat.
"You're SimGen's chief
of security and you have no idea why an unmarked truck is rolling from the
basic research building toward the company's private airport?"
Portero's eyes narrowed.
"How do you know that's the road to the airport?"
Romy smiled. "Lucky
guess?"
His expression hardened as
he slammed her door closed.
"And just when we were
starting to really hit it off," she muttered.
17
WESTCHESTER COUNTY,NY
OCTOBER 6
Patrick Sullivan lay in bed on his right side, face to the
wall, Pamela spooned warmly against his back.
Ah, peace.
Judge Boughton's decision
had started to thaw the ice between them. After all, if a federal judge thought
the case warranted a hearing, then maybe Patrick hadn't gone off his head with
"this sim thing," as she liked to call it. A little champagne before
dinner and a Graves Bordeaux with perfectly done steaks had finished the melt,
leading to a hefty serving of aerobic sex for dessert.
And now for some much-needed
sleep. But his slow slide toward dreamland was cut short by the crash of
shattering glass. He levered up in the bed. Not again! The sound had come from
the living room this time. Anger bloomed with the crash, but thewhoomp! that
followed it shot a bolt of terror through his heart, even before he saw the
flicker of flames along the hallway.
"Pam!" he shouted,
shaking her. "Pam, wake up!"
She was slow coming to. Not
used to all that wine. But when she saw the flames and smelled the smoke-
"My God!"
Neither of them was wearing
a stitch but they still had a few seconds. Patrick found Pam's slacks and
blouse on the floor and tossed them to her. As she slipped into them-God knew
where their underwear might be-he dialed 911. He found his jeans as he was
reporting the fire.
Less than a minute later,
cold and barefoot, they stood on the curb and watched the flames fan out from
the living room. The howling fire trucks arrived shortly and brought the blaze
quickly under control, but not before it had gutted Patrick's house. Somewhere
along the way a neighbor had draped a blanket over their shoulders; another had
brought them some old sneakers, ill-fitting but a hell of a lot more
comfortable than the cold wet asphalt of the street.
When it was over and the
firemen were rolling up their hoses, Patrick stood mute, numb with shock,
unable to move a muscle as he stared at the smoking ruin of his home. But
Pamela began to lose it. She started with a few deep sobs that quickly graduated
to wails. Patrick tried to comfort her but she shoved him back.
"Don't come near
me!" she screamed. "This is all your fault! I told you to forget this
crazy sim thing but you wouldn't listen! You had to keep pushing and pushing
until you almost got us killed!"
Patrick saw the terror
slithering in her eyes. He took a step toward her. "Pam-"
"No!" She held out
a hand and backed away. She looked wild with her hair in disarray and her tears
reflecting red and blue flashes from the police and fire vehicles. "No,
you stay away! I've had it! I can't take this anymore! Everyone I work with
thinks you're either a nut or an opportunist! I'm tired of defending you and I
don't want to be burned alive! We'rethrough , Patrick! I can't take any more...I
just can't!"
She's hysterical, he
thought. She doesn't know what she's saying. "Pam, please..."
"No!" She raised
her hand higher and turned away, moving toward her car. Through a sob she said,
"I'm going home alone, Patrick. Good-bye."
She left Patrick standing
alone outside the smoking timbers of what had been his home, wondering how a
day that had started out so well could go so hideously wrong.
18
SUSSEX COUNTY,NJ
OCTOBER 7
"All I can say," Mercer Sinclair shouted,
"is that there'd better not be any connection to SimGen! If I find out
anyone here had anything to do with this, heads will roll, and I don't care
whose body is attached!"
Luca Portero watched
Sinclair-1-his pet name for SimGen's CEO-pace back and forth in his two-toned
CEO office before his panoramic CEO window. If this display was being staged to
intimidate Luca or the two other men who made up the rest of the CEO's captive
audience, it was failing. Miserably.
Luca glanced around. Abel
Voss had his wide butt crammed into an armchair and looked as if he was
listening to a weather report, and not a terribly bad one. Sinclair-2, Ellis,
the useless Sinclair, was slumped on the sofa and staring out at the clear
morning sky. As for Luca himself, he stood. He preferred to stay on his feet
during these gatherings.
Sinclair-1 paused, so Luca
used the break to offer something useful.
"I spoke to the
Westchester County Sheriff this morning. They caught the guys-two of them.
Didn't take much: They were drunk and had wrapped themselves around a utility
pole getting away. Had an unused Molotov and a can of gas in their back
seat."
Sinclair-1 pointed at Luca.
"Who hired them? You?"
Luca only stared at him.
"I asked you a
question," Sinclair-1 said. "And I'd better like the answer. Because
if I don't..."
He let it hang, but Luca
didn't believe in letting things hang. "You'll...what?"
Sinclair-1 might be CEO, but
Luca wasn't going to allow anyone he didn't take orders from to threaten him.
And he took orders from no one in this room.
Voss jumped into the tense
silence. "I think we can be sure our friend Luca here had nothing to do
with any attack on Mr. Sullivan."
"Can we?"
Sinclair-1 said, glaring at Luca. "I've witnessed your problem-solving
methods in the past, Portero, and this incident, I might say, fits right in
with your M.O."
"We've all seen how he
solves problems," Voss said. "And that's just my point. If we
consider one salient fact here, I think we can be certain Mr. Portero did not
try to incinerate Mr. Sullivan."
"And what would that
fact be?"
"Mr. Sullivan is still
alive."
Luca fought a smile as Voss
winked at him. He disliked the legal profession as a whole and found fat people
repulsive, but this lard-bellied shyster was all right.
Sinclair-1 considered Voss's
words, then turned back to Luca and nodded. "I apologize."
Luca went on as if nothing
had happened. "The men were a couple of Teamsters who as much as
confessed, making statements to the effect that no way were they calling 'a
bunch of fucking monkeys our union brothers.' As far as anyone can tell, they
were acting on their own."
"Thank God they
failed!" Voss cried.
Sinclair-1 nodded.
"Damn right. Bad enough Boughton denies the declaratory judgment. All we
need now is some asshole making a martyr out of Patrick Sullivan." He
turned to Voss. "Which brings me to another point: Didn't you sit in that
very same chair and tell me Boughton would be on our side? 'Our kinda guy,' was
the way you described him. Someone who'd 'toss this case in two seconds flat.'
Wasn't that how you put it?"
"I believe I did,"
Voss replied, looking uncomfortable. "But you see-"
"What I see is that he
did just the opposite. What the hell happened? Did he have some kind of
mini-stroke? What is hethinking ?"
"If you ask me, and you
just did, I believe that ol boy's hearin the magic word that rings a bell in
every judicial head:precedent ."
Sinclair-1 stopped pacing
and did a slow turn toward Voss. "Precedent? You don't mean-?"
"I do," Voss said.
"Oh yes I surely do. Every judge dreams of having his name attached to a
precedent-setting decision. This could be a big one. Might upgrade the legal
status of sims to 'persons.' To that end any judge might be inclined to allow
Mr. Sullivan more latitude than he'd ever normally tolerate."
Sinclair-1 lowered himself
into the high-backed chair behind his shiny black desk. "Upgrade
to...persons," he said, sounding as if he was running out of air.
Luca suddenly felt a little
tense himself. He was about to speak when another voice interrupted him.
"Yes, Merce.Upgrade -as
in closer to human."
The sound of Ellis
Sinclair's voice startled Luca. Sinclair-2 rarely opened his mouth at these
meetings. He turned to see the older brother's eyes blazing as he straightened
from his perpetual slump, rising from dazed and listless to tight and focused.
Luca couldn't remember the last time he had seen him like this, if ever.
Sinclair-1 glared at his
brother. "If you can't add anything constructive, Ellis-"
"Upgraded close enough
to human so that they can no longer be classed asproduct , asproperty . Think
about that, Merce."
Luca was doing some
thinking, and he knew that could mean the end not just of SimGen, but of so
much more. A catastrophe. Yet Sinclair-2 seemed to relish the possibility.
"Now, now," Voss
said. "I wouldn't worry about it too much. Nothin like that'll ever get
past our appeal."
Sinclair-1 wheeled on him.
"You said it would never get past Boughton!" he shouted. "What
if the appellate court has visions of precedents dancing in its head too?"
"Feeling a little
tense, Merce?" said the older brother. "Sims in court...an OPRR
inspection team ranging across the campus." He waggled his finger in the
air. "Mene mene tekel upharsin."
Luca stared at Sinclair-2.
First he acts like he wants his own company ruined, now he's talking gibberish.
What a loser.
But a glance at the CEO's
enraged expression told Luca that maybe it wasn't gibberish. Voss too looked uncomfortable.
Must have meantsomething . What language? Luca wanted like crazy to know what
the hell Sinclair-2's jabber meant but couldn't reveal his ignorance. The words
had a familiar ring, like echoes from somewhere in his childhood, but they
remained tantalizingly out of reach.
Nobody was moving. Reminded
Luca of one of those freeze-frame endings in a movie. Then Voss glanced at him.
He must have sensed Luca's confusion.
"It's a Biblical
prophecy, Mr. Portero. The legendary handwritin on the wall. Means you've been
counted and weighed and found want in, and so God's gonna divide up your
kingdom and hand over the pieces to your enemies."
"I knew that,"
Luca said, feeling his face redden. He remembered it now, from the Catholic
school his mother had forced him to go to.
"Forget that
nonsense," Sinclair-1 snapped. "We've got to take Sullivan out of the
picture."
Nowyou're talking, Luca
thought. "I'll talk to my people," he said. "If they clear
it..."
Sinclair-1 shot him a hard
look. "I'm not talking about your methods. We'll take him out without
laying a finger on him." To Voss: "He's an attorney. Find out who his
clients are. He works both sides of the labor fence, so let's see what unions
and companies use him."
Voss was nodding and
grinning. "I see which way this breeze is blowin."
"But let's not stop
there. What's the name of his firm?"
"Payes and Hecht."
"Good. Make a list of
their biggest clients. When you've put all that together, we'll sit down and
see what arms we can twist, what favors we can call in."
"Right. We'll have his
firm give that boy a choice: Drop the sims or we drop you."
Sinclair-1's smile was
tight. "When we're finished with Mr. Patrick Sullivan, he'll wish to God
he'd never laid eyes on a sim." He turned back to Luca. "That leaves
OPRR. What's the status there?"
"Under control."
Luca glanced at his watch. "I should be checking back with my office
now."
Actually, his security force
didn't need him. The OPRR team was being expertly corralled, and would see only
what they were supposed to see. But he'd had enough of this meeting. And the
knowledge that the luscious Cadman woman was somewhere on the campus burned
like a flame inside him. Something about her had reached a deep, usually
well-insulated part of him. He wanted another look at her, wanted to be in the
same room, breathe the same air, catch her scent, brush against her...
"Maybe you should be
checking a little closer," Sinclair-1 said. "I understand there was
an incident yesterday."
Luca tensed. "What
incident?"
"The OPRR point scout
saw something she shouldn't have."
Damn! How had he learned
that?
"She saw an unmarked
truck, nothing more."
"She shouldn't have
seen that truckat all ."
"And she wouldn't have
if she'd stuck to her schedule. She was supposed to arrive at one. The truck
was scheduled to be long gone before noon. But there she was making a stink at
the gate five hours early."
"What did she
see?" Voss said.
"An unmarked truck pull
out of Basic's secure loading dock and head up the road. No reason for her to
think it was anything more than a supply truck making routine deliveries."
He didn't mention her
question about it heading for the airport.
"Lucky for us,"
the CEO said. "But what if something untoward had happened, say, an
improperly latched rear door swinging open while she was standing there staring
at it? What then?"
"I don't waste time
worrying about things that never happened."
The CEO stared at him a
moment. "Let's just hope that little incident does not come back to haunt
us."
Luca said nothing. He also
didn't want to mention the fact that the truck hadn't been completely unmarked.
It had had a license plate. He wondered if Romy Cadman had noticed that. And if
so, had she cared. He hadn't seen her write anything down, but that didn't mean
she hadn't memorized it. But why would she bother? OPRR wasn't interested in
trucks.
But they'd sure as hell have
been interested in what that one was carrying.
Nothing to worry about as
far as Luca could see. The truck had been driven aboard the cargo plane and
whisked away toIdaho . The OPRR inspection was going by the numbers-his
numbers. Everything under control. No sweat.
Although he wouldn't mind
getting sweaty with their chief inspector.
He yanked his thoughts away
from that warm little fantasy to the matters at hand. As he saw it, this
Sullivan guy and the sim unionization thing were powder kegs. Let Sinclair-1
and Voss try to put Sullivan on the ropes their way. If that worked, fine. If
not, his people would step in and settle the matter his own way. For good.
Either way, the future was
not going to be a happy place for a certain shyster named Patrick Sullivan.
TWO
The Portero Method
1
MANHATTAN
OCTOBER 19
"Well, it's been two weeks since the
inspection," Romy said, "and we're still in court trying to get
SimGen to open its basic research facilities. So, net gain thus far from all
this effort is zip. Or maybe I should sayzero -if you'll pardon the expression."
"Any time," Zero
said.
They had assumed their usual
positions in the dank basement under the abandoned storefront onWorth Street :
Zero backlit behind the rickety table, swathed in a turtleneck, dark glasses,
and a ski mask this time; Romy sitting across from him. She'd walked twice
around the block today to assure she hadn't been followed.
Romy knew she'd been in a
foul mood lately; she'd spent the past couple of weeks snapping at everyone in
the office. And with good reason. The organization was getting nowhere with
SimGen. Lots of movement but no forward progress. Like jogging on a treadmill.
And she resented Zero too,
with his corny disguise and his secrets and his damned elliptical manner. She
could sense him smiling at her behind the layers of cloth hiding his face. She
wanted to kick over his crummy folding table, snap his dark glasses, rip off
his ski mask, and say, Let's just cut this melodramatic bullshit and talk
face-to-face.
Usually she didn't like
herself when she fell into this state, but today she relished it. She wanted
someone to push her buttons so she could tap dance on a head or two.
"But 'zero' isn't quite
accurate," he said. "Your inspections confirmed that SimGen is
treating its sims as humanely as advertised."
Romy nodded. That had been
the plus side. Though the young sims led a barracks-style life of multilevel
bunks and regimented hours, their environment was clean and they were well
nourished.
"Humanely," she
said. "After spending all that time with so many of them, the word has
garnered new meaning in respect to sims."
"How so?"
"Well, so many typical
chimp behaviors are missing. The mothers don't carry their young on their backs
like chimps, but on their hips like humans. And I saw only a rare sim grooming
another. Chimps are always grooming each other. I'd think if SimGen wanted to
keep the public thinking of sims as animals they would have allowedsome chimp
behavior to carry over."
"First off," Zero
said, "it could be learned behavior. If they've never seen or experienced
grooming, they might not do it. Plus, sims don't have anywhere near the amount
of hair as chimps, so it's not necessary. And if it's genetically linked
behavior, it might have disappeared when SimGen 'cleaned up' the sim genome by
removing most of the so-called junk DNA. Or the company might have engineered
it out of them because it would interfere with their work efficiency."
"That last sounds
typical. Too bad, because it seems to give chimps comfort." Romy shook her
head. "No grooming, no sex, no joy, no aggression, no love, no hate...it's
like they're half alive-lessthan half. It's unconscionable. Chimps laugh, they
cry, they exhibit loyalty and treachery, they can be loving and murderous, they
can be born ambitious, they can fight wars, they can commit infanticide. A mix
of the good and the bad, the best and the worst, just like humans. But
sims...sims have been stripped of the extremes, pared down to a bland mean to
make them workforce fodder."
She closed her eyes a moment
to hold back a hot surge of anger. No use getting herself worked up now.
"How do sims feel about
it?" Zero asked. "Ever wonder?"
"All the time. I signed
to a lot of the young ones during the inspection tours, asking them just
that:How do you feel? andAre you happy? "
"How did they
answer?"
"They answered 'Okay'
to the first, but they didn't seem to know what 'happy' meant."
"Tough concept."
Romy shot to her feet and
walked around in a tight circle, grinding a fist against her palm.
"Maybe I should quit
this."
"Romy-"
"No, I'm serious. My
life is one tangled mass of dissatisfaction. I should quit the organization,
put in my time at OPRR, settle down, marry a fellow bureaucrat, buy a house,
have kids, and forget all this crap! Life would be so much simpler and I'd be
so much happier!"
"Would you?"
"At least I wouldn't be
so damn frustrated!" You're losing it, she thought. Keep a lid on it. But
she couldn't. She needed to spew. "Everywhere I turn, someone's hiding
something from me: couldn't find anything useful at SimGen, you won't show me
your face or let me in on who else is in the organization. Hell, for all I
know, OPRR's got a secret agenda they're keeping from me too! I'm sick of it!
Sick to death!"
Zero said nothing, merely
sat and waited for her to cool. Good move.
With a little more circle
walking and fist grinding, the heat seeped away and she dropped back into the
chair.
"Okay," she said.
"I'm back."
"What can I do to make
this better?"
"Nothing. It's not you,
it's me. I always seem at odds with a world that I should be so thankful for.
Look what the genome revolution has done. We'll all live longer because so many
genetic diseases have already been wiped out, and days are numbered for the
rest of them. Heart disease, diabetes, high blood pressure, certain cancers-if
they ran in your family you pretty much had to resign yourself to dealing with
them at some point in your life. Not these days. Germline therapy has seen to
that. Cystic fibrosis, sickle cell anemia, MS-hell,nobody has those
anymore."
"Jerry Lewis finally
stopped those telethons."
Romy had to smile.
"There you go-something else to be thankful for. And then there's...me.
You know about my splice, I assume."
Zero nodded. "Changed
your life, didn't it."
Oh, yes, she thought. You
might even say it saved my life.
She remembered adolescence
as a time of chaos. Under the influence of the new hormones surging through her
maturing body, her childhood fits of violence segued into other modes of acting
out. When she was Reasonable Romy she was an A student, but then somewhere in
her system a switch would be thrown and Raging Romy would emerge. If Reasonable
Romy had a fault, it was that she felt too much, cared too much. Raging Romy
cared for no one, least of all herself, and needed to go to extremes to feel
anything.
She stifled a groan as she
remembered the reckless sex-she cut a sexual swath through the willing males
and females in each of the three high schools she attended, then jumped into
drinking, drugs, shoplifting, the whole gamut. When she was caught dancing
naked on the roof of the gym she qualified for emergency institutionalization.
During her time in the
locked ward of the hospital, the doctors explained that Reasonable Romy was the
real Romy, the only Romy, but at times her neurohormones would undergo wild
fluctuations, causing her to act out of character. They said it was a form of
what they called bipolar disorder and they had medications that would keep her
neurohormones-and thus her behavior-on an even keel.
Wrong.
Oh, the drugs worked for a
while. She survived high school and her parents' divorce-Raging Romy's behavior
playing a major part in the breakup-And Got Through College Without too many
incidents. During grad school she started noticing increasingly wide mood
swings. She managed to earn her Ph.D. in Anthropology, but shortly after that
she was out of control.
A parade of doctors tried a
wide array of chemical cocktails to regulate her behavior. No luck. Finally
someone suggested a radical new treatment-gene therapy. A defective gene in her
brain cells had been identified as the cause of her disorder. Using a viral
vector, they could replace the aberrant base sequence in the gene and get it
back to normal functioning.
But no success was
guaranteed. The therapy was still experimental in those days. The virus would
target only areas of the brain that controlled her serotonin and dopamine
levels; if it got to enough cells, the levels would stabilize, normalize. If
not...well, there'd been all sorts of releases to sign.
Apparently the vector virus
reached a sufficient number of cells: Raging Romy never showed her face again.
But she wasn't gone. She
remained in the unspliced cells, whispering, rattling her chains...a ghost in
Romy's machine. And when Reasonable Romy was angry or stressed, she could feel
Raging Romy pushing her way to the surface, trying to break through to be
reborn.
And the scary part was,
sometimes Romy found herself cheering her on, almost hoping she'd make it.
Because she'd felt so damngood when Raging Romy had the wheel.
"Yes, it did,"
Romy told Zero. "I had a genetic defect spliced out of me and I've never
regretted it. I'm more my own boss because of it. So why aren't I overjoyed
with our brave new world?"
Zero said nothing.
The perfect response, Romy
thought. If I don't know, he sure as hell doesn't.
She sighed. "Anyway,
our inspections were satisfactory-as far as they got. But they could be
performing vivisection in that basic research building for all we know."
She'd had two ongoing
problems to contend with during the inspection tour. Lack of access to basic
research had been the major issue. The other had been the relentless come-ons
from Luca Portero; the man somehow had developed the notion that he was
irresistible to women, and that Romy's repeated refusals of his invitations to
lunch, dinner, and even breakfast were simply her way of playing hard to get.
She didn't mention that to
Zero. What was the point? OPRR would be locked in court with SimGen for the
foreseeable future and she probably wouldn't see Luca Portero again for a long
time, if ever.
But just thinking about that
man only added to her edginess.
Zero said, "We'll let
the courts deal with the basic research issue for now. The good news is that
after many man-hours of effort by a number a people, we've finally hit pay dirt
on that license plate number you so wisely recorded-a number we wouldn't know
had you not thrown them a curve by showing up early. A lucky day for us when
you joined the organization."
She could feel his praise
mellowing her-a little. Always nice to be appreciated, but how sincere was he?
Was it that he had sensed her mood and was simply trying to placate her? So
damn hard to read him without a glimpse of his face or his eyes. Almost as bad
as email. Worse-even email had those annoying little smilies.
But she remembered his
excitement when she'd told him about the plate. He hadn't been faking that.
"About time something
paid off," she said.
"Not a big payday, I'm
afraid, but who knows where it will lead. The truck was leased from a firm
inGooding,Idaho , by a private individual named Harold Golden."
"Really." She drew
out the word. "What's a private individual fromIdaho doing on SimGen's
campus?"
"It gets better: Harold
Golden's MasterCard is sound, so the leasing company never checked him out. But
we did, and guess what? Harold Golden doesn't exist. He's just a name on a
credit card account."
"How can you be
sure?"
"Can't be one hundred
percent sure unless we find something like his Social Security number belonging
to a soldier who died inAfghanistan orIraq . That's not the case here. The
provenance of his Social Security number appears sound, but can you imagine a
man who's doing some sort of business with SimGen who has never taken out a
loan of any kind? Who has one credit card on which he charges only one thing:
the lease of three trucks?"
"Unlikely...but that
doesn't mean he doesn't exist."
"I can tell you that he
doesn't live at theBoise address he gave the leasing company. And that his
MasterCard bill goes to an entirely different address: a mail drop inHicksville
."
"Long Island?"
"At the risk of
sounding like an infomercial: But wait-there's more. The investigator I sent
toIdaho turned up something else: Harold Golden began leasing these trucks four
years ago. The man who runs the company remembers him because Golden wanted the
exact same trucks that had been returned that very day from another lessee.
Guess who that lessee was?"
Romy shrugged. "Mercer
Sinclair?"
"Close.Manassas
Ventures."
"Doesn't mean a thing
to me."
"Manassas Ventures was
the source of the start-up capital that allowed the brothers Sinclair to get
SimGen rolling. Consequently it controls a huge block of SimGen stock."
"And the connection to
Harold Golden?"
"At this point, nothing
beyond the trucks. But guess where Manassas Ventures has its office."
"Hicksville?"
"Exactly. And it has a
strange way of doing business. The company rents space in a small
out-of-the-way office building but doesn't seem to have any employees. Manassas
Ventures is on the door, but it's a door that remains locked all day, every
day, week after week. Makes you wonder, doesn't it."
"A man who doesn't
exist and a business that doesn't do any business."
Romy felt a tingle along the
nape of her neck. "Am I detecting a pattern here?"
"I think so.
Ironically, we've been aware of Manassas Ventures all along but never paid any
attention to it. I'd assumed it was simply another of the countless venture
capital groups that have popped up since the early nineties-one that happened
to get lucky and strike it very rich. But I should have known never to assume
anything where SimGen is concerned."
"IfManassas owns a lot
of company stock, then it's logical for it to be involved in SimGen
doings."
"But logic seems to be
taking a breather here. For instance, if you were an investment group with
SimGen on your list and flush with capital, what would you be doing?"
"I'd be crowing. I'd
have impressive offices to attract new ventures to underwrite."
"Exactly. Yet Manassas
Ventures's only address is a deserted space in a nowhere building."
"Almost as if they're
hiding."
"They are. Behind
Harold Golden. I believeManassas invented him as a layer of insulation between
itself and the truck rentals. And it almost worked. We were just lucky that our
investigator asked the right questions on a day when someone at the leasing
company was in a talkative mood. Otherwise, we'd never know theManassas
connection."
"But why insulate
itself?"
The tingle in Romy's neck
moved across her shoulders and down her spine. She sensed the situation moving
beyond simply wrong...something sinister at work here.
Zero said, "Because I'm
betting that Manassas Ventures has ongoing involvement with SimGen's day-to-day
workings that it doesn't want anyone to know about. And the most likely reason
for keeping an activity secret is that it's illegal."
"But SimGen is one of
the richest corporations in the world, with a lock on a unique product"-she
hated when sims were referred to as "product," but this time it
fit-"in high demand. They're practicallyminting money. They've got it all.
Why risk a connection to something illegal? It doesn't make sense."
"It does if whoever is
behind Manassas Ventures is pulling strings inside SimGen. Pulling strings that
lead to the basic research facility, perhaps?"
That struck a nerve...might
explain the company's adamant refusal to let OPRR near the building, even with
a court order.
Zero went on and Romy could
sense him fairly vibrating with anticipation. "If something illegal or
even quasi-legal is going on, we may have found the lever to crack open
SimGen's wall of secrecy. All because you showed up earlier than
expected."
"And caught a
worm."
"Maybe a snake. I'd say
Manassas Ventures is long overdue for an in-depth probe of its workings and
personnel, wouldn't you."
"Anything I can
do?"
"In regard toManassas ,
no. But as for our friend, Patrick Sullivan-"
"Oh? So he's 'our
friend' now, is he?"
Romy sensed a smile behind
Zero's ski mask. "Not a close friend, not a bosom buddy, but..." His
voice trailed off.
"But what?"
"I don't know...there's
something about him. Maybe I'm feeling a little sorry for him because he's
going through the worst time of his life."
"Really?"
"His girlfriend dumped
him, his house is a charred ruin, he's been living in a motel room for weeks,
and SimGen is putting the screws to his career."
Romy felt her interest
growing. "How so?"
"They're pressuring
Sullivan's clients to drop him."
She shook her head in
amazement. "How do youknow all this?"
"I have my
sources."
"You're a SimGen
insider. You've got to be."
"Back to Mr.
Sullivan?"
Romy tore her mind away from
the tantalizing possibilities of Zero's identity. Sullivan...his predicament
did sound pretty awful, but the shyster deserved it.
"Don't expect me to
shed tears for any lawyer, especially one of the headline hunting variety who's
been taking those sims for a ride."
"You're assessment of
him might be accurate, but I've got to hand it to him: He's lost a number of
big clients and he's still hanging tough."
"No kidding?" Romy
was surprised. "I'd have thought he'd have folded like an old suitcase by
now."
"Well, I don't expect
him to hold up forever, so I believe it's time we stepped in. And speaking of
suitcases..." Zero lifted a large metal attaché case onto the table.
"I'm hoping the contents of this will bolster his fortitude."
He slid it toward Romy who
released the catches and lifted the top. She repressed a gasp at sight of the
stacks of currency.
"How much is in
here?"
"Two hundred and fifty
thousand."
"What's wrong with a
check?"
"I feel a man like Mr.
Sullivan-I am not blind to his failings-will require more concrete proof of the
seriousness of our interest."
Here was concrete, all
right-a whole sidewalk. "How do I approach him?"
"Directly, I would
think. I'll leave the details up to you."
Zero rose. A sign the
meeting was over.
"But where do I say the
money's from?"
"Again, I leave that to
your inventive mind. But since I know how lying bothers you, I'm going to make
things easier. I'm giving the money to you, no strings attached."
"You'rewhat ?"
"That's right. To do
with as you wish. Buy a house or a fleet of sports cars if you want. It's all
yours."
As the shock wore off, she
began to understand. "I see what you're up to."
Zero said, "But should
you decide to approach Mr. Sullivan with it, I suggest being nice to him. You
might find yourself spending a good deal of time with Mr. Patrick
Sullivan."
"I can hardly
wait." She snapped the lid shut on the money. "That's it? You're
letting me walk out of here with a quarter of a million in cash?"
"Yourquarter of a
million. Remember?"
Romy smiled. This was
turning out to be not such a bad day after all.
2
THEBRONX
Needle Lady and Needle Man take Meerm upstair. Show room.
Nice room.
"This is your new home,
Meerm," Needle Lady say.
"Why Meerm new
room?"
"Because you're a
special sim." Needle Lady smileNeedleMan. "Very special."
Meerm say, "All for
self? Not share other sim?"
"All yours,"
Needle Man say. "The rest of the sims will stay downstairs in the dorm
room, just like always. But you'll be here."
Meerm walk and look. Nice
bed, own bathroom, all for Meerm. Not need share. But Meerm little room still
have metal bar window like sim big room downstair.
Meerm sit bed, hold out arm.
"What are you doing,
Meerm?" Needle Lady say.
"Stick?"
Needle Lady smile. "No,
Meerm, we won't be taking any blood from you. Except for a tiny little bit now
and then, you get to keep your globulins."
No stick? This ver strange.
Always Needle Lady and Needle Man stick-stick-stick. Take Meerm blood ev few
day. Take-take-take. Now no stick?
"Meerm blood bad?"
Needle Man laugh, say,
"Not at all! In fact, we're very happy with what we found in it.Very
happy."
Own room. No stick. Meerm
happy sim.
3
WESTCHESTER COUNTY,NY
OCTOBER 22
"Mr. Kraft wants to see you in his office,"
Maggie said as Patrick passed her desk. The strained look on his secretary's
face told him the managing senior partner wasn't requesting a social visit.
Patrick's stomach roiled.
Great. He was living out of a suitcase, Pamela wouldn't return his calls, his
clients were either bailing out-like Ben Armstrong who'd taken Jarman's
business to another firm with no explanation-or giving him ultimatums: Say
good-bye to the sims or say good-bye to us. And now Alton Kraft was waiting for
him. Just what he needed.
Well, at least things
couldn't get much worse. Or could they?
Patrick laid his briefcase
on his desk and glanced around. His office was small, as was his window with
its limited view of downtownWhite Plains . But that left extra wall space for
his law books. He liked his office. Cozy. He wondered how long he'd be rating a
window if his clients kept heading for the hills.
He walked down the hall
toAlton 's office, took a deep breath, then stepped inside. A bigger office
than Patrick's. Much bigger. Thicker carpet, bigger desk. Lots of window glass,
and still plenty of space for books.
"Hi,Alton ."
"Patrick," Kraft
replied.
No "good morning"
or even a "hello." Just his name, spoken in a flat tone from the man
seated behind the mahogany desk. And no handshake. Kraft was something of a
compulsive hand shaker, but apparently not today. His blue eyes were ice,
glinting within a cave of wrinkles.
Patrick's gut tightened.
This did not look good.
He dropped into a chair,
trying to look relaxed. "Maggie said you wanted to see me."
"A serious matter has
come up," Kraft said, bridging his hands. "One that needs to be
addressed immediately. We all know about the recent exodus of your
clients-"
"Just a temporary
thing,Alton . I-"
Kraft held up his hand. When
the senior managing partner held up his hand, you stopped talking and listened.
"We've been aware of
the losses you've been suffering and we've sympathized. We were confident you'd
recover. But now things have taken an ugly turn. It was bad enough when it was
just your client base that was eroding, but now the dissatisfaction is spreading
to the partners' clients."
"Oh, hell,"
Patrick said. He could barely hear his own voice.
"'Oh, hell' doesn't
even begin to say it, Patrick. Two of the firm's oldest and biggest clients
called yesterday to say they're having second thoughts about staying with us.
They said they'd always thought of Payes & Hecht as a firm that represented
people, a firm above suchstunts -their word, not mine, Patrick-as representing
animals. Who do we prefer as clients, they want to know: people or animals?
Because it's time to choose."
"The sons of
bitches," Patrick muttered.
"They may well be, but
they're sons of bitches who pay a major part of the freight around here."
And account for a lot of the
senior partners' billable hours, Patrick thought.
The partners had sat back
and watched with clucks of the tongue and sympathetic shakes of the head as his
client base headed south. No need for immediate concern: The firm adjusted
salaries and bonuses according to each member's billing, so Patrick's bottom
line would take the hit, not theirs. But when they saw their own paychecks
threatened...ah, now that was a different story.
Not that Patrick blamed
them. He'd do exactly the same.
"I don't think I have
to tell you what needs to be done," Kraft said.
Patrick knew. Shit, yes, he
knew.
"And if I don't?"
"I'm already taking
heat because of this, Patrick. Don't make it more difficult than it already
is."
Patrick understood. Alton
Kraft had been his biggest supporter for partnership. If Patrick looked bad, he
looked bad. The partners had probably told him to give Sullivan a choice: Stick
with the sims or stay with the firm. Mutually exclusive options.
The decision should have
been a no-brainer except for the inconvenient fact that he'd become attached to
the Beacon Ridge sims. He enjoyed visiting them, liked the feelings that rolled
off them-probably the nearest thing to worship he'd ever experience.
But all that was going to
end. Because on his next visit he'd have to tell them he was dropping their
case. He'd make up something good, and they'd believe him, and they wouldn't
hold it against him, because Mist Sulliman the best, Mist Sulliman never lie to
sim, Mist Sulliman never let sim down.
Yeah, right.
Mist Sulliman feel like
slime mold.
He fought the urge to grab
Kraft by his worsted lapels and shout, Fuck you, fuck the firm, and fuck all
its candy-assed clients!
Instead, he sighed and
nodded. "All right."
He'd lost his house, his
girlfriend, and a shitload of clients. He couldn't afford to lose his job too.
"Good man," Kraft
said. He rose and thrust out his hand. "I'll tell the others."
Nowthe handshake. Patrick
made it as perfunctory as possible and beat it the hell out of there. Or maybe
crawled was more like it. Or slithered. He felt like he'd just ratted out a
friend to the police. If the carpet had been shag he would have needed a machete
to reach the door.
As he passed Maggie again
she cocked her head toward the waiting room farther down the hall.
"New client. No
appointment. Wants to know if you can squeeze her in."
"Anew client? No
kidding? What's my morning look like?"
"Empty."
Figured. "Then by all
means, 'squeeze her in.'"
A few minutes later Maggie
showed a statuesque brunette into his office and introduced her as Romy Cadman.
Short dark hair, dark eyes, full lips, and long legs. Dressed on the casual
side in a sweater and flared slacks under a long leather coat, all black.
Patrick's spirits lifted.
Nothing like a new client, and a beautiful one to boot.
Maggie placed the woman's
card on his desk:Romy Cadman-Consultant.
"I won't take up much
of your time, Mr. Sullivan," she said as he rose to shake her hand.
Patrick fixed on her
eyebrows, so smooth, so dark, tapering to perfect points. Penciled? No, just
naturally perfect. But he couldn't find much warmth in the deep brown eyes
below-at least not for him. All business. A woman with a mission. Aconsultant
with a mission.
"Take as much as you
need," he said, thinking, I've gotaaaaall day. He gestured to a seat.
"Please."
"That won't be
necessary." Because she remained standing, so did Patrick. "I
understand, Mr. Sullivan, that you've come under a lot of pressure from SimGen
lately."
"SimGen?" What was
she talking about? "No...I haven't heard a thing from SimGen."
"Indirectly, you have.
They've been contacting all your clients and either cajoling or coercing them
into dropping you."
Patrick decided he'd sit
now. It sounded so paranoid, but only for a second or two, and then it made
terrible sense.
"How do you know?
Howcan you know?"
"Not important,"
Ms. Cadman said. "What matters is whether they're succeeding."
"What do you
mean?"
She cocked her hip and
released an exasperated sigh. "They want you to drop the sims. Are you
going to stand up to SimGen, or cave in?"
Cave in...hell of a way to
put it. At least he knew where Ms. Romy Cadman's sympathies lay. So no way was
he going to tell her he'd decided to do just that: cave in. His eyes drifted to
those long legs. They looked strong.
"May I inquire as to
your interest in this?"
"I want to see the sims
get a fair shake."
He glanced at her card
again.Consultant ...to whom?
"Are you with one of
those animal rights groups?"
"My interest is
personal. So what's your decision, Mr. Patrick Sullivan, attorney at law?"
The subtle little twist she
put on those last three words gave Patrick the impression that somehow she'd
already guessed the answer.
"I haven't come to one
yet."
She stared at him a moment,
her expression dubious. Then she put her briefcase on the table and released
the catches.
"Very well. If you're
sitting on the fence, perhaps this will tip you toward the sims."
She gave the briefcase a
one-eighty swivel, lifted the top, and Patrick found himself nose to nose with
more cash than he'd ever seen in one spot in his life-he'd handled bigger
checks, sure, but this wascash .
Hoping his eyes weren't
bugging, he lifted a packet and fanned it.
"All twenties, Mr.
Sullivan."
"How-?" The words
seemed to catch in his throat. "How many?"
"Exactly twelve hundred
and fifty. To spare you from doing the math, that's a quarter of a million
dollars. When I have your assurance that you will continue the fight, I will
deposit all of it into the sim legal defense fund."
Patrick eyed the money. This
would take him a long way into that case; and with other contributions he could
stir up during the proceedings, probably all the way through, with maybe a good
chunk left over at the end.
Tempting...Jesus, it was tempting.
The added prospect of spending time with this woman because of it made the
offer even more tempting. Pamela had been gone for weeks and...
No. Staying with the sims
meant being booted from the firm...going solo. He didn't care for that idea.
Payes & Hecht could be a cutthroat place at times, but even on the worst
days he found a certain level of comfort in having a firm behind him. Like a
security blanket-one trimmed with barbed wire, perhaps, but still...
And where would he be after
the sim case, whatever the outcome? Who'd be his future clients? Sims? Hardly.
Uh-uh. Tempting as all that
cash might be, he wasn't going to commit professional seppuku for it. But he
couldn't say that to this beautiful woman.
Painfully he pulled his gaze
away from the money and looked at her.
"I'll take that into
consideration, Ms. Cadman."
"Good." She
snapped the cover closed on all that beautiful green. "When do you expect
to finalize your decision?"
"Before the end of the
day."
"Wonderful."
One word...but the acid she
managed to lace through it seared him to the core. She was looking right
through him, and her eyes, the twist of her lips, everything in her body
language radiated contempt.
"My number is on the
card. Call me when you decide."
She turned and walked out,
leaving him mired in a pool of dismay. A woman like that, you wanted her
looking at you with admiration, not like something that had just crawled out
from under a rock.
But what else was he
supposed to do? What elsecould he do? Sometimes you simply had to be pragmatic.
Patrick sighed. The perfect
cap on the worst weeks of his life.
He heard a patter behind him
and turned toward the window. It had begun to rain. Great.
With his mood darker than
the weather, Patrick stepped out into the hall. Off to his right he spotted the
pretty lady with the briefcase full of pretty money waiting for the elevator.
"I'm going to grab a
cup of coffee," he told Maggie.
"Want me to get it for
you?" she said, looking up from her computer screen.
"Thanks, but you're
busier than I am at the moment."
Down the hall, laughter
echoed from the open doorway of the kitchenette that housed the coffee maker
and a small refrigerator. He slowed his approach when he heard his name.
A voice he recognized as
belonging to Rick Berger, one of the younger associates, was saying,
"...and so when Istill won't give Skipper a steak instead of dog chow, he
says, 'I'll get you! I'm calling Sim-Sim Sullivan!'"
More laughter. Patrick felt
his face flush. Setting his jaw he turned and glanced back at the waiting area.
The elevator doors were sliding open and Romy Cadman was stepping inside. He
broke into a run.
"Ms. Cadman! Hold those
doors!"
She turned and gave him a
curious look, but put out a hand to stall the doors. He hopped into the cab
beside her.
"I've made up my
mind," he told her.
She blinked, shock and
disbelief playing tag across her features. "You mean-"
I know I'm going to regret
this, he thought, but fuck 'em. Fuck 'em all.
"Damn right. Want to
meet my clients?"
Her smile lit the elevator.
"I'd love to."
4
Romy's head spun as she followed Sullivan's BMW through
the downpour to the golf club.
What happened back there?
she wondered. There he was, standing in his office, and he's clearly out of the
picture-wouldn't say so to her face, but she'd seen defeat in his eyes, his
posture,I quit written all over him-and a couple of minutes later he's jumping
into the elevator with her and not looking back.
Had he truly been on the
fence and she'd misread him? She'd been sosure ...
Well, no use in beating it
to death. He was still on board. That was what counted. She didn't know how
good Sullivan was, but at least the sims still had a lawyer.
He stopped next to a high
privet hedge and she pulled in behind him. She grabbed her umbrella and stepped
out of her car. The umbrella was auto open which was good because she had the
briefcase in her other hand. She had no intention of leaving it in the car.
An umbrellaless Sullivan
came splashing over to her.
"Let me help," he
said, reaching for the briefcase.
She handed him the umbrella
handle. "Help with this."
"Aaawww," he said,
grinning.
Nice smile. Gave him a
boyish look. Like a mischievous child.
Together they sloshed
through the soggy grass toward a barrack-like building.
"Most of the caddies
and gardening sims should be in. Not a golf day. You'll have to come back at
night after the kitchen and dining room close to catch all of them."
Patrick knocked and they
were admitted by a grinning sim he introduced as Tome. Romy was prepared for
the barrack, and her tours of the SimGen dorms prepared her for the vague musty
odor that attended a crowd of sims. But she was totally unprepared for the reception.
Like Jesus' return
toJerusalem : cheering, waving, jumping on furniture, and cries of "Mist
Sulliman!" from a dozen sim throats. Everything short of throwing palm
fronds at his feet.
Flushed and looking a little
embarrassed, Sullivan turned and gave her a self-conscious shrug. "My
clients."
"My God," she
said, unable to hide her awe. "They...they love you."
A sheepish grin. "Yeah,
well..."
"No. They truly do. How
could you have ever even considered...?"
His blue eyes widened, not
in surprise that she'd guessed, more in fear that she'd say it out loud. But
she'd never do that-not to his sims. Everyone, even sims, needed someone or
something to believe in, even if their god was made of tin.
And that need in these sims
further bolstered her conviction that all sims were too close to human to be
treated as they were...as property...as slaves.
"It's all very
complicated," he said.
Romy shook her head.
"No, it's not. It's all very simple, really: You do the right thing."
"But right for whom?
What's good for the right hand may not necessarily be good for the left. In
case you don't know, my specialty is labor relations. It's all negotiation. The
art of the possible."
His voice was smooth, his
eyes intent, his smile sincere. He was good, he was persuasive, and no doubt
that he was smart. She wondered if Zero looked like Patrick Sullivan. But
Sullivan wasn't Zero, and Romy wasn't buying.
"You've got to draw a
line somewhere."
He shook his head. "The
client and the opposition draw the lines. Then I try to get them to redraw
their lines in places that both sides can live with."
"But these particular clients
can't draw that line," she told him. "They don't know how, they
wouldn't know where. So you've got to draw it for them, making certain it's in
the right place. And then you've got to stand behind that line and say, 'This
far and no farther.' No matter what is thrown against you-SimGen, the
Teamsters, the US Government: 'This far and no farther.'"
Now Sullivan's turn to shake
his head. "It's all so clear and simple to you?"
"Crystaland
absolutely."
The tumultuous greeting had
run its course, but a second round of cheering followed when Sullivan
introduced Romy and announced that she was contributing "lots of
money" to pay for the legal battles ahead. That finally died down, and now
the sim called Tome was leading a young female toward them.
"Mist Sulliman. Meet
new sim. Anj."
Dressed in the bib overalls
and T-shirt that seemed to be the off-duty uniform of the Beacon Ridge sims,
Anj was young and slight-couldn't have weighed more than eighty pounds fully
dressed-and clung shyly to Tome, not making eye contact. Romy put out her hand
and Tome had to take Anj's arm and extend it for a handshake. But she needed no
prompting to grasp Sullivan's. Even smiled.
The old sim grinned. "Tome
tell Anj all 'bout Mist Sulliman."
The gathering's attention
shifted from the two humans to the food cart that was being wheeled in by a
pair of kitchen sims.
"Lunch," said
Tome. "You eat?"
They both declined and
watched as Tome led Anj away.
"Seems awful young,
doesn't she?" Sullivan said.
Romy was seething.
"SimGen can't breed sims fast enough to meet demand, so they're leasing
them out at younger and younger ages."
She watched them line up,
plates in hand, for servings of some sort of stew being ladled out of a big pot
withSIMS hand printed in red on the side. A scuffle broke out between two of
them when one tried to cut ahead in line. Tome had to leave Anj to break it up,
and she stood alone, looking lost.
"It's criminal,"
Romy said.
Sullivan didn't seem too
concerned. "Speaking of lunch, we need someplace to talk. How
about-?"
"I had a big breakfast.
How about right here?"
"Too crowded."
"They're busy
eating," she said, gesturing to the sims seating themselves at the long
tables. "Besides, I'm used to being around sims. I work for OPRR. I'm a
field agent in its Division of Animal Welfare."
"Sounds
government."
"Yes and no."
They found a couple of empty
easy chairs angled toward each other and she explained how the Office for the
Protection of Research Risks was part of the National Institutes of Health,
indirectly funded by the government.
"Then that's government
money?" he said, pointing to the briefcase. "I don't know if I'll be
allowed to use-"
"Mymoney, Mr.
Sullivan," she replied, glad she could say that truthfully. "Mine. To
do with as I wish, and this happens to be what I wish. But I want a commitment
from you, Mr. Sullivan."
"Only judges and
opposing attorneys call me Mr. Sullivan. Makes me feel like I'm in court. Call
me Patrick."
And if I do, she thought,
looking at him, I suppose I'm going to have to tell you to call me Romy. First
names make us sound like friends. Do I want to sound like your friend, Patrick
Sullivan? Can I trust you enough?
"Maybe when we know
each other better...when I see how much of a commitment you have to this
project. I'm more interested in commitment than first names, Mr.
Sullivan."
"I-"
At that moment Anj appeared
at his side and squeezed next to him in his chair. "Um, uh...hello,
Anj," he said, looking nonplused and not a little uncomfortable. "Can
I help you?"
The young sim said nothing
as she draped herself across his lap, then curled up and began sucking her
thumb. She looked so small and fragile in those baggy overalls.
"Too young," Romy
said. And through her cooking anger she could imagine Raging Romy beginning to
stir. "They're sending them out too damn young."
Sullivan sat stiff as a
board in his easy chair. "What's she doing?"
Romy noticed Anj's eyelids
drooping. "Looks like she'd going to take a nap."
"Great. And what do I
do while she's catching Z's?"
"Just sit there while
we finish our discussion," Romy said, not particularly liking herself for
the enjoyment she was taking in his discomfiture. "Commitment,
remember?"
"You're going to make
me sick of that word."
"I won't need to
mention it again if I get it from you."
"Commitment how?"
"That you'll devote
enough of your professional time to the sims to see that they get a fair
shake."
"Time?" he said,
eyebrows rising. "You want time, you got it."
"But it's more than
time." How could she explain this? "There's an obscure Paul Simon
song called 'Everything Put Together Falls Apart.' It doesn't get played much
but-"
"I remember it. A
jazzy, bluesy thing."
"That's it. I don't
recall the lyrics but I've never forgotten the title, because I've always added
my own coda:unless you act . The world does not become a better place andstay a
better place on its own. It takes effort. Constant effort, because entropy is
the default process. And so every day is a battle against the tendency for
things to devolve to a lower state-of existence, of civilization, of meaning,
of everything that matters. That's why I've brought you this money. Because
everything put together falls apart-unless you act."
"But I can't see sims
as entropic. If anything-"
"To create a new
self-aware species is a magnificent accomplishment; to use them as slaves is to
drag that accomplishment through the mud; to accept that circumstance is poison
for the human soul."
He sighed and nodded.
"Can't argue with that. All right, I'll promise you more than time. As of
today I'm quitting Payes & Hecht to devote myself full time to these
guys."
Romy couldn't help but
wonder if Sullivan was quitting his firm or his firm was quitting him. No
matter. Either way he'd have only one client.
"Excellent, Mr.
Sullivan. I'll deposit the money this afternoon."
"It's going to be a
long, bumpy road," he said. He gestured around at the barrack. "I
mean, let's face it: This isn't a bad life. These sims have it pretty good,
don't you think?"
"Maybe, but they're a
lucky minority. You can't imagine what I've seen. As a matter of fact..."
She stopped herself. Did she
dare? Yes. Why not? Mr. Patrick Sullivan needed something to rile him up,
stiffen his spine.
"Tell you what,"
she said. "I'll call you in the next day or two and bring you along as I
wind up an investigation I've been pursuing for weeks. You game?"
He shrugged. "Sure.
I'll just need-"
Anj whimpered. Her eyes
remained closed in sleep.
"Misses her mother,
I'll bet," Romy said.
Sullivan stared down at the
young sim. "Afraid I can't help her there."
"Want me to take
her?"
He raised a hand and
gingerly, gently, began stroking her stiff, stringy hair. "No. That's all
right."
Romy realized she was
catching a glimpse of a facet of Patrick Sullivan that he hid from the world,
perhaps even from himself.
"You prefer Patrick to
Pat?" she said.
He glanced up with a
surprised expression, then grimaced. "Pat sounds like an androgynous
serving of butter, and Patty makes me sound like I should be holding up the bar
at the Dublin House Pub. Just Patrick."
"All right,
Patrick," she said. She hesitated, then figured, what the hell. "And
you might as well call me Romy."
5
SUSSEX COUNTY,NJ
OCTOBER 25
"Sullivan quit the firm rather than drop the
sims!" Mercer Sinclair said.
He pushed his chair back
from his desk and began to pace his office. His personal news service had
picked up Sullivan's announcement that he was going into solo practice, and
informed him via his computer first thing this morning. Immediately he'd called
Voss and Portero. Somehow his brother had got wind and showed up as well. Not
that Ellis would contribute anything. Not that Mercer cared. He was too
baffled, too pissed to care.
"I can't believe
it!" he went on. "Is the man crazy? Has he suddenly become a
crusader? What's gotten into him?"
Abel Voss cleared his
throat. "An infusion of cash, it appears."
"Really? How
much?"
"Quarter mil was
deposited to his sim defense fund two days ago."
Mercer was stunned. "A
quarter-how do you know?"
Voss glanced at the security
chief. "Mr. Portero's people have been monitoring the fund."
Portero's people...Mercer
knew Voss didn't mean the SimGen security department Portero headed.Portero's
people -SIRG. No one referred to them by name. They were elsewhere, far off the
SimGen campus, and Mercer wasn't the least bit surprised that SIRG had devoted
a small part of its vast resources to keeping an eye on Patrick Sullivan's
activities.
He shivered ever so slightly
at the thought of being the object of that cold scrutiny.
"Who'd give that kind
of money to a small-town ambulance chaser?"
"That boy's no rube. He
was ready and waitin with an injunction when Beacon Ridge tried to trade some
of its sims to another club. And he had another ready in record time when we
issued that recall on them. He's anticipated us at every turn. He may be an
opportunist, but he's a smart one."
"Fine. He got lucky.
But where did the money come from?"
"A cashier's
check," Voss said. "That's all I know."
"Perfect," Mercer
said, cracking his knuckles in frustration. "So we can't trace it."
"Yes, we can,"
Portero said, speaking for the first time. "And we did."
Mercer stared at the
security chief, standing there in his dark suit with his hands tucked behind
his back, straight as a board, like some parade ground tin soldier waiting to
be inspected.
"Why didn't you say so
in the first place?"
Mercer thought he sensed an
instant of hesitation in Portero but couldn't be sure. He doubted this man had
an uncertain cell in his body...and yet, he'd seen something flash across his
face.
"We are looking into an
unexpected aspect of the situation."
"Which is?"
"The purchaser of the
cashier's check was a Ms. Romy Cadman. You may remember the name: She led the
OPRR inspection team."
Mercer stiffened.
"OPRR? You don't think-?"
Voss shook his head.
"OPRR's budget just barely covers its expenses. Even if it had the surplus
it wouldn't jeopardize its funding by getting involved in something like
this."
"Is she independently
wealthy?" Mercer said, feeling his unease growing by the second.
"Where'd she get that kind of money?"
"She lives modestly on
a modest income," Portero said flatly. "She purchased the check with
cash. That is all we know-so far."
A quarter of a million in
cash. And probably more where that came from. Someone out there wanted Sullivan
to succeed.
Again that sense of
malevolent convergence through which he could almost hear the gears of some
giant piece of machinery starting to turn...an engine of destruction. But whose
engine? Whose destruction?
"I don't like
this," Mercer said.
"Neither do my
people," Portero said. "We're going to handle matters from
here."
"Meaning what?"
Ellis said.
Mercer glanced at his
brother. Their eyes met. On this they could agree; neither of them was
comfortable with the way Portero's people handled problems.
"Meaning this situation
is spinning out of control. Your attempt to stop Sullivan failed. Now it's our
turn."
"Now wait a
minute," Voss said, both chins jiggling as he hauled his bulk out of the
chair. "Wait just one damn minute. Don't you folks say another word until
I'm on the right side of that door. I don't need to hear this."
He hustled across the gray
carpet and let himself out.
As soon as the door closed
Ellis turned to Portero. "You're not planning to-"
"No plans have been
finalized, but direct action will be taken."
"No!" Ellis said,
rising. "I'm not going to sit by while you and your people pull more of
your dirty tricks."
"You have no choice,
I'm afraid," Portero said without changing his inflection. "The
matter is out of your hands. Sullivan has proven smarter and more stubborn than
anyone anticipated. Even though the chance that his suit will set a precedent
is remote, the mere possibility that he might succeed is unacceptable. My
people have decided to stop him now, before he uses the courtroom to plant
himself in the national consciousness."
"My God!" Ellis
moaned, shutting his eyes. "Why did we ever become involved with
you?"
Portero didn't answer. No
answer was needed. But here again, for the second time in as many minutes-a
rare occurrence, to be sure-Mercer could agree with his brother. He wished at
times like these that they'd found another way to finance their start-up back
in the seventies. But he knew that when he settled down later and was able to
regain his perspective, this feeling would pass, and once again he'd appreciate
how SimGen never could have achieved its current dominance without SIRG's help.
Portero said, "We also
intend to learn the source of the Cadman woman's money."
"How will you do
that?"
"Not your
concern." And again a flash of something in Portero's ebony eyes, almost
like regret this time. "But we will know."
6
WESTCHESTER COUNTY
OCTOBER 26
"Mr. Sullivan?"
Patrick looked up from the
box he'd just folded closed. He was nearly finished packing up the books in his
office. Strangely enough, he wasn't the least bit sad about leaving Payes &
Hecht. And from the cool reception he'd received in the hallways, he gathered
the feeling was mutual.
Only Maggie seemed genuinely
sorry to see him go. She was out now, scrounging up more boxes for him, so
there'd been no one to intercept his visitor.
He saw a thin, aging woman
in a faded blue flowered dress and a rumpled red cardigan sweater. She wore a
yellow scarf around her head, babushka style, and clutched a battered black
handbag before her with both her bony hands. Her pale hazel eyes peered at him
and she nodded vigorously.
"Yes, you're him,"
she said. "I recognize you from the TV."
"Yes, ma'am?" he
said. "Can I help you, Ms....?"
"Fredericks.Miss Alice
Fredericks." She offered a smile that might have been girlish had she
possessed more teeth. "I wish to retain your services, Mr. Sullivan."
The poor woman didn't look
like she had enough for her next meal. Not that it mattered. He was no longer
with the firm.
"I'm afraid I-"
"I want you to sue
SimGen for me. I can tell you're a brave man. You're taking on the company on
behalf of those poor dear sims, so I figure you're just the man, in fact
theonly man with the guts to tackle them for me."
This was interesting.
"That's very
gratifying. On what grounds would you wish me to tackle them, may I ask?"
Her face screwed up,
accentuating her wrinkles, and she looked as if she was about to cry. "They
took my baby!" she wailed.
Baby? Patrick stared at her.
A warning bell clanged in his brain. SimGen might have some skeletons in its
corporate closets, but he doubted stealing babies was one of them. And this
woman was long, long past the baby-bearing years.
"When did this
happen?"
She sobbed. "Years and
years ago! I...I'm not sure how many. Things get fuzzy..."
"Why have you waited so
long to go after them?"
"I've been to every
lawyer in New York City and no one will take the case. They're all
afraid!"
"I find that hard to
believe, Miss Fredericks. There are literally thousands of lawyers in the city
who would get in line to sue SimGen."
"Sure...until they hear
about the space aliens."
Oh, Christ. No need for a
warning bell anymore. There it was, right out on the table: a big, multicolored
bull's-eye withLooney Tunes scrawled across it.
Patrick didn't want to ask
but had to. "Aliens?"
"Yes. Space aliens
abducted me, impregnated me, and then when I delivered, it was a sim. But I
loved him anyway. That didn't matter, though. They took my baby boy away from
me. And do you know who they handed him to? Right in front of me? Mercer Sinclair!
Mercer Sinclair took my baby and I want him back!" She sobbed again.
She wasn't scamming. Patrick
had a sensitive bullshit meter and it wasn't even twitching. This poor woman
believed every word.
"I sympathize, Miss
Fredericks, but-"
"And you know what
Mercer Sinclair did with my son, don't you? He made the whole race of sims from
him. And he did it for the aliens so that earth can be repopulated by a slave
race that the aliens can use around the galaxy."
Patrick blinked. A living
breathing talking issue ofWeekly World News had walked into his office. It
might be funny if the woman weren't so genuinely upset. And he might be tempted
to sit down and listen to her-purely for entertainment-if he didn't have such a
burning need to put this place behind him.
"Tell you what, Miss
Fredericks. I'm leaving the firm, so I won't be able to help you. But you could
try one of the firm's associates. I suggest you go down the hall and find Mr.
Richard Berger's office and tell him your story. And tell him I referred
you."
"Thank you, Mr.
Sullivan. I'll do that right now."
That should teach Berger to
call him Sim-Sim Sullivan.
7
MANHATTAN
"Perrier?" Judy said. "Are my ears playing
tricks or did I just hear you order water?"
Ellis had been taking in
Tavern On The Green's sunny, glass-walled Terrace Room with its hand-carved
plaster ceiling and panoramic view of Central Park. The park was more
impressive when in bloom, but even here in the fall he found a certain stark,
Wyethesque beauty in the denuded trees. The Terrace Room's seating capacity was
150. Today it seated only four: Ellis, Judy, his daughter, Julie, and son,
Robbie, the birthday boy. He'd rented out the entire space for a family
luncheon.
Ellis turned to his ex-wife.
Judy was looking better than ever. With her perfectly coiffed blond hair, her
diamond bracelets, and her high-collared, long-sleeved, clinging pink dress
made out of some sort of jersey material-Versace, he guessed, because she'd always
loved Versace-she fit perfectly in this ornate setting. Judy was only two years
his junior, but Ellis thought he must look like her father. She was enjoying
her wealth from the divorce settlement. Far more than Ellis was enjoying his
own.
"Yes," Ellis told
her. "I've decided to take a vacation from alcohol."
"That's wonderful,
Ellis." He knew she meant it. The divorce had been amicable: Ellis had
told her she could have anything she wanted. That said, she'd taken a lot less
then she could have-more than the GNP of a number of small nations, to be sure,
but still, she could have grabbed for so much more. "How long has this
been going on?"
"Since the
summer."
"What made
you...?"
"Lots of developments,
lots of things happening. Things I want to keep an eye on."
"And Mercer? How's
he?"
"The same. Eats,
sleeps, and drinks the business. Still obsessed with SimGen's profits and its
image. Someday he'll look around and wonder where his life has gone." He
leaned closer and lowered his voice. "Did you hold on to all that SimGen
stock from the settlement?"
Her brows knitted.
"Yes. Why?"
"Wait till after the
earnings report at the December stockholders' meeting, take advantage of the
bounce, then dump it."
"Is something
wrong?"
"Things might
become...unsettled. I want you and the kids protected. But mum's the word. Just
sell quietly and stick it all in T-notes, okay?"
She set her lips and nodded.
"Good." He
straightened, put on a happy face, and looked around the table. "But
enough about me and Mercer and business. This is a celebration." He turned
to Robbie. "How's the birthday going so far?"
His son shrugged, a typical
fifteen-year-old's studied nonchalance mixing with embarrassment at being out
on the town with his folks and his younger sister on his birthday. He was
underdressed in denims for the occasion, but that was to be expected of a boy
his age; his buzz-cut hair revealed a bumpy skull. Hardly attractive, Ellis
thought, but it was the style. So was the turquoise stud in Robbie's left
eyebrow. At least he showed no signs of a splice, and Ellis prayed he never
would. He realized it was a teenager's duty to irk his parents, but he hoped
Robbie would find his own ways rather than galloping after the herd.
"Okay, I guess."
Ellis smiled. He wasn't
making any appreciable progress developing the new sim line he so desperately
wanted, but he was feeling good about himself nonetheless, better than he had
in years, and he wanted to share it. Only on rare state occasions did they get
together as a family, but he'd used Robbie's fifteenth birthday as a reason,
and it was as good an excuse as any.
"Just okay?" Ellis
said. "This is your favorite restaurant, right?"
He had a big day planned.
After lunch they'd head for Broadway where he had four precious front-row seats
forWordplay! , the hot new musical comedy everyone said was a must-see. Then
dinner at Le Cirque, followed by a Knicks game in the SimGen skybox.
As Robbie shrugged, Julie
chimed in. "I can't wait to see the play!"
She was thirteen and the
light of Ellis's life. Judy had dressed her in a plaid wool skirt and a white
blouse. Julie's pod backpack was suede, sporting the Dooney & Bourke logo.
Robbie was an intelligent kid, but Julie was brilliant. She had a wonderful
future ahead of her.
A memory surfaced...of the
day SIRG had threatened Julie to assure his silence, to keep him in line. And
it had worked...for a while...until he'd found another way to make things
right. But God help Julie and Robbie if SIRG ever found out.
He shoved the memory back
into the depths. Nothing was going to ruin today.
"You just want to see
Joey Dozier," Robbie sneered.
"Who's he?" Ellis
said, fully aware he was a teen heartthrob who'd moved from a hit TV sitcom to
lead in a Broadway play. "Never heard of him."
Julie got a dreamy look in
her eyes. "He'sgorgeous! " she said, as if that explained it all.
Ellis started to laugh but
it died in his throat as he saw the small crowd of sign-carrying protesters
appear at the Terrace Room windows. Their chant of "Free the sims! Free
the sims!" began to echo through the glass.
The tuxedoed maitre d'
hurried to Ellis's side.
"I'm so sorry, Mr.
Sinclair. I've called the police. They will be here in a few minutes."
Ellis looked around the
table. Judy was ignoring them, Julie was watching, fascinated, and Robbie, the
birthday boy, looked ready to crawl under the table.
"How did they know I'd
be here?" Ellis asked, furious. He'd booked the whole room just to avoid
an incident, even used a pseudonym.
"Someone must have
recognized you."
Pretty fast work,
considering he left all the public appearances to Mercer. Probably someone on
the Tavern staff. However it had happened, he wasn't going to let them ruin the
day he had planned.
He pushed back his chair and
rose. "I'll handle this."
"Ellis, no!" Judy
said, placing a hand on his arm.
"Mr. Sinclair, the
police-"
"Could take a while to
get here. In the meantime I want to talk to these people."
He crossed to a door leading
out to the lawn and stepped through. The shouting grew louder as the crowd-a
three-to-one ratio of women to men-recognized him. He stood impassively for a
moment or two, then raised his hands.
When they quieted enough for
him to be heard he said, "Please. I'm trying to have lunch with my
family."
Cries of "Aaaaaw!"
and "Pity the poor man!" rose, and one woman stepped forward to
snarl, "Yeah! Eating lunch grown and harvested by slave labor!"
Ellis stepped forward. He'd
noticed something interesting about a number of the protesters.
"If this is supposed to
accomplish something," he told them, "I assure you it won't. Perhaps
a more sincere group might make a point, but not a bunch of hypocrites."
Ellis kept moving into the
gasps of "What!" and "You bastard!" and "What
right?" and pointed to the snarling woman's handbag.
"Balducci, right?"
Her only reply was a stunned
look.
"Sim made!" Ellis
pivoted and jabbed a finger at the insignia on a man's windbreaker. "Tammy
Montain-sim made!" As he slipped deeper into the throng, pointing out all
the popular labels that used sim labor, crying "Sim made!" over and
over, he knew he should be careful. But these people angered him, and not
simply because they'd interrupted his lunch.
Finally he was back where
he'd started and could see by their expressions and averted eyes that he'd
taken the steam out of them.
"How can you be part of
the solution when you're part the problem?" he said, knowing it was a
cliché but knowing too that it would hit home. "You really want to 'free
the sims'? The fastest way is to boycott any company that uses them as labor.
Companies understand one thing: the bottom line. If that's falling off because
they use sim labor, then they're going tostop using sim labor. It's as simple
as that. But you can't show up here wearing sim-made clothes and shoes and
accessories and expect anyone with a brain to take you seriously. If you're
sincere about this you're going to have to make some sacrifices, you're going
to have to let the Joneses have the more prestigious sim-made car, the more
fashionable sim-made sweater. Otherwise, you're just blowing smoke."
Ellis stepped back inside
and closed the door behind him. He had no idea what the protesters would do
next, but the question was made moot by the arrival of half a dozen cops who
began herding them off.
He returned to the table to
find his family staring at him.
"Dad," Robbie
said, wide-eyed. "You were great!"
"Ellis?" Judy
said. Ellis noticed a tremor in her voice, and were those...?
Yes, she had tears in her
eyes. "For a moment there you were like...like you used to be."
He looked into her moist
blue eyes. God, he wanted her back, more than anything in the world.
"I don't know if I can
ever be like I used to be, Judy," he said, knowing his soul was scarred
beyond repair. "But if things go right, if a few things happen the way I
hope they will, I should be able to present a reasonable facsimile."
"But Dad," Robbie
was saying, "you were, like, telling them how to, like, so screw your own
company."
Ellis put on a pensive
expression. "You know, Robbie, now that you mention it, I believe I was.
I'll have to be more careful in the future."
"Will sims ever evolve
into humans?" Julie said, looking up at him with her mother's huge blue
eyes.
Ellis stared at her,
momentarily dumb.
"She's studying
evolution in school," Judy offered.
Ellis cleared his throat and
controlled the sudden urge to run from the room. He'd rather be off the subject
of sims-this was Robbie's birthday after all-and especially off their
evolutionary genetics, but how could he not answer the jewel of his life?
"Doyou think they
will?"
"Well," she said
slowly, "we humans evolved from chimps, and sims are a mix of chimps and
humans, so won't sims evolve into humans someday?"
"No," Ellis said,
choosing his words carefully. "You see, humans didn't evolve from chimps;
chimps and humans are primates and both evolved from a common primate ancestor,
an ape that had evolved from the monkeys."
"A gorilla?"
"No. Gorillas branched
off earlier. Let's just call our common ancestor the mystery primate."
Julie grinned. "Why
call him 'mysteryprimate'?"
"Because we haven't
found his bones yet. But we don't need to. Genetics tells the story. So even
though we may never identify the mystery primate's remains, we know he existed
and we know that at some point millions of years ago, whether because of a
flood or a continental upheaval or climactic changes in Africa, a segment of
the mystery primate population became separated from the larger main body. This
smaller group wound up stranded in a hotter, drier environment, probably in
northeast Africa; some theories say it was an island, but whatever the
specifics, the important point is they were cut off from all the other
jungle-dwelling primates. And there, under pressure to adapt to their new
environment, they began to evolve in their own direction."
"But didn't the mystery
primates in the jungle evolve too?"
"Of course, but because
they were in an environment they were used to, they had little need for change,
so they evolved more slowly, and in a different direction: toward what we now
call chimpanzees. Meanwhile the primates in the separated group, in a drier,
savanna-like environment, were changing: They were growing taller, their skin
was losing its hair and learning to sweat in the hotter temperatures; and
because they were no longer in a lush jungle where food was hanging from every
other tree, they had to learn to hunt to keep from starving. This added extra
protein to their diet which meant they could afford to enlarge a very important
organ that needs lots of protein to grow. Do you know what that organ is?"
"The brain," Julie
said.
"You aresmart ,"
he told her. "Absolutely right. The sum of all these changes meant that
they were evolving into hominids."
"Humans, right?"
"Humans are hominids,
true, but it took millions of years for the first hominids to evolve intoHomo
sapiens ."
"But once they got back
to the jungle, couldn't the hominids get back together with the mystery
primates?"
Bright as Julie was, Ellis
wondered how far he could delve into the intricacies of evolutionary drift with
a thirteen-year-old. He paused, looking for an analogy. He knew she played the
cello in her school orchestra...maybe she could understand if he related
evolution to music.
"Think of DNA as a
magnificent symphony, amazingly complex even though it is composed with only
four notes. Every gene is a movement, and every base pair is a musical note
within that movement. So if one of those base pairs is out of sequence, the
melody can go wrong, become discordant. If enough are out of place, it can ruin
the entire symphony. But sometimes changes can work to the benefit of the
symphony.
"Imagine the sheet
music for a concert arriving in a city far from where it was composed. The
local musicians look at it and say, 'No one around here is going to like this
section, nor that movement; we'd better change them.' And they do. And then
that version is shipped off to another city even farther away, and those local
musicians find they must make further changes to satisfy their audience. And on
it goes, until the music is radically different from what was on the original
sheets.
"This is what happened
to the sheet music of the hominid's DNA. It was progressively changed by
different environments; but the chimp DNA never left its hometown, so it
changed relatively little. And because they'd been separated, with the genes of
one group never having a chance to mix with the genes of the other, each group
kept evolving in its own direction, causing their genomes to drift further and
further apart.
"At some point millions
of years ago both groups reached the stage where neither was a mystery primate
anymore. By the time the hominids started spreading into different areas of
Africa, it was too late for a reunion. The hominids were playing Bach, while
the chimps sounded like heavy metal. They couldn't play together. Too many
changes. One of the most obvious was the fusion of two primate chromosomes in
the hominids, leaving them with twenty-three pairs instead of the twenty-four
their jungle cousins still carried."
"But sims have only
twenty-two pairs, right?" Julie said. "What happened-?"
"That's way too long a
story for now," Ellis said quickly. "Suffice it to say that the two
groups had evolved so far apart that they could no longer have children
together. Once that happened, their evolutionary courses were separated
forever. So you see, a chimpanzee cannot evolve into a human any more than a
human..."
His voice dried up.
Julie said, "But that
doesn't mean a sim won't evolve into a human."
"Sims are different,
Julie. Theycan't evolve. Ever. To evolve you must be able to have children, and
sims can't. Each sim is cloned from a stock of identical cell cultures. They
are all genetically equal. Evolution involves genetic changes occurring over
many generations, but sims have no generations, therefore no evolution."
"This is pretty heavy
luncheon chatter, don't you think?" Judy said.
Ellis was grateful for the
interruption.
"Your mother's
right." He chucked Julie gently under the chin. "We can continue this
another time. But did I answer your question?"
"Sure," Julie said
with a smile. "Sims will always be stuck being sims."
Not if I can help it, Ellis
thought.
8
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
"You're not getting another beer, are you?"
Martha called from the upstairs bedroom.
Harry Carstairs stood before
his open refrigerator, marveling at the acuity of his wife's hearing.
"Just one more."
"Harry!" She drew
out the second syllable. "Haven't you had enough for one night?"
No, he thought. Not yet.
"It's just a
light."
"Aren't you ever coming
to bed?"
"Soon, hon."
She grumbled something he
didn't catch and he could visualize her rolling onto her side and pulling the
covers over her head. He twisted the cap off the beer, took a quick pull, then
stepped over to the bar. There he carefully lifted the Seagram's bottle and
poured a good slug into his beer.
Gently swirling the mixture,
he headed for his study at the other end of the house.
He was drinking too much, he
knew. But it took a lot of booze to put a dent in a guy his size. Still he
didn't think it was a real problem. He didn't drink during the day, didn't even
think about it when he was surrounded by the hordes of young sims he oversaw.
Their rambunctious energy recharged him every morning, filling his mind and
senses all day.
But when he got home, when
it was just Martha and he, the charge drained away, leaving him empty and flat.
A dead battery. Not that there was anything wrong with Martha. Not her fault.
It was all him.
