Kicking her legs out over the ocean,
the lonely mermaid gazed at the horizon from her perch in the
overhanging banyan tree.
The air was absolutely still and
filled with the scent of night flowers. Large fruit bats flew
purposefully over the sea, heading for their daytime rest. Somewhere
a white cockatoo gave a penetrating squawk. A starling made a brief
flutter out to sea, then came back again. The rising sun threw up
red-gold sparkles from the wavetops and brought a brilliance to the
tropical growth that crowned the many islands spread out on the
horizon.
The mermaid decided it was time for
breakfast. She slipped from her hanging canvas chair and walked out
along one of the banyan’s great limbs. The branch swayed lightly
under her weight, and her bare feet found sure traction on the rough
bark. She looked down to see the deep blue of the channel, distinct
from the turquoise of the shallows atop the reefs.
She raised her arms, poised briefly on
the limb, the ruddy light of the sun glowing bronze on her bare
skin, and then pushed off and dove head-first into the Philippine
Sea. She landed with a cool impact and a rush of bubbles.
Her wings unfolded, and she flew
away.
***
After her hunt, the mermaid–her name
was Michelle–cached her fishing gear in a pile of dead coral above
the reef, and then ghosted easily over the sea grass with the
rippled sunlight casting patterns on her wings. When she could look
up to see the colossal, twisted tangle that was the roots of her
banyan tree, she lifted her head from the water and gulped her first
breath of air.
The Rock Islands were made of soft
limestone coral, and tide and chemical action had eaten away the
limestone at sea level, undercutting the stone above. Some of the
smaller islands looked like mushrooms, pointed green pinnacles
balanced atop thin stems. Michelle’s island was larger and
irregularly shaped, but it still had steep limestone walls undercut
six meters by the tide, with no obvious way for a person to clamber
from the sea to the land. Her banyan perched on the saucer-edge of
the island, itself undercut by the sea.
Michelle had arranged a rope elevator
from her nest in the tree, just a loop on the end of a long nylon
line. She tucked her wings away–they were harder to retract than to
deploy, and the gills on the undersides were delicate–and then
slipped her feet through the loop. At her verbal command, a hoist
mechanism lifted her in silence from the sea to her resting place in
the bright green-dappled forest canopy.
She had been an ape once, a siamang,
and she felt perfectly at home in the treetops.
During her excursion, she had speared
a yellowlip emperor, and this she carried with her in a mesh bag.
She filleted the emperor with a blade she kept in her nest, and
tossed the rest into the sea, where it became a subject of interest
to a school of bait fish. She ate a slice of one fillet raw,
enjoying the brilliant flavor, sea and trembling pale flesh
together, then cooked the fillets on her small stove, eating one
with some rice she’d cooked the previous evening and saving the
other for later.
By the time Michelle finished
breakfast, the island was alive. Geckoes scurried over the banyan’s
bark, and coconut crabs sidled beneath the leaves like touts
offering illicit downloads to passing tourists. Out in the deep
water, a flock of circling, diving black noddies marked where a
school of skipjack tuna was feeding on swarms of bait fish.
It was time for Michelle to begin her
day as well. With sure, steady feet, she moved along a rope walkway
to the ironwood tree that held her satellite uplink in its crown,
straddled a limb, took her deck from the mesh bag she’d roped to the
tree, and downloaded her messages.
There were several journalists
requesting interviews–the legend of the lonely mermaid was
spreading. This pleased her more often than not, but she didn’t
answer any of the queries. There was a message from Darton, which
she decided to savor for a while before opening. And then she saw a
note from Dr. Davout, and opened it at once.
Davout was, roughly, twelve times her
age. He’d actually been carried for nine months in his mother’s
womb, not created from scratch in a nanobed like almost everyone
else she knew. He had a sib who was a famous astronaut, a McEldowny
Prize for his Lavoisier and His Age, and a red-haired wife
who was nearly as well-known as he was. A couple of years ago,
Michelle had attended a series of his lectures at the College of
Mystery, and been interested despite her specialty being, strictly
speaking, biology.
He had shaved off the little goatee
he’d worn when she’d last seen him, which Michelle considered a good
thing. "I have a research project for you, if you’re free," the
recording said. "It shouldn’t take too much effort."
Michelle contacted him at once. He was
a rich old bastard with a thousand years of tenure and no notion of
what it was to be young in these times, and he’d pay her whatever
outrageous fee she asked.
Her material needs at the moment were
few, but she wouldn’t stay on this island forever.
Davout answered right away. Behind
him, working at her own console, Michelle could see his red-haired
wife Katrin.
"Michelle!" Davout said, loudly enough
for Katrin to know who’d called without turning around. "Good!" He
hesitated, and then his fingers formed the mudra for
<concern>. "I understand you’ve suffered a loss," he said.
"Yes," she said, her answer delayed by
a second’s satellite lag.
"And the young man–?"
"Doesn’t remember."
Which was not exactly a lie, the point
being what was remembered.
Davout’s fingers were still fixed in
<concern>. "Are you all right?" he asked.
Her own fingers formed an equivocal
answer. "I’m getting better." Which was probably true.
"I see you’re not an ape any
more."
"I decided to go the mermaid route.
New perspectives, all that." And welcome
isolation.
"Is there any way we can make things
easier for you?"
She put on a hopeful expression. "You
said something about a job?"
"Yes." He seemed relieved not to have
to probe further–he’d had a real-death in his own family, Michelle
remembered, a chance-in-a-billion thing, and perhaps he didn’t want
to relive any part of that.
"I’m working on a biography of
Terzian," Davout said.
" . . . And his Age?" Michelle
finished.
"And his Legacy." Davout
smiled. "There’s a three-week period in his life where he–well, he
drops right off the map. I’d like to find out where he went–and who
he was with, if anyone."
Michelle was impressed. Even in
comparatively unsophisticated times such as that inhabited by
Jonathan Terzian, it was difficult for people to disappear.
"It’s a critical time for him," Davout
went on. "He’d lost his job at Tulane, his wife had just
died–realdeath, remember–and if he decided he simply wanted to get
lost, he would have all my sympathies." He raised a hand as if to
tug at the chin-whiskers that were no longer there, made a vague
pawing gesture, then dropped the hand. "But my problem is that when
he resurfaces, everything’s changed for him. In June, he delivered
an undistinguished paper at the Athenai conference in Paris, then
vanished. When he surfaced in Venice in mid-July, he didn’t deliver
the paper he was scheduled to read, instead he delivered the first
version of his Cornucopia Theory."
Michelle’s fingers formed the mudra
<highly impressed>. "How have you tried to locate
him?"
"Credit card records–they end on June
17, when he buys a lot of euros at American Express in Paris. After
that, he must have paid for everything with cash."
"He really did try to get lost,
didn’t he?" Michelle pulled up one bare leg and rested her chin on
it. "Did you try passport records?"
<No luck.> "But if he stayed in
the European Community he wouldn’t have had to present a passport
when crossing a border."
"Cash machines?"
"Not till after he arrived in Venice,
just a couple of days prior to the conference."
The mermaid thought about it for a
moment, then smiled. "I guess you need me, all right."
<I concur> Davout flashed
solemnly. "How much would it cost me?"
Michelle pretended to consider the
question for a moment, then named an outrageous sum.
Davout frowned. "Sounds all right," he
said.
Inwardly, Michelle rejoiced.
Outwardly, she leaned toward the camera lens and looked
businesslike. "I’ll get busy, then."
Davout looked grateful. "You’ll be
able to get on it right away?"
"Certainly. What I need you to do is
send me pictures of Terzian, from as many different angles as
possible, especially from around that period of time."
"I have them ready."
"Send away."
An eyeblink later, the pictures were
in Michelle’s deck. <Thanks> she flashed. "I’ll let you know
as soon as I find anything."
At university, Michelle had discovered
that she was very good at research, and it had become a profitable
sideline for her. People–usually people connected with academe in
one way or another–hired her to do the duller bits of their own
jobs, finding documents or references, or, in this case, three
missing weeks out of a person’s life. It was almost always work they
could do themselves, but Michelle was simply better at research than
most people, and she was considered worth the extra expense.
Michelle herself usually enjoyed the work–it gave her interesting
sidelights on fields about which she knew little, and provided a
welcome break from routine.
Plus, this particular job required not
so much a researcher as an artist, and Michelle was very good at
this particular art.
Michelle looked through the pictures,
most scanned from old photographs. Davout had selected well:
Terzian’s face or profile was clear in every picture. Most of the
pictures showed him young, in his twenties, and the ones that showed
him older were of high quality, or showed parts of the body that
would be crucial to the biometric scan, like his hands or his ears.
The mermaid paused for a moment to
look at one of the old photos: Terzian smiling with his arm around a
tall, long-legged woman with a wide mouth and dark, bobbed hair,
presumably the wife who had died. Behind them was a Louis Quinze
table with a blaze of gladiolas in a cloisonné vase, and, above the
table, a large portrait of a stately-looking horse in a heavy gilded
frame. Beneath the table were stowed–temporarily, Michelle assumed–a
dozen or so trophies, which to judge from the little golden figures
balanced atop them were awarded either for gymnastics or martial
arts. The opulent setting seemed a little at odds with the young,
informally dressed couple: she wore a flowery tropical shirt tucked
into khakis, and Terzian was dressed in a tank top and shorts. There
was a sense that the photographer had caught them almost in motion,
as if they’d paused for the picture en route from one place to
another.
Nice shoulders, Michelle thought. Big
hands, well-shaped muscular legs. She hadn’t ever thought of Terzian
as young, or large, or strong, but he had a genuine, powerful
physical presence that came across even in the old, casual
photographs. He looked more like a football player than a famous
thinker.
Michelle called up her
character-recognition software and fed in all the pictures, then
checked the software’s work, something she was reasonably certain
her employer would never have done if he’d been doing this job
himself. Most people using this kind of canned software didn’t
realize how the program could be fooled, particularly when used with
old media, scanned film prints heavy with grain and primitive
digital images scanned by machines that simply weren’t very
intelligent. In the end, Michelle and the software between them
managed an excellent job of mapping Terzian’s body and calibrating
its precise ratios: the distance between the eyes, the length of
nose and curve of lip, the distinct shape of the ears, the length of
limb and trunk. Other men might share some of these biometric
ratios, but none would share them all.
The mermaid downloaded the data into
her specialized research spiders, and sent them forth into the
electronic world.
A staggering amount of the trivial
past existed there, and nowhere else. People had uploaded pictures,
diaries, commentary, and video; they’d digitized old home movies,
complete with the garish, deteriorating colors of the old film
stock; they’d scanned in family trees, postcards, wedding lists,
drawings, political screeds, and images of handwritten letters.
Long, dull hours of security video. Whatever had meant something to
someone, at some time, had been turned into electrons and made
available to the universe at large.
A surprising amount of this stuff had
survived the Lightspeed War–none of it had seemed worth targeting,
or, if trashed, had been reloaded from backups.
What all this meant was that Terzian
was somewhere in there. Wherever Terzian had gone in his weeks of
absence–Paris, Dalmatia, or Thule–there would have been someone with
a camera. In stills of children eating ice cream in front of Notre
Dame, or moving through the video of buskers playing saxophone on
the Pont des Artistes, there would be a figure in the background,
and that figure would be Terzian. Terzian might be found lying on a
beach in Corfu, reflected in a bar mirror in Gdynia, or negotiating
with a prostitute in Hamburg’s St. Pauli district–Michelle had found
targets in exactly those places during the course of her other
searches.
Michelle sent her software forth to
find Terzian, then lifted her arms above her head and
stretched–stretched fiercely, thrusting out her bare feet and
curling the toes, the muscles trembling with tension, her mouth
yawned in a silent shriek.
Then she leaned over her deck again,
and called up the message from Darton, the message she’d saved till
last.
"I don’t understand," he said. "Why
won’t you talk to me? I love you!"
His brown eyes were a little
wild.
"Don’t you understand?" he cried. "I’m
not dead! I’m not really dead!"
Michelle hovered three or four meters
below the surface of Zigzag Lake, gazing upward at the inverted bowl
of the heavens, the brilliant blue of the Pacific sky surrounded by
the dark, shadowy towers of mangrove. Something caught her eye,
something black and falling, like a bullet: and then there was a
splash and a boil of bubbles, and the daggerlike bill of a collared
kingfisher speared a blue-eyed apogonid that had been hovering over
a bright red coral head. The kingfisher flashed its pale underside
as it stroked to the surface, its wings doing efficient double duty
as fins, and then there was a flurry of wings and feet and bubbles
and the kingfisher was airborne again.
Michelle floated up and over the
barrel-shaped coral head, then over a pair of giant clams, each over
a meter long. The clams drew shut as Michelle slid across them,
withdrawing the huge siphons as thick as her wrist. The fleshy lips
that overhung the scalloped edges of the shells were a riot of
colors: purples, blues, greens, and reds interwoven in a
eye-boggling pattern.
Carefully drawing in her gills so
their surfaces wouldn’t be inflamed by coral stings, she kicked up
her feet and dove beneath the mangrove roots into the narrow tunnel
that connected Zigzag Lake with the sea.
Of the three hundred or so Rock
Islands, seventy or thereabouts had marine lakes. The islands were
made of coral limestone and porous to one degree or another: some
lakes were connected to the ocean through tunnels and caves, and
others through seepage. Many of the lakes contained forms of life
unique in all the world, evolved distinctly from their remote
ancestors: even now, after all this time, new species were being
described.
During the months Michelle had spent
in the islands, she thought she’d discovered two undescribed
species: a variation on the Entacmaea medusivora white
anemone that was patterned strangely with scarlet and a cobalt-blue;
and a nudibranch, deep violet with yellow polka dots, that had
undulated past her one night on the reef, flapping like a tea towel
in a strong wind as a seven-knot tidal current tore it along. The
nudi and samples of the anemone had been sent to the appropriate
authorities, and perhaps in time Michelle would be immortalized by
having a Latinate version of her name appended to the scientific
description of the two marine animals.
The tunnel was about fifteen meters
long, and had a few narrow twists where Michelle had to pull her
wings in close to her sides and maneuver by the merest fluttering of
their edges. The tunnel turned up, and brightened with the sun; the
mermaid extended her wings and flew over brilliant pink soft corals
toward the light.
Two hours’ work, she thought,
plus a hazardous environment. Twenty-two hundred calories,
easy.
The sea was brilliantly lit, unlike
the gloomy marine lake surrounded by tall cliffs, mangroves, and
shadow, and for a moment Michelle’s sun-dazzled eyes failed to see
the boat bobbing on the tide. She stopped short, her wings cupping
to brake her motion, and then she recognized the boat’s distinctive
paint job, a bright red meant to imitate the natural oil of the
cheritem fruit.