He wished now they'd had
kids. Life had been so fine before when it was just the two of them. And
SimGen, of course. Martha worked for the company too, in the comptroller's
office. SimGen became part of their household, turning their marriage into a
ménage à trois. But it had been a rewarding arrangement. They'd built their
dream house on this huge wooded lot, traveled extensively, and had two fat
401(k)s that would allow them comfortable early retirement if they wanted it.
But a few years ago he'd
begun to feel an aching emptiness in their home, to sense the isolation of the
surrounding woods. He knew the day, the hour, the moment it had begun: When
Ellis Sinclair had informed him about the sudden death of a sim.
Not just any sim. A special
sim, one Harry had known throughout his entire time at SimGen. He'd taught that
sim chess and turned him into a damn good player. They used to play three or
four times a week.
And then he was gone. Just
like that. Died on a Saturday, into the crematorium on Sunday, and his quarters
stripped by the time Harry returned to work on Monday morning.
The boilermakers-Martha
thought they were just plain beers-numbed the ache. But the ache seemed to
require more anesthetic with each passing year.
Harry settled himself at his
desk and reached out to restart the computer chess match he'd paused in midgame
when-
He stopped. That feeling
again. A prickling along his scalp...as if he was being watched.
Harry abruptly swiveled his
chair toward the window directly behind him and caught a glimpse of a pale blur
ducking out of sight. He sat stunned, frozen with the knowledge that he hadn't
been imagining it. Someone had been watching him through that goddamn window!
He leaped from his seat,
lumbering toward the sliding glass doors that opened from his study onto the
rear deck. He slipped, fell to one knee-damn boilermakers!-then yanked back the
door and lurched onto the deck.
"I saw you, damn
it!" he shouted, voice echoing through the trees, breath fogging in the
cold air. "Who are you? Who thefuck are you!"
He stopped, listening.
Where'd he go? But the woods were silent.
And then Martha's voice,
frightened, crying: "Harry! Harry, come quick!"
Harry ran back inside,
charging the length of the house, shouting her name. He made it up the stairs
to the master bedroom where he found her standing in the dark, staring out the
big window overlooking the front yard.
"What is it?"
"I saw someone out
there!" Her hand fluttered before her mouth like a hummingbird over a
flower. "Just a glimpse. He was moving away toward the road but I know I
saw him!"
"Nowdo you believe
me?"
He'd told her before about
this feeling of being watched but Martha had always chalked it up to his
drinking.
"Yes! Yes, I do! And
I'm calling the police!"
"Good. You do
that," Harry said, feeling a deep rage start to burn-damn, it was good to
feel something again. He headed for the stairs. "And tell them to hurry.
Because if I get to him first they'll have to scrape what's left of him into a
goddamn bucket!"
"Harry, no!"
Martha cried.
Harry ignored her. His blood
was up, he could feel it racing through his head, his muscles. He'd been
spooked, he'd been doubted, he'd even doubted himself, but now it was clear
he'd been right all along and it was time for a little payback, time to kick
some major donkey.
He hit the front drive
running and sprinted for the street. In seconds his heart was thudding, his
lungs burning.
Out of shape. And four
sheets to the wind. But he was going to catch this fucker, and before he wiped
up the road with him, he was going to find out why he-
Ahead...to the right...a car
engine turning over, gears engaging, tires squealing on pavement.
Shit!
By the time Harry reached
the street all he could see was a distant pair of taillights shrinking into the
darkness.
He bent, hands on thighs,
grunting and gasping for air. Maybe it was for the best. If he had caught up
with the guy he might have been too winded to do much more than grab him and
fall on him and hope he crushed the fucking hell out of him.
But the worst part was he
still had no answers. Why was somebody watching him? Why should anyone care
enough about him to come out here and sit in the cold dark woods to watch him
play chess with his computer?
Get a life, man!
One thing was certain-no,
make that two...two things were certain.
First, he was going to get a
gun. Tomorrow.
Second, he was going to stop
drinking. At least stop drinking so much. Also tomorrow.
Right now he was thoroughly
rattled and needed a double of something. Anything. Just so long as it was a
double.
9
MANHATTAN
OCTOBER 29
"There it is," Romy said, pointing.
Patrick squinted down the
garbage-strewn alley to where a naked bulb glowed dimly above a dented metal
door. Back in the Roaring Twenties, a speakeasy might have hid behind a door
like that. Here in the twenty-first century he knew nothing so innocuous
awaited him.
"I don't like
this."
A week had passed since Romy
Cadman had barreled into his life. She'd called him this afternoon, suggesting
they meet in the city for a late dinner, and then she wanted to show him a few
sights.
They had an excellent meal
in the Flatiron district, with perhaps a little too much wine, and Patrick
found himself feeling more than a little amorous. Butamour did not appear to be
on the menu.
A real shame, because Romy
Cadman was without a doubt the most exciting, most fascinating woman he had
ever met. Being in her company reduced all the other women he'd known in his
life to wraiths. But he couldn't get past the firewall she'd set up along her
perimeter.
He came close, though. At
one point during dinner the conversation had strayed from sims and legal
matters to the theater; somehow the subject of ballet came up, and Patrick had
seen a change in Romy as she enthused over an upcoming production ofSwan Lake .
She smiled and her eyes sparkled as she went on about her favorite dancers and
performances. Patrick wished he'd known more about the subject, but ballet had
always left him cold. He did a good job of looking interested, though. Hell,
he'd try toe dancing himself if it would keep this woman's guard down.
But too soon the subject ran
out of steam and her defenses were back in place. She wasn't playing hard to
get, shewas hard to get. At least where he was concerned.
After dessert, as he'd
helped her into her long black leather coat, he said, "I'm surprised you'd
wear something like this."
"Cleathre?"
"This is
cleathre?" Cloned leather. He'd heard of it but had never actually seen
it. He fingered the smooth, supple surface. "Feels like the real
thing."
"Itis the real thing.
It's just that no animals had to die to make it."
Cleathre and furc, cloned
from skin cells of cows, minks, sables, even pandas, were the hottest new thing
in the fashion industry. Ethically pure, esthetically perfect, and not cheap.
From the restaurant she'd
cabbed him down to this crummy ill-lit neighborhood in the West Teens, so far
west he could smell the river.
He felt like a fish out of
water: overdressed and under-leathered. Romy's coat matched the dominant color
of the passing locals, but Patrick's white shirt, paisley tie, and herringbone
overcoat made him stand out like a Klansman at an NAACP meeting.
"Nothing to worry
about," she said.
"Easy for you to say.
You're staying out here."
He glanced around uneasily.
He was no country boy, knew Manhattan pretty well, in fact; but this was a part
of the city he tended to avoid. Clubs down here were in the news too often,
usually connected to stories about shootings and drug overdoses.
Romy's smile had a bitter
twist. "I'd go in with you, but it's not exactly my kind of place."
"You keep saying that,
but it doesn't help me. Before I walk in there I'd much rather know whose kind
of place itis than whose kind it isn't."
"You need to find out
for yourself."
"Okay then, why don't I
find out in the daytime?"
"Because the action at
a place like this doesn't get rolling until about now."
"This is all because I
said I thought sims had a pretty cushy existence, right?"
"Stop stalling,"
she said, giving him a gentle punch on the shoulder. "Are you going to
knock on that door or not?"
Patrick tried a grin.
"I'd love to, except that it means leaving you out here alone on these
mean streets."
"Oh, I can take care of
myself," she said, and this time her smile had a touch of warmth in it.
She pulled a finger-length vial from her pocket. "One spray of this will
stop a horse."
Was this a rite of passage,
a trial by fire? Was this what he had to do to win her? Or at the very least,
earn the right to try? He glanced at her intent dark eyes under those perfect
brows. If so...
"Okay," he said.
"Here I go."
He walked the dozen or so
paces to the door, took a deep breath of urinetinged air, and rapped on its
battered, flaking surface.
A narrow window slid open
and two dark eyes peered out at him.
"Yeah?" said a
harsh voice.
Feeling as if he'd stepped
into a particularly corny episode of the oldUntouchables , he said, "I'd,
um, like to come in."
"Ever been here
before?"
"No, um, a bartender at
the Tunnel sent me."
"What's his name?"
"Tim. He told me to
tell you that Tim sent me."
Actually, Patrick had never
met Tim, but Romy had told him to say that.
The door opened. Fighting
the urge to turn and trot back down the alley, he stepped inside. The door
slammed shut behind him and Patrick found himself sharing a long narrow hallway
with a two-legged slab of beef who probably held graduate degrees in bar
bouncing: shaved head, earrings, crooked nose, and a steroidal body stuffed
into a sleeveless black T-shirt emblazoned withMOTHER 'S. An old Guns n' Roses
tune vibrated from the end of the hall.
The slab held out his hand.
"Twenty-five bucks."
"What for?"
"Door charge."
"Twenty-five bucks just
to walk in?"
"You see busloads of
gooks marchin through here? This ain't no sightseein stop. Pay up or
walk."
Patrick reached into his
pocket. "Tim didn't say anything about a door charge."
"He's not supposed
to." The bouncer grinned and stuck out his tongue-long and forked-and
waggled it in Patrick's face.
A splicer, Patrick thought,
trying to hide his revulsion. What the hell has Romy got me into?
Patrick handed him the
money.
"Welcome to the
Jungle." The bouncer pointed toward the end of the hall. "Mona will
take care of you," he said, then cupped his hands around his mouth and
shouted, "Incoming! Newbie!"
Patrick hurried down the
hallway, brushing the sides in his haste. The faster he went, the sooner this
would be over. He hoped.
Mona-at least he assumed the
obese woman in the tight red dress exposing acres of cleavage was Mona-met him
at the end of the hall. Another splicer: oversized lizard scales ran up the
sides of her face and across her throat and who knew where else. She and the
bouncer must be a couple-both into reptiles.
Tattoos and piercings had
once been considered avant garde, but eventually were mainstreamed. Then
tailored genes and nonhuman splices hit the black market and the bod-mod crowd
jumped on them like cats on a nipcoated mouse.
"Hi, honey," she
said, showing pointed teeth in a big welcoming grin. "First time,
huh?"
"Uh, yeah."
First time forwhat ?
"Everybody's a little
nervous the first time." She took his arm and led him around a corner.
"Let me introduce you to the girls first, then you take your time and pick
the one you want. The base charge is two-fifty and that allows you half an
hour. We charge extra if you go over, and of course there's surcharges for any
specialties you want..."
Patrick stopped cold when he
saw them.
"Kinda gets you, don't
it," Mona said. "Nobody ever imagines they could look this
good."
The "girls" were
female sims, but nothing like Patrick had ever seen or imagined. Someone had
caked them with makeup, either styled and dyed their hair or fitted them with
wigs, then dressed them in vinyl or studded leather or lingerie-satin teddies,
frilly see-through nighties, the whole Frederick's of Hollywood catalog. And
their legs-most of them had shaved legs. Sims as a rule were only slightly
hairier than humans, and the hair was coarser, but they didn't shave their legs
or underarms. Patrick had never seen a shaved female sim, or ones with such
breasts-they must have had implants.
"Good Christ!" he
blurted. "What have you done to them?"
He did his best to hide his
revulsion as Mona gave him a sharp look, but God it wasn't easy. Sim whores...
She grinned again and gave
him a knowing wink. "You don't like them all dolled up? That's all right.
I think I know your type."
"You do?" That
possibility was almost as unsettling as the sight of these sim sex slaves.
She pointed to two unshaven,
unenhanced females lounging nude on a couch.
"We've got Teen and
Mone over there. They work in our special jungle room for clients who like
their sims just the way you'd encounter them in the wild."
"In the wild? They
don'toccur in the wild! They're...manufactured!"
"Hey," Mona said,
her smile fading. "Are you here to have fun or nitpick my ass?"
Patrick stared, he gawked,
he gaped in shock at their surreal sicko getups. His stupefaction that anyone
could find these pathetic creatures even remotely erotic quickly faded,
replaced by a deeper revulsion as he noticed the bruises on their shaved limbs,
their dead dull eyes. They looked like desiccated shells as they sat and smoked
and stared at him.
Smoked...he'd never known a
sim to smoke.
He had to get out of here.
Now.
"I...I think I've
changed my mind."
"What's the
matter?" She looked genuinely offended. "We got the best in
town."
Patrick started backing
toward the hallway. "I'm sure you do, it's just that I...nothing personal,
but I don't think I'm ready yet."
Glaring now, Mona said,
"Then why'd you come?"
"A friend told me
to." God, he wanted to kill Romy. "Said I'd find it enlightening. But
I don't."
He turned and headed for the
door where the bouncer waited.
"Jerry!" Mona
called out behind him. "Something's not right with this guy."
Jerry placed himself between
Patrick and the door.
"You got a problem,
pal?"
Oh, no, Patrick thought as
his gut clenched. He's going to beat the shit out of me.
"Yeah," Patrick
said, pressing one hand against his stomach and the other over his mouth.
"I think I'm going to be sick." He retched for effect.
"Don't you even fuckin
dream of it, asshole! You puke in here, you're gonna clean it up-with your
tongue!"
Patrick retched again,
louder this time. "Oh, God!" He doubled over.
"Motherf-"
He felt the back of his coat
bunch as Jerry grabbed a fistful of fabric, heard the door swing open, and then
he was propelled into the stink of the alley. He stumbled, almost lost his
footing, but managed to stay upright as he skidded to a halt against the brick
wall on the far side.
Patrick didn't stop to look
back. He pushed off the wall and hurried from the alley at something just short
of a trot. He found Romy waiting for him on the sidewalk.
"Well?" she said,
raising her eyebrows.
"Damn it, Romy!"
He'd half expected some sort
of ha-ha-the-joke's-on-you attitude, but she was all business.
"I take it you ran into
a few sims."
"You know damn well I
did!" God, he was pissed. He felt besmirched, belittled, diminished. If
she'd been a guy he'd be taking a poke at her right now. "Why the
hell-?"
She held up one hand to
silence him and raised the other to her lips. He realized she was holding a
PCA.
"My man inside confirms
the sims are there. It's a go."
"What's a go?"
Patrick said.
"A raid," she
said. "Let's get out of the way."
She led him across the
street. The first blue-and-white NYPD units were screeching to a halt in front
of the alley by the time they reached the opposite curb. Patrick watched
fascinated as a small horde of blue uniforms swarmed toward the dented door.
Patrick stared at Romy.
"You're a cop?"
"No. And this sort of
work isn't really a kosher part of my OPRR duties, but I've made it so. I snoop
around. I talk to people, people talk to me. I've been watching this place for
some time. Took me a while to find the rear exit. Once I had that, I brought in
NYPD."
"Then what did you need
me for? Why'd you send me in there?"
Her gaze was focused on the
alley, her dark eyes hard and bright as she watched the cops knock open the
door with a short steel battering ram.
"To make sure the sims
were inside. You never know who's got a source in a precinct house. If they got
wind of the raid they'd have the sims stashed out of town and I'd have egg on
my face and the cops would be less cooperative next time I came to them."
If she thought that was
going to mollify him, she was dead wrong.
"You could have told me,
damn it! Why'd you send me in there with no idea what I'd be getting
into?"
"Would you have gone in
if I had?"
"Well..." He let
the word trail off but knew the answer would have been a definite no.
"I didn't think so. But
because you did, you played a meaningful part in reeling in some single-celled
organisms posing as human beings,things "-she managed to inject so much
contempt into the word-"who make pond scum look tasty." A wry smile.
"Ain't that cool?"
Patrick had to admit it was,
but he wasn't about to say so.
"What happens to
them?"
"The humans won't see
daylight for a long, long time. Those sims in there have been either abducted
or leased under false pretenses. The charges will range from grand theft to
fraud to pandering to cruelty to animals to operating a criminal enterprise to
promoting bestiality and whatever else the prosecutors can think of. You're the
lawyer. You can imagine."
Patrick nodded, mentally
adding a few more charges.
Romy kept talking. "And
the perps-do I sound like a cop?-are guaranteed to get slammed with max
sentences. SimGen, as you've learned firsthand, is relentless when it comes to
anyone messing with their product. Their contacts in the judicial system, the
ones who guarantee them favorable rulings whenever necessary, also see to it
that anyone who transgresses against them lands lower-lip-deep in doo-doo. And
after the criminal courts are through with the bastards, SimGen chases them
down in civil court and gets dibs on everything they've ever owned in their
life and everything they'll earn till Resurrection Day."
"Is that admiration I
hear?"
Romy shook her head.
"No. But you've got to respect SimGen's efficiency. When their ends
coincide with mine-as in rescuing sims from these oxygen wasters-I'm only too
happy to take advantage of that efficiency. But we part on thewhy : My reasons
are personal and ethical, theirs are purely business and public
relations."
"What happens to the
sims?" he said, remembering the tarted-up females.
"Someone from SimGen
will be by to pick up the poor things and take them to the Jersey campus where
they'll rehab the ones they can and retire the ones they can't."
"Doesn't exactly sound
like the Evil Empire to me."
She turned and glared at
him. "Oh, but they are, Patrick Sullivan. That sleazy little operation
across the street couldn't have existed without SimGen, because SimGen made the
sims that were mistreated in there."
"Hey, Ford makes cars
and some people get drunk and kill people with them or use them to rob banks or
rig them with dynamite."
She rolled her eyes.
"You don't see the difference between a hunk of tin and those creatures
you're representing in court?"
"Of course I do. I
just-"
"SimGen created a new
species and enslaved it. Sims feel pain, they feel pleasure, they laugh,
theythink , damn it! And they're slaves. A sentient slave species...you don't
think that's evil?"
"Well, when you put it
that way..."
"What other way is
there to put it? They've got to be stopped."
Patrick laughed. "And
who's going to do that? You?"
She nodded. "Yes."
He couldn't believe this.
She actually seemed serious. "You don't really think-"
"Something's rotten in
SimGen," she said. "They're dirty. When I was there I could smell it.
And when I find out what they're hiding, I'm going to bring them down."
"You."
She set her jaw.
"Me...with a little help from some friends."
"What friends?"
"Just...friends."
She stepped off the curb. "I'm going in to check over those sims,
catalogue any injuries or evidence of drugging before the SimGen folks arrive.
Want to come along?"
Patrick hesitated. He'd
already been inside once and wasn't keen on going back.
"I don't know...I've
got an early day tomorrow..."
"I know. Beacon Ridge
has filed some new motions on the federal appeal."
That gave him a mild jolt.
"You're really staying on top of this, aren't you."
"I tend to keep a close
eye on my investments. As a matter of fact, I was planning on coming up to
White Plains tomorrow."
"What for?"
"To see you in
action."
"Ah, yes. Your
investment." He wasn't sure if he liked the idea. He wasn't some trick
pony.
"If you hang around
awhile you could give me a ride up there."
Nowhere was an interesting
development. "Where are you staying?"
"Don't know yet. How's
your motel?"
Whoa! His heart did a pole
vault. "Not fancy, but decent. As a matter of fact, you could save
yourself a few bucks and stay in my room."
She laughed from deep in her
throat. God, what a sound. He could listen to her laugh all night. Visions of
that marvelous tight body began to play in his head...in bed next to him,
straddling him...Pamela had been gone for too long and right now every
Y-chromosome in his body was doing a mating dance.
"I don't think
so."
He raised his hands.
"Nothing salacious here. The room's got two double beds. You could have
the other one."
"How generous,"
she said with a wry twist to her smile.
"And listen, I'll be a
Boy Scout. Really. You can have your bed, I'll have mine, and we'll turn the
lights out and just lie there and talk."
Patrick didn't quite believe
he'd just said that, but it was true. He'd settle for talk, anything to stay
close to this woman.
"I appreciate the
offer," Romy said, "but I'm a private sort of person. But you will
drive me?"
Drive you...aw, lady, don't
say things like that.
"Sure."
"Great. We'll have to
stop at my office to pick up my overnight bag."
"No problem."
And on the way home, lady,
I'm going to do my absolute damnedest to convince you that two rooms is one too
many.
10
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NY
OCTOBER 30
Romy glanced at the clock numerals glowing on the
dashboard of Patrick's BMW. Hard to believe it was quarter to three already.
Time flies when you're
having fun.
Well, not fun, exactly. But
it had been a good night. And she felt very good about putting those sim
abusers behind bars.
She watched Patrick as he
maneuvered along the winding curves of the Saw Mill River Parkway, deserted at
this hour except for the single pair of headlights a couple of hundred yards
behind them. He'd handled himself well tonight. And she'd been heartened by how
deeply the sim bordello had shaken him.
"Tired?" she said.
"A little. How about
you?"
"Not a bit." She
was totally wired.
"I could perk up,"
he said with a grin. "That is, if you decide to take up my offer on the
rooming arrangements."
She laughed. "You don't
give up, do you."
After those splicer
slimeballs had been carted off, and the cops had returned to Manhattan South,
and SimGen had picked up the sims, they'd retrieved his car from the garage,
picked up her bag, and headed for the northern suburbs. Patrick had spent the
early part of the trip on the make, pitching his idea of sharing a room.
Finally he seemed to have run out of gas.
Romy had to admit that a
bout of sweaty, energetic sex would be perfect right now. Might take the edge
off this persistent adrenaline buzz. But not with Patrick Sullivan. They'd be
working too closely over the next few months. That level of intimacy in their
relationship would further complicate an already complicated situation.
And her track record with
relationships of any sort was downright miserable. She no sooner got close to
someone than she seemed to scare them away.
Like Jeff Hogan, a bright,
funny computer game designer who worked for Acclaim out on Long Island. They
started going out last spring, grew close, but not close enough that Romy could
tell him about Zero and the organization. He must have sensed she was keeping
something from him-no doubt thought she had another guy-and one night he went
so far as to follow her. Fortunately she spotted him and aborted her planned
meeting with Zero. But that was it for Jeff Hogan.
"Give up?" Patrick
said. "I don't know the meaning of the words."
She smiled. "If you're
half this tenacious on behalf of your clients, I don't think the sims can
lose." The smile faded. "Still think all sims have it cushy?"
"Not those."
"Ever hear of a
globulin farm?"
"Never."
Romy said, "When you
get sick, when a virus or bacterium invades your body, you fight back through
your immune system. It forms proteins, immune globulins known as antibodies, to
kill the invaders. That's called active immunity. But let's say you jab
yourself with a needle that's infected with, say, hepatitis B or C. You could
ward off infection by either of those viruses through passive immunity-by being
injected with antibodies or immunoglobulins from someone already immune to
them."
Patrick was getting the
picture. A few months ago he'd have to ask another half dozen questions to fill
in the blanks, but after what he'd seen tonight, he felt up to doing some of
the filling himself.
"Let me guess: Since
sims are so close to humans, some slimeball gets the bright idea of kidnapping
or hijacking a bunch and infecting them with viruses and selling off the
immunity of whichever ones survive."
"Exactly," Romy
said. "And sometimes if a sim survives one virus, they infect it with
another, and then another, until they can harvest a multiimmune globulin. The
more diseases covered, the higher the price per dose."
"Ain't science
grand," Patrick said.
"But it's not a
one-time thing. A sim will produce those antibodies for as long as it lives.
All the farmers have to do is keep it alive and healthy and they've got
themselves a cash cow they can literally milk for years."
"Great," he said
in a sour tone.
"But even they don't
have it a tenth as bad as some of the cases I've seen. Try to imagine a sim
tossed into a cage with three pit bulls."
"Aw no."
"Or two sims shoved
into a pit, knives duct-taped into both hands, and bullwhipped until they fight
to the death."
"Stop!"
"And some are simply
tied up in a basement and tortured for days, weeks."
"Christ, Romy,please!
"
She'd seen too much, too
damn much over the years. Tears welled in her eyes.
"I don't know
why...maybe it's because they're so unassertive, or because they have no
franchise, but sims seem to bring out the very worst in the worst of us. The
racists who're so desperate to feel superior to something, anything, even if
it's not human; others who think God gave them the animal kingdom as their
playground, to do absolutely anything with that they damn well please; and the
sick souls who want to vent their psychoses on something weak and defenseless.
Serial killers, teenage gangs, they've found a new target: Kill a sim for
kicks. Damn them." She heard her voice break. "Damn them all to
hell."
"Easy," Patrick
said, reaching across, finding her hand, squeezing it. "Easy."
Romy couldn't gauge the
genuineness of the gesture, whether he really felt for her or was simply
pressing his case to be roommates, but she didn't pull away.
The interior of the car
brightened. Romy glanced in her sideview mirror and saw that the car behind
them was closer now, coming up fast. Patrick noticed it too.
"Looks like someone
wants to pass," he said.
She felt the BMW decelerate
as Patrick eased up on the gas to allow the other car to go by. She looked out
her window at the ravine beyond the guardrail and suddenly had a premonition.
"Don't slow down!"
she cried.
"Wha-?"
"Hit the gas! Don't let
it pass!"
Too late. The other car had
gained too much momentum. It pulled alongside-Romy could see now that it was a
big, heavy Chevy van-and then cut a hard right into the Beemer's flank.
She screamed as the impact
sent a shock of terror through her chest. Patrick cried out and the car swerved
as he was knocked away from the steering wheel. Metal screeched, sparks flew as
the steel guardrail ripped along the outside of her door, just inches away.
Patrick grabbed the wheel, trying to regain control, but then the van hit them
again, harder, and this time the Beemer climbed the guardrail, straddled it for
an endless instant, then toppled over.
Romy's window exploded
inward, peppering her with safety glass as the car landed on its passenger
side-she heard someone screaming and recognized the voice as her own. She hung
upside down in her seatbelt as the Beemer rolled onto its roof, then over to
the driver side where it slidbounced-rattled the rest of the way down a slope
of softball-size chunks of granite. She felt as if she were trapped in some
wild amusement park ride that had gone horribly wrong. Finally the car hit the
bottom of the ravine and bounced back onto its wheels.
Battered, shaken, her heart
pounding madly, she shook off the shock and looked at Patrick. He was a shadow
slumped against the wheel-the airbag hadn't deployed. She heard him groan and
thought, We're alive!
But this was no accident.
Someone had tried to kill them!
And then she saw forms
moving into the beam of the one remaining headlight, crouching shapes in dark
jumpsuits, looking like commandos.
Realization stabbed into her
brain: Already down here! Waiting for us! All planned! We were targeted to be
knocked off the road at that point!
She found the door lock
toggle, hit it. Locks wouldn't do much good, but Patrick's window, though
cracked, was still intact. She leaned close to him.
"Don't move!" she
whispered in his ear.
He gave her a groggy look.
"What?"
"Keep quiet and play
dead!"
She pushed his head down so
it was resting against the steering wheel, then slumped herself against him and
watched through narrowed lids.
Three of them, moving
quickly and cautiously, squinting in the light. Must have been waiting in the
dark for a while. She thought she spotted a fourth figure hanging back at the
edge of the glow.
She slipped her hand into
her pocketbook, searching for something, anything she might use to protect
herself. Her fingers closed around a metal cylinder, twice the length of a
lipstick. Oh, yes. In the confusion she'd all but forgotten about that.
"Somebody kill those
lights!" said the middle figure.
"Got it."
One figure veered toward
Patrick's side of the car while the other two approached Romy's. A hand snaked
through her window. She steeled herself as fingers probed her throat.
"Got a pulse."
"Great. Get her arm out
here. I'll shoot her up. Got that recorder ready?"
The third man was rattling
Patrick's door. "Hey, it's locked. Find the switch over there."
A hand fumbled along the
inside of her door. Over the first man's shoulder she saw the other lift an
inoculator.
No!
She felt her fear nudging
Raging Romy. Come on! she thought. Wake up! Where are you when I need you?
As soon as she heard the
door locks trip open, she began spraying. Not a five- or ten-percent capsicum
spray, but a concentrated stream of CS tear gas. The nearer of the two caught
the full brunt of it. Clawing at his eyes, he cried out and lurched backward,
knocking into his partner; Romy was moving too, pushing open her door and
leaping out, arm extended, giving the inoculator man a faceful. He shouted and,
arms across his face, turned and tried to run blind, but tripped and fell over
the first guy.
Raging Romy was back.
"What the fuck?"
she heard the third man say from Patrick's side of the car. She turned and saw
him start to move around toward her.
"Run, Patrick!"
she screamed. "Run now!"
Before taking her own
advice, she went to work on the two bastards on the ground, using her boots to
hurt them where they lived, putting all the considerable strength of her legs
and much of her body behind the kicks. Raging Romy wanted to give them more,
take the time to do the job right so it would be a long, long while before they
were able to try something like this again, but the third man had reached the
front of the car and she had to run.
Patrick lay trembling
against the steering wheel, trying to control his bladder, afraid he was going
to be killed. The guy on his side of the car had just yanked the door open when
all hell broke loose to Patrick's right-shouts, cries, moans, and then Romy
telling him to run. The guy outside his door was moving away and so Patrick
kicked it the rest of the way open and did just that.
He didn't pick a direction,
he simply ran with everything he had. A quick glance over his shoulder showed
no one in pursuit, and a slim figure, glints of light flashing from her glossy
cleathre coat, fading into the night on the far side of the car. Romy. Thank
God.
He ran on, still afraid for
his life, but he had a chance now, and that left room enough in his panicked
brain for questions: Who? Why? And room for shame. He was running instead of
fighting. Even though he wasn't a fighter, he felt he should be back there
kicking multiple butts to defend Romy. Instead, she'd taken the lead and sprung
them both. What kind of a woman had he become involved with?
At least they were running
in opposite directions. That would split the opposition.
He spotted a large dark
splotch ahead to his right-a tiny grove of trees, tall bushes maybe-and headed
for it. He could stop there, get his bearings, and then try to make it back up
to the road.
As he entered the grove he had
a vague impression of a shadow hugging one of the dark tree trunks immediately
to his right, but he kept pushing into the foliage.
"Not so fast, little
man," said a deep voice.
And then something rammed
into his abdomen, a fist, plunging toward his spine, almost reaching it. As
Patrick grunted in airless agony and doubled over, another fist slammed into
the back of his neck, collapsing him to his knees. He retched.
"Got him!" the
voice bellowed.
Through the red and black
splotches flashing in his vision, Patrick was aware of a flashlight flicking on
and off. A moment later he heard thumping footsteps approach.
"Ricker?" said the
voice that belonged to the guy who'd opened his car door.
"Over here. Where's
Hoop and Cruz?"
As Patrick's breathing eased
and his head cleared, he glanced left and right: two pairs of identical black
sneakers leading to black pants with elastic cuffs.
"Down. Bitch was
playing possum. Maced them and took off. They're getting their eyes back
but-"
"Damn fuck better! Got
to catch her before she gets to the road and stops a car!"
"That might be up to me
and you-she did some real damage to their balls before she left."
"Shit! All right, let's
do this guy, dump him back in his car, and go after her."
Do?Panic clawed at Patrick's
brain.
For the second time tonight,
he felt himself grabbed by the back of his coat. This time he was hauled to his
feet.
"Steady him," the
big one, the one called Ricker, said as a pair of massive arms twined around
Patrick's head and neck like anacondas.
"Wh-what're you
doing?" he cried, although he sensed with a sick terrifying certainty what
was coming.
"What the accident
didn't, buddy boy," said Ricker's voice close to his ear.
Patrick writhed in their
grasp and cried out his fear as he felt those arms tighten, but he was trapped
and pinned and helpless as a moth about to have its wings plucked...
...and then a jarring
impact, an agonized "Uhnh!" from Ricker, a startled "What
the-?" from the other, and the murderous grip loosened, the arms fell
away, and something slammed against Patrick's back, knocking him face first
onto the ground. He heard scuffling feet, grunted as someone's heel kicked him
in the ribs, then winced as he heard a loud, wet, crunchingsmack! followed by a
brief light rain of warm heavy droplets against his head and the back of his
neck. After that, a heartbeat of silence, followed by the impacts of two heavy
objects thudding to the ground, one on his left, another on his right. Then...
...silence.
He waited in panicked
confusion, holding his breath, playing dead, praying he'd survive the night.
Silence persisted. Warily he raised his head, inching it upward, spitting the
dirt from his lips. To his left he saw a pair of blackclad legs and sneakered
feet, only this time they were horizontal. With growing alarm he slowly rotated
his head left-
-and scrambled to his feet
with a startled cry when he found a bloodstained face and dead staring eyes
only inches from his own.
Heart hammering, he backed
away from the two still forms, the one who'd been struggling with his car door,
and the bigger one, the one called Ricker, the one who'd been about to snap his
neck when-
When what? What had just
happened here?
He did a full, stumbling
turn as he edged out of the grove, searching the shadows for something,
anything that might account for the two dead men, but found only more shadows.
When he reached the edge of the foliage he ran, blindly at first, but then a
passing splash of light from above told him where the roadway was. He veered
right and began to claw his way up the steep slope, stumbling, slipping, the
rough granite tearing his pants, cutting his skin. Finally he reached the
battered steel guardrail and pulled himself over.
No one else in sight. Where
was Romy? God, he hoped she was okay.
Aching and bleeding, he
slumped against the cold metal and tried to catch his breath.
Not in shape, he thought as
he searched his pockets for his PCA. And even if he were, he wasn't in shape
for a carjacking and dead bodies. He was a talker, not a fighter. He-
Shit! He'd plugged the PCA
into the recharger in the car!
All right. As soon as he
claimed a second wind, he was going to start running, and keep on running until
a car showed up. And then he was going to stop it and have them call 911.
Lights glowed beyond the
curve to his left. As a car careened into view, he rose and staggered across
the shoulder toward the roadway, waving his arms. Only when he was completely
exposed and vulnerable did it occur to him to wonder whether it might be friend
or foe.
Moot question. The car
hurtled past without even slowing.
Patrick looked down at his
wrinkled, torn, bloodstained suit. I wouldn't stop for me either.
Maybe he'd be lucky and the
driver would call in about a disheveled crazy looking man wandering the Saw
Mill. But the way his luck was running...
He ducked and turned as he
heard a noise on the slope below...moving closer. Someone climbing his way. He
peeked over the guardrail and sighed with relief when he recognized her.
"Romy!" he said,
rising and extending his hand. "Thank God you're safe!"
And please don't say, No
thanks to you, my hero.
He helped her over the rail
and noticed she wasn't even breathing hard.
"Are you all
right?" she said, giving him the once-over as she straightened her coat.
"Where are you bleeding from?" Was that real concern in her eyes?
"What? Oh...only a
little of that's mine."
He recounted what had
happened in the grove.
She glanced between him and
the dark pool of the ravine. "And you didn't see who it was who saved you?"
"Not a hair, not a
trace."
She nodded, looking around.
"Typical."
"What's that
mean?" And then he realized she didn't look the least bit shocked or
worried.
"It means the
organization is looking out for you."
"What organization?
Those 'friends' you mentioned earlier? Who-?"
She pivoted and held up a
hand to shush him. "Hear that?"
He heard a car engine
gunning in the ravine. No way that could be his. They both leaned over the
rail, squinting into the dark.
"When I was hiding in
the brush down there I spotted another van just like the one that drove us off
the road. On my way back up here I noticed that the two guys I gassed were
gone."
"You think they took
the bodies with them?"
"I'll bet on it. This
wasn't a couple of beered-up Teamsters. These people had a plan and they were
following it by the numbers, military style."
Patrick noticed her stiffen,
as if a bell had just rung. "What?"
She shook her head.
"Nothing."
As the sound of the van's
engine faded, Patrick stared again into the dark ravine, trying to locate his
BMW, and was struck by how perfectly their "accident" had been
planned. If he had trouble locating his car in the shadows below-and he had a
fair idea where it should be-a passing car wouldn't have a clue.
A shudder cut through his
body. He began to tremble inside.
"Don't tell me
'nothing,'" he said. "Somebody tried to kill us and-"
"They were going to
shoot me up with something first...to ask me questions."
"Oh, Christ! What are
we into here? Whowere they?"
"SimGen, I
suspect."
"No way! With their
clout in court and Congress, they don't need to hire killers."
"Who's got more to
lose?"
"No, Romy, I don't buy
it-I won't buy it. They're-"
She leaned close. Intensity
radiated from her like heat from a reactor core. "They're hiding
something, Patrick. And whatever it is, the two of us-you, me-we've touched a
nerve. We've somehow threatened that secret."
"Just great," he
said. "One of the largest corporations in the world has painted a
bull's-eye on my back." He held up his hands and watched them shake.
"Look at me-I'm a wreck."
"The shakes are
normal," Romy said, holding out her own trembling hands. "Just excess
adrenaline. It'll pass. How do you feel otherwise?"
"How does terrified
sound?" He wasn't ashamed to admit it: He was shaken to his core.
"It's not every day someone tries to kill me."
"The all-important
question is: Have they scared you off?"
"Oh, they've scared me,
but not off," he said, hoping he sounded a lot braver than he felt.
"You see, they made a big mistake when they ruined my practice: It left me
with only one client. Ican't quit."
Romy smiled at him, and he
sensed genuine regard in her eyes. Somehow that made the terrors of the past
few minutes almost worthwhile. Almost.
"And I'll tell you
something else," he said, feeling a growing anger blunt the edge of his
fear. "I'm still not convinced SimGen was behind what happened here, but
just in case it was, I'm putting them on notice."
Her eyes never left his
face. "How?"
"I'm sure I saw the
word 'SimGen' on the side of the van that sideswiped us. How about you?"
"Come to think of
it," she said, touching an index finger to her temple, "I believe I
did too."
"Of course you did.
We'll make sure it's in the police report, and I'm going to mention it in every
interview over the next week or so. SimGen will deny it of course, but a
suspicion will be implanted in the public mind. SimGen will bepraying nothing
happens to us."
"I love it," she
said. "Turns the tables in a wonderfully underhanded way."
"I aced Underhanded 101
and 102 in law school."
"I'll bet you
did." She pulled a PCA from her coat pocket. "Time to call the
cops."
11
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
"I understand," Luca Portero said for what
seemed like the hundredth or thousandth time, trying to calm the voice on the
other end of the hard-encrypted line.
Truth was, he didn't
understand. Not one damn bit.
He rubbed his burning eyes.
Somewhere outside this sealed office in the subbasement of SimGen's Basic
Research building, the sun was preparing to rise. Luca hadn't slept in
twenty-three hours, but he wasn't the least bit physically tired. The fatigue
weighing on him like a lead-lined shroud was mental, from hammering his brain
for an explanation as to how such a simple op could go so fatally wrong.
"Doyou understand,
Portero?" said the voice.
It belonged to Darryl
Lister, Luca's old CO, the man who'd brought him into SIRG. Just like back in
the service, Lister was his direct superior, and the next stop up the ladder
from Luca. Lister was understandably upset about being awakened ahead of his
alarm clock with the news that two of their men were dead. He'd hung up on
Luca, then called him back half an hour later-after checking with the SIRG
higher-ups, no doubt.
"Then maybe,"
Lister continued, "just maybe you can helpme understand how six pros go
out to process a couple of soft-shelled yuppies, and two come back in body bags,
while the yups are still walking around. You were running the op. Explain,
please."
Lister's tone surprised
Luca. He sounded nothing like the Captain he'd known back in their Special
Forces days. Hell, they'd stalked through Kabul and Baghdad together; he was
one of the few men in the world Luca respected. Why was he coming on so
managerial?
Couldn't worry about that
now. Had to give him answers.
Luca once more reviewed the
set-up, groping for a flaw. He'd handpicked the men, all seasoned SIRG
operatives. Using a bogus identity he'd personally rented the vans from two
different companies-could have used unmarked SimGen vehicles but didn't want to
chance a trace. Then last night, after weeks of surveillance on Sullivan and
Cadman, a golden opportunity: the two of them together driving through
Westchester in the dead hours of the morning. A couple of quick calls and
everyone was in position, waiting for it to go down.
So far, so good. Not a hint
that it was going to go down the toilet.
He reran his mental tape of
what he'd learned from debriefing the survivors. According to Snyder and
Lowery-the wheel man and his back-up in the first van-the hit on Sullivan's car
had been perfect: over the rail and down the slope. As planned, they'd driven
away and left their rented van at a body shop that knows how to keep a secret.
After that the story murked
up. The two survivors of the wet team, Cruz and Hooper, had spent too much time
recovering from their doses of Mace to see anything. And they were still
limping from the tap dance the Cadman woman had done on them.
Luca shook his head, torn
between rage and admiration. Some kind of broad, that Romy. He couldn't help
but admire the way she'd engineered the raid on that sim whorehouse. And then
she'd made asses of two of his best men. Maybe they were still alive thanks to
her. He could use someone like her.
When Cruz and Hooper could
finally see and walk again, they'd found Ricker and Green dead; they'd gathered
up the corpses and hauled ass out of there in the second van.
"I put Ricker in
charge," Luca said.
"Good choice,"
Lister replied. "I'd have done the same. But Ricker is dead, and that's
what disturbs me, Portero. How does Ricker wind up with a cracked skull? Who do
you know who could take Ricker in hand-to-hand?"
"Nobody."
"Damn right. He was a
fucking animal."
No argument there. Ricker
wasn't just big and tough, he was experienced and smart. No one was going to
take him down without a struggle, and not without him taking one or two down
with him. But according to Cruz and Hooper, they never heard a sound.
And Ricker's body...his
throat had been crushed-that explained the silence-and his head had been
smashed. Looked like he'd leaned out of a speeding subway and got clocked by a
support girder. Same with Green.
In fact, if Luca wasn't so
sure it was impossible, he'd think someone had grabbed Ricker and Green by
their necks and smashed their heads together...like a bully brother breaking
his sister's dolls. But who could manhandle two guys as fit and jacked as
Ricker and Green like that?
An icy length of barbed wire
dragged along Luca's spine.
"According to what
you've told me," Lister said, "Ricker and the team didn't know where
they were going until less than an hour before they hit the road. Even you
didn't know. So how did whoever took them out know? Sounds to me like they were
already there waiting."
"Or they were
followed."
"But why follow them at
all? Unless...shit! The Japs! I bet it's the Japs! That goddamn Kaze Group has
been sticking its dirty fingers deeper and deeper into the biotech pie, and
now-"
"I doubt it's the
Japs," Luca said. "They've got no reason to protect Sullivan."
"Maybe they just want
to keep us off balance."
Luca began to feel an
unsettling suspicion. He hesitated, as if uttering the words might turn the
possibility into a reality. But Lister-and SIRG-had to know.
"I think there's a new
player in the game."
"Where'd you get an
idea like that?"
"A gut feeling. And the
fact that we've never had to deal with a countermove like this."
A pause while Lister
digested that. "Who on earth...?"
"I have no idea-yet.
But I'm going to find out."
"You do that. But don't
lose us any more men in the process. Whoever these people are, they play
rough."
"Rough," Luca
said, clamping his jaw. "They don't know rough. Not by half."
"And somethingyou
should know," Lister said. "Word from upstairs is that this was a bad
idea."
"Bad?" Anger
dueled with a sudden stab of cold fear. "It was approved! What the hell
are they trying-?"
"Careful what you say,
Portero. The wrong people might hear and you could find yourself back where you
came from, living on your pension while pimping for your mother-and happy to be
allowed to do so. Comprende?"
Lister's unexpected attack
rocked Luca. "What?What did you just say?"
Rage flared through him,
making him want to reach through the phone and kill. He didn't care about the
swift and inevitably deadly reprisal from SIRG, he wanted to crush Lister's
larynx, wanted to see his eyes bulge, his face turn purple while Luca screamed
in his ear that yes, my mother was a whore, but only because she had to be and
she's not anymore, and yes, she doesn't know who my father was, but...
"Sorry," Lister
said. "That was uncalled for. I'm just...you wouldn't believe the pressure
that's coming down."
Luca said nothing. All
right, so SIRG was squeezing Lister, big time. That still didn't give him the
right...
"Look," Lister said.
"Whatever you thought they said before, they now say the lawyer is not
key. If he goes, he can be replaced in minutes by another lawyer, maybe a
better one, who might cause even more problems."
Lister paused, as if
expecting a comment. They're right, Luca grudgingly admitted. No shortage of
lawyers. But he said nothing.
Lister went on: "The
sims-thisparticular group of sims-are key. No other group has come forward
looking to unionize, only these. Why, we don't know. Why, we don't care. Point
is, SIRG wants the focus of your efforts from now on to be the Beacon Ridge
sims. Are we clear on that?"
"Completely."
Calmer now, Luca already was
germinating an idea. A simple plan. A one-man job. And he knew just the man.
This time there'd be no
slip-ups because he'd take care of it himself.
Because this had become
personal.
Romy Cadman had made him
look bad. Hurt his reputation. Now she was going to hurt.
12
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NY
"I'm fine, really," Romy said.
She stood in an empty
ladies' room speaking to Zero on the secure PCA he'd given her. It was clear
after last night that she was under surveillance, so she'd picked a spot at
random and wound up in a coffee shop not far from the federal district
courthouse in White Plains. At this hour-10:32A .M.-the dining area contained
only a handful of late breakfasters, and the ladies' room was empty; she'd
checked all the stalls before calling.
"You're sure?
Absolutely sure?"
The concern in his voice
touched her. "Absolutely. Those martial arts lessons you made me take came
in handy."
"I never thought you'd
be in physical danger, but I felt it best you be prepared for it."
"If nothing else, it's
helped me keep my cool."
Relative cool, she thought.
Her nerves were still jangled. She'd tried to rest at the motel-in her own
room, much to Patrick's dismay-but sleep had remained steadfastly out of reach;
so she'd compensated this morning by drinking too much coffee, which did
nothing to settle her nerves.
She caught sight of herself
in one of the mirrors. A little haggard looking, but not half bad for someone
who'd ducked an attempt on her life just a few hours ago.
"But murder?" she
said. "Somehow I don't see the brothers Sinclair sitting around and
deciding to have us killed."
"That decision was
reached elsewhere, I'm sure. By someone connected to the company but with his
own best interests at heart."
"Someone also connected
to Manassas Ventures, perhaps?"
"Perhaps. Our
investigation into that little company keeps coming up empty. It seems to exist
in a vacuum. We've avoided direct inquiries, keeping everything back door
because we don't want to let them know anyone's interested. But if nothing pans
out soon we may have to arrange a little accident."
"Accident?"
He went on without
elaborating. "In the meantime we want to keep you and Patrick alive and
well. Connecting SimGen to the vans was a brilliant stroke. Your idea?"
"No. Patrick's."
"Clever fellow. The
Beacon Ridge sims could do a lot worse."
"I'm beginning to see
that." After last night, despite his tough talk, she'd half expected him
to wake up this morning and run off with his tail tucked between his legs. But
he was in court now, arguing motions. "What I don't see is how you managed
to be down in that ravine with us."
"Iwasn't there."
"I don't mean you
personally-the organization."
"We had a tail on
Portero."
That startled her. "For
how long?"
"Long enough to see him
rent a couple of vans. After that, we kept an eye on the vans. When some
mercenary types became attached to the vans, I suspected strong-arm tactics were
in the works. Some of our people followed one van to that ravine and
you-know-who intervened."
"I'm glad."
"So am I. I'd never
forgive myself if..." He cleared his throat. "Anyway, the gloves are
off, I'm afraid. The organization is going to mount its own surveillance on you
and Patrick. The Beacon Ridge barrack as well."
Romy's stomach turned.
"Oh, no. You don't think-"
"Anything is possible.
And we must be prepared for it."
13
THE BRONX
NOVEMBER 6
Meerm not hungry. Get good food in Meerm room, special
food, come on own plate. Meerm not have get self from pot like down in sim big
room. Meerm room food better. Yum-yum. Meerm wish she feel better so she like
food more.
Meerm lonely sometime in own
room. But Meerm not downstair where Needle Lady and Needle Man stick sharp
thing in sim, take blood. Take-take-take. And hair face man do very bad hurt
thing to Meerm and other sim. But not here Meerm room. No sharp stick here. No
one hurt Meerm in own room.
Meerm room top floor. Meerm
like look window at sky. Dark now. See light on street down below. Sometime
Meerm wish-
"Helloooo, Meerm!"
Meerm turn, see Needle Man
come through door. Needle Lady come behind. They ver happy. Needle Man hold big
bottle, drink yellow bubble water in glass.
"Your latest test
results are in," Needle Lady say, "and we love you, Meerm!"
"Why love Meerm?"
Needle Man laugh, say,
"Because you're going to make us rich!"
"Yes!" Needle Lady
yell. "We're going toown SimGen!"
"Now, now,
Eleanor," Needle Man say. "Let's not be greedy. We'll settle for
half!"
They laugh-laugh-laugh.
"Who'd ever
think," Needle Man say, "that two humble globulin farmers would be
able to put a company like SimGen up against the wall?"
"We haven't put it
there yet," Needle Lady say. "I still have to get up the nerve to
make the call."
"And when we do, we've
got to be careful. We'll be playing with the big boys, and they're not going to
like what we have to tell them."
They stop laugh, stop smile.
Drink more.
Ooh! Tummy hurt. Meerm want
feel better. Why hurt?
14
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NY
NOVEMBER 13
"I've got to tell you," Patrick said to Romy as
they sat in the sim barrack. Anj was going through her now standard routine of
draping herself across Patrick's lap whenever he visited. He'd found it cute
before; a warm-fuzzy moment. Now..."After what I saw in that brothel, I'm
not as comfortable with this as I used to be."
"That's
understandable," she said. "You never viewed them in a sexual context
before."
"I still
don't...can't." The memory of the brothel still gave his gut a squeamish
twist. "But knowing that other people do..."
She was out from the city
again, checking on her investment, as she liked to put it. Night had fallen but
she'd hung around. For the past week Patrick had entertained a faint hope that
their ordeal in the ravine might forge a bond that would lead to a closer, more
intimate relationship. That hope was fading. She seemed warmer toward him, but
for the most part Romy remained all business.
"How's your car?"
"Totaled. Just like my
house." And my love life, he mentally added. Why don't I just join a
monastery and make it official? "Haven't seen any insurance money on
either, but I'm making do."
"You still haven't been
scared off then?" she said.
"I'm not looking to be
a martyr, but no."
She smiled. "I never
took you for the martyr type."
"You mean there's a
martyr type? Who the hell would want to be a martyr?"
"More than you'd think.
In the right setting it can be a form of celebrity."
"I guess so. Who was it
who said that some people climb onto the cross merely to be seen from a greater
distance?"
"Camus, I
believe."
Patrick was
startled-happily. "You've read Camus?"
She shrugged.
Here was a side of Romy he'd
never imagined. He wanted to delve deeper but she steered him right back to
business.
"Do you see any legal
speed bumps ahead?" she asked.
"Not in the immediate
future," he began, then noticed Tome hovering at his shoulder.
"'Scuse, Mist Sulliman,
but Anj must eat." He tugged the sleeve of the young sim's T-shirt.
"Come, Anj. Dinner come." As he led her toward the tables, Tome
turned and said, "You eat too?"
Patrick glanced around. Most
of the sims had gone through the line and were chowing down. He eyed the rich
dark stew being ladled from the big pot and wasn't even tempted.
"No, thanks, Tome. I'm,
uh, cutting back."
Romy lowered her voice.
"Maybe we should give it a try. Just a taste...to be good guests."
"It's made from
dining-room leftovers," he whispered from a corner of his mouth.
"I believe I'll pass
too," Romy called out, then turned to Patrick. "By the way, are you
still living in that motel?"
"Still."
"Aren't you
cramped?"
"Yes and no. I thought
I'd go nuts in a place like that-you know, without all my things. But I've
found I don't miss them as much as I thought I would. No house, no furniture,
no office, no status car...I should be in a deep depression but oddly enough
I'm not. I've got this strange, light feeling...unencumbered, I guess you could
say. I feel as if I've been cut free from weights I didn't even know were
there. That sound weird to you?"
"No," she said
softly, and he thought he detected some warmth in her smile. "Not weird at
all." She seemed to catch herself and looked away in the direction of the
sims. "By the way, if we're not eating here, where do you suggest?"
"How do you feel about
Cajun food?"
"Love it. I'll eat
anything blackened-catfish, redfish, potholders, you name it."
"Great. I know this
little place in Mount Kisco..."
They talked about their
favorite foods-one of Romy's was sushi which, despite heroic efforts, Patrick
had never developed a taste for. He was beginning to believe that the evening
was shaping up to be ripe with promise when a loud groan and a clatter interrupted
them.
Patrick turned and saw that
one of the caddie sims had knocked his plate off the table and was doubled
over, clutching his abdomen. As he watched, a second sim slipped off the bench
and slumped to her knees, moaning.
"What the hell's going
on?" Patrick said.
But Romy was already on her
feet. "Oh, God!" she cried. "Something's wrong with the
food!" She rushed forward, shouting. "Don't eat the food! It's
bad!Bad! "
Too late. Patrick watched
helplessly as one sim after another doubled over and crumpled to the floor,
writhing in pain.
"What is it?" he
said. "Ptomaine?"
She shook her head, her face
ashen. "Spoiled food doesn't act this quickly. They've been poisoned, damn
it! Somebody's poisoned their food!"
Patrick pulled out his PCA
and punched in 911. "I'll call an ambulance-lotsof ambulances!"
"To take them
where?"
"To the emer-" He
stopped. "Shit!"
"Right. No hospital's
going to take them. They're not human."
"Then how about a
veterinary hospital?"
"Is there one around?
And even if there is, how do we get them there? I don't know of an ambulance
service in the world that'll transport animals." She pulled out her own
PCA. "But I know someone..."
"This organization of
yours?"
She glanced at him, then
turned away. He thought he heard her say "Zero."
Patrick had to do something.
With frustration mounting to the detonation point he looked around and saw Tome
still standing.
"Tome! You didn't
eat?"
The older sim shook his
head. "Not chance."
"Get up to the
clubhouse! Fast! Tell them you've all been poisoned!"
As Tome ran off, Patrick
hurried to the dorm area and began pulling blankets and pillows from the bunks.
He couldn't do anything about whatever toxin had been used to poison them, but
at least he could try to make the sims more comfortable.
"Good idea," Romy
said, close by. He looked up and saw her beside him with an armful of blankets.
"Help is on the way."
"Who? How much?"
"I don't know."
They hurried back to the
eating area where it looked like a bomb had exploded: benches on their sides,
tipped tables, spilled trays, and moaning, pain-wracked casualties strewn about
the floor. Patrick recognized Nabb, his caddie when he'd played golf here-the
last time he'dever play golf here-that fateful September day he became involved
with these sims. He lay doubled over on his side, arms folded across his
abdomen.
"Here you go,
buddy," he said, slipping a pillow under his head.
"Hurt, Mist
Sulliman," Nabb groaned. "Hurt ver bad."
He draped a blanket over
him. "I know, Nabb. We're getting help."
He spotted Deek, another
caddie he knew, and tried to make him comfortable.
"Why hurt, Mist
Sulliman?" Deek said, looking up at him with watery brown eyes.
"Why?"
"Because
someone..." A blast of fury forced him to stop and look away. Who? Who
would or could do something like this? He found it incomprehensible.
"Sweet Jesus!"
someone gasped.
Patrick looked up and saw
Holmes Carter and a slim, dapper man he didn't recognize standing behind Tome
in the barrack doorway. The stranger moved into the room, leaving the pudgy
Carter alone, looking like a possum frozen in the glare of oncoming headlights.
"Tome wasn't
kidding!" the stranger said to no one in particular. "What happened
here?"
"They started getting
sick after eating the stew," Patrick said. "Who are you?"
"Dr. Stokes. I'm an
anesthesiologist. And I already know who you are." He didn't offer to
shake hands; instead he knelt beside one of the sick sims, a female. "This
one doesn't look so hot."
Tell me something I don't
already know, Patrick wanted to say, but bit his tongue.
"None of them do. Can
you help?"
"I'm not a vet."
Romy's eyes implored him.
"Help them! Please! You treat humans. How much closer to human can you
get?"
Dr. Stokes nodded.
"Point taken. Let's see what I can do."
As the doctor began pressing
on the sim's abdomen, asking her questions, Patrick glanced around and spotted
a small, huddled form under one of the tables. With a cold band tightening
around his chest, he rushed over-Anj. She lay curled into a tight, shuddering
ball.
"Anj?" Patrick
crouched beside her and touched her shoulder; her T-shirt was soaked.
"Anj, speak to me."
A whimper was her only
reply. Patrick gathered her into his arms-Christ, she was wringing wet-and
carried her over to Dr. Stokes. Her face was so pale.
"This one's just a
baby," he told Stokes. "And she's real bad."
Patrick gently lay Anj on
the floor between them. Romy was there immediately with a pillow and blanket.
"Diaphoretic,"
Stokes said, more to himself than Patrick. He held her wrist a moment.
"Pulse is thready."
"What's that
mean?"
"She's going into
shock." He turned back to the first sim he'd been examining. "This
one too. They're going to need IVs and pressors. What in God's name did they
eat?"
Before Patrick could answer,
he heard the sound of a heavy-duty engine, slamming doors, and Carter saying,
"You can't drive that up here!"
He looked up and saw two
grim-faced men, one in a golf shirt, the other in a sport coat, file through
the door with some kind of cart rolling between them. They pushed past Carter
as if he were a piece of misplaced furniture. Two more strangers, a man and a
woman, both in flannel shirts and jeans, followed them.
"You can't just walk in
here!" Carter said. "This is a private club!"
Ignoring him, they pulled
stethoscopes and blood pressure cuffs from the cart and fanned out into the
room. The woman came over to where Patrick, Romy, and Stokes stood. She looked
to be about fifty, her long brown hair streaked with gray and tied back. She
nodded to Romy, then without a word she knelt beside Anj and the other sim and
began taking blood pressures.
"They're shocky,"
Stokes offered.
The woman looked up. Her
face was expressionless, all business, but her eyes looked infinitely sad.
"You a doc?"
"Yes, I'm an-"
"We've got saline in
the cart. If you want to help, you can start drips on these two."
Stokes nodded and headed for
the cart. The stranger moved on.
Patrick turned to Romy.
"Who are these people?"
"Doctors."
"From SimGen?"
She shook her head and bit
her upper lip. Romy's usually steely composure had slipped. She looked rattled,
something Patrick never would have thought possible. Maybe it was the
helplessness. Patrick felt it too-a need to do something but not knowing what.
"Your people
then," he said. "Your organization. How'd they get here so
fast?"
"They've been on
standby."
"You mean you expected
this?"
"Expected someone might
try to hurt them." Her eyes were black cauldrons. "Excuse me. I need
a little air."
He watched her breeze past
Holmes Carter, still standing by the door, sputtering like an over-choked
engine. Tome squatted against a far wall, his face buried in his arms. And all
around Patrick, the strange, silent doctors, gliding from one sick sim to
another.
Feeling useless, he decided
he could use a breath of night air himself, but first he had something to
say...
He stopped before Carter.
"This your doing, Holmesy?"
Carter's round face
reddened, his third chin wobbled. "You son of a bitch! If I was going to
poison anyone it would be you, not these dumb animals. They're just pawns in
your game."
The genuine outrage in
Carter's eyes made Patrick regret his words. He backed off a bit.
"Well...somebody poisoned them."
"If you're looking to
place blame, Sullivan, find a mirror. This never would have happened if you
hadn't started poking your nose where it doesn't belong."
Stung, Patrick turned away.
The truth of Carter's words hurt and clung to him as he stepped out into the
night.
Some sort of oversized
commuter van was parked on the grass outside. The doctors had driven it straight
across the club's rear lawn to the barrack door; Patrick could trace the deep
furrows under the pitiless glow of the moon peering down from the crystal sky.
Up on the rise he spotted a number of Beacon Ridge members standing outside the
clubhouse, gawking at the scene. And Romy...where was Romy?
He walked around the barrack
and spotted her down the slope by the border privet hedge. But she wasn't
alone. A tall dark figure stood beside her. After a moment, Romy turned and
began walking back up the slope; the tall man faded into the shadows of the
hedge.
"Who was that?" he
asked as she approached.
"No one."
"But-"
Her face had settled into
grim lines. "You didn't see a thing. Now let's go back inside and make
ourselves useful."
Patrick was about to comment
on what seemed to be a lot of hush-hush, undercover nonsense but bit it back.
It wasn't nonsense at all. Not when poison was part of someone's game plan.
Romy stopped dead in the
doorway and he ran into her back, knocking her forward. He saw immediately why
she'd stopped.
Chaos in the barrack. The
formerly silent, seemingly imperturbable doctors were in frenzied motion,
pumping ventilation bags and thumping sim chests.
"I've got another one
crashing here!" one called out. He was on his knees next to an unconscious
sim. He looked up and saw Romy and Patrick. "You two want to help?"
Patrick tried to speak but
could only nod.
"Name it," Romy
said.
"Each of you get an
Ambu bag from that cart and bring them over here."
Romy was already moving.
"What's an Am-?"
"Looks like a small
football with a face mask attached," the doctor said.
Romy opened a deep drawer,
removed two of the devices, handed one to Patrick. On their way back, to his
right, he noticed Holmes Carter kneeling, using one of the bags to pump air
into a sim's lungs.
Carter...?
To their left, the woman doc
waved and called out. "Romy! Over here! Quick!"
Romy peeled off and Patrick
kept on course toward the first doc. He stuttered to a stop when he saw the
patient.
Anj.
She lay supine on the floor,
limp as a rag doll with half its stuffing gone; the front of her bib overalls
had been pulled down and her T-shirt slit open, exposing her budding,
pink-nippled, lightly furred breasts.
"Don't just stand
there!" the doctor said. He was sweaty, flushed, and looked too young to
be a doctor. He had his hands between Anj's breasts and was pumping on her
chest. "Bag her!"
Patrick's frozen brain tried
to make sense of the words as they filtered through air thick as cotton.
"Bag...?" Was she
dead?
"Give me that!"
The doctor reached across Anj and snatched the Ambu bag from Patrick's numb
fingers. He fitted the mask over Anj's mouth and nose and squeezed the bag.
"There! Do that once for every five times I pump."
Patrick dropped to his knees
and managed to get his hands to work, squeezing the bag every time the doctor
shouted, "Now!" and wishing someone would cover her. Every so often
the doctor would stop pumping and press his stethoscope to Anj's chest.
"Shit!" he said
after the third time. "Nothing! Keep bagging." He pawed through what
looked like an orange plastic tool box, muttering, "No monitor, no
defibrillator, how am I supposed to...here!"
He pulled out a small
syringe capped with a three- or four-inch needle. He popped the top, expelled
air and a little fluid, then swabbed Anj's chest with alcohol.
Patrick blinked.
"You're not going to stick that into-"
That was exactly what he
did: right between a pair of ribs to the left of her breast bone; he drew back
on the plunger until a gush of dark red swirled into the barrel, then emptied
the syringe.
The doctor resumed pumping,
crying, "One-two-three-four-five-bag!"
They kept up the routine for
another minute or so, then the doctor listened to Anj's chest again.
"Nothing." He
pulled a penlight from the plastic box and flashed it into her eyes.
"Fixed and dilated." He leaned back and wiped his dripping face on
his sleeve. "She's gone."
"No," Patrick
said.
But Anj's glazed, staring
eyes said it all. Still he resumed squeezing the bag, frantically,
spasmodically.
"No use," the
doctor said.
"Try, damn it!"
Patrick shouted. "She's too young! She's too..." Heran out of words.
"Her brain's been
deprived of oxygen too long. She's not coming back."
Patrick dropped the bag and
leaned over her. An aching pressure built in his chest. He felt his eyes fill,
the tears slip over the lids and drop on Anj's chest.
A hand closed gently on his
shoulder and he heard the young doctor say, "I know how you feel."
Patrick shrugged off his
hand. "No, you don't."
"I do, believe me. We
couldn't save her, but we've got other sick sims here and maybe we can save
some ofthem . Let's get to work."
"All right,"
Patrick said, unable to buck the doctor's logic. "Just give me a
second."
As the doctor moved off,
Patrick pulled the edges of Anj's torn T-shirt together. They didn't quite meet
so he pulled up the bib front of her overalls. Then he pushed her eyelids
closed and stared at her.
How could he feel such a
sense of loss for something that wasn't even human? This wasn't like puddling
up at the end ofOld Yeller . This wasreal .
He pulled off his suit coat
and draped it over the upper half of her body. He hovered by her side a moment
longer; then, feeling like a terminally arthritic hundred-year-old man, he
pushed himself to his feet and moved on.
The next half hour became a
staggering blur, moving from one prostrate form to another, losing sim after
sim, and pressing on, until...finally...it was over.
Spent, Patrick leaned
against a wall, counting. He felt as if he'd been dragged behind a truck over
miles of bad road. He'd cried tonight. When was the last time he'd cried? Romy
sagged against him, sobbing. He counted twice, three times, but the number kept
coming up the same: nineteen still, sheet-covered forms strewn about the floor.
The woman doctor they'd met
earlier drifted by; he flagged her down.
"How many did you
save?" he said.
She brushed a damp ringlet
away from her flushed face. "Six-just barely. We've moved them into the
sleep area. They'll make it, but it'll be weeks before they're back to normal.
Counting the older sim who didn't eat, that leaves seven survivors."
"The bastards!"
Romy gritted through her teeth. "The lousy fucking bastards!" She
pushed away from him and began pounding the wall with her fist, repeating,
"Bastards!" over and over through her clenched teeth.
She dented the plasterboard,
punched through, then started on another spot.
Patrick grabbed her wrist.
"Romy! You're going to hurt yourself!"
She turned on him with
blazing eyes; she seemed like another person and for an instant he thought she
was going to take a swing at him. Then she wrenched her arm free and stalked
toward the door.
Though physically and
emotionally drained, Patrick forced himself to start after her. But when he
spotted Tome crouched in a corner, his head cradled in his arms, he changed
course and squatted next to him.
"I'm sorry, Tome,"
he said, feeling the words catch in his throat. "I'm so sorry."
Tome looked up at him with
reddened eyes; tears streaked his cheeks. "Sim family gone, Mist Sulliman.
All gone."
"Not all, Tome. Deek
survived, so did some others."
But Tome was shaking his
head. "Too many dead sim. Family gone. All Tome fault."
"No-no-no,"
Patrick said, putting a hand on his shoulder. "You can't lay that on
yourself. If anybody's to blame here-besides the son of a bitch who poisoned
the food-it's me."
Tome kept shaking his head.
"No. Tome know. Tome ask Mist Sulliman. If Tome nev ask, Mist Sulliman nev
do."
"That doesn't make you
responsible for...this. You wanted something better for your family, Tome, and
we're not going to let this stop us. I swear-"
"No, Mist
Sulliman." He struggled to his feet. "We stop. Family gone. No law
bring back. We stop. Other sim die if no stop."
"You can't mean
that!" Patrick said, stunned. "That'll mean that Anj and Nabb and all
the others died for nothing!"
Tome turned and slid away.
"No union, Mist Sulliman. Tome too tired. Tome too sad."
"Then they win! Is that
what you want?"
"Tome want sim
live," he said without looking back. "That all Tome want now."
Patrick fought the urge to
grab the old sim and shake some sense into him. They couldn't quit now-public
opinion would rush to their side after this atrocity. He took a step after him,
but the utter defeat in the slump of those narrow shoulders stopped him.
He remembered the night they
met, when Tome explained what he and the other sims wanted:Family...and one
thing other...respect, Mist Sulliman. Just little respect.
And now your family's been
murdered, Patrick thought. And the only respect you've gained is mine. And
what's that worth?
Flickering light to his left
caught his eye. He saw Reverend Eckert's face on the TV screen in the corner.
The voice was muted but Patrick knew the bastard could only be spewing more of
his anti-sim venom. With a low cry of rage he stalked across the room, picked
up an overturned bench, and raised it above his head. But before he could smash
the set, a hand grabbed his arm.
"Please don't do
that," said a voice.
He turned and found Holmes
Carter standing behind him. On any other day he would have teed off on the man,
but Carter had surprised the hell out of him tonight-worked as hard as anyone
to save the sims. And he looked it: His sport coat was gone and his wrinkled
shirt lay partially unbuttoned, exposing a swath of his bulging belly. Right
now he looked shellshocked.
Patrick knew exactly how he
felt.
"Why the hell
not?"
"What will the
survivors watch?"
Damn him, he was right.
Patrick lowered the bench
and extended his hand. "I want to thank you, Holmes. I take back anything
I've ever said to offend you."
"Sure." Carter
gave the hand a listless, distracted shake and looked around. "Gone,"
he said dazedly. "Just like that, three-quarters of our sims...gone.
Nabb...he used to be my favorite caddie, and now he's dead. Why?" He
looked at Patrick with tear-filled eyes. "What kind of sick person would
do this? What kind of a world have we created?"
"Wish I knew, Holmes.
It gets stranger and stranger."
Carter sighed. "I
realized something tonight. These sims...they're...they were...part of Beacon
Ridge. We knew them. We liked them. I'm going to tell the board to grant
collective bargaining rights, and I'm going to insist that the survivors remain
together as long as they want."
Patrick opened his mouth to
speak but found himself, for possibly the first time in his adult life, at a
loss for words.
Carter smiled wanly.
"What's the matter? Cat got your tongue?" He gave his head a single
sad shake. "Wasn't that part of the exchange that set this whole mess in
motion?"
Patrick nodded, remembering
their little confrontation in the club men's room. "Yes...yes, I believe
it was. This is good of you, Holmes."
"I just wish I'd done
it yesterday."
Without another word Carter
turned and wove his way through the dead sims toward the door.
We've won, Patrick thought-a
reflex. The thought died aborning. He looked around at the sheeted forms and
knew that if this was winning, he'd much rather have lost.
He heard an engine rumble to
life outside. He looked around and realized that the mysterious doctors had
disappeared. He hurried to the door in time to see the truck roll away across
the grass toward the road.
Romy stood there, leaning
against the barrack wall. He approached her cautiously. She seemed to have
spent her rage, so he filled her in on the latest developments.
"Tome's decision
doesn't surprise me," she said in a low, hoarse voice. "Sims aren't
fighters. But after what you'd told me about the club president..."
"Yeah. I guess I had
him wrong. People never cease to surprise me, for good or for ill. Like these
phantom doctors of yours. Where did they come from, where did they go? They pop
out of nowhere with no explanation, and then they're gone."
"I told you-" Romy
began.
"I don't want to hear
about some nameless 'organization' again. How about some specifics? Who's
behind you? And who killed those two guys when we were run off the road the
other night? I want answers, Romy."
Her expression was tight.
"Do you? Well then maybe you're in for one more surprise tonight."
"I don't think I can
handle another." He noticed a strange look in her eyes, wary yet flirting
with anticipation. "But I'll bite. What?"
"Someone wants to meet
you."
15
Romy drove. A mostly silent ride during which she replied
to his questions with terse monosyllables. He sensed an inner struggle but
hadn't a clue as to what it might be about. In his brain-fragged state, Patrick
didn't have the strength or the will to probe.
She stopped at a small cabin
on the edge of Rye Lake. Patrick stepped from her rented car and looked around.
The surrounding woods lay
dark and silent; the cabin was an angular blotch of shadow with no sign of
habitation; on its far side a dock jutted into the lake where tendrils of mist
rose into the chill air from the glassy moonlit water.
"Doesn't look like
anyone's home," he said.
Romy was moving toward the
cabin. "Look again. And use your nose."
Patrick sniffed the air. A
wood fire somewhere. And now he saw a thin stream of smoke drifting from the
cabin's chimney. Okay, so someone was inside. But who? Along the way Romy had
told him that he'd find out when they got there. Just what she'd told him when
she'd led him to the sim whorehouse. This time would be different. He wasn't
going through that door until-
But Romy wasn't waiting for
him. She was already halfway to the house.
He hurried to catch up to
her. "This cloak and dagger stuff is getting to me."
"Relax. You may find a
cloak here, but no dagger." Without warning she leaned forward and kissed
him-too briefly-on the lips. "Thanks."
"What for?"
"For hanging in there
tonight. For caring."
Patrick touched his mouth
where the warmth of Romy's lips lingered. He wanted more, but she'd already
opened the door and pushed through. He followed her into the dark interior, lit
only by the glow from the fireplace.
"Over here, Romy,"
said a deep voice near the fire. Patrick could make out a dark form seated in a
high-backed chair, positioned so that the light came from behind him. The
figure leaned forward and extended a hand. With a start Patrick realized he was
masked. "Welcome, Mr. Sullivan."
Hesitantly Patrick stepped
forward and shook the hand, surprised to find it was gloved. "And you
are...?"
"My name is Zero."
And that stands for what?
Patrick thought. IQ? Personality rating? But he said, "Interesting
name."
"Forgive the
melodramatic trappings," Zero said, "but we take security very
seriously."
Melodramatic barely touches
this, Patrick thought. I'm standing in the dark talking to a masked man.
But it was right in tune
with the nightmarish unreality of the past few hours.
"Just who might 'we'
be?"
"A loose-knit
organization I've put together."
"An
organization...what's it called?"
"I've resisted naming
it. Once a group gives itself a name, it tends to take on a life of its own;
the group can become an end in itself, rather than simply a means."
"What end are we
talking about here?"
"In a nutshell: to
protect existing sims from exploitation and stop SimGen or anyone else from
producing more."
"Tall order."