Michelle prudently rose to the surface
a safe distance away–Torbiong might be fishing, and sometimes he did
it with a spear. The old man saw her, and stood to give a wave
before Michelle could unblock her trachea and draw air into her
lungs to give a hail.
"I brought you supplies," he
said.
"Thanks." Michelle said as she wiped a
rain of sea water from her face.
Torbiong was over two hundred years
old, and Paramount Chief of Koror, the capital forty minutes away by
boat. He was small and wiry and black-haired, and had a broad-nosed,
strong-chinned, unlined face. He had traveled over the world and off
it while young, but returned to Belau as he aged. His duties as
chief were mostly ceremonial, but counted for tax purposes; he had
money from hotels and restaurants that his ancestors had built and
that others managed for him, and he spent most of his time visiting
his neighbors, gossiping, and fishing. He had befriended Darton and
Michelle when they’d first come to Belau, and helped them in
securing the permissions for their researches on the Rock Islands. A
few months back, after Darton died, Torbiong had agreed to bring
supplies to Michelle in exchange for the occasional fish.
His boat was ten meters long and
featured a waterproof canopy amidships made from interwoven pandanas
leaves. Over the scarlet faux-cheritem paint were zigzags,
crosses, and stripes in the brilliant yellow of the ginger plant.
The ends of the thwarts were decorated with grotesque carved faces,
and dozens of white cowrie shells were glued to the gunwales. Wooden
statues of the kingfisher bird sat on the prow and stern.
Thrusting above the pandanas canopy
were antennae, flagpoles, deep-sea fishing rods, fish spears, radar,
and a satellite uplink. Below the canopy, where Torbiong could
command the boat from an elaborately carved throne of
breadfruit-tree wood, were the engine and rudder controls, radio,
audio, and video sets, a collection of large audio speakers, a depth
finder, a satellite navigation relay, and radar. Attached to the
uprights that supported the canopy were whistles tuned to make an
eerie, discordant wailing noise when the boat was at speed.
Torbiong was fond of discordant
wailing noises. As Michelle swam closer, she heard the driving,
screeching electronic music that Torbiong loved trickling from the
earpieces of his headset–he normally howled it out of speakers, but
when sitting still he didn’t want to scare the fish. At night, she
could hear Torbiong for miles, as he raced over the darkened sea
blasted out of his skull on betel-nut juice with his music
thundering and the whistles shrieking.
He removed the headset, releasing a
brief audio onslaught before switching off his sound
system.
"You’re going to make yourself deaf,"
Michelle said.
Torbiong grinned. "Love that music.
Gets the blood moving."
Michelle floated to the boat and put a
hand on the gunwale between a pair of cowries.
"I saw that boy of yours on the news,"
Torbiong said. "He’s making you famous."
"I don’t want to be
famous."
"He doesn’t understand why you don’t
talk to him."
"He’s dead," Michelle said.
Torbiong made a spreading gesture with
his hands. "That’s a matter of opinion."
"Watch your head," said Michelle.
Torbiong ducked as a gust threatened
to bring him into contact with a pitcher plant that drooped over the
edge of the island’s overhang. Torbiong evaded the plant and then
stepped to the bow to haul in his mooring line before the boat’s
canopy got caught beneath the overhang,
Michelle submerged and swam till she
reached her banyan tree, then surfaced and called down her rope
elevator. By the time Torbiong’s boat hissed up to her, she’d folded
away her gills and wings and was sitting in the sling, kicking her
legs over the water.
Torbiong handed her a bag of supplies:
some rice, tea, salt, vegetables, and fruit. For the last several
weeks Michelle had experienced a craving for blueberries, which
didn’t grow here, and Torbiong had included a large package fresh
off the shuttle, and a small bottle of cream to go with them.
Michelle thanked him.
"Most tourists want corn chips or
something," Torbiong said pointedly.
"I’m not a tourist." Michelle said.
"I’m sorry I don’t have any fish to swap–I’ve been hunting smaller
game." She held out the specimen bag, still dripping sea
water.
Torbiong gestured toward the cooler
built into the back of his boat. "I got some chai and a
chersuuch today," he said, using the local names for
barracuda and mahi mahi.
"Good fishing."
"Trolling." With a shrug. He looked up
at her, a quizzical look on his face. "I’ve got some calls from
reporters," he said, and then his betel-stained smile broke out. "I
always make sure to send them tourist literature."
"I’m sure they enjoy reading
it."
Torbiong’s grin widened. "You get
lonely, now," he said, "you come visit the family. We’ll give you a
home-cooked meal."
She smiled. "Thanks."
They said their farewells and
Torbiong’s boat hissed away on its jets, the whistles building to an
eerie, spine-shivering chord. Michelle rose into the trees and
stashed her specimens and groceries. With a bowl of blueberries and
cream, Michelle crossed the rope walkway to her deck, and checked
the progress of her search spiders.
There were pointers to a swarm of
articles about the death of Terzian’s wife, and Michelle wished
she’d given her spiders clearer instructions about dates.
The spiders had come up with three
pictures. One was a not-very-well focused tourist video from July
10, showing a man standing in front of the Basilica di Santa Croce
in Florence. A statue of Dante, also not in focus, gloomed down at
him from beneath thick-bellied rain clouds. As the camera panned
across him, he stood with his back to the camera, but turned to the
right, one leg turned out as he scowled down at the ground–the
profile was a little smeared, but the big, broad-shouldered body
seemed right. The software reckoned that there was a 78 percent
chance that the man was Terzian.
Michelle got busy refining the image,
and after a few passes of the software, decided the chances of the
figure being Terzian were more on the order of 95 percent.
So maybe Terzian had gone on a Grand
Tour of European cultural sites. He didn’t look happy in the video,
but then the day was rainy and Terzian didn’t have an
umbrella.
And his wife had died, of
course.
Now that Michelle had a date and a
place she refined the instructions from her search spiders to seek
out images from Florence a week either way from July 3, and then
expand the search from there, first all Tuscany, then all
Italy.
If Terzian was doing tourist sites,
then she surely had him nailed.
The next two hits, from her earlier
research spiders, were duds. The software gave a less than 50
percent chance of Terzian’s being in Lisbon or Cape Sounion, and
refinements of the image reduced the chance to something near
zero.
Then the next video popped up, with a
time stamp right there in the image–Paris, June 26, 13:41:44 hours,
just a day before Terzian bought a bankroll of Euros and
vanished.
<Bingo!> Michelle’s
fingers formed.
The first thing Michelle saw was
Terzian walking out of the frame–no doubt this time that it was him.
He was looking over his shoulder at a small crowd of people. There
was a dark-haired woman huddled on his arm, her face turned away
from the camera. Michelle’s heart warmed at the thought of the
lonely widower Terzian having an affair in the City of
Love.
Then she followed Terzian’s gaze to
see what had so drawn his attention. A dead man stretched out on the
pavement, surrounded by hapless bystanders.
And then, as the scene slowly settled
into her astonished mind, the video sang at her in the piping voice
of Pan.
Terzian looked at his audience as
anger raged in his backbrain. A wooden chair creaked, and the sound
spurred Terzian to wonder how long the silence had gone on. Even the
Slovenian woman who had been drowsing realized that something had
changed, and blinked herself to alertness.
"I’m sorry," he said in French. "But
my wife just died, and I don’t feel like playing this game any
more."
His silent audience watched as he
gathered his papers, put them in his case, and left the lecture
room, his feet making sharp, murderous sounds on the wooden
floor.
Yet up to that point his paper had
been going all right. He’d been uncertain about commenting on
Baudrillard in Baudrillard’s own country, and in Baudrillard’s own
language, a cheery compare-and-contrast exercise between
Baudrillard’s "the self does not exist" and Rorty’s "I don’t care,"
the stereotypical French and American answers to modern life. There
had been seven in his audience, perched on creaking wooden chairs,
and none of them had gone to sleep, or walked out, or condemned him
for his audacity.
Yet, as he looked at his audience and
read on, Terzian had felt the anger growing, spawned by the
sensation of his own uselessness. Here he was, in the City of Light,
its every cobblestone a monument to European civilization, and he
was in a dreary lecture hall on the Left Bank, reading to his
audience of seven from a paper that was nothing more than a
footnote, and a footnote to a footnote at that. To come to the land
of cogito ergo sum and to answer, I don’t
care?
I came to Paris for this? he
thought. To read this drivel? I paid for the
privilege of doing this?
I do care, he thought as
his feet turned toward the Seine. Desiderio, ergo sum, if he
had his Latin right. I am in pain, and therefore I do
exist.
He ended in a Norman restaurant on the
Ile de la Cité, with lunch as his excuse and the thought of getting
hopelessly drunk not far from his thoughts. He had absolutely
nothing to do until August, after which he would return to the
States and collect his belongings from the servants’ quarters of the
house on Esplanade, and then he would go about looking for a
job.
He wasn’t certain whether he would be
more depressed by finding a job or by not finding
one.
You are alive, he told himself.
You are alive and in Paris with the whole summer ahead of you,
and you’re eating the cuisine of Normandy in the Place Dauphine. And
if that isn’t a command to be joyful, what is?
It was then that the Peruvian band
began to play. Terzian looked up from his plate in weary
surprise.
When Terzian had been a child his
parents–both university professors–had first taken him to Europe,
and he’d seen then that every European city had its own Peruvian or
Bolivian street band, Indians in black bowler hats and colorful
blankets crouched in some public place, gazing with impassive brown
eyes from over their guitars and reed flutes.
Now, a couple of decades later, the
musicians were still here, though they’d exchanged the blankets and
bowler hats for European styles, and their presentation had grown
more slick. Now they had amps, and cassettes and CDs for sale. Now
they had congregated in the triangular Place Dauphine, overshadowed
by the neo-classical mass of the Palais de Justice, and commenced a
Latin-flavored medley of old Abba songs.
Maybe, after Terzian finished his veal
in calvados sauce, he’d go up to the band and kick in their guitars.
The breeze flapped the canvas
overhead. Terzian looked at his empty plate. The food had been
excellent, but he could barely remember tasting it.
Anger still roiled beneath his
thoughts. And–for God’s sake–was that band now playing
Oasis? Those chords were beginning to sound suspiciously like
"Wonderwall." "Wonderwall" on Spanish guitars, reed flutes, and a
mandolin!
Terzian had nearly decided to call for
a bottle of cognac and stay here all afternoon, but not with that
noise in the park. He put some euros on the table, anchoring the
bills with a saucer against the fresh spring breeze that rattled the
green canvas canopy over his head. He was stepping through the
restaurant’s little wrought-iron gate to the sidewalk when the
scuffle caught his attention.
The man falling into the street, his
face pinched with pain. The hands of the three men on either side
who were, seemingly, unable to keep their friend
erect.
Idiots, Terzian thought, fury
blazing in him.
There was a sudden shrill of tires, of
an auto horn.
Papers streamed in the wind as they
spilled from a briefcase.
And over it all came the amped sound
of pan pipes from the Peruvian band.
Wonderwall.
Terzian watched in exasperated
surprise as the three men sprang after the papers. He took a step
toward the fallen man–someone had to take charge here. The
fallen man’s hair had spilled in a shock over his forehead and he’d
curled on his side, his face still screwed up in pain.
The pan pipes played on, one distinct
hollow shriek after another.
Terzian stopped with one foot still on
the sidewalk and looked around at faces that all registered the same
sense of shock. Was there a doctor here? he wondered. A
French doctor? All his French seemed to have just drained
from his head. Even such simple questions as Are you all
right? and How are you feeling? seemed beyond him now.
The first aid course he’d taken in his Kenpo school was ages
ago.
Unnaturally pale, the fallen man’s
face relaxed. The wind floated his shock of thinning dark hair over
his face. In the park, Terzian saw a man in a baseball cap panning a
video camera, and his anger suddenly blazed up again at the fatuous
uselessness of the tourist, the uselessness that mirrored his
own.
Suddenly there was a crowd around the
casualty, people coming out of stopped cars, off the sidewalk. Down
the street, Terzian saw the distinctive flat-topped kepis of a pair
of policemen bobbing toward him from the direction of the Palais de
Justice, and felt a surge of relief. Someone more capable than this
lot would deal with this now.
He began, hesitantly, to step away.
And then his arm was seized by a pair of hands and he looked in
surprise at the woman who had just huddled her face into his
shoulder, cinnamon-dark skin and eyes invisible beneath wraparound
shades.
"Please," she said in English a bit
too musical to be American. "Take me out of here."
The sound of the reed pipes followed
them as they made their escape.
***
He walked her past the statue of the
Vert Galant himself, good old lecherous Henri IV, and onto the Pont
Neuf. To the left, across the Seine, the Louvre glowed in mellow
colors beyond a screen of plane trees.
Traffic roared by, a stampede of steel
unleashed by a green light. Unfocused anger blazed in his mind. He
didn’t want this woman attached to him, and he suspected she was
running some kind of scam. The gym bag she wore on a strap over one
shoulder kept banging him on the ass. Surreptitiously, he slid his
hand into his right front trouser pocket to make sure his money was
still there.
Wonderwall, he thought.
Christ.
He supposed he should offer some kind
of civilized comment, just in case the woman was genuinely
distressed.
"I suppose he’ll be all right," he
said, half-barking the words in his annoyance and anger.
The woman’s face was still half-buried
in his shoulder. "He’s dead," she murmured into his jacket.
"Couldn’t you tell?"
For Terzian, death had never occurred
under the sky, but shut away, in hospice rooms with crisp sheets and
warm colors and the scent of disinfectant. In an explosion of tumors
and wasting limbs and endless pain masked only in part by
morphia.
He thought of the man’s pale face, the
sudden relaxation.
Yes, he thought, death came with a
sigh.
Reflex kept him talking. "The police
were coming," he said. "They’ll–they’ll call an ambulance or
something."
"I only hope they catch the bastards
who did it," she said.
Terzian’s heart gave a jolt as he
recalled the three men who let the victim fall, and then dashed
through the square for his papers. For some reason, all he could
remember about them were their black-laced boots, with thick
soles.
"Who were they?" he asked
blankly.
The woman’s shades slid down her nose,
and Terzian saw startling green eyes narrowed to murderous slits. "I
suppose they think of themselves as cops," she said.
Terzian parked his companion in a café
near Les Halles, within sight of the dome of the Bourse. She
insisted on sitting indoors, not on the sidewalk, and on facing the
front door so that she could scan whoever came in. She put her gym
bag, with its white Nike swoosh, on the floor between the table legs
and the wall, but Terzian noticed she kept its shoulder strap in her
lap, as if she might have to bolt at any moment.
Terzian kept his wedding ring within
her sight. He wanted her to see it; it might make things
simpler.
Her hands were trembling. Terzian
ordered coffee for them both. "No," she said suddenly. "I want ice
cream."
Terzian studied her as she turned to
the waiter and ordered in French. She was around his own age,
twenty-nine. There was no question that she was a mixture of races,
but which races? The flat nose could be African or Asian or
Polynesian, and Polynesia was again confirmed by the black, thick
brows. Her smooth brown complexion could be from anywhere but
Europe, but her pale green eyes were nothing but European. Her
broad, sensitive mouth suggested Nubia. The black ringlets yanked
into a knot behind her head could be African or East Indian, or, for
that matter, French. The result was too striking to be beautiful–and
also too striking, Terzian thought, to belong to a successful
criminal. Those looks could be too easily identified.
The waiter left. She turned her wide
eyes toward Terzian, and seemed faintly surprised that he was still
there.
"My name’s Jonathan," he
said.
"I’m," hesitating,
"Stephanie."
"Really?" Terzian let his skepticism
show.
"Yes." She nodded, reaching in a
pocket for cigarettes. "Why would I lie? It doesn’t matter if you
know my real name or not."
"Then you’d better give me the whole
thing."
She held her cigarette upward, at an
angle, and enunciated clearly. "Stephanie América Pais e
Silva."
"America?"
Striking a match. "It’s a perfectly
ordinary Portuguese name."
He looked at her. "But you’re not
Portuguese."
"I carry a Portuguese passport."
Terzian bit back the comment, I’m
sure you do.
Instead he said, "Did you know the man
who was killed?"
Stephanie nodded. The drags she took
off her cigarette did not ease the tremor in her hands.
"Did you know him well?"
"Not very." She dragged in smoke
again, then let the smoke out as she spoke.
"He was a colleague. A
biochemist."
Surprise silenced Terzian. Stephanie
tipped ash into the Cinzano ashtray, but her nervousness made her
miss, and the little tube of ash fell on the tablecloth.
"Shit," she said, and swept the ash to
the floor with a nervous movement of her fingers.
"Are you a biochemist, too?" Terzian
asked.
"I’m a nurse." She looked at him with
her pale eyes. "I work for Santa Croce–it’s a–"
"A relief agency." A Catholic one, he
remembered. The name meant Holy Cross.
She nodded.
"Shouldn’t you go to the police?" he
asked. And then his skepticism returned. "Oh, that’s right–it was
the police who did the killing."
"Not the French police." She
leaned across the table toward him. "This was a different sort of
police, the kind who think that killing someone and making an arrest
are the same thing. You look at the television news tonight. They’ll
report the death, but there won’t be any arrests. Or any suspects."
Her face darkened, and she leaned back in her chair to consider a
new thought. "Unless they somehow manage to blame it on
me."
Terzian remembered papers flying in
the spring wind, men in heavy boots sprinting after. The pinched,
pale face of the victim.
"Who, then?"
She gave him a bleak look through a
curl of cigarette smoke. "Have you ever heard of
Transnistria?"
Terzian hesitated, then decided "No"
was the most sensible answer.
"The murderers are Transnistrian." A
ragged smile drew itself across Stephanie’s face. "Their
intellectual property police. They killed Adrian over a
copyright."
At that point, the waiter brought
Terzian’s coffee, along with Stephanie’s order. Hers was colossal, a
huge glass goblet filled with pastel-colored ice creams and fruit
syrups in bright primary colors, topped by a mountain of cream and a
toy pinwheel on a candy-striped stick. Stephanie looked at the
creation in shock, her eyes wide.
"I love ice cream," she choked, and
then her eyes brimmed with tears and she began to cry.
Stephanie wept for a while, across the
table, and, between sobs, choked down heaping spoonfuls of ice
cream, eating in great gulps and swiping at her lips and
tear-stained cheeks with a paper napkin.
The waiter stood quietly in the
corner, but from his glare and the set of his jaw it was clear that
he blamed Terzian for making the lovely woman cry.
Terzian felt his body surge with the
impulse to aid her, but he didn’t know what to do. Move around the
table and put an arm around her? Take her hand? Call someone to take
her off his hands?
The latter, for preference.
He settled for handing her a clean
napkin when her own grew sodden.
His skepticism had not survived the
mention of the Transnistrian copyright police. This was far too
bizarre to be a con–a scam was based on basic human desire, greed,
or lust, not something as abstract as intellectual property. Unless
there was a gang who made a point of targeting academics from the
States, luring them with a tantalizing hook about a copyright worth
murdering for. . . .
Eventually, the storm subsided.
Stephanie pushed the half-consumed ice cream away, and reached for
another cigarette.
He tapped his wedding ring on the
table top, something he did when thinking. "Shouldn’t you contact
the local police?" he asked. "You know something about this . . .
death." For some reason he was reluctant to use the word
murder. It was as if using the word would make something
true, not the killing itself but his relationship to the killing . .
. to call it murder would grant it some kind of power over him.
She shook her head. "I’ve got to get
out of France before those guys find me. Out of Europe, if I can,
but that would be hard. My passport’s in my hotel room, and they’re
probably watching it."
"Because of this
copyright."
Her mouth twitched in a half-smile.
"That’s right."
"It’s not a literary copyright, I take
it."
She shook her head, the half-smile
still on her face.
"Your friend was a biologist." He felt
a hum in his nerves, a certainty that he already knew the answer to
the next question.
"Is it a weapon?" he asked.
She wasn’t surprised by the question.
"No," she said. "No, just the opposite." She took a drag on her
cigarette and sighed the smoke out. "It’s an antidote. An antidote
to human folly."
"Listen," Stephanie said. "Just
because the Soviet Union fell doesn’t mean that Sovietism
fell with it. Sovietism is still there–the only difference is that
its moral justification is gone, and what’s left is violence and
extortion disguised as law enforcement and taxation. The old empire
breaks up, and in the West you think it’s great, but more countries
just meant more palms to be greased–all throughout the former Soviet
empire you’ve got more ‘inspectors’ and ‘tax collectors,’ more
‘customs agents’ and ‘security directorates’ than there ever were
under the Russians. All these people do is prey off their own
populations, because no one else will do business with them unless
they’ve got oil or some other resource that people want."
"Trashcanistans," Terzian said. It was
a word he’d heard used of his own ancestral homeland, the former
Soviet Republic of Armenia, whose looted economy and paranoid,
murderous, despotic Russian puppet regime was supported only by
millions of dollars sent to the country by Americans of Armenian
descent, who thought that propping up the gang of thugs in power
somehow translated into freedom for the fatherland.
Stephanie nodded. "And the worst
Trashcanistan of all is Transnistria."
She and Terzian had left the café and
taken a taxi back to the Left Bank and Terzian’s hotel. He had
turned the television to a local station, but muted the sound until
the news came on. Until then the station showed a rerun of an
American cop show, stolid, businesslike detectives underplaying
their latest sordid confrontation with tragedy.
The hotel room hadn’t been built for
the queen-sized bed it now held, and there was an eighteen-inch
clearance around the bed and no room for chairs. Terzian, not
wanting Stephanie to think he wanted to get her in the sack, perched
uncertainly on a corner of the bed, while Stephanie disposed herself
more comfortably, sitting cross-legged in its center.
"Moldova was a Soviet republic put
together by Stalin," she said. "It was made up of Bessarabia, which
was a part of Romania that Stalin chewed off at the beginning of the
Second World War, plus a strip of industrial land on the far side of
the Dniester. When the Soviet Union went down, Moldova became
‘independent’–" Terzian could hear the quotes in her voice. "But
independence had nothing to do with the Moldovan people, it
was just Romanian-speaking Soviet elites going off on their own
account once their own superiors were no longer there to restrain
them. And Moldova soon split–first the Turkish Christians . . ."
"Wait a second," Terzian said. "There
are Christian Turks?"
The idea of Christian Turks was not a
part of his Armenian-American worldview.
Stephanie nodded. "Orthodox Christian
Turks, yes. They’re called Gagauz, and they now have their own
autonomous republic of Gagauzia within Moldova."
Stephanie reached into her pocket for
a cigarette and her lighter.
"Uh," Terzian said. "Would you mind
smoking out the window?"
Stephanie made a face. "Americans,"
she said, but she moved to the window and opened it, letting in a
blast of cool spring air. She perched on the windowsill, sheltered
her cigarette from the wind, and lit up.
"Where was I?" she asked.
"Turkish Christians."
"Right." Blowing smoke into the teeth
of the gale. "Gagauzia was only the start–after that, a Russian
general allied with a bunch of crooks and KGB types created a
rebellion in the bit of Moldova that was on the far side of the
Dniester–another collection of Soviet elites, representing no one
but themselves. Once the Russian-speaking rebels rose against their
Romanian-speaking oppressors, the Soviet Fourteenth Army stepped in
as ‘peacekeepers,’ complete with blue helmets, and created a
twenty-mile-wide state recognized by no other government. And that
meant more military, more border guards, more administrators, more
taxes to charge, and customs duties, and uniformed ex-Soviets whose
palms needed greasing. And over a hundred thousand refugees who
could be put in camps while the administration stole their supplies
and rations. . . .
"But–" She jabbed the cigarette like a
pointer. "Transnistria had a problem. No other nation recognized
their existence, and they were tiny and had no natural resources,
barring the underage girls they enslaved by the thousands to export
for prostitution. The rest of the population was leaving as fast as
they could, restrained only slightly by the fact that they carried
passports no other state recognized, and that meant there were fewer
people whose productivity the elite could steal to support their
predatory post-Soviet lifestyles. All they had was a lot of obsolete
Soviet heavy industry geared to produce stuff no one
wanted.
"But they still had the
infrastructure. They had power plants–running off Russian oil
they couldn’t afford to buy–and they had a transportation system. So
the outlaw regime set up to attract other outlaws who needed
industrial capacity–the idea was that they’d attract entrepreneurs
who were excused paying most of the local ‘taxes’ in exchange for
making one big payoff to the higher echelon."
"Weapons?" Terzian asked.
"Weapons, sure," Stephanie nodded.
"Mostly they’re producing cheap knockoffs of other people’s guns,
but the guns are up to the size of howitzers. They tried banking and
data havens, but the authorities couldn’t restrain themselves from
ripping those off–banks and data run on trust and control of
information, and when the regulators are greedy, short-sighted
crooks, you don’t get either one. So what they settled on was, well,
biotech. They’ve got companies creating cheap generic
pharmaceuticals that evade Western patents. . . ." Her look
darkened. "Not that I’ve got a problem with that, not when
I’ve seen thousands dying of diseases they couldn’t afford to
cure. And they’ve also got other companies who are ripping
off Western genetic research to develop their own products. And as
long as they make their payoffs to the elite, these companies remain
completely unregulated. Nobody, not even the government,
knows what they’re doing in those factories, and the government
gives them security free of charge."
Terzian imagined gene-splicing going
on in a rusting Soviet factory, rows and rows of mutant plants with
untested, unregulated genetics, all set to be released on an
unsuspecting world. Transgenic elements drifting down the Dniester
to the Black Sea, growing quietly in its saline environment. . . .
"The news," Stephanie reminded, and
pointed at the television.
Terzian reached for the control and
hit the mute button, just as the throbbing, anxious music that
announced the news began to fade.
The murder on the Ile de la Cité was
the second item on the broadcast. The victim was described as a
"foreign national" who had been fatally stabbed, and no arrests had
been made. The motive for the killing was unknown.
Terzian changed the channel in time to
catch the same item on another channel. The story was
unchanged.
"I told you," Stephanie said. "No
suspects. No motive."
"You could tell them."
She made a negative motion with her
cigarette. "I couldn’t tell them who did it, or how to find them.
All I could do is put myself under suspicion."
Terzian turned off the TV. "So what
happened exactly? Your friend stole from these people?"
Stephanie swiped her forehead with the
back of her wrist. "He stole something that was of no value to them.
It’s only valuable to poor people, who can’t afford to pay. And–"
She turned to the window and spun her cigarette into the street
below. "I’ll take it out of here as soon as I can," she said. "I’ve
got to try to contact some people." She closed the window, shutting
out the spring breeze. "I wish I had my passport. That would change
everything."
I saw a murder this afternoon,
Terzian thought. He closed his eyes and saw the man falling, the
white face so completely absorbed in the reality of its own
agony.
He was so fucking sick of death.
He opened his eyes. "I can get your
passport back," he said.
Anger kept him moving until he saw the
killers, across the street from Stephanie’s hotel, sitting at an
outdoor table in a café-bar. Terzian recognized them immediately–he
didn’t need to look at the heavy shoes, or the broad faces with
their disciplined military mustaches–one glance at the crowd at the
café showed the only two in the place who weren’t French. That was
probably how Stephanie knew to speak to him in English, he just
didn’t dress or carry himself like a Frenchman, for all that he’d
worn an anonymous coat and tie. He tore his gaze away before they
saw him gaping at them.
Anger turned very suddenly to fear,
and as he continued his stride toward the hotel he told himself that
they wouldn’t recognize him from the Norman restaurant, that he’d
changed into blue jeans and sneakers and a windbreaker, and carried
a soft-sided suitcase. Still he felt a gunsight on the back of his
neck, and he was so nervous that he nearly ran head-first into the
glass lobby door.
Terzian paid for a room with his
credit card, took the key from the Vietnamese clerk, and walked up
the narrow stair to what the French called the second floor, but
what he would have called the third. No one lurked in the stairwell,
and he wondered where the third assassin had gone. Looking for
Stephanie somewhere else, probably, an airport or train
station.
In his room Terzian put his suitcase
on the bed–it held only a few token items, plus his shaving kit–and
then he took Stephanie’s key from his pocket and held it in his
hand. The key was simple, attached to a weighted doorknob-shaped
ceramic plug.
The jolt of fear and surprise that had
so staggered him on first sighting the two men began to shift again
into rage.
They were drinking beer, there
had been half-empty mugs on the table in front of them, and a pair
of empties as well.
Drinking on duty. Doing surveillance
while drunk.
Bastards. Trashcanians. They could
kill someone simply through drunkenness.
Perhaps they already had.
He was angry when he left his room and
took the stairs to the floor below. No foes kept watch in the hall.
He opened Stephanie’s room and then closed the door behind
him.
He didn’t turn on the light. The sun
was surprisingly high in the sky for the hour: he had noticed that
the sun seemed to set later here than it did at home. Maybe France
was very far to the west for its time zone.
Stephanie didn’t have a suitcase, just
a kind of nylon duffel, a larger version of the athletic bag she
already carried. He took it from the little closet, and enough of
Terzian’s suspicion remained so that he checked the luggage tag to
make certain the name was Steph. Pais, and not another.
He opened the duffel, then got her
passport and travel documents from the bedside table and tossed them
in. He added a jacket and a sweater from the closet, then packed her
toothbrush and shaver into her plastic travel bag and put it in the
duffel.
The plan was for him to return to his
room on the upper floor and stay the night and avoid raising
suspicion by leaving a hotel he’d just checked into. In the morning,
carrying two bags, he’d check out and rejoin Stephanie in his own
hotel, where she had spent the night in his room, and where the air
would by now almost certainly reek with her cigarette
smoke.