"We know."
"How many
members?"
"Many."
"Like those doctors who
showed up tonight?"
"Yes. Volunteers. They
were on standby in case of disaster."
"Which we had-in
spades."
"Yes. Mistakenly I had
expected more direct violence, a bomb or the like. I had the barrack under
guard." Zero's voice thickened. "I never thought to guard the
kitchen."
Romy said, "So it was
one of the help?" The flickering firelight accentuated her high
cheekbones, glittered in her eyes. Even in the dark she was beautiful.
"I doubt it. That
sample of stew you brought me was laced with a very sophisticated synthetic
toxin we've been unable to identify. This was not the work of a jealous kitchen
hand or a union goon. Whoever did this has considerable resources."
"SimGen," Patrick
said.
"Not impossible, but
out of character. SimGen has always protected its sims."
"But have its sims ever
posed a threat before?"
Romy spoke. "That's a
point, but we're coming to believe that SimGen is not quite the free-standing
entity it presents to the public. That it's not pulling all its own strings.
This may be the work of another shadow organization within SimGen or linked to
it."
Uh-oh, Patrick thought,
sniffing paranoia. What next? New World Order conspiracy? Trilateral
commission? Illuminati?
Only Romy's presence kept
him from backing away. He couldn't think of anyone more firmly grounded in
reality. And he couldn't deny the reality of the poisoned Beacon Ridge sims.
"But why kill those
sims?"
"Because what threatens
SimGen," Zero said, "threatens the shadow group. And in this case,
the sims were the logical target: Lawyers are replaceable, plaintiffs are
not."
"Thanks a lot,"
Patrick said, but knew it was too true. "Any idea who they are?"
"No, but we've got the
start of a trail, and we're following it. That's why I've asked you here
tonight, Mr. Sullivan. We'd like your help."
"You want to hire
me?"
"Not exactly. You'd be
an unpaid consultant, a volunteer like Ms. Cadman."
"I don't work for
free."
"Even for people who
saved your life?" Romy said.
She had him there.
"Glad you brought that up: Just whodid save my life?"
Zero said, "Join us and
you'll know...eventually."
"You need me in the
legal field?"
"There, and wherever
else your unique brand of ingenuity can be of service."
"Flattery will get you
everywhere."
"And who knows?"
Zero said. "We may be able to position you for another crack at SimGen's
deep pockets."
"Now you're
talking."
"I thought that might
sell you," Romy said.
"I'm not sold yet.
You've been calling the shots for Romy, I assume."
Zero inclined his head.
"I merely suggest...she is always free to decline, just as you will
be."
"But who's calling the
shots for you?"
"No one."
"You could be just
telling me that."
"I could. But I'm
not."
"So you're funding this
operation?"
He shook his head. "I
raise money in various ways...donations from a number of sources."
"I must have missed the
last annualFree the Sims telethon."
No one laughed. Tough crowd,
Patrick thought. But then, after what had happened tonight, what did he expect?
"Your point?" Zero
said.
"Money tends to come
with strings."
"True. And these
donations come with one string, and only one: Stop SimGen."
"What about freeing the
sims?"
"That will be the
fallout, but first we shut down the pipeline. Once we cut off the flow of new
sims, we can deal with the problem of what to do with those who already
exist."
"These donors...who are
they-specifically? I like to know who's footing the bill."
"I will partially
answer that when you join us, with the proviso that you never breathe a word of
what you learn. But I must warn you not to accept my invitation lightly. The
deeper you delve into this morass, the more you'll see that nothing connected
with it is what it appears to be. And there's danger. You've witnessed
firsthand on more than one occasion the ruthlessness of the other side. We're
in a war, Mr. Sullivan, and any one of us could become a casualty."
Patrick swallowed. Where had
his saliva gone? But if Romy was in this and willing to take the risks, how
could he stand here next to her and back out? What kind of a man would that
make him?
Perhaps a man who'd live to
a ripe old age.
"What about if I decide
I don't like what you're up to? If I want to walk, I want be able to do so with
no strings."
"Of course. As long as
you understand that you're not walking away from the confidentiality
agreement."
Hoping he wouldn't regret
this, he managed a shrug and a nod that conveyed a lot more bravado that he
felt.
"Fair enough. I'll give
it a try. Do I have to sign in blood?"
Zero shook his head.
"Your word is enough."
He raised his hand and a TV
flickered to life on the far side of the room. Diagonal lines danced across the
screen, then the Reverend Eckert's face appeared.
"Jerk!" Patrick
said.
"Give him a
listen."
Eckert's face looked grave,
anguished. His voice was at least an octave lower than his usual ranting tone.
"My friends...I have
just heard that a number of sims-nineteen of them, I'm told-have been killed.
Poisoned. These were the sims who were trying to unionize. This is very
disturbing. More than disturbing, it's a terrible, terrible thing, and I hope,
I pray to the Good Lord that no one in my flock is responsible. Because if one
of you is, then I must shoulder some of the blame. It might have been my words
that drove one of you to this terrible deed. If so, then I have been
misunderstood. Terribly misunderstood.
"So hear me now,
friends, and hear me well.
"I wish no harm to any
sim. I have never, ever preached violence against
them. I have said they were
created by evil, Satan-inspired science, and I know that to be true, but I have
never said the sims themselves were evil. They are not. They are the innocent
products of unnatural science who should be allowed to live out their lives in
peace.
"Violence toward sims
is not the way. If you kill sims, you only give SinGen the excuse to produce
more. We want SinGen tostopproducing sims. We must use the law-the law,my
friends-to cut off the supply at its source by piercing the beating evil heart
of the problem. And that heart is the devil corporation that subverts the Laws
of Creation by fashioning creatures that are not part of God's design.
"Please. I beg of you:
Do not harm sims. That is not the answer-it is, in fact, counterproductive.
Spreading the word, boycotting businesses that lease sims, endlessly harassing
SinGen in court until it finally surrenders. That is the way, my friends. The
only way.
"And to continue
fighting that battle, I need your support..."
The screen went blank.
"His standard request
for contributions follows," Zero said.
"When did he broadcast
that?" Patrick said.
"He hasn't. He rushed
it into production and it's going out to replace his previously scheduled
message."
"How'd you get
it?"
"The Reverend Eckert is
part of the organization. One of its major contributors, in fact."
For the second time tonight
Patrick found himself speechless.
Romy smiled, her first in
too many hours. The pearly enamel within her smile caught the light, giving her
a Cheshire Cat look.
"If only you could see
your face! Oh, God, I wish I had a camera!"
16
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
NOVEMBER 14
As soon as Luca stepped into the room, the usually
listless Sinclair-2 rose from his seat and came toward him. He looked like he'd
slept in his clothes; his face flushed as he started shouting.
"It was you, wasn't it!
You killed those sims! You monster! Youmonster !"
"Calm down,
Ellis," Abel Voss said, putting an arm around the man's shoulders.
"You can't go makin wild accusations like that."
"I can!"
Sinclair-2 cried. "I know this man's methods. And if he didn't do it
himself, he sent one of his hired thugs!"
No, Luca thought. I did it
myself. A one-man op. That's what you have to do sometimes if you want to be
sure a job gets done right.
It had taken Luca about a
week after the Saw Mill River Parkway debacle to put all the pieces in place.
Two nights ago he'd made his move.
But the op developed an
early hitch: a tail. If he hadn't been looking for one, he never would have
spotted it. But he'd been prepared.
He'd driven into midtown
Manhattan and valet-parked his car at the New York Hilton, then zipped through
the lobby and out a side exit where he hailed a cab that took him to a second
car that had been left for him in a lot near the theater district. He'd driven
out of town immediately, directly to Westchester where he'd parked a good mile
from the Beacon Ridge Country Club. He'd walked the rest of the way, ducking
into the shadows whenever a car approached. When he reached the club, he'd
huddled in the hedges until the sims were all in their barrack and the last
human had left.
Or so he'd thought. That was
when he'd almost got caught. He'd been about to step out of the bushes when he
spotted two dark figures gliding between the shadows near the barrack. As he'd
watched, they separated, one swiftly climbing a tree, the other disappearing
into the bushes.
Someone had the sim quarters
under guard. Sullivan? Cadman? No matter. That hadn't been Luca's destination.
He was headed for the sprawling structure on the crest of the hill, the club's
main building.
Soon he'd reached his
destination: the kitchen. Once he'd located the cooking pot labeledSIMS he
removed a vial of clear odorless liquid from his breast pocket. A brand new
compound sent down through Lister from SIRG; so new it didn't have a name yet,
only a number: J7683452.
He'd emptied the vial into
the big pot and begun swirling the liquid around, coating the sides and bottom.
When it dried, it was invisible. The only thing that could have gone wrong was
somebody washing out the pot. But it had been hung up clean, so that was
unlikely.
Amazing stuff, J7683452. He
could have stuck his head into that pot, licked its insides clean, and he'd be
fine. Perfectly harmless in that state. But heat it to a hundred-and-sixty
degrees or more and...
Bon appétit.
As for here and now, he
didn't owe the Sinclair brothers an explanation. And they didn't deserve one.
"Admit it, Portero! You
murdered those nineteen sims!"
"Murdered?" he
said with a calculatedly derisive snort-few things gave him more pleasure than
getting under these twits' skins. "They're animals. They can be killed,
they can be slaughtered, they can be sacrificed to the gods, but they can't be
murdered."
With a hoarse roar
Sinclair-2 launched himself at Luca, only to be hauled back by the heavier, stronger
Voss.
"You don't want to be
doin that, son," Voss said. "Trust me, you don't."
"Ellis, for God's sake
control yourself!" Sinclair-1 said.
"Listen to them,"
Luca said softly.
He hadn't moved a muscle.
He'd take no pleasure in hurting Sinclair-2-it would be like fighting a
woman-but he could not allow another man to lay a hand on him.
Sinclair-2 struggled a
moment, then pulled free and returned to his usual spot on the sofa where he
dropped his face into his hands.
What gives with that guy?
Luca wondered. How can he be such a wimp?
"Did you?"
Sinclair-1 said, staring at him. "Were you responsible for poisoning those
sims?"
"Does it matter?"
Luca said.
No one answered.
Just as I thought. They
don'twant to know.
"Just tell me one
thing," Voss said. "And think very carefully on your answer: Will the
perpetrator or perpetrators ever be found?"
"My guess?" Luca
shook his head. "Never. But whoever they were, they did us a favor. The
Beacon Ridge club has surrendered. They're giving the sims what they
want."
"Since when?" Voss
said. "I ain't heard nothin about this."
"That's because they
haven't made the announcement yet."
"If that's true,"
the attorney said, his eyes widening, "it takes the matter out of the
court's hands."
"No precedent,"
Sinclair-1 whispered.
Luca watched cautious
optimism grow in their eyes. He'd be sharing in that good feeling if not for a
call he'd received this morning. Nothing more than a hoax, he hoped-prayed. Or
maybe a wild fantasy cooked up by some drugged-out waste of protoplasm. He'd
fed it to Lister who'd pass it up the SIRG ladder, but he'd keep it from the
Sinclairs for now. He suspected a leak somewhere, and if he was right, the less
said here, the better.
But he dearly wished he
could lay it on these two. The mere mention now of what the woman on the phone
had told him would snuff out the relief warming Sinclair-1 and Voss as if it
had never been.
Because if this woman had
been telling the truth about a sim named Meerm, it made the threat they'd just
overcome seem like a pebble in a mountain gorge.
THREE
Meerm
1
THE BRONX
NOVEMBER 30
Poor Meerm. Poor, poor Meerm. She ver sick sim. Meerm nev
sick before. Not like be sick. Food come up sometime. And tummy hurt.
Hurt-hurt-hurt. Bad tummy hurt all time.
Meerm stand window, look out
through metal bar. Wish she be outside sometime. Not now. Cold out now. Still-
What that? Loud noise from
downstair. Again! Loud noise again.Crack! Like giant plate break. Meerm go
door, open just little and listen. Hear loud scare word by Needle Lady and
Needle Man, hear new man voice shout more loud, hear sim voice, many voice
cryee-ee-ee! Ver fraid, other sim.
Meerm hear new man voice
shout, "Where is she?" and hear ver fraid Needle Lady say,
"Upstairs! We moved her upstairs!"
Meerm ver fraid. Make belly
hurt badder. Hear many loud feet come stair. Meerm want close sick room door
but no good. Across hall see ladder up wall. Ladder up to little door. Meerm
sure locked-all door here locked-but Meerm try. Must try. Too fraid stay sick
room.
Meerm jump cross hall, climb
ladder, push little door. Move! Door move! Meerm so happy. Climb up roof.
Cold-cold-cold. Close little door. Meerm listen. Hear new man voice shout. Ver,
ver mad. Hear foot on ladder. Come roof! What Meerm do? Where go?
There. Metal hole. Meerm can
fit? Run and crawl in. Squeeze ver hard. Sink inside just as mans come roof.
Meerm close eye, not breathe as mans run all round roof. Man look in metal hole
but not see Meerm.
Mans ver mad as leave roof.
Meerm safe but still not move. Wait. Meerm will wait long long time. Wait
until-
What smell? Smoke! Smoke and
hot come up vent. Meerm get out and stand on roof. Tar hot on foot. Smoke all
round. Meerm ver ver scare. Run round roof, see fire evwhere. Look down. Flame
all round, come out bar on all window. Meerm not want die. But roof ver hot.
Tar melt under Meerm foot. What Meerm do?
Meerm scream. No one hear.
No one near.
2
MANHATTAN
DECEMBER 1
Patrick stood at his hotel window and gazed down at the
top of Madison Square Garden and the giant Christmas snowman atop its entrance.
The unrisen sun was just beginning to lighten the low clouds lidding the city.
In a few hours the streets below would be packed with the weekly Saturday horde
of Christmas shoppers.
Patrick had been awake for
hours. This had become a pattern every night since the poisoning of the sims.
Fall asleep easily-with the help of a couple of stiff Scotches-and then find
himself wide awake at 3:00A .M. or so with his mind sifting through the
litterbox his life had become.
All because of an argument
in a country club men's room. What if he hadn't chosen that moment to go to the
bathroom? What if he'd waited until after that second drink? Holmes Carter
would have been long gone, and without Carter's bad attitude, Patrick would
have laughed off Tome's request to unionize the club sims. If he'd done that,
where would he be now?
For one thing, he'd still
have a law practice; he missed Maggie, even missed some of his clients. He'd also
have a house instead of a fire-blackened foundation. And he might still have
Pamela, although he wondered if that would be such a good thing. From his
present perspective he could see that their relationship had been one more of
mutual convenience than rooted in any deep regard.
He probably wouldn't have
spent Thanksgiving alone, either. Ever since his folks retired to South
Carolina, they'd always called and insisted he come down for Thanksgiving. Not
this year. That was Dad's doing, Patrick was sure.
He'd known Dad had been
upset with the whole idea of a sim union-he'd made that perfectly clear over
the phone on more than one occasion-but Patrick hadn't realized just how much
until Thanksgiving came and went without an invitation.
That had hurt. Even now,
more than a week later, the wound still ached.
So here he was: jobless,
homeless, alone, and functionally orphaned. And aligned with a masked mystery
man who'd invited him to join a nameless fifth column movement to bring down
one of the world's most powerful multinational corporations.
"And I said yes,"
he whispered, still not believing it.
This is not me, he kept
telling himself. This is somebody else. All I wanted out of life was stability
and a good living. That was why I went into law. I am not a risk taker. I am
not an adrenaline junkie. How did I come to this? And how do I get out of it?
Easy. Just say no. Pack up
and walk away.
And do what? Labor
relations? After what he'd been through, could he go back to sitting at a table
and listening to union and management argue over the length of coffee breaks or
who qualified for daycare? Not likely.
And then there was Romy.
Walking away from Zero meant walking away from her.
So for the foreseeable
future he'd stick this out and see where it took him.
Hopefully it would soon take
him out of this hotel. Zero had suggested he relocate himself and his practice
to Manhattan. Romy had laughed off Patrick's suggestion that he move in with
her while he hunted for an office and an apartment. So for the time being, home
was a room in the Hotel Pennsylvania. Finding space-whether living or
office-wasn't easy. The new boom had sent prices in Manhattan up to where the
new space station was nearing completion.
The jangle of the phone
startled him. He stepped through the dark room to the night table, found the
phone, and fumbled the receiver to his ear.
Romy's voice: "Am I
interrupting something?"
"Only my daily predawn
reverie."
She gave him an address.
"If you haven't anything better to do, meet me there ASAP. I'll wait for
you."
Patrick sensed strain in her
voice, but before he could ask for any details she hung up.
Dutifully he pulled on
yesterday's clothes, grabbed a large container of coffee on his way through the
lobby, and ventured into the early morning chill of Seventh Avenue in search of
a taxi.
The driver shot him a look
when he read off the address. "You're sure?"
"I'm sure,"
Patrick told him after double-checking.
The driver
shrugged-reluctantly, Patrick thought-and gunned the cab into the traffic.
Patrick considered that look
and thought, Romy, Romy, what are you getting me into now?
3
THE BRONX
All too soon Patrick understood the driver's reaction. The
address was in the fabled borough of the Bronx. Not the nice Botanical Gardens
Bronx, but the bad Bronx, theBonfire of the Vanities /"Fort Apache"
Bronx. This particular section embodied most people's worst expectations: a
wasteland of scattered buildings, some occupied, some abandoned, all battered,
interspersed with vacant, garbage-strewn lots.
"Christ, what happened
here?" Patrick muttered as he stepped out of the cab.
As soon as he closed the
door behind him, his taxi chirped its tires and zoomed away. Patrick couldn't
blame him. At least there were lots of cops around. No need to ask why they
were here: The charred, smoking ruin of what must have been a cousin to the
neighboring derelict buildings was the obvious center of attention. No fire
trucks in sight now, but a couple of red SUVs bearing fire department logos
stood out among the cluster of blue-and-white units blocking the street.
He glanced around and
spotted Romy's long black cleathre coat among the gaggle of onlookers standing
outside the yellow police tape.
"Not exactly my idea of
a fun place to spend a Saturday morning," he said as he reached her.
"You're here," she
said, but no smile lit her grim expression. "Good. We can get
started."
"'How are you,
Patrick?'" he said. "'Did you sleep well?' Why, yes, Romy. Thank you
for asking. And how was your night?"
"Save it," she
said, lifting the tape and ducking under. "Follow me."
Patrick complied as she
approached a burly, clipboard-wielding sergeant.
"Excuse me,
Sergeant," she said, holding up a leather ID folder. "Romy Cadman,
OPRR. Please fill me in on what you've found."
The sergeant swiveled his
head and gave her a quick up and down with his pale blue eyes.
"O-P-what?"
"Office for the
Protection of Research Risks. We're federal. We monitor labs and test subjects,
animal and human. Lieutenant Milancewich at Manhattan South notified me that
this building might have housed an unlicensed lab and that sims could have been
involved."
Patrick knew Romy had no
authority to be here, but said nothing, just stood by and admired her moxie as
she weathered the sergeant's hostile stare.
"He did, did he? Well,
I ain't heard of no OPRR and no Lieutenant Milancewich, and you're one hell of
a long way from Manhattan South. We can handle this just fine without no feds
nosing into it."
"Of course you
can," Romy said. "OPRR has no investigative authority. We're only
offering help. We know labs. We can trace diagnostic equipment better and
faster than anyone. We know lab animals. If sims were used as test subjects
here, we can help you track them. Our interest is purely statistical: We're
keeping tally of illegal labs and what biologicals they produce." She
opened her cleathre coat to return her ID folder to an inner pocket, revealing
in the process a tight, black, ribbed knit sweater and long legs slinking from
a short black skirt. "We're a resource, sergeant. Use us."
The sergeant's eyes lingered
on her coat as she tied it closed, then he stuck out his hand.
"Andy Yarger."
Romy smiled and shook his
hand. "Call me Romy."
Patrick resisted an impulse
to close his eyes and shake his head. If that had been him popping up in front
of Sergeant Yarger with an OPRR ID, he'd have been kicked back on the far side
of the yellow tape before he'd spoken word one. But Romy had just reduced this
Bronx-hardened cop to a lap dog.
The weaker sex? Yeah, tell
me about it.
"And who's this?"
Yarger said, jutting his chin Patrick's way.
"That's my assistant,
Patrick."
Patrick smiled and nodded at
the sergeant, thinking, That's me, all right: faithful sidekick and gofer.
Yarger narrowed his eyes.
"Ain't I seen you before?"
"About the lab
equipment?" Romy prompted.
"Your lieutenant friend
was right. We found bits and pieces of all sorts of lab equipment in the
wreckage. Some of it's been identified as-lemme see." He consulted his
clipboard. "Here we go: hematology machines, blood chemistry analyzers,
immu...immuno..."
Romy was nodding. "I
get the picture. Who identified the equipment?"
"Couple of M-E's
boys."
"M-E?" Patrick
said when he saw Romy's stricken look. "Sims were killed?"
"We should be so lucky.
Nah. Just one very dead, very crisp human corpse. Male, age unknown."
Patrick stared at the
burned-out ruins and couldn't help grimacing. They reminded him of what
remained of his house, and how "crisp" he could have been.
"What a way to
go."
"Wasn't the fire that
got him. A bullet saved him from that."
"Really?" Patrick
said. "You're sure?"
Yarger gave him a steely
look.
"What he means,"
Romy added quickly, "is how can you tell if he was, as you say, 'very
crisp'?"
The sergeant poked an index
finger against the center of his forehead. "Ain't never seen no fire burn
a little hole here and blow off the back of a skull, know what I'm
saying?"
"I hear you," Romy
said. "But no, er, 'crisp' sims?"
"Not yet anyways. Don't
expect to find none either."
"But Lieutenant
Milancewich mentioned sims."
"Right. We have a
witness who saw armed men herding a bunch of sims and some humans into a couple
of vans just before the place lit up." He shook his head. "I don't
know what sort of incendiary devices they used, but they musta been beauts.
Place went up like it was made of paper."
"But therecould be dead
sims in there," Romy persisted.
Yarger crooked a finger and
started moving away. "C'mere. I'll show you why there won't be."
Patrick and Romy followed
him to a taped-off area near the corner. Yarger stopped and pointed to the
sidewalk.
"That's why."
Red spray-painted letters
spread across the pavement.
FREE THE SIMS!
DEATH TO SIM OPPRESSORS!
SLA
"SLA?" Patrick
said with a glance at Romy.
Her face was troubled when
she met his eyes. "I know what you're thinking," she whispered.
"But no. Impossible. He'd never."
"The Symbionese
Liberation Army?" Patrick raised his voice to cover hers. "Didn't
they kidnap Patty Hearst?"
"Different group,"
Yarger said. "These assholes are the 'SimLiberation Army.' Don't that beat
all."
"How do you know?"
Romy said.
"That's what they
called themselves in the note they left."
"What else did it
say?"
"Buncha sim-hugger
garbage. The usual stuff. You know the rap."
"May I see it?"
Yarger gave Romy a
you-gotta-be-kidding look. "Forensics got it." He turned as someone
called his name. "Yeah. Be right there." Then back to Romy.
"Look, you wanna leave me your card, we'll call you if we think we need
help. But don't wait up for it. And for the time being, stay on the other side
of the tape, okay?"
Patrick expected Romy to
press him further, but she simply nodded. Patrick lifted the tape for her and
she ducked under. She pulled out a compact camera and began snapping pictures.
"For your
scrapbook?"
"For Zero. He'll want
to see."
"Speaking of
Zero," he said, leaning close and whispering. "Did you call him about
this?
"You don't call Zero.
You leave a message."
"Could he be behind
this?"
She lowered her camera. Her
look was fierce. "I told you-"
"Does he consult you on
everything he does? Of course not. So how do you know?"
She started snapping
pictures again. "I just do. He lets me take care of the brothels and
places like this. That'smy job."
"Well just what sort of
place is it-or I guess I should say,was it?"
"A globulin farm."
"A what?"
"I thought I explained
that when-wait. Did you see that Asian man?"
"No. Where?"
"He was in that knot of
people over there. I just pointed the camera in his direction and he ducked
away. Where did he go?"
She rose on tiptoe to scan
the area, then quickly ducked back.
"Oh, hell!" She
spun, turning her back to Patrick as she started moving toward the corner.
"Don't look around, just follow me."
"Why?"
"Just do it. I don't
want to-"
"Well, well!" said
a man's voice behind him. "If it isn't Ms. Romy Cadman of OPRR. Fancy
meeting you here."
"Shit!" Romy
hissed; it sounded more like escaping steam than a word.
As she turned, so did
Patrick. He saw a swarthy, broad-shouldered man in a gray overcoat swaggering
toward them. Patrick took an instant dislike to his smug expression. But his
cold, dark eyes were his most arresting feature. Patrick felt like a mouse
being scrutinized by a rattlesnake. But then the man's gaze flicked away.
Patrick had been demoted from lunch to background scenery.
"Mr. Portero,"
Romy said in a deep-freeze voice. "What a surprise."
"I don't see why it
should be. Sims were reported on the scene, and SimGen has a vital interest in
the welfare of all sims."
"Sure it does,"
Romy said, drawing out the first word. "But to send its chief of
security?"
"'Free the sims' is not
a phrase SimGen takes lightly, especially when it involves murder. I decided to
look into this myself."
"You should introduce
yourself to that sergeant over there," Romy said. "His name's Yarger
and he's anxious for all the help he can get."
"I'm sure he is."
Portero jerked a thumb toward the smoking ruin. "What do you think?
Globulin farm?"
"That's my guess."
Patrick remembered now.
"That's where they infect sims with viruses and such and then drain off
and sell their immune globulins, right?"
The man turned his
glittering stare on Patrick. "And you are...?
"This is a
friend," Romy said. "Patrick Sullivan. Patrick, meet Mr. Portero,
security chief at SimGen."
"Oh, yes," Portero
said. "I believe I've heard of you. Some sort of lawyer, right?"
Patrick noticed that Portero
had clasped his hands behind his back as he spoke. A handshake seemed out of
the question.
"Some sort, yes,"
Patrick said. "But about this globulin farm...?"
"A small operation from
what I can gather," Portero said.
Patrick glanced at the
blackened ruins. "Not any kind of operation now."
"Thanks to this
so-called SLA," Portero said. He stared at Romy. "Ever hear of them,
Romy?"
Patrick felt his insides
clench at the sound of her first name on Portero's lizard lips, but said
nothing.
Romy regarded him coolly.
"Not till this morning."
"I don't understand
their methods," Portero said, rubbing his jaw as he looked around. "I
can see them making off with the sims, to free them later. But why fire the
building? What if they'd missed a few sims in their raid? They'd have been
cooked just like that corpse." He turned to Romy. "Did your sergeant
friend mention finding any sim bodies?"
"No, thank God."
"Yes...Thank God."
Portero's eyes became distant; he seemed to recede for a moment, then gathered
himself. "But why did these terrorists make off with the humans as
well?"
"Your guess is as good
as mine," Romy said.
Portero smiled as he shook
his head. "Oh, I doubt that, Romy. I doubt that very much."
And then he swaggered away.
"Something about this
has got him worried," Romy said. "He's putting on a good show, but
something's bothering him."
"Is that why he never
blinks?"
"He doesn't have to; he
has nictitating membranes."
"That figures. And his
tiny reptile heart is set on you."
Romy's lips twisted.
"Yeah, I know."
"But I'm taller."
She smiled for the first
time since he'd arrived. "You know, sometimes I'm glad you're
around."
"Only sometimes?"
She hooked her arm through
his and started walking. "Let's go grab some breakfast and wait for Zero
to get back to me."
"Excellent idea, but in
a better neighborhood, if you please."
As they moved away he
glanced back at Portero, intending to give him a look-what-I've-got wink, but
thought better of it when he saw the fierce look in those icy dark eyes.
4
MANHATTAN
They were just finishing a leisurely breakfast at an East
Seventies café when Romy's PCA went off. She checked the readout:
GARAGE 10AMØ
She was glad for the change
from the Worth Street basement. Use one place too often and eventually the
wrong person was going to make the right connection. She and Patrick hopped a
cab to the West Side.
"I don't see a
garage," Patrick said as they stepped out onto Ninth Avenue in the
Thirties.
He noticed the sidewalks
were busy here, but nowhere near as crowded as the midtown madhouse a few
blocks east.
"It's down the street,
closer to Tenth. But let's stand here awhile. Just to be sure no one followed
us."
The sun had poked through
the clouds but did little to moderate the chill wind whistling off the Hudson.
"Do you ever ask
yourself if you're crazy?" Patrick said, looking around as if expecting to
see trench-coated men lurking in doorways.
"All the time."
"Good. That's a healthy
sign. Because I think we're both crazy."
"I think I know where
this is going."
"Do you? Great. Then
maybe you can tell me why we're at the beck and call of this guy. Who is he?
What's driving him? Why's he doing this? What's in it for him?"
"I can't answer all
your questions," she told Patrick, "but I can tell you why he's doing
it: to stop the slave trade of sentient beings."
"But what's in it for
him?"
"Cessation of the slave
trade of sentient beings."
"Bull. Idealistic
crap."
The words stung Romy.
"You don't believe people can be motivated by ideals?"
"Foot soldiers can be,
and they often are. But not the generals, not the guys running the war. They've
got something else driving them, whether it's a better place in history or a
spot closer to their god or riches or fame or glory or power or revenge or
guilt; there's always something in it for them."
"What about Gandhi? Schindler?
Father Damien? Mother Teresa?"
He shrugged. "Everyone
in the world knows their names. Maybe that's what they were after."
"I'm glad I'm not
you," she said. "What an awful way to view life."
"Maybe I've seen too
many so-called idealists caught with their hands in the till."
"A corrupt individual
doesn't corrupt the ideal."
"No argument there, and
I didn't bring this up to start one. But look at the situation. Here's a guy
who has to have spent a fortune setting up this nameless organization to stop
SimGen, and then he hides his identity from everyone who works for him. I can
see him not trusting me, but what about you? You say you've worked with him for
years. He's got to know you're in this for the long run. Why doesn't he let you
see his face?"
"How do you know he
hasn't?" she shot back.
Patrick's eyebrows jumped.
"Has he?"
"No."
"See what I mean?"
"Maybe he's someone
we'd recognize."
"Yeah, there's a
thought. You know...he seems to be built a lot like David Letterman."
Romy wasn't going to dignify
that with a response.
"Let's walk," she
said, satisfied that no one was on their tail.
"Seriously, though, I'd
feel a lot better about this Zero guy if I knew what makes his motor run."
Patrick seemed to be in summation mode as they headed toward Tenth Avenue,
walking sideways, the wind ruffling his blond hair as he gestured with his hands.
"If it's because a SimGen truck ran over his mother when he was a kid,
fine. Or if he's got huge short positions on SimGen stock, fine. Or even if
it's because of something crazy like Mercer Sinclair stole his girlfriend in
seventh grade, okay too. I just want to know so I can have a handle on how much
he'll risk to get what he wants. Because so far we're the ones in the line of
fire, not him. He wasn't in my car when it was run off the Saw Mill. He wasn't
at Beacon Ridge when the sims offered to share their poisoned food with
us."
Romy hated to admit it, but
Patrick was making sense. She'd been taken with Zero from their first meeting.
She'd sensed the fire burning beneath all his layers of disguise, and had been
warmed by its heat. But what fueled that fire? It was a question she'd never
asked. She'd assumed it burned the same as her own, an all-consuming desire to
right a wrong. Was that foolish? Perhaps. But she had to go with what she felt.
"All I can tell
you," she said, "is that I believe in his cause and he's never let me
down. I don't intend to let him down."
He sighed. "Fair
enough. I'm trusting your judgment. For now."
Down near Tenth, Romy
stopped before a dirty white doorway next to an equally dirty white roll-up garage
door and pressed a buzzer. She glanced up into the eye of an overhead security
camera and nodded once, signaling that all was clear. The door buzzed open.
Inside, a single dusty bulb
glowed in the ceiling. They found Zero, barely visible in the gloom, his tall
lean figure swathed in sweater, jeans, ski mask, dark glasses, and gloves,
pacing beside a beat-up Ford Econoline delivery van, once white, now soot gray.
"Have you heard any
more about this SLA group?" he said without preamble.
Romy sensed the tension in
his voice.
"Nothing. I called a
few of the cops I know but nothing's broken yet beyond the identity of the
corpse in the ashes: Craig Strickland, a twenty-four-year-old loser with a
history of assaults."
"Doesn't sound like
your typical globulin farmer."
"They figure he was
security. He may have tried to resist. As for the SLA, an all-points has been
issued but they and their captives seem to have vanished."
"Two vans filled with
human and sim hostages and no one's seen a thing?"
"Not yet."
Zero slammed a gloved fist
against the already dented side of the van.
"Damn! Whoare these
psychos? What do they hope to accomplish for sims by murdering humans? Not that
the world is any poorer for the loss of a globulin farmer, but killing him
shifts the focus. The public's attention is on the murder now, not on the sims
the dead man was abusing."
"Pardon my
paranoia," Patrick said, "but maybe that's the whole point. Maybe
these aren't sim sympathizers. Maybe SimGen is behind them."
"I don't buy
that," Zero said, "but let's assume SimGen has somehow come to the
conclusion that the gains from high-profile murder will, by some stretch of the
imagination, outweigh the risks. If that's true, and if they're going to spray
paint 'Death to sim oppressors' at the scene, then why kill only one of the
globulin farmers? Why not make a real statement and kill them all?"
"Hostages?"
Zero's expression was
unreadable behind his mask and shades, but Romy could imagine a dour look as he
stopped his pacing and faced Patrick.
"How many people can
you see stepping forward to pay a globulin farmer's ransom?"
Patrick shrugged. "Okay.
So much for the hostage idea."
"'Death to sim
oppressors!'" Zero said, slamming his fist against the van again.
"Damn them! Idiots!"
Romy had never seen him show
so much emotion. She found it oddly exciting.
Down, girl, she told herself
as she pulled her digital camera's chip case from her pocket.
She said, "I may have
another piece to add to the puzzle. I took a shot of an Asian man-Japanese, I
think-at the scene. He ducked away as soon as he saw the camera. I've never
seen him before, and it may mean nothing, but he was definitely camera
shy."
Zero seemed to have calmed
himself. He took the chip. "I'll see if he's anyone we should know
about."
"But what's the
plan?" she said. "What do we do about this SLA?"
"No choice but to wait
and see. I doubt we'll have much of a wait. A group like that won't want to
stay out of the headlines. But in the meantime, we're ready to make our move
against Manassas Ventures."
Romy stiffened.
"When?"
"Monday, first thing in
the morning. Are you up for it?"
Monday...she'd have to take
a personal day.
"I think so."
She wasn't looking forward
to this. It involved playing a role, pretending she was a kind of person she
despised. She hoped she could bring it off.
Zero's dark lenses were
trained on her. "Something wrong?"
She didn't want to let him
in on her apprehensions. He had enough on his plate.
"I just keep thinking
about those sims." And that was no lie. "Whoever these SLA people
are, I hope they're taking good care of them."
"Amen to that,"
Zero muttered. He shook his head. "'Free the sims.' Don't they understand?
Sims have never been allowed to learn to fend for themselves. A free sim isn't
free at all. It's a lost soul."
5
THE BRONX
Poor Meerm.
Meerm feel so bad. So more
bad than last night. Now Meerm still belly-sick but cold and hungry also too.
Also too arm hurt where burn while climb down building side. And leg hurt from
fall ground. Hurt-hurt-hurt. Meerm hurt all over.
And Meerm ver fraid. Hide in
bottom old empty building. No window and many rat. Rat sniff at Meerm burn.
Shoo way, throw rock. Bad place this. And so cold. Meerm miss own room and
yum-yum food. Wish go back but room gone. She go look in dark. All burn, all
gone.
Meerm ver lonely. Meerm ver
fraid. Not know what do. Not know where go.
6
HICKSVILLE, LONG ISLAND
DECEMBER 3
Shortly after 8:00A .M. Romy stepped through the front
door of the small two-story office building and made a show of looking at the
directory. The vestibule was clean but showing some wear around the edges. Just
like the building, which was typical of the boxy, clapboard style popular back
in the seventies. The tenants listed-a dentist, a real estate office, an
insurance agent-were typical of any suburban office building; all except the
lessee of the small corner office on the second floor: a venture capital
company she knew was worth billions.
Romy hurried up to the
second floor and found the door to Suite 2-C. A strictly no-frills black
plastic plaque spelled outMANASSAS VENTURES ,INCin small white letters. She
waited outside the door until she heard someone climbing the steps, then she
started knocking. A woman in a colorful smock appeared, heading for the dental
office, and Romy turned to her.
"When does the Manassas
Ventures staff usually arrive?"
The woman looked
dumbfounded. "You know, I don't think I've ever seen anybody coming or
going from that office."
That's because no one does,
Romy thought. Zero had had the place under observation for weeks.
"Really?" Romy
said, putting her hand on the doorknob and rattling it. "I've been trying
to reach them by phone but no one returns my messages, so I thought I'd come
over in person and-"
The door swung inward.
"Now isn't that
something," the dental assistant said as she stepped forward for a peek at
the interior. "They must've forgot to lock it."
Morning sunlight streamed
through the sheer curtains behind an empty receptionist's desk and flared the
dust motes dancing through the air. No shortage of dust here-the desktop
sported a good eighth of an inch.
"Hello?" Romy
said, stepping inside. The air smelled stale, musty. No one had opened a window
for a long, long time. "Anybody home?"
"Good luck," the
woman told Romy and started back toward her office.
"Thanks."
Romy had to act quickly. She
glanced up, searching for the strand of monofilament she'd been told she'd find
hanging from the central light fixture. There it was, a length of fine fishing
line, barely visible.
Two of Zero's people had
broken in over the weekend. They'd unlatched the door and rigged the fixture to
drop when the fishing line was pulled.
The original plan had been
to loosen the hinges on the door so that it would fall outward when Romy tugged
on it. She would let it knock her down and claim a terrible back injury. But
Patrick had vetoed the idea. An injury caused by the door might leave the
landlord as the liable party rather than the tenant. And it was the tenant they
were after.
The most open-and-shut
scenario-he'd called itres ipso loquitor -was to arrange for Romy to be
"injured" by a tenant-installed fixture. After some reconnoitering,
the fluorescent box in the ceiling over the reception area had received the
nod.
Romy was supposed to pull
the string and let it crash to the floor, then stagger out and collapse in the
hall, pretending it had landed on her.
Pretend...she'd never been
good at pretending. How was she supposed to slump to the floor out there and
moan and groan about being hurt and have anyone buy it? And the Manassas
people, when they heard about it they'd know that what had happened here was
all a sham, a set-up designed to drag them into the legal system and expose
their corporate innards. They'd respond with lawyers using every possible legal
ploy to keep their secrets.
They'll play hide, we'll
play seek. A game.
But this was no game to her.
Romy was serious. She'd show them just how serious.
Acting quickly, before the
dental assistant could unlock her office across the hall, Romy stepped under
the fixture and yanked on the line.
Her cry of pain was real.
7
Patrick sat in the driver seat of Zero's van, idly
watching the little office building. He'd parked across the street in a church
parking lot-Our Lady of Something-or-other-and left the engine idling to run
the heater, but he was keeping his window open to let out the pungent odor that
seemed to be ingrained into the van's metal frame. The driver seat felt like
little more than a sheet of newspaper spread over a collection of rusty
springs.
But the sharp jabs against
his butt were inconsequential compared to the discomfort of sharing the van
with the shadowy form seated behind him. Here was a perfect opportunity to
probe Zero, maybe get a line on what made this bird tick, but Patrick found
himself tongue-tied.
What do you say to a masked
man?
Had to give it a shot:
"Do you mind if I ask you a personal question?"
Zero's deep voice echoed
from the dark recess at the rear of the van. "Depends."
"Why do you call
yourself 'Zero'?"
"That is my name."
Ooookay. Try another tack.
"How about them Mets?" That was usually a foolproof conversation
opener, especially out here on the Island, even in the off-season. "What
do you think of that last round of trades?"
"I don't follow
sports."
Okay, strike that. Maybe if
we concentrate more on the moment...
"You have any idea what
this van was used for before you got it?"
"It was a delivery
truck run by a Korean Christian group in Yonkers."
"Smells like they
spilled a gallon of roast puppy stew on the way to the annual church potluck
dinner."
Patrick heard a soft
chuckle. "I can think of worse things to spill."
Hey, he laughs!
"You mean, be grateful
for small favors, right?"
"Small and large. I'm
grateful the Reverend Eckert has finally been able to purchase space on a
satellite."
"That means he'll be
beaming his anti-SimGen sermons direct."
"Right. No more worries
about SimGen influencing the syndicate that distributes his show to local
stations. Not only can he beam his shows to the syndicate, but he's now got
direct access to anyone with a satellite dish."
"Nice. A big jump in
audience."
"I'm grateful
too," Zero said, "for how well you and Romy are working
together."
"So far, so good. She's
a piece of work."
"That she is. One very
intense young woman. Tell me, Patrick, do you hope for a closer relationship
between the two of you?"
Patrick blinked in surprise.
Odd question. "Do you mean working or personal?"
"Personal."
"Is there something I
don't know?" he said, turning to look at Zero. He wished he'd take off
that mask. "Is there something going on between you and Romy? Because if
there is-"
Zero gave a dismissive wave.
"Nothing, I assure you. I am...unavailable."
That was a relief.
"Well, okay, but all I
can say is, whether or not we go the next step is up to her. If you're worried
about a romance between us interfering with our job performance, rest easy. The
lady has thus far found the strength of character to resist my charms."
"Which I'm sure are
considerable."
"As me grandma used to
say," he said in a pretty fair Irish accent, "from yer lips to Gawd's
ear."
"Speaking of God, I've
been looking at this church. Are you Catholic?"
"With a name like
Patrick Michael Sullivan, could I be anything else?"
"Practicing?"
"No. Pretty much the
fallen-away variety. Haven't seen the inside of a church for some time."
"But you do believe in
God."
"Yeah, sure."
Where was this going?
"Did you know that some
sims believe in God, even pray to Him?"
"No. I didn't."
For some reason the idea made him uncomfortable. "Any particular
faith?"
"They tend toward
Catholicism. They like all the statues, although they find the crucifix
disturbing. They're most comfortable with the Virgin Mary. Pick through any sim
barrack and you'll usually find a few statues of her."
"I can see that. A
mother figure is comforting."
"Sims pray to God,
Patrick. But does God hear them?"
"What do you
mean?"
"Do sims have souls?"
"This is heavy
stuff."
"Most enlightened
believers accept evolution. Genetics makes it impossible for an intelligent
person to deny a common ancestor between chimps and humans. Some theologians
posit a 'transcendental intervention' along the evolutionary tree, the moment
when God imbued an early human with a soul. So I ask you, Patrick: When human
genes were spliced into chimps to make sims, did a soul come along with
them?"
"To tell the
truth," Patrick said, "I've never given it an instant's thought until
you just mentioned it."
Who had time to ponder such
imponderables? Zero, obviously. And it seemed important to him.
"Think about it,"
Zero said. "Sims praying to a God who won't listen because they have no
souls. Imagine believing in a God who doesn't believe in you. Tragic, don't you
think?"
"Absolutely. But I
wonder-"
The wail of a siren cut him
off. He watched as an ambulance screamed into the parking lot across the
street.
"You think that's for
Romy?"
"I imagine so."
Zero's voice now was close behind him. "I told her to give it her best
performance."
They watched a pair of EMTs,
a wiry male and a rather hefty woman, hurry inside. A few moments later they
reemerged, pulled a stretcher from their rig, and hauled it inside.
"Wow," Patrick
muttered. "She must be bucking for an Oscar."
He kept his tone light but
felt a twinge of anxiety at the way those EMTs were hustling. A long ten
minutes later they exited, wheeling the stretcher between them. But it wasn't
empty this trip. Patrick could make out a slim figure in the blanket. Had to be
Romy. He noticed that her head was swathed in gauze...with a crimson stain
seeping through.
"Shit!" he cried,
fear stabbing him as he reached for the door handle. "She's
bleeding!"
"Wait!" he heard
Zero say, but he was already out and moving toward the street.
No way he could sit in a van
and watch Romy be wheeled into an ambulance by strangers when she was hurt and
bleeding. Her gaze flicked his way as he dashed into the parking lot. When he
saw her hand snake out from under the blanket and surreptitiously wave him off,
he slowed his approach. And when she gave him a quick thumbs-up sign, he veered
off and headed for the office building. He waited inside until the ambulance
wailed off, then crossed back to the van.
"She seems okay,"
he said as he climbed back into the driver seat.
"Wonderful,"
replied the voice from the dim rear.
"But what the hell
happened in there?" He threw the shift into forward and took off after the
receding ambulance. "She was supposed to stand clear and fake being hurt.
How the hell did she cut her head open?"
"I should have foreseen
this," Zero said. "This is so Romy."
"What do you
mean?"
"Don't you understand?
She had to make it real. She had to send a message to Manassas and SimGen and
whoever else is involved that she's ready to bleed for her beliefs."
"Sheesh," Patrick
muttered.
"Isn't she
wonderful."
It wasn't a question. In
that moment Patrick realized that the mysterious Zero, although
"unavailable," was as smitten with Romy Cadman as he was.
"What is it about
her?" Patrick said. The ambulance was still in sight, though blocks ahead.
Tailing it was easy in the light traffic. "I mean, you're obviously taken
by her, and I confess I'm drawn to her-"
"Drawn?"
"Like a moth to a
searchlight. And then that guy Portero-"
"The SimGen security
chief?"
"He's got it bad for
her. Might as well have written it on his forehead in DayGlo orange. What is it
about Romy Cadman?"
"Simple: her
purity."
Patrick didn't have to ask.
He knew Zero wasn't talking about virginity. He was talking about heart, about
purpose.
"I hear you. But
Portero didn't strike me as the kind who'd go for that."
"Some men approach
purity like Romy's simply to protect it from harm; and some wish to draw closer
in the hope that it will rub off on them or somehow cleanse them; and others
want to possess it merely to defile it and extinguish it because it reminds
them of what they have become, as opposed to what they could have been."
Patrick glanced Zero's way
in the rearview. He'd obviously given a lot of thought to this.
"Well, I guess we know
where Portero fits in that scheme."
"I think we do."
"But how about
you?"
A long pause, then Zero
said, "If my circumstances were different, I'd be content merely to warm
myself in her glow. And if I couldn't do that I'd settle for curling up outside
her door every night to keep her safe from trespassers."
Patrick swallowed,
unexpectedly moved.
"You know, Zero,"
he said, his voice a tad hoarse, "I've got to admit I've had my doubts
about you. Major, heavy-duty doubts. But now..."
"Now?"
Patrick didn't know quite
what to say. Any man who could pinpoint Romy as Zero had, and who could not
only feel about her the way he'd described, but come out and say it...
"You're all
right."
Lame, but the best Patrick
could do at the moment. At least it was sincere. Romy would appreciate that.
8
Patrick parted the curtains that separated Romy's
treatment area from the rest of the bustling emergency room. She sat on the
edge of a gurney, her head swathed in fresh gauze-but no seepage this time. She
looked pale and tired, but even so, to Patrick she was a vision.
"How are you
feeling?"
A wan smile. "I've got
a killer headache but I'll survive."
He leaned close. "How'd
you get hurt?"
"You've heard the
expression, 'Shit happens'? Well-"
Patrick clapped his hands
over his ears. "The 'S' word! Saints preserve us!" He wanted to throw
his arms around her but made do with seating himself next to her on the gurney.
"Seriously. What happened?"
"This lighting fixture
fell from the ceiling and clocked me on the noggin; things get a little fuzzy
after that. Took the ER doc hours to get to me, then after she stitched up my
scalp there were x-rays and-"
"How many
stitches?"
"The doctor said
seventeen."
"Seventeen!" The
number horrified him.
"It's not as bad as it
sounds. She said she placed them close together to keep the scar thin."
Scar?"Jesus, Romy-"
She smiled. "Not like
I'm going to look like the bride of Frankenstein, or anything. It cut my scalp,
way up above the hairline. Once the hair grows back where they shaved it, no
one will know, not even me."
Relief seeped through
Patrick. The lighting fixture had been his idea. If it had left Romy
disfigured...
"Why, Romy?"
"Relax, will you. I got
a tetanus shot out of it, and a free ride in a stoplight-running ambulance.
It's no biggie, Patrick. Really."
"Is to me. Zero
too." Patrick had driven him to the garage, then rushed back here.
"He wants me to call him as soon as-"
"I'll call him."
"How many days are they
going to keep you?"
"Days? More like
minutes. They're finishing up my paperwork now."
"You're kidding!"
Patrick realized his knowledge of medicine was just this side of nothing, but
wasn't it standard procedure to admit a head-trauma patient for observation, at
least overnight? "They're letting you go?"
"Be real, will you.
It's just a cut on my head. I can-"
"Excuse me," said
a male voice.
Patrick looked up and saw a
dark-haired man in a gray suit standing between the parted curtains.
"Are you her
doctor?" Patrick said. If so he was going to warn him about the
malpractice risks of releasing Romy too early.
The man flashed a
collector's edition set of pearlies. "Not a chance. I'm an attorney and
I'm looking for the woman who was injured in the Manassas Ventures offices this
morning."
Patrick stared at him. He'd
met his share of ambulance chasers, but this guy really lived up to the name.
"That would be
me." Romy shook her head. "But I don't need a lawyer. I've-"
"You're absolutely
right. And that's precisely why I'm here." He handed Romy a card.
"Harold Rudner. I represent Manassas Ventures." He set his briefcase
on the gurney and popped its latches. "The company called me the instant
its landlord informed it of this unfortunate incident. I was instructed to find
you and compensate you immediately for the pain and inconvenience you have
suffered."
"Compensate me?"
He lifted the briefcase lid,
removed a slip of paper, and extended it toward Romy.
"Exactly. Although your
injury resulted from shoddy work by remodeling contractors, Manassas is taking
full responsibility and offering you this to ease your distress."
Romy took the slip and
stared at it. "A check? For a hundred thousand dollars?"
"Yes." He pulled a
sheaf of papers from the briefcase. "And all you need do to have your name
written on the pay-to-the-order-of line is sign this release absolving Manassas
Ventures of all liability and refrain from any future-"
"Wow!" Patrick
said, impressed. "Hit her while she's still dazed from the terrible
concussive impact of her life-threatening head injury, then shove a check under
her nose and tell her all those zeroes can be hers if she'll just sign away her
legal rights to just compensation for an injury that might affect her quality
of life for years, maybe decades, perhaps permanently. Youare a smoothy."
Romy and Rudner were staring
at him.
Finally Rudner spoke.
"Are you her lawyer?"
"I am a very close personal
friend who just happens to be an attorney."
Rudner turned to Romy.
"I am offering you far more than you could hope to receive from any
jury."
"We'll see about
that," Patrick said. "One hundred thousand dollars barely scratches
the surface of the amount this unfortunate woman deserves for her pain and
suffering."
Romy smiled and handed back
the check. Rudner took it with a sad shake of his head.
"You're making a big
mistake," he told her. "One you'll regret when a jury offers you only
a fraction of this-one third of which will go to your attorney. This could be
all yours, every cent of it."
Romy's hands flew to her
mouth as she gave Patrick a wide-eyed stare. "Oh, Patrick! Am I making a
terrible mistake? You know how I depend on your wisdom. Tell me. I don't know
what to do!"
Patrick had to look away. It
took all his will to keep a straight face. When he had control, he turned back,
took both her hands in his, and lowered his voice an octave. "Trust me, my
dear. I am well versed in these matters. You deserve much, much more."
"All...all right,"
she said, her voice faltering. "If you say so."
Rudner shook his head again
and closed his briefcase. As he lifted it off the gurney he turned to Patrick.
"And you calledme a
smoothy?"
As soon as he was gone they
both doubled over in silent laughter.
"Life-threatening head
injury?" Romy gasped, red-faced.
Patrick countered with,
"'You know how I depend on your wisdom'? I thought I was going to get a
hernia!"
She pressed her hands
against her temples. "Oh, I shouldn't laugh! It makes my headache
worse!"
Patrick looked at her.
"I know this is serious business, but I couldn't resist. That was
fun."
She frowned. "Do you
think he knew who we were?"
"Not a clue. He's a
hired gun." Patrick shook his head, still amazed at how quickly the
company had responded. "A hundred grand for a cut head offered to someone
they might just as easily have charged with trespassing. If this is any
indication of how badly Manassas wants to avoid the legal system, I think we're
onto something."
9
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
DECEMBER 7
"So," Mercer Sinclair said, "the missing
globulin farmers have surfaced." He'd chosen that word deliberately but
his little pun went unappreciated by his audience. So he added,
"Literally."
That at least elicited a
smile from Abel Voss.
Mercer had invited the usual
crew-Voss, Portero, and Ellis-to his office to discuss the matter. He had his
agenda for the meeting posted in a corner of the computer monitor embedded in
the ebony expanse of his desk while his custom news service scrolled items
tailored to his topics of interest.
"Postmortem ain't back
yet," Voss said, "but the M-E's on notice to copy us immediately with
any and all results."
"I'm told the bodies
appear to have been in the river about a week."
Voss nodded. "All three
of them shackled together and weighted down. But the Hudson's gotta way of
returning some of the gifts it gets. Looks like these SLA boys took 'em for a
ride that very night, shot them in the head, then dumped them before
sunup."
"But not before
torturing them," Ellis said.
Mercer glanced at his
brother. Ellis hadn't missed a meeting in months now. Maybe his latest
anti-depressant cocktail was working. Mercer knew he should be glad about that
but he wasn't. The closer Ellis was to catatonia, the easier he was to deal
with.
"Yep, I heard that
too," Voss said. "Cigarette burns, fingernails tore off." He
grimaced. "Ugly stuff."
"They were globulin
farmers, Abel," Mercer said, unable to keep the scorn from his tone.
"Somebody improved the gene pool by removing them."
"Don't get me wrong,
son. I ain't no fan of their sort. Riddin the world of their kind is all fine
and good. But torture? Ain't no call to torture no one, son. No one. I think
we're dealin with some real sick puppies here."
"Which segues very
neatly into the reason for our meeting: the 'sick puppies' who call themselves
the Sim Liberation Army. It's been a week since they raided that globulin farm
and no one knows any more about them today than they did then. And where are
the sims they supposedly wanted to free?" He turned to his chief of
security who had yet to say a word. "Mr. Portero, if the NYPD is at a
loss, surely your people have the resources to pick up the slack, don't you
think?"
Portero shrugged.
"We're looking into it."
"This needs more than
mere looking into, Mr. Portero. We need to track them down. It's vitally
important that SimGen be recognized as the true guardians and protectors of
sims, not some group of murderous radicals."
Portero said, "The
longer they go undetected, the lower the odds of finding them. And so far they
seem to have pulled off a perfect disappearing act."
"Which means
what?"
"That they're probably
professionals-well-funded professionals. Which makes me wonder if they might
not be connected to that lawyer Patrick Sullivan."
"Why on earth would you
think that?" Ellis said.
"It's not a stretch. A
quarter of a million dollars appeared out of the blue to keep his unionization
case going just when it was ready to fall apart. And I saw him and the Cadman
woman outside the globulin farm the morning after this SLA demolished it."
Cadman? Mercer thought.
Didn't I just see that name? He'd been about to switch the topic to the annual
stockholders' meeting less than two weeks away, but instead he reversed the
scroll on his newsclips.
"On the contrary,
Portero," Ellis said. "It'squite a stretch. People who try to use the
legal system to seek a solution don't suddenly leap to murder and arson."
Portero's face remained
impassive as he replied. "Perhaps Sullivan became a bit testy after his
clients were put down."
Ellis stared at him.
"You lousy piece of-"
"Gentlemen,
gentlemen," Voss said, shifting his considerable bulk in his seat and
raising his hands. "We're not the enemy here. The enemy is outthere
."
"Really?" Ellis
said. "Sometimes I wonder."
Cadman...Mercer kept
searching his screen. There. Found it. A suit against Manassas. He smiled. He'd
long ago embraced his anal-completist nature because it so often paid
unexpected dividends. Like now: Years ago, when he'd begun using the service,
he'd entered 'Manassas Ventures' as a search string; this was the first hit
he'd ever seen. He clicked on the abstract to bring up the full article; he
felt a sweat break as he skimmed it.
"Listen to this,"
Mercer said. "Someone is suing Manassas Ventures."
He noticed a slight stiffening
of Portero's parade-rest stance. "Is that so?"
"Manassas is in your
people's bailiwick. Why don't you know about this?"
"We have lawyers for
legal problems. What's the suit about?"
"Let's see...no dollar
amount given, just 'unspecified compensatory and punitive damages.'"
"No, I mean the reason
for the suit."
"Lots of things. Here's
just a sample: 'physical injury, pain, suffering, mental anguish and trauma,
unpleasant mental reactions including fright, horror, worry, disgrace,
embarrassment, indignity, ridicule, grief, shame, humiliation, anger, and
outrage.'"
Portero snorted.
"Probably a stubbed toe. They'll put a check in front of him and he'll go
away."
"I doubt it. It's not a
him. It's a her named Cadman. Romilda Cadman."
Portero's smug reptile mask
dropped and, just for a second, Mercer caught a flash of uncertainty.
Portero...unsettled? The possibility turned his stomach sour, like curdled
milk.
"The OPRR inspector
lady?" Voss said. "The one who funded Sullivan's sim case? What
thehell ?"
"Care to guess what
attorney is representing her?"
"I don't have to,"
Voss said. "Gotta be Sullivan."
Mercer noted that Portero's
dumbfounded look had surrendered to tightlipped anger. He glanced at Ellis,
expecting some sort of comment, but his brother remained silent, his expression
unreadable.
"Right," Mercer
said. "Patrick Sullivan again. I don't like this."
"This makes no
sense." Portero's voice was even softer than usual. "What can they
possibly hope to gain? Are they that desperate for cash?"
"Oh, I doubt money's
got a thing to do with this," Voss said. "It will take them years to
get a decision, and even if they win, more years before they ever see a dime.
No, instead of thinking about money, we should be asking why the man who
harassed SimGen about unionizing sims is now harassing the venture capital
company that helped put SimGen in business. I find that real disturbin."
The question disturbed
Mercer as well. "You're the lawyer," he told Voss. "Have you got
an answer?"
"I'm bettin he wants to
use the discovery procedures of a civil action to dissect Manassas Ventures'
workings-its board of directors, its assets and liabilities, the whole
tamale."
Mercer's gnawing sense of
malignant forces converging on him had receded after the withdrawal of the sim
unionization suit, but now it returned with a gut-roiling vengeance.
"Why Manassas? Beyond
owning a bundle of SimGen stock, it has no direct link to us."
"Not anymore, but it
used to. Obviously he's sniffed out something and he's going after it."
"Maybe it's just a
fishing expedition," Mercer said, but he didn't believe it.
"Could be, but why in
that particular pond? And let's face it, Manassas is such a well-stocked pond,
he just might hook something."
No one spoke then. The idea
that anyone would want to lift the Manassas Ventures rock and inspect what was
crawling around beneath it had never occurred to Mercer. He'd been assured that
Manassas was a dead end. But what if wasn't? What if someone found a trail that
led from Manassas to SIRG?
This had to be stopped. Now.
Before it went any further.
He looked at Portero.
"Your people can handle this, can't they?"
"Wait a minute, wait a
minute," Voss said, holding up a hand before Portero could reply.
"Before we start talking about stuff I don't want to hear, why don't you
just buy her off?"
Portero stared at him.
"Buy her off? You don't know this woman. I spent days with her during the
OPRR inspection and let me tell you, she is not for sale."
Voss grinned. "Sure she
is, son. I've waded through truckloads of bullshit in my day, but I've learned
one thing always holds true: Everybody's got a price tag. Some hide it better'n
others, but you look hard enough, you'll find it. Your folks've got pockets
deep as a well to China. You have them tell her to name a price, and then you
meet it. And that'll be it. You'll see."
But Portero was shaking his
head. "I don't think there's enough money in the world."
Mercer was surprised by
something in his tone. It sounded like admiration.
10
MANHATTAN
DECEMBER 8
Zero had called and asked Patrick to come over to the West
Side garage. Romy was already there when Patrick arrived. With oversized
sunglasses hiding her fading shiners, and a baseball cap covering her
stitched-up scalp, she looked none the worse for wear.
Patrick asked her how she
was doing, and of course she told him fine. She was always "fine."
She said she'd be even better when the stitches came out tomorrow.
Patrick rubbed his hands
together. The old radiator running along the cinderblock wall only partially
countered the afternoon chill. Neither Romy nor Zero seemed to feel it. Of
course Zero, swathed head to toe as usual, would be the last to chill.
"We heard from the
Manassas attorneys," he told them. "They want a meeting. Soon. I set
it up for next Thursday, my office." He glanced at Romy. "Can you
make it?"
"I'll be there."
"My only regret is that
I couldn't add my own charges to the suit."
"On what grounds?"
"Loss of services and
consortium."
"You," she said,
pointing a finger at him, "are incorrigible." She tried to look stern
but he could see she was fighting a smile. She turned to Zero. "Did you
have any luck with my photo?"
"Quite an interesting
picture," Zero said, handing Romy an eight-by-ten color print.
The dim light made it hard
to see details. Patrick craned his head over Romy's shoulder for a better look,
but found himself gazing at the nape of her neck instead, focusing on the
gentle wisps of fine dark hair trailing along the curve. He leaned closer,
drinking her scent, barely resisting the urge to press his lips against the
soft white skin...
"That's him, all
right," Romy said. "Does he have a name?"
"Yes. It took me a
while to trace him but-"
"Christ!" Patrick
said. He pointed to a spot at the rear end of the ceiling. "Who's
that?"
He'd glanced up and caught a
flicker of movement above and beyond Zero, at the point where a ladder embedded
in the rear wall of the garage ran up to a square opening in the ceiling. He
could swear he'd seen a pair of eyes peering out at them from within that
darkness.
Zero didn't turn to look.
"Where?"
"There! In that
opening! I saw someone!"
The opening was empty now,
but he knew what he'd seen.
"I'm sure you
did," Zero told him. "But it was no one you need concern yourself
with at the moment. Now-"
"Wait a minute, wait a
minute," Patrick said, walking over to the ladder. "If someone's up
there listening, I want to know who it is."
"Someone's up
thereguarding ," Romy said. "Please, Patrick. Let it go for
now."
He didn't like letting it
go, but short of climbing up there and entering that patch of night-something
he had no inclination to do-Patrick didn't see that he had much choice. He'd
come to trust Zero, and if he said someone was guarding them, then Patrick
would buy it.
"All right," he
said, turning back. "Where were we?"
Zero said, "The man in
the photo looked Japanese so I scanned him into a computer and had it comb the
databases of the Japanese government and major Japanese corporations." He
held up a printout of a full-face photo of someone who bore a passing resemblance
to the man in Romy's shot. "This came back with a sixty-three percent
confidence match."
"That's him," Romy
said without hesitation.
"You're sure? The
computer wasn't."
"Don't care. I saw him
live and that's him."
"Fine," Patrick
said. "Now...who him?"
"Yoshi Hirai,
Ph.D.," Zero said. "Top recombinant man for Arata-jinruien
Corporation."
"Which is...?"
Patrick had never heard of them.
"A division of Kaze
Group and one of SimGen's potential competitors. They want to raise their own
sims but so far haven't met with any success. They even started a dummy
corporation to pirate the sim genome but were caught. They'll do anything to
cut into the sim market."
"What was a creep like
that doing at the fire?" Romy asked.
"Exactly what I'd like
to know."
Patrick said, "Could
the SLA be Japanese? But why hijack sims when they can lease as many as they
want? And why these globulin farm sims?"
"Never mind why,"
Romy said. "How about where? Where are those sims? That's my concern. I
hope they don't end up like their farmers, or get spirited off to Japan. We'll
never find them."
11
RIVERSIDE PARK
Meerm so very sad. Live all alone in bush. Walk night,
hide day. Find clothes, dirty, smelly, but warm. Wear three shirt and two pant.
Steal blanket. Carry all night while search food.
Pain wake Meerm in bush
home. Dark come now. Many people walk. Meerm know must stay hid till late.
Meerm so hungry. Peek out bush. Ver near big round building made stone. See
lady point, say, "Granztoom."
Meerm not know what
granztoom.
Meerm move along wall, stay
dark spot. Climb to street. Put blanket over head and walk. Keep face down,
look sidewalk. So fraid people hurt if see Meerm, but people walk fast, not
look Meerm.
Meerm look for light-front
place people eat. Can find food in dark behind. But see no place yet. Street
dark. Hear noise behind. Meerm so scare, push against wall, turn. Building door
open. Sim come out. Two sim, three sim, many sim. Meerm watch as more sim than
count line up straight at curb.
Meerm see bus come and all
sim go in. Meerm so cold, so hurt, so lone. Meerm drop blanket and go behind
last sim. Climb step, sit empty seat. Bus dark and warm. Meerm curl up, close
eye.
12
WESTCHESTER COUNTY, NY
Patrick's breath steamed in the night air as he strolled
across the rear lawn of Beacon Ridge toward the sim barrack. He'd been back
only once since the night of the poisoning. He wasn't sure exactly why he'd
come tonight. Talking about sims with Romy and Zero this afternoon had made him
think of Tome. He'd returned to Katonah to sign some papers dealing with his
property-someone had made an offer on what was left of his home and he'd
accepted-and gave in to an urge to see how the old sim was doing.
As he reached for the knob
on the barrack door it opened and out stepped Holmes Carter. He jerked his
portly frame to a halt, obviously startled.
"Sullivan?"
"Carter. Fancy meeting
you here."
Carter didn't offer to shake
hands, neither did Patrick. They'd reached a détente but that didn't make them
friends.
"I was just about to
say that myself," Carter replied. "You're trespassing, you
know."
"Yeah, I know. But ease
up. I'm not looking for new clients. Just visiting an old one. Promise."
"Tome?"
"Yeah." Patrick
noticed Carter staring at him from under his protruding forehead, saying
nothing. "Something wrong?"
"I guess you could say
I'm amazed. I figured since the sims dropped the union idea and were no further
use to you, we'd never see you again."
"That's usually the way
it goes with client-attorney relationships, but these were special
clients."
Another long stare from
Carter. He was making Patrick uncomfortable.
"You're full of
surprises, aren't you, Sullivan." Then he sighed. "Maybe it's a good
thing you're here. Tome isn't doing too well."
Aw, no. "Is he
sick?"
"I had a vet check him
and she says no. He does his washroom duties, but just barely. He's listless,
eating just enough to stay alive, and spending all of his free time in his
bunk."
It occurred to Patrick that
Holmes Carter seemed to know an awful lot about this aging sim.
"What brings you down
to the barracks? Never knew you to be one to mix with the help."
He looked away. "Just
checking up on him. So sue me, I'm worried."
Now it was Patrick's turn to
stare. He remembered how Carter had pitched in to help the poisoned sims, and
now this.
"You're no slouch in
the surprise department yourself, Holmes." This had to be one of a handful
of times he'd addressed the man by his first name.
"The board wants him
declared D and replaced. I was giving him a pep talk but I'm not getting
through. Want to take a crack at him?"
Patrick knew that if Tome
were human he'd have been offered grief counseling after the killings. The poor
old guy must be really hurting.
He stepped past Carter into
the barrack.
"I'll give it a
shot."
With Carter following,
Patrick wandered through the familiar front room, past the long dining tables
and battered old easy chairs clustered around the TVs in two of the corners.
The gathered sims glanced at him, then returned to what they were doing. He
thought of the joyous welcomes that used to greet him, but most of those sims
were dead or still at work, finishing up in the club kitchen. These replacement
sims didn't know him.
But wait...he remembered one
sim, a caddie...
"Where's Deek?" he
said.
Carter glanced around.
"I don't see him. Might be sitting outside. The other survivors seemed to
have bounced back, but not Tome."
That's because he was the
patriarch, Patrick thought.
He proceeded into the rear
area and looked around. The dorm area was dimly lit; his gaze wandered up and
down the rows of bunk beds, searching for one that was occupied.
"Left rear
corner," Carter said. "Lower bunk."
Patrick started forward,
puzzled. He'd already looked at that bunk and had thought it was empty. But now
he could see a shape under the covers, barely raising them, curled and facing
the wall.
"Tome?" he said.
The shape turned and Patrick
recognized Tome's face as it broke into a wide smile.
"Mist Sulliman?"
The old sim slipped from under the covers and rose to his feet beside his bed.
"So good to see."
Patrick's throat constricted
at the sight of Tome's stooped, emaciated form. Wasn't he eating at all?
"Good to see you too,
Tome."
He held out his hand and,
after a second's hesitation, Tome reached his own forward.
"You come see Mist
Carter?" Tome said as they shook hands.
"No, Tome. I came by to
see you." Patrick saw something in Tome's eyes when he said that,
something beyond gratitude. "But Mister Carter tells me you're not doing
well. He says you spend all your free time in bed. Are you sick, Tome? Is there
anything I can do?"
"Not sick, no," he
said, shaking his head. "Tome sad. See dead sim ever time walk through eat
room. Can't stay. Tired all time."
Patrick nodded,
understanding. Tome had to go on living in the building where the sims he'd
considered his family were murdered, had to eat in the room where they died. No
wonder he was wasting away.
Then Patrick had an idea,
one he knew would cause complications in his life. But the sense of having
failed Tome and his makeshift family had been dogging Patrick since that
terrible and ugly night, and helping him now wasn't something he merely wanted
to do, it was something he needed to do.
"You know what you
need?" Patrick said. "You need a change of scenery. Wait here."
He went back to Carter,
pulled him into a corner and, after a ten-minute negotiation, the deal was set.
"All right, Tome,"
he said, returning to the bunk. "Pack up your stuff. You're going on a
vacation."
Tome's brow furrowed.
"Vay-kaysh..."
Poor old guy didn't even
know what the word meant. Patrick decided not to try to explain because this
wasn't going to be a real vacation anyway. Simply removing Tome from the
barracks might be enough, but Patrick thought the old sim would want to feel
useful.
"You're going to stay
with me for a while. I've got a brand new office and I need a helper."
Tome straightened, his eyes
brighter already. "Tome work for Mist Sulliman? But club own-"
"That's all taken care
of."
Patrick had convinced Carter
to allow him to take over Tome's lease payments for a month or so. As club
president, Carter had the authority, and the board couldn't squawk too much
because it wasn't costing the club a penny. The lease payments wouldn't be
cheap but Patrick had all that money left in the Sim Defense Fund and figured
it wouldn't be a misappropriation to use some of it to help a sim.
As for keeping Tome busy,
the old sim had taught himself to read so it shouldn't be a big stretch for him
to learn to file.
"Unless of
course," Patrick said, "you'd rather stay here."
"No, no," Tome
said, waddling over to a locker. "Tome come."
As Patrick watched him stuff
his worldly belongings into a black plastic trash bag, he wondered at his own
impulsiveness. He'd been planning to convert the second of the two bedrooms in
his newfound apartment into a study, but he guessed that could wait. Let Tome
have it for a month or so. Who knew how much of his abbreviated lifespan the
old sim had left?
Not as if it's going to
interfere with my love life, Patrick thought, thinking of the persistently
elusive Romy.
"Tome ready, Mist Sulliman,"
the sim said, standing before him with straightened spine and thin shoulders
thrown back.
"Let's go then,"
Patrick said, smiling at himself as much as at Tome. He felt like Cary Grant
teaching Gunga Din to drill. Not a bad feeling; not bad at all. "Time to
see the world, Mr. Tome."
13
NEWARK, NJ
"Hey, you sim."
Finger poke Meerm. Open eyes
and see sim look in face.
"You new sim? You no
work. Why you ride?"
"Cold. Hurt.
Sick."
"Beece tell drive
man."
"No!" Meerm sit
up. Look out window. Bus on bridge cross water. Whisper, "No tell mans!
Mans hurt Meerm!"
"Mans not hurt."
"Yes-yes! Mans hurt
Meerm. Make Meerm sick. Please-please-please no tell mans!"
Other sim look round, say,
"Okay. No tell mans." Sit next Meerm. "I Beece."
"I Meerm." Look
window. "Where go?"
"Call Newark. Sim home
there."
Ride and ride, then bus stop
by big building. Meerm follow Beece and other sim out. Up stair to room of many
bed, like room of many bed in burned home.
Meerm say, "Mans hurt
here?"
"Mans no hurt. Mans
feed. Sim sleep. Sim work morning."
Beece show Meerm empty bed.
All other sim go eat. Meerm hide. Beece and other sim bring food. Meerm eat.
Not yum-yum food like old burned home but not garbage food.
Meerm sleep on empty bed.
Warm. Fed. If only sick pain stop, Meerm be happy sim.
14
MANHATTAN
DECEMBER 13
Patrick paced his new office space, waiting for Romy. He'd
asked her to show up early for their meeting with the Manassas Ventures
attorneys. The prime reason was to offer her some coaching on how to respond to
them. The second was to spring a little surprise.
He stopped next to an oblong
table in the space that did double duty as his personal office and conference
room, and looked around. The offices of Patrick Sullivan, Esq., occupied the
fourth floor of an ancient, five-story Lower East Side building; gray carpet,
just this side of industrial grade, white walls and ceiling-the latter still
sporting its original hammered tin which he'd decided he liked. His degrees and
sundry official documents peppered the walls between indifferent prints he'd
picked up from the Metropolitan Museum store. And of course he had his books
and journals scattered on shelves and in bookcases wherever there was room.
He heard the hall door open.
Romy. He called out, "Back here!" but the woman who came through the
door was not Romy.
"Mr. Sullivan?"
An older woman in an ancient
tan raincoat, frayed at the sleeves and at least three sizes too big for her.
He recognized her: the
space-alien-abducted-and-impregnated lady whose sim child had been stolen and
given to Mercer Sinclair. He remembered everything about her except her name.
"Alice
Fredericks," she said. "Remember?"
"Yes, of course. How
are you, Miss Fredericks?"
"I could be better. I
still haven't found a lawyer yet."
"To sue SimGen about
the space aliens?"
"Yes. And for taking my
sim child. I looked you up and learned you'd opened a new office, so I came
straight here. Will you take my case now, Mister Sullivan?"
How to let this poor lady
down easy?
He gave her an apologetic
shrug. "I'm afraid my schedule's rather full now." He glanced at his
watch. "And I'm expecting a client for an important conference in just a
few minutes and-"
"Oh, I'm so sorry. I
should have made an appointment."
"That's okay." He
pushed a legal pad and a pen across the table to her. "But I'll tell you
what. Leave me your number and I'll call you when my schedule opens up."
"Then you're not
afraid?" she said, scribbling on the sheet.
"Of SimGen?
Never."
"I meant the space
aliens. You're not afraid of the space aliens?"
"Never met one I
couldn't take with one hand."
"Thank you," she
said, puddling up again. "You don't know what this means to me."
"I'm sure I
don't."
"That's the number of
the phone in the hall outside my room. Just ask for me and someone will get
me."
Patrick nodded. He felt a
little bad, giving her the brush like this, but it was the gentlest way he knew
to get her out of his office.
Romy entered as Alice was
leaving.
"Who was that?"
"A poor soul with a
crazy story about SimGen." Patrick shook his head. "If she's
representative of my future clientele, I'm in big trouble. But never mind
her." He spread his arms. "What do you think of my new office?"
"Not bad," she
said, looking around as she seated herself at the mini conference table.
She was being generous, he
knew. "I know what you're thinking, and I agree: I need a decorator."
"Not really." She
smiled faintly as she gazed up at the patterned ceiling. "I kind of like
the anti-establishment air of the place."
"So do I. Gives me a
feeling of kinship with the likes of Darrow and Kuntsler."
She smiled. "Darrow,
Kuntsler and Sullivan. What a firm."
"Better than my old
firm, Nasty, Brutish and Short."
He studied her across the
table as she smiled. She looked good. The wicked shiners she'd developed after
the Great Injury had faded from deep plum to sickly custard yellow. The sutures
were gone from her scalp; she'd been able to hide the angry red seam by combing
her short dark hair over it, but today she'd left it exposed for all the world
to see.
"Want some
coffee?" he said.
She shook her head.
"I'm tense enough, thank you."
"How about decaf? I can
have my legal assistant perk up a pot in no time."
"Assistant? I didn't
know you'd hired anyone."
"You don't expect a
high-powered attorney like me to stoop to filing my own papers, do you?"
Patrick turned toward the file room and called out, "Assistant! Oh,
assistant! Can you come here a minute?"
Tome, who'd been waiting
quietly and patiently behind the door as instructed, said, "Yes, Mist
Sulliman."
Romy's eyes fairly bulged.
"That sounds like-"
And then Tome, ever so
dapper in his new white shirt, clip-on tie, and baggy blue suit, stepped into
the room.
"It is!" she
cried. She leaped to her feet and crossed the room in three long-legged
strides. She threw her arms around Tome and hugged him as she looked at Patrick
with wonder-filled eyes. "But how? You couldn't...you didn't..."
"Kidnap him? Not
quite."
She kept her arms around the
old sim as Patrick explained Tome's post-traumatic depression and the
arrangement with Beacon Ridge. Because she was taller than Tome, Romy's bear
hug pressed his head between her breasts.
Hey, that's where I should
be, Patrick thought as Tome grinned at him.
Nothing salacious or
suggestive in that smile, just pure happiness. Being away from the barracks had
worked wonders on the old sim. Within two days he was up and about, eating with
gusto. And once Patrick had taught him the rudiments of filing, Tome took to
the task with religious zeal.
Romy barraged Tome with
questions about how he was feeling and what he'd been doing since the tragedy.
Patrick had things he needed to discuss with Romy so he gave them a little time
to catch up, then interrupted.
"Tome, would you mind
doing some more filing before our guests arrive?"
"Yes, Mist
Sulliman."
After Tome disappeared into
the file room, Romy turned to him. "Does he bunk here?"
"No. We're
roomies."
"Roomies?" She
gave her head a slow shake. "Am I hearing and seeing things? I've heard
hallucinations can be an aftereffect of head trauma."
"It's not so bad."
The apartment he rented in an upgraded tenement not far from here was plenty of
room for the two of them. "He keeps pretty much to himself. I got him one
of those compact TV-DVD combinations for his bedroom and he spends most of his
time there."
Her eyes were bright as she
stared at him. "What a wonderful, wonderful thing to do."
"He's a riot,"
Patrick said, grinning. "I bought him that suit and he's absolutely in
love with it. I had to go out and buy an iron and a board because he insists on
ironing it every night." She was still staring at him. "Hey, no
biggie. I figure it's only for a month or so, till he gets back on his
feet."
"Still, I never would
have imagined..."
"I'm told I'm full of
surprises." He pulled a packet of folded sheets from an inside pocket of
his jacket and slid them across the table to Romy. "But I'm not the only one."
"What's this?"
"A report from the
Medical Examiner's office on the three floaters from the Hudson."
"The globulin farmers?
How'd you get it?"
"It arrived by
messenger this morning, no return address, but I can guess."
Romy nodded. "So can
I." They'd decided not to mention Zero if there was any chance of a bug
nearby. "He has contacts everywhere."
"I can save you the
trouble of reading it," Patrick said as she unfolded the pages.
"Remember how the bodies showed signs of torture? Well, toxin analysis
revealed traces of a synthetic alkaloid in the tissues of all three. I won't
try to tell you the chemical name-it's in there and it's a mile long-but the
report says it's known in the intelligence community asTotuus ; developed in
Finland as a sort of 'truth' drug, and supposedly very effective."
"Totuus," Romy
said, her face a shade paler. "I wonder if that's what they planned to use
on me."
"When?"
"When they drove us off
the road. Remember I said one of them had a syringe and said something about
'dosing' me up and getting a recorder ready?"
"Right." The
memory twisted his insides. "You think there's a connection between the
SLA and-?"
"I guess not. But
listen to this: The report says the Totuus was administeredbefore they were
tortured."
"I don't get it,"
Romy said. "Why use torture when you've got a truth drug?"
Patrick wandered to the
window overlooking Henry Street and watched the traffic. The same question had
been bothering him.
"Maybe for fun. I don't
know what's driving these SLA characters, but it's pretty clear now they're a
vicious bunch."
"And if they want to
'free the sims' as they say, where are the ones they 'liberated'?"
"I was wondering the
same thing. If they-"
A black Mercedes limo
stopped and double parked on the street below. In this neighborhood that could
mean only one thing.
"They're here," he
said. "Fashionably early."
He watched as two
dark-suited, briefcase-toting figures emerged, one male, one female; he noticed
the woman lean back into the car and speak to someone still in the back seat.
Three arrive but only two
come up. Odd...
"All right," he
said, clapping his hands. "Places, everyone. Tome, you know what to do;
Romy, you know your part. We've got only one shot at this so let's get it
right."
The two Manassas attorneys
soon arrived, trying unsuccessfully to hide their astonishment at being
welcomed by a sim. Introductions were made, cards exchanged. The woman, a
redhead, thin and pale as a saltine, was Margaret Russo; the heavy, dark-haired
man, who looked like he scarfed up all his associate's leftovers, was David
Redstone.
Russo glanced around.
"Well, I must say, your office is...unique."
"And that
elevator," Redstone said. "What an antique."
"It's steam
powered," Patrick told them. "Can't be replaced because this is an
historic building." He had no idea if any of that were true but it sounded
good. "Shall we get started?"
He led them the short
distance to the conference table where Romy waited. He made the introductions,
then indicated chairs across the table from Romy for the Manassas people. He
sat next to Romy.
"What's he doing?"
Russo said, pointing to Tome who had situated himself on a chair behind and to
Patrick's left with a steno pad propped on his lap.
"Taking notes,"
Patrick tossed off. "Now, before we-"
Russo was still staring.
"But he's a sim. Sims can't write."
"It's shorthand. He'll
type it up later."
He watched Russo and
Redstone exchange glances. Good. Get them off balance and keep them there. They
didn't need to know that Tome would be making meaningless scribbles or that
Patrick was recording the meeting. He was sure they had their own recorders
running.
"We'd like to get right
down to business," Redstone said, pulling a legal pad from his briefcase.
"The nitty gritty, as it were. To expedite matters I propose that we drop
all pretense and skip the verbal jousting."
"No trenchant legal
repartee?" Patrick said. "Where's the fun?"
"Look, Mr.
Sullivan," Russo said, "we all know what this is about. We know Ms.
Cadman was injured, but we also know the incident was set up."
Patrick glowered at her.
"You'd better be able to back that up with proof, Ms. Russo."
"No jousting,
remember?" she said. "Whatever it is you want, other than money,
you're not going to get. So let's just end this charade here and now. We are
authorized to make the following offer: Name a figure. Tell us the magic number
that will make you walk away from this, and we will pay it."
Patrick had been expecting
an attempt to buy them off, but nothing this blatant. But if that was the way
they wanted to play...
"A magic number,"
he said, tapping his chin and pretending to ponder the possibilities. "How
does an even billion sound?"
Russo and Redstone blinked
in unison.
Russo recovered first. She
cleared her throat. "Are we going to have a serious discussion or not? Did
you call us here to waste our time or-"
"Whoa," Patrick
said. "First off, you called us. Secondly-let me check with my assistant
here." He turned to Tome. "Didn't they say, 'Name a figure, any
figure'?"
The sim consulted his steno
pad and said, "Yes, Mist Sulliman."
Tome had been instructed to
say that, no matter what Patrick asked him.
"There, you see? 'Name
a figure.' And I believe a billion is a figure."
"You can't possibly
expect a small company like Manassas Ventures to come up with a sum like
that," Russo said.
"Why not? It owns
billions worth of SimGen stock. But maybe it doesn't have the stock anymore.
I've learned that it's a wholly owned subsidiary of MetaVentures, based in
Atlanta, so maybe the stock went there. Or perhaps it traveled further up the
ladder to MacroVentures, a Bahamian corporation. But MacroVentures is owned by
MetroVentures in the Caymans. Maybe that's where the stock ended up. Wherever
it is, we know one of these companies has the financial wherewithal to pay Ms.
Cadman's 'magic number' in a heartbeat. So don't cry poverty to me."
"This is
preposterous!" Redstone sputtered.
"Not as preposterous as
you two trying to keep me from having my day in court," Romy said.
Patrick had instructed her
to play it sincere, and she was doing fine, because she was genuinely outraged.
"Oh, please-"
Russo began but Romy cut her off.
Here it comes, Patrick
thought.
"All I wanted was a
little information," Romy said. "Nothing complicated. I simply wanted
someone to explain why a truck leased by Manassas Ventures in Idaho was driving
around the SimGen campus in New Jersey."
He scrutinized the two
attorneys, watching their reactions as Romy dropped her bomb.
Patrick had gone half crazy
trying to ferret out the principals in all the subsidiaries behind Manassas.
Only the discovery proceedings of a lawsuit would give him a chance to pierce
their multiple walls of secrecy. But it still might take him years to reach the
end of their corporate shell game, and even then he might well come up empty.
So he'd decided to shake things up by tossing a live snake into Manassas's
corporate lap.
But neither Russo nor
Redstone showed even a hint of surprise or concern. They either were clueless
or had nervous systems of stone.
Damn.
"Write that down,"
Patrick said irritably, pointing to Redstone's legal pad. "It's
important."
"What?"
"Your clients will want
to know about those trucks. Trust me."
As Redstone made a note with
a gold mechanical pencil, Russo said, "Can we stop playing games? A
billion is out of the question."
"Out of the
question?" Patrick said. "Gee. And we haven't even discussed punitive
damages yet. I was thinking at least another billion-"
Russo slammed her hand on
the table and shot to her feet. "That's it. I see no point in prolonging
this farce. You two have an opportunity to be set for life. You've been offered
the moon, but you want the stars."
"Very poetic."
She glared at him.
"When you and your client come to your senses, Mr. Sullivan, call
us."
"It won't be a call, it
will be a subpoena. Many subpoenas. A blizzard of them. The first are already
on their way."
"Send as many as you
wish," Redstone said, snapping his briefcase closed. "You won't see a
dime."
Patrick smiled.
"Perhaps not, but we'll get what we want."
They stormed out.
After the door slammed, Romy
said, "Wow. They're taking this personally."
"I've got a feeling they
were offered a big bonus if they got the job done." He headed for the
door. "Excuse me."
"Where are you
going?" Romy said.
"Down to the street.
I'll only be a minute."
He took the stairs and beat
the Manassas attorneys to the lobby. He waited until they were outside, then
trailed them to the limo. When they opened the door he caught up and leaned
between them.
"You folks forgot to
take my card, so I brought one down for each of you." He peered into the
dim backseat and looked into the startled blue eyes of a balding man, easily in
his seventies, sporting a dapper pencil-line mustache. "Hello,"
Patrick said. "Have we met? I'm-"
"Get in!" the man
said to the two attorneys. He turned his head away from Patrick and spoke to
the driver. "Go! We're through here!"
The doors slammed and the
limo moved off.
Who's the old guy? Patrick
wondered as he took the stairs back up. He'd half-expected to see Mercer
Sinclair or perhaps that Portero fellow, but he'd never seen this guy before.
Whoever he was he hadn't seemed at all happy that Patrick had got a look at
him.
When he reached the office
Romy was just finishing a call. She snapped the PCA closed and turned to him.
"That was our mutual
friend. I told him about the meeting and he's a little upset that we didn't
clear your idea with him first."
"I'm not used to having
a nanny," Patrick replied. "Besides, we're just stirring up the
bottom of the pond to see what floats to the surface."
"He's worried that
mentioning the Manassas-Idaho truck connection at this point might give them time
to cover their tracks. Or worse, precipitate a rash response."
"You mean like running
my car off the road again? I don't think so."
Patrick didn't think whoever
was behind Manassas would risk hurting him or Romy. That would raise too many questions;
might even prompt a Grand Jury investigation.
"Still, he suggested
that you invest in a remote starter for your car. Just in case."
Patrick stared at her, his
mouth dry.
Romy smiled.
"Joking."
Patrick was about to tell
her where Zero could store his remote starter when her PCA chirped again. He
watched her face, expecting the usual lightup he'd noticed whenever she spoke
to Zero, but instead her brow furrowed as she frowned.
"Have you got a car
available?" she asked as she ended the call.
"I can get to it in
about five minutes. Why?"
"Road trip." Her
expression remained troubled.
"Something wrong?"
"One of my NYPD
contacts. He gave me the address of a house in Brooklyn. Said they'd found
something there that would interest me."
"He didn't say
what?"
"No. He said I had to
see it to believe it."
15
NEWARK, NJ
Meerm here some day now. Little happy here.
Still tired-sick and
hurt-belly-sick, sometime cold-sick and hot-sick. No more cold-hungry. Have
place live, have food. Lonely in day when all sim go work. Meerm try help by
clean and make bed. Must be quiet. Not let man downstair, man call Benny, know
Meerm here.
Shhh! Benny come now. Benny
come upstair ever day.
Meerm rush closet. Hide.
Peek through door crack. See Benny walk round and open window. Come once ever
morning. Always talk self.
"Damn monkeys!"
Benny say. "Bad enough I gotta play nursemaid to 'em all night, but why
they have to stink so bad?"
Benny open all window, then
close all. Ver cold while window open, even in closet. Meerm shiver.
Benny leave and warm start
come again. Meerm stay closet and wait. Better when sim come. Sim laugh, talk,
bring Meerm food, not tell Benny. Meerm lonely till then. Wait Beece.
Beece friend. Try make
better when Meerm hurt. Beece say Meerm need doctor. No doctor! Not for Meerm!
Doctor hurt Meerm. No doctor! Beece say okay but not like. Meerm can tell.
Meerm little happy here.
Meerm stay.
16
EAST NEW YORK, NY
"One thing I've got to say about hanging with
you," Patrick said as he drove them past peeling houses behind yards
littered with old tires and charred mattresses. "I get to see all the
city's ritziest neighborhoods. Say, you live in Brooklyn, don't you?"
Yes, Romy thought as she
stared straight ahead through the windshield. She thought of the neat little
shops and bistros along Court Street, just around the corner from her apartment
in Cobble Hill. That was Brooklyn too, but a world away from this place. East
New York was the far frontier of the borough. The economic boom of the nineties
had run out of gas before it reached here, and the boom of the oughts had kept
its distance as well. The faces were black, the cars along the trash-choked
curbs old and battered, the mood grim.
"Hello?" Patrick
said. "Are you still with me?"
She nodded and looked down
at the map unfolded on her lap. She knew she hadn't been good company on the
slow, frustrating drive across the Manhattan Bridge and through the myriad
neighborhoods of the borough, but the nearer they moved to their destination,
the tighter the icy clamp around her stomach.
Lieutenant Milancewich's
call nagged at her. Her sim-abuse tips had helped him make a few busts over the
years and in return he occasionally gave her a heads-up on investigations he
thought might interest her. But he wasn't a friend, merely a contact, and she
knew he considered her a little wacko. Maybe a lot wacko. He had no use for
sims and thought her overzealous in her one-woman war, but a bust was a bust
and he was glad to have them credited to his record.
Today, though, she'd heard
something strange in his voice; she couldn't identify it, but knew she'd never
heard it before. She'd pressed him about what it was he wanted her to see but
he wouldn't say anything beyond,Iain't been there myself, so I don't want to
pass on any secondhand reports, but if what I hear is true, you should be
there.
Is it bad? she'd asked.
It wasn't good.
And that was what bothered
her. The strange note in his voice when he'd said,It ain't good.
"I hope we're almost
there," Patrick said. "I don't think I want to get lost out here,
especially with sundown on the way."
She focused on the map.
"Make a left up here onto-there!" She pointed to a pair of
blue-and-white units just around the corner. "See the lights?"
"Got 'em."
Patrick pulled into the curb
and they both stepped out. She let him lead the way as they headed toward the
yellow crime scene tape. Once they were past that, Romy took the lead. Three of
the four cops at the scene were either in their units or leaning against them
as they talked on two-ways. Romy approached the fourth, a patrolman sipping a
cup of coffee outside the front door of a shabby, sagging Cape Cod. He looked
to be in his late twenties, fair-skinned, with a reddish-blond mustache.
After showing him her ID and
going through the what-is-OPRR? and what's-OPRR-got-to-do-with-this?
explanations, and making sure to smile a lot, she got him to open up.
"Got a call about a bad
smell coming from the place." He cocked his head toward the house as he
spoke in an accent that left no doubt he was a native. "So we
investigated. Had to kick in the front door and that's when it really hit us.
Ain't the first time I smelled that."
"Somebody dead?"
"That's what we
figured, only we had it wrong. Notsome body-manybodies. And they ain't
human."
Romy closed her eyes and
took a deep breath. She was afraid to ask. "How many?"
"Looks like a
dozen."
She heard Patrick's sharp
intake of breath close behind her.
"How many sims were
taken from the globulin farm?" he asked.
"Thirteen," she
said without turning. "At least they think it housed thirteen." That
was the count the police had painstakingly gleaned from one of the computer
chips plucked from the ashes.
"Hey, you think these
might be the missing sims from that Bronx fire a couple weeks back?" The
cop shook his head. "Don't that beat all. I thought that job was pulled by
a bunch of sim lovers."
"These may have no
relation."
How could they? It didn't
make sense that people who spray-painted "Death to sim oppressors"
would kill the very sims they'd liberated.
The cop said, "Well, if
they're the same, I'd guess from the stink and the condition of the bodies that
they were done the same night as the fire." He shook his head in disgust.
"Pisses me off."
Surprised, Romy looked at
him. "Killing sims?"
"You kidding? No way. I
mean, I'm not in favor of someone going around killing dumb animals, but what
pisses me is that even though they ain't human I gotta hang around with my
thumb up my ass-'scuse the French, okay?-while everybody figures out what to do
and who should do it."
"How'd they die?"
Romy asked.
"Don't need no
forensics team for that." He poked his index finger against his temple and
cocked his thumb. "Bam! One to the head for each of them. Must've used
jacketed slugs because-"
"Thank you," Romy
said, holding up a hand.
"Yeah, well, it was
messy, all right. But not near as messy as what was done to them after they was
shot."
Romy stiffened. "What
do you mean?"
"Sliced them open from
here"-his gun barrel finger became a scalpel and he dragged it from the
base of his throat to his groin-"to here."
"Christ!" Patrick
said.
Romy swallowed. "Why on
earth...?"
"Beats me. Dragged all
their guts out and piled them in the middle of the cellar floor. Freaking mess
down there, and if they think I'm gonna clean it up because it's 'evidence,'
they can-"
"I want to see,"
Romy said.
"No, you don't, lady.
If there's one thing I know in this life, lady, it's you do not want to go down
in that cellar."
She looked around at the
hollow-eyed buildings and the hollow-eyed stragglers with nothing better to do
than stand at the police tape and stare.
He's so right, Romy thought.
I don't.
But she had to see this for
herself. Nothing made sense. If these were the sims from the globulin farm,
what were they doing here? Had they been "liberated" just to be
executed and mutilated?
Setting her jaw to keep her
composure, Romy pulled a stick of gum-Nuclear Cinnamon-from her purse and began
to chew.
The cop nodded knowingly.
"I see you've been down this street before."
"What's going on?"
Patrick said.
She turned and offered him a
stick, saying, "Because sometimes the smell's so thick you can taste
it."
"You're going in?"
he said. He looked genuinely concerned. "That's way above and beyond,
Romy. Leave it for the forensics people. You don't have to do this."
"Yeah, I do," she
said. "Because they're sims the M-E will give them a cursory once-over, if
that. Most likely the remains will be shipped back to SimGen and we'll never
hear a thing. I don't expect you to come with me, Patrick. In fact, I'd prefer
you didn't. But I need to see what's been done, so I can get a feel for the
kind of monsters we're dealing with here."
She turned to the patrolman.
"Let's go."
"Sorry," he said,
shaking his head. "Might smell a little better in there now with the doors
open, but I'm not going back in until I have to." He pointed toward the
open front door. "Once you're inside, head straight back to the kitchen;
hang a U and you'll be facing the cellar stairs." He handed her his
flashlight. "There's no electricity so you'll need this. Just don't drop
it. Or blow lunch on it."
"Thanks. I won't."
Knowing that if she
hesitated she might lose her nerve, Romy immediately put herself in motion.
She'd examined dead sims before, some of them in a ripe state of decomposition,
and had learned some tricks along the way.
She'd gained the top of the
two crumbling front steps and was pulling a tissue from her purse when she
sensed someone behind her.
Patrick. His face looked
pale, and despite the cold she thought she detected a faint sheen of sweat
across his forehead.
"Wait for me out
here," she told him.
"Sorry, no. I could
have stayed in the yard if the cop had gone with you, but I can't let you go
down there alone."
"Patrick-"
"Let's not argue about
it, okay. I'm going in. Give me a stick of that gum and we'll get this over
with."
She stared at him a moment.
Patrick Sullivan was turning out to be a gutsy guy. She handed him a tissue
along with the gum.
"When we head down to
the cellar, hold this over your mouth and nose, pinching the nostrils and
breathing into the tissue. That way you'll rebreathe some of your own
air."
He nodded, his expression
grim as he unwrapped the gum and stuck it into his mouth. "Let's go."
Romy led the way. Despite
the open doors front and rear, the odor was still strong on the main floor; but
when she rounded the turn and stood before the doorless opening leading down
from the kitchen, it all but overpowered her. She heard Patrick groan behind
her.
"Tissue time," she
said. "And it could be worse. At least it's cold; that slows down
decomposition. Imagine if this were August."
Patrick made no reply. Romy
stared at the dark opening of the cellar doorway. She wished there were someone
else she could dump this on, but couldn't think of a soul.
Steeling herself, she
flicked on the flashlight and started down into the blackness. She kept the
beam on the steps, moving carefully because there was no railing. The odor was
indescribable. It made her eyes water. Even with her nostrils pinched, it
wormed its way around the cinnamon gum in her mouth and made a rear entry to
her nasal passages by seeping up past her palate.
When she reached the bottom
Romy angled the beam ahead, moving it across the concrete. At first she thought
someone had started painting the floor black and run out of paint
three-quarters of the way through; then she realized it was blood. Old, dried
blood. The cellar must have been awash in it.
She flicked the beam left
and right to get her bearings and stopped when it lit up what looked like a
pile of dirty rope. She remembered what the cop had said-dragged all their guts
out and piled them in the middle of the cellar floor-and knew she wasn't
looking at rope.
She swallowed back a surge
of bile and forced herself forward, trying not to step in the dried blood-might
be evidence there-as she moved. She stopped again when her beam reflected off
staring eyes and bared teeth. She'd found the dead sims. Clad only in caked
blood, their bodies ripped from stem to stern, they'd been stacked like
cordwood against one of the walls. Their dead eyes and slack mouths seemed to
be asking,Why? Why? And she wanted to scream that she didn't know.
Behind her she heard Patrick
retch. She turned and saw him leaning against one of the support columns.
"You okay?" she
said through her tissue.
"No." His voice
was hoarse. He held up a thumb and forefinger; they appeared to be touching.
"I'm just this far away from losing my lunch."
"I skipped lunch, thank
God." She paused, then, "Look, I need to get closer."
"I don't. I'll stay
back here and guard the steps, if you don't mind."
"I appreciate it,"
she told him. He'd already proved himself as far as she was concerned.
Turning, she spotted fresh,
dusty prints ahead in the dried blood, leading to the cadavers; one of the
cops, no doubt. To avoid further contamination of the scene she used them as
stepping stones to move forward, knowing all along that it was wasted effort-no
one was going to spend much time sifting this abattoir for clues. But there was
a right way to do something, and then there was every other way.
Closer now she flashed her
beam into the gaping incision running the length of the nearest cadaver's naked
torso. A female. Her ribs had been ripped back, revealing lungs but no heart.
Romy leaned forward and checked the abdominal cavity. Liver and kidneys gone.
She craned her neck to see into the pelvis-uterus and ovaries missing too.
She moved onto another, a
male this time, and the results were similar except that his testicles had been
removed.
Romy straightened. They'd
been gutted, all of them, and the males castrated. She took a quick turn around
the rest of the basement but found no sign of the excised organs. The
intestines had been removed and discarded in a pile because they were valueless
and only got in the way. But all the rest were missing.
"Let's go," Romy
said, taking Patrick's arm and pointing up the steps toward daylight and
fresher air. "I've seen enough."
More than enough.
They hurried to the first
floor and back out to the front yard. Romy didn't understand the missing
ovaries and testicles-she knew of no use for them-but she understood the rest
all too well.
Furious, she went straight
to the cop and slapped the flashlight back into his palm.
"Didn't you notice
anything missing down there?" she said.
He looked uncomfortable.
"Like what?"
"Like their organs!
They weren't just killed, they were harvested! Andthat "-she jabbed a
finger at his chest-"is a felony!"
17
HARLEM
DECEMBER 14
Beece work ver hard today. Many cloth to cut. Boss say,
Faster, faster! Beece cut fast as can. Still boss yell.
Beece ver hot. Thirsty. Go
sink for drink. Drink quick 'cause sink next boss office. Too long drink boss
yell.
Boss door open. New man walk
through. Red-hair man. Show boss papers. Beece hear talk.
"I'm from the city Animal
Control Center, Mr. Lachter."
"Hey, I treat my sims
good."
"No, Mr. Lachter, that
would fall under the auspices of the ASPCA. We have a different mandate, and at
the moment we're looking for a lost sim."
Beece almost leave sink, now
stay. Lost sim? Could be Meerm? Listen more.
"I got all mine. I
count 'em every morning. None missing, no extras."
"Good. But from past
experience we know that lost sims tend to seek out other sims, so we'd greatly
appreciate it if you'd keep your eye out for any sim that might wander
in."
Boss laugh. "He does,
I'll put him to work!"
"It's a female and if
she shows up you should isolate her immediately."
"Why's that?"
"She may be sick.
Nothing contagious to humans, but she might infect other sims."
Infect? Beece think. What
mean infect?
"I don't need none of
that. I can barely make production quotas now."
"If she shows she may
look a little different than the average sim and-"
"Different? What is
she, a new breed?"
"No. Same as the rest,
but she might look a little heavier...perhaps 'bloated' is a better term. She's
sick and we can take care of her, but we have to find her first."
Meerm! Man talk about Meerm!
Meerm sick but fraid doctor. Beece feel sorry Meerm. City Man want help Meerm.
No hurt Meerm.
Beece fraid talk Boss. Boss
yell all time. But Meerm Beece friend. Must help Meerm.
Beece step in office.
"'Scuse, please, boss."
Boss face go mad. "What
the hell you doing here! Get back to work, you lazy-"
"No, wait,"
red-hair city man say. He look Beece. "Do you know something?"
"Sick sim come home."
"Home? Where's
home?"
"I crib them in Newark
overnight," Boss say.
"Newark? Why so
far?"
"Because it's tons
cheaper to bus them back and forth than rent space for them around here. Sorry
if that's out of your jurisdiction, pal, but-"
"Oh, don't you worry
about that. Just give me the address of this place. I'll take it from
there."
Beece happy. Red-hair city
man nice. Help Meerm. Make Meerm better.
18
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
"This is good," Mercer Sinclair said as he
skimmed the reports. "This is very good."
Just SimGen's security chief
in the office with him today. Portero had personally delivered the police
reports on the sim massacre in Brooklyn, an unusual courtesy. Perhaps the man
was coming around, learning to be a team player.
Who am I kidding? Someone
like Harry Carstairs is a team player, but not Portero. He doesn't know the
meaning of the word "team." Mercer smiled to himself. Come to think
of it, neither do I.
This visit meant one thing:
Portero wanted something.
He'd never come right out
and ask, Mercer knew. He'd use an oblique approach, try to sneak it in when no
one was looking. Mercer was sure he'd find out what it was before the meeting
ended.
"I thought you'd be
upset," Portero said.
Is that why he came? To
watch me blow my top? Sorry, Little Luca. Not today.
"I am. I hate the idea
of losing a dozen of our sims. That's something people seem to
forget-they'reour sims. No matter what country they're shipped to, even if it's
the other side of the world, they still belong to SimGen. We can barely keep up
with demand as it is, so of course I hate to lose even one."
"But you seem
almost...happy."
"I'm happy that these
SLA creeps have been exposed for what they are. Yesterday's discovery shows
they're not pro-sim activists, they're murderous organleggers." He glanced
at the police report again. "They're sure these are the same sims that
were hijacked from the globulin farm?"
Portero nodded.
"Absolutely. Lucky thing NYPD was able to resuscitate that memory chip
from the Bronx. And lucky too these globulin farmers were excellent record
keepers: They scanned the neck bar codes of all their 'cows' into their
computers."
"Then that nails the
SLA. When they're caught they'll go down for murder and illegal organ
trafficking. Any chance of tracing those organs?"
Portero shrugged.
"Unlikely. They were probably shipped overseas while still warm. I've
heard the Third World black market in transplant organs is booming,
but..." He looked troubled.
"But what?"
"I know there's a big
demand for human organs, but sim organs?"
"They're called
xenografts-nonhuman organs. Human bodies used to reject them almost
immediately, but with the new treatments that remove his to compatibility
antigens, the rejection rate is about equal to human allografts. Those hearts,
livers, and kidneys are worth a fortune on the black market."
Portero nodded and Mercer
thought, You haven't a clue as to anything I just said.
"Hearts, livers,
kidneys," Portero said. "What about uteruses and ovaries? Are they
transplantable?"
"No value at all. Nor
are the testicles they cut off-unless someone's developed a taste for a new
kind of Rocky Mountain oyster."
Just the thought made Mercer
ill.
"Then why go to the
trouble to harvest them?"
"Maybe they were stupid
organleggers."
"One other thing
concerns me," Portero said. "The chip from the globulin farm shows
records of thirteen sims housed there right up until the night of the fire. But
only twelve were found in that Brooklyn basement."
"You're sure?"
"We know from the
records that a female sim is unaccounted for. The only reason I can imagine why
she wasn't butchered along with the rest is that she wasn't with them."
"You think she
escaped?"
"I suspect she was
never captured. I think she fled the raid and the fire, and is hiding somewhere
in the city."
"Why on earth would she
hide?"
"Maybe she saw the
security man murdered and she's frightened. She could be anywhere, too
terrified to show herself."
A witness, Mercer thought. A
sim could never testify in court, but this one might be able to provide the
police with a lead or two.
Mercer glanced down at the
embedded monitor in his desktop. Damn near every headline scrolling up the
screen this morning seemed to be about the sim slaughter in Brooklyn. The good
part was that the phony "SLA" had shown its true colors; the bad part
was the depiction of sims as helpless victims, easy prey for human scum. Too
high a sympathy factor there. He needed to counter that, and this missing sim
offered a unique opportunity.
"I want that sim
found," he told Portero. "To make sure she is, SimGen is going to
offer a million-dollar reward to whoever finds her."
Portero looked dubious.
"Do you think that's necessary? I'm sure my people-"
"Forget your people.
This is strictly a SimGen matter. We'll handle it."
Yes. The more he thought
about this, the more he liked it. Here was a way to take back the headlines and
reassert SimGen as the true champion and defender of sims.
"Very well,"
Portero said, rising. "Since there's nothing for me to do in that regard,
I'll get back to my office."
After Portero was gone it
occurred to Mercer that he hadn't discovered the reason for the security
chief's personal visit. He'd been sure he'd wanted something. But what?
Well, whatever it was, he
hadn't got it.
19
Luca Portero went directly from the CEO's office to the
parking lot where he picked up one of the SimGen Jeeps. He grinned as he drove
out the gate.
A million-dollar reward-and
Sinclair thinks it was his idea. Doesn't have a clue that I steered him into
the whole thing.
The meeting had been a thing
of beauty, he had to admit. Knowing Sinclair-1's obsession with SimGen's public
image, Luca had simply parceled out the information-first playing dumb about
the xenografts, then mentioning an unaccounted-for sim, then hinting that she
might be a witness-letting Sinclair pounce from one to the next like a mouse
following a trail of cheese bits, until he'd ended up right where Luca wanted
him.
A reward! Put SimGen in the
news: The corporation with a heart as big as its market cap value!
Putty in my hands, Luca
thought.
His grin faded as he thought
about what lay ahead. Another meeting. This one with Darryl Lister. He and his
old CO hadn't had a face-to-face in almost a year, which could only mean that
the subject was as delicate as it was important.
That made him uneasy. Worse
yet, they were meeting at Luca's house.
He pulled up the long drive
to the rented two-bedroom cabin in the center of five acres of dense woods. He
liked the isolation. This was his retreat from SimGen and lost sims.
Lister wasn't due for
another half hour. Still plenty of time to get Maria out of the way and-
He hit the brakes when he
saw the black Mercedes SUV parked in front of the house.
Lister? Shit!
He still had time to salvage
this. Was Lister alone? With the late morning sun glinting off the SUV's
windshield, Luca couldn't tell how many were in the car.
When he pulled up next to it
he was startled to see that it was empty. He hurried through his front door and
found Darryl Lister sitting on the couch, sipping a beer. Maria stood behind
him, rubbing her hands together, her dark eyes wide with anxiety.
Luca stared at Lister. This
plump country squire type was miles away from the hardbodied CO who'd
parachuted with him onto the Shahi Kot mountains. He was a pogue now, in his
late forties, and the brown corduroys and bulky white Irish wool sweater he
wore couldn't hide the inches he'd been adding to his waist. And judging from
the new gelled-up style of his light brown hair, it looked like he'd started
going to a fag barber. The man was becoming a stranger.
"Luca." He rose
and smiled as he extended his hand. "I was going to wait in the car, but
then this sweet young thing surprised the hell out of me by opening the front
door. I invited myself in." As they shook hands, his smile faded.
"Who is she, Portero? I know you don't have any kids. A niece?"
"No one you have to
worry about."
"You know the
rules."
Luca held up the car
keys."Maria, esperame en el auto."
She scurried around the
couch. Her jeans and bulky flannel shirt couldn't hide her ripe young figure as
she grabbed the keys and ran out the door. Luca noticed Lister's eyes following
her all the way.
"Nice," he said.
"What is she? Sixteen?"
Luca felt invaded. He wanted
to tell Lister it was none of his fucking business, but bit it back. To a very
real extent, itwas Lister's business.
"She's old
enough," Luca said.
Maria had told him she was
eighteen, but she might be even younger. He'd seen her begging on an East
Village sidewalk last summer. Maybe it was her flat peasant face, or the desperation
in her black eyes...something about her spurred an impulse from a nameless
place to shove a couple of singles into her hand. He heard her soft,
"Gracias, señor," saw the sudden faraway look in her eyes as she
clutched the bills between her breasts like a family heirloom, and he had to
speak to her. Good thing he knew Spanish because she didn't know anything else.
He bought her lunch, took
her to a Spanish film at the Angelika, bought her dinner, then brought her
home. She'd been living here ever since. She cleaned his house, cooked his
food, kept his bed warm at night, and thought she'd found heaven.
"She's an illegal who's
young enough to be your daughter, right?"
True on both counts, but so
what? "Don't worry. She doesn't know anything. Can't speak a word of
English."
"But Iam worried. It's
against the rules. You're supposed to be a model citizen. A clean nose, no
legal hassles. That's the deal when you come in. You agreed, now look at you:
shacking up with a barely legal illegal."
"No one's going to
know. Not way out here."
"Butour people will
know. Sooner or later you know they'll find out. And they won't like it. And
since I sponsored you, that will reflect on me."
"Look-"
"They've already got
questions about you. Like why you don't seem to own anything. You rent this
place and..." He looked around with distaste. "And it looks like you
furnish it from secondhand stores."
"It came with the
territory. It's a furnished rental."
"I know we pay you
enough to afford to buy."
Of course they did. But Luca
saw no point in tying up money in real estate. He wanted no anchors. When the
time came to move on, as it inevitably would, he wanted to be able to pick up
and go without a second's hesitation, without a single look back.
"It's the way I've
always lived."
"I know. I've tried to
explain that to them. They don't care. They want you settled in. I went out on
a limb to get you this cushy assignment, but if you don't put down some roots,
they'll transfer you out to Idaho. And I'll have egg on my face."
Luca had spent a few months
at the Idaho facility and had no desire to go back.
He held up his hands in
surrender. "Message received. I'll see what I can do about buying this
place."
"Luca," Lister
said, smiling as he put a hand on his shoulder. He rarely called him by his
first name. "You're making good money. And you'll be making better and
better money. Enjoy it, for Christ's sake. That's what it's for. You can't take
it with you."
Luca nodded. "I guess
you're right."
But he was thinking, Youcan
take it with you-if you've got it squirreled away in a secret offshore account.
Luca believed in being
prepared. He'd learned that from his mother. She might have been a whore, but
she was no dummy. She always kept a roll of cash hidden away for what she
called "the rainy days," when the cops periodically would raid her
place and roust her out. The cash had always kept her out of jail.
The same held true here. Who
knew when the weather would change? He could handle the proverbial rainy day,
but SIRG played rough, and if a shitstorm struck, he believed in having a safe
harbor to hole up in. His was in Hamilton, Bermuda.
He repressed a shudder. If
SIRG ever found out about that account...
"But that's only half
the reason for this face-to-face," Lister said.
"If it's about the
missing sim," Lucas blurted, relieved to be moving away from his personal
life, "I just enlisted Mercer Sinclair's help-a million-dollar
reward."
Lister was looking at him.
"So you told him?"
"Not yet. Not till I
find the sim. I've got people combing the city, visiting any place that uses
sim labor. This reward will flush out anyone who's seen her. Once I have her,
the Sinclairs can take over."
Lister frowned. "You
might have had this sewn up by now if they'd been on board from the
start."
"They'd have added nothing
but panic." Bad enough to have Lister calling twice a day, he didn't need
the Sinclairs yammering in his ear every free minute too. "And don't
forget, it took days for the fire department to sift through all the rubble.
Until they reported no sim remains, we didn't know for sure she was
missing."
"Still, if this
million-dollar reward had been announced days ago..."
"You know my problem
with telling SimGen too much."
"This 'leak' you
suspect?"
Luca nodded.
Lister shoved his hands in
his pockets and looked around. "I thought you were way off base with that
at first. Now I'm not so sure."
"Why? What's
happened?"
"The Manassas attorneys
met with the Cadman woman and Sullivan. What a farce. She could have walked
away with millions but she's asking forbillions in damages."
Luca wanted to laugh. He'd
known they couldn't buy off Romy Cadman.
Just hearing her name set
off reactions within him, part anger, part lust. Sometimes when he was with
Maria, moving inside her, he thought of Romy Cadman. Young stuff like Maria
pushed his buttons,all his buttons, but that didn't mean he didn't have anything
left over for a prime piece of mature tail like Cadman.
"Did you agree to pay
it?"
Lister stared at him.
"You're not serious."
"You should have called
their bluff, just to see what they'd do. Because we all know they're not after
money. But what does this have to do with a leak?"
"The Cadman woman said
she'd come to the Manassas office because she wanted to know why a truck leased
in Idaho by Manassas was driving around the SimGen campus."
"But..." Luca's
heart stalled, then picked up again. "But there's no connection. Those
leases are paid through Golden's credit card."
Hal Golden was dead, but no
one knew that. His body lay six feet deep in a field in Thailand, but his
credit record, active and pristine, lived on in the computers of the finance
world. Golden had never even heard of Manassas Ventures while he lived, so how
had Cadman and Sullivan linked him to the company?
"I know that. But at
one time Manassas leased them directly. Somehow she made the connection. And
I'm beginning to wonder if she might have been tipped."
"But that doesn't make
sense. If someone's leaking her information about Manassas Ventures, wouldn't
they tell her everything?"
"You'd think so,
wouldn't you. But whatever her source, somehow this woman has identified
Manassas as the tie between SimGen and our Idaho facility."
"So then, why not just
abandon Manassas? It served its purpose."
"It's not like some
dinghy you can cut loose at sea and forget. It's part of a chain of subsidiary
corporate entities that this Sullivan fuck has already traced back four or five
levels. This haseveryone upset."
The way Lister emphasized
"everyone" made it clear to Luca that this went far up the SIRG
ladder.
"They want the woman
and the lawyer stopped," Lister added, staring at him. "And since you
were in charge of the Cadman woman when she saw the truck with the Idaho
plates, that puts this square in your lap. They want you to take care of
it."
"What? Take her out? If
anything happens to her, anythingfinal , Manassas Ventures will be a prime
suspect."
"I'm talking
aboutinformation , not termination. She's obviously not alone in this. They
want to know who's behind her. They want her source. And if there's a leak in
SimGen, they want to know who it is. Word has come down: This has equal
priority with the missing sim. Understand me, Luca? This isn't me talking to
you." Lister suddenly looked uncomfortable. "This comes from the Old
Man himself."
The Old Man? Luca swallowed.
That meant this wentall the way up the ladder, and all eyes would be on him.
Damn Romy Cadman for mentioning that truck. It almost seemed like she was doing
everything in her power to screw him.
"Word is he's raising
hell how if you'd done the job right the first time, when you rolled Sullivan's
car off the Saw Mill, we wouldn't be facing this now."
Luca felt sick.
"Jesus..."
"I went to bat for you,
sent the Old Man your record in Operation Anaconda and the Baghdad sorties, and
apparently that carried some weight. You know, soldier to soldier. He's giving
you a chance to redeem yourself. That doesn't happen too often."
"I'm grateful," he
said, forcing the words past stiff lips.
Luca felt a growing pressure
in his head. Was someone out to get him...dump more on him than any one man
could handle, then wait for him to buckle under the weight?
"I'll help you with the
logistics and anything else I can," Lister told him. He looked fidgety
now. Maybe Luca wasn't the only one being given a second chance. "We'vegot
to know who she's fronting for." He glanced at his watch. "Got to
run."
Luca followed him outside to
the cars. He waved to Maria and jerked his thumb over his shoulder toward the
open front door. She jumped out of the Jeep and ran back into the house.
Again, Lister's eyes
followed her. "Remember what I said about putting down roots."
"Roger that," Luca
said.
But not till he saw how all
this settled out. Until then he wanted that Bermuda account as fat as possible.
"And ditch the kid. Put
her back where you found her."
"Will do."
Lister smiled. "Or
marry her."
"I don't think
so."
He'd miss Maria, miss her a
lot. She loved sex, cooked up a storm, and was crazy about him, would
doanything for him. Maybe he'd keep her around till he found a replacement.
Someone who could-
Luca's PCA chirped. He
flipped it open and turned away from Lister as he spoke. "Yes."
"This is Grimes. We
found her. She's been hiding out in a sim crib."
Relief flooded through him.
"You have her?"
"Not yet. But we've got
an address and we're on our way."
"Where's the
crib?" Luca listened as Grimes read off a Newark address. "I'll meet
you there."
He ended the call and turned
back to Lister. "One of my men. We've located the missing sim. We're on
our way to pick her up." He grinned at Lister. "One problem down, one
more to go."
"Let's hope so,"
Lister said.
Luca jumped into the Jeep.
Newark. Not a long drive. And the timing could not be better. Tying this up
would free him up to devote all his energies to Romy Cadman, and settling with
her once and for all.
20
NEWARK, NJ
Meerm lonely. Not hungry. Nibble food save from last
night. Watch out window. See peoples walk sidewalk. Not far down. One floor.
Meerm listen. Sometime hear what passing peoples say. Sometime happy. Sometime
mad. Meerm like happy better.
Meerm watch street. Many car
but no sim bus. Wait sim bus. Hope come soon. Then friend Beece come. Belly
pain hurt less when Beece near. Beece talk Meerm, help Meerm.
Meerm see car come fast.
Stop outside. Four sunglass mans come. Look round, look sim building. Meerm
quick step back. Who mans? Why here? Why look at sim building?
Meerm fraid mans come in.
Peek so mans not see. No mans come in. All stand by car. One talk little phone.
Why here?
Then Meerm see new car. Also
fast. Stop next first car. One man come. New man talk loud. Point this way and
that way. Other mans go. New man voice...Meerm hear before. But where?
Now Meerm see new man and
other man come sim building. Meerm fraid. Mans come take Meerm away? Back to
new needle place?
Meerm hide. Go closet. Push
self into dark corner. Make ver small.
Hear yell downstair. Benny
mad. Shout loud. New man yell back.
Meerm shake. Know new man
voice! Same voice in old home night loud noise and fire. Hear on roof too. New
man come get Meerm!
Hear loud feets on stairs.
Must not find! Must not find! Meerm climb up in closet. Get on shelf. Curl up.
Make small-small. Tiny-tiny-tiny. Push back into high corner and-
Corner move. Meerm turn,
feel loose board. Meerm push board, move more. Black space open. Cold in hole.
Meerm not care. Too fraid be cold.
Hear new man voice yell,
"Damn it, where is she?" Voice close now. In sim sleep room.
Meerm squeeze into black
hole. Ooh-ooh-ooh. Too tight. Meerm so fat now. Meerm fraid get stuck, but more
fraid new man. Push-push-push, get fat self into hole.
"I tell you,"
Benny say, "we ain't got no sims here inna day!" Benny sound fraid.
"Not till tonight when they all bussed back from the city."
"She's here!" new
man say. "And we're going to find her! Look under every bunk! Check every
closet!"
Meerm in cold place inside
wall. Ver tight. Ver dark. Meerm push on board, push back where belong. More
dark now. All dark.
Meerm hear closet door
squeak. Some man open. Meerm can't see man but hear thing move. Meerm stay ver,
ver still. Not breathe.
"Nothing in here."
New man voice ver close. Meerm so fraid. Want go pee. Bite lip stop cry.
"Where the fuckis she?"
"Maybe she goes
out," say other man voice. "You know, walks around."
"Since when did you
become a sim expert?"
Other man say, "Hey,
I'm just thinking out loud, okay? That sim at the sweatshop described her to a
T: she's lost, she's sick, she's blown up. So we know she's staying here. She's
just not here now. Probably going stir crazy here alone all day."
"All right. Here's what
we'll do. Bring in the others and we'll do a sweep of the building. If we don't
find her we'll back off and put the place under twenty-four-hour watch. When
she returns, we nab her."
Meerm hear mans go way but
still not move. Still fraid. Meerm must stay in sim building. Mans will get
Meerm. Hurt Meerm if try leave. Meerm so sad she cry.
21
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
Luca wanted to skip this-he had far more pressing things
to do than listen to Sinclair-1 yammer. But the man had said he was calling
this late meeting specifically to address a security issue. In addition to
everything else going on, SimGen security was still his responsibility.
But he didn't have to arrive
on time. He was punctual by nature, and his years in Special Forces had
reinforced that, so it took considerable effort to force himself to walk slowly
down the hall, pacing himself to arrive at least three minutes late.
Luca balled his fists.
Coming up empty in the sim crib this afternoon still rankled him. Fury and
disappointment had mixed into a combustible compound in his bloodstream. His
head felt like a ticking bomb. He'd left four men to watch the building-all
sides, all day, all night-but he had a gnawing premonition that the missing sim
wouldn't be back.
Then, just fifteen minutes
ago, Lister calls, supposedly concerned about the well-being of the sim because
he hadn't heard any word on her. Luca had had to eat some bitter crow.
As if that wasn't bad
enough, Lister then proceeded to twist the knife: "Someone handed you the
address where she was staying and she ducked you? If a monkey can outwit you,
how can we expect you to find out who's behind the woman and her lawyer?"
Don't worry, Luca thought as
he approached the door to Sinclair-1's office. She's next on my list. And I
know just how I'm going to handle her. As soon as I finish with these
assholes...
When he stepped into the
office he found only two of the usual crew in attendance: Both Sinclairs were
present, but Abel Voss was missing.
"Mr. Portero,"
Sinclair-1 said as soon as the door closed. "We've been waiting for
you."
"The wait is
over," Luca replied. He wanted out of here as quickly as possible, so he
pushed right to the subject, "You mentioned a security matter?"
"Yes, Mr. Portero. Were
you aware that we had an attempted break-in this afternoon?"
"Of course." A
group of sim huggers had tried to run the front gate. His men had detained them
until the State Police arrived. "They're in jail."
"How gratifying that
you know. But my question is, Where were you?"
"Busy with other
matters."
"Matters more important
than the security of this campus? Security here is your number-one priority.
There are murderous bioterrorists running around out there, slaughtering humans
and sims, and yet when this group tried to attack us, you were nowhere to be
found."
"Harmless
nobodies," Luca said, allowing a sneer to work its way onto his face. What
an old woman he was.
"Lucky for us. But with
you hiding out somewhere, there's no telling what damage we might have suffered
if they'd been the SLA."
A flash of anger added heat
to the pressure pushing against his eardrums. Hiding? Had this empty suit just
accused him of hiding?
"Easy, Mercer,"
said Sinclair-2, turning his head to look at Luca. This was the first sign of
life he'd shown.
With difficulty Luca kept
his voice level. "But they weren't the SLA."
"But they could have
been!" Sinclair-1 said. He pointed over his shoulder at the darkening
hills visible through the oversized picture window behind him. "The SLA
could be out there now, in the trees, readying an assault."
"They're not, and they
never will be." Luca had had just about enough of playing games with these
two. "I guarantee it."
Sinclair-1's eyebrows rose
halfway to his forehead. "You guarantee it? How interesting. You're
clairvoyant?"
"No," he gritted.
"I'm the SLA."
Immediately he wished he
hadn't said it.
"This is no time for
sick humor," Sinclair-1 said.
Luca knew from the dubious
expression on the CEO's face that he still had a chance to take it back, but
decided against it. Fuck 'em. He stepped up to Sinclair-1's desk, rested his
hands on its cool onyx surface, and leaned forward, literally getting in the
other man's face.
"That was not any kind
of humor."
"What?" The voice
from his right, Sinclair-2, on his feet, his face pale. "You?"
"Ellis, he's
joking."
Luca fixed Sinclair-1 with
his gaze. "Have youever known me to joke?"
The CEO wavered, then took a
step back, his eyes wide.
Movement to Luca's right.
"Monster!" Sinclair-2 charging, face distorted with fury. Luca
pivoted, drove a fist into his gut, and that was all it took. The man doubled
over, then dropped to his knees, gasping.
"Dear, God! Ellis! Are
you all right?"
The kneeling man, still
clutching his belly with one hand while the other clutched the arm of the sofa
for support, shook his head. His voice was a half-strangled whisper. "I'll
never be all right."
Sinclair-1 stared at Luca.
"Why? In God's name,why ?"
"To find your
million-dollar sim."
"For what?"
Sinclair-2 said as he hauled himself back into the couch. He sat hunched over,
rubbing his belly. "To harvest her organs along with the rest?"
"No. To give her to you
two."
"Why would we be
interested?"
"Because she's
pregnant."
A pause as the two brothers
glanced at each other, then stared at Luca.
Sinclair-1 snorted.
"Impossible!"
"So I've been
told." Luca shrugged. "And maybe that's true in theory. But I deal in
facts, and everything I've discovered about this particular sim confirms that
she is pregnant."
"How on earth did you
find out about her?"
Might as well tell them the
whole story, Luca thought. Well, most of it.
"It started with a
phone call last month. A woman said she had to speak to Mercer Sinclair right
away, said she had information that would affect the entire future of SimGen.
That sounded like a security matter to me so I took the call and-"
"And pretended to be
me?"
"Of course. The woman,
whose name I later learned was Eleanor Bryce, a Ph.D. in microbiology, told me
she was in possession of a pregnant sim."
"You accepted
that?" Sinclair-2 said. His color was returning along with his voice, but
pure hatred gleamed in his eyes. "Just like that?"
Portero returned his stare.
You want another try for a piece of me, fancy man? Next time I spread your nose
across your face.
"Of course not. In an
involved back-and-forth that took almost two weeks she sent enough information
to convince our people that she could be telling the truth."
"Yourpeople!"
Sinclair-1 now. "The ones in our Basic Research facility, I suppose. Why
not ours?"
"We were going to bring
in your people later, but first we had to secure this sim. The Bryce woman made
enough slips during our communications to allow me to pinpoint her location.
When she presented her ultimatum I decided it was time to move."
"Ultimatum?"
Sinclair-1 said.
That's not what you should
be asking me, Luca thought. Why aren't either of you asking the right question?
Because he was dying to lay
the answer on them...and watch both the Sinclair brothers' hair turn white
before his eyes.
Luca said, "She wanted
to sell us the sim."
"Sellus? Sell us
something that already belonged to us? What did you tell her?"
"Since I was pretending
to be you, I said exactly that, then I asked her how much she wanted. She told
me to bid. And she warned me not to be 'chintzy'-her word-because there'd be
another bidder: the Arata-jinruien Corporation."
Sinclair-1 pounded a fist on
his desktop. "Thosebandits? Outrageous!"
"Wait just a
minute," Sinclair-2 said, holding up a hand. "Let's take a step back
here."
Here it comes, Luca thought.
His gut tingled with anticipation.
"Let's just say,"
Sinclair-2 continued, but he spoke to his brother, as if Luca weren't there,
"that this Bryce woman, through hormone treatments or a recombinant patch,
did somehow manage to induce a female sim to produce a fertilizable ovum. That
will cause SimGen problems because it means people will be able to breed their
own sims-and no one on this planet wants that less than I do-but it doesn't
invalidate our patent on the sim genome. So-"
Not the question!
"She didn't do anything
to the sim," Luca snapped. "She's a microbiologist. Knows nothing
about reproductive medicine."
"How can you be
sure?" Sinclair-1 said.
"She told me."
Sinclair-1 barked a laugh.
Luca glared at him. "At
the time I questioned her she was loaded up with a drug that made her incapable
of lying."
"The compound mentioned
in the autopsy report," Sinclair-2 said, his tone dripping contempt.
"Did you torture them before or after you had your information?"
"That was just window
dressing, to muddy the waters while I eliminated everyone with firsthand
knowledge about the pregnancy. I didn't know what the sims knew, but I didn't
want any loose ends, so they were removed too."
"Dear God, why?"
Sinclair-2 said. "A pregnant sim, even if it were possible, opens up a can
of worms, but it's not worth the lives of three people and a dozen sims!"
Here's the moment, Luca
thought. Time to rock your world.
"It does if the father
of the sim's baby is human."
Silence, a moment of
glorious, absolute silence in the office as the Sinclair brothers froze. Luca
could have been looking at a photograph, or an elaborate sculpture. Then the
thump of Sinclair-1 dropping heavily into his chair as if the bones in his legs
had suddenly dissolved.
Luca inhaled the mixture of
shock and terror filling the air. Moments like this made life worth living.
He's wrong! Mercer Sinclair
thought, fighting a vertiginous sense of unreality. Portero's wrong! He has to
be!
...the father of the sim's
baby is human...
Those words hung in the air
before him, almost visible. He sensed that if he reached out his hand he might
touch them.
He looked at his security
chief's smug expression and knew that Portero believed it, but that didn't mean
it was true. Being a tough guy didn't mean you couldn't be scammed.
Mercer worked his lips,
forcing out the words. "A hoax!" he cried, but it sounded more like a
bleat.
Portero shook his head.
"I have it from all three farmers: They all believed they were in
possession of a pregnant sim that was going to make them rich beyond their
wildest dreams."
"Then they believed
wrong!"
"Wait a second,"
Ellis said. "They believed. That's important. They may have been morally
bankrupt, but they weren't ignorant. A globulin farm requires a fair amount of
scientific sophistication. And if they were convinced that one of their sims
was pregnant..."
Mercer stared at his
brother. Ellis seemed to have shaken off the pain and humiliation of Portero's
gut punch. But instead of feeling, as Mercer did, that his lips were encased in
lead, Ellis seemed almost...energized.
And he was thinking the
unthinkable.
"Ellis...it can't be.
Read my lips: Sims. Are. Sterile. Want me to write it out on a piece of paper
for you?"
"But a sim gene can
mutate," Ellis said. "Sims can't evolve, but they're as prone to
mutations as any other organism. Murphy's Law, Merce: Shit happens, especially
when it comes to reproduction. Nature abhors a dead-end species nearly as much
as a vacuum."
"Don't talk to me of
'Nature' and what it abhors," Mercer said. "Iabhor teleological
concepts. Life is chemicals, pure and simple."
Ellis went on as if Mercer
hadn't spoken. "I remember reading years ago about a woman who'd lost her
left ovary due to a ruptured cyst and her right fallopian tube due to a tubal
pregnancy. She was told she'd never have to worry about birth control, but
years later she showed up in her doctor's office with a positive pregnancy
test. An ultrasound showed that her left fallopian tube had migrated across her
uterus to link up with her right ovary."
"Apocryphal
garbage."
Ellis looked at Portero.
"This Bryce woman who called, this microbiologist, did she tell you how
she found out the sim-what was her name again?"
"Meerm," Portero
gritted. The name burned like acid on his tongue.
"Did she tell you how
she discovered Meerm was pregnant?"
Portero made a face.
"What difference does it make?"
"Humor me."
A sigh, then, "When she
first called she told me she'd been working up a sick sim-vomiting, pain.
Couldn't find out what was wrong so she sent blood out to a commercial lab and
ordered a preset battery of tests for abdominal pain. The battery was designed
for humans, and one of those tests was for pregnancy. It came back positive.
She repeated it at three different labs, and all came back positive. She rented
an ultrasound rig and that removed all doubt. She overnighted me copies of the
blood work and the ultrasound. I had our people go over them. They said it
could easily be a hoax, but there was enough there to be worried about."
Mercer said, "So you
made a preemptive strike before the Japanese could get involved."
Portero inclined his head a
few degrees. "Exactly."
Had to hand it to the man:
His methods might be loathsome, but he got things done.
"But why invent this
SLA group?"
"For cover. I didn't
want anyone to guess the real reason for the raid, and a bunch of wacked-out
sim huggers seemed perfect. The op would have gone down without a hitch if
their security guy hadn't decided to take his job seriously. Four of us went in
and the jerk started shooting, so we had to take him out. The shots must've
spooked the pregnant sim who was being kept separate from the other cows. When
I couldn't find her I figured she was hiding somewhere in the building; since I
didn't have time to look for her, I fired the place."
"But no sim remains
were found," Ellis said. "Which meant she escaped." He shook his
head. "I can see the logic, sick as it is, of killing the humans. But why
the sims? Even if they somehow knew about Meerm's pregnancy, who'd believe
them?"
Portero's eyes narrowed and
his tone skirted with a snarl. "First off, I wasn't about to nursemaid a
bunch of monkeys. Second, they could identify us. And third, our people over in
Basic Research wanted to look at their gonads, just in case they'd undergone
any changes like the pregnant one. I covered that by taking hearts and kidneys
and livers too-made it look like a harvest."
Mercer clenched his teeth
and stared at Portero. You shit! he thought. Just yesterday you stood right
there and played all innocent about organlegging and xenografts.
He wanted to throw something
at him but feared Portero might return it with interest. Or worse, shove it
down his throat.
"What ice-cold womb did
you spring from?" Ellis said, still shaking his head.
Mercer feared Portero might
react violently, but the insult seemed to roll off him. And Mercer realized
that neither of them could insult Luca Portero, because Portero didn't care
what they thought.
We're of a different
species, and our opinions are irrelevant.
Mercer watched as his
brother closed his eyes a moment, took a breath, then said, "How did the
globulin farmers know the father was human?"
"They asked the sim and
she fingered Craig Strickland, the farm's security guard-"
"The corpse that was
found in the fire?"
"Yeah, him. Seemed he'd
been spending some of his guard time diddling the livestock. Before he ate a
few bullets."
Mercer slumped back in his
chair, rubbing his eyes. This can't be happening.
"You realize what this
means, don't you, Merce." His brother's voice.
It wasn't a question. Mercer
lowered his hands to find Ellis staring at him. Yes, he knew exactly what this
meant: the end of SimGen.
But only if somebody else
found the sim first.
"Five million
dollars," Mercer blurted. "I'm raising the reward to five million for
information leading to the successful 'rescue'-and I want that term
emphasized-of the missing sim. We'll say the reason we're willing to pay so
much is that she can lead us to the killers of the twelve dead sims, and that
nobody slaughters and mutilates our sims and gets away with it."
"What if she's
dead?" Portero said. "She can't be 'rescued' then."
Mercer thought about that a
moment. "I want her to be worth more alive than dead, so we'll offer to
pay just one million for her remains. But I want her alive, get it? Alive,
alive, alive!"
Yes. Get their hands on this
sim before anyone else. And once she's safely tucked away, find out how she
became fertile. Then take steps to make sure it never happens again.
Somewhere, out there,
walking around, was living, breathing proof that humans and sims could
cross-fertilize...Mercer's worst nightmares had never even come close to such
an apocalyptic scenario. If news of this ever got out, sims would have to be
reclassified closer to human, too close to be property, too close to be
leased...
Imagine having to announce
that at the stockholders' meeting next week. SimGen shares would crash and
burn...they'd be the Hindenberg of the NASDAQ. He'd lose everything.Everything!
And so would SIRG.
"Find her,
Portero," Mercer said. "This is as important to your people as it is
to me. All that SimGen stock they hold will be toilet paper if someone beats us
to her. If you do nothing else in your life, you must find that sim. That is
your number one priority."
"Not quite,"
Portero said softly. "There's another, equally pressing matter that
requires my attention."
Looking at the security
chief's dark expression, and knowing his ruthlessness, Mercer was glad he was
not that other "equally pressing matter." He wondered who might be
involved, then decided he'd rather not know.
"But don't worry about
your pregnant sim," Portero went on. "I've got a good idea where she
is and I'll have men watching the area twenty-four/ seven. You'll have your
sim."
22
NEWARK, NJ
Mans go way. Meerm hide in wall. Too fraid come out. Meerm
feel something move inside. Not first time. Meerm feel before but nev so much.
Move-move-move inside. What do that? Is why Meerm belly so big?
When sim come back work,
Meerm climb out wall. Not leave closet because hear other man come.
Yell-yell-yell.
"You, you lousy monkey
bastard! You made me look like a jerk!"
Meerm hear Beece say,
"Please, sir, Beece not understand."
Meerm peek through crack.
See big red-hair man stand over Beece.
"Don't give me that
shit! You lied to me!"
"Beece tell
truth!"
"You said there was a
sick female sim here! Do you see her? Where is she? Show her to me, you lying
monkey bastard! Show me!"
Meerm see red-hair man raise
fist. Meerm close eye, turn away. Hear hit sounds, hear Beece make hurt sounds.
"Hey-hey-hey!"
Benny say. "You kill him, you replace him!"
Meerm hear other hit sound,
hear more hurt sound.
"I oughta drop-kick
your sim ass right out the window! All right, I'm outta here. If I have to look
at another monkey I'm gonna puke!"
Man and Benny leave. Meerm
want hide more but must see Beece. Beece friend, Beece hurt. Meerm leave
closet. Find all sim in circle round Beece bunk. Beece eye swoll, nose bleed.
Hold side. Poor Beece. Hurt-hurt-hurt.
"Beece! Meerm sorry!
Ver sorry."
Beece say, "Not Meerm
fault. Beece fault. Beece want help Meerm but Meerm right. Bad mans. Ver
bad."
"Poor Beece!"
"Beece not tell ever
again." Beece look at other sim. "No sim tell mans bout Meerm. If
tell mans come hurt Meerm like hurt Beece." Beece close good eye now.
"Beece tired. Sleep now."
Meerm stay by Beece. Stroke
arm. Poor hurt Beece. Meerm so sad. Keep hand on Beece arm. Stay by Beece all
night.
FOUR
Zero
1
MANHATTAN
DECEMBER 15
"This is fabulous!" Patrick shouted, venting his
glee. "Ab-so-lute-ly faaaaabulous!"
He shuffled in a circle
around the cracked concrete floor, punching the air, wanting to laugh aloud but
fearing if he ever let himself get started he might not be able to stop.
Zero had called Romy and him
to a meeting here in the garage without hinting at what it might be about.
Patrick wished he could have watched Zero's face, especially his eyes, as he'd
laid the news on them about a sim made pregnant by a human. He hadn't been able
to fathom the mystery man's feelings through the ski mask and shades, but
Patrick knew exactly howhe felt. Suddenly his whole world had burst wide open
in a blinding blaze of glory. Lawyers dream about an opportunity like this.
Dream, hell, most of them didn't even have the capacity to imagine something
like this.
It was a home run.
In the bottom of the ninth.
With the bases loaded.
On Christmas Day.
With a winning lotto ticket
waiting in the dugout.
Life was good, life was
sooooo good!
Finally he turned back to
Romy and Zero. As usual, Zero hung back in the shadows; Romy stood by the panel
truck; both were watching him as if he were mad. He glanced up at the square of
darkness in the ceiling above the ladder fastened to the rear wall. No eyes
peering at him this time. But even if there were, it wouldn't have fazed him.
Not today.
"I get a feeling I've
made Mr. Sullivan's day," Zero said, ostensibly to Romy.
"I think you made his
year," she said, her expression troubled.
Patrick couldn't figure
that. She should be beaming.
"Year?"he cried.
"This makes mylife! A baby with a sim mother and a human father! Don't you
see what this means?"
"Of course," Zero
said. "Undeniable proof that humans and sims can cross-fertilize."
"Right! And that means
they have to be upgraded into the same category as humans."
"It's called
'genus,'" Zero said, "not category."
"Oh, right." He'd
never found science very interesting. No juice. "Genus and species.
We'reHomo sapiens , right? So what genus are sims?"
"Start with the root:
the animal kingdom; from there you move to the Chordata phylum, then to the
Mammalia class. The next divisions are known as 'orders.' Humans, apes,
monkeys, even tree shrews are all members of the Primate order. But after that
we branch into different families. Chimps, gorillas, and orangutans are
classified as members of the Pongidae family, while humans are the only
existing members of the Hominidae family."
"Pongidae...Hominidae,"
Patrick said, rolling the unfamiliar words over his tongue. He guessed
scientists were like lawyers, using dead languages to confuse and confute.
"Even before sims were
created," Zero was saying, "there were movements in the scientific
community to shift chimps to the Hominidae family, and they might have
succeeded if not for SimGen. Once SimGen got into the act, the movement ran out
of gas."
Romy said, "I've never
understood how one corporation could wield so much influence."
"Money," Zero
said.
Her brow furrowed. "I
can see that working where legislation is involved, but how can you buy a
scientific classification?"
"With grants. The right
amount of money to the right universities to see the right man as head of the
right department, and suddenly there are more important concerns than to which
familyPan troglodytes belong. And so chimps stayed Pongidae."
"Pan troglodytes,"
Patrick said. "That's the chimp genus and species, right?"
Zero nodded. "And sims
are known asPan sinclairis of the family Pongidae."
"Pan sinclairis,"
Patrick said, shaking his head. "Talk about ego." Then he grinned.
"But no amount of grants is going to keep them out of Hominidae once word
gets out about this baby. We'll move them up to theHomo genus and get them a
brand new name:Homo simiens . How does that sound?"
"It sounds like the end
of SimGen," Zero said.
"Damn right. Move sims
to genus Homo, they become humans. And since owning a human hasn't been legal
since the Emancipation Proclamation, SimGen loses everything. Tome and I are
going to lead the biggest class action lawsuit this world has ever seen. The
tobacco settlements will look like chump change. Every sim will have a Caddy
and a condo, and the Sinclair brothers, when I'm through with them, will be
living on the street."
Patrick waited for a
reaction-a laugh, a cheer, encouragement, anything-but Zero remained silent
behind his shields, while Romy frowned and seemed to be miles away.
"I won't even take the
customary thirty or forty percent," he added. "I'll settle for one
point." Plus expenses, of course. He could handle one percent of a
zillion-last him the rest of his life and then some.
Still no reaction from
either of them. He felt like a singer with a dead mike.
Finally Zero stirred, lacing
his gloved fingers and popping the knuckles. "All fine and good, Patrick,
but your scenario is missing one crucial element: You need proof."
"Oh. Yeah. Right."
No arguing with that: no
pregnant sim, no case.
"And we can't offer
five million for a tip."
"No," Patrick
said, "but maybe you can intercept that tip."
"How do you propose I
do that?"
"Obviously you've got a
line into the heart of SimGen."
He noticed Zero stiffen into
a wary pose. "Obviously?"
"Sure. How else could
you come by all this inside information. I don't know if it's a person or a
bug, and I don't want to know. What I'm saying is, if we can intercept the
crucial tip, or even get it at the same time SimGen does, maybe we can reach this
sim-"
"She's got a name:
Meerm."
"See? You even know her
name. So if we can use the tip to reach her before SimGen does, we're
golden."
Zero shook his head. "I
doubt that's possible. All tips will be directed to Luca Portero, and he's not
the type to share information, even with the Sinclairs."
"Well...," Patrick
said slowly, discarding a new idea immediately, but voicing it just to get a
rise out of Romy. "He does have the hots for Romy..."
"Don't even think about
it," she snapped.
"Joke, Romy." At
least she'd been listening. "Are you okay?"
She shook her head.
"Not really. Something about this bothers me. How can a sim and a human
cross-fertilize? Sims have twenty-two chromosome pairs and humans have twenty-three.
Somewhere along the line they're not going to match up, and a pair of
chromosomes is going to be left hanging."
"Not necessarily,"
Zero said. "Look at the mule. Its father is a donkey, which has thirty-one
pairs and its mother is a horse, which has thirty-two, though both are members
of the genusEquus . Mules have been around for ages with no problems from the
dangling chromosomes, other than the fact that they're usually sterile."
Romy's frown deepened.
"Then this baby, if it's ever born, will probably be sterile too."
"We'll have to see.
We're in uncharted territory here."
"So a mule,"
Patrick said, "is the offspring of a male donkey and a female horse. What
if it's the other way around?"