Terzian opened a dresser drawer and
scooped out a double handful of Stephanie’s T-shirts, underwear, and
stockings, and then he remembered that the last time he’d done this
was when he cleaned Claire’s belongings out of the Esplanade house.
Shit. Fuck. He gazed down at the
clothing between his hands and let the fury rage like a tempest in
his skull.
And then, in the angry silence, he
heard a creak in the corridor, and then a stumbling thud.
Thick rubber military soles, he
thought. With drunk baboons in them.
Instinct shrieked at him not to be
trapped in this room, this dead-end where he could be trapped and
killed. He dropped Stephanie’s clothes back into the drawer and
stepped to the bed and picked up the duffel in one hand. Another
step took him to the door, which he opened with one hand while using
the other to fling the duffel into the surprised face of the drunken
murderer on the other side.
Terzian hadn’t been at his Kenpo
school in six years, not since he’d left Kansas City, but certain
reflexes don’t go away after they’ve been drilled into a person
thousands of times–certainly not the front kick that hooked upward
under the intruder’s breastbone and drove him breathless into the
corridor wall opposite.
A primitive element of his mind
rejoiced in the fact that he was bigger than these guys. He could
really knock them around.
The second Trashcanian tried to draw a
pistol, but Terzian passed outside the pistol hand and drove the
point of an elbow into the man’s face. Terzian then grabbed the
automatic with both hands, took a further step down the corridor,
and spun around, which swung the man around Terzian’s hip a full two
hundred and seventy degrees and drove him head-first into the
corridor wall. When he’d finished falling and opened his eyes he was
staring into the barrel of his own gun.
Red rage gave a fangs-bared roar of
animal triumph inside Terzian’s skull. Perhaps his tongue echoed it.
It was all he could do to stop himself from pulling the trigger.
Get Death working for him for a
change. Why not?
Except that the first man hadn’t
realized that his side had just lost. He had drawn a knife–a
glittering chromed single-edged thing that may have already killed
once today–and now he took a dangerous step toward
Terzian.
Terzian pointed the pistol straight at
the knife man and pulled the trigger. Nothing happened.
The intruder stared at the gun as if
he’d just realized at just this moment it wasn’t his partner who
held it.
Terzian pulled the trigger again, and
when nothing happened his rage melted into terror and he ran. Behind
him he heard the drunken knife man trip over his partner and crash
to the floor.
Terzian was at the bottom of the stair
before he heard the thick-soled military boots clatter on the risers
above him. He dashed through the small lobby–he sensed the
Vietnamese night clerk, who was facing away, begin to turn toward
him just as he pushed open the glass door and ran into the
street.
He kept running. At some point he
discovered the gun still in his fist, and he put it in the pocket of
his windbreaker.
Some moments later, he realized that
he wasn’t being pursued. And he remembered that Stephanie’s passport
was still in her duffel, which he’d thrown at the knife man and
hadn’t retrieved.
For a moment, rage ran through him,
and he thought about taking out the gun and fixing whatever was
wrong with it and going back to Stephanie’s room and getting the
documents one way or another.
But then the anger faded enough for
him to see what a foolish course that would be, and he returned to
his own hotel.
***
Terzian had given Stephanie his key,
so he knocked on his own door before realizing she was very unlikely
to open to a random knock. "It’s Jonathan," he said. "It didn’t work
out."
She snatched the door open from the
inside. Her face was taut with anxiety. She held pages in her hand,
the text of the paper he’d delivered that morning.
"Sorry," he said. "They were there,
outside the hotel. I got into your room, but–"
She took his arm and almost yanked him
into the room, then shut the door behind him. "Did they follow you?"
she demanded.
"No. They didn’t chase me. Maybe they
thought I’d figure out how to work the gun." He took the pistol out
of his pocket and showed it to her. "I can’t believe how stupid I
was–"
"Where did you get that? Where did you
get that?" Her voice was nearly a scream, and she shrank away
from him, her eyes wide. Her fist crumpled papers over her heart. To
his astonishment, he realized that she was afraid of him, that she
thought he was connected, somehow, with the
killers.
He threw the pistol onto the bed and
raised his hands in a gesture of surrender. "No really!" he shouted
over her cries. "It’s not mine! I took it from one of
them!"
Stephanie took a deep gasp of air. Her
eyes were still wild. "Who the hell are you, then?" she said. "James
Bond?"
He gave a disgusted laugh. "James Bond
would have known how to shoot."
"I was reading your–your article." She
held out the pages toward him. "I was thinking, my God, I was
thinking, what have I got this poor guy into. Some professor I was
sending to his death." She passed a hand over her forehead. "They
probably bugged my room. They would have known right away that
someone was in it."
"They were drunk," Terzian said.
"Maybe they’ve been drinking all day. Those assholes really pissed
me off."
He sat on the bed and picked up the
pistol. It was small and blue steel and surprisingly heavy. In the
years since he’d last shot a gun, he had forgotten that
purposefulness, the way a firearm was designed for a single, clear
function. He found the safety where it had been all along, near his
right thumb, and flicked it off and then on again.
"There," he said. "That’s what I
should have done."
Waves of anger shivered through his
limbs at the touch of the adrenaline still pouring into his system.
A bitter impulse to laugh again rose in him, and he tried to
suppress it.
"I guess I was lucky after all," he
said. "It wouldn’t have done you any good to have to explain a pair
of corpses outside your room." He looked up at Stephanie, who was
pacing back and forth in the narrow lane between the bed and the
wall, and looking as if she badly needed a cigarette. "I’m sorry
about your passport. Where were you going to go, anyway?"
"It doesn’t so much matter if I
go," she said. She gave Terzian a quick, nervous glance. "You can
fly it out, right?"
"It?" He stared at her. "What do you
mean, it?"
"The biotech." Stephanie stopped her
pacing and stared at him with those startling green eyes. "Adrian
gave it to me. Just before they killed him." Terzian’s gaze followed
hers to the black bag with the Nike swoosh, the bag that sat at the
foot of Terzian’s bed.
Terzian’s impulse to laugh faded.
Unregulated, illegal, stolen biotech, he thought. Right in his own
hotel room. Along with a stolen gun and a woman who was probably out
of her mind.
Fuck.
The dead man was identified by news
files as Adrian Cristea, a citizen of Ukraine and a researcher. He
had been stabbed once in the right kidney and bled to death without
identifying his assailants. Witnesses reported two or maybe three
men leaving the scene immediately after Cristea’s death. Michelle
set more search spiders to work.
For a moment, she considered calling
Davout and letting him know that Terzian had probably been a witness
to a murder, but decided to wait until she had some more evidence
one way or another.
For the next few hours, she did her
real work, analyzing the samples she’d taken from Zigzag Lake’s
sulphide-tainted deeps. It wasn’t very physical, and Michelle
figured it was only worth a few hundred calories.
A wind floated through the treetops,
bringing the scent of night flowers and swaying Michelle’s perch
beneath her as she peered into her biochemical reader, and she
remembered the gentle pressure of Darton against her back, rocking
with her as he looked over her shoulder at her results. Suddenly she
could remember, with a near-perfect clarity, the taste of his skin
on her tongue.
She rose from her woven seat and paced
along the bough. Damn it, she thought, I watched you
die.
Michelle returned to her deck and
discovered that her spiders had located the police file on Cristea’s
death. A translation program handled the antique French without
trouble, even producing modern equivalents of forensic jargon.
Cristea was of Romanian descent, had been born in the old USSR, and
had acquired Ukranian citizenship on the breakup of the Soviet
Union. The French files themselves had translations of Cristea’s
Ukranian travel documents, which included receipts showing that he
had paid personal insurance, environmental insurance, and departure
taxes from Transnistria, a place of which she’d never heard, as well
as similar documents from Moldova, which at least was a province, or
country, that sounded familiar.
What kind of places were these, where
you had to buy insurance at the border? And what was
environmental insurance anyway?
There were copies of emails between
French and Ukranian authorities, in which the Ukranians politely
declined any knowledge of their citizen beyond the fact that he
was a citizen. They had no addresses for him.
Cristea apparently lived in
Transnistria, but the authorities there echoed the Ukranians in
saying they knew nothing of him.
Cristea’s tickets and vouchers showed
that he had apparently taken a train to Bucharest, and there he’d
got on an airline that took him to Prague, and thence to Paris. He
had been in the city less than a day before he was killed. Found in
Cristea’s hotel room was a curious document certifying that Cristea
was carrying medical supplies, specifically a vaccine against
hepatitis A. Michelle wondered why he would be carrying a hepatitis
vaccine from Transnistria to France. France presumably had all the
hepatitis vaccine it needed.
No vaccine had turned up. Apparently
Cristea had got into the European Community without having his bags
searched, as there was no evidence that the documents relating to
the alleged vaccine had ever been examined.
The missing "vaccine"–at some point in
the police file the skeptical quotation marks had appeared–had
convinced the Paris police that Cristea was a murdered drug courier,
and at that point they’d lost interest in the case. It was rarely
possible to solve a professional killing in the drug
underworld.
Michelle’s brief investigation seemed
to have come to a dead end. That Terzian might have witnessed a
murder would rate maybe half a sentence in Professor Davout’s
biography.
Then she checked what her spiders had
brought her in regard to Terzian, and found something that cheered
her.
There he was inside the Basilica di
Santa Croce, a tourist still photograph taken before the tomb of
Machiavelli. He was only slightly turned away from the camera and
the face was unmistakable. Though there was no date on the
photograph, only the year, though he wore the same clothes he wore
in the video taken outside the church, and the photo caught him in
the act of speaking to a companion. She was a tall woman with deep
brown skin, but she was turned away from the camera, and a
wide-brimmed sun hat made her features indistinguishable.
Humming happily, Michelle deployed her
software to determine whether this was the same woman who had been
on Terzian’s arm on the Place Dauphine. Without facial features or
other critical measurements to compare, the software was uncertain,
but the proportion of limb and thorax was right, and the software
gave an estimate of 41 percent, which Michelle took to be
encouraging.
Another still image of Terzian
appeared in an undated photograph taken at a festival in southern
France. He wore dark glasses, and he’d grown heavily tanned; he
carried a glass of wine in either hand, but the person to whom he
was bringing the second glass was out of the frame. Michelle set her
software to locating the identity of the church seen in the
background, a task the two distinctive belltowers would make easy.
She was lucky and got a hit right away: the church was the Eglise
St-Michel in Salon-de-Provence, which meant Terzian had attended the
Fête des Aires de la Dine in June. Michelle set more search spiders
to seeking out photo and video from the festivals. She had no doubt
that she’d find Terzian there, and perhaps again his
companion.
Michelle retired happily to her
hammock. The search was going well. Terzian had met a woman in Paris
and traveled with her for weeks. The evidence wasn’t quite there
yet, but Michelle would drag it out of history
somehow.
Romance. The lonely mermaid was in
favor of romance, the kind where you ran away to faraway places to
be more intently one with the person you adored.
It was what she herself had done,
before everything had gone so wrong, and Michelle had had to take
steps to re-establish the moral balance of her universe.
Terzian paid for a room for Stephanie
for the night, not so much because he was gallant as because he
needed to be alone to think. "There’s a breakfast buffet downstairs
in the morning," he said. "They have hard-boiled eggs and croissants
and Nutella. It’s a very un-French thing to do. I recommend
it."
He wondered if he would ever see her
again. She might just vanish, particularly if she read his thoughts,
because another reason for wanting privacy was so that he could call
the police and bring an end to this insane situation.
He never quite assembled the
motivation to make the call. Perhaps Rorty’s I don’t care had
rubbed off on him. And he never got a chance to taste the buffet,
either. Stephanie banged on his door very early, and he dragged on
his jeans and opened the door. She entered, furiously smoking from
her new cigarette pack, the athletic bag over her
shoulder.
"How did you pay for the room at my
hotel?" she asked.
"Credit card," he said, and in the
stunned, accusing silence that followed he saw his James Bond
fantasies sink slowly beneath the slack, oily surface of a dismal
lake.
Because credit cards leave trails. The
Transnistrians would have checked the hotel registry, and the credit
card impression taken by the hotel, and now they knew who he
was. And it wouldn’t be long before they’d trace him at this
hotel.
"Shit, I should have warned you to pay
cash." Stephanie stalked to the window and peered out cautiously.
"They could be out there right now."
Terzian felt a sudden compulsion to
have the gun in his hand. He took it from the bedside table and
stood there, feeling stupid and cold and shirtless.
"How much money do you have?" Terzian
asked.
"Couple of hundred."
"I have less."
"You should max out your credit card
and just carry Euros. Use your card now before they cancel
it."
"Cancel it? How could they cancel
it?"
She gave him a tight-lipped, impatient
look. "Jonathan. They may be assholes, but they’re still a
government."
They took a cab to the American
Express near the Opéra and Terzian got ten thousand Euros in cash
from some people who were extremely skeptical about the validity of
his documents, but who had, in the end, to admit that all was
technically correct. Then Stephanie got a cell phone under the name
A. Silva, with a bunch of prepaid hours on it, and within a couple
of hours they were on the TGV, speeding south to Nice at nearly two
hundred seventy kilometers per hour, all with a strange absence of
sound and vibration that made the French countryside speeding past
seem like a strangely unconvincing special effect.
Terzian had put them in first class
and he and Stephanie were alone in a group of four seats. Stephanie
was twitchy because he hadn’t bought seats in a smoking section. He
sat uncertain, unhappy about all the cash he was carrying and not
knowing what to do with it–he’d made two big rolls and zipped them
into the pockets of his windbreaker. He carried the pistol in the
front pocket of his jeans and its weight and discomfort was a
perpetual reminder of this situation that he’d been dragged into,
pursued by killers from Trashcanistan and escorting illegal
biotechnology.
He kept mentally rehearsing drawing
the pistol and shooting it. Over and over, remembering to thumb off
the safety this time. Just in case Trashcanian commandos stormed the
train.
"Hurled into life," he muttered. "An
object lesson right out of Heidegger."
"Beg pardon?"
He looked at her. "Heidegger said
we’re hurled into life. Just like I’ve been hurled into–" He flapped
his hands uselessly. "Into whatever this is. The situation exists
before you even got here, but here you are anyway, and the whole
business is something you inherit and have to live
with." He felt his lips draw back in a snarl. "He also said
that a fundamental feature of existence is anxiety in the face of
death, which would also seem to apply to our situation. And his
answer to all of this was to make existence, dasein if you
want to get technical, an authentic project." He looked at her. "So
what’s your authentic project, then? And how authentic is
it?"
Her brow furrowed. "What?"