"That's a less common
combination, but then you get something called a hinny. They look like mules
but tend to be smaller because most donkeys are smaller than horses."
"Where do all these
fascinating tidbits of animal husbandry leave us?" Patrick said.
"With the realization
that, given a fertile sim, a human-sim hybrid is a very real possibility."
"I keep thinking about
that baby," Romy said. "What's going to happen to it? Who'll take
care of it? And being neither sim nor human, what place will it have in the
world?"
Zero's tone softened.
"Until we find Meerm I suggest you put off worrying about the baby. Given
your nature, I know that won't be easy, but your own safety should be at the
top of your list right now. You won't be able to help that baby if anything
happens to you."
Patrick felt the muscles
between his shoulder blades tighten. "What do you mean, 'happens'?"
He sighed. "You haven't
heard the whole story yet."
"What are you holding
back?"
"Nothing. I never had a
chance to finish. Your war dance got us off track."
Romy eyed Zero.
"There's a poor, frightened sim whore out there pregnant by a human
degenerate. Isn't that enough?"
"I never mentioned a
whore, sim or otherwise."
"I just
assumed..."
Zero looked at Romy.
"You might want to sit down."
"Oh, no." She
stood blinking for a few heartbeats, then retreated two steps and dropped into
the chair by the wall. "Do I want to hear this?"
"Probably not, but you
need to."
Zero then went on to explain
who was behind the SLA and the reasons for its atrocities. Patrick listened,
but all the while his eyes were fixed on Romy. He watched her initial disbelief
give way to unwilling acceptance of a horrifying truth. Her expression was
slack by the time Zero finished. He wanted to step to her side and slip his
arms around her, but thought better of it. Jostle her now and she might
explode.
Patrick too was shocked. To
think that just two weeks ago in front of the burned-out ruins of the Bronx
globulin farm, Romy had introduced him to the engineer of all this death and
destruction.
"There's got to be some
way we can nail Portero for this," Patrick said.
"Don't count on it.
He's a pro, a very careful one."
"That doesn't mean we
can't manufacture some evidence."
"No," Zero said,
shaking his head. "Too dangerous."
Romy finally spoke, her
voice barely above a whisper. "I...I'd always figured Portero for a snake.
But...I never dreamed...I mean, executing three humans and twelve sims...just
to cover his tracks."
"And those are just the
ones we know about. You two might have been added to list if we hadn't
intervened when Patrick's car was knocked off the road."
"That was him?"
Patrick said, turning toward Romy. "You mean I was standing two feet away
from the guy who tried to kill me and I didn't know it?"
"Not him
directly," Zero said. "But he planned it."
"Why didn't anyone tell
me?"
He shrugged. "No one
said, 'Let's not tell Patrick.' When it happened, we still weren't sure of you.
And after you came on board, it simply never came up."
"Just as well, I
guess," he said. "If I'd known I might have opened my big yap and
given something away."
"Which brings me back
to what I was saying before," Zero said. "Watch your backs. You and
Romy have put yourselves on the wrong side of Manassas Ventures. Manassas is
connected to SimGen and therefore, by extension, to Luca Portero. We've known
he was ruthless, we just didn't know until nowhow ruthless. There's nothing
this man won't do, so please be careful. I'll do whatever I can to back you up,
but the organization can do only so much."
Patrick turned to Romy.
"Maybe we should move in together."
She rolled her eyes.
"Not that again."
"For mutual protection,
of course."
"Of course."
"Not such a bad idea, actually,"
Zero said. "I know I'd rest easier, but I'll leave that up to you
two."
Zero, I think I love you,
Patrick thought.
But Romy didn't appear to be
buying. "Let's worry about Meerm," she said. "How do we find her
first?"
"Why don't we try
thinking like a sim?" Patrick said, hating to leave the subject of
cohabitation. "If I were a lost and frightened sim, where would I
hide?"
"With other sims,"
Zero said. "The trouble is, if she's hiding from humans she's not exactly
going to come out and announce herself."
Patrick had a thought.
"How about my roomie? Is there some way Tome can help sniff her out? You
know, set a sim to find a sim?"
Zero pointed at him.
"Now that's an idea."
"As long as it doesn't
put him in any danger," Patrick added. He'd grown fond of that old sim,
and the possibility of anything happening to him put a twist in his gut.
"I don't want him hurt."
"None of us do,"
Zero said. "Let's sit down and see where we can take that. Meanwhile, I've
appealed to a higher power for help."
"You've been
praying?" Romy said.
"No, I meant that in a
more literal sense. I was speaking of the Reverend's satellite."
2
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
"Watch this," Sinclair-1 said the moment Luca
stepped into the darkened office. The sun was down but only a corner floor lamp
was lit.
Luca glanced around. No one
else present. "Watch what?"
"This, goddamn it. I
just recorded it off the dish."
Sinclair poked his desktop
and the plasma TV screen on the wall flickered, then lit with the face of the
Reverend Eckert.
"My dear brothers and
sisters. I had an entirely different sermon prepared for this broadcast, but
just moments ago I experienced an epiphany, a revelation of such staggering
importance that I felt it my duty to you and to my ministry to discard my
prepared sermon and immediately address this matter.
"Do you know what an
'urban legend' is? I'm sure you do, but in case some of you don't, let me
explain. Urban legends are stories that are told and retold so many times that
they take on a patina-or should I say, the appearance-of truth. We never get
the story firsthand; usually we're told that somebody's uncle or aunt, or that
a friend's grandmother knows someone who personally experienced the incident.
"You might have been
warned against bringing home a large cactus because somebody knows someone
whose cactus burst open to let out a torrent of deadly tarantulas.
"Or you heard about the
burned corpse of a frogman found in the ashes of a forest fire, the story going
that he was SCUBA diving when he was scooped up by a firefighting helicopter as
it filled its bucket from the lake near the fire.
"Or the 'documented
facts' that eelskin wallets erase magnetic cards and giant alligators infest
New York City sewers, and on and on.
"Brothers and sisters,
I could spend the whole program cataloguing these tales, but that's not why I'm
speaking to you today. I pray you've caught my meaning, because I want you to
believe that what I am about to say is not an urban legend.
"As I told you earlier,
I've had a revelation from On High. But some people, for their own selfish
reasons, will want to deny its truth. My words, as they spread,will be written
off by these professional doubters as just the latest in a long line of urban
legends. But don't listen to them, friends. I have it on excellent authority,
not from a friend of a friend, but from the ultimate Unimpeachable Source that
what I am about to tell you is God's Truth.
"That Truth concerns a
sim, a female sim, lost, alone, frightened, hiding somewhere in New York City.
Yes, I'm talking about the same sim that Satan's own corporation, SinGen, has
offered five million dollars for. But have you asked yourselves why SinGen is
offering so much for one lowly sim? They'll tell you it's to help bring
murderers to justice, but is that really the case? The humans these murderers
killed were criminals themselves. And sims are killed every day without SinGen
offering so much as a dime to find the culprits.
"So there I was today,
sitting alone in my home chapel, spending quiet time in communion with the
Lord, wondering what was so special about this particular sim to make the
devil's company squander so much of its tainted lucre to find her.
"And then it came to me.
In a blaze of inspiration that could only be the result of the touch of the
Lord his own self, I knew!
"This lost sim is
pregnant!
"Now, now, I know we've
all been told that sims can't procreate, but think about who's been telling us
that: the devil corporation run by Satan, the Father of Lies. Only God is
perfect. Satan makes mistakes-that's why he rules in Hell after all, instead of
in Heaven. And Satan made a real whopper of a mistake this time.
"What's that? Yes, I
hear you. I hear what you're saying. You're saying, 'A pregnant sim, Reverend
Eckert? How can that be? Who is the father?'
"And that, brothers and
sisters, is the worst part. This was no immaculate conception. No, this is an
abomination. This sim pregnancy is the result of un-plumbed wickedness and
moral decrepitude. For the father, I say to you, the father of this sim's baby
ishuman!
"Of course, I use the
term loosely, for what sort of human would defile himself so by doing such a
thing to a helpless animal? But yes, you heard correctly, the father is human!
"Now, I know what
you're saying in your hearts, if you're not crying it out loud, 'Why, Reverend
Eckert? Why would God allow such an unspeakable thing to occur?' And I must
tell you, friends, that I asked myself the same question. I wondered if this
could be a sign of the End Times: Could the child of this unholy union be the
Antichrist?
"But the Lord his own
self was guiding my thoughts because I suddenly realized that this unborn child
is just the opposite of the Antichrist. For it will notbe born to establish
Satan's rule on earth, but to dislodge his foul foothold, destroy the satanic
beachhead we know as SinGen!
"That is therealreason
the company is offering so much to find this poor, mistreated, pregnant sim.
"So I say to you, my
brothers and sisters, do not listen when you are told that this can't be true,
that it's just another urban legend. It isnot!If you live in the Northeast,
live anywhere in or around New York City, I beg you, as soon as I am finished
here: Leave your homes and hie into the streets to look for this unfortunate
creature.
"And if you find her,
do not call SinGen, no matter how much money it is offering. Do not allow
yourselves to be tempted by the devil's offer. Sell this sim and you are
selling your soul. Instead, call the number flashing at the bottom of your
screen and I will personally see to it that this sim and its child are
protected from Satan's forces.
"And when the child is
born, I shall bring it to the halls of Congress and display it to the leaders
of our nation. And then the scales shall fall from their eyes and they will see
that they have allowed an abomination to move into their house; and the
shackles shall loosen from their limbs and they will act, casting SinGen into
the outer darkness whence it came, where there shall be weeping and gnashing of
teeth.
"Go now, my brothers
and sisters. Fill the streets. Waste not another moment. Find-"
The screen went blank.
Another touch on the desktop and the lights came up.
Luca blinked, momentarily
mute with shock. He opened his mouth to speak but Sinclair voiced his thoughts.
"He knows! How thehell
did he find out?"
"A leak," Luca
said. "I've suspected one for some time now."
"You think the room is
bugged? By someone other than you, I mean."
Luca was taken aback by the
casualness of the remark.
"What?" Sinclair
said, a tiny smile twisting his lips. "You think I don't know your people
have this office bugged? Probably the whole campus as well, am I right?"
He was. Offices, labs, even
rest rooms-all bugged. Luca shrugged it off.
"We sweep this office
regularly. No listening devices of any sort." Other than ours.
"Ifound out
yesterday," Sinclair said, then pointed to the blank TV screen.
"Heknows today. How else but a bug?"
"A person. I've long
suspected your brother. This confirms it."
"It confirms nothing of
the sort. Ellis? Ridiculous!"
"Really? Until
yesterday, only a select few of our people knew. Even the men I've had combing
the city don't know; they think we want this sim because she's got a rare
immune globulin in her blood. Weeks of searching without a hint of a leak. But
yesterday afternoon I tell you and your brother, and today, just twenty-four
hours later, the Reverend Eckert is telling the world. If it's not your
brother, then it's you."
Sinclair sat down and
drummed his fingers on the desk. "Well, it's not me. And I can't believe
it's Ellis, not after the way your people threatened his children."
"I'm not aware of any
threat."
"No? Well, I guess it
was before your time."
That part was true. But Luca
knew perfectly well what the CEO was talking about. A brilliant little op,
involving nothing overt, but it had kept Ellis Sinclair in line ever since.
Sinclair looked at him.
"Maybe Eckert did have a revelation."
"You don't really
expect-"
"I don't mean from
God."
"Then-"
"Hear me out. Here's
this guy who's got a hard-on for SimGen. He hears we're offering five million
to find this lost sim, so he figures out the worstcase scenario for us, and
broadcasts it. It's just a coincidence that he happens to hit on the
truth."
Luca snorted. "You
don't believe that any more than I do."
Sinclair sighed. "No.
No, I don't."
"However Eckert came to
it, we can count on a lot of his people on the streets looking for that sim,
trying to find her first."
"Does that worry you,
Mr. Portero? Don't let it. The more the merrier. Eckert's people merely
increase our chances. They may believe in God, but when it comes down to five
million dollars' worth of cold hard cash, they'll believe in that even
more."
"We'll see." Luca
wasn't so sure about that, but saw no point in arguing. He had another point to
press. "In the meantime, my people will expect you to do something about
your brother."
"Very well. From now
on, any meetings concerning matters of a sensitive nature will be conducted
without him." His eyes narrowed. "But you don't have any hard
evidence against Ellis, do you. Otherwise you wouldn't have looked so shocked
when I played you that tape. I'd be surprised if you weren't monitoring his
calls. Have you been following him as well?"
"No. But we will."
Truth was, he'd set tails on
Sinclair-2 a number of times but they always lost him. Looked like he'd have to
tail him personally.
I can spread myself only so
thin, damn it.
"Starting when?
Tonight?"
"No, not tonight. But
soon."
He had a more pressing
matter to attend to. He and Lister had spent much of the day setting up an op
for tonight. The target, Romy Cadman, knew Luca's face so he could not be
directly involved, but he'd be on standby, eagerly awaiting the results. By the
end of the night he'd have established a solid link of money and information
between Cadman and Ellis Sinclair.
And then there'd be no need
to follow anyone anywhere.
3
MANHATTAN
"Really," Romy said as their cab climbed the
on-ramp to the Brooklyn Bridge, "this is unnecessary. I'm more than
capable of finding my own way home."
"You heard what our
friend said this afternoon," Patrick replied. "'Be careful.' And
that's what we're doing."
Beside him, in the darkness
of the rear seat, he saw her shake her head. "An awfully long trip."
"Not if I'm with
you."
Light from a passing car reflected
off her smile. "What a nice thing to say. But perhaps I should have
phrased it a little differently: This is going to be an awfully longround
trip."
As the bejeweled towers of
Lower Manhattan dwindled behind them, Patrick thought about the day. A good
day. Any day with more ups than downs was a good day. After the shock of
learning who was behind the SLA and the globulin farm murders had worn off, and
Patrick had settled down from his initial elation over the news of the pregnant
sim, they'd brainstormed ways to find Meerm. Reverend Eckert's exhortation to
his followers to track her down for him instead of for SimGen-a message he'd be
hammering into his viewers day after day-would help, but they still hadn't
figured out a way to fit Tome into the equation.
As darkness fell they'd
called it a day, Zero taking off in the van, and Romy accepting Patrick's
invitation to dinner. They'd walked downtown and found a bistro in Chelsea that
looked inviting. A pair of Rob Roys before and a shared bottle of pinot noir
during a meal of various pastas and sauces had left Patrick in a genial mood.
He figured Romy, who'd matched his Rob Roys with Cosmopolitans, had to be
feeling mellow herself.
"Am I that bad?"
"No," she said.
"Not bad at all." He felt her take his hand, interlace her fingers
with his, and give it a little squeeze. "In fact, you're good. Taking Tome
in like you did is, well, I don't think I've ever heard of anyone doing that
for a sim."
She rested her head on his
shoulder. The scent of her hair and the wave of warmth seeping up from where
their hands coupled enveloped Patrick, making him feel as if he were riding a
cloud.
What is it with this woman?
he wondered. We're only holding hands but it feels like we're having sex.
He rode that cloud all the
way to Brooklyn, and too soon they were stopped in front of a neat, four-story
brick-faced building.
"I'll walk you to your
door," he said.
Romy shook her head.
"No, you won't."
"We've got to be
careful, Romy..."
She leaned forward and
kissed him lightly on the lips. "You're not walking me to my door. You're
coming up."
"For a nightcap?"
"A drink, coffee,
anything you want."
Patrick couldn't see Romy's
face in the dimness, couldn't read her eyes. His first impulse was to ask her
to repeat her last statement, but he feared she might take it as a wisecrack.
Some sort of spell had been woven here tonight and he wasn't about to risk
breaking it.
"Let's go," he
said, and fumbled his wallet out of his pocket to pay the cabby.
The stairway within was too
narrow to ascend abreast so he had to follow Romy, which positioned her hips at
eye level before him. Their rhythmic sway within her cleathre coat only
exacerbated the electric ache in his groin.
They stopped climbing at the
third floor. Romy keyed open a door marked 3A. She stepped through, turned, and
pulled Patrick inside. Without turning on the lights she slammed the door and
slipped her arms around his neck. Patrick responded instinctively, pulling her
close. His lips found hers, he felt her left leg sliding up the outside of his
thigh as he slipped his right hand along her ribs toward her left breast-
-and then the lights came
on.
Romy spun, ending up beside
him, hands out, ready to fight.
But the blond-haired guy
with one hand on the lamp switch held a silenced automatic in the other. A
second man, his dark hair tied back in a neat little ponytail, sat in an easy
chair and held an identical silenced pistol. Both wore dark suits and white
shirts buttoned to the top.
The seated man smiled as he
spoke. "Well, well. Look at this, won't you. A two-for-one special."
He had a faint Texas accent.
Amazing how fast lust can
fade-Patrick's insides had already turned to ice.
"What do you
want?" Romy said.
"You, Ms. Cadman,"
Ponytail said. "Not for anything carnal, I'm sorry to say, although I'm
sure that would prove to be a mutual pleasure. We simply wish to ask you some
questions. And as long as your lawyer friend is here, we have questions for him
as well."
"Forget about it,"
she said, turning and reaching for the doorknob.
"Please don't,"
Ponytail said. "These silencers aren't in place for show. Wewill shoot if
necessary. Not a killshot-a knee, a thigh, just to get across the point that we
have questions that we intend to have answered. We can do this friendly, where
no one gets hurt and you both walk away wound-free, or we can do it messy. I
prefer the friendly path, don't you?"
"Friendly sounds good,
Romy," Patrick whispered, nudging her with his elbow. "Especially
when we're outgunned two to zip."
She didn't look at him. All
he heard was a soft, "Shit!"
Patrick raised his hands,
hearing the words to that old blues song about being a lover, not a fighter.
"Let's do friendly."
"A practical man,"
said Ponytail. He rose and moved toward two ladder-back chairs sitting side by
side on the carpet. "We took the liberty of moving these in from the
kitchen." He did a mocking, maitre d'-type flourish. "Both of you
remove your coats and be seated, s'il vous plait." It sounded weird with
that Texas accent.
Patrick tossed his
herringbone overcoat onto the couch and guided Romy to one of the chairs.
"Portero sent you,
didn't he?" she said as he helped her out of her coat.
"Portero...Portero...,"
Ponytail said slowly. "No, I don't believe we've met. Is she as pretty as
you?"
Blondy guffawed.
That laugh says it all,
Patrick thought as he seated Romy, threw her coat on the couch, then dropped
into the other chair. He tried to relax but quailed as he felt the muzzle of
Ponytail's silencer suddenly press against his temple.
"Ms. Cadman," the
man said, "my associate will put down his weapon while he affixes you to
the chair. You will allow him to do so without resistance. If you resist you
will end up with a very messy carpet and we will be faced with the unfortunate
circumstance of having only one person to interrogate."
Patrick's bladder clenched.
He wasn't cut out for this. He'd been trained to pose logical arguments based
on law and precedent in an arena overseen by a supposedly impartial magistrate.
If he won, great; if he lost, at least he could walk away
knowing-hopefully-that he'd acquitted himself well in the contest. But
this...the loser here didn't walk anywhere.
The blond guy laid his
pistol on the carpet far from Romy. He produced a roll of aluminum duct tape
and began taping her arms and legs to the chair. When he finished he bent over
her and cupped one of her breasts in his hand.
"Nice," he said,
grinning.
Romy jerked her head
forward, ramming it into his face. He staggered back, clutching his nose. When
he recovered he bared his teeth, cocked his fist, and started toward her.
"Uh-uh-uh!" said
Ponytail in a schoolmarm tone. "Mustn't mar the merchandise. Tape up Mr.
Sullivan, please."
Scowling, Blondy taped
Patrick to his chair, winding it blood-stoppingly tight. When he finished, he
retrieved his weapon from the floor and holstered it inside his jacket.
But he wasn't quite
finished. He stepped over to Romy and grabbed the tip of her breast through her
sweater. He gave the nipple a vicious twist and said, "Thatwon't mar the
merchandise."
Romy winced but didn't give
him an iota more.
Patrick twisted against his
bonds. "You shit!" He didn't kid himself about being a tough guy but
the way he felt at that moment left no doubt he could kill the bastard.
"All right now,"
Ponytail said, holstering his own weapon under his left arm and pulling a
leather case from under his right. "Enough fun and games. Let's playWho
Wants To Spill The Beans? "
He snapped open the case,
revealing an inoculator and two vials of amber fluid. He loaded one of the
vials into the chamber of the inoculator, then pulled a recorder out of his
pocket and set it on the coffee table.
"Now," he said,
smiling. "Who wants to be first? Let's see...eenie, meenie-"
A softthump sounded from an
adjoining room.
"What was that?"
Ponytail said.
Blondy shook his head.
"Don't know. I checked it out when we got here. It was empty."
"Probably just my
cat," Romy said.
Ponytail snarled, "You
don'thave a cat!" He jerked his head toward the doorway and told Blondy,
"That could have been the window. Check again."
Blondy pulled his gun and
edged into the dark doorway. He poked his head inside, looked around, then
reached his free hand inside for the light switch.
And then-Patrick couldn't be
sure-it looked like he either tripped and fell into the room or something
pulled him in. Whatever the cause, one second Blondy was there, leaning through
the doorway, the next he wasn't. A faint sound, something like a strangled
grunt came from within, followed by a thump-it didn't sound heavy enough for a
falling-body thump; maybe just a dropped-gun thump.
"Duke?" Ponytail
said. He placed the inoculator kit on the coffee table next to the recorder and
retrieved the pistol from under his suit coat. "Duke, are you okay?"
No answer from the bedroom.
Ponytail edged toward the
doorway, pointing his pistol at Romy's head. "I don't know what kind of
shit's going down here, but if anything untoward happens, you go first."
The first thought that ran
though Patrick's mind was,Untoward ? Did he really sayuntoward ?
Ponytail reached the
doorway. He peeked around the molding and suddenly cried out, reeling back as
Duke's limp body came flying out of the room to crash against him. He grunted
as he tumbled to the floor, his pistol discharging and sending a bullet over
Romy's head to punch a fist-size chunk of plaster out of the wall above one of
the windows.
He didn't get a chance for a
second shot because Duke's body wasn't the only thing flying through the
doorway. Something else followed directly behind-a snarling, barrel-chested
apparition in a sleeveless black coverall, its furry, black-eyed head split
open to reveal yellow teeth and a pair of huge fangs in the upper jaw. But even
more frightening was the scarlet coloring that blazed along its upper snout as
it flew through the air, long arms outstretched, fingers curved into claws.
Ponytail let out a panicked
bleat at the sight of it, and Patrick caught an odd light in the man's eyes;
shock and terror, yes, but something else: recognition.
He tried to bring his pistol
around but it was knocked from his grasp and sent skittering across the floor.
He wailed,
"Kree-!" but whatever he intended to say was choked off as long
fingers wrapped around his throat and squeezed.
Patrick was just registering
that they might be in worse trouble now than a moment ago, when Romy started
talking to the thing.
"Kek! Don't kill him,
Kek! We need him alive!"
"Youknow this
thing?"
She didn't respond but
stayed focused on the creature that continued to throttle Ponytail. The man's
mouth worked spasmodically as his eyes bulged and his face purpled.
"Kek! Let go! Let go
now!"
Finally her words seemed to
get through to the thing. It released its stranglehold and leaped up, but it
didn't stay still, didn't seem able to. It wandered back and forth, growling,
flailing at the air, as if working off a rage. On the floor, Ponytail coughed
and retched, sucking in air, but it was purely reflexive. He was out cold.
As for Duke, he wasn't
breathing at all. And the unnatural angle of his head on his shoulders made it
clear that he would never breathe again.
Nipple-twisting bastard,
Patrick thought. Good riddance.
"Good, Kek," Romy
was saying in a soothing voice. "You did good, very good. Zero will be so
proud of you."
That seemed to calm the
beast. It stopped its agitated pacing and cocked its head as its dark eyes
peered at Romy from beneath a prominent brow. The crimson coloring atop its
snout was fading. Still staring at Romy it made a chirping sound.
Patrick didn't know what to
think. It looked like some bizarre sort of gorilla, but nothing like Patrick
had ever seen in any zoo he'd visited. More like a mutant sim who'd overdosed
on steroids. The creature seemed to be on their side, but just barely. Patrick
had never sensed so much aggression packed into a single being.
"Whatis that thing,
Romy?" he whispered.
"Just be calm,"
she said, nodding and smiling at the creature. "He's been told you're on
our side but he doesn't know you, so he's not sure of you. Whatever you do,
don't make any sudden moves."
He glanced down at his
duct-taped legs and arms. "As if I have a choice."
"I'm about to remedy
that." She looked at the creature. "Kek, you've got to cut me
free," she said softly, as if talking to a child. "So I can call
Zero. Use your knife to cut me free."
Kek unsnapped a safety strap
from a scabbard attached to the belt around its waist-Patrick hadn't noticed
the belt till now-and whipped out one of those huge, saw-toothed Special Forces
knives.
Patrick's gut clenched.
"Oh, Christ! Someone gave that thing a knife?"
"Quiet!" Romy
hissed. "Kek's a 'he,' and you owe him."
"I know, but-"
"I'm not talking about
tonight. Now be quiet and I'll explain later." She turned back to Kek and
dipped her head toward the tape around her right arm. "Could you cut that,
Kek? I can't call Zero and tell him what a good job you did until you cut that
tape."
Kek loped over and Patrick
gasped as the creature raised the knife and, in a move so casual in manner yet
so blindingly fast in execution, slashed the duct tape with a single thrust. He
expected blood to gush from Romy's wrist, but only the tape parted, leaving her
without a scratch.
"Good job!" she said
as she wriggled that arm free and began the laborious task of unwinding the
tape trapping her left wrist.
"Ask him if you can
borrow his knife," Patrick said. "To speed things up." Being
trapped in this chair was making him claustrophobic.
She gave him a rueful smile.
"I wouldn't advise you or anyone else to try to take Kek's knife away from
him. Even if you say, 'Pretty please.'"
She freed her left and, then
began to work on her legs. As she did, Kek retreated to a corner where he
squatted and watched.
When she was finally free
she rose and walked away.
"Hey!" Patrick
said. "What about me?"
She stepped through an
alcove and Patrick heard the rattle of cutlery from within. A moment later she
emerged holding a wicked looking carving knife.
"Ginsu," she said.
"Cuts through tin cans."
"But will it cut duct
tape?"
"We'll see."
It did, of course, and
seconds later Patrick was free. He started to rise, then sat back down. He
looked at the two men on the floor, one dead, the other halfway there, then at
the creature squatting against the wall, watching them, and felt weak, as if
someone had pulled a drainage plug from his ankle and all his energy had run
out.
"What's going on, Romy?
What have we got ourselves into?"
"Life!" she said,
turning, bending at the waist, and leaning toward him. "Don't you feel
alive, more alive than you've ever felt in your life?" She held the Ginsu
blade before her face. "This is it! This is the cutting edge! This is
where your vote is counted! This is where you make a difference!"
She's high, he thought.
Stoked on adrenaline. And me? A total wreck.
"You're very scary
right now," he told her.
"Am I?" She
straightened. "Sorry. That was someone else talking."
"What?"
"Never mind." She
pointed to the unconscious man. "Can you believe it? We've finally got one
of them!"
"One of who?"
"They're from Manassas,
or whoever's behind Manassas. And the people behind Manassas are behind SimGen.
This blows the lid off, breaks everything wide open. We're finally going to get
some answers."
"What if he doesn't
want to talk?"
"Oh, he'll talk."
She turned and lifted the inoculator from the kit on the coffee table. "Do
unto others what they were about to do to you, right?"
Patrick stared at the amber
liquid in the vial. They'd been about to inject some of that into Romy and him.
"You think that's the
truth drug we heard about? The one they found in the dead globulin
farmers?"
She nodded. "Totuus.
I'd bet my soul."
"And then what?"
"I don't know."
She gestured to the dead man. "Maybe we'd have ended up like him."
"Speaking of him, how
do we explain a dead body to the police?"
"We won't."
"We can't very well say
he broke his own neck."
"I'm sure Zero will
have a way to handle it."
Romy picked up her coat from
the floor. "Kek, you did good," she said soothingly to the creature
as she rummaged in a pocket.
Patrick noticed that the red
coloration had faded completely from its snout, replaced now by a bright blue.
"Can I ask again:
Whatis he?"
"Oh, I'm sorry,"
she said as she pulled a phone from the coat pocket. "I'll introduce
you."
"That's okay."
She motioned to the
creature. "Come over here, Kek. I want you to meet Mister Sullivan."
"Really," Patrick
said out of the corner of his mouth as Kek rose and started toward them.
Something about this creature stirred a primal fear in him. And the way its
gaze veered to Patrick's left and right, never making eye contact, didn't help.
"That's okay."
"Kek," Romy said,
"shake hands with our new friend, Patrick Sullivan. And Patrick, meet the
fellow who saved your life back in October."
"My life? You mean,
when we were knocked off the Saw Mill?"
As Romy nodded Patrick
relived the moment in the inky grove as the massive arms of the man named
Ricker wrapped around his head and shoulders, felt them tense as he prepared to
snap Patrick's neck, and then the sudden release. Moments later, Ricker and his
friend were dead.
He considered Kek's muscular
arms, sensed the power in the thick shoulders bulging through the sleeveless
coverall. Yes, power to spare, more than enough to take out two hardened pros,
especially if they didn't see him coming.
"I guess I owe you big
time, Kek," Patrick said, thrusting out his hand. He still didn't know
what kind of mutant monkey thing stood before him, but he most definitely
wanted Kek on his side. "It's a pleasure to meet you. Thank you for saving
my life. Thank you very much."
Kek pulled back his
shoulders and puffed out his chest. Finally he made eye contact. His hand was
warm and dry as his long fingers wrapped around Patrick's. He bared his teeth,
revealing those fangs. An attempt at a smile?
"Does he speak?"
Patrick said.
"Not more than a few
syllables-one of them being 'Kek.' But he understands speech and he
signs."
Kek released Patrick's hand
and turned to the two men on the floor. Ponytail groaned and stirred. Kek bent,
grabbed the man's hair, and slammed his head against the floor.
"Easy, Kek," Romy
said. "We don't want to scramble his brains."
"Whatdo we want to
do?" Patrick said.
Romy said, "Zero,"
to her PCA, then smiled. "That's what I'm about to find out."
4
Every muscle in Luca's body wound tight as he let himself
into the foyer of Romy Cadman's apartment building. Something had gone wrong.
He didn't know what, couldn't imagine what, but Palmer and Jackson weren't
answering his calls.
They'd been flown in from
the Idaho facility especially for this op-both of them experienced men who'd
return there immediately after they completed their work. The chance of Cadman
or Sullivan ever seeing either of them again was nil. They'd called in when
they'd set themselves up in the apartment; they'd responded when the
surveillance team in the car outside let them know that both the woman and
Sullivan were on their way up.
But that had been over an
hour ago. No one had heard from them since. No one had entered or left the
building since Cadman and Sullivan's arrival.
He couldn't help remembering
the first time he'd run an op against these two: a humiliating failure and two
of his men dead.
Not again, he thought,
almost a prayer. Please, not again.
But the previous op had been
a complicated outdoor job, with innumerable variables; this one was in a small
apartment, a limited, controlled field of operation that Palmer and Jackson had
secured beforehand. What was wrong? An hour was more than enough for a pair of
armed pros to deal with two unarmed civilians, juice them up with Totuus, and
record the answers to a few questions. Like, who do you take instructions from,
where do you get your money, and so on.
Luca had wanted to be there,
and would have been if termination had been in the plan; but since Cadman and
Sullivan were going to be released, he couldn't risk showing his face.
He hurried up the stairs.
Key in hand, he pressed his ear against the door to 3A and knocked. No sound
from within, not a whisper, not a rustle. He knocked again, same result.
Steeling himself for what
might lie within-visions of Ricker's and Green's smashed skulls from the last
time flashed through his brain-Luca unlocked the door and stepped inside.
Empty silence. Quick dodges
in and out of the rooms, another circuit to check out the closets, and then
back to the center of the front room, to wander in a slow, baffled circle.
Where the hell was everybody? Could he be in the wrong apartment?
And then he spotted white
fragments and powder on the carpet in the corner. He stepped closer and
recognized it as plaster. A quick look up and he found a deep pock in the wall.
Bullet hole. Fresh one. Looked for more but came up empty.
He felt his pulse kick up.
Someone had got off a shot, but only one. That confirmed that he was in the
right place. But where did everybody go? He stepped to the window and looked
down at the small rear courtyard. No way out here-the fire escape was in front.
They had to be hiding in another apartment-the only possible answer. He'd keep
the building under surveillance. Sooner or later they had to show themselves.
But what if they weren't
here? What if they'd got away clean?
He pulled out his PCA and
called down to the surveillance car across the street. "Anybody leave
since I've been inside?"
"Negative."
Snyder's voice. He and Lowery were on watch. "Saw a grayish van pull out
of an alley half a block down right after you went in, but that's about it."
A van. Could that be...?
"Did you get the plate
number?"
"Yep. You want a read
back?"
Luca closed his eyes. Thank
God for Snyder. At least someone was on the ball. "No. But don't lose it.
It might be important."
And then again, it might not
mean a goddamn thing.
Luca Portero dried his
sweaty palms on his coat sleeves. Two more men gone, and he knew no more now
about who was behind Cadman and Sullivan than he did before.
How the hell was he going to
tell Lister?
5
"You know," Patrick told Zero after they'd
pulled into the West Side garage and the door had closed behind their van,
"I could get used to this. And that worries me."
The cascade of emotions from
the threats and the violence had faded now, leaving him oddly exhilarated. But
it had been harrowing.
When Romy had called Zero
they'd learned that he had an escape route all worked out. Following his
instructions, they'd taken the stairs to the roof-Romy in the lead, Patrick
bringing up the rear, Kek in the middle carrying their two attackers, one over
each shoulder. Romy's was the second of four joined buildings. They'd walked
across two neighboring roofs to a ledge where a fire escape led down to an
alley. After a short but nerve-wracking wait, Zero's battered Econoline pulled
up and they'd all climbed aboard.
Patrick had handled the
driving on the way back, with Zero in the passenger seat, and Romy in the
middle. That was when his mood had begun to change. They'd done it! They'd
faced murderous opposition and-with no little help from Kek-overcome it. They
were wheeling away with no one in pursuit, no one even aware that they'd turned
the tables.
As soon as they'd reached
Manhattan they found a deserted spot under the FDR Drive where they leaned
Duke's corpse against a steel support. Throughout the night anyone who saw him
would think he was passed out drunk; in the morning light they'd think
differently. Patrick then piloted the van across town with Duke's unconscious
partner.
Masked as usual, Zero
stepped out of the passenger door and regarded Patrick through his dark
glasses. "Yes. It's the high of victory. Not a good thing to get too used
to. You can't expect to win all the time."
"I know." Patrick
opened his door and hopped out. "But after all the bad news, after being pushed
around and running into wall after wall, this feels very, very good. It'll feel
even better if it turns out that one of these two poisoned my clients.
"And maybe," Romy
said, taking the hand he offered to help her out of the van, "he's one of the
SLA creeps who butchered the globulin farm sims as well."
"Wouldn't that be
sweet."
Zero leaned back inside and
spoke toward the darkened rear section. "Kek. Tape the man into the chair
by the wall."
They'd brought everything
along-the tape, the inoculator kit, the silenced pistols. Neither man had
carried any identification.
Poetic justice, Patrick
thought as he watched Kek get to work. Bound with his own tape, injected with
his own truth drug.
He looked around, noticing
how his senses felt heightened. Despite the low light in the garage, he seemed
to see everything with day-bright clarity. The tang of gasoline and the heavier
odor of DW-40 were sharp in the air; the ticking of the van's cooling engine
was like a ball-peen hammer rapping an anvil.
Zero was away from the van
now, moving to the darker shadows of a corner. Why wouldn't he let anyone see
his face? What was he afraid of?
Patrick followed him, but
not too closely. "What is he and where did you find him?" he said,
pointing to Kek.
"In Idaho. Last
year."
"Idaho?" Romy
said. "You never told me that. I thought you'd found him around
SimGen."
Zero shrugged. "Sorry.
It never came up. And it didn't seem to matter until you saw that Idaho license
plate on the SimGen campus."
"I wondered why you
were so psyched about that."
"How do you just happen
to 'find' something like him in Idaho?" Patrick asked.
"Don't you remember
hearing reports of people claiming they'd spotted Bigfoot in Idaho last
winter?"
"Vaguely. I try not to
devote too many memory cells to that sort of thing."
"I do...if it sounds
furry like a sim. I sent a couple of volunteers out there to track down the
sightings, and they returned with Kek, suffering from starvation, frostbite,
and half dead from exposure. Dr. Cannon and I nursed him back to health
and-"
"Who's Dr.
Cannon?"
"You met her at Beacon
Ridge," Romy said. "She was the woman doctor who tried to save the
poisoned sims."
"Right," Patrick
said. "I remember her. But whatis Kek? Where did he come from?"
"I don't know,"
Zero replied, watching as the creature taped the still unconscious Ponytail
into the chair. "But he's obviously the product of a recombinant lab, an
advanced one. He looks to be part mandrill and part gorilla, and I'd be very
surprised if he didn't have a fair amount of human DNA spliced into his genome
as well."
Patrick shook his head in
wonder. "He's scary looking."
"I doubt that's by
accident. Nor his aggressiveness."
"But why?" Kek had
finished his task and now squatted by the prisoner, his eyes fixed on Zero as
he awaited further instructions. "Who'd want to create something like
that?"
Zero walked back to the cab
of the van and reached through the window. "I'll show you." He
withdrew one of the silenced pistols and held it up. "A .45 caliber HK
SOCOM. Ever seen one before?"
"Never," Patrick
said. "What's 'HK' mean? Hong Kong?"
Zero laughed.
"Hardly." He swiveled the pistol toward Romy. "Romy? Know
it?"
"It's Heckler and Koch,
but beyond that...sorry, no."
"Heckler and Koch Mk 23
Special Operations Command model. Its barrel comes threaded and suppresser
ready." Zero held it out to Kek. "Kek? Would you break this down for
me please?"
"Are you nuts?"
Patrick whispered as Kek loped forward. "That's a loaded weapon!"
Zero didn't respond. He
placed the pistol in Kek's outstretched hand and said, "You can use that
workbench over there."
Kek took the pistol and
inspected it, turning it over in his hands a few times before he ejected the
clip and then worked the slide to remove the chambered round.
"He knows guns!"
Patrick said, his voice hushed in awe.
"You ain't seen nuthin
yet," Romy told him.
Kek stepped over to the
workbench and Patrick watched in amazement as his long, nimble fingers removed
the silencer and disassembled the gun with practiced speed, then arranged its
innards for inspection, all in less than thirty seconds. When finished he took
one step back and stood with his hands behind his back, awaiting approval.
"He's military!"
Patrick said.
"Or paramilitary. Or
perhaps intended as some sort of semi-human mercenary. Who can say? But he can
break down just about any weapon you hand him, and he knows no fear."
"A perfect
soldier."
"Maybe not perfect, but
damn near."
"What happened to his
left hand?" Patrick said as he noticed that Kek's ring and pinkie fingers
were missing a joint or two.
"Frostbite," Zero
replied.
"So he owes his life to
you?"
"And Kek knows
it," Romy said. "He's totally devoted to Zero."
"An overstatement, I
assure you," Zero said.
Patrick didn't think so.
He'd noticed that Kek's eyes had stayed focused on Zero since his arrival. Even
now, as he awaited approval of his breakdown of the pistol, his eyes never left
Zero.
"I believe he's waiting
for your okay," Patrick said.
"Oh, sorry," Zero
replied. He saluted Kek and said, "Excellent job, my friend. Please
reassemble it."
Patrick had no way to gauge
this creature's emotions, but he sensed a burst of pride and pleasure in
response to Zero's approval. Oh, yes, Kek might be hell on wheels when it came
to confronting an enemy, but he was Zero's kitty cat.
"Who made him?"
Patrick said as Kek's flying fingers clicked the pieces back into place.
"SimGen?"
"The most likely
suspect," Zero said.
"But if so, how did he
get from New Jersey to Idaho?"
"Our guess is he was
put aboard a truck from the SimGen basic research facility; the truck was
driven aboard a plane at the SimGen airstrip and flown to Idaho."
"Why Idaho?"
"Because it's largely
empty. Because you can buy big parcels of land that allow you to operate in
near absolute privacy."
"But who?" Patrick
said. "Who wants to operate in secrecy? Who wants to stockpile a bunch of
Keks?"
"Kek might be just one
of many new species quartered in the hinterlands."
The possibilities made
Patrick more than a little queasy. "There's a thought to take to bed with
you."
Just then Ponytail stirred,
groaned, and lifted his head.
Zero glanced his way and
said, "A font of information on these very subjects is about to become
available to us. I hope."
"I don't think you have
to hope," Patrick said. "I'd swear he recognized Kek when he jumped
him. He even tried to say something. It sounded like, 'Kree-' but he never got
to finish it."
Ponytail's eyes were glazed
and it was obvious to Patrick he had no idea where he was or why he was tied up
or what was going on. Tell him he's at an S & M beerfest in Sydney and he'd
buy it. After ten seconds or so his chin dropped back onto his chest.
"We'll have to ask him
about that," Zero said. "He should be ready to talk soon." He
turned to Kek. "Take your position upstairs at the window now."
Kek turned and scrambled up
a metal ladder affixed to the rear wall.
"The garage comes with
a loft," Zero said. "The window up there affords an excellent view of
the street. It also serves as Kek's home."
"So it was him I saw
peeking down on us that day," Patrick said.
Zero nodded. "Kek has a
curious nature." He turned to Romy. "Where did we put that inoculator
kit?"
"Right here," Romy
said, and handed it to him.
"The moment of truth,
as it were," Zero said, opening the kit as he approached the captive.
"Now we find out if Luca Portero is as involved as we think he is."
"How safe is that
stuff?" said Patrick, eyeing the amber fluid in the inoculator's chamber.
"I've never used
it," Zero said. "But they were willing to dose you up with it. Any
objections to returning the favor?"
"None at all,"
Patrick said.
"I didn't think
so." He handed the inoculator to Romy. "Would you do the honors?"
"My pleasure," she
said.
She tilted Ponytail's head
to the side, exposing his neck.
"You know what you're
doing?" Patrick said.
She nodded. "Used to
work research. Injected a lot of animals before I decided I'd rather work the
other side of the street."
She placed the business end
of the inoculator gun against the side of Ponytail's neck. She look as if she
were about to execute him.
"What about the
dose?" Patrick said. "How do you know how much to give?"
"Haven't the faintest.
But this is the dose he was planning to put into us, so that's what goes into
him."
"And if it's too
much?"
She shrugged. "That'll
be his problem, won't it."
Patrick realized he was
seeing another side of Romy, a new persona, cold, efficient, almost ruthless in
simmering fury. Was this the "someone else" she'd mentioned before?
Not that he could blame her: This man had invaded her home, bound her, watched as
his partner had mistreated her, and had been about to invade the very core of
her privacy-her mind. Add to all that the possibility that he might have had a
hand in the deaths of dozens of sims and the guy was lucky she wasn't jabbing
the inoculator into his eye.
Patrick felt his shoulders
bunch as the Romy pressed the trigger and injected the liquid through the skin
of Ponytail's neck with a softpop .
The man flinched, his eyes
fluttered open. He raised his head and looked around, dazed. Patrick saw the
purpling welts on his throat, mementos of Kek's fingers. He blinked. Patrick
watched a look of utter horror flow through his features when he saw the
inoculator in Romy's hand.
"No!" he rasped,
his voice barely audible through his bruised larynx. "You didn't! Please
tell me you didn't!"
Romy bounced the inoculator
in her hand. "Shoot you up with your own junk? You bet we did."
"Not Totuus!"
"If that's what's in
your vial, then, yes, Totuus."
And then Ponytail did
something that took Patrick completely by surprise: His face screwed up and he
began to sob. Romy took a step back and regarded him with mute shock.
"You didn't have to do
that!" he squeaked in his laryngitis voice. "I would have told you! I
would have told you anything you wanted to know!"
"Sure, you would
have," Romy said. "And we would have been able to take every word to
the bank, right?"
"What's wrong with
him?" Patrick said, turning to Zero. The man's genuine terror was getting
to him. "What don't we know about this drug?"
Zero's expression was
unreadable behind his ski mask, but his tone was puzzled. "I researched it
after hearing that it had been found in the globulin farmers' bodies. Its main
side effect is a headache for about a day afterwards."
Romy seemed unfazed by the
man's abject terror. She pressed the redRECORD button on his own recorder and
held it before his face.
"What's your
name?" she said.
Ponytail squeezed his eyes
shut and gritted his teeth, fighting the drug and the question.
"Come on," Romy
cooed. "This is a simple one. Your name...what is your name?"
The man's face reddened with
effort, then the words broke free in a hoarse rush: "David Daniel
Palmer!"
"Excellent. Now, Mr.
David Daniel Palmer, who sent you?"
He began to blubber again.
"Please don't ask me that! Please!"
"And if I'd begged you
not to shoot me up with this stuff an hour ago, you would have spared me,
right?"
"Please!"
Romy's voice hardened.
"Stop stalling! Tell me now: Who do you work for?"
Parker screwed up his face,
chewed on his lips, then blurted through a sob, "SIRG-"
But as soon as the word
escaped him, his eyes rolled back in his head. He stiffened, bared his teeth,
and began to shake, violently enough to start his chair walking across the
floor.
"Ohmigod!" Romy
cried. "What's happening?"
Zero leaped forward.
"He's having some sort of seizure! If he swallows his tongue he'll choke
to death!"
Patrick watched in horror as
Zero's gloved hands worked past Palmer's foam-flecked lips, trying to pry open
his jaws.
And then as suddenly as the
attack had started, it stopped. Palmer drooped in his chair, breathing
raggedly, his eyes glazed.
"Daniel Palmer,"
Zero said, leaning close, all but shouting. "Are you all right?"
Palmer mumbled something.
Zero shook his shoulder.
"I said, are you all right?"
Palmer stared at him as if
he were speaking a foreign language, then said, "Crash want rag lay hedge
knock two."
"What?" Zero said.
"Numb bag five sense
peel drawer another stop see."
"He's lost his
mind!" Romy said, her hand over her mouth. The cold bitch goddess with the
inoculator and the tape recorder was gone, and she was back to the Romy Patrick
knew...or thought he did. "Did I do this? Is this my fault?"
"I don't know,"
Zero said. "I've never seen or heard of anything like it." He glanced
at Romy and Patrick. "There's also the possibility he's faking."
"He gets an Oscar if he
is," Patrick said.
Zero leaned close again:
"What's your name?"
"Realize game
attached."
"Oh, God!" Romy
whispered.
Zero pulled out a phone.
"I think we need help."
"Who are you
calling?" Patrick asked.
"A doctor."
6
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
DECEMBER 16
"Duke Jackson is dead," said Lister's voice
through the receiver.
Luca Portero tightened his
grip on the encrypted phone and kept kicking at the leaves. He'd been out in
the woods surrounding his cabin, taking some fresh morning air, taking precautions...the
way things were going, precautions might come in handy. The news didn't
surprise him.
"How?"
"Broken neck. His body
was found around 5:00A .M. A red flag went up at our end when NYPD tried to run
his prints this morning. They've got him listed as a John Doe and he'll remain
that way."
"What about
Palmer?"
"Not a peep. And that
worries me more. I'd almost prefer to have his corpse surface."
Luca knew what Lister meant.
An experienced operative caught in the act while carrying a supply of Totuus
was a recipe for disaster. But Luca had taken precautions for just this
eventuality.
"We're protected,"
Luca said. "I had him and Jackson down a dose of MTW before they went
out."
"Thank God for that.
How did you ever convince them to take it?"
"I told them they had
no choice, that it was a direct order from the Old Man himself."
"Lucky they believed
you. Still...MTW is still pretty new. Not much field experience with it. Better
pray it worked. Because if it didn't..."
Lister didn't finish the
sentence. Didn't have to. If the MTW had failed, Palmer would have spilled
everything by now.
The MTWdid work, Luca
thought. Ithad to.
"But even if it works
perfectly," Lister went on, "you're not off the hook for muffing
another operation. And neither am I."
"We didn't muff athing
!" Luca said as a cold lump formed in his belly. "The Idaho hotshots
blew it."
"The people upstairs
don't see it that way. They're out four skilled operatives in two months with
nothing to show for it. And they keep asking me, 'Where's the pregnant sim? All
our resources at your disposal, a five-million-dollar reward for information
leading to her, and what have you come up with?' Do you hear what they're
saying, Luca? It used to be, 'When's Portero coming up with something?' Now
it's, 'When areyou coming up with something?' Me. Like we're Siamese
twins."
Luca thought he heard a
tremor in Lister's voice. He'd never known Darryl Lister to be scared. When
they'd been pinned down by Taliban mortars outside Gardez, he'd been the
picture of cool. But now...
"Shit. I'm sorry,
man."
"Hey, we're not dead
yet. We've gotten out of tighter places. But they want results by the end of
the year."
The end of the year-two
weeks!
Luca said, "What about
the plate number Snyder spotted on that van last night?"
"Nothing. He must have
got it wrong. The number's not in use. Tell Snyder he needs glasses."
Luca didn't think so. More
likely the plates were phony, and Palmer and Jackson had been in that van along
with Cadman, Sullivan, and who knew who else.
"All right then,"
Luca said. "What's the status of Cadman and Sullivan now? Do we keep after
them?"
"The decision's been
made to back off for the time being. They'll be on guard now and-"
"Obviously they
werealready on guard."
"Yes, well, be that as
it may, they'll be on full alert now, and we can't risk losing any more men.
The legal people can put the stall on any discovery motions Sullivan files;
we'll find out who's behind them later. Right now concentrate on finding that
sim."
"It's possible she's
dead," Luca said, hoping it was true. "That cold snap after she
escaped was pretty mean. She could have crawled into a pipe somewhere and froze
to death."
"Then find her body.
Since that fool Eckert started blathering about her being pregnant and the
baby's father being human, SimGen stock price has slid six points. Most people
think he's crazy, but he's making a lot of investors nervous. And that makes
everyone upstairs nervous. You know what SimGen stock means."
Luca nodded. It meant
independence for SIRG. No strings, no brakes.
"We've got to find her,
Luca. I don't have to tell you what will happen if Eckert or Cadman and
Sullivan get to her first."
Luca closed his eyes. That
would finish SimGen, finish SIRG, and leave him running for his life.
"They won't."
And to make sure they
wouldn't, he had to nail Ellis Sinclair as their informant and serve up his
head on a silver platter.
7
MANHATTAN
Patrick checked the cars on Henry Street outside his
office building before stepping out. All looked empty, no plumes of idling
exhaust. After the other night, he was spooked, and not ashamed to admit it.
You weren't paranoid when they really were out to get you.
He stepped out onto the
sidewalk and cried out as he collided with someone. He jumped back, ready to
run back inside, when he noticed it was an older woman. He grabbed her arm to
keep her from falling.
"I'm sorry," he said.
"I wasn't looking."
"Did I frighten you,
Mr. Sullivan?" she said.
He looked at her face.
Uh-oh. Alice Fredericks. The Mother of All Sims.
"Hello, Miss
Fredericks. Nice to see you again. No, you didn't frighten me. I just didn't
expect anyone there." He made a show of glancing at his watch. "I'm
just heading off to a meeting and-"
"You didn't call me,
Mr. Sullivan." Her look was reproachful. "You said you would and I've
been waiting every day but you haven't called."
"I told you," he
said, backing away, "I'll call when my schedule lightens up. It's just
that there's been so much going on."
No lie there.
"You're not afraid, are
you?"
Maybe he should tell her he
was very afraid, that he was terrified. Then she'd look for someone else. But
he couldn't make himself say it.
"Not of space
aliens." True enough. Too many other truly frightening things going on in
his life right now to worry about space aliens. "Not a bit."
"Very well," she
said. "I'll be waiting."
He turned and hurried toward
Catherine Street to find a taxi.
After a ride during which
Patrick spent more time looking out the rear window than the front, the cabby
dropped him off at Penn Station. He wandered around Seventh Avenue, going in
and out of stores to make sure he wasn't being followed, then headed further
west.
Finally he arrived at Zero's
garage just behind a middle-aged woman. Despite the parka-like hood cinched
tight around her head against the cold, he recognized her.
"Dr. Cannon," he
said, extending his hand. "I'm Patrick Sullivan. I don't know if you
remember me, but I was-"
"You were helping at
the Beacon Ridge atrocity," she said with a smile as she pushed back her
hood. He noticed that her long graying mane had been shorn to an almost boyish
length. "Yes, of course I remember. And call me Betsy, please."
The door opened and Romy was
there, smiling. "A two-fer! Come in, Betsy. So good of you to come."
"No problem. It's
easier for me to come to Zero than him to come to me."
"And you cut your hair.
I love it!"
Patrick stepped inside and
closed the door behind him, remembering Zero's hurried phone conversation with
Dr. Cannon last night. She was on staff at Nassau County Community Hospital
and, following her instructions to Zero, Patrick and Romy had driven David
Palmer out to the hospital and left him in the parking lot for her to
"find."
Now, as the three of them
trooped toward the rear of the garage, Kek suddenly came bounding down the
ladder from his domain in the loft and charged them. Patrick tensed, waiting
for Zero or Romy to call him off, but they said nothing. Then Betsy Cannon
opened her arms and embraced the beast.
"How is my friend Kek
doing?" she said.
Kek signed something to her
and Betsy laughed. They had a brief conversation-Betsy speaking, Kek signing,
then Kek scrambled back up the ladder to his observation post.
"You nursed him back to
health, I'm told," Patrick said as Kek vanished into the ceiling.
"Not really. Zero did
most of the nursing. I tried to save his frostbitten fingers but was only
eighty-percent successful. As an OB-GYN I have surgical training, but-"
"OB?" Patrick
glanced past her at Zero who nodded. "Then if we find this pregnant
sim-?"
"You'll bring her to
me, of course. I've lots of experience delivering sims."
"You have?"
"Certainly. I spent six
years as medical director of SimGen's natal center. When it finally seeped
through to me that I was delivering a race of slaves into the world, I quit.
And not long after that I received a call from Zero."
The idea of birthing sims
thrust Alice Fredericks's crazy, tortured face into Patrick's mind. "Let
me pop you a question out of far left field: Do you know if SimGen ever used
human women to bear sims?"
"What?" Romy said.
"That's not out of left field, that's from the bleachers!"
"Not while I was there,
I assure you," Betsy said. "Why do you ask?"
Patrick told them about
Alice Fredericks and her story.
"She certainly sounds
delusional," Betsy said.
"I'm ready to believe
that SimGen's connected to almost anything bad," Zero said, "but I
draw the line at space aliens. Let's get back to reality, shall we?" He
turned to Betsy Cannon. "Any idea yet as to what's wrong with the patient
we sent you last night?"
"The more we learn
about his condition," she said, shaking her head, "the more
mysterious it becomes. He has a form of aphasia that's both expressive and
receptive."
"Sorry?" Patrick
said.
"He can't understand
what's said to him, or even written out for him, and can only jabber word salad
when he wants to speak."
Patrick shivered inside.
"Sounds like an inner circle of lawyer hell."
"Syndromes like it can
occur with strokes or sometimes with tumors that affect the Broca speech area
of the brain, but an MR scan showed a perfectly normal brain. We shipped him
out to NYU Medical Center this morning where they did a PET scan-that's positron
emission tomography. It gives us a functional as opposed to structural view of
the brain, and Mr. Palmer's Broca area has been damaged."
"Damaged how?"
Romy said.
Betsy shrugged.
"Neurology is not my field but I've been asking a lot of questions under
the guise of being interested because I found him in the parking lot. The
experts' best guess is a toxin."
"Totuus?" Romy
said. "You mean I did that to him?"
"No. Totuus was found
in his system, but the NYU neurologists believe he had another compound in his
bloodstream that combined with the Totuus to form a neurotoxin specific to the
Broca area."
"Pretty damn
sophisticated," Zero said.
Betsy nodded.
"Amazingly sophisticated, according to the experts. All just theory, of
course, one they have no way of testing at the moment, but it goes a long way
toward explaining his syndrome."
"And it fits with his
behavior last night," Romy said. "Remember how he broke down and
cried when he found out we'd injected him with the Totuus? He must have known
he had the other compound floating through his bloodstream, and knew what was
coming."
Zero said, "A failsafe
to prevent anyone from using Palmer's own Totuus against him."
"Is it permanent?"
Romy asked.
Betsy shrugged. "Who
can say? No one I've spoken to has ever dealt with anything like this."
"My guess is it's
temporary," Zero said. "I can't see anyone willingly taking something
that could cause irreversible brain damage. But temporary can be a long
time."
"Talk about covering
your tracks," Romy said, shaking her head. "How are we ever going to
nail these monsters?"
Betsy smiled and tightened
her scarf around her neck. "That I will leave to you. As for me, as long
as I'm in the city I believe I'll do some Christmas shopping. Good luck. And
you know I'm available anytime day or night if you find that pregnant
sim."
Patrick showed her out, then
returned to where Zero and Romy were standing.
"I've been
thinking," he said. "What if it wasn't just the mixture of the two
drugs in his bloodstream? What if saying a vital word was what triggered
the-what was it?"
"Aphasia," Zero
said, then shook his head. "That sounds even more farfetched."
"Maybe. But what was he
saying at the very instant something tripped the circuit breaker in his
brain?"
"I don't
remember," Romy said, "but it's easy enough to find out."
She went to a shelf on the
wall and retrieved the recorder. She reversed it for a second, then hitPLAY .
Romy's voice burst from the tiny speaker.
"-op stalling! Tell me
now: Who do you work for?"was followed by Parker's hoarse
rasp:"SIRG-" and then strangled noises and cries of alarm.
Romy switched off the
player. She looked pale. "Want to hear it again?"
"That's okay. You heard
the word: 'Surge,' right?"
Zero shrugged. "I doubt
he was talking about a fabric or an electric current. I believe he got out the
first syllable of the answer-'s-u-r' or 's-e-r' or 'c-e-r' or maybe even
'c-i-r' for circle-and then the seizure hit and the rest of the word or words
were crushed into a guttural mess."
"But this was in direct
response to 'Who do you work for?' so it's got to have some relevance, don't
you think? I mean, at least it's a start. Question is, how to find out if it
means anything?"
"Why don't we simply
ask?" Romy said.
"Oh, sure. I'll just
call up Mercer Sinclair and say, 'What does the word "surge" mean to
you?' That'll work."
A smile played about Romy's
lips, the first since last night. "Why call when you can ask in
person?"
8
NEWARK, NJ
Meerm feel ver bad today. So fat belly. Legs swoll. Hard
move. Many move inside, like thing kicking. Kick-kick-kick. And dizz. Ver dizz.
Oop. Meerm trip, fall
against bunk. Make noise. Loud. Must hide. Benny come.
Climb top closet. So hard
climb. More hard squeeze into hole. But Meerm push hard. Push back board and
wait in dark. Soon Benny come. Talk self. Always talk self.
"Who's up here? Goddamn
it, I heard you. I been hearing you all week! Now come out!"
Benny come closet. Pull
door. Meerm not breathe. Hear Benny voice through wall. Shout-shout-shout.
"Where are you, dammit!
You gotta be somewhere! Or maybe I just gone loco! No! I know what I heard,
dammit!"
Benny leave closet. Many
loud noise in room-dresser move, bunk move, door slam-slam-slam. Then noise
stop.
"All right so maybe I
am hearing things. Next I'll be seeing things. That's it. I'm losing it. I been
babysitting these monkeys so long I'm going bugfuck nuts! But I coulda
sworn..."
Benny go way but Meerm stay.
Too tired. Too scare to move. And hurt. Kick and hurt all time. Poor Meerm.
When hurt stop?
9
MANHATTAN
DECEMBER 19
Romy was late for the meeting. On purpose.
For the past few years she'd
made a point of keeping a few shares of SimGen stock in her 401(k) for the sole
purpose of being invited to shareholders' meetings. She'd been to a number of
these and knew how they went-blather and hype from beginning to end. The only
interesting part was the finale when Mercer Sinclair took questions from the
audience.
By the time she reached the
upper floors of the Waldorf Astoria she already knew from the ecstatic talk in
the lobby that SimGen-or "simgee," as the stockholders liked to call
it, phoneticizing its SIMG stock symbol-had come in with earnings of $1.37 per share,
beating not only the analysts' predictions of $1.26, but the whisper number of
$1.31 as well.
She walked into the
magnificent four-story Art Deco grand ballroom just in time to fill out an
index card with her question for the CEO. Instead of passing her card down to
the center aisle, she walked it to the rear of the ballroom and personally handed
it to the elderly gent who would be reading them.
"I'd really like to
know the answer to this," she whispered, laying a hand on his arm and
flashing her warmest smile.
He looked at her over the
top of his reading glasses and smiled. "I'll see what I can do,
miss."
Then she found an empty seat
along the side and waited. Mercer Sinclair, dark-haired, dark-eyed, and
impeccable in a charcoal gray silk Armani suit, stood behind a podium on the
dais and breezed through the usual run of inane questions from the audience
about future earnings projections and new product outlooks-all of which were
explained in detail in the annual report-and deftly fielded inquiries about the
Reverend Eckert's assertions that the lost sim was pregnant, laughing them off
as a crude and transparent ratings ploy.
And then the reader-man got
to Romy's question.
"Mr. Sinclair, a
stockholder wants to know, 'How big a part does surge play in your day-to-day
operations?'"
Romy leaned forward,
studying Mercer Sinclair's face as it floated in the glow from the podium. She
saw him stiffen as if touched by a cattle prod, watched his eyes widen, then
narrow. Even if she were blind she'd have detected his shock from his stammering
reply.
"Wh-what? I-I don't
understand the question. What does it mean? Could the person who asked it
please identify himself and clarify the question?"
Romy didn't move.
"Please," Sinclair
said. "I...I'm quite willing to answer any question, but I have to
understand it first. Who asked it? If you'll be kind enough to clarify..."
Romy sat and watched him
stumble and fumble, peering into the great dark lake of faces before him.
Finally he fluttered a hand
at the reader and said, "Very well...I guess he left...next
question."
He went on responding but
Romy could tell his heart was no longer in it. His answers were terse, his
manner distracted, as if he couldn't wait to be done with this.
Before the lights came up,
Romy wandered back to where the elderly question reader was winding up the Q
and A session, and grabbed the discard pile of cards he'd already read. No
sense in leaving any unnecessary traces behind.
She had a bad moment when
two men in suits followed her into the elevator down to the lobby, but they
spent the ride talking about hockey and got off on the twenty-second floor. She
used a side exit and stepped out onto East Forty-ninth. She waited to see if
anyone followed, then hurried downhill to sunny Lexington Avenue where Patrick
waited. His face was too well known to SimGen stockholders to risk his presence
at the meeting, but he hadn't been able to stay completely away.
"Well?" he said as
he took her arm and began walking her uptown. The cold snap had broken and the
day was clear and mild. "Did he react?"
"Did he ever,"
Romy said. "He just about lost it. Looked as if he'd just been stripped
naked and hosed with ice water."
Patrick grinned and jabbed
the air with a fist. "Knew it!"
She had to hand it to
Patrick. He had an acute ear for nuances and he'd heard something in that one
syllable from David Palmer. He'd been sure it was significant, and he'd been
right.
He threw an arm around her
shoulders. "Damn, I wish I could have been there." He waved his free
hand in the air. "But forget about that. The question now is, how do we
capitalize on this?"
"For one thing,"
Romy said, "we know the word itself has meaning. It's not just part of
another word or a phrase."
"If I'd known that last
night I could have saved myself a lot of trouble. I went through an online
dictionary and plugged in every spelling of 'surge' I could think of to see if
it might be the first syllable of another word. Got nowhere. Didn't do any
better when I tried every possible homonym. 'Surge' is not a common
syllable."
"For which we should be
thankful, I guess. Imagine if he'd said 'con'?"
"Then we'd be cooked.
But 'surge' itself doesn't appear to mean anything."
"It might if it's an
acronym."
He stopped walking as if
he'd hit an invisible wall. His arm dropped from her shoulder and she missed
it.
"An acronym! Of course!
And acronyms usually mean government." He pressed the heel of his palm
against his forehead. "Do you know how many Washington agencies,
departments, sub departments, and bureaus are designated by acronyms? It's
staggering."
She looked away, glancing
around to see if anyone was watching them. "What makes you so sure you'll
find it in Washington? You've already traced the chain of subsidiaries leading
to Manassas Ventures offshore. Who knows how far offshore the chain goes? Maybe
it ends in Moscow. Or Beijing."
"You wouldn't be trying
to discourage me, would you?"
"Not at all, but we're
still a long way from home."
"At least we've got the
Internet."
"Right." He
glanced around. "I think I'll head downtown for a little point-and-click
session on my office computer. Want to come along?"
"I've got to get back
to OPRR, but we can share a cab."
He looked into her eyes.
"What almost happened the other night at your place?"
"We almost got dosed
with Totuus."
"No. I mean, what was
in the cards before we opened the door and found the two uninvited
guests?"
Romy held his gaze. She'd
grown to like Patrick, even admire him in some ways, but she didn't love him.
She enjoyed his company and, even though she knew injecting sex into their
relationship might complicate matters, she'd wanted him that night. But that
wasn't the same as wanting him every night.
"We'll never know, will
we," she said, giving him a warm smile. "It was a moment, one that
might come again."
"Or might not."
His expression soured, leaving him looking needy.
Well, I have needs too, she
thought. Sometimes sex is front and center, but lots of times something else
pushes it down the line.
She knew all too well how
she'd let the war on SimGen take over her life, but the time to press the fight
was now. Every day of delay meant another day of slavery for the sims. Plenty
of time later to play catch up.
"It's the Masked
Marvel, isn't it," he said.
"Who?"
"Zero. You've got a
thing for him."
"Don't be silly. I've
never even seen his face."
"That doesn't mean you
haven't imagined it, or that you can't be infatuated with him."
She tensed. Patrick had hit
a bit too close to home. Yes, she had times when she fantasized about Zero. His
inner strength and resolve spoke to her, reaching out through his layers of
protective insulation to touch her like no one else she had ever known. And his
air of remove that proclaimed him beyond her reach only heightened the
attraction.
Fearing her expression might
give something away, she stepped off the curb and waved at an approaching taxi.
"You're talking
crazy."
10
You've got to love modern technology, Luca Portero
thought, smiling as he spotted Ellis Sinclair's silver Lexus SUV half a dozen
car lengths ahead on the George Washington Bridge.
Luca had equipped the Lexus
with a transponder that let him know its location no matter where it went. He
glanced at the locator screen, glowing in the dark on the passenger seat.
Luca's car was a fixed dot in the center of the green LCD monitor; the Lexus
was a blip floating directly above it. A GPS program laid out a map of the city
around them, showing both cars crossing the Hudson River toward the city.
All was well.
Well?he thought. Who am I
kidding?
He shook his head. He'd
almost forgotten whatwell meant. Nothing was anywhere nearwell .
Darryl Lister had become a
raw, twitching nerve after he learned of the fateful question at the
stockholders' meeting, a nonstop question box:Who asked it? How could he know?
Well, Luca had soon found
out that it wasn't a 'he' at all. The meeting had been recorded-a matter of
routine-and who did he spot while reviewing the video files: Cadman. Romy
fucking Cadman.
Initially Lister had been
sure that Palmer had talked under his own Totuus, but then they'd tracked the
operative to some Long Island hospital where he was spending his days sitting
around babbling gibberish. Obviously the MTW had worked.
Luca shuddered at the
thought of such a fate, even if the effect only lasted for ninety days. Ninety
days of hell. If you weren't loony before, you damn sure might be after.
But the success of the MTW
had sent Luca back to the leak problem.
He already knew it was Ellis
Sinclair. But who was he was leaking to? That was what mattered. Tonight Luca
would find out. Once he learned Sinclair's contact, the rest would fall into
place. Then he'd make his move. And take no prisoners.
He followed Sinclair down
the West Side Highway to Fifty-fourth Street, crawled across Midtown-traffic in
the city would be murder until after Christmas-to a parking garage across the
street from the Warwick Hotel. Shit! He couldn't very well pull in right behind
him. He should have brought backup.
He left the car
double-parked and running while he trotted to the ramp that led down to the
parking area. Crouching, he spotted Sinclair accepting a ticket from the
attendant. But instead of walking back this way, he started up the ramp on the
other side.
Fuck! He was heading out to
Fifty-third!
Luca ducked back into his
car. He folded up the locator unit and grabbed the keys. As he slammed and
locked the door he heard a voice behind him.
"Can't leave that
here."
He turned to see an NYPD
uniform. Black, big face, big gut stretching his blue shirt, big black belt
laden with police paraphernalia.
"Officer, this is an
emergency."
"I don't care if your
hair is on fire, you can't leave that car here. There's a garage right there.
Pull it in and-"
"I don't have time.
I'll be right back."
"You leave that car
there, I promise you, it'll be long gone and far away when you come back."
"Fine," Luca said,
moving off. He tossed the keys to the cop. "Take it. Merry
Christmas."
The cop opened his mouth,
then closed it. Luca doubted he'd ever had anyone tell him to go ahead and tow
his car.
Luca dashed straight through
the garage-down, across, and up onto Fifty-third. He stopped when he reached
the sidewalk, frantically peering east and west through the lights, the
shadows, the people hurrying to escape the chill.
Which way, damn it?
He glanced longingly at the
locator unit, dangling from his hand like a small valise. If only there had
been some way to affix a transponder to Sinclair himself.
Never mind the wishing. What
now?
He couldn't see Sinclair on
Fifty-third. Maybe he'd headed downtown on Sixth Avenue. Luca's instincts urged
him in that direction. He started off at a run but the crowds on the avenue
slowed him to a crawl. The Radio City Music Hall Christmas Show was in full
swing, jamming the Sixth Avenue sidewalks with parents and their screaming
kiddies. But that meant Sinclair couldn't move fast either.
Luca bullied and bulled his
way through the throng as fast as he could, earning angry looks and comments.
Yeah, merry Christmas to you too, fuckers. He kept rising on tiptoes to check
the other side of the street-he saw oversized Venus de Milos framing the Credit
Lyonnaise Building, and a line of fifteen-foot nutcrackers standing guard
against the columns of the Paine-Webber, but no Ellis Sinclair.
An Art Deco marquee directly
ahead now,Radio City blazing in red neon, and the damned charter busses
vomiting tourists onto the sidewalk blocked his view of the opposite side. No
sign of Sinclair here, so he stepped between two buses to check the other
side-just in time to spot Sinclair starting down a subway entrance by the Time
& Life Building.
Luca congratulated his
instincts. And his luck. But it occurred to him that Sinclair was moving pretty
quick for a guy who was supposedly dosed to the eyeballs on antidepressants.
No time to wonder about that
now.
He sprang forward to follow
but a horn blared him back. The light was against him and traffic was moving
just fast enough to make crossing impossible. Cursing, he edged to the corner.
As soon as the light changed Luca lunged forward, damn near knocking down a few
slow movers on his way to the subway. He flew down the steps and raced along
the longest, fanciest goddamn subway ramp he'd ever seen-marble tile, brass
trim, all part of the Rockefeller Center complex.
When he reached the token
booth, Sinclair was nowhere in sight.
Uptown or down?
He saw theALL TRAINS sign
and ducked under the turnstile-no time for a token-and followed the sound of a
train pulling in. He reached the platform just in time to see the doors of an F
train pincer closed behind Sinclair.
Luca pelted after the train
as it began to move, intending to grab a handle and jump onto the landing
between the cars, but it picked up speed too quickly and he was left standing
on the platform.
The lighted sign on the rear
car said its last stop was 179th Street in Jamaica. That meant Sinclair could
be going across town or to the far side of Queens, or anywhere between.
He let out a roar and kicked
the nearest tiled pillar.
"Hey, don't worry,
buddy," said a shabby guy a few feet away. "There'll be another along
soon."
Luca wanted to kill him.
11
SUFFOLK COUNTY, NY
Zero stepped into the small, two-story farmhouse in the
middle of a fallow potato field, one of many that dotted eastern Long Island.
Good to be home, even if he
had no one to share the place.
He unwrapped the scarf from
his lower face and removed the hat with the pulled-down brim. Masking his
features was relatively easy in the colder weather, especially at night. Summer
was a problem, forcing him into a wig, a fake beard and nose, oversized
sunglasses, and a floppy boonie cap.
He shrugged out of his coat
and turned on the three computers arranged around the sparsely furnished living
room. A couch, a recliner, a TV, three folding chairs before the card tables
holding the computers. Not exactly the lap of luxury, but it served his purposes.
As the computers booted up
he stepped to the mantle of the cold fireplace where an eight-by-ten
black-and-white photo of Romy Cadman leaned against the wall. He loved this
close-up, taken with a telefoto lens shortly after a letter to the editor of
theTimes had brought her to his attention. He felt a familiar ache as he stared
at her face.
Romy...were there other
women in the world like her? If so, he'd never met one. But then, really, how
many women had he met? Nowhere near enough for a fair comparison.
He ran a fingertip along her
cheek, wishing he could do so in the flesh.
And what did others matter,
anyway? Romy was Romy, his Romy. He knew he shouldn't think of her as his, for
she never would be, never could be. That would require removing his mask for
her, letting her see his face. And then she'd reject him, turn away in
loathing.
Well...he didn't
actuallyknow that, but he couldn't risk it. Better this way. At least he could
see her often, be near her, talk to her, hear her voice. But once she rejected
him, all that would be lost. And even if by some miracle she, superior woman
though she might be, didn't reject him, the whole relationship would change,
and not for the better.
Tonight's Romy ritual ended
with a knock on the front door. Even though he was expecting it, Zero jumped at
the sound. A visitor here was an occasion. Only one person knew where he lived,
and his visits were rare.
He laid the photo face down
on the mantle and went to the door. When he opened it he embraced his oldest
and dearest friend, the man who was like a father to him.
"How are you?"
"Good, Ellis. Very
good. How are you?"
"Getting better every
day, thanks to what you and your group have been doing."
Ellis Sinclair did look
better. Maybe a little grayer, but less gaunt. Perhaps he was eating better.
"Come in," Zero
said, shutting the door and taking Ellis's coat.
He felt a little awkward. He
was unpracticed at being a host.
Ellis did a slow turn,
taking in the small living room. "Are you comfortable here?"
"Yes, thanks to
you."
He pulled a bottle of Scotch
from the cabinet under the TV. He'd never developed a taste for liquor himself,
but he knew his guest was something of a hard drinker. But Ellis surprised him
by waving it off.
"Thanks, but I'm taking
a breather from the booze."
Zero almost said, Glad to
hear it, but reconsidered. Wouldn't be appropriate.
"Coffee, then?"
Ellis shook his head.
"I can't stay long. As I told you, the reason I'm here is because I didn't
want to discuss this over the phone. May I sit?"
"Of course."
How strange to acquiesce to
a request for a seat from the owner of the house. Since the purchase of real
estate would be-to put it mildly-awkward for Zero, Ellis Sinclair had bought
the place for him years ago.
"I gather this is
fairly important then," Zero said as they seated themselves, Ellis on the
couch, and Zero in the recliner.
A vague anxiety had been
nibbling at him since Ellis's call late this afternoon. What was too sensitive
to discuss over an encrypted phone?
"More than fairly. In
fact I was followed tonight-by Portero himself, I believe."
"But you lost
him." It was a statement. He knew Ellis would have aborted his visit if he
thought he was being followed.
"Yes. Took a subway to
Forest Hills and rented a car there." He shifted in his chair. "But
let me cut to the chase here: Someone asked a very disturbing question at the
stockholders' meeting today."
Zero nodded. "You mean
about 'surge'?"
"Exactly. One of your
people, I presume?"
"Yes. Ms. Cadman. It
was her idea. We heard the word from a man who tried to assault her, and she
thought that would be a way to see if it meant anything."
"Just the word?"
Ellis said, his eyebrows lifting. "That's all you have?"
Too much had been happening
lately to allow Zero time to give Ellis one of his irregular briefings, so he
filled him in now on the invasion of Romy's apartment, the Totuus, and Palmer's
resultant aphasia.
"So you have no idea
what this Palmer fellow was referring to," Ellis said.
"Not yet. But we know
it means something. And I figure you're the man who can tell us just
what."
Ellis tapped his fingers on
the armrest of the recliner. This went on for an agonizing minute. Then,
"No, I'm not."
"What?" Zero
couldn't hide his shock. "You're a founder of SimGen! This goes back to
Manassas Ventures. They gave you start-up capital. You'vegot to know!"
"I do know," Ellis
said. "But I can't tell you."
"Anotherthing you can't
tell me?" He could feel his blood rising. "When I found Kek you said
you couldn't tell me anything about him or about what was going on in Idaho.
'Too sensitive,' you said. Now two men attempt a chemical rape on the minds of
Romy Cadman and Patrick Sullivan; we ask one of them who sent him and he tells
us 'surge.' You know who that is and won't tell me? Why on earth not? 'Too
sensitive' again?"
"No," Ellis said,
his gaze boring into Zero. "Too dangerous."
"It's already
dangerous."
"But you've sampled
only a taste of what's waiting for you if you push this further."
"You're telling me to
back off?"
"I'mbegging you to back
off."
Zero couldn't believe what
he was hearing. But the emotion in Ellis's voice-fear, desperation-were real.
"Isn't this what you
set me up to do?"
"No, it's not. Your
goal-our goal-is to turn the public against SimGen and the idea of sims as
laborers.Stop further cloning of sims -that was the goal, remember?"
"Of course. And how
better to turn the public against SimGen than to find its dirty laundry and
wave it in the air for all to see?"
"You have no idea what
you're getting into, the forces you'll be setting in motion...they'll crush
you."
"They have to find us
first."
"Zero, leave it alone,
I beg you. You're making progress on so many other fronts. You don't
need-"
"Progress? What
progress? SimGen is opening more natal centers all the time!"
"We may soon have to
rethink that with the tide of public opinion turning. Manufacturers, one or two
of them major, are starting to advertise their products, their clothes, toys,
appliances, and so on, as 'sim-free.' Mutual funds specializing in sim-free
companies are springing up. The Beacon Ridge poisoning-it's awful to look at it
as anything but an atrocity, but something good did come out of it because it's
accelerated the process." Ellis leaned forward, his expression intense,
alive with hope. "We'rewinning , Zero. Leave Manassas Ventures and the
rest alone."
We'renot winning, damn it,
Zero thought, his frustration a fire in his gut.
"What we've been doing
until now is like trying to tame a killer carnivore by removing its food
supply. Can't be done. Or if it can, it'll take a lifetime. But that was all we
had, the only way we knew to deal with it. Until now. Now we may have found a
weapon, one that can strike at the heart of the beast. And that changes
everything."
"But you're forgetting
that there's a pregnant sim somewhere out there. Find her and prove that the
father of her child is human and our war is won!"
"Ifwe find her. That's
a very, very big 'if,' Ellis. And if we don't, and if we neglect this 'surge'
lead while we hunt for her, then we may miss a crucial opportunity."
"I know you're chafing
to end this crusade, but you have no idea what you're getting into."
"They've already tried
to kill Romy and Patrick. What can be worse?
"They cansucceed . And
they will. Keep pushing this and some of your people will die."
The words jolted Zero. He'd
realized that when Romy and Patrick had been run off the highway, but hearing
it said aloud...
Ellis leaned back and closed
his eyes. "You want to strike at the beast. I understand that. But I've
been living in the belly of that beast for decades and believe me, Zero, it's
dark in there. It's full of things that should never see the light of
day."
"What sort of
things?"
"Painful things. Things
that will hurt me personally, and devastate other, more innocent, parties.
Things that no one will want to hear. And don't think you'll come through
unscathed, either."
Zero swallowed. "What
do you mean?" He couldn't suppress a mocking tone. "Or is it 'too
sensitive' again?"
Ellis looked away and shook
his head. "Some of it is sensitive. And some of it is...unspeakable."
The last word lingered in
the air between them. Zero's mouth felt dry, his tongue like old leather. He
couldn't bear the thought of one of the most decent, moral men he had ever
known connected to something unspeakable.
What had Ellis got himself
into?
"So," Ellis said
finally. "Do we understand each other? Will you concentrate on finding
Meerm and back away from Manassas?"
Shaking his head was the
hardest thing Zero had ever done in his life.
How could he turn down this
man who'd been so good to him? But he didn't see any other choice.
"I can't do that. Even
if I wanted to, I doubt I could call off Romy and Patrick."
"Of course you can.
You're they're leader."
"Causes take on a life
of their own. Romy and Patrick are off and running like hounds who've caught a
scent. There's no whistling them back."
Ellis rubbed a hand across
his eyes, then dragged it down his face. He looked ten years older than when
he'd arrived.
Zero said, "But I will
do this. I will push the search for Meerm as best as I can. If that pans out,
then Manassas and 'surge' will be moot."
"I pray so."
Looking exhausted, Ellis
rose slowly from the recliner and shrugged into his coat.
"Is there nothing I can
say to make you change your mind?"
"I wish there were, Ellis.
You don't know how much it hurts me to go against you."
"Hurt? You don't know
hurt, Zero. Keep on this road, and it will come to a very bad end. A terrible
end. And you...you may end up the sorriest of all."
Without another word, Ellis
Sinclair opened the door, stepped outside, and walked to his car, leaving Zero
wondering if he'd just made the worst mistake of his life.
12
NEWARK, NJ
DECEMBER 20
Benny come and go. Meerm can't stay hide. Too many kick
inside when Meerm squeeze into wall. And must go wee. Meerm go wee so ver much
these day. Leave closet now.
Feel stuff on floor. Look
see white powder. Meerm touch taste. Mmmm. Sugar. Why sugar on floor?
Meerm not know. Must go wee
now. Meerm hurry to bathroom. Do wee. When Meerm finish she flush.
No-no-no! Meerm forget! Must
not flush! Nev flush in day when no sim round! Benny hear!
Benny come now! Meerm hurry
to closet. Climb to shelf. So hard, so ver hard climb. Squeeze into hole.
Squeeze-squeeze-squeeze.
"I heard that! Goddamn
it I might imagine a creak or a thump, but I know I ain't imaginin no toilet
flush!
Meerm squeeze into hole,
push board back. Wait and listen.
"Ay! Lookit that!
Tracks through my sugar! So I ain't loco! Someone's up here, an I know just
where you are, man!"
Meerm hear bang-bang-bang on
closet door. Jump with every bang.
"I don't know where you
was hidin before, but Benny gotcha now! Ain't no monkey gonna outsmart Benny.
Benny outsmartyou ! So come on out where I can see you!"
Meerm not come out. Meerm
too scare. Meerm stay. Benny nev find Meerm here behind board.
Bang-bang-bang again.
"Hey! You hear me? No sense draggin this out. It's over! You tagged!"
Meerm hear closet door open. "You-what the fuck?" Hear hangers move.
"Hey! What's goin on here?"
Now Benny start bang closet
wall-bang-bang-bang! Ver loud to Meerm behind board. Meerm hold breath and hold
ear. Now Benny bang Meerm board. No-no-no! Board move. Meerm see light.
"Ay, lookit this shit!
Damn me, there's a space back there! Ay, that where you are? That where you
been hidin on Benny? Say somethin, will ya? Awright, dammit. That the way you
wanna be..."
Meerm hear Benny go but
Meerm stay. Not move. Then hear Benny come back. Hear chair drag across floor.
Benny push board and big light shine in Meerm eye.
"There you are, you
lazy monkey. Playin hooky from the job, huh? Wait'll I tell the boss. Ay,
you're a plump one, aintcha. Whatcha been doin? Eatin all day? You-wait a
minute. Wait a fuckin minute. You that sim they lookin for! The pregnant one!
The five-million-dollar sim! Holy Christ! Holy Christ! You her! An I gotcha! I
gotcha!"
Light go way, Benny go way,
then closet door close. Meerm hear bumps against closet door.
What Benny say? Meerm
pregnant sim. What pregnant? Meerm five-million-dollar sim. What five million?
Meerm not understand. Meerm try understand later. Now Meerm must run. Benny
find Meerm. Benny will call mans who hurt.
Meerm climb out on closet
shelf and drop to floor. Push on closet door but door not move. Meerm push so
ver hard. Push-push-push, but door not move. Door locked. No-no-no!
Meerm trapped. Meerm ver
fraid and ver scare. Meerm shake inside and out, almost hard as kick-kick-kick.
Meerm cry. Poor, poor Meerm.
13
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
"Mr. Portero," Nowicki's voice said through
Luca's office intercom, "I think you'd better take this call."
"Who is it?"
"Calls himself Benny
Morales and says he knows you. Says he's got the pregnant sim."
"Sure. Him and half a
million others."
Luca shook his head. How
many times had he heard that since the fivemegabuck reward hit the news? People
were crawling out of the woodwork with crazy stories, some wishful thinking,
others outright lies. Meerm, or an equally pregnant sim, had been sighted in
Chicago, San Francisco, Buenos Aires, London, Hong Kong. The world was suddenly
full of pregnant sims.
"This Morales says he
met you at the Newark crib when you came looking for the pregnant sim; says
she's been hiding there right under his nose all along."
Luca remembered Morales now,
a quick, jittery little ferret of a man. Remembered that damn crib too. After a
weeklong fruitless vigil, he'd yanked surveillance from the place, figuring if
the pregnant sim hadn't returned by then, she wasn't coming back at all.
But if she'd never left the
building in the first place...
"Put him though."
Luca's hand darted toward
the phone and hovered over the receiver. He let it ring twice before picking
up.
A few minutes later, after
listening to Morales's story, Luca hung up and jabbed the intercom button.
"Nowicki. Get Grimes and Alessi. Meet me in the garage. We're
rolling!"
This was it. Morales's story
hung together too well to be anything but the real thing.
We've found her!
Luca felt as if a magnum of
Dom Perignom had popped open inside his chest.
14
NEWARK, NJ
The rain clouds that had been threatening all day opened
up just in time to snarl traffic throughout the metropolitan area. So it was
well after dark when Luca and his men arrived at the crib. Benny Morales met
them at the front door.
"Upstairs!" he
said, leading them up a narrow stairway. "I got her trapped, locked up
tight inna closet an I been keepin an eye on it all a time 'cept for when I was
watchin for you at the window so I know she still in there."
Morales had reminded Luca of
a ferret last visit; now he was a ferret on speed. Luca could understand that.
The little man was going to be a multi-millionaire. But Luca was going to
recapture his pride and his credibility, and maybe even his future, and that
was worth more.
"There it is,"
Morales said, as he led them into a bunk-filled space on the second floor.
"Where are the rest of
your sims?"
"Not back yet." He
glanced at his watch. "Maybe half hour. But look here." He stepped
farther into the room and pointed to a door on the right. "She in
there." He held up an old-fashioned skeleton key. "I got her locked
and blocked. She ain't goin nowhere nohow."
Luca smiled. Morales wasn't
kidding. He'd wedged a chair under the doorknob. Hiding his excitement, he held
out his hand and Morales dropped the key into his palm. He stepped to the door,
removed the chair, and poised the key before the lock.
"Meerm?" he said
though the door. "My name is Luca Portero. I am from SimGen."
He spoke softly, maintaining
a calm, soothing tone. He wanted to take this sim with the least possible fuss
and muss. Everyone-from the Sinclairs all the way to the top of SIRG-wanted her
and her unborn baby alive and well. The better the condition he delivered her
in, the better for him. But if she was going to make this difficult he'd come
prepared. One way or another, Luca intended to leave here tonight with the
world's only pregnant sim.
"The company has sent
me here to protect you, Meerm. We know you're not feeling good and we're here
to take you back to where you can rest and get well. I'm going to open the door
now."
Luca slipped the key into
the lock and turned it. As he gripped the knob...
"Don't worry if you
don't see her right away," Morales said from a few feet behind him.
"Like I told you, there's this loose piece of wallboard and-"
Without looking back, Luca
waved for him to shut the hell up. He turned the knob and pulled the door
open-slowly, so as not to appear the least bit aggressive.
As Morales had said, the
closet looked empty. Some old shoes, some hanging clothes, a hat or two on the
shelf.
"Upper right,"
Morales said in a stage whisper. "Above the shelf. See the loose
board?"
Luca nodded. The remodeling
had been done on the cheap, probably not even up to code. Or maybe the codes
had been relaxed because the floor wasn't designated for human habitation.
Whatever the reason, the framing studs looked to be about two feet apart and
the wallboard carelessly nailed. As a result the whole upper corner of the
inner wall had popped loose, allowing easy access to a dead space beyond.
Luca held back a hand, palm
up. "Flashlight," he said, and one was slapped into it.
He dragged the chair into
the closet and stepped up on it for a better look. He pushed back the board and
shone the light into the opening. But instead of the expected pair of
frightened brown sim eyes staring back at him, he found an empty space. Cold
sweat started in his armpits as he quickly angled the beam around, revealing
knotty studs, the unfinished reverse sides of wallboard, lots of crumbling
brick, but no sim.
No goddamned sim!
"She's not here!"
he rasped through his sand-dry throat. "You said she was here! Where is
she?"
"Whatchoo you mean, she
not there?" Morales cried, a panicky edge to his voice. "She gotta be
there! I lock her in myself! She can't be nowheres else!"
Luca poked his head through
the opening. The dead space was deeper than he'd have thought. It angled back
around the rear of the closet, beyond his field of vision.
"Meerm?" he
called, still keeping his voice soft. "Meerm, are you there? We're here to
help you."
No reply. Not a rustle of
movement, not even a breath.
Okay, he thought. She wants
to play it that way, then the gloves have to come off.
He swiveled and hopped off
the chair. Morales was waiting for him right outside the closet door.
"Lemme see that light!
I find her for you! I know she there!"
Luca studied him a moment.
He hadn't been lying about seeing a sim in there. He was too upset. Probably
he'd had the five million already half spent in his head and now he saw it
slipping away.
Luca shoved him aside.
"Go find yourself a corner and stay out of the way, little man. We're
going to do it our way." He looked at his three men and jerked a thumb
over his shoulder, toward the street below. "She's hiding in the wall. Get
the tools."
They were back in two
minutes with crowbars, axes, and sledgehammers.
"Hey, whatchoo think
you doin?" Morales cried, running over.
Luca held up a crowbar and
glared at him. "You want to be alive to collect your reward, right? Then
stay the hell out of our way."
With that he turned and smashed
the curved end of the bar through the wallboard, gave it a half twist, and
yanked back, dislodging one side of the board from its stud. His men did the
same, attacking the closet and the walls around it with gusto. In five or six
minutes they'd stripped this end of the room back to the underlying brick.
But still no sim. Luca
wanted to scream. Where could she be? Had Morales lied to him? But there seemed
no point to that.
Then he heard Alessi's voice
from his left, near the corner of the room. "Aw, shit, boss. Take a look
at this."
Luca hurried over and saw a
large hole in the bricks. He grabbed the flashlight and shined the beam
through. More bricks inside. He stuck his head inside and looked up and down.
Cool musty air wafted against his face from below.
"Looks like an old
airshaft." His voice echoed off the walls. He pulled back and found
Morales standing a few feet away, his hands rubbing over each other in a
nervous, washing motion. "Where's it go?"
Morales shrugged. "I
didn't even know it was there. Nobody tell me nothin."
Okay. The sim had crawled
from the dead space behind the closet into the air shaft. Once in there she had
two directions to choose from: up or down. Considering she was frightened and
pregnant, she'd have taken the easiest and fastest route.
"Check out the first
floor," he told his men. "Tear out the wall and see if there's an
opening down there." To Morales: "You got a basement here?"
"Sure."
"Show me."
He followed the little man
down two levels. When Morales turned on the basement lights, Luca saw a piece
of plywood and its exposed nails dangling from the ceiling, smears of blood on
the floor, on the wall, and on the sill of the open window, and he knew in one
spirit-crushing instant what had happened.
The sim had eased herself
down the shaft and landed on the plywood that had closed the opening. Her
weight knocked the crudely fixed board free and she'd fallen to the floor,
cutting herself on the nails in the process. She'd limped to the window, opened
it, and squeezed through.
Gone!
Without warning-Luca was
barely aware of what he was doing-he grabbed Morales and flung him against the
wall. The ferret-man slammed against the concrete and slumped to the floor,
wincing and clutching his shoulder.
"Aw, man!" he
moaned. "Whatchoo do that for?"
Because it feltgood! Luca
wanted to scream. Instead he said, "Because you had her and you let her
slip away!"
"I did everythin I
could!"
"Not enough!" Luca
sensed his rage peaking toward critical mass. He forced himself to step back,
knowing if he let himself get any closer to the whining little bastard he'd
break his neck. "You had her! You had her and you let her get away!"
At least that was the way it
seemed. Luca glanced around. But what if she just wanted him to think that was
what happened? What if-?
Wait. What was he thinking?
He was dealing with a sim. They didn't have the brains for misdirection.
Still...this one had made a fool of him once already...
Just to be sure, Luca did a
quick search of the basement. Not much down here; no closets or crawl spaces to
hide in, just cinderblock walls and solid concrete floor. Satisfied that she
was gone, he closed and locked the open window and headed for the stairs,
leaving Morales behind on the floor.
He called his three men
together and faced them in the front hallway.
"All right," he
said, forcing a calm demeanor, "here's the situation: She's gone. Escaped
through the basement window."
"Shit!" Grimes
muttered. He was wiry and redheaded, and his Adam's apple wobbled in his long
neck when he spoke. "We'll never find her out there in the dark!"
Luca wheeled and got in his
face. "She's hurt, she's bleeding, she's on foot, she's pregnant, and
she's a sim! If you can't track something like that, you should be working for
somebody else!"
Grimes backed up.
"Okay, okay. Sorry."
Luca turned away. He needed
more men. He reached for his phone to call Lister, have him find back-up.
They'd comb this area until-
The sound of squeaking
brakes just outside the front door made him turn. A battered old school bus had
pulled to a stop at the curb. As he watched through the cracked glass, the bus
doors folded back and a line of sims began stepping down to the sidewalk.
"Hold everything,"
Luca said as he headed for the door. "I think reinforcements just
arrived."
He hadn't wanted to call for
help Now he wouldn't have to. He stationed himself at the top of the front
steps and held up his hands.
"Nobody goes inside
yet," he told the sims.
He made them wait in the
fine drizzle until the bus had emptied out. They looked to number about forty
or so.
"Hey!" the
grizzled old driver said. He'd come to the bus door and stood staring at Luca.
"Who are you?"
"Someone who's commandeering
these sims."
"They ain't yours to
commandeer! Where do you get off thinkin-"
Luca glared at him.
"Move on, old man. This isn't your concern."
The driver looked as if he
were about to say something, then changed his mind. As the bus wheezed away,
Luca turned back to the sims.
"We've come for
Meerm," he told them, raising his voice. "We know you've been hiding
her. But that's all right. We're here to help her and-"
"No!" said a sim,
pointing at Grimes. "No help sim! Hurt sim!"
Luca looked more closely at
the sim who'd spoken and noticed that his left eye sported the yellowing
remains of a shiner. He turned to Grimes.
"What'd you do,
Grimes?" he said, keeping it low and through his teeth. "Beat him
up?"
Grimes blinked and
swallowed. "I thought he'd lied to us, so I just-"
"So you just scared the
shit out of them, guaranteeing they'd never tell us a thing. This could have
been over a week ago, you fucking stupid-" He turned away before he ripped
out the man's bobbing Adam's apple and made him eat it. "I'll deal with
you later."
Fighting for calm, he faced
the sims again. He'd hoped to enlist their voluntary support, make themwant to
find Meerm for him. But Grimes had blown that, so he'd have to take a direct
approach.
"I know it's cold out
and you're all probably tired and hungry. There's nothing you'd like better now
than to get inside and eat and relax, right? Well, guess what? That's not going
to happen until Meerm is found. We're going to start searching now, and we're
going to keep searching till we find her, even if it takes all night,
understand?"
Luca could see from the
resignation in their eyes that they understood, all right. They understood just
fine. And this would work. He had forty-plus searchers instead of the maximum
dozen humans he'd be able to muster on such short notice. And these were better
than humans. Who better to sniff out a sim than another sim?
Yeah, this will work. Damn
well better. But what if it didn't? What if they came up empty tonight and all
this commotion caught the attention of some of Eckert's followers? Or Morales
opened his yap to the wrong people? Eckert could wind up with the pregnant sim.
He turned and found Morales
standing in the front hallway.
"Listen up," he
told the little man. "If I find the sim, you get the five million. Anyone
else finds her, you're out in the cold. So keep your mouth shut about
this."
Morales stared at him,
rubbing his shoulder. "First you push me around, then you do this. You
loco, man?"
Not loco, Luca thought,
turning away. But if anyone's going to bring in this sim, it's going to beme.
15
MANHATTAN
Patrick closed his eyes and leaned back in his swivel
chair.
"My eyes are going to
burn out the back of my skull if I stare at this computer screen another
minute."
"Here," Romy said,
tapping him on the shoulder. "Let me spell you. We've only got a few more
to go."
It seemed like they'd been
at this all day. Romy had arrived at his office late this afternoon and
together they'd cooked up a list of acronyms, using every possible combination
of letters that might conceivably be pronounced "surge"-from CERGE,
CERJE, CIRJ, and so on, to SIURJ, ZIRJE, ZOORGE and beyond. Then he'd begun plugging
them into one Internet search engine after another.
So far the hits had been few
and none had panned out.
"Only a few more, you
say?" He stretched. "I'll keep at it then. What's next?"
Romy consulted her list.
"S-I-R-G."
Patrick typed it into the
entry box on the searcher and hitENTER . Half a second later a string of
varicolored type cascaded down the screen. The engine reported 1,753 hits.
"We've got
something," he said.
SIRG turned out to be the
acronym for a raft of organizations, ranging from the Summit Implementation
Review Group to the Spatial Information Research Group to the Student Internet
Research Group.
"These sound
exciting," Romy said dryly, reading over his shoulder. She'd been nibbling
on a sweet roll and her breath carried a hint of cinnamon. He was sure her lips
would taste even better. "Hope you didn't get your hopes up."
Patrick shook his head,
trying to forget how close she was and focus on the screen. "I've learned
better by now."
He clicked his way through
one link after another; all the groups seemed pretty straightforward. Then he
came to something called the Social Impact Research Group.
"Social impact of
what?" he said.
"And on what?"
Romy added.
The article was an old one,
quoting from another even older article. SIRG received only passing mention in
reference to some unspecified appropriations bill.
"Wait," Romy said.
"Appropriations means government. Hit a few more links."
He did but found only
scattered mentions of the group; nothing of substance, no hint as to its
purpose.
"Let me try," Romy
said.
They switched seats. Patrick
watched her access a directory of US Federal Government agencies and enter a
string of asterisks into a password box.
"Don't forget,"
she said, as if reading his mind, "I work for a government agency myself.
I've picked up a few passwords and access codes along the way."
He watched a while longer,
then got up and moved away. Romy was far more facile than he at the keyboard.
She worked too fast for him-he'd no sooner focus on a screen than she'd be
clicking to another. He stepped to the window and stared out at the night.
This block of Henry Street
was reasonably well lit. He studied the parked cars for signs of life. None.
The only pedestrian was a drab-looking woman making her way along the sidewalk
directly below.
This constant vigilance
rawed his nerves. When would it end? When could he relax again, if ever?
He wandered over to where
Tome was busily filing papers.
"Getting tired,
Tome?"
"No, Mist
Sulliman," the old sim said, grinning up at him in the narrow confines of
the file room. "This fun."
Whatever turns you on, he
thought. He patted the sim's bony back.
"Great, my friend. Have
a ball."
Patrick was turning to go
when he spotted something blinking on a little table in the corner. Tome
followed his gaze. He snatched up the rectangular object and hid it behind his
back.
"What's that?"
Tome looked down.
"Picture, Mist Sulliman."
"A picture? Can I see
it?"
"Mist Sulliman be
mad," he said, eyes still on his shoes.
"Nonsense. Just let me
see."
With obvious reluctance,
Tome placed the framed picture, upside down, into Patrick's outstretched hand.
He turned it over and stared
in shock. The Virgin Mary...Our Lady of Guadalupe, to be exact, but not like
Patrick had ever seen her. The traditional gold-leaf glory radiating around her
had been enhanced with flashing red rays. Patrick flipped it over and spotted
the battery case that powered the diodes.
"This
is...amazing," Patrick said. "Where did you get it?"
"Buy on street. Mist
Sulliman not mad?"
"Why on earth would I
be mad?"
"Lady on street yell
Tome. Say Mother Mary not for sim."
Bitch. Although he could see
how true believers would object to sims taking up their religion,
worshippingtheir god. It diminished them, made them feel less special.
"But why, Tome? Why'd
you buy it?"
"Tome pray for Mist
Sulliman and Miss Romy. Ask Lady to protect."
Patrick was touched, didn't
know quite what to say. He stepped past Tome and replaced the blinking icon on
the table.
"Thank you, Tome.
I...we have something called freedom of religion in this country. That means
you can pray to any god you want. And...thanks."
He wandered back toward
Romy, ready to tell her about Tome's prayers, when she called out to him.
"Look at this,"
she said, her expression troubled. "This particular SIRG-the Social Impact
Research Group-had millions and millions of government dollars poured into it
through most of the nineties and into the oughts, and then the money
stopped."
"Money from
where?"
"That's the weird part.
I can't find out who picked up the tab."
"Somebody had to. Some
department or agency had to be debited before SIRG could be credited."
"I know. There's a
whole string of agencies and departments and groups that seem to be
intermediaries but I keep running into dead ends or getting lost in the maze
whenever I try to track the money back to its source."
Patrick shook his head.
"Almost like..."
Romy looked up at him.
"Manassas Ventures."
"Do you think...?"
She held up a hand.
"Before you go getting excited, let me tell you that I think SIRG might be
dead. As in defunct. Can't find a mention or a penny of appropriations from any
source whatsoever for years."
"Damn! For a moment I
thought we were on to something. But then again, how much pay dirt could we
expect from something with a name like the Social Impact Research Group?"
"Don't let a title put
you off," she said. "Ever hear of SOG?"
"Son of Godzilla?"
Romy smiled up at him.
"Close. Try the 'Studies and Observations Group.' It was started in the
Nam era. That innocent title covered a joint Special Operations unit that
included members from the Air Force, Navy SEALs, and Special Forces. They were
sent into Laos to wage a secret war."
"So you think someone
who thought SOG was a clever cover might have come up with SIRG?"
"Just a thought."
Romy looked back at the screen and rubbed her neck.
"Stiff?"
"Yeah. Been a long
day."
He gripped both her
shoulders and began kneading the back of her neck with his thumbs. He could
feel the warmth of her skin through the light weave of her sweater.
She groaned. "That
feelsgood ."
You're telling me, he
thought.
"SIRG appears to be
defunct," she said as he continued to knead. "But it could be
operating under a different name. Either way, just to be sure we've turned over
every rock before we move on, I think we should know where its money came from,
don't you?"
"But how?"
Patrick stretched his
fingers forward, working his massage down to her collar bones.
"My...office."
Romy groaned again. "You're making it hard to concentrate."
"Just soothing those
tight muscles. Relax." Patrick himself was anything but as a rapturous
pressure built within.
She cleared her throat.
"What was I saying?"
"Something about your
office." He slipped his fingers over her collar bones onto the upper edges
of her pectorals.
"Oh, right. OPRR's
computers are linked to the government. And my boss, Milton Ware, is an
absolute master at weaving through bureaucratese. I need to find a way to put
Uncle Miltie onto the scent without knowing why. Maybe if I-"
"Excuse me?"
They both jumped and turned
at the sound of a woman's voice. Relief flooded Patrick as he recognized the
figure standing in the doorway.
"Miss Fredericks! How
did you get in here?" He could have sworn he'd locked the door.
Alice Fredericks smiled.
"I'm sorry if I startled you, Mr. Sullivan. But I was walking by and just
happened to look up and see the lights, so I thought I'd stop in and inquire as
to why you haven't called me."
Walking by? Patrick thought.
Probably watching the place with a telescope.
He leaned closer to Romy and
whispered, "She's the one I told you about." Romy gave him a puzzled
look, but before he could elaborate-
"Oh, no!" Alice
cried, pointing to Tome who had stepped out of the filing room. "It's one
of them! One of my long lost great-grandchildren! Please take him away! The
sight of him tears at my heart!"
"Now I remember,"
Romy whispered. "Dramatic, isn't she."
"Just a bit."
He motioned the baffled Tome
back into the file room where he'd be out of sight, then turned to Alice.
Though he was still rattled by the way she'd strolled in here off the street,
he didn't want to take it out on her. But it was time to put a stop to these
intrusions.
"Miss Fredericks, I'm
sorry, but I don't think I'll be able to spare the time to take your case. And
even if I did, in the long run it will come down to your word against SimGen's,
and I don't think-"
"Even if I have
proof?"
"What sort of proof can
you have?"
"A check made out to me
from Mercer Sinclair."
Yeah, right, he thought.
"How would you happen to have that? Once you cash a check it goes back to
the one who issued it."
"But I didn't cash
it," Alice said, eyes wide. "It was the last payment for letting them
use my body to incubate the alien child. I didn't know they'd steal him from
me. How could I take money from the man who stole my child?" Her eye
filled with tears. "That would be like...like selling my baby!"
"So why didn't you burn
it or tear it up?"
"I kept it as a reminder
to stay the course, and because I knew someday I'd have a chance to confront
Mercer Sinclair again, and when I did I wanted to be able to throw it back in
his face!"
"We'd love to see that
check," Romy said. When Patrick gave her an are you-nuts? look she nudged
him with her elbow and whispered, "No stone unturned, right?" Then
she raised her voice: "Can you bring it here?"
"Oh no," Alice
said. "I never take it out of my room. But if you want to come visit me,
I'll be very happy to show it to you."
Patrick regarded Alice
Fredericks. Was she completely bonkers and dreaming all this up? Just a lonely
lady who'd say anything to have company? Or could there be a kernel of truth at
the heart of her crazy story?
Patrick sighed. "Leave
me your address and I'll see if I can get over tomorrow."
"Hewill get over
tomorrow," Romy said, giving him a wry smile. "Even if I have to drag
him."
16
NEWARK, NJ
Meerm shiver in dark. Ver wet and cold. Ver scare. And
hurt. Hand bleed, foot bleed, leg bleed. Not bleed lot but still bleed. Blood
wash off in rain but come more blood.
Meerm inside now. Clothes
all wet and drip. But where? Meerm not know. Meerm run-run-run from sim home.
Slip in water. Fall down, get up, fall down. Many fall. Meerm so dizzy and
weak. No run no more. See old metal door in brick wall. Pull-pull-pull on
handle. Door open loud and Meerm go in. Close door behind.
Not warm here. Ver dark.
Meerm feel big metal wire. Go up-up-up. Ver bad oil smell.
Meerm shiver more. Meerm
cry. So cold-wet. So lonely. Sim friend gone forever. Meerm no go back. Bad
mans wait for Meerm. Want hurt her. Poor Meerm. Nev see Beece friend again.
What sound? Outside. Some
call Meerm name. Meerm listen hard. Yes. Some call, "Meerm! Meerm, where
you?" Not man voice. Sound like sim. Sound like Beece!
Beece-Beece-Beece! Meerm so
happy to hear Beece. Want see. Meerm push door open little. Ver ver little.
Just enough see.
Yes! There! There Beece!
Meerm go open wider-
No-no-no! Beece bring mans!
Bad mans who hurt!
17
Beece walk down dark alley with other sim. Beece cold and
hungry-tired, not know where is. Too many turn. Beece pretend search Meerm but
not want find. Beece not like these mans. Ver mean mans. But meanest is
red-hair city man who hurt Beece. Other mans call him Grimes. Grimes ver bad
man. All these mans bad. Want hurt Meerm. Why? Meerm not bad. Meerm just sick.
Get big-big belly.
Beece hear run-steps. Crouch
down fraid when see red-hair city man run up. But not hit Beece. Stop and talk
other man.
"Hey, Alessi! Somebody
called the cops. Lowery heard it on the scanner."
"Shit!"
"Yeah, well, had to
expect it. Somebody sees a bunch of men and monkeys poking through their
neighborhood, they want to know what's going on."
"Don't suppose we've
got any suck with these locals."
"Naw. Who'd ever figure
we'd have to operate in Newark? Anyway, Portero doesn't want anyone to know why
we're here. That's why I'm moving the car around to the main drag out there.
I'll be in the McDonald's lot. When the boys in blue arrive, we fade."
"I'll bet he's royally
pissed."
"Count on it."
"All right. See you at
McDonald's. Hey, while you're there, get some burgers and fries for the trip
home. I missed dinner."
"You got it."
Grimes go. Other man look
Beece. "Keep looking, monkey. We're not through yet. You go over
there." Point other sim. "You come over here with me. Find her, damn
it!"
Beece go where told. Lots
trash here. Big puddle. Shoe all wet. Beece lost. See top Mickey-D sign between
building. Golden arches. Yum. Beece love Mickey-D. Yes-yes. Sometime-
What sound? Beece hear
squeak-squeak. Turn see black metal door in brick wall. Look hard see red
letter.
ELEVATOR SHAFT
DANGER!
AUTHORIZED PERSONNEL
ONLY!
Beece no read but Beece see
blood on door. See eye look out from door crack.
Meerm! Meerm here!
Beece look round quick. Mans
not near. Man not look. Beece fraid talk. Wave Meerm to make stay. No speak, no
move! Beece bend, get water in hand. Wash blood off door. Get more. Blood all
gone now.
Man yell, say, "Find
anything over there?"
"No, sir. Many puddle.
No see Meerm."
"All right then, keep
moving! Time's a-wasting!"
Beece bend and whisper to
door, "Beece not tell. Not tell no one."
18
SUFFOLK COUNTY, NY
So...Meerm is in Newark.
Zero couldn't be absolutely
sure, but it was evident that Portero believed so. Zero had hired a private
detective to keep an eye on him. Often the man reported back that Portero had
given him the shake, but tonight he'd called and said that Portero and three
others had made a beeline from the SimGen campus to a battered neighborhood in
Newark.
Zero had driven his van from
the West Side garage, through the Holland Tunnel, into Newark. Although only a
few miles, the trip had taken nearly an hour. But well worth it. Arriving, he'd
been treated to the spectacle of Luca Portero and his men herding dozens of
sims through the streets, all calling "Meerm! Meerm!"
His heart had sunk. The
swine had found her-or damn near. Only a matter of time before all those men
and sims tracked Meerm down.
And then...a reprieve. He'd
pounded his steering wheel with glee as he watched Portero and company make a
slapdash retreat just before the Newark Police arrived with their lights
flashing. They'd left empty-handed, which meant that Meerm-if she were here at
all-was still somewhere in the vicinity. It also meant that Portero and his men
would be back.
Zero had been tempted to
wait until the cops were gone and then try to find Meerm on his own. But as
much as his heart went out to that poor, frightened creature hiding somewhere
in the dark, searching alone seemed like courting disaster.
All this gave Zero much to
think about on the long ride back to Long Island.
By the time he arrived home
he had a semblance of a plan, one that had been inspired by Portero himself
when he'd conscripted Meerm's fellow sims to find her. The murdering bastard
was clever, no getting around that.
But Zero could play that
game too, and play it better.
He removed his knit watch
cap and tinted lenses, then unwrapped the scarf from his lower face. The air
felt good against his skin.
His answering machine
carried a message from Patrick saying they still hadn't nailed down
"surge" but had a lead or two they'd follow up tomorrow.
Ellis's warnings about
digging into "surge" still haunted him, especially his comment that
Zero would not come through "unscathed" if he persisted. And his
description of some of the secrets behind SimGen as "unspeakable"...a
word he found deeply disturbing.
But there was no turning
back now. Events were gathering momentum, and he had to find a way to control
them, or at least steer them in the right direction.
One thing he knew he must
control was Meerm. For her own sake, and the sake of all sims, he had to keep
her out of SimGen's hands. And to that end, Zero knew of a very bright sim
named Tome who would be more than willing to help. If he could find a way to
sneak Tome into the Newark crib, the sims there might trust him enough to let
him know where Meerm was hiding.
Ifthey knew.
But assuming they did, Zero
and Tome could then seek her out and bring her to safety.
Another if:If she'd come
along.
Meerm probably had been so
terrified by Portero and his thugs that she wouldn't trust any human now.
Another instance where Tome again might come in handy.
But Zero had reservations
about the old sim's powers of persuasion. And that was why Zero had to
accompany him. Because if Tome couldn't coax Meerm out of hiding, Zero would
have to step in.
He moved to the dusty mirror
over the sofa and looked at himself. He did that often. Too often, perhaps, he
thought. But that's what you do when you wished you looked like someone else,
like something else.
He looked at his forehead
and wished for less of a slope and a less prominent brow ridge; he wished his
nose were longer, and his lips thinner.
This was not a face Romy
could love, but it might be a face Zero would have to let her see. Because
Meerm was that important. He'd risk anything to keep her away from SimGen, even
if it meant revealing what he was.
For when Zero took off his
mask, Meerm would have to trust him. Because she would know she was talking to
another sim.
FIVE
Thy Brother's Keeper
1
MANHATTAN
DECEMBER 21
"You're sure we've got the right address?"
Patrick said.
He and Romy stood before a
dilapidated five-story Alphabet City tenement that leaned on its neighbor like
a drunk against a lamppost; a rusty fire escape laced its sooty bricks and
sootier windows.
He'd figured Alice
Fredericks was poor, but not this poor.
"Let's see." Romy
checked the number on the door atop the crumbling front stoop against the paper
in her hand. "Yes. This is what she wrote down. She's in apartment 2D. I
hope she's in."
Patrick had called Alice's
number three times this morning to make sure she was home before they made the
trip. Whoever had answered the hall phone told him-with growing annoyance
because he said he was waiting for another call-that "the crazy bitch
ain't answerin her door."
Patrick rubbed his cold
hands together and envied Romy's cleathre coat. The weather wasn't going to let
anyone forget that today was the first day of winter. Near noon now but the sun
hung low as a cold wind knifed down the nearly empty street.
Cold as the knot of tension
in his chest. He looked around. Parked cars lined the curb; if anyone was
lurking in one of them, watching, readying to spring, he couldn't tell. Only an
occasional driver passing on the street glanced their way-Romy tended to draw
looks-but no one seemed unduly interested. He'd kept watch during the cab ride
over and hadn't noticed anyone following.
"This is all a waste of
time, you know," he told her. "She may have had a child at one time,
and she may even have sold it, but-"
"Not just a child, according
to her," Romy corrected him. "A sim."
"Oh, right. How did I
leave that out? A baby sim she says was the result of fertilization by
aliens." He shook his head. "Who's crazier-her, or us for coming
here?"
"We've come this far,
let's finish it."
"Whatever she gave
birth to, we know she didn't sell it to Mercer Sinclair, and we know she
doesn't have a SimGen check signed by him."
"That's just it:
Wedon't know. We assume, but we don'tknow ."
"I do. Why are you so
gung ho to call her bluff?"
"Because it will nag at
me if I don't check it out. That's why I'm here on my lunch hour. I don't want
to keep wondering if maybe she's only ninety percent crazy and ten percent of
what she's telling us is true. And what if that ten percent puts us on a path
to 'surge'? The Idaho license plate on that truck led to Manassas, didn't
it?"
"Point taken." But
Patrick doubted very much they'd score anything useful here. "Okay, let's
get this over with."
He took the front steps two
at a time, pushed on the front door, but it was locked. She'd said she was in
2D; he found the 2D bell button, but it was unlabeled. He pressed it anyway. No
buzzer sounded to unlock the door. Tried again, but still no response.
He turned to Romy. "Are
you getting a bad feeling about this?"
"She may not be
in."
"Or she may not be
well. Or worse."
"You mean that we might
not be her first visitors since she left last night?"
"Yeah."
Just then the door swung
open and an anemic-looking splicer goth, twenty something and all in black,
stepped out. She hissed at him, revealing a pair of long, sharp vampire
fangs-the real thing, he was sure-then flowed down the steps, trailing black lace.
Patrick caught the door
before it latched closed again, and held it for Romy. "After you."
"In this case,"
Romy said, "gentlemen first."
Feeling his neck muscles
bunch, Patrick took one last look at the street, then led the way up the worn
stairs to the second floor where they found a narrow hallway lit by low-watt
bulbs in steel cages and smelling vaguely of urine.
"Wait here," he
told Romy.
She shook her head.
"You might need me."
He noticed that she had her hand
inside her bag. "What've you got in there?"
"Something I hope I
don't have to use."
Listening for a click, a
creak, anything that might herald an opening door, he led her to the right,
past the hall phone framed by scribbled names and numbers. Finally they reached
2D. Patrick took a breath and knocked on the peeling surface. No answer. He
tried again, louder.
"Alice? It's Patrick
Sullivan."
He pressed his ear to the
door and thought he heard a rustling sound within, but couldn't be sure. Tried
to look through the peephole but couldn't see a thing, not even light.
"I don't like
this," Romy whispered. "I told her we'd be here today. What
if..." Her voice trailed off as she frowned.
Patrick knew what she was
thinking. He'd been thinking it too. "You mean, what if she's been talking
too much about this check and someone finally decided to shut her up for
good?"
"Which would mean she
wasn't crazy after all."
"We've got to get in
there." He lowered his voice further. "What if it's all a set
up?"
Romy chewed her upper lip.
"Maybe we should call the cops. Report her as a missing-"
The door suddenly swung
inward, a hand darted out, grabbed the lapel of Patrick's overcoat, and pulled
him inward. He stifled a terrified cry when he recognized Alice Fredericks.
"Come in!" she
hissed. "Quick!"
Patrick stepped through, Romy
right behind him. Alice slammed the door as soon as they were inside, plunging
them into darkness. He could make out glints of light from what seemed to be a
window, but she must have left her shades down.
"Alice," he said
as his pounding heart slowed. "What's going on? Can we have some
light?"
Rustling clothing, shuffling
feet accompanied by a strange crinkling noise, and then a lamp came to life.
Patrick barely recognized Alice. Her gray hair was in wild disarray, her feet
bare, her frayed housecoat haphazardly buttoned. And her eyes-red, swollen,
wet...
"Alice," he said.
"You've been crying. What-?"
The words dried up as his
brain began to register his surroundings.
"Oh, my," Romy
said softly at his side. She'd seen it too.
Patrick did a slow turn, his
feet crinkling on the aluminum foil that lined the floor. And the walls. And
the ceiling. And the two windows on the outer wall, which was why the one-room
apartment was so dark. In some areas, the ceiling especially, the foil looked
as if it had been collected from trash cans-minutely crinkled, in odd-sized
squares, some with fast-food logos showing; other areas were covered in long
smooth strips, obviously tacked up right off the roll.
"Alice?" he said.
"What is all this?"
"What? Oh, you mean the
foil. That's for protection."
"From...?"
"From having my mind
read. The aliens working for Mercer Sinclair can read thoughts, you know. This
protects me from them. At least..." Her voice faltered as her face twisted
into a mask of grief. She sobbed. "At least I thought it did!"
Romy stepped closer and
slipped an arm around the woman's quaking shoulders. "What's the matter,
Alice? What happened?"
"The check!" Alice
wailed. "They stole it!"
Knew it! Patrick thought.
Complete waste of time.
"You mean," Romy
said, "someone broke in here and took it?"
"Yes! They knew my
secret hiding place and they switched it with another check, a worthless
one!"
Romy glanced up at Patrick
and shrugged.
"Let's go,"
Patrick said. He wanted to be angry at this flaky lady for wasting his time,
but she was too genuinely distressed. Her bizarro apartment, though, was giving
him a grand case of the creeps.
"We can't leave her like
this. She's terrified." Romy turned back to Alice. "When did you last
see the check?"
"Oh, I haven't taken it
out for years. But after talking to you last night, I pulled it out of my
secret hiding place, to have it ready for Mr. Sullivan, and it had
changed!" Another sob, louder this time. "The date's the same and the
money's the same, but it's not a SimGen check anymore and someone else's
signature is there instead of Mercer Sinclair's!" She fumbled in her
housecoat pocket. "Here. I'll show you."
"Romy...," Patrick
began but her quick sharp look cut him off.
"Let me calm her down a
little," she said, "then we can be on our way."
Alice produced a slip of
paper and shoved it into Romy's hand. "There. See for yourself!"
Patrick saw Romy glance at
the check, then take a closer look.
"What?" Patrick
said.
Romy angled the paper back
and forth in the dim light. "Well, it's for five thousand dollars and it's
made out to Alice Fredericks. And she's right about the signature: I don't know
whose it is, but it's not Mercer Sinclair's."
"I'll bet she's also
right about it not being from SimGen too."
Romy nodded, still staring
at the check. "Uh-huh. It was drawn on the First Federal Bank of
Arlington, Virginia." She looked up at him, her eyes so bright they fairly
glowed. "From the account of something called Manassas Ventures."
2
"I don't get it," Patrick said. His stomach
lurched as one of the Federal Plaza elevators lifted them toward OPRR's offices.
They'd held off talking
about Alice during the ride over from Alphabet City. The odds that one of New
York's current crop of cabbies would know enough English to follow their
discussion were astronomical, but still they hadn't wanted to risk it. Now they
had an elevator car to themselves.
"I think I do,"
Romy said. "I think she did perform some service for SimGen in its early
years, maybe even before it started calling itself SimGen. And it may well have
had something to do with a baby."
"What about the space
alien angle? You're not buying into-"
"Of course not. I'm no
psychologist, but I can see how she may have felt very guilty about what she
did. Combine that with not being too tightly wrapped in the first place, and
you can understand someone unraveling. She structured a fantastic scenario that
blended fact and fiction."
"But Mercer
Sinclair?"
"More mixing of fact
and fiction," Romy said. "Alice must have had some direct contact
with him because he keeps reappearing in her story-taking the sim baby, signing
her check."
"Right. The check. Why
did she think it had changed?"
"You heard her. She
hadn't looked at it for years, and during that time it did change-in her mind.
Maybe Mercer Sinclair had given it to her himself. She remembered that and so
over the years her loosely hinged mind substituted his signature for whoever
really signed it. And since Mercer Sinclair is synonymous with SimGen, she
began to remember it as a SimGen check."
"Poor lady. I'd give
anything to know the truth about her."
"I don't think even she
knows anymore."
He slipped an arm over Romy's
shoulders and pulled her closer. "You were good with her."
"I felt sorry for the
poor thing."
It had taken Romy a while,
but finally she'd managed to calm Alice Fredericks, telling her she was safe
now: The aliens had what they wanted and so they wouldn't be bothering her
again. She could take down the foil, let some fresh air into the room, and stop
worrying. Alice seemed to buy it. She hadn't seemed quite ready yet to peel the
foil from the walls, but she'd been in better spirits, and even gave them the
check to take with them. After all, it wasn't the real thing, so it was no use
to her.
"How old do you think
she is?" Patrick said.
"She said she was
forty-seven."
"Yeah, but is that
reliable? She looks sixty."
"Poverty and madness
can age you pretty fast."
"Yeah, well..." He
sighed. "I guess there's no way to find out what really went on between
her and SimGen-or rather, the proto-SimGen being directly financed by Manassas.
Which leaves us no closer finding out who's behind Manassas."
"But we've got a
Manassas Ventures check, and it's signed. That'ssomebody's signature."
"Right." With his
free hand Patrick pulled the old check from his pocket and held it up. "A
C-like letter connected to a squiggle, and then an L-like thing connected to
another squiggle, on a check drawn on a Virginia bank that was no doubt gobbled
up by another bank that merged with yet another bank which was taken over by
still another bank."
"But the check's dated
back when all that appropriation money was being funneled into SIRG. If we can
connect SIRG to that Arlington Federal account..."
"Fat chance."
"Don't be so sure. I've
got Uncle Miltie working on SIRG."
Patrick had to laugh.
"How do you get your superior to do your scut work?"
She lifted her chin
defiantly. "I'll have you know I'm superior to Milton Ware in every
way."
"Except in seniority,
position, and salary, right?"
"Mere details. Besides,
he's crazy about me."
"Aren't we all?"
"And he's an expert at
tracking down funding. Nobody better. Knows a ton of passwords and can sniff
out an unclaimed research dollar at a thousand paces. That's how I sicced him
on SIRG. I told him this group got zillions in funding without ever revealing
what it was doing. Maybe if OPRR learned its secret..."
"And he bought
it?"
"Why not? It's true,
isn't it?"
"Did you tell him it
hasn't received a dime in years?"
"Of course. But I
suggested that if he could find where all that funding came from, maybe some of
it might still be around for OPRR to tap into."
"And he bit?"
"Like a dog on a bone.
And Milton Ware is the kind of dog who'll work a bone until there's nothing
left."
They reached the OPRR
offices, a nondescript suite on the eighteenth floor. Romy led Patrick to a
windowed office where a peppy, white-haired little man sat hunched before a
computer. The plaque on his desk readMILTON WARE .
"Any luck?" she
said.
The man looked up and
regarded them with bright blue eyes. "Yes and no."
After Romy made
introductions, Ware took off his glasses and pointed to the inch-high stack of
printouts on his desk.
"The good news is that
I know where Social Impact Research Group's money came from. The bad news is
that OPRR won't be able to get any of it."
"Why not?" Romy
said.
"Because its ultimate
source was the Department of Defense."
"Knew it!" Romy
said, clapping her hands once. "Just like SOG-military bucks laundered
through an innocent-sounding subagency. Any indication where the money went
after it was cleared through SIRG?"
"Hell," Patrick
said, "we know damn well-" But a quick look from Romy shut him up.
Right. They both suspected
that the money had marched through a parade of holding companies until it
reached Manassas Ventures, which used it to fund the nascent SimGen. But Milton
Ware knew nothing of this.
"We know it wasn't
anything legit," Romy said, jumping in to cover for him. "Otherwise
they would have been more open about the funding."
"I don't see why it
matters," Ware said. "It doesn't exist anymore. No trace of it in
anyone's budget anymore."
Patrick leaned back and
thought a moment. They knew SIRG was still active-Daniel Palmer had said the
name before his speech center blew a fuse. But where was it getting its funding
now? The path to the answer might not lie with government agencies but with
people. He'd seen it happen time and again during his labor relations practice:
certain shady characters, on both the labor and management sides, would be
found out and sent packing, only to pop up in another company or union local
the following year.
"SIRG might be
operating under a different name," he said, "but I bet the personnel
are the same. Any idea who headed SIRG?"
Ware leaned forward and put
on his glasses. "Yes. I remember coming across that somewhere..." He
began shuffling through his printouts. "Here it is: the director was a
Lieutenant Colonel Conrad Landon."
"And where is he
now?"
"Easy enough to find
out." Ware turned to his computer. After a number of flamenco bursts on
his keyboard, he leaned closer to the screen and said, "Conrad Landon
retired as a full bird colonel."
"Damn. When?"
Ware stared at the monitor.
"The same year the funding died."
"What a surprise,"
Romy murmured.
Patrick leaned across the
desk for a peek at Ware's screen. "Any hint at where he might-?"
The picture of Landon
startled him. Something familiar about the man in the grainy, black-and-white
personnel-file photo.
"What's up?" Romy
said.
"Nothing. I just-"
And then he knew. Add a few decades, enough to whiten the hair and deeply line
the face, and Patrick recognized him. "Nothing." Repressing a shout
of triumph, he rose and extended his hand across the desk. Had to get out of
here, had to talk to Romy alone before he exploded. "Nice meeting you, Mr.
Ware. I've got to run. Romy, could you show me out?"
He fairly pulled her out of
her seat and propelled her ahead of him down the hall.
"What is it?" she
said.
"Where can we
talk?"
"My office is-"
"Might be bugged."
He saw the elevators ahead. "Back to our mobile conversation pit."
He pressed both theUP
andDOWN buttons. The upward bound car arrived first, carrying four people. He
let it go. The downward was empty. Perfect. He dragged Romy inside, jabbed the
button for the lobby. As soon as the doors closed...
"Remember when we had
our little face-to-face in my office with the Manassas Ventures lawyers?"
he said, his tongue all but tripping over the words in his rush to get them out
before someone else entered the car. "And remember how I followed them
downstairs to their limo, hoping to find someone like Mercer Sinclair sitting
in the back?"
She frowned.
"Vaguely."
"But it turned out to
be someone I'd never seen before. Well, I've just seen him again. The man in
the back seat was Conrad Landon, former Army colonel, and former director of
SIRG. Maybe not so former. I'll bet SIRG never went away and he's still calling
the shots. Find this Conrad Landon and we'll find SIRG."
3
NEWARK, NJ
Something's not right, Zero thought with a pang of unease.
We're missing something.
He sat next to Tome in the
rear seat of the van as it bounced over the rough pavement of Newark's dark
back streets toward the sim quarters Portero had led him to last night. Not
quite 6:00P .M. yet but the sun was long gone and icy night had taken command.
Tome was dressed like the
worker sims, but he'd been equipped with a PCA. The plan was to drop him off
where he could sneak into the building and mix with the other sims. Zero was
confident that Tome's gentle nature and above-average intelligence would gain
him the respect and confidence of the other sims, enough so that one of them
would trust him with Meerm's whereabouts. When he found out, he'd press the
preset speed-dial number and they'd pick him up.
Zero sighed. Not a perfect
plan. It hinged entirely on the assumption that the sim laborers knew where
Meerm was hiding.
His face itched under the
ski mask; he'd traded tinted glasses for the ultra darks he usually wore, but
they still impaired his vision. He wished he could pull everything off and ride
along like a normal human being. But then, he wasn't a normal human being.
Just ahead of him, Patrick
and Romy were a pair of silhouettes in the front seat.
"You two have done
wonderful work," Zero said. "You make a great team."
"We do, don't we,"
Patrick said from behind the wheel.
Zero watched them glance at
each other and smile. He could sense the growing bond between him. And as much
as it made him ache to see Romy with Patrick, he knew it was for the best.
Despite their surface differences, Zero sensed that they complemented each
other on the deeper levels where it really counted.
He steered his thoughts away
from Romy and toward what she and Patrick had uncovered today.
"We now have an
ironclad chain of evidence. It doesn't take a handwriting expert to decipher
the signature on Alice Fredericks's Manassas Ventures check as 'Conrad Landon.'
That draws a direct line from the Department of Defense to SimGen."
"It's not something
that will hold up in a court of law," Patrick said. "Off the top of
my head I can think of half a dozen grounds for preventing it from being
admitted as evidence. But in the court of public opinion, it's a hydrogen
bomb."
"Assuming the public
gives a damn," Romy said.
Patrick nodded. "Oh,
they'll care all right. We lay it out clear and simple for them. We show how
SimGen's early financing was public money: from Manassas Ventures which got it
from SIRG which got it from the Department of Defense. The obvious question
then is: Why? What did the D-o-D get in return? So we'll explain how Manassas
leases trucks in Idaho that show up on the SimGen campus, transporting cargo
back and forth, cargo that no one's allowed to see. But we've seen it, and
that's when we show them Kek. When we reveal that Kek was found in Idaho,
they'll be able to connect the last dots themselves: SimGen is producing hybrid
simian soldiers for the Department of Defense to use in black ops or guerrilla
operations. When the public learns that SimGen has been turning normally
harmless creatures into man-killers, they'll care. They'll care like crazy.
SimGen's dirty little secret will finally be out in the open for all to see,
and that will be the beginning of the end of SimGen."
Zero had been listening to
Patrick, but someone else's words had been echoing through his brain at the
same time.
You have no idea what you're
getting into, the forces you'll be setting in motion...they'll crush you.
"No comment back
there?" Patrick said.
"As I told you:
wonderful work."
But still that uneasy
feeling plagued Zero. Was this the danger Ellis had warned him about? He could
see now why the people behind SimGen were so ruthless when it came to
protecting the company.
So he added, "Now we
know why SIRG's funding was cut off: it didn't need any more. With all the
SimGen stock it holds in Manassas Ventures, SIRG is a financially independent
organization. Which means we've got to be more careful than ever."
"Right," Patrick said.
"More than careers and reputations hang in the balance should their little
operation be exposed. Billions of bucks are at stake."
Romy half turned in her
seat. "Which raises a scary question: If SIRG has its own billions to
finance its operations, who does it answer to?"
"No one with a
conscience, that's for sure. Maybe someone high up in the Pentagon, maybe only
Conrad Landon himself."
"I think we can count
on SIRG to do whatever it deems necessary to protect its investment," Zero
told them. "That's why, if we're going to bring SimGen down, I'd prefer to
find a way that keeps you two out of the spotlight."
"Which is why we're
heading to Newark, I assume."
"Exactly. I think it
will be safer for all concerned if we let Meerm and her baby bring down
SimGen."
"But that puts the
child in jeopardy," Romy said.
"No more so than now.
Meerm's baby is just as much a threat to SimGen dead as it is alive. Its
half-human, half-sim DNA will tell the whole story, a story that, unlike the
money trail you've discovered, can't be denied or stonewalled or spun into
something with no resemblance to the truth. That baby is a slam dunk."
"Then it's all on our
buddy Tome."
"Yes, Mist
Sulliman," Tome said from his seat beside Zero. "Tome ready
help."
"I know you are,"
Zero said softly.
Now Romy looked back at him
from the front seat. "Zero, I've been around you long enough to know when
you're holding something back. What aren't you telling us?"
So many things...but right
now Ellis Sinclair's words continued to haunt him, especially his warning about
the fallout from what they might uncover.
Things that will hurt me
personally, and devastate other, more innocent, parties. Things that no one
will want to hear. And don't think you'll come through unscathed, either.
That last part had been
particularly unsettling, but not as jarring as his final warning about what
they might find.
Some of it is sensitive. And
some of it is...unspeakable.
Zero couldn't allow Romy and
Patrick even a hint of his connection to Ellis, but perhaps he could hint at
the man's warnings.
"It's not so much
holding back as a feeling that there's something more behind all this,
something we're missing."
"Like what?"
Patrick said. "SIRG is the bastard child SimGen's been hiding in its
basement. That's enough, don't you think?"
"I suppose so."
But he remained dissatisfied
and uneasy. What had they missed?
Zero shook off the worries
as he spotted a street sign.
"We're getting
close."
"Another scenic
neighborhood," Patrick said. "The Bronx, East New York, Alphabet
City, and now Newark. Where next? Beirut?"
Zero had to admit that
Patrick had a point. Low-rent businesses, abandoned, graffito-crusted
buildings, stripped skeletons of cars lining the street...but just the kind of
low-rent neighborhood someone would pick to house sim laborers.
"It's to the right up
ahead," he told Patrick, "but don't make the turn. Cruise through the
intersection and everyone keep an eye out for surveillance teams."
"You think Portero's
watching the place?" Romy said.
"Count on it."
They made a couple of passes
through the immediate area, and along the way spotted four occupied sedans. The
first, with a pair of men slouched in the front seat, was parked across the
street from the front door of the building; a single occupant in each of the
other three; two of those were situated on the streets that flanked the sim
building, the last sitting opposite a narrow alley that appeared to lead toward
the rear of the building.
Patrick pulled into the curb
two blocks away and stopped under a dead streetlight. Ahead and to the right,
the light over the front door of the sim crib glowed like a star in the
darkness.
"This looks too risky,
Zero," he said. "Tome's not going in."
"Tome can go,"
said the sim.
"Uh-uh," Patrick
said, shaking his head, and Zero could sense his resolve turning to stone.
"I won't allow it."
Zero sighed. "I
agree."
He couldn't see any way of
slipping Tome past Portero's surveillance.
"Damn." Zero made
a fist. "I anticipated two teams, not four."
"Might be five-one
roving. I swear we passed the same green Taurus twice."
Just then a school bus
rumbled past and pulled to a stop before the sim building. As Zero watched it
disgorge its crew of sim laborers, he had an idea.
"All right," he
said. "Let's head back."
Romy said, "We're not
giving up already, are we?"
"Not a chance. Just
changing tactics. And I promise you, by this time tomorrow night Tome will be
safely inside that building, and no one will be the wiser."
"Tomorrow's
Saturday," Patrick said. "Will the sims be working?"
"Of course. They
workevery day. 'Weekend' has no meaning for a sim."
As they drove back Zero
reviewed all they'd learned about SIRG and Manassas. He knew Ellis had been
sincere when he'd warned him against digging too deep. Well, they'd dug, and
dug deep. They'd discovered a dirty little secret, yes, but nothing
"unspeakable."
And that worried Zero.
4
Meerm ver hungry. Drink rainwater some but no food all
day. Ver fraid go out. Stay behind metal door till dark. Still fraid go out.
Tummy hurt so ver bad. And belly kick-kick-kick all day.
Must go out. Push metal
door. Goskeek ver loud. But no mans come.
Meerm go out. Smell food,
yum-yum food smell. Drool smell. From other side fence.
Meerm creep to fence, peek
through. See gold arch. Go under fence, cross street, go sticker bush, come
other fence. See Mickey-D! Mickey-D! But can't have. Meerm so sad.
Meerm see boy-mans come out
Mickey-D. Hold black bag, throw in bigbig metal can. When boy-man go, Meerm
squeeze through fence hole and go to can. Top ver high but Meerm climb up and
fall inside. Many bag here. Meerm rip one. Yum-yum food smell come out. Meerm
reach inside, find much food, half-eat, all mixy-mixy. Meerm not care. Is
yum-yum.
Ouch. Hand hurt. Meerm look.
See rats. Rat want food too. Bite Meerm. Meerm throw food at rat. Plenty food
here. Food for all.
Meerm shove food into mouth
fast can. Chew-chew-chew. So good. Meerm not sad now. Still hurt but hunger go.
Good. For now.
5
MINEOLA, NY
DECEMBER 22
Romy had called first thing in the morning and told
Patrick to pick her up. They had a doctor's appointment, she said.
After she'd settled herself
in the car she explained that the appointment was with an obstetrician. That
had taken him aback until she explained that it was Dr. Cannon, and they were
visiting her to discuss Alice Fredericks.
Betsy Cannon worked out of a
small office attached to her home, a modest two-story colonial on a tree-lined
street in Mineola. She'd already made her hospital rounds; her office hours
didn't start until 1:00P .M. so they had plenty of time. Looking casual in a
loose turtleneck sweater and khaki slacks, she served them coffee and
Entenmann's crumb cake in her roomy kitchen.
"Is there a Mr. Dr.
Cannon?" Patrick whispered as Betsy stepped out of the room to take a call
from the hospital.
Romy shook her head.
"No. Never was, and I doubt there ever will be, if you get my drift."
"No kidding?"
Patrick said. "Never would have guessed."
Betsy returned then and
seated herself on the far side of the kitchen table. "You wanted to ask me
about this Fredericks woman?"
"Yes," Romy said.
"Her story is such a mishmash of fact and fiction, we were hoping you'd be
able to separate the two."
Patrick appreciated the
"we." It hadn't even occurred to him to run the story past Dr.
Cannon. And considering that she'd spent years as head of sim obstetrics for
SimGen, he was disappointed with himself for not thinking of it first.
Betsy smiled. "Well,
I'll be glad to try. I can explain parts of her story-especially the ones about
being abducted and impregnated by space aliens-with one word: psychosis."
Patrick said, "That's
pretty strong, isn't it?"
"She's delusional, she
has a persistent break with reality that interferes with her day-to-day
functioning. That behavior fits the diagnosis. The sad thing is, she can be
easily helped. The right medications could restore her neurochemicals to proper
balance and she'd come back to the real world."
"Neurochemicals,"
Romy murmured. "They'll get you every time."
Patrick shot her a
questioning glance but she only shrugged and waved it off.
"Delusional or
not," he said, getting back on track, "she gave us the check. And
unless I'm delusional too, it looks pretty real."
Betsy smiled. "I'm sure
it is. And you'll notice I didn't include the part about her giving birth to a
sim as one of her delusions."
"You don't really
think...," Romy said, frowning. She glanced at Patrick. "I mean,
how...?"
"It's obvious when you
think about it," Betsy told her. "Human surrogate mothers were a
necessity in the early stages of the sim breeding process."
Romy's face twisted in
revulsion. "Why on earth-?"
"Because sims are
considerably larger than chimps. A small chimpanzee uterus couldn't carry a sim
baby to term, but a human uterus would have no problem."
Patrick was dazed. "So
part of what she's saying might be true?"
"Perhaps not about
birthing the very first sim, but...how old is she?"
"Forty-seven-she
says."
Betsy nodded. "Then
she's about the right age. Think about the implantation process-flat on her
back on a table, bright lights overhead, surrounded by doctors in caps, masks,
and goggles as they insert an in-vitro-fertilized ovum into her uterus. You can
see how an unbalanced mind might later reinterpret this as an alien
abduction."
"But to go through all
that for five thousand dollars?"
"I'm sure it was more
like fifty thousand: say, five in advance, then five every month until
delivery. The process is no different from being a surrogate mother for a human
couple."
"Except that at the end
you don't deliver a human baby," Romy said.
Betsy nodded. "Right.
And perhaps that unbalanced an already fragile mind."
"Which makes her one
more casualty left in SimGen's wake," Romy said.
"But she couldn't have
been the only one," Patrick said. "How come we haven't heard about
this before?"
Betsy shrugged. "I'm
sure there were many human surrogate mothers before SimGen developed its
breeding stock. I'm also sure they signed non-disclosure agreements with stiff
penalties."
"Not exactly the sort
of thing I'd want to trumpet from the rooftops anyway," Romy added.
Patrick leaned back,
thinking. He had a sense that something important had slipped past him here,
something Betsy had said a moment ago.
A small chimpanzee uterus
couldn't carry a sim baby to term, but a human uterus would have no problem.
And then he knew.
"Oh, Christ! Meerm is
carrying a half-human, half-sim baby. Won't it grow too big-?"
"Too big for her to
carry full term?" Betsy said. "Absolutely. Normal sim gestation is
eight months, but we don't know when Meerm conceived, so we don't know her due
date. That's why you have to find her. If she goes into premature labor while
she's in hiding, the baby won't survive. If she's too far along the baby will
be too big for a vaginal delivery, which means she'll need a cesarean."
"And if she doesn't get
one?" Romy asked, and Patrick could tell from her expression that she
didn't want to hear the answer.
"We'll lose both of
them."
Romy closed her eyes for a
heartbeat or two, then stared at Patrick. "We'vegot to find her."
"Tome is set to go
tonight."
Zero had called Patrick this
morning to tell him he'd gone back to Newark before dawn and followed the sim
bus into Manhattan. He saw where it dropped off the sims at a Harlem sweatshop.
Assuming pick-up would be at the same spot, the new plan was to put Tome on
line with the workers as they boarded the bus.
"If Tome gets the job
done tonight, we could be bringing Meerm here tomorrow morning."
Betsy smiled and raised her
coffee cup in a sort of toast. "I'll be waiting."
6
NEWARK, NJ
Meerm hide in cold dark place and hurt. Hurt so ver bad.
Tummy go kick-kick-kick. Was food bad? Meerm not think. Not feel sick tummy,
just hurt tummy. Hurt-hurt-hurt, then stop. Then hurt-hurt-hurt again, then
stop.
Now hurt stop again. Meerm
close eyes and breathe. So good when hurt stop.
What this? Leg feel wet.
Meerm touch. Yes, wet and warm. Put wet from leg near light from steel door
crack. Red wet. Blood? Where blood come? From inside? How come from inside?
Now Meerm cry. Don't want
bleed. Don't want die. What wrong Meerm?
7
MANHATTAN
Tome keep head down and walk far back in bus like Mist
Sulliman say do. Sit seat and wait. Other sim come, say, "My seat, my
seat."
Tome stand wait for bus
move, then find other seat.
"Who you?" say
she-sim next Tome. "You not shop sim."
Tome remember what Mist
Sulliman tell him say. "Yes, not shop sim. Just old sim looking for
friend."
"Who friend?"
"Meerm."
Tome know not true, but Mist
Sulliman tell say this.
She-sim say loud,
"Beece! Beece! Come see old sim!"
Tome look and see he-sim
come down aisle. This Beece big. Look down Tome.
"Why here old
sim?"
"I am Tome. Look for
Meerm. She friend."
Beece get mad face.
"You lie! Bad mans send! You want hurt Meerm!"
"No! Good mans send.
Friend all sim. Best friend sim have. Try to make sim union. Try-"
"What yooyun?"
Tome try tell but Beece not
understand. So Tome tell Beece bout how Mist Sulliman hurt by bad mans, house
burned by bad mans who hate sim.
Beece eyes ver wide.
"House burn? Because help sims?"
All other sim who hear turn
round, look Tome.
Tome say, "Yes! Good
man! Best man. Now want help Meerm. Save her from bad mans. Also Meerm ver
sick."
All sim nod. Yes, some say.
Meerm ver sick.
"Good man help make
better. Where Tome find Meerm?"
Beece not speak.
She-sim next Tome say,
"Beece not know. No sim know."
No sim speak long time. Tome
ver sad. Want help Mist Sulliman but fail. Touch phone in pocket. Must call and
tell.
Then Beece say, "Beece
know. Not know exact, but can help." Beece look hard Tome. "Must tell
true. Must help Meerm."
"Tome help Meerm."
So ver happy now. "Tome help good."
8
NEWARK, NJ
"Get ready," Zero murmured from the darkness
behind her as the school bus pulled to a stop before the sim crib.