Terzian couldn’t stop, not that he
wanted to. It was just Stephanie’s hard luck that he couldn’t shoot
anybody right now, or break something up with his fists, and was
compelled to lecture instead. "Or," he went on, "to put this in a
more accessible context, just pretend we’re in a Hitchcock film,
okay? This is the scene where Grace Kelly tells Cary Grant exactly
who she is and what the maguffin is."
Stephanie’s face was frozen into a
hostile mask. Whether she understood what he was saying or not, the
hostility was clear.
"I don’t get it," she
said.
"What’s in the fucking bag?" he
demanded.
She glared at him for a long moment,
then spoke, her own anger plain in her voice. "It’s the answer to
world hunger," she said. "Is that authentic enough for
you?"
Stephanie’s father was from Angola and
her mother from East Timor, both former Portuguese colonies swamped
in the decades since independence by war and massacre. Both parents
had, with great foresight and intelligence, retained Portuguese
passports, and had met in Rome, where they worked for UNESCO, and
where Stephanie had grown up with a blend of their genetics and
their service ethic.
Stephanie herself had received a
degree in administration from the University of Virginia, which
accounted for the American lights in her English, then she’d gotten
another degree in nursing and went to work for the Catholic relief
agency Santa Croce, which sent her to its every war-wrecked,
locust-blighted, warlord-ridden, sandstorm-blasted camp in Africa.
And a few that weren’t in Africa.
"Trashcanistan," Terzian said.
"Moldova," Stephanie said. "For three
months, on what was supposed to be my vacation." She shuddered. "I
don’t mind telling you that it was a frightening thing. I was used
to that kind of thing in Africa, but to see it all happening in the
developed world . . . warlords, ethnic hatreds, populations being
moved at the point of a gun, whole forested districts being turned
to deserts because people suddenly need firewood. . . ." Her emerald
eyes flashed. "It’s all politics, okay? Just like in Africa. Famine
and camps are all politics now, and have been since before I was
born. A whole population starves, and it’s because someone,
somewhere, sees a profit in it. It’s difficult to just kill an
ethnic group you don’t like, war is expensive and there are
questions at the UN and you may end up at the Hague being tried for
war crimes. But if you just wait for a bad harvest and then arrange
for the whole population to starve, it’s different–suddenly
your enemies are giving you all their money in return for food, you
get aid from the UN instead of grief, and you can award yourself a
piece of the relief action and collect bribes from all the relief
agencies, and your enemies are rounded up into camps and you can get
your armed forces into the country without resistance, make sure
your enemies disappear, control everything while some deliveries
disappear into government warehouses where the food can be sold to
the starving or just sold abroad for a profit. . . ." She shrugged.
"That’s the way of the world, okay? But no more!" She grabbed
a fistful of the Nike bag and brandished it at him.
What her time in Moldova had done was
to leave Stephanie contacts in the area, some in relief agencies,
some in industry and government. So that when news of a useful
project came up in Transnistria, she was among the first to
know.
"So what is it?" Terzian asked. "Some
kind of genetically modified food crop?"
"No." She smiled thinly. "What we have
here is a genetically modified consumer."
Those Transnistrian companies had
mostly been interested in duplicating pharmaceuticals and transgenic
food crops created by other companies, producing them on the cheap
and underselling the patent-owners. There were bits and pieces of
everything in those labs, DNA human and animal and vegetable. A lot
of it had other people’s trademarks and patents on it, even the
human codes, which US law permitted companies to patent provided
they came up with something useful to do with it. And what these
semi-outlaw companies were doing was making two things they figured
people couldn’t do without: drugs and food.
And not just people, since animals
need drugs and food, too. Starving, tubercular sheep or pigs aren’t
worth much at market, so there’s as much money in keeping livestock
alive as in doing the same for people. So at some point one of the
administrators–after a few too many shots of vodka flavored with
bison grass–said, "Why should we worry about feeding the animals at
all? Why not have them grow their own food, like plants?"
So then began the Green Swine Project,
an attempt to make pigs fat and happy by just herding them out into
the sun.
"Green swine," Terzian repeated,
wondering. "People are getting killed over green swine."
"Well, no." Stephanie waved the idea
away with a twitchy swipe of her hand. "The idea never quite got
beyond the vaporware stage, because at that point another question
was asked–why swine? Adrian said, Why stop at having animals do
photosynthesis–why not people?"
"No!" Terzian cried, appalled. "You’re
going to turn people green?"
Stephanie glared at him. "Something
wrong with fat, happy green people?" Her hands banged out a furious
rhythm on the armrests of her seat. "I’d have skin to match my eyes.
Wouldn’t that be attractive?"
"I’d have to see it first," Terzian
said, the shock still rolling through his bones.
"Adrian was pretty smart," Stephanie
said. "The Transnistrians killed themselves a real genius." She
shook her head. "He had it all worked out. He wanted to limit the
effect to the skin–no green muscle tissue or skeletons–so he started
with a virus that has a tropism for the epidermis–papiloma, that’s
warts, okay?"
So now we’ve got green warts,
Terzian thought, but he kept his mouth shut.
"So if you’re Adrian, what you do is
gut out the virus and re-encode to create chlorophyll. Once a
person’s infected, exposure to sunlight will cause the virus to
replicate and chlorophyll to reproduce in the skin."
Terzian gave Stephanie a skeptical
look. "That’s not going to be very efficient," he said. "Plants get
sugars and oxygen from chlorophyll, okay, but they don’t need much
food, they stand in one place and don’t walk around. Add chlorophyll
to a person’s skin, how many calories do you get each day? Tens?
Dozens?"
Stephanie’s lips parted in a fierce
little smile. "You don’t stop with just the chlorophyll. You have to
get really efficient electron transport. In a plant that’s handled
in the chloroplasts, but the human body already has mitochondria to
do the same job. You don’t have to create these huge support
mechanisms for the chlorophyll, you just make use of what’s already
there. So if you’re Adrian, what you do is add trafficking tags to
the reaction center proteins so that they’ll target the
mitochondria, which already are loaded with proteins to
handle electron transport. The result is that the mitochondria
handle transport from the chlorophyll, which is the sort of job they
do anyway, and once the virus starts replicating, you can get maybe
a thousand calories or more just from standing in the sun. It won’t
provide full nutrition, but it can keep starvation at bay, and it’s
not as if starving people have much to do besides stand in the sun
anyway."
"It’s not going to do much good for
Icelanders," Terzian said.
She turned severe. "Icelanders aren’t
starving. It so happens that most of the people in the world who are
starving happen to be in hot places."
Terzian flapped his hands. "Fine. I
must be a racist. Sue me."
Stephanie’s grin broadened, and she
leaned toward Terzian. "I didn’t tell you about Adrian’s most
interesting bit of cleverness. When people start getting normal
nutrition, there’ll be a competition within the mitochondria between
normal metabolism and solar-induced electron transport. So the green
virus is just a redundant backup system in case normal nutrition
isn’t available."
A triumphant smile crossed Stephanie’s
face. "Starvation will no longer be a weapon," she said. "Green skin
can keep people active and on their feet long enough to get help. It
will keep them healthy enough to fend off the epidemics associated
with malnutrition. The point is–" She made fists and shook them at
the sky. "The bad guys don’t get to use starvation as a weapon
anymore! Famine ends! One of the Four Horsemen of the
Apocalypse dies, right here, right now, as a result of
what I’ve got in this bag!" She picked up the bag and threw
it into Terzian’s lap, and he jerked on the seat in defensive
reflex, knees rising to meet elbows. Her lips skinned back in a
snarl, and her tone was mocking.
"I think even that Nazi fuck Heidegger
would think my project is pretty damn authentic.
Wouldn’t you agree, Herr Doktor Terzian?"
Got you, Michelle thought. Here
was a still photo of Terzian at the Fête des Aires de la Dine, with
the dark-skinned woman. She had the same wide-brimmed straw hat
she’d worn in the Florence church, and had the same black bag over
her shoulder, but now Michelle had a clear view of a three-quarter
profile, and one hand, with its critical alignments, was clearly
visible, holding an ice cream cone.
Night insects whirled around the
computer display. Michelle batted them away and got busy mapping.
The photo was digital and Michelle could enlarge it.
To her surprise, she discovered that
the woman had green eyes. Black women with green irises–or irises of
orange or chartreuse or chrome steel–were not unusual in her own
time, but she knew that in Terzian’s time they were rare. That would
make the search much easier.
"Michelle . . ." The voice came
just as Michelle sent her new search spiders into the ether. A
shiver ran up her spine.
"Michelle . . ." The voice came
again.
It was Darton.
Michelle’s heart gave a sickening
lurch. She closed her console and put it back in the mesh bag, then
crossed the rope bridge between the ironwood tree and the banyan.
Her knees were weak, and the swaying bridge seemed to take a couple
of unexpected pitches. She stepped out onto the banyan’s sturdy
overhanging limb and gazed out at the water.
"Michelle . . ." To the southwest,
in the channel between the mermaid’s island and another, she could
see a pale light bobbing, the light of a small boat.
"Michelle, where are
you?"
The voice died away in the silence and
surf. Michelle remembered the spike in her hand, the long, agonized
trek up the slope above Jellyfish Lake. Darton pale, panting for
breath, dying in her arms.
The lake was one of the wonders of the
world, but the steep path over the ridge that fenced the lake from
the ocean was challenging even for those who were not dying. When
Michelle and Darton–at that time, apes–came up from their boat that
afternoon, they didn’t climb the steep path, but swung
hand-over-hand through the trees overhead, through the hardwood and
guava trees, and avoided the poison trees with their bleeding,
allergenic black sap. Even though their trip was less exhausting
than if they’d gone over the land route, the two were ready for the
cool water by the time they arrived at the lake.
Tens of thousands of years in the
past, the water level was higher, and when it receded, the lake was
cut off from the Pacific, and with it the Mastigias sp.
jellyfish, which soon exhausted the supply of small fish that were
its food. As the human race did later, the jellies gave up hunting
and gathering in exchange for agriculture, and permitted themselves
to be farmed by colonies of algae that provided the sugars they
needed for life. At night, they’d descend to the bottom of the lake,
where they fertilized their algae crops in the anoxic, sulfurous
waters; at dawn, the jellies rose to the surface, and during the
day, they crossed the lake, following the course of the sun, and
allowed the sun’s rays to supply the energy necessary for making
their daily ration of food.
When Darton and Michelle arrived,
there were ten million jellyfish in the lake, from fingertip-sized
to jellies the size of a dinner plate, all in one warm throbbing
golden-brown mass in the center of the water. The two swam easily on
the surface with their long siamang arms, laughing and calling to
one another as the jellyfish in their millions caressed them with
the most featherlike of touches. The lake was the temperature of
their own blood, and it was like a soupy bath, the jellyfish so
thick that Michelle felt she could almost walk on the surface. The
warm touch wasn’t erotic, exactly, but it was sensual in the way
that an erotic touch was sensual, a light brush over the skin by the
pad of a teasing finger.
Trapped in a lake for thousands of
years without suitable prey, the jellyfish had lost most of their
ability to sting. Only a small percentage of people were sensitive
enough to the toxin to receive a rash or feel a modest
burning.
A very few people, though, were more
sensitive than that.
Darton and Michelle left at dusk, and,
by that time Darton was already gasping for breath. He said he’d
overexerted himself, that all he needed was to get back to their
base for a snack, but as he swung through the trees on the way up
the ridge, he lost his hold on a Palauan apple tree and crashed
through a thicket of limbs to sprawl, amid a hail of fruit, on the
sharp algae-covered limestone of the ridge.
Michelle swung down from the trees,
her heart pounding. Darton was nearly colorless and struggling to
breathe. They had no way of calling for help unless Michelle took
their boat to Koror or to their base camp on another island. She
tried to help Darton walk, taking one of his long arms over her
shoulder, supporting him up the steep island trail. He collapsed,
finally, at the foot of a poison tree, and Michelle bent over him to
shield him from the drops of venomous sap until he died.
Her back aflame with the poison sap,
she’d whispered her parting words into Darton’s ear. She never knew
if he heard.
The coroner said it was a
million-to-one chance that Darton had been so deathly allergic, and
tried to comfort her with the thought that there was nothing she
could have done. Torbiong, who had made the arrangements for Darton
and Michelle to come in the first place, had been consoling, had
offered to let Michelle stay with his family. Michelle had surprised
him by asking permission to move her base camp to another island,
and to continue her work alone.
She also had herself transformed into
a mermaid, and subsequently, a romantic local legend.
And now Darton was back, bobbing in a
boat in the nearby channel and calling her name, shouting into a
bullhorn.
"Michelle, I love you." The words
floated clear into the night air. Michelle’s mouth was dry. Her
fingers formed the sign <go away>.
There was a silence, and then Michelle
heard the engine start on Darton’s boat. He motored past her
position, within five hundred meters or so, and continued on to the
northern point of the island.
<go away> . . .
"Michelle . . ." Again his voice
floated out onto the breeze. It was clear that he didn’t know where
she was. She was going to have to be careful about showing
lights.
<go away> . . .
Michelle waited while Darton called
out a half-dozen more times, and then he started his engine and
moved on. She wondered if he would search all three hundred islands
in the Rock Island group.
No, she knew he was more organized
than that.
She’d have to decide what to do when
he finally found her.
While a thousand questions chased each
other’s tails through his mind, Terzian opened the Nike bag and
withdrew the small hard plastic case inside, something like a box
for fishing tackle. He popped the locks on the case and opened the
lid, and he saw glass vials resting in slots cut into dark grey
foam. In them was a liquid with a faint golden cast.
"The papiloma," Stephanie
said.
Terzian dropped the lid on the case as
he cast a guilty look over his shoulder, not wanting anyone to see
him with this stuff. If he were arrested under suspicion of being a
drug dealer, the wads of cash and the pistol certainly wouldn’t
help.
"What do you do with the stuff once
you get to where you’re going?"
"Brush it on the skin. With exposure
to solar energy, it replicates as needed."
"Has it been tested?"
"On people? No. Works fine on rhesus
monkeys, though."
He tapped his wedding ring on the arm
of his seat. "Can it be . . . caught? I mean, it’s a virus, can it
go from one person to another?"
"Through skin-to-skin
contact."
"I’d say that’s a yes. Can mothers
pass it on to their children?"
"Adrian didn’t think it would cross
the placental barrier, but he didn’t get a chance to test it. If
mothers want to infect their children, they’ll probably have to do
it deliberately." She shrugged. "Whatever the case, my guess is that
mothers won’t mind green babies, as long as they’re green
healthy babies." She looked down at the little vials in their
secure coffins of foam. "We can infect tens of thousands of people
with this amount," she said. "And we can make more very easily."
If mothers want to infect their
children . . . Terzian closed the lid of the plastic case and
snapped the locks. "You’re out of your mind," he said.
Stephanie cocked her head and peered
at him, looking as if she’d anticipated his objections and was
humoring him. "How so?"