Romy raised her binoculars
and focused on the front door. Patrick had parked the van in the same spot as
last night. He sat beside her behind the wheel, training his own set of glasses
on the door, and she knew Zero had his pair aimed between them. They had to
know whether or not Tome got off the bus, and all agreed that three sets of
eyes were better than one.
Romy licked her lips. Her
fingers felt slick against the black matte finish of the binocular barrels.
This was the night when it all could come together, when all her years of
effort, when everything she'd worked for would come to fruition...
Or go up in smoke.
She took a breath. No smoke.
This was going to work.
No movement yet. She noticed
Patrick lowering his glasses.
He let out a long, slow
breath, as if he'd been holding it. "What if somebody spots him and gets
suspicious?" he said.
"No reason they
should," Zero said. "Tome's dressed just like the other sims. And
besides, the surveillance teams are looking for a pregnant female."
"But what about their
warden or whatever you call the guy inside-what if he counts one extra and
turns him over to the guys outside. I saw how they cut up those other
sims."
Romy stared at Patrick. Was
that a catch in his voice? He was really worried-not about blowing their chance
to find Meerm, but about Tome being hurt. Same as last night when he'd refused
to let Tome near the building.
She felt a burst of warmth
for him. What a change from the hard case she'd met just a few months ago. She
laid a gentle hand on his arm.
"We won't let anything
happen to Tome. You know that."
"Better not," he
said, staring straight ahead. "He's my roomie, you know."
"I know. And I-"
"There they are,"
Zero said and the three of them trained their glasses on the small patch of
sidewalk between the bus and the front door.
Romy wished there were more
light as the sims trooped out in ones and pairs. She fine-tuned the focus on her
binocs, training her gaze on their faces. Since they all were dressed in
identical coveralls, only the faces would tell. She watched one after another
swim through her field of vision in a seemingly endless stream, and then
suddenly the parade was over.
"I didn't see
him," Romy said.
Neither had Zero or Patrick.
"Do you think this
means what it's supposed to mean?" Patrick whispered.
Romy felt her heart rate
kick up. The plan was for Tome to enter the sim dorm if he hadn't learned
Meerm's whereabouts by the time the bus arrived. If he'd been successful, he
was to hide on the bus until the driver parked it down the street, then sneak
out and call for pick-up.
"I hope so," she
said.
Patrick reached for the
ignition but Zero stopped him.
"Wait till we hear from
him. We're much less conspicuous sitting still."
And so they waited. And
waited.
"Why doesn't he
call?" Patrick said, tapping the steering wheel none too gently.
"Something's wrong."
Romy prayed not.
Tome lost.
Turn round and round in dark
but not know where is.
Tome bad sim. Old fool sim.
Not listen Mist Sulliman. Not do what told. Mist Sulliman say call but Tome
not. Fool Tome wait driver go, then open bus window. Climb through, drop
ground. Tome not call like Mist Sulliman say. Fool Tome go find Meerm self.
Show Mist Sulliman can find. Bring back Meerm. Make Mist Sulliman proud.
Tome do bad thing. Wait by
bus. See no car. Run cross street. Hide shadow. Try remember what Beece say.
Wish Beece knew better where Meerm hide. Only know, "Left side home building.
Many, many turn go see Mickey-D gold arch light over fence. Look black metal
door. Red writing door. Meerm inside."
Tome go, make many many
turn. No see Mickey-D. No see black metal door. Now Tome lost in ver dark
place.
Tome keep walk. Hear car
noise. Many car. See light. Go to and find big street. Many light and car. And
there Mickey-D. Tome find! Tome not bad sim! Not fool!
But where steel door? Tome
look-look but no see door, no red writing. Tome fail. Ver sad again. Pull out
phone, remember what Mist Sulliman say: First press red button, wait for beep,
then press 9 button, then press green button.
Tome hope Mist Sulliman not
mad and say no more friend with Tome. That make Tome ver sad.
"Yes!" Patrick
cried as his PCA chirped.
Romy watched him jab theSEND
button and crush the phone against his ear. He'd been sitting there with it
clutched in his hand, thumb poised over the buttons like a mad bomber with a
detonator.
"Tome!" he cried.
"You're all right?" He turned and nodded to Romy and Zero.
Romy let out a sigh of
relief. The last twenty-five minutes had been hell.
"No-no," Patrick
was saying. "That's all right. As long as you're okay, it doesn't matter.
Listen, you stay there but keep out of sight. We'll come by and get you."
He closed the PCA and started the van.
"What happened?"
Zero said.
"He thought he could
find Meerm himself."
"Oh, God!" Romy
said.
"I know, I know, it was
foolish. But it's okay. We're picking him up at the McDonald's we passed back
there on Springfield Avenue. Now nobody get on his case, okay? He was just
trying-"
"But this means he
found out where Meerm is."
Patrick nodded, with no
little pride in his grin. "That he did. And if we can decipher the
directions he got, we'll have Meerm on her way to Dr. Cannon before you know
it."
Romy smiled, sharing his
infectious optimism, allowing herself to hope.
Lister's voice grated
through the encrypted phone line. "Still no sign of that damned
monkey?"
Damned monkey was right.
Double-damned monkey. Luca leaned back in his sofa, put his feet up on the old
coffee table, and scratched his throat. His shaver had been a little dull this
morning and it had irritated his skin, but not as much as the events of the
past few days were irritating his gut. How many places could a pregnant sim
hide?
"Not a trace."
Behind him, in the kitchen,
he could hear Maria humming as she cooked up their Saturday night feast. A
spicy aroma wafted around him, making his mouth water.
"Shit," Lister
said. "I'm getting lots of questions about all the men we're tying up. Let
me get this straight: You've got five cars and twelve men involved in this
surveillance?"
"Correct: four cars
stationary, one on patrol, with rotating twelve-hour shifts of six men
each."
Suddenly Maria's face
hovered above him, grinning as she dangled a glistening sliver of chicken over
his lips. He opened his mouth and she dropped it in. Delicious. He blew her a
kiss and she swayed back to the kitchen.
Damn, he was going to miss
her.
"And you think that's
the way to go?"
Luca chewed and swallowed
quickly. "That's what all our sim experts advise. They say she's got to
eat, so that means if we don't catch her wandering around or trying to sneak
back into the sim crib, we'll find another sim sneaking out to bring her
food."
"Makes sense to me, but
upstairs is complaining about the manpower commitment."
"It's not as if these
guys have anything better to keep them busy."
"Oh, but very soon they
will. Guillotine is a go."
Luca stiffened.
"When?"
"Can't say more now.
Maybe in person."
Luca understood. Even a
hard-encrypted phone wasn't secure enough for a conversation about Operation
Guillotine. Because Guillotine was what SIRG was all about, and the neck
scheduled to be placed under that blade was Aazim Saad's.
Al Qaeda was gone, but its
goals and methods lived on in various smaller offshoots. The most active was
the Malaysian Mujahideen led by Aazim Saad.
One of his men had ratted
out the Omani terrorist kingpin, and his headquarters had been traced to a
rubber plantation in Borneo. Operation Guillotine would drop three commando
teams of specially trained mandrilla sims into the surrounding jungle and have
them raid the compound, killing anything that moved. All their gear-weapons,
clothing, communications-would be foreign-made to obscure their point of
origin. Even if one were captured alive, it couldn't give anything away,
because it wouldn't know anything, and couldn't tell if it did. The Malaysian
Mujahideen would be wiped out, and no one would know by whom.
This had been the Old Man's
dream: an anonymous strike force that could operate with greater efficiency and
ferocity than any human equivalent. All SIRG had needed was clearance from the
Pentagon to proceed. Now they had it. And if Guillotine was a success, Conrad
Landon would be the toast of a very small, very elite inner circle in the
Department of Defense.
Luca had seen the mandrillas
in training. Their ferocity awed him. They knew no fear, and gave no quarter.
Their downside was the difficulty controlling them, and stopping them once they
got started. Heaven help any innocent bystanders near the Saad compound.
"All I can say,"
Lister said, "is that some of those surveillance men are going to be
needed back in Idaho for the launch."
"I don't think I'll
need much more time. It's been only forty-eight hours. She can't go-"
His PCA rang. "Just a
sec. That's from the surveillance team." He put Lister on hold, snatched
up the phone, and recognized Snyder's voice.
"Guess what just
happened?"
"What?" Please,
Luca thought. Nothing bad. Don't tell me anyone's dead.
But Snyder sounded pleased
with himself; almost happy.
"I'm pulling up to the
drive-thru window of this McDonald's near the crib to get coffees for the guys
when I see this beat-up old van with New York tags pull into the lot. And I'm
thinking, you know, there's a lot of dirty old white vans with New York plates,
but maybe this is the one I spotted in Brooklyn, you know, when Palmer and
Jackson disappeared from that op. And I was wishing I had the tag number handy
when-"
"Get to the goddamn
point!"
"Okay, okay. So I'm
watching the van and I see the rear door swing open. No big deal, but then this
sim hops out of the bushes and jumps inside."
The PCA's seams let out a
faint squeak as Luca's grip tightened. "Was it her?"
"Nah. This was a skinny
male, but you could tell from his coveralls he's from the crib."
"He's leading them to
her! Where are they now?"
"About twenty-five
yards ahead of me, heading back toward the crib."
"Don't lose them. You hear
me, Snyder? Do...not...lose them. And don't let them spot you either. You spook
them, they'll take off."
"Maybe I should contact
the others so we can tag team them on the tail."
"Good idea. No,
wait."
Luca's mind raced over the
possibilities. These people had fooled him before. Was it sheer luck that
Snyder spotted the sim jumping into the van, or was hesupposed to see it? The
expected response was to mobilize the entire surveillance team, which would
leave the sim crib unguarded. Could that be their real purpose?
"Do it this way. Lowery
and Stritch have the front door. While Lowery takes the car to back you up,
tell Stritch to go inside and find out from that jerk Morales which of his sims
is missing. If the sim from the van somehow makes it back to the crib, I want
to know which one it is."
"Got it," Snyder
said.
"I'm on my way over
now. I can't emphasize how important this is, Snyder. Don't blow it."
He returned to Lister.
"Gotta go. Tell the folks upstairs our 'big manpower commitment' just paid
off."
He ended the call without
waiting for a response. He told Maria not to wait up as he rushed for the door.
"You did a good job, Tome,"
Romy said, feeling for the agitated old sim.
Tome sat hunched on a rear
seat of the van, distraught that he'd failed to find Meerm. Romy had moved out
of the front. She and Zero flanked him.
"Yes," Zero added.
"An excellent job. But now tell us again what Beece said. Try to remember
exactly."
Romy listened closely to
Tome's recitation of Beece's fractured directions to Meerm's hiding place,
trying to fathom a way to put them to practical use.
And then from the front seat
Patrick said, "I think we've got trouble."
Zero leaned forward.
"What's wrong?"
"A green Taurus has
been following us since McDonald's."
Romy tensed. "You're
sure?"
"He's hanging back, but
I just made a couple of turns and he's still with us."
"Let's leave the
neighborhood, then," Zero said. "Head for one of the highways-22, 78,
doesn't matter, just so long as it takes us to the airport."
"Newark Airport?"
"It's a maze, and a
traffic nightmare. If we can't lose them there, we never will."
"But what about
Meerm?" Romy said.
Zero shook his head.
"Too risky to look for her now. We'd lead them right to her."
Romy hung on as they bounced
along. She saw a red, white, and blueTO 78 sign flash by and cried out,
"There!"
"Damn!" Patrick
said. "Missed it! Look for another."
Romy peered through the
windshield. "Where are we?"
"Haven't a clue."
Patrick shook his head. "Don't know a thing about Newark."
The buildings had fallen
away behind them and now they were moving through a no-man's-land of junkyards
and railroad tracks, bouncing along a rutted gravel path.
"The Taurus isn't
pretending anymore," Patrick said, and Romy thought she detected a tremor
in his voice. "He's getting closer. And there's another car behind
him."
"He knows we've spotted
him," Zero said. He moved to the rear doors and crouched among the
overnight bags he'd told Romy and Patrick to bring. If they found Meerm, they
wouldn't be going home. She watched him peer through a small, unpainted area of
one of the windows. "Looks like he brought back-up along. I was afraid of
this."
"He's getting
closer!" Patrick called from the front.
Romy moved back beside Zero.
"What do you think they'll do?"
"Try to stop us, find
out who we are, maybe kill us. Except for Tome. They'll want to interrogate
him."
Romy sensed a cold wave slip
over her, just as it had last week when it had come time to dose the man called
David Palmer with his own truth drug. As she felt her emotions crystallizing,
falling one by one into deep-freeze hibernation, she reached into her shoulder
bag and pulled out a .45 caliber HK semiautomatic. She worked the slide to
chamber a shell.
"I don't think
so," she said.
Zero's head swiveled to the
pistol, then to her. "Where'd you get that?"
"From one of the two
creeps who invaded my home."
"How long have you been
carrying it?"
"Ever since two creeps
invaded my home."
"He's riding my
tail!" Patrick cried from the front.
Romy gestured with her HK
toward the rear door. "Hold that open and we'll stop this right now."
Zero shook his head.
"It may come to that, but let's try my way first." He opened a
heavy-duty plastic cooler and reached inside.
"You were ready for
something like this?"
"I try to be prepared
for everything."
Despite the situation, she
had to smile. "You must have been a great Boy Scout."
He looked at her again.
"No. Never had the chance." His voice sounded sad. "But I think
I would have loved it."
He came up with a red,
softball-size object that jiggled in his gloved hand.
Romy stared at it. "A
water balloon?"
"Not quite. Put your
pistol away and get ready to open the door for me."
Romy didn't know what Zero
was up to, but she'd learned to trust his judgment. And his preternatural calm
bolstered her confidence. She stowed the pistol and unlatched the door.
Zero called toward the
front: "Do we have any curves coming up, Patrick?"
"About thirty
yards."
Zero turned to Romy.
"Get ready. Five-four-three-two-one-open!"
Romy gave the door a shove.
As soon as it swung open, revealing the green Taurus no more than half a dozen
feet from their rear bumper, Zero launched the balloon with a gentle underhand
toss.
Romy watched it wobble
through the air and land on their pursuer's windshield-which then disappeared
in a splatter of dark green paint.
The car swerved as the
windshield wipers came on.
"Those won't
help," Zero said. "Oil-based."
And then the van leaned to
the right as it rounded a curve, but the Taurus kept going straight, bounding
off the gravel roadway and ramming nose first into a deep ditch. It hung there,
trunk skyward, steam boiling from under its crumpled hood.
She heard Patrick laugh.
"What the hell?"
"Not in the clear
yet," Zero said, staring out the rear door at the second car. He had
another paint balloon in his hand. "Come on," he whispered.
"Just a little closer."
But the second car, a dark
blue Jeep, hung back. Obviously they'd seen what happened to the Taurus.
"Have to try something
else," Zero said. He rummaged in the chest and came up with a plastic
container. "Here. Toss these out."
Romy lifted the lid to find
a couple of dozen steel objects that looked like jacks. But these were much
bigger, and instead of six tips, these had only four, each ending in a sharp
barbed point.
"What are-?"
"Road stars. Just toss
them out. They're configured so that they always land with a point up."
Romy emptied the container,
watched the Jeep roll over them, and waited for its tires to go flat.
"Hmmm," Zero said.
"Must have self-sealing tires. The stars will chew them up eventually but
we don't have time for that. They're probably calling for more back-up
now."
He pulled two lengths of
chain from the chest, each with a dozen or so road stars attached, and dropped
them out the back.
Again Romy watched the Jeep
run over them, but nothing happened.
"They didn't
work."
"Just give them a few
seconds longer. The chains will wrap themselves around an axle, and drag the
stars through the rubber-"
Romy saw a puff of dust as
the front left tire blew out.
"-tearing the tire to
shreds."
The Jeep swerved on the
gravel and then another tire blew. The van left it behind in the dark, eating
dust.
"Back to that 78 sign,
Patrick," Zero called, "and please don't miss it this time."
Romy gazed at Zero and tried
to sort through the strange mix of emotions scattering through her at that
moment. They were warm-no, they were hot-and if this wasn't love, it should be.
Luca thumbed theSEND button
on his ringing PCA. It was Stritch.
"I'm in the crib
now," he said. "Our buddy Benny here is in charge of forty-two sims,
and that's how many I count."
"Count again. You made
a mistake."
"I've counted three
times already. There's forty-two sims here; not forty-three, not forty-one.
Forty-two."
"Then he's lying about
the number."
"That's what I thought
so I made him show me his records. Sure enough: forty-two."
Portero growled and hung up.
All sims accounted for? Then where did the sim in the van come from?
The PCA rang again. Snyder
this time. His voice sounded strange...nasal.
"Give me some good
news."
"We lost them."
Luca's car swerved when he
heard the words and he didn't trust himself to drive. He pulled over and
listened to Snyder's long-winded, jumbled, broken-nosed, ass-covering version
of whatever really happened, blaming it on a guy in a ski mask or some such
shit. When it was over Luca broke the connection and sat with his forehead
resting on the steering wheel. For the first time in his adult life, Luca
Portero wanted to cry.
9
NEWARK, NJ
DECEMBER 23
"All right," Zero said, peering through the
pre-dawn light at the McDonald's four blocks ahead. "Let's stop
here."
He sat with Tome and Kek in
the rear of the van. Patrick had the wheel as usual, Romy at his side.
Zero yawned. Tired. They all
were tired. And they should be. A long night that he, Romy, and Patrick had
spent spray-painting the van. He'd had no way of finding a new one on such
short notice, so now the old one sported a glossy black coat and New Jersey
tags he'd picked from a pile of old plates he'd found in a Staten Island
junkyard.
He glanced at his watch:
6:45A .M. and still no sun. Not due to rise for another half hour. Newark
hadn't risen yet either, most of it still asleep on this cold Sunday morning.
He'd wrestled all night with the timing of his approach to Meerm. Assuming he
could find her, it would be safer for all concerned to make contact under cover
of darkness. But he was sure Meerm would be frightened of anyone she couldn't
see. That necessitated a daylight approach, multiplying the risks of being
spotted.
He stared at the McDonald's,
Beece's key landmark. He'd told Tome he'd been able to see its golden arches
over a fence near Meerm's hiding place. Beece had made no mention of crossing
the avenue, which meant Meerm was hiding someplace behind the McDonald's.
A detailed aerial
reconnaissance photo would have told him all he needed to know, but since he
didn't have one of those, he'd have to proceed by trial and error.
"Okay," he told
Patrick. "Let's make this first right up here and see if you can position
us a couple of blocks behind the McDonald's. We'll work our way back toward it
from there."
"Gotcha," Patrick
said, and put the van in gear.
"Everyone keep an eye
out for Portero's people."
"If you see a green
Taurus," Romy said, grinning at Zero over her shoulder, "it won't be
them."
Patrick laughed.
"Right! I'll bet it'll be next week before anyone can see through that
windshield again."
Zero grinned beneath his ski
mask. Fortunately no shots had been traded. Romy's pistol last night had
unsettled him. Their pursuers undoubtedly had seen Tome get into the van-why
else would they have followed?-and so Zero guessed they'd want the sim alive as
a lead to Meerm. He'd figured-hoped was more like it-that they wouldn't fire
unless fired upon. He was glad he'd brought along some alternative weaponry.
However, if they ran into
any of Portero's men today, they'd be edgy, might shoot first and worry later
about who they hit. That was why he'd brought Kek along. He glanced back at the
gorilla-mandrill hybrid crouched by the rear door. He wore black coveralls
cinched with the belt that held his Special Forces knife. His snout was a cool
blue and he seemed relaxed, but Zero knew if provoked he could explode into
violence in the blink of an eye.
As Zero turned forward
again, he caught Romy staring at him, her eyes almost luminous in the dimness.
She'd been doing that a lot since their time together in the rear of the van
last night. He sensed it was more than combat bonding, feared it might be
infatuation. That sort of look from Romy should have made him giddy, but
instead it weighed on Zero. A look was the limit, the most he could ever hope
for.
After zigzagging through the
narrow streets, Patrick stopped the van by the mouth of an alley running
between a rundown tenement and an abandoned brick building that might have been
a factory once. Pigeons clustered in its broken window frames, cooing and
watching.
"Unless my sense of
direction is completely out of whack," Patrick said, pointing down the
alley, "the McDonald's is two blocks that-a-way."
"All right then,
Tome," Zero said. "It's up to you and me now. Let's go find
Meerm."
The old sim looked at
Patrick and Zero could sense the bond between them. Patrick nodded. "Go
ahead, Tome. You can do it."
"Yes, Mist Sulliman.
Tome try best."
Patrick rolled down his
window and checked the street. "All clear."
Zero pushed open a rear door
and hopped down. As soon as Tome was out he started to push it closed and found
Romy staring at him again.
"Be careful," she
said.
Zero could only nod.
He hurried Tome off the
sidewalk and into the narrow alley. As they moved through the litter and the
rubble, their breath steaming in the frigid air, Zero glanced up and was
surprised to see a number of clotheslines stretching above them; one sported a
bra and a very large set of white panties. Apparently the tenement wasn't as
deserted as it looked.
"If you were
Meerm," Zero said to Tome, keeping his voice low, "and you were in
here and frightened, and looking for a place to hide, which way would you
go?"
"Tome not Meerm."
"Yes, but imagine you
were."
"What is 'magine?"
How to explain that? Maybe
Tome wasn't capable of imagining. But he'd imagined starting a sim union,
hadn't he. Imagining a solution to a problem, though, wasn't the same as
pretending to be someone else.
But if I can do it, why
can't Tome?
"We can talk about
imagining later," Zero told him. "Right now we need to find a spot
where we can see the golden arches over a fence, isn't that what Beece
said?"
"Yes. Say Meerm in
metal door with red write."
A metal door with red writing...that
was their best clue. If they had a big search party, and unlimited time, and
could comb the area openly without fear of being attacked, Zero had no doubt
they'd find Meerm before the morning was out. But with just him and Tome...
They arrived in a small
quadrangular courtyard that once must have served as a dump for the surrounding
buildings. No fence, no McDonald's arches, no metal door with red writing.
They moved on into another
alley, misaligned with the one they'd just left. They were halfway to the next
street when Zero noticed a low passage, five feet high at most, cutting away
through the wall of the building to their left. He stooped and saw daylight at
the far end.
"Did Beece mention
anything about a tunnel?"
Tome shook his head.
"No, Mist Zero."
"Okay, then." He
was about to turn away when it occurred to him to check it out. They were here.
Foolish not to take a look.
"Tome, we should see
what's on the other end of that tunnel. Since you're smaller, you're elected.
Hurry though and take a quick look. If you see anything that might be what
we're looking for, I'll follow you."
The old sim nodded and
ducked into the tunnel. Zero watched his silhouette dwindle toward the far end
until he stepped into the light. He moved away from the opening, leaving Zero
staring at an empty square of light, and then suddenly he was there again,
hurrying back.
"Mist Zero!" Tome
cried, his voice squeaking with excitement. "Is here! Metal door and fence
and red write!"
Zero didn't wait to hear if
the McDonald's arches were visible.
"Let's go!"
Bent in a deep crouch, he
splashed through the wet tunnel in Tome's wake and emerged into a small vacant
lot. A fenced vacant lot, with the McDonald's arches visible between the
buildings across the street. And directly across the lot, an abandoned brick
warehouse with a rusty metal door embedded in its flank, a door labeled with a
warning in faded red letters. At the rear of the lot was the open end of an
alley, probably how Beece had arrived.
They'd found it. Now they
had to hope she hadn't moved to a new hiding place. Please, let her still be
there.
"All right, Tome.
Remember: We have to be calm, we have to speak softly. You'll do the talking as
we planned, okay?"
Tome nodded. "Tome talk
good."
Zero approached the door with
measured steps, making enough noise so that anyone on the other side would hear
their approach and not be taken completely by surprise when the door opened. He
stopped outside it, waited a heartbeat or two, then gripped the door's upper
corner and pulled.
The hinges squealed horribly
as it swung open. Inside lay a pool of night, untouched by the dawn. Zero
listened but heard no movement within.
As rehearsed, Tome leaned
inside and said, "Meerm? This Tome. Friend sim. Friend Beece. Tome bring
friend help Meerm."
Silence.
She's gone, Zero thought.
And then, echoing from
within, a soft whimper.
"Do you think they're
all right?" Romy said as she sat in the passenger seat and stared down the
alley.
"They've only been gone
a few minutes," Patrick replied.
Romy knew that, but couldn't
quell her dark sense of foreboding.
"I should have gone
with them."
"No, you shouldn't
have. And you know why."
Romy glanced at Patrick. He
seemed testy this morning. Lack of sleep, maybe. But she knew what he meant:
They'd all agreed that a group of humans would spook Meerm.
"Well, then, I should
have gone with Tome instead of Zero. I'm female. If Tome can't talk her out, I
think a female human would be a lot less threatening than a male."
Patrick looked at her.
"You could be right. In fact, that makes sense-a hell of a lot more sense
than sending a guy in a ski mask. I must be overtired. I should have thought of
that myself. Hell, why didn't you bring this up before?"
"I did. But Zero was
dead set on going himself. Wouldn't consider anyone else."
"Doesn't make sense.
You've known him longer than I have, but he doesn't strike me as the
my-way-or-the-highway sort."
"He's not. He'll go
with the best idea, no matter who comes up with it. But he wasn't budging on
this."
"Must have his
reasons."
"I'm sure he does. And
after last night, I'm more than willing to defer to his judgment." She
caught Patrick rolling his eyes. "What?"
"Nothing."
"No, tell me."
"I thought you were
going to start gushing again."
"Gush?" She felt a
sting of embarrassment, knew what he was talking about, but couldn't bring
herself to admit it. "About what? I don't gush about anything."
"You do about Zero. You
haven't been able to stop yakking about last night."
Was it that obvious? She'd
been so taken by Zero's aplomb in handling their pursuers-was still impressed,
couldn't stop thinking about it. He could have got those two cars off their
tail by pulling out a bazooka and blowing them both to smithereens. Effective
but...lacking something. Instead he'd operated like a skilled surgeon, not
cutting too deep or too long, inflicting no more damage than necessary to get
the job done. And she loved that.
Now more than ever she felt
she had to know who Zero was. She needed to see the face, look into the eyes of
this man who did what he did, not just last night, but every day of his life.
That was the man for her.
She looked at Patrick.
Another good man, who managed to surprise her time and again. But he wasn't
Zero. There was no one else in the world like Zero.
"Sorry if I've been
boring you," she said. "But if you could have seen-"
A growl from Kek, squatting
in the darkness behind them. Patrick held up his hand for silence and cocked
his head toward the van's oversized side view mirror.
"Oh, shit. We've got
trouble!"
Romy tensed and reached into
her bag for her pistol. "Like what?"
"Like a late model
Impala coming this way, looking like it's got no particular place to go."
She looked down the alley.
No sign of Zero and Tome returning yet. Good.
"Duck down. Maybe
they'll just drive by if it looks empty."
"Too late. I'm sure
they spotted me in my side mirror."
"All right then,"
she said, her thoughts accelerating. "Let's pretend we're having a
fight." She raised her voice and gestured angrily. "You worthless
lump of protoplasm! What good are you? Tell me that! What good are you?"
"Protoplasm?"
Patrick said.
"The window's
closed," she told him. "Doesn't matter what we say; they won't be
able to make out the words anyway, but we've got tolook like we're going at
it."
"Yeah?" Patrick
cried, getting into it. "Is that what you think of me?Protoplasm? Hey,
you're nothing but a...a..." Helowered his voice. "What's lower than
protoplasm?"
"I don't know,"
she whispered as she shrugged. "Try mitochondria."
"Right!" he
shouted, shaking his fist in the air between them. "That's what you are! A
mitochondria! Just a lousy, no-good, two-bit mitochondria!"
The Impala slowed as it
passed, and Romy saw the passenger's pale face turned their way, his flat gray eyes
staring into the van's cab, past Patrick's turned back, at her face. She hoped
she looked angry enough.
Romy slammed the dashboard
with her fist. "Isn't that typical! You don't even know the word! The
singular is mitochondrion , you moron!"
The Chevy pulled ahead and
looked like it was moving on, but then it stopped.
Kek let out another growl.
Romy glanced back and noticed the mandrilla's snout had turned a bright red.
"Easy, Kek," Romy
cooed. "Just stay put."
But as the Impala's
passenger door swung open, so did one of the van's rear doors.
"Stay, Kek!"
Patrick said. "I can talk us out of-" The rear door closed softly.
"What's he going to do?"
"Nothing!" Romy
shouted, motioning to him to keep up the faux fight. "Not unless he has
to! And if we play this right, he won't have to!"
Patrick matched her volume.
"How, goddamnit?"
The passenger, a fortyish
redhead wearing a wrinkled green sport coat and a wary expression, was almost
to Patrick's door.
Romy cried, "When he
comes to the window-which will be in about two seconds-act pissed. We're having
a private argument here and he's butting in. Can you get into that?"
"Yeah!" Patrick
gritted his teeth and leaned closer. "I can get into that! I can get into
it better'n you, you worthless mito-" He jumped at the tap on the driver
window, turned, and rolled it down an inch. "Who the hell are you?"
The man's lips turned up at
the corners in a poor imitation of a friendly smile. "Hi, we're a
neighborhood patrol, just keeping an eye out for trouble and-"
"Yeah, well so
what?" Romy said, leaning over Patrick's shoulder and projecting Raging
Romy-scale belligerence. "Who needs you? Go patrol some other
neighborhood. This one's fine!"
She noticed how the man's
eyes were fixed on Patrick, barely flicking her way during her outburst.
"Yeah!" Patrick
said. "This one's fine!"
Suddenly the guy's hand
darted into his coat and came out with a big pistol, a cousin to the HK in
Romy's bag, which she didn't dare reach for now.
"Hold it!" he
said, grinning at Patrick. His Adam's apple was bobbing wildly. "I know
you. You're that sim lawyer. We've been looking for you. Turn off the
engine."
His expression tight, grave,
Patrick glanced at Romy and obeyed.
"Holdreal still
now." Without turning his head the man called to the Impala. "Yo,
Snyder! Come see what we hooked!"
The Chevy's driver door
opened and a taller, beefier man stepped out. He had a small white bandage
taped across his swollen nose.
"Well, well," he
said as he reached the van and looked inside. "If it isn't Sullivan and
Cadman."
Romy knew she shouldn't be
surprised that he knew her name, but the way he said it, the sound of it on his
lips, jolted her.
"What's in the back
there, folks?" Snyder said, grinning. "A ski mask, maybe? And a
supply of paint balloons? Mind if we take a-"
What happened next was a
blur: Two furry hands appeared, one to the left of Snyder's head, one to the
right of the redhead's, and then those heads slammed together with a
sickeningcrunch! Both men's mouths dropped into shocked ovals as their eyes
rolled up under their lids.
"Jesus!" Patrick
said.
Then the furry hands smashed
the heads together again, and this time the sound was wetter, softer. Blood
spurted from the redhead's nose, splattering Patrick's window.
"Christ, Romy! Make him
stop! He's going to kill them!"
"Too late for
that," she said, feeling the cold touch of Raging Romy's secret delight.
"Kek! Put them back in the car. Quick!"
"I know that
sound," Patrick said dully. "I heard it the night we were run off the
Saw Mill. I-"
She grabbed Patrick's arm.
"We've got to move! They may have a call-in schedule, and if they miss
it-"
"Yeah, yeah," he
said, looking dazed and maybe a little sick. "Got to move,
but...Jesus."
She noticed Kek dragging the
two bodies back to the car and tossing them through the open driver door like
sacks of wheat. She rolled down her window and leaned out.
"Kek! No, sit them up!
Sit themup !"
The mandrilla looked at her,
then nodded and followed her instructions.
She turned back to Patrick.
"We've got to find Zero and get out of here!"
"Don't forget
Tome." Patrick seemed to be recovering from his shock. "And what
about Meerm?"
"I don't know about
Meerm. She might not even be in Newark any longer. But I know what these people
will do to Zero if they find him."
Patrick nodded.
"Right."
Romy heard the van's rear
door slam, looked around and saw Kek returning to his standby squat. She
glanced at the Chevy and saw two upright silhouettes in its front seat.
"Stay here, Kek,"
she said. "I'll be right back."
The mandrilla made no sign
that he'd heard, but she knew he had.
"We'llbe right
back," Patrick said. He cut her off as she opened her mouth to tell him
she'd go alone. "We do this together."
Romy sensed arguing wasn't
going to work so she nodded and motioned him to follow her. She moved off at a
trot, heard his sloshing footsteps close behind.
Down the alley...nothing.
Into the courtyard...nothing. Down a second alley...noth-
Wait. Voices to her left.
Where? From that opening. Tome's voice. Without hesitation she ducked and
entered in a crouch. She heard Patrick puffing behind her. Ahead she could see
that the tunnel opened into a vacant lot. And there, across the lot, Zero and
Tome crouched before an open metal door, talking to no one, or at least no one
she could see.
"Wait," Patrick
whispered. "Don't go out there. Looks like they found her. Two more humans
will only spook her."
"She'll be spooked a
lot worse if more of Portero's goons show up. They'd better talk her out of
there soon or all this will be for nothing. We'll give them a couple more
minutes, then we've got to get out of here."
"Might take more than a
couple of minutes," Patrick sighed. "I mean, would you trust a
stranger in a ski mask?"
"Damn," Romy said,
feeling as if the tunnel walls were closing in on her. "She doesn't come
out in two minutes, I'll go in there myself and drag her out."
"Shhh!" Patrick
hissed. "I'll be damned! I think Zero's going to take off his mask!"
Romy looked and-dear God,
Patrick was right. Remaining statue-still, she held her breath and watched.
This is going nowhere, Zero
thought. And it's because of me. Or because of this ski mask.
No question about it: Meerm
was in that elevator shaft, hiding in the dark, but she wasn't budging. Tome
was doing his best, but he wasn't cut out for persuasion. Zero could try going
in after her, and that would work if the space beyond the door was limited to
just the shaft. But what if it opened into the rest of the warehouse? They'd
never find her.
All right. He couldn't blow
this chance. It might never come again. Time to put it all on the line.
Zero pulled off his dark
glasses, slipped his thumbs under the edge of his ski mask, and ripped it off.
"Look, Meerm," he
said, leaning through the open door. "Look at me. I'm not a man. I'm a
sim. Not a sim exactly like you, but a sim just the same. And I promise you,
Meerm, I swear to you that I am not here to harm you. Just the opposite. I am
here to help you and protect you from being harmed by the bad men."
Zero waited, hoping he'd
said enough, praying he hadn't said too much. He glanced at Tome who was
staring at him with wide eyes. He nodded to the old sim, to let him know, yes,
this is true. Maybe...maybe if only Tome and Meerm knew, he could still keep
his secret. The two sims would talk, of course, but Zero could tell Romy and Patrick
that he'd used makeup to look like a sim so he could coax Meerm out. They'd buy
it. It was much more plausible than the truth.
Zero refocused on the black
hole of the elevator shaft. He heard a rustle within, and then a hoarse,
fragile voice...
"Is true? You not
man?"
"No, Meerm." Zero
fought back a sob. It had worked. He could feel Meerm tipping his way.
"I'm a sim too. But if I am to help you, we must hurry from here.
Now."
"Meerm want go."
And now a face, a swollen, care-ravaged sim face, floated into the light.
"Meerm not like here. But..."
"We must go now, Meerm.
The bad men are looking for you. If they come before-"
Meerm stepped out into the
light. Zero gasped at the sight of her-her belly so big and her ankles so
swollen she could barely move. She took a step forward, but caught her foot and
started to fall. Zero grabbed her, then lifted her into his arms. She was heavy
for a sim, but nothing he couldn't handle.
"Don't be afraid,
Meerm," he said in a soothing voice as she started to struggle.
"You're okay, now. I'll make you safe and keep you that way. No one will
hurt you ever again."
As he turned toward the
tunnel he saw two figures emerging from its entrance. Romy and Patrick, faces
ashen, mouths agape, eyes fixed on his nonhuman face. They couldn't miss its
yellow eyes and simian cast-his brow ridge was not so pronounced as Meerm and
Tome's, he knew, his nose not quite as flat, but he was unmistakably sim like.
Oh, no, he thought as dismay
softened his knees and he almost stumbled. Oh, God, what have I done?
Just when they were so close
to success, he'd ruined everything. Now the whole organization would fall apart
because...because who'd want to follow a sim?
Even worse was the
uncomprehending look of betrayal he saw in Romy's eyes.
But he had to press on. She
looked away as he approached, so he addressed Patrick.
"Help me get her
through the tunnel. We haven't got much time."
Patrick blinked, hesitated a
heartbeat, then nodded. "Less than you think."
As they eased Meerm into the
opening, Zero prayed Romy would follow.
10
Silence ruled the van. Zero leaned forward as Patrick
piloted them toward the freeway.
"Follow the signs
toward the Goethals Bridge," he told him.
He glanced at Romy, huddled
against the passenger door at the far end of the front seat, staring dead ahead
without blinking, looking as if she were in a trance.
I've really done it now,
Zero thought. I've lost her. She'll never trust me again.
Meerm whimpered at his side.
She was curled next to him on the rear seat. He laid a reassuring hand on her
shoulder. Tome and Kek hunched behind them in the open rear section.
"Goethals,"
Patrick said. "Got it. But I think...I think we..." He seemed to run
out of words.
"You think you deserve
an explanation," Zero said. "Of course you do."
"I mean," Patrick
said, "I feel as if the world just tipped ninety degrees."
Zero glanced again at Romy
who still hadn't moved. She'd known him so much longer than Patrick. Her world
must feel even further out of kilter.
"You're not human?"
Patrick said.
"No."
"I heard you tell Meerm
that you're a sim."
"I am."
"But how come you
don't...?"
"...look like the
average sim? I'm one of the earliest, so early that you'll find no UPC tattoo
on the nape of my neck. Plus I'm a mutant-bigger and paler than my brother
sims-too big and too human-looking for the workforce. So they kept me separate.
I was raised in SimGen's basic research facility and after a while I became a
mascot of sorts. My only contacts growing up were the Sinclair brothers and
their most trusted techs. Later, when Harry Carstairs arrived to take over sim
training, he took a special interest in me."
Harry...how he'd loved Harry
Carstairs. The man's daily visits had been the high point of his adolescence.
"He was impressed by my
linguistic skills so he tested my intelligence; when he found it to be not only
far above sim average but above human average as well, he and-"
He cut himself off. Better
not mention Ellis.
"He got permission to
see how far they could take me. I learned to read, and built up my own library;
I was never allowed out of basic research, but television gave me a window onto
the rest of the world. Harry and I...I guess you might say we bonded. He taught
me to play chess and we spent hours hovering over the board."
He missed Harry, especially
their chess games. Every so often Zero would give in to a compulsion to see the
man. He'd sneak by Harry's house at night and watch him as he sat and played chess
against his computer; he'd longed to knock on the window and challenge him to a
game. But Harry believed him dead, and had to go on believing that.
Patrick said, "But how
did you graduate from SimGen mascot to Zero, SimGen nemesis?"
"I've always been
called Zero. I imagine it's derived from part of my serial number when I was an
embryo. As for my 'graduation'...I believe I became inconvenient. Here I was,
this man-size sim who was an evolutionary and commercial dead end. Somewhere
along the line, a corporate decision was made to terminate me."
"Jesus," Patrick
whispered. "Just like that?"
"Just like that."
"What were they going
to do-shoot you?"
"An injection. They
drew blood from me at regular intervals. This time they were going to put
something in instead of take something out."
Zero saw Romy glance quickly
over her shoulder, then return to her thousand mile stare.
"Scumbags,"
Patrick muttered, shaking his head.
Only one, Zero thought.
Mercer Sinclair had made the unilateral decision.
He looked down at Meerm
who'd closed her eyes and seemed to be dozing. Termination would have been her
fate if Portero had found her first.
Patrick asked, "How'd
you manage to escape?"
"I found I had a highly
placed ally in the company who arranged to fake my death."
Ellis again. He'd told his
brother that he didn't want a stranger terminating Zero, that he'd do it
himself. But he injected Zero with a sedative instead of poison, cremated
another dead sim in his place, and spirited him out of SimGen. He told Zero
everything, and set him up with a steady flow of cash and data aimed toward one
purpose: to stop SimGen and free his brother sims.
"This ally is the
source of all your inside information, I take it," Patrick said.
"Yes."
Patrick shook his head
again. "A high-up inside SimGen working against it. Is he nuts or does he
have a personal beef with the Sinclairs?"
"Both, I think. But
it's also a moral issue with him."
All true. But Zero had
always sensed something else driving Ellis Sinclair, almost as if he felt he
had to atone for something. Something "unspeakable," perhaps?
Patrick laughed. "Put a
sim in charge of bringing down the makers of sims. I've got to say, it has a
nice symmetry to it. And now that we've got Meerm, it looks like your job is
just about over. Congratulations, Zero. They chose the right man. I mean sim. I
mean-hell, I don't know what I mean. All I can say is I never had an inkling you
weren't human."
And now we come to the
crucial junction, Zero thought.
"Does it bother you
that I'm not?" He directed the question at Patrick but he was watching
Romy. He thought he saw her flinch.
"I don't know. You're
not like Tome or any other sim I've met. In fact, you're more human than some
humans I know. Smarter too. What a world! But you haven't steered me wrong yet.
So I guess the answer is no. To tell the truth, every day I'm getting less and
less sure about what exactly 'human' means."
Bless you, Patrick, he
thought, then looked at Romy. He couldn't bear her silence any longer. This had
to be dragged out in the open now.
"And you, Romy?"
he said. "You haven't said a word."
For a few seconds, she
didn't move, then she twisted swiftly in her seat and faced him. Angry tears
streaked her cheeks.
"You lied to me!"
"I never told you I was
human."
"You pretended to
be!"
"I never pretended to
be anything other than who I am. I didn't even change my name."
"You hid yourself-that
was a lie!"
"No, I had to. Would
you have joined me if you'd known I was a sim? A mutant sim?"
Her angry expression
faltered, then she turned away again.
"Think, Romy. When was
I ever untrue to you? Were the goals of our activities against SimGen ever
other than what I said they were? Have I ever misled you into doing something
that you didn't want to do, or worked you toward an end that wasn't your own as
well?"
She replied in a tiny voice.
"No."
"Then can I ask you why
you're so angry at me?"
"Who says I'm angry at
you?" she said in that same small voice. "Maybe I'm angry at
me."
Baffled, he replied, "I
don't-"
She held up a hand.
"Can we just leave it be? I've got some adjusting to do and I need some
time. Okay?"
"I understand, but I
need to know: Are you still with us?"
She nodded without speaking,
without looking around.
Zero leaned back and closed
his eyes to hold back the tears.
After a while Patrick said,
"Goethals Bridge dead ahead. Why do we want that?"
"Because it's the
quickest route out of Jersey."
"But where are we
going?"
"Dr. Cannon's." He
took one of Meerm's hands in his. "We're bringing her the most important
patient of her career."
11
Two more men dead!
"Shit-shit-SHIT!"
Luca Portero screamed as he smashed a glass paperweight against his office
wall. He didn't have to worry about anyone hearing; security staff was minimal
on Sundays.
Luca hadn't seen the bodies
yet, but Lowery, who'd found them, had told them that both their skulls had
been cracked like eggs. That sounded eerily similar to the way Ricker and Green
had bought it off the Saw Mill. But this was in broad daylight, damn it!
Could things get any fucking
worse?
As if in answer to his
question, the secure phone rang. He hesitated-because, yes, things could get a
lot worse-then answered it. He repressed a sigh of relief when he heard
Lowery's hello.
"What?"
"I've been checking
around the area and found some squatters in this broke down old apartment house
on the same block."
"Did they see
anything?"
"Not what happened to
Snyder and Grimes, but they did see this black van parked on the street-"
"They're sure it was
black?"
"Double-checked that.
They swear it was black. But here's the meat: the one looking out the window
says she saw a very swollen looking female sim being led into the black
van."
Oh, no! No! They've found
her! Snatched her right out from under our noses! How the fuck could this
happen?
"She's absolutely
sure?"
"No question."
"Who was doing the
leading?"
"Two men-one 'very
strange looking,' according to her, but she was kinda vague about that-along
with a woman, and another sim, an old male."
Luca dropped into his desk
chair and cradled his head in his free hand. Cadman and Sullivan. Had to be.
Plus that old sim Sullivan kept around, and someone else working with them.
And they had the pregnant
sim.
"All right," Luca
said, straightening. This wasn't FUBAR yet. It still could be salvageable.
"We abandon Newark. Divide the remaining men into four teams: one on
Sullivan's apartment, one on his office, one on Cadman's apartment, one on her
office. You see them, grab them."
"But-"
"I don't care what you
have to do to nab them, just get it done. If there's any flack we'll straighten
it out later. I want one of those shits and I want them brought to me!"
He'd interrogate them
personally and they'd lead him to this pregnant sim. No need to worry about
being recognized because whoever he dealt with would not be leaving vertically.
But what if they'd all gone
to ground?
12
MINEOLA, NY
"She's not going to last much longer," Betsy
Cannon said as she angled the doppler wand this way and that against Meerm's
swollen, gel-coated belly.
Romy, Zero, Betsy, and Meerm
were crowded into the tiny, white-walled, windowless procedure room in Betsy's
home office. Meerm lay on the table, Betsy working over her, Romy and Zero
watching from the other side.
"What do you
mean?" Romy said, watching in rapt fascination as the 3-D shape of the
fetus within Meerm's belly formed on the monitor screen.
"Her uterus has taken
just about all it can. It's too small for this baby. Andyet...the baby could
use more gestation time."
At least Zero had his ski
mask back on. They'd all agreed on the way here that no one else needed to know
Zero's history. When it was all over-and with Meerm's baby, that could be very
soon-he promised to go public.
The mask made it easier now for
Romy, but she wished Zero had waited outside with Patrick and Tome; she was
still uncomfortable with him, especially standing next to him like this. And
she didn't want to feel uncomfortable, hated herself for it.
But...how elsecould she
feel? She was fighting her way through an emotional maelstrom and still hadn't
regained her bearings. She'd admired Zero so; he'd become a hero in her eyes
and in her heart, and that was fine, but she'd also been sexually attracted to
him, had fantasized about him, and now...now to learn that he's not human.
So what?said the ghost of
Raging Romy, ever ready to shoutUp yours! to the world. It's not as if he's a
squid or a plant-he's a fellow primate.
That was true and real and
forward thinking, but another more primitive part of her was repulsed and kept
damning her, whispering that in another time, or in a SimGen-less world, Zero
would have been born a chimpanzee, destined to spend his days sitting in a
jungle sucking ants off a stick.
Sicko evil girl! Wanting to
make love with a monkey! Sick! Sick! Sick!
Romy did her best to shut
out that voice, but it wouldn't go away, couldn't because it was part of her,
and that was what so dismayed her. She'd always thought she was better than
that.
"How much longer?"
Zero asked.
Betsy Cannon brushed back
strands of graying hair from her face. "Hard to say. If this were a sim
baby I'd say she's almost due. If human I'd say premature. But this baby...I
don't know. And there's another problem: Meerm's uterus is small, smaller even
than a breeder sim's. That baby is packed tight in there, so tight I can't
determine its sex."
"We could lose the
baby?" Romy said.
"It's a real
possibility."
Romy stared at the color
image on the monitor, watched the rapid filling and emptying of the chambers of
its little heart, saw the baby move, squirming for comfort in the confines of
the too-small womb.
We can't lose you, she told
it. Youmust live. We're so close now and...the salvation of an entire species
rests on you.
"We could lose the
mother as well," Betsy added. "The baby is going to be premature, and
I can tell you right now that a vaginal delivery is out of the question. This
baby is coming out by section."
"Cesarean?" Romy
said, looking at Meerm's distended belly. "How...where...?"
"I don't know."
Betsy's expression was grim. "Not here, that's for certain. It's major
surgery and I'm not equipped for that, not unless we intend to sacrifice the
mother."
Romy's gaze darted to
Meerm's face. The poor sim didn't have a clue as to who or what they were
talking about.
"That's not an
option," Zero said. The finality in his tone stabbed Romy with a reminder
of why she'd been so attracted to him. "Tell me what you need and I'll
arrange it."
"A sterile operating
room and a skilled surgical team," Betsy said. "Can you manage
that?"
"Tall order," Zero
said. His voice had lost some of its confidence.
And then another voice spoke.
"Why Meerm sick?"
They all stared at her a
moment, then Betsy spoke.
"You're not sick,
Meerm. You're going to have a baby."
Her sloping brow furrowed.
"Baby? What is baby?"
"You know babies,"
Betsy said. "You must have seen many babies on television."
The brow furrows deepened.
"Baby?"
"Only this won't be
like the human babies you've seen. This will be asim baby." She gave a
little shrug as she glanced at Zero and Romy, signifying that she was
simplifying the situation as best she could for Meerm.
"Where baby?"
Betsy tapped the sim's
abdomen. "Right in here. And the baby will come out soon."
"Baby here?" Meerm
said, a slow smile of wonder spreading across her face as she gently rubbed her
hands across her belly. "Baby inside? Baby kick-kick-kick?"
"Oh, yes!" Betsy
laughed. "I'll bet that baby's been kick-kick-kicking like crazy!"
As they all watched Meerm
gaze at her belly, a question occurred to Romy.
"Will she be able to
care for a baby?" she said softly.
"She won't have to
worry a bit," Betsy said. "That baby will getgreat care. As a
one-of-a-kind species, it will belong to the world."
"No, it will belong to
Meerm. It will beher baby. We're not going to forget that, are we?"
"Ah, Romy," Zero
said through a sigh. "That's why we need you: to ask the tough
questions."
Something in his voice struck
her...did Zero...could Zero feel about her the way she...?
No. Out of the question. He
couldn't. He simply couldn't.
13
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
"Let's get this started," said Sinclair-1,
spinning his chair away from the winter-browned hills beyond his office window
to face Luca and Abel Voss. "I've still got a lot to do today."
Luca thought the CEO looked
particularly irritable this afternoon. That was going to get worse when he
heard Luca's news. Normally he'd relish the prospect of upsetting him, but not
now. All the blame rested squarely on him.
"We're waiting for your
brother."
Voss shifted his bulk in his
chair to face Luca. "I thought he wasn't comin."
"I called and told him
this was too important to miss," Luca replied.
Sinclair-1 gave him a
questioning stare. Luca only nodded. Yes, they'd agreed that Ellis would be
excluded from tactical meetings, but Luca had a reason. He was sure Sinclair-2
already knew that Meerm had been snatched from under SIRG's nose, and damn well
knew who had done it; he was going to use Sinclair-2 to bait a trap for the
people he'd been supplying with information.
They included Cadman and
Sullivan, Luca knew, and at least two or three others. Whoever they were,
they'd all vanished. He'd hoped to nab either Cadman or Sullivan and wring the
pregnant sim's whereabouts out of them, but since he couldn't find them, he was
looking for a way to make them come to him.
Because heneeded that sim.
Lister had thrown a shit fit this morning when he'd heard about losing Grimes
and, of all people, Snyder. Grimes had been something of a jerk, but Snyder had
been their most dependable man. Luca had stashed the bodies in the woodshed
behind his cabin-he hoped the cold weather held-and Lister was keeping the news
from the higher-ups for now, but couldn't cover it up indefinitely. If Luca
could produce the pregnant sim, however-say, today or tomorrow-the deaths
wouldn't matter.
The office door opened and
Sinclair-2 entered. The older brother looked strange today. And then Luca
realized what it was: His usual down and dour demeanor was gone and he looked
almost...happy.
You son of a bitch.
He fought the urge to grab
him by his scrawny neck and twist it till he spilled everything he knew. Every
last thing.
But that was not an option.
Even though Mercer Sinclair was considered the true untouchable-his was the
public face of SimGen, so closely identified with the company that if he went
down, so would the stock that made SIRG an entity unto itself-Ellis Sinclair
was also considered off-limits. No move could be made against him without
direct authority from the Old Man himself.
What Luca couldn't
understand about Ellis Sinclair waswhy . Why would anyone in his right mind want
to kill this golden goose called SimGen? So that had to be the answer: The
older Sinclair was out of his mind.
Which didn't make Luca want
to kill him any less.
He swallowed his bile and
said, "I won't waste anyone's time here: We have it on good authority that
the pregnant sim is in the hands of Patrick Sullivan and Romy Cadman."
"Oh, Christ,"
Sinclair-1 groaned, closing his eyes.
"That tears it,"
said Abel Voss.
Sinclair-2 leaned back in a
sofa and said nothing.
"When?" the CEO
said, recovering quickly. "Where are they now?"
"This morning. And if I
knew where, we wouldn't be having this meeting."
"Damn!" Sinclair-1
glared at Luca. "You've got to get her back!"
"We're working on
it."
Sinclair-2 finally spoke.
"Give it up, Merce. Can't you see it's gone too far? It's past the point
of no return now."
"Not yet! Not until
they produce that baby!"
"And even if they
do," said Voss, "we can call it a hoax, can't we? Some cheap
publicity stunt, a twenty-first century version of the Piltdown man or Barnum's
Cardiff Giant. We get our PR boys to crank up their bullshit machines and start
poundin away at every news outlet they know: A hoax, that's all it is. Just a
hoax. Those boys are so good, before you know it, we'll be believin it
ourselfs."
Sinclair-1 was shaking his
head. "That won't fly in this case. They have a real live sim mother. They
can identify the human father-what was his name?"
"Craig
Strickland," Luca said. "The security guard at the globulin
farm."
"Who's dead, right? But
that doesn't preclude fingerprinting his DNA. Plus they can put the sim mother
and human father together for months in the same building in the Bronx. And
most important, they'll have the baby. With all that, it's a simple everyday
process to establish paternity."
Luca could have cheered.
He'd been looking for an opening to bait his trap, and this was it.
"I've taken care of
that," he said. "Because of his connection to a crime, Strickland's
body has been in cold storage in the New York City Morgue since it was pulled
out of the ashes in the Bronx. A real crispy critter."
"So?" Voss said.
"So yesterday it was
released. Since Strickland's got no family-at least none that's come forward-I
had one of my men present himself as Strickland's cousin and claim his body.
We're going to have it cremated as soon as possible."
He hadn't done any of this
yet. The idea had occurred to him less than an hour ago, and he had to clear it
with Lister first. But Sinclair-2 didn't know that.
"That still doesn't
help us," Sinclair-1 said. "If indeed his corpse was, as you so
elegantly put it, a 'crispy critter,' the NYPD would have had to look into his
DNA in the course of identifying the body. Even after he's reduced to ash, his
RFLP profile will remain in the department's database."
Voss frowned. "What's
R-F-"
"Restriction fragment
length polymorphisms," Sinclair-1 said. "A way of testing for the
differences in the banding pattern of DNA fragments from different individuals.
DNA fingerprinting, in other words."
"We know all about his
RFLP in the database," Luca said. "Ever hear of hacking a computer?
Hardly anyone's better at it than my people. We'll have someone else's
RFLP-yours, if you want it-in that computer before sunrise."
"I get it," Voss
said, nodding. "I'm not hearin a word of this talk of illegalities, of course.
Matter of fact, I ain't even in this here room right now. But if I were, even a
genetics cretin like myself can see what'll happen: They'll hold up this
Strickland boy as the father for all the world to see, but when it comes time
for matchin up the DNA, there'll come a cropper. They'll go to the NYPD
computer and-Lordy, Lordy, will you look at that-no match. And when they look
to exhume the body-"
"-they'll be
nowhere," Luca interrupted. "Because Craig Strickland will be nothing
but a pile of dust. A pile I will personally scatter over the Hudson
River."
"And without DNA
backup," Voss cried, slapping his thighs, "the hoax angle from our
flacks will start lookin mighty acceptable to the Great Unwashed. I like it! I
like it very much!"
Luca had been watching
Sinclair-2. His sunny disposition appeared to be fading. Rapidly. Good. He'd
taken the bait.
"So," Luca said,
clapping his hands. "That leaves one more matter to discuss: Who's
delivering the sim's baby?"
"Deliverin?" Voss
said. "Deliverin how?"
"This sim, this Meerm
or whatever she's called, is going to be giving birth. Who's going to handle
that?"
Sinclair-1 slapped his palm
on the table. "Excellent point." He jumped to his feet. "If, as
you say, this OPRR woman and that lawyer Sullivan have the sim, they're not
going to handle the delivery on their own. The baby is too important. They're
going to seek out expert help."
"You mean some sort of
obstetrician?" Voss said.
"Not just any OB.
They'll want one experienced with sim births. And if I was looking for a sim
OB, there's only one place on earth with a staff that fits the
qualifications."
"The Natal
Center!" Luca said. Damn it! He should have thought of that himself.
"They could be approaching someone on the staff right now."
Sinclair-1 pointed to Luca.
"Send a notice to the entire Natal Center staff-MDs and assistants
alike-warning them that they might be approached, and to report any feelers
that might come their way."
Voss said, "And you
might want to remind those folks that they're eligible for the five-million
reward."
"Excellent point,"
Sinclair-1 said.
"We'll check out any
Natal employees who're out sick or taking an unplanned vacation," Luca
added.
But all this was going to
require more manpower. He'd have to go to Lister for it. But that was okay.
Canvassing the Natal Center was a good tactical move, and Luca would present it
as his own idea.
Sinclair-2 suddenly shot
from his seat and began pacing. He looked jittery. I do believe we've hit a
nerve, Luca thought.
The CEO stared at his
brother. "What is it, Ellis? You have something to add?"
Sinclair-2 stopped at the
window and stared out at the hills. "I just thought of something.
Something terrible."
"Oh?" Sinclair-1
smiled. "Finally realized what that baby will do to our stock?"
"I'm not worried about
the stock," he said. "I'm far more worried about what this baby will
do tous , Merce-you and me. Personally, not financially."
"I'm not
following."
"What if Meerm's baby
is a girl?"
The CEO looked puzzled.
"Girl, boy, what difference does it make? Its very existence is the
threat."
"Competition,
Merce." Sinclair-2 turned from the window and stared at his brother. His
eyes looked haunted. "Inter- and intragenomic competition. Think about
it."
It's finally happened, Luca
thought. Sinclair-2 has completely lost it. Even his brother can't figure out
what he's talking about.
He glanced at the CEO then
and was struck by the change in his expression. His King-of-the-World look was
fading-the perpetually raised eyebrows had sagged, the condescending half smile
had fallen into a frown. But his eyes...his eyes told the whole story,
narrowing and then widening into what Luca could only describe as abject
horror. His mouth opened, his jaw worked, he took a step backward, almost lost
his balance, and fell into his chair where he sat staring at his brother. His
gray complexion made him look more dead than alive.
"What's wrong?"
Voss said, upset as well, but only by his boss's reaction. He seemed as much in
the dark as Luca. "What did he say? What's wrong with it being a
girl?"
The CEO was incapable of
speech. Sinclair-2 answered for him.
"Not your concern,
Abel. This is a personal matter between us."
"Itis his
concern!" Sinclair-1 blurted, getting some of his color back.
"It'sall our concern!" He turned to his brother. "Ellis, for the
love of God, if you're involved in any way with the people who have the sim, do
something! Stop them!"
Sinclair-2 shook his head.
"I can't stop anything. I don't know Meerm's whereabouts. It's beyond you,
it's beyond me. It's up to Zero now."
Sinclair-1's brow furrowed.
"Zero? What's zero?"
"Not what. Who."
"You don't
mean...?" Sinclair-1 blinked. "ThatZero? But he's dead."
Sinclair-2 stared at his
younger brother. "Not quite."
The two words seemed to hang
in the air between them. Portero caught Voss's eye and the big man shrugged,
obviously as confused as he.
"You liar!"
Sinclair-1 blurted, his face purpling. "You traitor!"
Sinclair-2's voice remained
flat. "You're amazing, you know that? But the fact remains, Zero's in
charge, not me, and I'm afraid events have built to a point of inevitability
now where no one can stop them."
"Nothingis
inevitable!" Sinclair-1 screamed. Now he seemed to be the one losing it.
"Not until I say so! There's still a fifty-fifty chance it's a male! But
no matter what it is, I want it bornhere! " He pointed with both hands,
jabbing his index fingers toward Luca and Voss. "So get out there and find
that sim, goddamnit!"
Normally Luca wouldn't have
allowed the twit to speak to him that way, but now he was clearly off his head,
so Luca turned and led Voss into the hall. As soon as the door closed behind
them, Voss grabbed his arm.
"You have any idea what
that ruckus was all about?"
Luca shook his head. He was
as baffled as the fat man.
"I been with this
company since the git-go," Voss said, sweating, eyes darting about like
caged birds, "and I ain't never, ever seen Mercer Sinclair lose his cool
like that." He shook his head. "Boy baby, girl baby-what the hell
does it mean?"
"Haven't a clue,"
Luca said, turning and moving away.
He had things to do. The
first was to pry more manpower out of Lister for his trap; another was to find
out what had so unnerved the Sinclairs. Something about inter- and intragenomic
competition. Sounded like heavy shit, not the kind of stuff they'd taught him
in Special Forces. But it might turn out to be important. It might beway
important. And right now he needed all the help he could get.
14
MINEOLA, NY
One hell of a day.
Patrick lay awake in the
dark in the smaller of Betsy Cannon's two extra bedrooms, and thought about the
changes Meerm's baby would bring. He had no doubt that the child's pedigree,
despite all the challenges and smokescreens SimGen would throw up, eventually
would elevate sims to the status of "persons." That one change in
designation would tumble SimGen and send the world's labor and financial
markets into chaos. The simple realization that he'd occupy a pivotal position
in the eye of that oncoming storm would have made sleep difficult; knowing that
a cadre of ruthless men were on the prowl, looking for him and Romy and Meerm
to prevent that from happening made it impossible.
Zero had departed late this
afternoon after a protracted debate as to whether or not Kek should stay here
for security. They finally decided against that. Zero was the only one who
could control him. What if Kek decided he wanted to go outside? Who was going
to stop him? If he were spotted, that would blow their cover. Better to keep
all nonhumans away from Betsy's.
After a light dinner, they'd
all turned in early. Romy was in the next bedroom down the hall, Meerm was on a
cot in Betsy's bedroom, Tome and Kek were with Zero at his home, wherever that
was, God was in His heaven, and not one damn thing seemed right with the world.
He jumped as he heard the
bedroom door open.
"It's only me." He
recognized Romy's whisper. "Didn't mean to frighten you."
"Just startled
me," he said. Then she startled him even further him by slipping under the
covers and huddling against him. "Hold me, Patrick."
"Gladly."
He wound his arms around
her. She was wearing some sort of long T-shirt. He didn't know what she had on
under it, if anything.
"No, I mean, just hold
me," she said. "Nothing more. I don't want to be alone tonight,
Patrick. I need a friend."
"That's me," he
sighed. He was about to add, Friend to the friendless, but bit it back. She was
trembling, as if chilled. So he said, "Tough day, huh."
"Believe it."
"Want to talk about
it?"
"No."
"Okay."
And then she said, "I
feel lost, Patrick. I used to have some pretty hard and fast ideas about right
and wrong, up and down, latitude and longitude, but now everything's been
twisted out of shape. Like one of those computer programs that let you distort
a photo or a famous painting, you know, push it and pull it this way and that
until it bears only a passing resemblance to the original. That's how my world
feels. That's how my life feels. That's howI feel. Like I don't even know
myself anymore." A harsh little laugh. "Not that I ever did."
"You loved him, didn't
you."
He heard a soft sob and felt
her head nod against his shoulder.
"Do you still?"
"I don't know,"
she whispered. "I think I was in love with an image I'd concocted. But now
that the mask is off..."
"Let me ask you
something," Patrick said. "If he'd taken off the mask and revealed a
face horribly disfigured by birth defects or an accident, how would that have
changed things?"
He marveled at the way his
thoughts were running. He should have been searching for the best angle to
wedge himself between Romy and Zero; instead he was looking for a way to ease
her pain. As much as he wanted her-and right now, with her bare legs warm
against his, that was very, very much-comforting her seemed even more
important.
"Not at all. It wasn't
a physical attraction. I see where you're going, but it's not the same. A
disfigured man would still be a man. Zero isn't..."
"A man? What's your
definition of a man, Romy?"
"A maleHomo sapiens
."
Patrick sensed himself
clicking into attorney mode, felt the well-oiled teeth of his rhetoric and
advocacy gears meshing. He'd always prided himself on an ability to mount a
convincing argument for either side of an issue, even one he didn't
particularly care for. Like this one.
"But before today, when
you thought of both Zero and me as maleHomo saps , you gravitated more toward
him than me. Why?"
"I didn't know you,
Patrick. And I didn't trust you. At least not at first. But you've got to admit
you've changed."
"How?"
"Well...," she
said, drawing out the word, "you've gone from a man with no commitments to
one who believes in something and is willing to put himself on the line for
it."
"Romy, Zero has been
committed since day one, from the roots of his hair down to his toenails, and
that was what you responded to. But it went beyond commitment, didn't it. He
demonstrated high intelligence, integrity, decency, courage, dignity, a
reverence for life that matches, maybe even exceeds, your own. Those are traits
you admire in humans. They're what make you value a human, and until this
morning you'd thought you could find them only in a human. But this is a new
world, Romy, where the definition of 'human' is being revised-and let me tell
you, when we take Meerm's baby public, it's going to undergo a total
rewrite."
Listen to me, Patrick
thought. I'm making his case and killing my own.
But he was on a roll, high
on his rhetorical momentum, and couldn't stop himself.
"As for Zero, he says
he's a mutated sim. Well, it looks to me like he mutated in theHomo sapiens
direction, big time. He's more human than a lot ofHomo saps I know, and we both
knowHomo saps who look more apelike than he does. Meerm's baby is going to
upgrade the sims from 'product' to 'person,' from the Pongidae family to
Hominidae, but as far as I can see, Zero is already there. A new species of
Hominidae-Homo zero. So what else do you want from the guy? What else does he
have to do to deserve you?"
He felt her stiffen.
"It's not about deserving me. I'd never-"
"Then decide what makes
a guy worthy of your love-his genome or his values."
A long silence. Patrick had
run out of steam, and Romy...he wished he knew what she was thinking.
Then she snuggled closer.
"Thank you, Patrick. That doesn't settle things, but it helps. Helps a
lot. You're a good friend."
Good friend...he wished he
were much more, but for now he'd settle for that. Didn't have much choice. And
who knew? Maybe things wouldn't work out between Zero and her. They'd barely
spoken today. Maybe Zero had other plans. But even if they both agreed on
trying a relationship, they had a hell of a lot stacked against them.
He'd wait, because he knew
of no other woman in the world like Romy Cadman. He'd hang around so he could
be close by to catch her if she fell.
15
SHORT HILLS, NJ
The late-night wind cut at Luca Portero as he strode
across the crowded mall parking lot toward Lister's Mercedes. A perfect meeting
place. The mall was staying open late for last-minute Christmas shoppers. Luca
had taken advantage of that, arriving early and picking up a bracelet for
Maria. He'd wait until after the holidays to dump her-no sense in spending New
Year's Eve alone.
He wondered why Lister had
insisted on a face to face tonight. He guessed it wouldn't be a happy meeting.
When he opened the SUV's door and saw the expression on his old CO's fleshy
face, he was sure of it.
"Cold out there,"
Luca said as he slipped into the passenger seat and slammed the door.
"Cold everywhere,"
Lister said. He sounded tired.
Not a good start. Better cut
to the chase.
"What's the word on the
plan? How many men they giving us?"
Lister shook his head.
"None."
Luca felt as if he'd been
slapped. "None? How are we going to-?"
"We're not." He
unbuttoned his camel hair coat. "They think using Strickland's body as
bait is a waste of time. Why should anyone care about his body when his DNA
fingerprint is on computer."
"But it won't be,"
Luca said. "Not after we hack the NYPD system."
"But it's not on just
the NYPD computer. If you remember, Strickland had a rap sheet that included a
couple of sexual assaults-one in Nassau County and one in Rockland-and a rape
in Queens that he pleaded down to simple assault. He got around. And so did his
RFLP. Seems if you're caught on a sexual assault in one area, the Special
Victims Units in all the surrounding areas check your DNA for a match in the
unsolved cases on their books. Craig Strickland's DNA is in dozens and dozens of
police computers all over the tri-state area. Even we can't hack all those
databases. It's an easy bet that a sharpie lawyer like Sullivan will figure
that out, and have a good laugh at us if we try to use Strickland as
bait."
Luca clenched his teeth.
Damn. He should have thought of that.
"Dumb idea, Luca,"
Lister said. "It had people questioning your suitability for leading a
field operation. Fortunately I was able to defuse that talk with your other
idea. That went over big. The Old Man sent two people from his own office to
help me canvass the SimGen Natal Center staff. We've been at it all day."
"We?" Luca said,
glad he'd presented the Natal Center idea as his own.
Lister smiled. "I know
I've become something of a REMF, but with manpower so short, I had to get
personally involved."
"Did anyone mention
being approached?"
Lister shook his head.
"Negative."
"One of them could be
lying. That sim's baby is too valuable to leave the delivery to chance. They're
going to want experienced help."
"I agree. But then I
thought to myself, if I was looking for that kind of expertise, would I
approach a Natal Center OB and ask him or her to jeopardize career and benefits
and pension plan and stock optionsand take a pass on a five-million-dollar
bounty? I don't think so. No, if I were smart-and these people are reasonably
smart-I'd go to aformer SimGen Natal Center OB, preferably a disgruntled one.
One with a grudge or a score to settle."
Luca found himself nodding.
Good thinking.
"Any hits?"
"A few of them look
promising. Most have relocated but one still lives in the area. Name's
Elizabeth Cannon. Her letter of resignation was a real bridge burner, calling
SimGen a 'slave factory' and its board of directors 'morally bankrupt.' She
lives on Long Island now and needs checking out. I emailed you the particulars.
Finding this sim isn't just your number-one priority, Luca; it's theonly
priority."
"I understand."
"Do you? I hope so.
This couldn't be happening at a worse time. We should be devoting all our
resources to making sure Guillotine comes off letter perfect; instead, I'm not
reporting two dead operatives and praying that damn monkey doesn't give birth
before you find her. This has got all the makings of a major clusterfuck."
Luca realized with a start
that Lister was scared. Beneath the tough-guy pose, he was terrified. Not for
his future in SIRG, but the future of SIRG itself. They were all frightened,
all the way up to the Old Man.
Lister took a deep breath. "I'll
be hunting down the other disgruntled OBs. Cannon's yours." He paused.
"You look tired, but I don't advise sleep. Get on this ASAP. We don't know
how much time we have."
"Roger."
The meeting over, Luca
stepped out of the SUV and watched Lister drive away.
Elizabeth Cannon...he'd
check her out first thing in the morning. But he also wanted to check out this
genomic competition that had so rattled the Sinclairs. He needed every edge he
could get.
He headed for his office
computer to look up some genetics.
16
MINEOLA, NY
DECEMBER 24
Romy watched Betsy adjust the IV running into Meerm's arm.
The air seemed close in the spare, windowless little procedure room. Patrick
had walked out-the sim's distress had been too much for him-leaving Romy alone
with Betsy and Meerm.
Betsy looked up at her.
"The contractions have subsided."
"How long can this go
on?" Romy asked, relieved the sim's pain had finally eased.
Betsy shook her head.
"Not too much longer. I was right in the middle of an ultrasound when she
started having contractions. I'd love to give the baby another week but Meerm's
uterus won't last that long."
"Why baby hurt
Meerm?" the sim said.
"As I told you,
Meerm," Betsy said softly, "the baby's not trying to hurt you. It's
just that you're too small and the baby's too large." She turned to Romy
and lowered her voice. "I tried to give her an anatomy lesson earlier. I
don't know how much of it took."
"On the new
ultrasound," Romy said, "did you see what sex it was?"
Betsy smiled. "Meerm
wanted to know too. Isn't that something? I didn't think sims differentiated
that much between sexes, but she was very curious. She wants a girl."
"And?"
"Can't say. The baby's
packed in too tight. If I had one of the higher resolution imagers I could
tell, but not with this model. I'll do another one tomorrow. Maybe we'll get
lucky."
"Yes. It would be nice
to be able to call the baby 'he' or 'she' instead of 'it.'"
"Indeed it would. Oh,
by the way, Zero called to see how the night went."
"When will he be
here?"
"He won't. He thinks
it's safer for all concerned if I'm the only one seen coming and going from
here."
Romy hoped her
disappointment didn't show. She needed to talk to Zero-not on the phone, but
face to face. Her emotions were still in wild turmoil, but she needed to know
howhe felt, and whathe wanted. Once she knew that, she could begin to sort out
her own feelings, make some decisions. She didn't know what the future held, but
she was keeping all options open for now.