"Where do I start?" Terzian zipped up
the bag, then tossed it in Stephanie’s lap, pleased to see her
defensive reflexes leap in response. "You’re planning on unleashing
an untested transgenic virus on Africa–on Africa of all
places, a continent that doesn’t exactly have a happy history with
pandemics. And it’s a virus that’s cooked up by a bunch of illegal
pharmacists in a non-country with a murderous secret police, facts
that don’t give me much confidence that this is going to be anything
but a disaster."
Stephanie tapped two fingers on her
chin as if she were wishing there were a cigarette between them. "I
can put your mind to rest on the last issue. The animal study
worked. Adrian had a family of bright green rhesus in his lab, till
the project was canceled and the rhesus were, ah,
liquidated."
"So if the project’s so terrific,
why’d the company pull the plug?"
"Money." Her lips twisted in anger.
"Starving people can’t afford to pay for the treatments, so they’d
have to practically give the stuff away. Plus they’d get reams of
endless bad publicity, which is exactly what outlaw biotech
companies in outlaw countries don’t want. There are millions of
people who go ballistic at the very thought of a genetically
engineered vegetable–you can imagine how people who can’t
abide the idea of a transgenic bell pepper would freak at the
thought of infecting people with an engineered virus. The company
decided it wasn’t worth the risk. They closed the project
down."
Stephanie looked at the bag in her
hands. "But Adrian had been in the camps himself, you see. A
displaced person, a refugee from the civil war in Moldova. And he
couldn’t stand the thought that there was a way to end hunger
sitting in his refrigerator in the lab, and that nothing was being
done with it. And so . . ." Her hands outlined the case inside the
Nike bag. "He called me. He took some vacation time and booked
himself into the Henri IV, on the Place Dauphine. And I guess he
must have been careless, because . . ."
Tears starred in her eyes, and she
fell silent. Terzian, strong in the knowledge that he’d shared quite
enough of her troubles by now, stared out the window, at the green
landscape that was beginning to take on the brilliant colors of
Provence. The Hautes-Alpes floated blue and white-capped in the
distant East, and nearby were orchards of almonds and olives with
shimmering leaves, and hillsides covered with rows of orderly vines.
The Rhone ran silver under the westering sun.
"I’m not going to be your bagman," he
said. "I’m not going to contaminate the world with your freaky
biotech."
"Then they’ll catch you and you’ll
die," Stephanie said. "And it will be for nothing."
"My experience of death," said
Terzian, "is that it’s always for nothing."
She snorted then, angry. "My
experience of death," she mocked, "is that it’s too often for
profit. I want to make mass murder an unprofitable venture. I
want to crash the market in starvation by giving away life."
She gave another snort, amused this time. "It’s the ultimate
anti-capitalist gesture."
Terzian didn’t rise to that. Gestures,
he thought, were just that. Gestures didn’t change the fundamentals.
If some jefe couldn’t starve his people to death, he’d just use
bullets, or deadly genetic technology he bought from outlaw
Transnistrian corporations.
The landscape, all blazing green,
raced past at over two hundred kilometers per hour. An attendant
came by and sold them each a cup of coffee and a
sandwich.
"You should use my phone to call your
wife," Stephanie said as she peeled the cellophane from her
sandwich. "Let her know that your travel plans have
changed."
Apparently she’d noticed Terzian’s
wedding ring.
"My wife is dead," Terzian
said.
She looked at him in surprise. "I’m
sorry," she said.
"Brain cancer," he said.
Though it was more complicated than
that. Claire had first complained of back pain, and there had been
an operation, and the tumor removed from her spine. There had been a
couple of weeks of mad joy and relief, and then it had been revealed
that the cancer had spread to the brain and that it was inoperable.
Chemotherapy had failed. She died six weeks after her first visit to
the doctor.
"Do you have any other family?"
Stephanie said.
"My parents are dead, too." Auto
accident, aneurysm. He didn’t mention Claire’s uncle Geoff and his
partner Luis, who had died of HIV within eight months of each other
and left Claire the Victorian house on Esplanade in New Orleans. The
house that, a few weeks ago, he had sold for six hundred and fifty
thousand dollars, and the furnishings for a further ninety-five
thousand, and Uncle Geoff’s collection of equestrian art for a
further forty-one thousand.
He was disinclined to mention that he
had quite a lot of money, enough to float around Europe for years.
Telling Stephanie that might only
encourage her.
There was a long silence. Terzian
broke it. "I’ve read spy novels," he said. "And I know that we
shouldn’t go to the place we’ve bought tickets for. We shouldn’t go
anywhere near Nice."
She considered this, then said, "We’ll
get off at Avignon."
They stayed in Provence for nearly two
weeks, staying always in unrated hotels, those that didn’t even rise
to a single star from the Ministry of Tourism, or in gîtes
ruraux, farmhouses with rooms for rent. Stephanie spent much of
her energy trying to call colleagues in Africa on her cell phone and
achieved only sporadic success, a frustration that left her in a
near-permanent fury. It was never clear just who she was trying to
call, or how she thought they were going to get the papiloma off her
hands. Terzian wondered how many people were involved in this
conspiracy of hers.
They attended some local fêtes, though
it was always a struggle to convince Stephanie it was safe to appear
in a crowd. She made a point of disguising herself in big hats and
shades and ended up looking like a cartoon spy. Terzian tramped
rural lanes or fields or village streets, lost some pounds despite
the splendid fresh local cuisine, and gained a suntan. He made a
stab at writing several papers on his laptop, and spent time
researching them in internet cafés.
He kept thinking he would have enjoyed
this trip, if only Claire had been with him.
"What is it you do, exactly?"
Stephanie asked him once, as he wrote. "I know you teach at
university, but . . ."
"I don’t teach anymore," Terzian said.
"I didn’t get my post-doc renewed. The department and I didn’t
exactly get along."
"Why not?"
Terzian turned away from the stale,
stalled ideas on his display. "I’m too interdisciplinary. There’s a
place on the academic spectrum where history and politics and
philosophy come together–it’s called ‘political theory’ usually–but
I throw in economics and a layman’s understanding of science as
well, and it confuses everybody but me. That’s why my MA is in
American Studies–nobody in my philosophy or political science
department had the nerve to deal with me, and nobody knows what
American Studies actually are, so I was able to hide out
there. And my doctorate is in philosophy, but only because I found
one rogue professor emeritus who was willing to chair my
committee.
"The problem is that if you’re hired
by a philosophy department, you’re supposed to teach Plato or Hume
or whoever, and they don’t want you confusing everybody by adding
Maynard Keynes and Leo Szilard. And if you teach history, you’re
supposed to confine yourself to acceptable stories about the past
and not toss in ideas about perceptual mechanics and Kant’s ideas of
the noumenon, and of course you court crucifixion from the laity if
you mention Foucault or Nietzsche."
Amusement touched Stephanie’s lips.
"So where do you find a job?"
"France?" he ventured, and they
laughed. "In France, ‘thinker’ is a job description. It’s not
necessary to have a degree, it’s just something you do." He
shrugged. "And if that fails, there’s always Burger
King."
She seemed amused. "Sounds like
burgers are in your future."
"Oh, it’s not as bad as all that. If I
can generate enough interesting, sexy, highly original papers, I
might attract attention and a job, in that order."
"And have you done that?"
Terzian looked at his display and
sighed. "So far, no."
Stephanie narrowed her eyes and she
considered him. "You’re not a conventional person. You don’t think
inside the box, as they say."
"As they say," Terzian
repeated.
"Then you should have no objections to
radical solutions to world hunger. Particularly ones that don’t cost
a penny to white liberals throughout the world."
"Hah," Terzian said. "Who says I’m a
liberal? I’m an economist."
So Stephanie told him terrible things
about Africa. Another famine was brewing across the southern part of
the continent. Mozambique was plagued with flood and drought,
a startling combination. The Horn of Africa was worse. According to
her friends, Santa Croce had a food shipment stuck in Mogadishu and
before letting it pass, the local warlord wanted to renegotiate his
bribe. In the meantime, people were starving, dying of malnutrition,
infection, and dysentery in camps in the dry highlands of Bale and
Sidamo. Their own government in Addis Ababa was worse than the
Somali warlord, at this stage permitting no aid at all, bribes or no
bribes.
And as for the southern Sudan, it
didn’t bear thinking about.
"What’s your solution to this?"
she demanded of Terzian. "Or do you have one?"
"Test this stuff, this papiloma," he
said, "show me that it works, and I’m with you. But there are too
many plagues in Africa as it is."
"Confine the papiloma to labs while
thousands die? Hand it to governments who can suppress it because of
pressure from religious loons and hysterical NGOs? You call
that an answer?" And Stephanie went back to working her phone
while Terzian walked off in anger for another stalk down country
lanes.
Terzian walked toward an old ruined
castle that shambled down the slope of a nearby hill. And if
Stephanie’s plant-people proved viable? he wondered. All bets were
off. A world in which humans could become plants was a world in
which none of the old rules applied.
Stephanie had said she wanted to crash
the market in starvation. But, Terzian thought, that also meant
crashing the market in food. If people with no money had all
the food they needed, that meant food itself had no value in the
marketplace. Food would be so cheap that there would be no
profit in growing or selling it.
And this was all just one
application of the technology. Terzian tried to keep up
with science: he knew about nanoassemblers. Green people was just
the first magic bullet in a long volley of scientific musketry that
would change every fundamental rule by which humanity had operated
since they’d first stood upright. What happened when every
basic commodity–food, clothing, shelter, maybe even health–was so
cheap that it was free? What then had value?
Even money wouldn’t have value
then. Money only had value if it could be exchanged for something of
equivalent worth.
He paused in his walk and looked ahead
at the ruined castle, the castle that had once provided justice and
security and government for the district, and he wondered if he was
looking at the future of all government. Providing an orderly
framework in which commodities could be exchanged was the basic
function of the state, that and providing a secure currency. If
people didn’t need government to furnish that kind of security and
if the currency was worthless, the whole future of government itself
was in question. Taxes weren’t worth the expense of collecting if
the money wasn’t any good, anyway, and without taxes, government
couldn’t be paid for.
Terzian paused at the foot of the
ruined castle and wondered if he saw the future of the civilized
world. Either the castle would be rebuilt by tyrants, or it would
fall.
***
Michelle heard Darton’s bullhorn again
the next evening, and she wondered why he was keeping fruit-bat
hours. Was it because his calls would travel farther at
night?
If he were sleeping in the morning,
she thought, that would make it easier. She’d finished analyzing
some of her samples, but a principle of science was not to do these
things alone: she’d have to travel to Koror to mail her samples to
other people, and now she knew to do it in the morning, when Darton
would be asleep.
The problem for Michelle was that she
was a legend. When the lonely mermaid emerged from the sea and
walked to the post office in the little foam booties she wore when
walking on pavement, she was noticed. People pointed; children
followed her on their boards, people in cars waved. She wondered if
she could trust them not to contact Darton as soon as they saw
her.
She hoped that Darton wasn’t starting
to get the islanders on his side.
Michelle and Darton had met on a field
trip in Borneo, their obligatory government service after
graduation. The other field workers were older, paying their taxes
or working on their second or third or fourth or fifth careers, and
Michelle knew on sight that Darton was no older than she, that he,
too, was a child among all these elders. They were pulled to each
other as if drawn by some violent natural force, cataloguing snails
and terrapins by day and spending their nights wrapped in each other
in their own shell, their turtleback tent. The ancients with whom
they shared their days treated them with amused condescension, but
then, that was how they treated everything. Darton and Michelle
didn’t care. In their youth they stood against all
creation.
When the trip came to an end, they
decided to continue their work together, just a hop across the
equator in Belau. Paying their taxes ahead of time. They celebrated
by getting new bodies, an exciting experience for Michelle, who had
been built by strict parents who wouldn’t allow her to have a new
body until adulthood, no matter how many of her friends had been
transforming from an early age into one newly fashionable shape or
another.
Michelle and Darton thought that
anthropoid bodies would be suitable for the work, and so they went
to the clinic in Delhi and settled themselves on nanobeds and let
the little machines turn their bodies, their minds, their memories,
their desires and their knowledge and their souls, into long strings
of numbers. All of which were fed into their new bodies when they
were ready, and reserved as backups to be downloaded as
necessary.
Being a siamang was a glorious
discovery. They soared through the treetops of their little island,
swinging overhand from limb to limb in a frenzy of glory. Michelle
took a particular delight in her body hair–she didn’t have as much
as a real ape, but there was enough on her chest and back to be
interesting. They built nests of foliage in trees and lay tangled
together, analyzing data or making love or shaving their hair into
interesting tribal patterns. Love was far from placid–it was a
flame, a fury. An obsession that, against all odds, had been
fulfilled, only to build the flame higher.
The fury still burned in Michelle. But
now, after Darton’s death, it had a different quality, a quality
that had nothing to do with life or youth.
Michelle, spooning up blueberries and
cream, riffled through the names and faces her spiders had spat out.
There were, now she added them up, a preposterous number of pictures
of green-eyed women with dark skin whose pictures were somewhere in
the net. Nearly all of them had striking good looks. Many of them
were unidentified in the old scans, or identified only by a first
name. The highest probability the software offered was 43
percent.
That 43 percent belonged to a
Brazilian named Laura Flor, who research swiftly showed was home in
Aracaju during the critical period, among other things having a
baby. A video of the delivery was available, but Michelle didn’t
watch it. The way women delivered babies back then was
disgusting.
The next most likely female was
another Brazilian seen in some tourist photographs taken in Rio. Not
even a name given. A further search based on this woman’s
physiognomy turned up nothing, not until Michelle broadened the
search to a different gender, and discovered that the Brazilian was
a transvestite. That didn’t seem to be Terzian’s scene, so she left
it alone.
The third was identified only as
Stephanie, and posted on a site created by a woman who had done
relief work in Africa. Stephanie was shown with a group of other
relief workers, posing in front of a tin-roofed, cinderblock
building identified as a hospital.
The quality of the photograph wasn’t
very good, but Michelle mapped the physiognomy anyway, and sent it
forth along with the name "Stephanie" to see what might
happen.
There was a hit right away, a credit
card charge to a Stephanie América Pais e Silva. She had stayed in a
hotel in Paris for the three nights before Terzian
disappeared.
Michelle’s blood surged as the data
flashed on her screens. She sent out more spiders and the good news
began rolling in.
Stephanie Pais was a dual citizen of
Portugal and Angola, and had been educated partly in the States–a
quick check showed that her time at university didn’t overlap
Terzian’s. From her graduation, she had worked for a relief agency
called Santa Croce.
Then a news item turned up, a
sensational one. Stephanie Pais had been spectacularly murdered in
Venice on the night of July 19, six days before Terzian had
delivered the first version of his Cornucopia Theory.
Two murders. . . .
One in Paris, one in Venice. And one
of them of the woman who seemed to be Terzian’s lover.
Michelle’s body shivered to a sudden
gasping spasm, and she realized that in her suspense she’d been
holding her breath. Her head swam. When it cleared, she worked out
what time it was in Maryland, where Dr. Davout lived, and then told
her deck to page him at once.
Davout was unavailable at first, and
by the time he returned her call, she had more information about
Stephanie Pais. She blurted the story out to him while her fingers
jabbed at the keyboard of her deck, sending him copies of her
corroborating data.
Davout’s startled eyes leaped from the
data to Michelle and back. "How much of this . . ." he began, then
gave up. "How did she die?" he managed.
"The news article says stabbed. I’m
looking for the police report."
"Is Terzian mentioned?"
<No> she signed. "The police
report will have more details."
"Any idea what this is about? There’s
no history of Terzian ever being connected with
violence."
"By tomorrow," Michelle said, "I
should be able to tell you. But I thought I should send this to you
because you might be able to tie this in with other elements of
Terzian’s life that I don’t know anything about."
Davout’s fingers formed a mudra that
Michelle didn’t recognize–an old one, probably. He shook his head.
"I have no idea what’s happening here. The only thing I have to
suggest is that this is some kind of wild coincidence."
"I don’t believe in that kind of
coincidence," Michelle said.
Davout smiled. "A good attitude for a
researcher," he said. "But experience–well," he waved a hand.
But he loved her, Michelle
insisted inwardly. She knew that in her heart. She was the woman he
loved after Claire died, and then she was killed and Terzian went on
to create the intellectual framework on which the world was now
built. He had spent his modest fortune building pilot programs in
Africa that demonstrated his vision was a practical one. The whole
modern world was a monument to Stephanie.
Everyone was young then, Michelle
thought. Even the seventy-year-olds were young compared to the
people now. The world must have been ablaze with love and
passion. But Davout didn’t understand that because he was old and
had forgotten all about love.
"Michelle . . ." Darton’s voice
came wafting over the waters.
Bastard. Michelle wasn’t about to let
him spoil this.
Her fingers formed <gotta go>.
"I’ll send you everything once it comes in," she said. "I think
we’ve got something amazing here."
She picked up her deck and swung it
around so that she could be sure that the light from the display
couldn’t be seen from the ocean. Her bare back against the rough
bark of the ironwood, she began flashing through the data as it
arrived.
She couldn’t find the police report.
Michelle went in search of it and discovered that all police records
from that period in Venetian history had been wiped out in the
Lightspeed War, leaving her only with what had been reported in the
media.
"Where are you? I love you!"
Darton’s voice came from farther away. He’d narrowed his search,
that was clear, but he still wasn’t sure exactly where Michelle had
built her nest.
Smiling, Michelle closed her deck and
slipped it into its pouch. Her spiders would work for her tirelessly
till dawn while she dreamed on in her hammock and let Darton’s
distant calls lull her to sleep.
They shifted their lodgings every few
days. Terzian always arranged for separate bedrooms. Once, as they
sat in the evening shade of a farm terrace and watched the setting
sun shimmer on the silver leaves of the olives, Terzian found
himself looking at her as she sat in an old cane chair, at the
profile cutting sharp against the old limestone of the Vaucluse. The
blustering wind brought gusts of lavender from the neighboring farm,
a scent that made Terzian want to inhale until his lungs creaked
against his ribs.
From a quirk of Stephanie’s lips,
Terzian was suddenly aware that she knew he was looking at her. He
glanced away.
"You haven’t tried to sleep with me,"
she said.
"No," he agreed.
"But you look," she said. "And
it’s clear you’re not a eunuch."
"We fight all the time," Terzian
pointed out. "Sometimes we can’t stand to be in the same
room."
Stephanie smiled. "That wouldn’t stop
most of the men I’ve known. Or the women, either."
Terzian looked out over the olives,
saw them shimmer in the breeze. "I’m still in love with my wife," he
said.
There was a moment of silence. "That’s
well," she said.
And I’m angry at her, too, Terzian
thought. Angry at Claire for deserting him. And he was furious at
the universe for killing her and for leaving him alive, and he was
angry at God even though he didn’t believe in God. The Trashcanians
had been good for him, because he could let his rage and his hatred
settle there, on people who deserved it.
Those poor drunken bastards, he
thought. Whatever they’d expected in that hotel corridor, it hadn’t
been a berserk grieving American who would just as soon have ripped
out their throats with his bare hands.
The question was, could he do that
again? It had all occurred without his thinking about it, old
reflexes taking over, but he couldn’t count on that happening a
second time. He’d been trying to remember the Kenpo he’d once
learned, particularly all the tricks against weapons. He found
himself miming combats on his long country hikes, and he wondered if
he’d retained any of his ability to take a punch.
He kept the gun with him, so the
Trashcanians wouldn’t get it if they searched his room when he was
away. When he was alone, walking through the almond orchards or on a
hillside fragrant with wild thyme, he practiced drawing it, snicking
off the safety, and putting pressure on the trigger . . . the first
time the trigger pull would be hard, but the first shot would cock
the pistol automatically and after that the trigger pull would be
light.
He wondered if he should buy more
ammunition. But he didn’t know how to buy ammunition in France and
didn’t know if a foreigner could get into trouble that
way.
"We’re both angry," Stephanie said. He
looked at her again, her hand raised to her head to keep the gusts
from blowing her long ringlets in her face. "We’re angry at death.
But love must make it more complicated for you."
Her green eyes searched him. "It’s not
death you’re in love with, is it? Because–"
Terzian blew up. She had no right to
suggest that he was in a secret alliance with death just because he
didn’t want to turn a bunch of Africans green. It was their worst
argument, and this one ended with both of them stalking away through
the fields and orchards while the scent of lavender pursued them on
the wind.
When Terzian returned to his room, he
checked his caches of money, half-hoping that Stephanie had stolen
his Euros and run. She hadn’t.
He thought of going into her room
while she was away, stealing the papiloma, and taking a train north,
handing it over to the Pasteur Institute or someplace. But he
didn’t.
In the morning, during breakfast,
Stephanie’s cell phone rang, and she answered. He watched while her
face turned from curiosity to apprehension to utter terror.
Adrenaline sang in his blood as he watched, and he leaned forward,
feeling the familiar rage rise in him, just where he wanted it. In
haste, she turned off the phone, then looked at him. "That was one
of them. He says he knows where we are, and wants to make a
deal."
"If they know where we are," Terzian
found himself saying coolly, "why aren’t they here?"
"We’ve got to go," she
insisted.
So they went. Clean out of France and
into the Tuscan hills, with Stephanie’s cell phone left behind in a
trash can at the train station and a new phone purchased in Siena.
The Tuscan countryside was not unlike Provence, with vine-covered
hillsides, orchards a-shimmer with the silver-green of olive trees,
and walled medieval towns perched on crags; but the slim, tall
cypress standing like sentries gave the hills a different profile,
and there were different types of wine grapes, and many of the
vineyards rented rooms where people could stay and sample the local
hospitality. Terzian didn’t speak the language, and because Spanish
was his first foreign language, consistently pronounced words like
"villa" and "panzanella" as if they were Spanish. But Stephanie had
grown up in Italy and spoke the language not only like a native, but
like a native Roman.
Florence was only a few hours away,
and Terzian couldn’t resist visiting one of the great living
monuments to civilization. His parents had taken him to Europe
several times as a child, but somehow never made it here.
Terzian and Stephanie spent a day
wandering the center of town, on occasion taking shelter from one of
the pelting rainstorms that shattered the day. At one point, with
thunder booming overhead, they found themselves in the Basilica di
Santa Croce.
"Holy Cross," Terzian said,
translating. "That’s your outfit."
"We have nothing to do with this
church," Stephanie said. "We don’t even have a collection box
here."
"A pity," Terzian said as he looked at
the soaked swarms of tourists packed in the aisles. "You’d clean
up."
Thunder accompanied the camera strobes
that flashed against the huge tomb of Galileo like a vast lighting
storm. "Nice of them to forget about that Inquisition thing and bury
him in a church," Terzian said.
"I expect they just wanted to keep an
eye on him."
It was the power of capital, Terzian
knew, that had built this church, that had paid for the stained
glass and the Giotto frescoes and the tombs and cenotaphs to the
great names of Florence: Dante, Michelangelo, Bruni, Alberti,
Marconi, Fermi, Rossini, and of course Machiavelli. This structure,
with its vaults and chapels and sarcophagi and chanting Franciscans,
had been raised by successful bankers, people to whom money was a
real, tangible thing, and who had paid for the centuries of labor to
build the basilica with caskets of solid, weighty coined silver.
"So what do you think he would make of
this?" Terzian asked, nodding at the resting place of Machiavelli,
now buried in the city from which he’d been exiled in his
lifetime.
Stephanie scowled at the unusually
plain sarcophagus with its Latin inscription. "No praise can be high
enough," she translated, then turned to him as tourist cameras
flashed. "Sounds overrated."
"He was a republican, you know,"
Terzian said. "You don’t get that from just The Prince. He
wanted Florence to be a republic, defended by citizen soldiers. But
when it fell into the hands of a despot, he needed work, and he
wrote the manual for despotism. But he looked at despotism a little
too clearly, and he didn’t get the job." Terzian turned to
Stephanie. "He was the founder of modern political theory, and
that’s what I do. And he based his ideas on the belief that all
human beings, at all times, have the same passions." He turned his
eyes deliberately to Stephanie’s shoulder bag. "That may be about to
end, right? You’re going to turn people into plants. That should
change the passions if anything would."
"Not plants," Stephanie hissed,
and glanced left and right at the crowds. "And not here." She
began to move down the aisle, in the direction of Michelangelo’s
ornate tomb, with its draped figures who appeared not in mourning,
but as if they were trying to puzzle out a difficult engineering
problem.
"What happens in your scheme," Terzian
said, following, "is that the market in food crashes. But that’s not
the real problem. The real problem is, what happens to the
market in labor?"
Tourist cameras flashed. Stephanie
turned her head away from the array of Kodaks. She passed out of the
basilica and to the portico. The cloudburst had come to an end, but
rainwater still drizzled off the structure. They stepped out of the
droplets and down the stairs into the piazza.
The piazza was walled on all sides by
old palaces, most of which now held restaurants or shops on the
ground floor. To the left, one long palazzo was covered with canvas
and scaffolding. The sound of pneumatic hammers banged out over the
piazza. Terzian waved a hand in the direction of the clatter.
"Just imagine that food is nearly
free," he said. "Suppose you and your children can get most of your
food from standing in the sunshine. My next question is, Why in
hell would you take a filthy job like standing on a scaffolding and
sandblasting some old building?"
He stuck his hands in his pockets and
began walking at Stephanie’s side along the piazza. "Down at the
bottom of the labor market, there are a lot of people whose labor
goes almost entirely for the necessities. Millions of them cross
borders illegally in order to send enough money back home to support
their children."
"You think I don’t know
that?"
"The only reason that there’s a market
in illegal immigrants is that there are jobs that well-off people
won’t do. Dig ditches. Lay roads. Clean sewers. Restore old
buildings. Build new buildings. The well-off might serve in
the military or police, because there’s a certain status involved
and an attractive uniform, but we won’t guard prisons, no matter how
pretty the uniform is. That’s strictly a job for the laboring
classes, and if the laboring classes are too well-off to labor, who
guards the prisons?"
She rounded on him, her lips set in an
angry line. "So I’m supposed to be afraid of people having more
choice in where they work?"
"No," Terzian said, "you should be
afraid of people having no choice at all. What happens when
markets collapse is intervention–and that’s state
intervention, if the market’s critical enough, and you can bet the
labor market’s critical. And because the state depends on
ditch-diggers and prison guards and janitors and road-builders for
its very being, then if these classes of people are no longer
available, and the very survival of civil society depends on their
existence, in the end, the state will just take them.
"You think our friends in Transnistria
will have any qualms about rounding up people up at gunpoint and
forcing them to do labor? The powerful are going to want their
palaces kept nice and shiny. The liberal democracies will try
volunteerism or lotteries or whatever, but you can bet that we’re
going to want our sewers to work, and somebody to carry our
grandparents’ bedpans, and the trucks to the supermarkets to run on
time. And what I’m afraid of is that when things get
desperate, we’re not going to be any nicer about getting our way
than those Sovietists of yours. We’re going to make sure that the
lower orders do their jobs, even if we have to kill half of them to
convince the other half that we mean business. And the technical
term for that is slavery. And if someone of African descent
isn’t sensitive to that potential problem, then I am very
surprised!"
The fury in Stephanie’s eyes was
visible even through her shades, and he could see the pulse pounding
in her throat. Then she said, "I’ll save the people, that’s
what I’m good at. You save the rest of the world, if you
can." She began to turn away, then swung back to him. "And by the
way," she added, "fuck you!" turned, and marched away.
"Slavery or anarchy, Stephanie!"
Terzian called, taking a step after. "That’s the choice you’re
forcing on people!"
He really felt he had the rhetorical
momentum now, and he wanted to enlarge the point by saying that he
knew some people thought anarchy was a good thing, but no anarchist
he’d ever met had ever even seen a real anarchy, or been in
one, whereas Stephanie had–drop your anarchist out of a helicopter
into the eastern Congo, say, with all his theories and with whatever
he could carry on his back, and see how well he prospered. . . .
But Terzian never got to say any of
these things, because Stephanie was gone, receding into the
vanishing point of a busy street, the shoulder bag swinging back and
forth across her butt like a pendulum powered by the force of her
convictions.
Terzian thought that perhaps he’d
never see her again, that he’d finally provoked her into abandoning
him and continuing on her quest alone, but when he stepped off the
bus in Montespèrtoli that night, he saw her across the street,
shouting into her cell phone.
A day later, as with frozen civility
they drank their morning coffee, she said that she was going to Rome
the next day. "They might be looking for me there," she said,
"because my parents live there. But I won’t go near the family, I’ll
meet Odile at the airport and give her the
papiloma."
Odile? Terzian thought. "I should
go along," he said.
"What are you going to do?" she said,
"carry that gun into an airport?"
"I don’t have to take the gun. I’ll
leave it in the hotel room in Rome."
She considered. "Very
well."
Again, that night, Terzian found the
tumbled castle in Provence haunting his thoughts, that ruined relic
of a bygone order, and once more considered stealing the papiloma
and running. And again, he didn’t.
They didn’t get any farther than
Florence, because Stephanie’s cell phone rang as they waited in the
train station. Odile was in Venice. "Venezia?" Stephanie
shrieked in anger. She clenched her fists. There had been a cache of
weapons found at the Fiumicino airport in Rome, and all planes had
been diverted, Odile’s to Marco Polo outside Venice. Frenzied
booking agents had somehow found rooms for her despite the height of
the tourist season.
Fiumicino hadn’t been re-opened, and
Odile didn’t know how she was going to get to Rome. "Don’t try!"