Then Patrick stuck his head
into the little room. "I think the house is being watched."
Romy felt her shoulders
tighten. "You're sure?"
"I haven't seen men
with binoculars trained on us, but someone's sitting in a car parked up the
street facing this way, and he's been there for a while."
"Show me."
He led her to the picture
window in the living room. It was midday but the low gray sky shed little light
into the room. Romy reached for a lamp, then thought better of it.
"Damn," Patrick
said. "It's gone. But I tell you, it was sitting right over there for a
good half hour."
Romy scanned the street and
saw a blue sedan parked against the curb at the other end.
"Was that there
before?" she asked, pointing.
"No," Patrick
said. "I'm sure it wasn't. And this one's got-doesn't that look like two
men inside?"
"Yes, it does,"
Betsy said, coming up behind them. "I'm calling the police."
"Is that such a good
idea?" Patrick said.
Romy smiled. "I think
it's a great idea. If theyknew something, they'd havedone something. Betsy left
SimGen with a roar, so it's no surprise they're watching her. Probably watching
a number of ex-Natal-Center people. But why should we let them have an easy
time of it? Let's make them explain to the local constabulary what they're
doing out there."
17
"Here's what we've got on her," Lowery said,
unfolding his notes behind the wheel of the surveillance car.
Luca stared at Dr. Cannon's
two-story colonial from the passenger seat. He'd wanted a personal look at the
lay of the land, and he didn't like it one bit.
"Elizabeth Cannon, age
forty-eight, never married, no kids, lives alone. In solo obstetrics-gynecology
practice. Works out of a home office, on the staff of Nassau County Community
Hospital."
"Home office?"
Luca said.
"Yeah. That extension
on the left side there."
"Where are her
patients?"
"I called about that.
Her answering service said she'd canceled her office hours from today through
next week but would still be seeing her hospital patients and doing her
deliveries."
"Odd, don't you
think?"
Lowery shrugged. "Hey,
it's Christmas Eve. And she took Christmas week off. Do the same if I
could."
"We don't find that
sim," he told Lowery, "you'll have the longest Christmas vacation of
your life."
The scanner squawked-Lowery
was tuned into the local cop frequency. Something about a fender bender on
Maple Street.
"So far she's been a
good little girl. Made her hospital rounds this morning, then went grocery
shopping."
"Buy a lot?" Luca
asked.
"Come to think of it,
yeah. Watched her load six bags in the back of her wagon-a blue Volvo, by the
way."
Luca straightened in his
seat. Interesting. "Six bags for one woman living alone?"
"Like I said, it's
Christmas. Maybe she's planning a big family dinner."
"Read your own
notes-she'sgot no family."
The more Luca thought about
Dr. Elizabeth Cannon, the more he liked her as a real possibility. A loner with
tons of experience delivering sims, she'd probably jump at the chance to shut
down a place she thought of as a "slave factory." Now here she was,
stocking up on groceries-enough to feed a sim and the missing Cadman and
Sullivan perhaps? Plus she had a home office, the perfect place to deliver a
sim. Was that why she'd canceled her office hours? Wouldn't do to have one of
her patients spot a pregnant sim, would it.
He felt some of his fatigue
lifting.
"All right,"
Lowery said, "let's just say this sim is in there. How-?"
"Sheis in there,"
Luca said. "I feel it in my gut."
"Okay. I'll go with
that, because my gut's giving me the same message, but does your gut have any
idea how we get her the fuck out of there? Look at this neighborhood, will you?
It'sLeave It To Beaver -ville. There's no room to operate."
Luca had already noticed
that. Neat, middle-size houses, most sporting Christmas decorations, nestled
side by side and back to back on quarter-acre lots, with wide streets that
nobody parked on. Sitting here like this, their car looked as alien as a flying
saucer. Only a matter of time before-
Another squawk on the
scanner, this one about a suspicious car parked on Cavendish Drive.
"Shit!" Lowery
said. "That's us."
Luca slapped the dashboard.
"Move. I don't want any local heat seeing our faces."
"So what do we
do?" Lowery said as he put the car in gear.
"A raid.
Oh-four-hundred tomorrow morning."
"Are you kidding? On
Christmas?"
"Can you think of a
time it'll be less expected? Six of us hit the place front and back wearing FBI
jackets and full assault gear. If we find the sim we secure her, terminate
everyone else, and take off. If we don't find her, we apologize for raiding the
wrong address, and disappear."
"FBI?"
"Hey, it's not like
they never raid private homes and it's not like they've never fucked up before
either. Everybody still remembers Waco. It'll take days, maybe weeks, before
the feds convince the public they weren't involved."
Lowery grinned. "And by
then we'll be long gone. I like it."
"It's win-win,"
Luca said. "If I'm right, we'll have the sim. If I'm wrong, no more
wasting time watching Cannon."
But I'mnot wrong, he told
himself. That sim's in there. I can smell her.
18
SUFFOLK COUNTY, NY
"Even though it's only Christmas Eve, we'll call this
our Christmas dinner," Zero said as he opened the lids of the pizza boxes
on his dining room table. "Because who knows where we'll be tomorrow? No
turkey for our sim Christmas, I'm afraid. Just two large pies-a plain and a
sausage." He glanced at his two guests. "Do either of you know what
Christmas means, by the way?"
Kek didn't even look up;
he'd been lured away from one of the computers where he'd been engrossed
inMortal Kombat XX , and now he grabbed a slice of the sausage pie and started
wolfing it down.
But Tome smiled and said,
"Lights and trees and presents."
"Yes, that's a big part
of it. A time of peace on earth and good will toward men, I'm told. But what
about sims? Does that include good will toward sims?"
Zero had made the mistake of
allowing himself a glass of holiday cheer: one Scotch and water. Terrible
tasting stuff, didn't know how Ellis Sinclair had drunk so much of it all those
years, but he'd forced it down-the season to be jolly and all that. Now he
wished he hadn't. Not used to alcohol, and though he wasn't feeling much in the
way of physical effects, it seemed to have untethered his thoughts, leaving
them to wander. Now they were wandering into terra incognita.
"Tome not know, Mist
Zero."
Not know what? Oh,
yes...about good will toward sims.
"Of course you don't,
Tome. Christmas has become a secular holiday for the most part, but it's still
a religious occasion for those who celebrate the arrival of their god to save
mankind. But what of us sims? Are we included in that salvation? Or are we
damned?" He toasted with a piece of plain pie. "Joy to the
world."
But he felt no trace of joy,
felt instead as if he were standing on the brink of a precipice, gazing into
the unknown. The world as he'd always known it was about to change. Radically.
And with it his relationship to that world and all the people he knew in it.
Nothing would ever be the same.
He tried to imagine what it
would be like to come out of hiding, to wander about with his face exposed to
the world, to be aperson . He could not.
He surprised himself by
starting to sing: "We three sims of chimpanzee blood, wondering how we'll
ride out the flood..." He noticed Tome and Kek staring at him. "Come
on, sing! You know the words!"
But then he couldn't go on,
not with his throat constricting around a sob.
What have I done? My race,
my brother sims-what will happen to them when Meerm's baby is shoved in the
face of the world? By saving them will I doom them to extinction?
19
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
DECEMBER 25
"We leave at oh-three-hundred," Luca told
Lowery. The two of them had the SimGen security offices virtually to
themselves. He checked his watch. "That gives you ten minutes to get the
other four assembled by the cars and ready to go."
"Got it," Lowery
said and trotted off.
Luca turned back to the
printouts on his desk. This genetics stuff was so complicated. He'd done search
after search before tracking down intergenomic and intragenomic competition,
and then more searching before finding articles he could understand. Weren't
many of those, but he'd managed to glean some idea of what it all meant. He
still didn't see what was so frightening about it.
Intergenomic competition...a
theory that arose back in the nineties about the maternal and paternal halves
of the fetal genome competing for dominance during development. Luca understood
it best when he translated it into combat terms. In a male embryo, the Y
chromosome from the father directs the struggle against the maternal half of
the genome. But in a female, with no Y to marshal the forces of the paternal
genome, the maternal X has an easier time against the paternal X; it can then
push more characteristics from its own underlying genome toward the front, thus
showing more of its maternal DNA to the world.
Intragenomic competition was
a newer and more controversial theory. Whileinter genomic competition applied
to all species,intra genomic competition applied only to recombinant transgenic
species of higher mammals, and it was a double war. While the usual
intergenomic competition was being waged, there was also a civil war going on
within the recombinant genome. As Luca understood it, the recombinant half
would try to express the genes from its original underlying genome at the
expense of the foreign genes that had been spliced into it.
Yeah? So what?
If all this held true, a
human father meant the pregnant sim's baby would look more like a human if it
was a boy and more like a chimp if it was a girl.
Again: So what?
I must be missing something,
Luca thought, because the only scary thing here is how boring this is.
He checked his watch again.
Time to go. An 0300 departure would get them to Mineola in plenty of time to
gear up for the raid.
And they had plenty of gear.
Like the others, Luca was wearing a black cotton BDU; but before they went in
they'd add body armor and Kevlar helmets with visors; each would carry tactical
forearm 15,000 candlepower flashlights and an HK submachine gun equipped with double
30-round translucent magazines.
He hoped to use that weapon.
He wanted that sim, yes, but wanted Cadman and Sullivan there too. Especially
Romy Cadman. He wanted one last look at that pretty face before he put a bullet
into it.
20
MINEOLA, NY
The racket-footsteps in the upstairs hallway, a fist
pounding on a door, Betsy's voice shouting-startled Romy awake. She found
herself up and moving without knowing how or why.
"Wake up! Patrick!
Romy! It's time! We've got to go!"
Go? Where? She pulled open
her door and caught Betsy as she hurried by. "What's wrong?"
"Meerm's in hard labor.
We can't hold off any longer. Got to get her to the hospital right now!"
Romy saw Patrick stick his
head out of his room and called to him. "Did you hear?"
He nodded blearily.
"What time is it?"
"Three-twenty!"
Betsy cried, moving away. "Get dressed. We've got to move!"
Romy jumped into her clothes
and was down the stairs in seconds, Patrick right behind her. They dashed to
Betsy's bedroom where they found a very confused and frightened Meerm lying on
a cot and wrapped in blankets.
"Patrick, you carry
her," Betsy said as she yanked the spread and blankets off her own bed.
"We'll fix up the car."
Romy followed her to the
garage where they flattened the rear seats in the Volvo and spread out the
bedclothes. Patrick appeared a moment later carrying the moaning Meerm. They
nestled her in the rear section.
"Patrick, you
drive," Betsy said. "Do you know the way to the hospital?"
"No."
"I'll direct you, then.
Romy, you stay here in the back with me."
And then they were on their
way, Betsy and Romy kneeling on either side of Meerm in the back as Patrick
pulled out of the driveway. Romy opened her PCA and left a beeper message for
Zero: "It's happening. We're on our way to the hospital."
As she hung up she heard
Betsy on her own PCA.
"...know it's
Christmas, Joanna, but this is more than just an emergency section, it's an
historical event...I wish I could say more than that, but I can't. Have I ever
lied to you? Well then, believe me, Joanna, youwant to be part of this. Okay,
good. I'll see you there."
As Betsy hung up and punched
in another speed-dial code, she glanced at Romy and smiled. "My surgical
team. A dedicated bunch, but itis Christmas Day. My nurse anesthetist is Hindu,
so she'll be no problem; but both my scrub nurses have small children."
She shrugged. "One's coming. I hope I can persuade the other. If not...do
you faint at the sight of blood, Romy?"
"Me?" Romy said,
caught off guard. "No, I'm okay with blood. But if you're talking about
assisting on a surgery...I don't think..."
"Let's hope you won't
have to, but be prepared. I may need you."
Slice open Meerm's belly?
Romy didn't know if she could help with that.
21
"Second floor-clear!"
"Office-clear!"
"Garage-empty!"
Luca stood in the center of
Dr. Cannon's living room listening to the reports through his headset, and felt
ridiculous.
The op had started out
perfectly. With the six team members divided between two Jeeps and a rented
van, they'd arrived in town with time to spare. They'd left the Jeeps in the
lot of an autobody shop and headed for Cannon's house in the van. The plan was
to ditch the van at the shop lot after the op and make it back to SimGen in the
Jeeps. But now...
Shit, the house was empty.
Luca had had his first
premonition the moment they'd pulled up in front: the lights were on. Upstairs
and down. At four in the morning?
They'd crept up to the
windows-no one moving about inside. They'd slammed through the rear door-no
alarm.
Footsteps pounded down the
stairs behind him. Luca turned and saw a helmeted figure approaching,
recognized him as Lowery when he lifted his visor.
"Three bedrooms
upstairs. The reports on her say she lives alone, but all three have slept-in
beds. They're not warm, but I'd guess they haven't been cold too long. Looks
like they left in a big hurry."
Luca felt as if he were
turning to ice. "You're saying they might have been tipped?"
Lowery shrugged. "Who'd
tip them? You and me were the only ones who knew where we were going. Maybe
they got spooked. Maybe they spotted us watching the place and decided to take
off."
Luca turned away and ground
his teeth. He should have kept someone here until the raid, but without Snyder
and Grimes he was short-handed. What did he do now?
"All right," he
said into his helmet mike. "Everybody back to the van. We're outta
here."
They'd return to the other
cars, but not to SimGen. Not yet. He was staying in this area. Maybe he'd split
up the team and send them looking for Cannon's Volvo. Slim chance there, but
better than doing nothing.
Needed time to think. No
question now that Cannon and the sim were together. Find the doc and he'd have
the sim, and Cadman and Sullivan too, no doubt.
Butwhere?
22
Zero watched the surreal scene below with a
by-now-familiar mix of anticipation and dread. The faint aftereffects of the
Scotch had evaporated when he received Romy's message. He'd arrived at the
hospital shortly after Betsy and the others, and left Tome and Kek parked in
the van while Patrick admitted him through the doctor's entrance. Like every
other department in the hospital, security was a skeleton crew because of the
holiday; so Zero, wearing a hat pulled low, dark glasses, and a scarf around
his lower face, made it to the OR suite without being stopped.
Betsy had commandeered the
amphitheater OR, and now Zero gazed down at a brightly lit operating table
fifteen feet below, where a nurse was scrubbing and shaving Meerm's distended
belly. The sim lay tense and trembling with IVs running into both arms. The
hovering dark-skinned anesthetist, who Betsy referred to as Madhuri, was ready
to put her under.
The scrub nurse looked up
and said, "Hey! Who's the guy in the mask?"
Zero leaned back out of
sight. He'd replaced the hat and scarf with his usual ski mask.
"A trusted
friend," Betsy said. "Don't worry about him, Joanna. Just get our
patient prepped."
Betsy had told him she'd
chosen the amphitheater for its audio-visual system, and Zero thought that an
inspired idea. They could still lose this war; maybe an A-V record would
provide some insurance. The problem was how to get the system up and running.
"There," Patrick
said, close at his side as he sighted along the top of the mounted camera.
"That's pointing in the general direction."
Zero turned and seated
himself at the computer console. "Good. Now let's see if we can get a
picture."
"You know how to work
this sort of rig?" Patrick said, leaning over his shoulder.
"Not really, but it
seems to be a dedicated system, and if the menu's at all intuitive..."
The menu formed on the
screen and Zero groaned. It looked like a crossword puzzle with numbered feeds
and rows ofinput from andoutput to and acronyms he didn't understand. Suddenly
the air in the balcony seemed too thin. He ripped off the mask and took a deep
breath. He looked down at his trembling fingers poised over the keyboard. It
wasn't just the computer program, it was everything...the huge responsibility
that he'd taken on over the past couple of years...he felt as if it were all
crashing down on him at once. Everything he'd been living for hinged on what he
and these good humans did here tonight.
He took another breath and
focused on the screen. He could handle this.
A little trial and error, a
lot of intuition...he could do it. He had to do it.
Meerm so ver fraid. Not
fraid needle. Fraid this place. And fraid hurt. Hurt so bad.
"Okay now, Meerm,"
say mask lady. Nice lady. "I'm going to make the hurt go away."
Meerm feel warm, feel hurt
go. This ver nice lady.
"I'm going to put you
to sleep now, Meerm," lady say. "And when you wake up, you'll have a
baby. Won't that be nice?"
Yes. Baby. Meerm baby. So
nice. Meerm want hold, want kiss. Make baby safe. Hold-hold-hold and nev let
go.
Sleepy now, but not stop
think baby...Meerm baby...Meerm ver own baby...happy Meerm...
23
"Stop!" Luca shouted. "Pull over right
now!"
Lowery slammed on the
brakes. As the Jeep screeched to an unexpected halt, the two following vehicles
skidded past and swerved to stops ahead.
"Where's the
blower?" Luca shouted. "Give me the fucking blower!"
"Here," Lowery
said, slapping the PCA into his palm. "What's the matter?"
"I am so stupid,"
Luca said, punching in 4-1-1. "So fucking stupid!"
"Are you going to tell
me-?"
"Cannon's answering
service! They'll know where she is!"
He got the number from
information, punched it in, and asked for Dr. Cannon.
"Dr. Cannon's not
available," a woman's voice told him. "Dr. Moss is covering."
Shit! "I really need to
speak to Elizabeth personally. This is her brother and we've got a family
emergency that needs her immediate attention."
"Oh, I'm so sorry to
hear that. I'll try her house and-"
"I've already called
and she doesn't answer."
"Maybe she's at the
hospital. I can page her if you wish."
"Would you? That would
be wonderful."
Luca waited on hold, feeling
the time drag by, and then the operator was back on.
"I just spoke to the
hospital. Dr. Cannon is in surgery. I can leave a message for her as soon as
she gets out."
Surgery? Could it be...?
"Which hospital?"
"Nassau Community. Do
you want me to-?"
He cut her off and turned to
Lowery. "Nassau Community Hospital. You know where it is?"
"Not a clue. Give me
the address and the GPU will-"
"Right."
Luca punched 4-1-1 again.
He'd call the switchboard and ask for the address.
"Why didn't I see
it?" he shouted. "The sim's in labor! That's why Cannon's house was
empty. Everyone's at the hospital. She's having her baby."
Lowery grinned. "And we
didn't bring any cigars."
"Yes, we did,"
Luca said, patting his HK. "The exploding kind."
24
Romy, capped, masked, and garbed in surgical green, stood
between Betsy and Joanna at the stainless steel sink and learned how to scrub.
Betsy's other scrub nurse had begged off, refusing to leave her five-year-old
son to open his Christmas presents without her. That left Romy to fill in.
"Work the lather into
the skin," Betsy was saying, her voice slightly muffled by her surgical
mask, "especially between the fingers and around the nails."
"I don't know if I can
do this," Romy said. She was shaking inside. "It's not the blood or
the cutting, it's just that I've never even seen-"
"You'll be fine,"
said Joanna to her right. "I'll handle the technical stuff. The most
you'll have to do is hang on to a retractor while-"
"She's crashing!"
cried an accented voice from the operating room. "Something's
happened!"
"Oh, God, her
uterus!" Betsy said. "It's ruptured!" She grabbed three packets
of sterile gloves and handed them out. "Just put them on! Forget about
gowns and sterile procedure. We'll worry about sepsis later. Right now we've
got to move or we'll lose her!"
The next ten minutes were a
crimson-tinged blur through which Romy watched Betsy and Joanna work like a
single four-armed organism. Their communication seemed almost telepathic as
Joanna would slap an instrument into Betsy's palm as soon as she thrust out her
hand. Romy repressed a cry of anguish as Betsy cut quickly through Meerm's
abdominal wall, releasing a torrent of blood that gushed down her flanks and
soaked the table. Joanna said something about a uterine artery and Betsy was
calling for suction but Romy's eyes were locked on the glistening bloody dome
of Meerm's uterus floating in that sea of red. And the surreal aspect of being
able to glance up at the TV monitor suspended in a corner and view the scene
from a different angle. And then Betsy was cutting into that muscular sack,
reaching through the slit and pulling out a limp, bloody, silent baby. She held
it up by its feet, slapped it once, then again, and with that the little arms
jerked outward and the baby emitted a piercing cry. And then Betsy was clamping
and cutting the cord as she called for Zero or Patrick, she didn't care who, to
get down here and take charge of this baby because she needed everyone here to
help her stop Meerm's hemorrhaging before she died.
Seconds later, Patrick,
looking even more frightened than he had after they'd been run off the Saw
Mill, stumbled through the doors into the OR.
"What do Ido ?"
Patrick said as Joanna deposited the squirming, squalling, scrawny,
blood-slippery bundle of baby into his arms. It terrified him. God, what if he
dropped it? "I don't know a thing about babies! I've never-"
"No Butterfly McQueens
allowed," the nurse told him. "Madhuri will talk you through
it." Then she turned back to the furious activity on the operating table.
Patrick turned to the
anesthetist. "Madhuri?"
"Take it to the table
over there," she replied in a voice that was at once lilting and rapid
fire. "There's a basin of warm water. Rinse it off, wipe it down, and then
wrap it tightly in one of the blankets."
"But-"
"Hurry! Get it wrapped
up! You don't want hypothermia! I'd help you but I can't leave-" She
glanced at a monitor and called out, "Heart rate up to one-sixty!"
Gingerly cradling the
slippery baby in his arms, Patrick stepped to the cleaning table and placed it
on a towel. And now, as it screamed and thrust out its skinny limbs, he could
see that it was a girl. He dipped a towel in the basin of warm water and began
wiping away the blood and clinging membranes. This caused an escalation in the
wails. She was so small, so fragile looking. He hoped he didn't rub too hard
and break something, but he kept it up, working as quickly as he could. As soon
as she was reasonably clean, he found a soft blanket at the rear of the table
and wrapped it around her.
He looked over to Madhuri to
ask, Now what? but she was busy hanging a new IV bag, a small, red one, on an
IV pole so loaded with infusion bags it looked like a Christmas tree. The baby
was still crying so he lifted her into his arms-he felt a little more confident
now that she was dry and blanket wrapped-and held her tight against him.
Amazingly, her wails tapered
off. And now that he had a chance to look at her, he marveled at how human she
looked. He'd never seen a real live newborn. He'd seen photos, of course;
whenever the associates at his old firm had entered fatherhood, they always
brought in pictures taken right after birth showing these homely, scrunched-up
elfin faces that everyone pronounced beautiful. But this babywas beautiful.
Maybe because she hadn't been extruded through a birth canal. A nice
symmetrical face, a tiny nose, little bow lips, a light down of hair on her
head but none on her body. Damn, she looked human. More so than some of those
associates' kids.
He turned to look at the
operating table and met Romy's dark eyes, the only part of her face visible
between the cap and the mask.
"How's Meerm
doing?" he asked.
Betsy stood next to Romy,
and answered without looking up. "I clamped the big bleeder but she's not
out of the woods yet. She damn near bled out. We've got packed red cells and volume
expanders running full blast, and that should bring her pressure back."
"Patrick," said
Zero's voice over the loudspeaker, "hold up the baby so we can get a good
view."
Patrick turned, loosened the
blanket, and lifted her toward the camera lens pointed his way from the
balcony. Zero had got the video system working in time; now he seemed to have
mastered it. Patrick glanced at the monitor and saw himself, viewed from above,
holding the baby.
"Boy or girl?"
Romy asked as Patrick turned back their way.
"Girl. A beauty."
Betsy's head snapped up.
"Abeautiful girl?"
"A real doll."
Patrick saw the confusion in
Betsy's eyes and was framing a question about it when Madhuri began shouting.
"V-fib! She's in
V-fib!"
Oh, no! Zero felt a pang as
he saw the sudden frenzied activity around the operating table on the computer
screen. You can't lose her. She just became a mother.
He watched with growing
dismay as Betsy performed CPR on Meerm's chest, then applied the defibrillator
paddles, shocking her heart again and again. His eyes drifted from the painful
scene to the thumbnail feeds he'd accessed from the hospital's security
cameras-an easy task once he'd got the hang of the program. Almost five in the
morning and all quiet at Nassau County Community Hos-
Zero stiffened as he saw two
Jeeps and a van pull up at the emergency room entrance. No audio, but the way
the vehicles rocked on their springs meant they'd been moving fast.
Most likely nothing, he told
himself, but he kept watching, and his gut began a quick crawl when he saw six
men in full SWAT gear pile out onto the pavement. He couldn't see their faces through
their lowered visors but he spotted "FBI" on the back of one of them.
He didn't believe that for an instant. This was SIRG through and through, and
maybe Portero himself.
He glanced at the OR
feed-Betsy was still laboring over Meerm's inert, supine form-then at his
upload indicator for the digital movie of the birth. Almost complete. But now
he had to slow the invaders, mislead them, divert them.
As Zero slipped the ski mask
back over his head, he had an idea...
25
Luca's mind raced as he led his men from the emergency
area to the lobby. First thing, he had to seal the building and cut off any
escape. But for that he needed to know where the exits were, and the place to
find out was Information.
As they stormed into the
dimly lit, high-ceilinged lobby he found the reception desk empty; the entire
population was two gray-haired ladies and an aging security guard clustered
before a TV monitor fixed on a wall. He hurried over to grab the guard but
stopped dead when he saw what they were watching.
Four humans operating on a
pregnant sim.
The guard turned, saw them,
and stumbled backward, reaching for his two-way.
Luca reached out and grabbed
his arm. "FBI!" He shouted and pointed to the monitor. "Take us
to that operating room!"
"W-wait," the
guard said. "You can't just come in here and-"
Luca squeezed his arm.
Hard."Now!" He shoved him toward a hallway."Move!"
As the cowed guard led them
toward a bank of elevators, Luca turned to Stritch and pointed toward the old
ladies. "You stay here. Keep them away from the phones."
Behind his visor Luca
repressed a sigh of relief. No need to worry about covering the exits. The baby
hadn't been born yet. No one would be going anywhere until that happened.
26
"She is gone," Madhuri said, her voice an octave
lower than usual.
"No!" Betsy cried.
To Romy's horror, she'd had to watch while Betsy cracked open Meerm's chest and
manually compressed her heart. She was still at it, working like a mad woman.
"We've still got a chance!"
"Betsy, she is
dead."
Romy looked at the
anesthetist's black eyes and noticed they were rimmed with tears. Joanna's too.
Romy knew they mirrored her own. They all knew that Meerm wasn't coming back.
She reached across and
gently gripped Betsy's forearms. "She's right, Betsy. Meerm's gone. You
did your best but-"
"I should have brought
her in sooner!" Betsy wailed. She leaned forward over Meerm's inert heart,
and sobbed. "But I was worried about the baby! Damn it, damn it, damn
it!"
"You did all you
could," Romy said, touching the back of her sweat-soaked scrubs. "But
she-"
Zero burst through the OR
doors. "We have to go! SIRG just stormed into the lobby, armed to the
teeth!"
"Who's SIRG?"
Joanna said, gaping at Zero's mask. "And who the hell are you?"
"A friend," Betsy
said, ripping off her bloody gloves. She'd regained some of her composure but
seemed exhausted.
"And SIRG," Romy
added, feeling her gut clench, "is a group that wants to kill that
baby."
"Like hell they
will!" Joanna cried.
"Let's go!" Betsy
said. "We've got a minute, maybe two at the most before they're
here!"
"But what about
Meerm?" Romy said.
"We'll have to leave
her."
"No-"
"Romy," Zero said
softly, "I grieve for her as much as you-more than you-but they won't be
interested in Meerm now; they'll want her baby, and we can't let them have
her."
"We'll take her,"
Joanna said. "Madhuri, Betsy, and me. We'll put her in an isolette and
hide her in a motel or something."
"What's an
isolette?" Patrick asked. He was still holding the baby and seemed very
protective.
"It's an incubator of
sorts," Madhuri said. "A special enclosed container we use for
preemies. Keeps them safe and warm."
"Good idea," Betsy
said. "Since they probably know my car, we'll leave it here and take one
of yours."
Joanna said, "We'll
rustle up a portable isolette and meet you at the doctor's entrance."
She and Madhuri bustled off
while Betsy and Romy pulled a green sheet over Meerm's body. As the rest of
them hurried out into the hall with the baby, Romy hung back. She rested a hand
on the lifeless form beneath the sheet.
"You never had a
chance, did you," she whispered. "But things are going to change. And
whenever people talk about the change, they'll mention your name."
Small goddamn consolation,
she thought as she hurried away to catch up to the others.
27
Five men in full gear, plus the guard, made for a
claustrophobic ride as the elevator crept to the fourth floor. When the doors
opened, Luca and his team piled out and followed the guard to the operating
suite.
The old man pointed to a
pair of double doors. "The amphitheater's through there."
"That's where they're
transmitting from?"
The guard nodded. "But
the cameras are upstairs-through that door."
"Any other way
out?"
He shook his head.
Luca ripped the guard's
two-way off his belt and flung it against the tiles of the nearest wall.
"Stand over there and don't get in the way." He signaled to Lowery.
"You and Majesky take the stairs. The rest of you-with me."
He depressed the bolt catch
release lever on his HK to chamber the first round and stepped toward the
doors. He didn't expect resistance, but it never hurt to be prepared. And
besides, he knew of no better attention getter than a three-round burst into
the ceiling.
He kicked open the doors and
stepped through. "All right-!"
Empty. The place looked like
a cyclone had ripped through it, but not a soul in sight.
"What the-?"
He turned, ready to go out
and bang that guard's head against the wall for sending them to the wrong room
when he noticed the shape under the bloody sheet on the table. Three quick
steps took him to it. He hesitated, then reached out and pulled it off.
A dead sim, bloody, carved
open from chest to groin. Looked like Jack the Ripper had been at her. He saw
the gaping belly, the empty uterus.
The pregnant sim...this had
to be her...but where-?
Oh, no...oh, no...
His knees felt gelatinous,
his arms weak, the HK a hundred-pound weight in his hands as he turned and saw
the TV monitor-where the operation was still in progress...at this table...on
this sim...right in this room.
They'd fooled him...played
him for a grade-A-prime sucker...
He looked up toward the
spinning ceiling, saw a camera pointed his way from the balcony.
"Lowery?" he
whispered into his comm mike. "Lowery, what's going on?"
A helmeted head popped into
view next to the camera. "They're running a movie of the operation."
"Stop it, Lowery,"
he said, softly at first but with his voice rising. "Stop it right
now!"
"I don't know
how!"
"Yes, you do, goddamn
you!" He was screaming now. "Yes, you fucking well do!Now do it!
"
"Okay, okay!"
Luca heard the clinking
release of the bolt on Lowery's submachine gun, followed by one three-round
burst, then another. The monitor went blank...
...but its final image had
been Patrick Sullivan holding up a very human-looking baby girl...and Luca
remembered how the Sinclairs had feared the birth of a girl...and he also
remembered all that crap he'd read about inter- and intragenomic competition...
I took him a moment to piece
it all together, but then suddenly he knew what had terrified them.
You slimy bastards! After
what you did, you had the nerve to look down your noses atme?
Now more than ever he wanted
that baby.
28
Racing along the hallway, Romy hung on Patrick's arm and
stared at the baby. She couldn't take her eyes off that pink, perfect little
face.
"You weren't
exaggerating, Patrick," Romy told him. "She is truly beautiful."
Behind her, she heard Betsy
say, "Skip the elevators and take that stairway at the far end of the
hall." Then in a lower voice to Zero: "I need to talk to you about
that baby."
The two of them fell behind
as Romy and Patrick entered the stairwell and started down. On the ground floor
they exited and found themselves at the doctor's entrance. Joanna and Madhuri
were already there with what looked like an oversized clear-topped bread box on
wheels.
"We took the
elevator," Joanna said, eyes wide, "and we saw a SWAT guy in the
lobby. He had 'FBI' on his back," Joanna said. "Are we in
trouble?"
"They're not FBI,"
Romy told them, trying to keep the dread out of her voice. They mustnot get
this baby. "They're dressed-up thugs."
Patrick passed the baby to
Madhuri who kept her wrapped in her arms as they made the frigid pre-dawn dash
across the near empty parking lot to Joanna's minivan. Patrick loaded the
isolette into the rear while Romy helped Madhuri and the baby into the front
seat.
As Joanna started the
engine, Romy spotted Betsy hurrying their way. Behind her she saw Zero leaning
against the brick wall outside the doctor's entrance. Her heart twisted. His
posture was strange, as if he was sick.
"Is something wrong
with Zero?" she asked Betsy as she arrived.
"He's a little upset. I
don't have time to explain now. He can tell you. If you need us we'll be
at-"
Romy raised a hand.
"Don't say it. Better if we don't know. That way they can't make us tell."
Betsy's face blanched. She
nodded, then hugged Romy. "Get the hell out of here before they find
you."
The three women and the baby
roared off.
Romy watched for a few
heartbeats, praying for the baby's survival, then Patrick was tugging on the
sleeve of her scrubs.
"Romy. Let's
move."
Zero reached the van a few
seconds before they did. He pulled off his ski mask as he climbed into the rear
seat, moving like an arthritic old man.
"Will you drive,
Patrick?" he said in a voice barely above a whisper.
As they got moving, Romy
turned in the passenger seat and looked back. Kek was in the far rear; Tome sat
next to Zero who was staring at the floor in silence.
"What's wrong,
Zero?"
"What?" he said,
blinking and looking up at her. "What's wrong? Everything's wrong."
"Meaning?"
"Please don't ask me
about it." The lost look in his yellow eyes constricted Romy's throat.
"Not yet."
"Where are we
going?" Patrick said as they shot out of the parking lot.
"To pay a visit to
someone who has answers I need."
"Who?"
"Ellis Sinclair."
29
"Fan out!" Luca shouted. "They could still
be in the building!"
He doubted it, but that
might be just what they wanted him to do: figure they'd taken off and go on a
wild search through the streets, leaving them safe right here, laughing at him.
That was what they'd expect him to do, only this time he wouldn't.
"Everyone take a floor,
take a hall, go from room to room. Look for a baby, a newborn baby girl."
Luca kicked back through the
operating room doors and grabbed the old guard by his collar. "The
nursery! Where's the nursery?"
"Th-third floor,"
the old man cried, cringing.
"Take me there!"
A few minutes later he was
standing before a plate-glass window, staring at the rows of bassinets, only
half a dozen of them occupied. To his right a frightened new mother cried out
and asked him what was wrong. He ignored her.
These babies, all so human
looking. But that didn't mean the sim baby couldn't be among them. No way to
tell. The safest thing would be to kill all the girls, but he didn't know if he
could do such a thing.
Movement on the screen of
the monitor over the nurse's station at the rear of the nursery caught his eye.
The sim operation film...the one Lowery had supposedly shot up...it was still
playing. Suddenly the film cut off and a man appeared. Luca knew that
face...the Reverend Eckert! Somehow he'd got hold of the film. Eckert was
broadcasting it all over the world!
Luca turned and began a
stumbling trot back toward the elevators. Only one thing to do now.
Run.
30
MANHATTAN
It's over, Mercer Sinclair thought as he turned away from
his plasma screen TV and staggered to his living room window. He stared out
over the oddly silent Fifth Avenue at the pale, dawn-lit shadows of Central
Park. We're done.
He hadn't been able to sleep
so he'd turned on the TV and begun channel surfing. He'd paused when he
recognized Reverend Eckert's face-that damn fool seemed to be on some channel
somewhere every hour of the day and night-and stayed when he heard him rant
about a sim giving birth to a half-human baby. And then he'dshown the birth.
Portero and SIRG had failed.
Miserably. And worse, the sim baby was a girl, an all too human-looking girl.
What do I do now? he
wondered, his gaze wandering to the squatting granite mass of the Metropolitan
Museum a few blocks uptown. The markets were closed today in the US and most of
Europe, and the trading day had already ended in Asia. But when the Pacific Rim
markets reopened later tonight, SimGen stock would go into freefall.
Money wasn't the issue; even
without SimGen he was worth more than he could spend in a dozen lifetimes. No,
it was the company itself that mattered. He'd devoted his life to building
SimGen. It was his child, his only family, and now the wild dogs he'd kept at
bay for so long would leap upon her and tear her to pieces.
Mercer thought of the .38
caliber revolver he kept in the drawer by the bed. Maybe that would be the best
way, the easiest way. Better that than-
He stopped.
What am I thinking? It'snot
over! I'll fight this! Stonewall any questions, deny any and all allegations.
Sims aremy property, and it will take years-decades!-before someone can say otherwise.
And that someone will be the Supreme Court of the United States, because that's
how far I'll take it. And I'll win that fight.
Oh, no. This is not over.
31
FAR HILLS, NJ
Ellis stared at the screen, fascinated, shouting,
"They've done it! They'vedone it!"
He didn't know whether to
laugh or to cry. He didn't know what tomorrow would bring, or even what the
rest of today would hold, but everything in his life was going to be different
from now on. If nothing else, today promised a brighter future for the sims of
the world.
His phone rang.
"Ellis," said a deep voice he immediately recognized.
"Zero! Congratulations!
I just saw the film of the birth. Tragic about poor Meerm, but uploading the
film to Eckert was a brilliant move. Where are you?"
"At the front
gate."
That startled Ellis. And
something about Zero's voice wasn't right. "I'll open it right away. Have
you got the baby with you?"
"No. But I have
questions. Alot of questions."
Ellis's stomach plunged:
He'd been dreading this moment, dreading it for decades. "Yes, I suppose
you do. I'll open the gate."
He pressed a button on a
wall unit that operated the gate mechanism, then went to a front window to
watch a black van climb the long winding driveway to the house. The cook and
the maid had the day off; he'd planned to visit Robbie and Julie later, but he
might have to delay that.
Ellis stepped outside as the
van pulled to a stop before the front door. Zero alighted immediately and Ellis
was surprised to see that he'd removed his mask, his simian features naked to
the world. He walked past Ellis without a word, without a handshake, without
even eye contact, and stepped into the foyer. A man and a woman emerged-Romy
Cadman and Patrick Sullivan, looking perplexed. Ellis introduced himself and
welcomed them. The last to debark were Kek and an aging sim, but they did not
approach.
"You two are welcome
inside," he said.
"No, sir," said
the sim. "We stay. Good air."
"As you wish."
As Tome and the mandrilla
wandered out onto the frosty lawn, Ellis stepped back inside and faced his
guests.
"Can I offer anyone
some-"
"You've seen the
film," Zero said, his voice thick. "Meerm's baby is a girl, a very
human-looking girl. Dr. Cannon told me she should look more like a sim and she
told me why. She also gave me a possible explanation for why the baby looks so
human. She didn't want to believe it and neither do I. Do you know what I'm
talking about?"
"Yes, I believe I
do."
"Then tell me it's not
true!"
"I only wish I
could."
Zero lunged toward him,
teeth bared, hands clawing forward. Ellis braced himself for the impact.
"Zero, no!" Romy
cried.
Her voice seemed to pull him
back. He turned away and leaned a hand against the wall.
"Monster!" The
word came out half growl, half sob. "How could you?"
"I didn't. At least not
knowingly."
"Can someone tell me
what this is all about?" Romy said.
"Yes," Ellis
replied. "I suppose it's time I told someone. Let's all sit down and I'll
try to explain."
He led them to the two-story
cherrywood library that housed the book collection that had once been a pride,
but had long ago stopped meaning anything. Romy and Patrick took a couch. Zero
dropped into a wingback leather chair and stared at the floor; the pale morning
light through the tall windows washed out what little color was left in his
face. Ellis remained standing. This was going to be too painful to tell sitting
down. He needed to be up, moving about to release the tension coiled like an
overwound spring in his chest.
He wished Zero were alone,
but Zero might wind up telling Romy and Patrick anyway, so it was better they
all heard it firsthand.
"I've lied to you,
Zero. Lied to you from the day you were old enough to understand. You're not a
mutant sim. You're the very first viable sim. We designated you 'Sim Zero.'
Your cells provided the source material that was modified and remodified into
the creatures we now call sims. All sims are your descendants, Zero. You are
the sim Adam."
Ellis heard Romy gasp, heard
Patrick mutter, "Oh, man!" But he was watching Zero.
Zero looked up, fixed him a
moment with his yellow irises, then looked away again. "And who ismy
Adam?"
"That's a longer, more
complicated story. ButI was lied to long before you were, Zero. To see the
whole picture, we have to go back to the early days when my brother and I were
plowing all our capital and everything we could borrow into germline
engineering a commercially useful chimp-human hybrid. We weren't looking to
create a labor force then. We had other uses in mind-antibodies and xenografts
were high on our list. We could see success down the road but we needed more
funding. To get it, we made a deal with the Devil.
"Mercer approached the
Pentagon with a plan to co-develop an aggressive warrior-type simian-human
hybrid along with the more docile strain we wanted to market for commercial
use. The World Trade Towers were still standing then, but everyone in the
military accepted that sooner or later we'd be at war again in the Middle East.
So the generals jumped at the plan. But they realized the outrage that would
arise when the public learned that the army was creating gonzo animal warriors
and training them to kill humans-what if they got loose?-so they cloaked their
involvement under layers of security and bureaucracy.
"A wing of Army
Intelligence was created to develop and train these hybrids as warriors; it was
given the innocuous name of Social Impact Studies Group. SIRG in turn created
Manassas Ventures as a conduit for the funds funneled to our new company,
SimGen. To make this look like a real venture capital deal, the head of SIRG, a
colonel named Conrad Landon, demanded that Manassas get a piece of SimGen in
return for the investment. We agreed, not knowing at the time that we'd be
mortgaging our souls.
"But even with all
these millions in funding, the transgenic road to a sim-human hybrid was
fraught with obstacles, and at times seemed impassable. Somatic cell nuclear
transfer, embryo splitting, and germline modifications are routine procedures
now, but not then. We found we were able to increase the intelligence of apes,
mandrills, and baboons by only small degrees, which did not make the Pentagon
happy. And we were also running into walls trying to 'upgrade' the chimp genome
closer to human. We were swapping genes from our own cells into chimp germlines
and making a hideous mess of it. With a string of failures and the Pentagon
breathing down our necks, I was cracking under the pressure."
Ellis sighed, remembering
and regretting his decision to take a sabbatical at that time. Merce had been
enraged, screaming that he was jeopardizing both their futures, but Ellis had
made up his mind. He'd recently wed Judy and already their marriage was in trouble
because he was never home. So for his own sanity and the sake of his marriage,
he'd left his brother to work alone while they flew to France and rented a
little house in Provence. It had temporarily saved his marriage, but it ruined
the rest of his life.
"So I took a breather
to rest and recoup. I intended to stay a month but that stretched into two,
then three, then longer. I shouldn't have gone at all. I've done many foolish
things in my life, but the most foolish was trusting my brother to work
alone."
32
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
Darryl Lister had been waiting twenty minutes in Portero's
undersized backwoods shack. How did he stand this crummy, uncomfortable
furniture? The guy lived like a refugee.
But not for too much longer.
He heard a car pull up
outside and gestured to Venisi, one of the two men he'd brought with him, to
check the window. He looked out and nodded.
Okay. Portero was here.
Darryl took a deep breath. He'd been steeling himself for this moment since the
word had come down a few hours ago. Now that it was here he wanted to get it
over with. They'd been through a lot, Portero and he, but the time had come to
put the past aside and deal with the present.
Darryl pointed to either
side of the front door; Venisi and Markham nodded, drew their pistols, and
moved into position.
He's seen my car, he
thought. He'll be expecting me, but not them.
A few seconds later Portero
stepped through, dressed in black BDU shirt and pants, his face tight,
obviously ready for a confrontation. He immediately spotted his two extra
guests and his hand darted toward his sidearm, but stopped halfway.
"Let's not do anything
precipitous, Portero," Darryl said.
Portero glanced around the
room. "Maria?"
"She's in the bedroom.
She didn't feel a thing."
Portero squeezed his eyes
shut. "You didn't have to-"
"Yes, I did."
Markham had held her down while Venisi put a bullet through her brain. She'd
looked very peaceful when Darryl had looked in on her. "And it's your
fault. If you'd dumped her when I told you, she'd still be alive now, but
you're bigger than the rules, aren't you, Portero. Now hold still while these
two gentlemen search you."
Darryl had warned his two
men about Portero. He'd seen the guy in action-tough, fast, vicious-and didn't
want any slipups. Venisi covered him while Markham removed Portero's pistol
from his holster and did the pat down.
"What's this all
about?"
"Clean-up time. The
time when you tie up the loose ends, mop up the floor, close the door, and walk
away."
When Markham was done, he
nodded.
"You're telling me I'm
a loose end?"
"Eminently so."
Portero looked at the
ceiling. "I see."
Darryl had to admire his
composure. No breakdown, no begging. But he'd expected no less. If he kept this
up, the next five minutes would be bearable.
"The Old Man found out
about Snyder and Grimes," Darryl told him. "I had to say you hid
their deaths from me as well."
That had been one hairy
meeting. The Old Man had just received word that the DoD had reversed its
approval for Operation Guillotine-soon as the Pentagon heard about the sim's
baby, it decided it wanted nothing to do with monkey commandos-and he was in a
frothing rage. For a few bladder-clenching moments there Darryl had thought he
might be scheduled for a one-way ride into the woods, but he'd managed to shift
all the blame to Portero.
"Snyder and Grimes
brought your loss total to six men-five KIA and one Section Eight. But that's
only part of the reason I'm here." He gestured toward the door.
"Let's step outside."
Portero led the way,
followed by Venisi and Markham. Darryl brought up the rear.
"It's all falling
apart," he said as he ejected the clip from the pistol that had been used
on Maria. "The sweetest arrangement ever-ever-is tumbling down around us.
All because you didn't do your job. So now we have to fall back. Covering our
tracks isn't going to be enough. We have to erase them."
One by one he began removing
the .45 caliber rounds from the clip.
"For instance, as we
speak, there's an inferno raging in the middle of an Idaho nowhere, roasting a
lot of monkey meat. When the arson squad, or whoever eventually gets the job,
starts to sift through the ashes, they're going to have a lot of questions, but
no answers."
When he got down to the last
round, he left it in the clip and pocketed the others.
"Since no clean-up can
be guaranteed perfect, another aspect of the process is to provide plausible
deniability for the high-ups should the dogs come sniffing their way. That
means removing the weak or the too-visible links in the chain. You,
unfortunately, fall into both those categories."
"I thought we were
friends."
"We were. But this goes
beyond friendship. It's not like I have a choice, so don't make this harder than
it already is. You botched a number of crucial ops and, worse, made a spectacle
of yourself at that hospital this morning."
Darryl watched him bristle
at this, but Portero said nothing. Couldn't blame him. Why talk? Nothing he
said would change anything.
"And because I brought
you in, it falls to me to usher you out."
Darryl checked the pistol to
make sure the chamber was empty, then wiped it and the clip clean with a
handkerchief. He handed both to Portero.
"So...it's time. After
all we've been through, I feel it's only fair to offer you a chance to do the
right thing."
Portero took a deep breath,
then nodded and accepted the weapon.
"I'd like to do it
alone."
"I think we'd all prefer
that." Darryl gestured to the trees. "Do it in the woods." That
was where Darryl had planned to leave the body anyway. It might be months
before anyone found it, if ever. "But don't try anything cute, Portero.
Stay in sight. I'm giving you the option to go out like a man. Try to run and
we'll hunt you down like a dog."
Another nod from Portero as
he stared at the pistol and the clip in his hands, then he turned and walked
into the trees.
"Spread out,"
Darryl told Venisi and Markham in a low voice. "Triangulate on him. Keep
him in sight. He starts to run, take him down."
But Portero acted the good
soldier. He walked about a hundred feet along a path into the trees, stopped
beside a big oak. He faced them and raised the pistol to the side of his head.
Jesus, he's looking right at
us.
Darryl's instinct was to
turn away, but he forced himself to watch.
The shotcracked through the
chill air, Portero's head jerked to the left, and his body collapsed into the
brush.
Darryl let out a breath.
Done. Clean and neat.
He gestured to Venisi and
Markham. "Check him out. If he's still breathing, finish him."
He'd heard of people
surviving some outrageous head wounds. And with the way things had been going
for Portero lately, who knew? He might have botched this too.
33
FAR HILLS, NJ
"When I returned after six months away in
France," Ellis told his audience of three, "refreshed, renewed, ready
to work, I discovered that Mercer had made a staggering leap in our research.
He presented me with six surrogate mothers, all recently implanted with
human-chimp hybrid embryos. We hired obstetricians to watch them carefully
through their pregnancies, but to our dismay, one after another miscarried
until only one was left. But her fetus was a tough cookie. It held on, and in
her thirty-eighth week she delivered a living hybrid infant: Sim Zero."
Patrick said, "By any
chance was her name Alice Fredericks?"
"Why, yes," Ellis
said, startled to hear that name after so many years. "I believe it was.
How on earth-?"
"We've met." He
turned to Zero. "We've spoken to your mother, Zero."
"She's not my
mother," he snapped without looking up. "I don'thave a mother."
"He's right,
Patrick," Ellis said. "Zero was grown by cloning techniques from a
recombinantly hybridized nucleus. But when Mercer saw Zero he said that he'd
overdone it: He'd swapped in too much human genetic material.
"He explained to me
how, among many other changes, he'd deleted the two chimp chromosomes that
millions of years ago fused to form human chromosome 2, and replaced them with
a human chromosome 2. He'd also 'cleaned up' the hybrid genome by removing
loads of junk DNA-deleting AT-rich regions, shortening CpG islands-along with
codons and minisatellites; he even managed to remove an entire chromosome that
may have performed some useful function in the past but was now just taking up
space.
"So Zero wound up with
a largely junk-free twenty-two-pair genome-one shorter than human, two shorter
than the chimp's. Mercer told me he did it to make the splicing easier, but I
later learned he had a more sinister reason.
"However we both agreed
that Zero was too human. The public would never accept the merchandising of
something that looked so much like themselves. To make a commercially viable
laborer, we'd have to swap back some of the chimp genes he'd removed."
He noticed Romy's
hate-filled look. "I fully deserve your opprobrium, Ms. Cadman. But please
understand, I was a different person then: young, drunk with the egomaniacal
power to shape and create, never looking beyond the next splice. That was why I
went blindly along with Mercer's solution to work backward from Zero: Use his
cells as a starting point and swap back some of the chimp genes he'd removed. I
was ablaze with excitement at the possibilities opening before me. And because
I trusted my younger brother, I didn't ask the questions I should have.
"So we worked back from
Zero with great success. Seeing that success, and realizing that its own future
was tied to SimGen's, SIRG started gathering information on any public official
who might have a say in the legalization of sims. When we introduced the
species, SIRG contacted those who voiced opposition. When blackmail wasn't an
option, SIRG's field operatives went to work using intimidation and violence.
It was SIRG's behind-the-scenes manipulations that resulted in the
classification of sims as neither humans nor animals but property-SimGen's
property.
"And I confess that I
knew all this-not all the details, but the general plan-and I approved,
thinking, Why should we allow these small minds to block the road to the
future? Mercer and I were like gods, leading the way to a new world. To hell
with anyone who dared stand in our way."
Ellis stopped, took a
breath. "I believe I was crazy then, suffering from some sort of
monomaniacal mental derangement. But eventually I sobered. When all the legal
hurdles had been cleared and the labor markets across the globe were clamoring
for sims, sims, and more sims, when my personal net worth exceeded that of some
small nations, when I finally had time to look back and reflect on how I
arrived at my position, I became suspicious.
"Something was gnawing
at my subconscious and wouldn't let up. So I went back to the source, to Zero,
who was still alive; the basic research center's only permanent resident. I
took an oral scraping of his cells and started checking his DNA. Mercer's
'cleaning up' of Zero's genome may have made the splicing easier, but I
realized then that it also removed links back to the source DNA. After
exhaustive efforts, working in secret, I eventually traced Zero's DNA back to
its origin."
Ellis looked around at the
three faces fixed on his. Yes, even Zero had lifted his head for this.
Could he say it? Could he
push these words past his lips? He had to. He'd come too far to turn back.
"That source DNA didn't
belong to a chimpanzee. It belonged to me."
Romy's voice was barely
audible. "Oh...dear...God!"
Patrick was speechless,
staring in slack-jawed shock.
And Zero had closed his
eyes.
Ellis spoke past the lump in
his throat. "I confronted Mercer and, after strident initial denials, he
reluctantly confirmed it: Zero had been fashioned from one of my cells. My
brother had lied to me about adding too many human genes to a chimp genome to
make Zero; the truth was he'd swapped chimp genes intomy genome. And from there
I unwittingly helped him in further devolving Zero's genome to create the
sims."
"You're telling
me," Patrick said, sputtering, "tellingus ...that...that a sim is not
a recombinantly evolved chimp...it's a recombinantlyde volved human being? Tome
is a human being who's been genetically adulterated and then farmed out as a
slave? I...I..." He raised his hands, then let them drop.
Ellis understood. There were
no words for what he and Mercer had done.
Romy was silent, tears
streaming down her cheeks as she stared at Zero.
"Then I am-or was-a
man?" Zero said, eyes open now, his too human features tortured. "But
I'm reallynot a man, am I. I'm a thing. A freak!"
"Zero, don't!"
Romy sobbed.
But Zero went on, glaring at
Ellis. "What have youdone to me?"
Ellis could barely hear his
own voice. "The unforgivable. The unconscionable. The unspeakable. But I
didn't know, Zero."
"That's a little
convenient, don't you think?" Romy said, the edge on her voice slashing at
him. "'Fess up: You didn'twant to know."
"Maybe you're right.
But I do know I've been trying to undo this ever since I found out. Until this
moment, Mercer and I have been the only two who've known the truth. Not even
Colonel Landon of SIRG knows. What astonished me then, and what I still find
incomprehensible, is how Mercer could know all along that the sims he was
leasing to the world as slaves were his cloned half brothers, and not be
bothered a bit."
"But you didn't go
public," Patrick said. "You didn't even quit the company."
"I wanted todissolve
the company, but Mercer and SIRG controlled too much stock. I couldn't go
public with what I knew because I had children by then and I'd been
instrumental in creating the sims. If the truth got out I'd be seen as a
monster on a par with Mengele, and my children would be seen as offspring of a
monster.
"I was trapped, and
SIRG knew it, but just in case I had second thoughts, my daughter Julie
disappeared for half a day. She wasn't harmed, in fact she had a nice time with
the lady who took her to an amusement park, but the message was too clear. To
protect myself I hid a number of computer disks revealing everything; they'll
be released to all the media in the event of my death. SIRG and I entered a
cold-war state of mutually assured destruction, but it was too much for me.
Knowing I'd been instrumental in a monumental atrocity made me unfit for human
companionship. And since I couldn't tell anyone, not even my wife, my marriage
fell apart.
"So I dedicated myself
to the only solution I could think of: a Quixotic quest to develop a true
chimp-origin sim to replace the human-origin sims in circulation. But I've
found it impossible. I don't think it can be done.
"But all the while,
Zero had been growing up in the sealed-off section of basic research. Mercer
had forgotten about him until Harry Carstairs casually mentioned him. Mercer decided
he was a liability, the Missing Link between sims and humans. He ordered Zero
destroyed-sacrificed, put down, like any other lab specimen that had outlived
its usefulness.
"When I heard I told
Mercer I'd take care of it. But I had no intention of allowing Zero to be
killed. I was suddenly energized. In Zero I saw a chance to bring SimGen down.
Instead of administering a lethal injection, I spirited him off. I financed
him, setting him up as the nemesis of SimGen, a fifth column to turn people against
the use of sims. I saw him as a way to put the genie back in the bottle, so to
speak. And Zero was more than willing to help liberate his brother sims.
"Now Meerm's baby will
accomplish that. What I'd hoped for was to put SimGen out of business with all
of its secrets intact. That might not be possible now, seeing as the baby is a
girl."
"Why is that so
important?" Patrick said. "I saw Dr. Cannon react when I told her it
was a beautiful girl."
"It's too complicated
to delve into here. Just let me say that in an X-dominated hybrid genome with a
human father and a sim mother, the mother's non-native genes-that is, the
minority derived from another species-would be largely suppressed. Even though
they're there in the genotype, they don't show up in the phenotype. In other
words, if sims had been truly derived from chimps, Meerm's daughter would have
retained significant chimp features. But because the substrate of Meerm's
genome was human, the chimp genes didn't have a chance. That's why, in spite of
all the added chimp DNA, she gave us a beautiful, pink, human-looking
baby."
Romy said, "Then I
guess your dirty little secret won't be a secret much longer."
"That will be up to you
three, of course. The fact that the baby's a girl will cause people who know
genetics to question whether there might be more human DNA in sims than anyone
ever imagined, but I doubt they'll be able to prove anything. And their
questions will be drowned out in the tidal wave of protests against the cloning
of more sims. Thanks to Reverend Eckert the world has watched the birth of a
baby born of the union of man and sim. And after seeing that, the movement to
have them reclassified as Hominidae will gain unstoppable momentum."
He turned to Zero and felt
the lump grow in his throat again.
"And you, Zero, are a
man. The finest, most noble man I've ever known. And you can live as a man.
Whatever you want of mine is yours, Zero. I don't know whether to call you
brother or son, but like it or not, I'm part of you. We're related."
Zero stared at the
bookshelves, saying nothing.
Ellis stepped closer to him.
"I already have a son, Zero, but for a long time now I haven't had someone
I've cared to call brother. There's still a lot to be done; years of struggle
ahead before this abominable, tragic mess is straightened out. I helped cause
it with one brother; I need another brother to help me rectify it. Can you
forgive me enough to be that brother, Zero? Please?"
"I'll help you,"
Zero said, rising and looking him in the eye. "Because I need to finish
what I began. But don't call me brother. And don't ask me to forgive you."
The words struck like hammer
blows. Ellis briefly had harbored a hope, a vision of Zero and him tearfully
embracing and letting the past be past. But he could see now that wasn't going
to be. He ached for absolution, but it wouldn't be coming from Zero or the two
people with him. Not yet, at least.
"Fair enough,"
Ellis said. He resisted an impulse to offer his hand. Even that might be asking
too much right now. "As a first step I propose arranging a meeting
immediately with my brother. We'll lay out the facts for him and make it
perfectly clear that SimGen is dead."
34
SUSSEX COUNTY, NJ
Luca Portero waved as he cruised past the guard in the
gate kiosk and pointed his Jeep toward the SimGen main campus. He'd wanted to
avoid any small talk because he could barely hear his own thoughts, but he'd
take ringing in his ear over a hole in his head any day.
When he'd buried an AK-47
and an extra pistol in a waterproof gun case, he'd doubted he'd ever have to
use them. It was simply a precautionary measure. But when Lister had told him
it was time to "do the right thing," he'd known exactly where he
wanted to do it.
Do the right thing...was
Lister crazy? Like there was some sort of honor in executing yourself instead
of making somebody else do it? What century was he living in?
Correction:used to live in.
Luca had raised the pistol
to his head but pointed at the very rear of his skull. At the last second he'd
angled it even further rearward to send the slug past the back of his head. But
the report had damn near deafened him. He might never hear out of his right ear
again.
He'd dropped right onto the
spot where he'd buried the gun case. The two inches of covering dirt scraped
off quickly. The pistols Lister's butt boys were carrying were nothing against
the Kalashnikov. After they were down, Portero ran back and caught Lister
trying to get away in his car. The bastard had squealed for mercy, screaming
about friendship-friendship!After handing me a pistol so I could off myself!
Luca blew his head off.
Now he had to sky out of the
country. No need for panic. No one here knew about Lister. He figured he had
hours yet, and wanted to use some of that to deal with his office computer.
He'd been scrupulous about avoiding any links to his numbered account in
Bermuda, but you couldn't be too careful where SIRG was involved. They had
people who could drag all sorts of information from a supposedly destroyed
memory chip. So the chip was going with him. The ocean floor dropped to a
couple of miles deep off Bermuda; he'd bury the chip at sea.
As expected, the campus was
all but deserted. Only a few security personnel about. Perfect.
He'd just sat down before
his computer and was preparing to open the box and tear out the memory chip,
when he heard his office door open behind him. His fingers closed around the
grip of his .45.
"Oh, it's you, Mr.
Portero," said a voice he couldn't place. "I didn't expect you in
today."
He turned and recognized one
of the newer men on the security force-knew the face but not the name. He'd
been hired last summer; low on the ladder, which was no doubt how he'd pulled
Christmas duty.
"Yeah," Luca said.
"Just checking on something before I go home."
"Lots of brass in
today."
Luca's ears were singing and
the last thing he needed was chitchat with this kid, but his curiosity got the
better of him.
"Really? Who?"
"Both Sinclairs. First
the big guy copters in. Then Ellis Sinclair arrives in this beat-up van,
driving it himself."
"Is that a fact?"
Luca wasn't surprised. If
there was any time for a crisis meeting it was now.
"And you'll never
believe who was with him: that fox from OPRR-you know, the one who led the
inspection a few-"
"Romy Cadman,"
Luca said, and felt his blood jump a few degrees.
The bitch was back. And with
Sinclair-2. So they were no longer hiding their connection. Lister had put the
blame on Luca, but that was wrong. This wastheir fault. Especially hers. Things
had started downhill the moment she arrived. If not for Romy Cadman he'd still
be sitting pretty here, building his retirement account, planning ways to move
up the SIRG ladder. Instead he was on the run and would have to keep on running
the rest of his life.
Maybe it was fate that had
brought him back at this moment. He had scores to settle, scales to balance.
What was the expression-in
for a dime, in for a dollar? He'd left a pile of bodies back at his house; no
reason why he couldn't leave a few more in Sinclair-1's office.
35
This was a different Mercer Sinclair than the one Romy had
seen at the shareholders' meeting. The suave good looks, the debonair poise
were gone. This man looked haggard, years older. But he hadn't lost any of his
fight.
"As usual, Ellis, you
want to give up. You always were a quitter. But I'mnot giving up. Not by a long
shot. We can win, and I can tell you how. But I'm not discussing it before
outsiders-certainly not with someone here from OPRR."
"I'm not representing
OPRR today," Romy told him, "but I'll leave if-"
"No," Ellis said.
"We all stay. We all have a stake in this."
Romy looked around,
realizing how true that was. Ellis had led them all to the CEO's office-Romy,
Patrick, Zero, and Tome and Kek as well. The last three had the most at stake.
"Then this meeting is
over," said Mercer Sinclair. "When you come to your-"
Abruptly the door opened and
Luca Portero swaggered in. The pistol in his hand startled Romy, and the wild
look in his eyes terrified her.
"Hail, hail, the gang's
all here," he said, breaking into a sharklike grin. "And a motley
crew if I ever saw one," he said. "Four humans, a sim, a-holy shit!
Sothat's how you took down four of my men! Where'd you get the mandrilla? I
never would've-" His cold gaze settled on Zero. "And who or what the
fuck are you?"
"They were just
leaving, Portero," Mercer Sinclair said quickly. "And so are
you."
"Am I?"
"Yes. You're fired. As
of this minute you are no longer employed at SimGen."
"You talk to me like
that?" Portero said. "Where do you get the balls to use that tone of
voice with me after what you did?"
"What are you talking
about?"
"You stood there time
after time and looked down your nose at me and pretended to be horrified at
what you called my 'methods,' when all the while you built this company by
turning humans into monkeys and telling the world it was the other way around.
You can't fire me, you piece of shit. I'm firingyou !"
And before Romy knew it,
Portero's pistol was leveled at Mercer Sinclair's chest. He fired twice, two
rapid, booming reports, hitting him in the chest.
Images strobe-flashed
through Romy's shocked brain-Sinclair's eyes bulging-his mouth forming an
astonished O-his backward tumble with outflung arms-the window behind him
cracking as it was splattered with red.
And then Portero was
swinging his pistol in her direction. Patrick and Zero stood frozen to her
right, Ellis was lunging toward his fallen brother. Portero shifted his pistol
toward him, then seemed to change his mind.
"Later," he said
softly, then focused on Romy.
Kek growled and started
forward.
"Kree-gah!"
Portero said and Kek froze.
Portero smiled as he eyed
Kek. "Before being assigned here I worked with some of these mandrillas in
our Idaho facility. They're conditioned from birth to stop whatever they're
doing when they hear that word, then wait for another command-from the person
who said it. I'm told the word is ape talk from the Tarzan books." His
gaze returned to Romy. "Pretty cool, huh?" He heaved a theatrical
sigh. "And now it's your turn, Ms. Romy Cadman. You've messed up my
future, so now it's only fair I mess up yours."
Out of the corner of her
right eye she saw Zero take a step closer to her, saying, "Leave her
alone!"
"Hey, listen!"
Portero snarled. "I don't know what kind of a freak you are, but another
step and you're a dead freak. Got that?"
Kek growled again and
Portero yelled, "Kree-gah" a second time. "Don't make me shoot
you, boy," he told Kek. "I've got plans for you."
"What plans can you
possibly have for Kek?" Romy said, hoping she could get him talking, maybe
long enough for help to arrive, if any was coming.
"I may need a diversion
at the airport. I'll just set him to tearing things up in another part of the
terminal after I get there." He raised the pistol, centering it on Romy's
chest. "But enough idle chatter. Good-bye Romy Cadman."
Romy felt a stunning impact
against her right shoulder as, once again, two booming reports split the air.
She saw the muzzle flashes as she fell to her left and realized that Zero had
hurled himself against her.
No!
She heard Kek's enraged howl
as he launched himself through the air, saw Portero try to bring his pistol to
bear on the hurtling creature but he wasn't fast enough, heard him shout
"Kree-gah! Kree-gah!" but no amount of conditioning was going to keep
Kek from anyone who hurt Zero. Portero went down with screams of pain and
terror.
Zero!
Romy rolled and was on her
feet in a heartbeat, but Zero was down, slumped on his side, his life running
out of him front and back into two red puddles.
Romy swims into Zero's
vision. Joy bursts within his ruined chest at the sight of her alive and
unharmed. Her pale, strained face is framed in scintillating fog as she leans
over him and wails for someone to call for help.
Too late. Even though he
feels no pain, or perhaps because he feels no pain, Zero knows he's dying. The
impact of the bullets tearing though his chest was agonizing, but now...now he
feels feather light and completely at peace.
He stares at Romy's
tear-stained face as she calls his name again and again, begging him to hang
on. But he has no strength to hang on. He tries to move his lips but they won't
respond. They must! He has to tell her that it's better this way.
If this morning had gone
differently...if Betsy hadn't confided to him her suspicions about Meerm's
baby, and if Ellis hadn't confirmed them, his outlook would have been so
different. He could have lived with the belief that he was an intellectual
improvement on a nonhuman creature, could have held his head high as the best
of his breed that aspired to the next evolutionary step. But the truth changed
all that. He is not a step up from anything. He's an adulterated...thing...a
freak of science. He doesn't know how long he could have survived knowing that
he was cheated of his humanity.
He feels her hand in his. He
wills his fingers to move, and they do, they close on hers. She bursts into
sobs.
He wants to tell her how
he's loved her. And how, thinking he was a sim, he could have been satisfied to
go on loving her from afar. But he doesn't know how he could bear seeing her
and being with her, and ever dreaming about what, but for the violation of a
few genes, might have been.
It's better this way.
The opening in the
glittering cloud encircling Romy's face begins to narrow, brightening as she
seems to recede.
A sob builds in what's left
of his chest. Not yet. Let me look at her a little longer.
But the cloud brightens
further as the iris closes. And then she's gone and only the swirling light
remains. And Zero wonders if there's a heaven. For Romy's sake he hopes so,
because he knows that's where she'll go when her time is up.
But what about him? Did he
retain enough of that transcendent spark to allow him to pass on into another
life? Will he be welcomed? Or rejected as unfit?
He never fit anywhere during
his earthly life. Just once in his existence he'd like to feel he fits
somewhere.
Wouldn't that be wonderful.
And now the light suffuses
him and he's floating...
Dazed, Patrick dropped to
his knees beside Romy where she cradled Zero's head on her lap. She was bent
over his face, weeping. The sound tore at his heart. One look at Zero's glazed
eyes and Patrick knew he was gone. But maybe Romy hadn't realized that yet. He
didn't want to be the one to tell her.
"I called the security
office, the county sheriff, the state police. Cops and ambulances are on the
way."
"Too late!" she
sobbed. "He's gone!"
"I know," he said
softly. He reached past her arm and closed Zero's eyes.
She leaned over further and
kissed his forehead. "I loved him, Patrick."
"And he loved you. You
should have heard how he talked about you. And it wasn't just talk. He loved
you enough to die for you."
"I want him back."
"I know...I
know..." Heputa hand on her shoulder. "I do too."
"Can I...?" she
said without looking up. "Do you mind if I just stay here with him alone
until...until they come?"
"Sure. Of course."
Patrick was stung, but he understood.
He rose and became aware of
a wet slapping sound. He saw Kek kneeling on Portero's chest. He gripped the
man's ears as he repeatedly smashed the back of his head against the floor.
That head, wobbly on an obviously broken neck, was bleeding from the eyes,
nose, and mouth; the gray carpet was red under his skull.
"He's dead, Kek,"
Patrick said. "You can't kill him any more."
Kek looked up with tears in
his eyes, then, without missing a beat, went back to his work.
Suddenly Patrick remembered
Tome. He whirled and found the old sim squatting on the carpet a few feet away,
his face buried in the arms folded atop his knees.
"Tome? Are you
hurt?"
The sim looked up with
tear-filled eyes. "Ver sad, Mist Sulliman. All Tome's fault."
"No way, Tome," he
said, feeling a surge of anger. "Weknow whose fault this is, and it's not
yours."
With that Patrick turned
toward the CEO's desk and saw Ellis rise from behind it. He shot him a question
with his eyes, and Ellis shook his head. His expression was grim and sad, but
no tears.
Three men dead in less than
half a minute. Yes, men. From this day on Patrick swore to remember Zero as a
man. Although, considering the two others who'd joined him in death, that might
not be a compliment.
As sirens began to wail
outside, he wanted to ask Ellis Sinclair where they went from here, but the
rhythmic smacking of Portero's head against the wet carpet was turning his
stomach.
"Kek! Stop!
Please!" But the mandrilla ignored him. "Can't somebody stop
him?"
"Let him be," Romy
said in a flat tone without looking up. "Let him take as long as he
wants."
Epilogue
"I still can't believe it," Abel Voss said.
"Neither can I,"
Ellis replied.
The two of them sat in
Mercer's old office. Less than a week now since death had filled this space.
Ellis had ordered the carpets cleaned, but the removal of the bloodstains had
been only partially successful. He'd expected that, and had declined to order
new carpet. Just as he'd declined to repair the cracked picture window. He
didn't want to help anyone, especially himself, forget what had happened here.
He'd attended funerals of
two brothers since that day. At Mercer's he was part of a huge throng of
mourners, none of whom shed a tear. At Zero's he stood among a few select
members of the organization-Dr. Cannon and Reverend Eckert among them-all
weeping openly. He'd been a central figure at the first; he'd had to invite
himself to the second, his presence tolerated only because he claimed a blood
relationship.
"Then again," Voss
said, "when you think about it, who else was he gonna leave it to?"
Mercer's personal attorney
had read his will this morning. He'd left all his stock to Ellis, who was still
in shock.
"It was an old
will," Ellis said. "If he'd had the slightest inkling he was going to
die, I'm sure he would have changed it. But Merce thought he'd go on forever.
Or damn near."
"So now that you're the
absolute head honcho, what's your first step?"
"I've already taken
it," Ellis said, rising and moving to the window. "I'm shutting down
the natal centers. No new sim embryos implanted, all unborns aborted."
Killing unborn sims...the
idea sickened him. But it had to stop now.
Voss grunted. "That
leaves us a company without a product. But I guess you're just stayin ahead of
the curve, seein as how the government will pretty soon be gettin around to
forcin us to do just that."
How true. News networks
around the world had picked up the film of Meerm's delivery; repeated
broadcasts had raised a firestorm of protest: if sims and humans can
interbreed, then sims should be members of the human genus.
If they only knew.
But they never would. Romy
and Patrick had struck a deal: they would never reveal what they knew if Ellis
never revealed that Romy would be raising Meerm's baby, who she'd named Una.
She wanted the child-mother a sim, father a pervert-to grow up out of the
limelight without ever knowing her origins.
Fair enough. Una and her
mother had already done enough to further the sim cause. Ellis would do the
rest.
"Okay," Voss said.
"So no new sims. What about all the others out there already?"
"I'm going to start
recalling them. I want you to get the ball rolling on building dorms for them
on our Arizona land. I want them built as fast as possible. As soon as a block
is ready for habitation, I'll cancel enough leases to fill it. That's the way
we'll do it: a rolling recall until every living sim is out of the workforce
and assured of freedom and comfort for the rest of their lives."
Voss swallowed. "At
least they don't live too long, but even so, you're gonna bankrupt the company,
son!"
"Most likely." He
looked out at the gleaming buildings of the main campus, and the rolling hills
beyond. "But we've got lots of hard assets. We'll sell them all."
And when that's not enough,
he thought, I'll use my own funds, every last penny if necessary.
Ellis Sinclair figured he
was long overdue to become his brothers' keeper.