Stephanie shouted. "I’ll come to you."
This meant changing their tickets to
Rome for tickets to Venice. Despite Stephanie’s excellent Italian,
the ticket seller clearly wished the crazy tourists would make up
their mind which monuments of civilization they really wanted to
see.
Strange–Terzian had actually
planned to go to Venice in five days or so. He was scheduled
to deliver a paper at the Conference of Classical and Modern
Thought.
Maybe, if this whole thing was over by
then, he’d read the paper after all. It wasn’t a prospect he
coveted: he would just be developing another footnote to a
footnote.
The hills of Tuscany soon began to
pour across the landscape like a green flood. The train slowed at
one point–there was work going on on the tracks, men with bronze
arms and hard hats–and Terzian wondered how, in the Plant People
Future, in the land of Cockaigne, the tracks would ever get fixed,
particularly in this heat. He supposed there were people who were
meant by nature to fix tracks, who would repair tracks as an
avocation or out of boredom regardless of whether they got
paid for their time or not, but he suspected that there wouldn’t be
many of them.
You could build machines, he supposed,
robots or something. But they had their own problems, they’d cause
pollution and absorb resources and, on top of everything, they’d
break down and have to be repaired. And who would do
that?
If you can’t employ the carrot,
Terzian thought, if you can’t reward people for doing necessary
labor, then you have to use the stick. You march people out
of the cities at gunpoint, like Pol Pot, because there’s work that
needs to be done.
He tapped his wedding ring on the arm
of his chair and wondered what jobs would still have value.
Education, he supposed; he’d made a good choice there. Some sorts of
administration were necessary. There were people who were natural
artists or bureaucrats or salesmen and who would do that job whether
they were paid or not.
A woman came by with a cart and sold
Terzian some coffee and a nutty snack product that he wasn’t quite
able to identify. And then he thought, labor.
"Labor," he said. In a world in which
all basic commodities were provided, the thing that had most value
was actual labor. Not the stuff that labor bought, but the work
itself.
"Okay," he said, "it’s labor that’s
rare and valuable, because people don’t have to do it
anymore. The currency has to be based on some kind of labor
exchange–you purchase x hours with y dollars. Labor is
the thing you use to pay taxes."
Stephanie gave Terzian a suspicious
look. "What’s the difference between that and slavery?"
"Have you been reading Nozick?"
Terzian scolded. "The difference is the same as the difference
between paying taxes and being a slave. All the time
you don’t spend paying your taxes is your own." He barked a laugh.
"I’m resurrecting Labor Value Theory!" he said. "Adam Smith and Karl
Marx are dancing a jig on their tombstones! In Plant People Land,
the value is the labor itself ! The calories!" He
laughed again, and almost spilled coffee down his chest.
"You budget the whole thing in
calories! The government promises to pay you a dollar’s worth of
calories in exchange for their currency! In order to keep the roads
and the sewer lines going, a citizen owes the government a certain
number of calories per year–he can either pay in person or hire
someone else to do the job. And jobs can be budgeted in
calories-per-hour, so that if you do hard physical labor, you owe
fewer hours than someone with a desk job–that should keep the young,
fit, impatient people doing the nasty jobs, so that they have more
free time for their other pursuits." He chortled. "Oh, the
intellectuals are going to just hate this! They’re used to valuing
their brain power over manual labor–I’m going to reverse their whole
scale of values!"
Stephanie made a pffing sound. "The
people I care about have no money to pay taxes at all."
"They have bodies. They can still be
enslaved." Terzian got out his laptop. "Let me put my ideas
together."
Terzian’s frenetic two-fingered typing
went on for the rest of the journey, all the way across the causeway
that led into Venice. Stephanie gazed out the window at the lagoon
soaring by, the soaring water birds, and the dirt and stink of
industry. She kept the Nike bag in her lap until the train pulled
into the Stazione Ferrovia della Stato Santa Lucia at the end of its
long journey.
Odile’s hotel was in Cannaregio,
which, according to the map purchased in the station gift shop, was
the district of the city nearest the station and away from most of
the tourist sites. A brisk wind almost tore the map from their
fingers as they left the station, and their vaporetto bucked a steep
chop on the greygreen Grand Canal as it took them to the Ca’ d’ Oro,
the fanciful white High Gothic palazzo that loomed like a frantic
wedding cake above a swarm of bobbing gondolas and motorboats.
Stephanie puffed cigarettes, at first
with ferocity, then with satisfaction. Once they got away from the
Grand Canal and into Cannaregio itself, they quickly became lost.
The twisted medieval streets were broken on occasion by still,
silent canals, but the canals didn’t seem to lead anywhere in
particular. Cooking smells demonstrated that it was dinnertime, and
there were few people about, and no tourists. Terzian’s stomach
rumbled. Sometimes the streets deteriorated into mere passages.
Stephanie and Terzian were in such a passage, holding their map open
against the wind and shouting directions at each other, when someone
slugged Terzian from behind.
He went down on one knee with his head
ringing and the taste of blood in his mouth, and then two people
rather unexpectedly picked him up again, only to slam him against
the passage wall. Through some miracle, he managed not to hit his
head on the brickwork and knock himself out. He could smell garlic
on the breath of one of the attackers. Air went out of him as he
felt an elbow to his ribs.
It was the scream from Stephanie that
concentrated his attention. There was violent motion in front of
him, and he saw the Nike swoosh, and remembered that he was dealing
with killers, and that he had a gun.
In an instant, Terzian had his rage
back. He felt his lungs fill with the fury that spread through his
body like a river of scalding blood. He planted his feet and twisted
abruptly to his left, letting the strength come up his legs from the
earth itself, and the man attached to his right arm gave a grunt of
surprise and swung counterclockwise. Terzian twisted the other way,
which budged the other man only a little, but which freed his right
arm to claw into his right pants pocket.
And from this point on it was just the
movement that he had rehearsed. Draw, thumb the safety, pull the
trigger hard. He shot the man on his right and hit him in the groin.
For a brief second, Terzian saw his pinched face, the face that
reflected such pain that it folded in on itself, and he remembered
Adrian falling in the Place Dauphine with just that look. Then he
stuck the pistol in the ribs of the man on his left and fired twice.
The arms that grappled him relaxed and fell away.
There were two more men grappling with
Stephanie. That made four altogether, and Terzian reasoned dully
that after the first three fucked up in Paris, the home office had
sent a supervisor. One was trying to tug the Nike bag away, and
Terzian lunged toward him and fired at a range of two meters, too
close to miss, and the man dropped to the ground with a whuff of
pain.
The last man had hold of Stephanie and
swung her around, keeping her between himself and the pistol.
Terzian could see the knife in his hand and recognized it as one
he’d seen before. Her dark glasses were cockeyed on her face and
Terzian caught a flash of her angry green eyes. He pointed the
pistol at the knife man’s face. He didn’t dare shoot.
"Police!" he shrieked into the
wind. "Policia!" He used the Spanish word. Bloody spittle
spattered the cobblestones as he screamed.
In the Trashcanian’s eyes, he saw
fear, bafflement, rage.
"Polizia!" He got the
pronunciation right this time. He saw the rage in Stephanie’s eyes,
the fury that mirrored his own, and he saw her struggle against the
man who held her.
"No!" he called. Too late. The
knife man had too many decisions to make all at once, and Terzian
figured he wasn’t very bright to begin with. Kill the
hostages was probably something he’d been taught on his first
day at Goon School.
As Stephanie fell, Terzian fired, and
kept firing as the man ran away. The killer broke out of the
passageway into a little square, and then just fell down.
The slide of the automatic locked back
as Terzian ran out of ammunition, and then he staggered forward to
where Stephanie was bleeding to death on the cobbles.
Her throat had been cut and she
couldn’t speak. She gripped his arm as if she could drive her urgent
message through the skin, with her nails. In her eyes, he saw
frustrated rage, the rage he knew well, until at length he saw there
nothing at all, a nothing he knew better than any other thing in the
world.
He shouldered the Nike bag and
staggered out of the passageway into the tiny Venetian square with
its covered well. He took a street at random, and there was Odile’s
hotel. Of course: the Trashcanians had been staking it
out.
It wasn’t much of a hotel, and the
scent of spice and garlic in the lobby suggested that the desk clerk
was eating his dinner. Terzian went up the stair to Odile’s room and
knocked on the door. When she opened–she was a plump girl with big
hips and a suntan–he tossed the Nike bag on the bed.
"You need to get back to Mogadishu
right away," he said. "Stephanie just died for that."
Her eyes widened. Terzian stepped to
the wash basin to clean the blood off as best he could. It was all
he could do not to shriek with grief and anger.
"You take care of the starving," he
said finally, "and I’ll save the rest of the world."
Michelle rose from the sea near
Torbiong’s boat, having done thirty-six hundred calories’ worth of
research and caught a honeycomb grouper into the bargain. She traded
the fish for the supplies he brought. "Any more blueberries?" she
asked.
"Not this time." He peered down at
her, narrowing his eyes against the bright shimmer of sun on the
water. "That young man of yours is being quite a nuisance. He’s
keeping the turtles awake and scaring the fish."
The mermaid tucked away her wings and
arranged herself in her rope sling. "Why don’t you throw him off the
island?"
"My authority doesn’t run that far."
He scratched his jaw. "He’s interviewing people. Adding up all the
places you’ve been seen. He’ll find you pretty soon, I
think."
"Not if I don’t want to be found. He
can yell all he likes, but I don’t have to answer."
"Well, maybe." Torbiong shook his
head. "Thanks for the fish."
Michelle did some preliminary work
with her new samples, and then abandoned them for anything new that
her search spiders had discovered. She had a feeling she was on the
verge of something colossal.
She carried her deck to her
overhanging limb and let her legs dangle over the water while she
looked through the new data. While paging through the new
information, she ate something called a Raspberry Dynamo Bar that
Torbiong had thrown in with her supplies. The old man must have
included it as a joke: it was over-sweet and sticky with marshmallow
and strangely flavored. She chucked it in the water and hoped it
wouldn’t poison any fish.
Stephanie Pais had been killed in what
the news reports called a "street fight" among a group of foreign
visitors. Since the authorities couldn’t connect the foreigners to
Pais, they had to assume she was an innocent bystander caught up in
the violence. The papers didn’t mention Terzian at all.
Michelle looked through pages of
followup. The gun that had shot the four men had never been found,
though nearby canals were dragged. Two of the foreigners had
survived the fight, though one died eight weeks later from
complications of an operation. The survivor maintained his innocence
and claimed that a complete stranger had opened fire on him and his
friends, but the judges hadn’t believed him and sent him to prison.
He lived a great many years and died in the Lightspeed War, along
with most people caught in prisons during that deadly time.
One of the four men was Belorussian.
Another Ukrainian. Another two Moldovan. All had served in the
Soviet military in the past, in the Fourteenth Army in Transnistria.
It frustrated Stephanie that she couldn’t shout back in time to tell
the Italians to connect these four to the murder of another
ex-Soviet, seven weeks earlier, in Paris.
What the hell had Pais and Terzian
been up to? Why were all these people with Transnistrian connections
killing each other, and Pais?
Maybe it was Pais they’d been after
all along. Her records at Santa Croce were missing, which was odd,
because other personnel records from the time had survived. Perhaps
someone was arranging that certain things not be known.
She tried a search on Santa Croce
itself, and slogged through descriptions and mentions of a whole lot
of Italian churches, including the famous one in Florence where
Terzian and Pais had been seen at Machiavelli’s tomb. She refined
the search to the Santa Croce relief organization, and found
immediately the fact that let it all fall into place.
Santa Croce had maintained a refugee
camp in Moldova during the civil war following the establishment of
Transnistria. Michelle was willing to bet that Stephanie Pais had
served in that camp. She wondered if any of the other players had
been residents there.
She looked at the list of other camps
that Santa Croce had maintained in that period, which seemed to have
been a busy one for them. One name struck her as familiar, and she
had to think for a moment before she remembered why she knew it. It
was at a Santa Croce camp in the Sidamo province of Ethiopia where
the Green Leopard Plague had first broken out, the first transgenic
epidemic.
It had been the first real attempt to
modify the human body at the cellular level, to help marginal
populations synthesize their own food, and it had been primitive
compared to the more successful mods that came later. The ideal
design for the efficient use of chlorophyll was a leaf, not the homo
sapien–the designer would have been better advised to create a
plague that made its victims leafy, and later designers, aiming for
the same effect, did exactly that. And Green Leopard’s designer had
forgotten that the epidermis already contains a solar-activated
enzyme: melanin. The result on the African subjects was green skin
mottled with dark splotches, like the black spots on an implausibly
verdant leopard.
The Green Leopard Plague broke out in
the Sidamo camp, then at other camps in the Horn of Africa. Then it
leaped clean across the continent to Mozambique, where it first
appeared at a Oxfam camp in the flood zone, spread rapidly across
the continent, then leaped across oceans. It had been a generation
before anyone found a way to disable it, and by then other
transgenic modifiers had been released into the population, and
there was no going back.
The world had entered Terzian’s
future, the one he had proclaimed at the Conference of Classical and
Modern Thought.
What, Michelle thought excitedly, if
Terzian had known about Green Leopard ahead of time? His Cornucopia
Theory had seemed prescient precisely because Green Leopard appeared
just a few weeks after he’d delivered his paper. But if those
Eastern bloc thugs had been involved somehow in the plague’s
transmission, or were attempting to prevent Pais and Terzian from
sneaking the modified virus to the camps. . . .
Yes! Michelle thought exultantly.
That had to be it. No one had ever worked out where Green Leopard
originated, but there had always been suspicion directed toward
several semi-covert labs in the former Soviet empire. This was
it. The only question was how Terzian, that American in
Paris, had got involved. . . .
It had to be Stephanie, she thought.
Stephanie, who Terzian had loved and who had loved him, and who had
involved him in the desperate attempt to aid refugee
populations.
For a moment, Michelle bathed in the
beauty of the idea. Stephanie, dedicated and in love, had been
murdered for her beliefs–realdeath!–and Terzian, broken-hearted, had
carried on and brought the future–Michelle’s present–into being. A
wonderful story! And no one had known it till now, no
one had understood Stephanie’s sacrifice, or Terzian’s grief . . .
not until the lonely mermaid, working in isolation on her rock, had
puzzled it out.
"Hello, Michelle," Darton
said.
Michelle gave a cry of frustration and
glared in fury down at her lover. He was in a yellow plastic
kayak–kayaking was popular here, particularly in the Rock
Islands–and had slipped his electric-powered boat along the margin
of the island, moving in near-silence. He looked grimly up at her
from below the pitcher plant that dangled below the
overhang.
They had rebuilt him, of course, after
his death. All the data was available in backup, in Delhi where he’d
been taken apart, recorded, and rebuilt as an ape. He was back in a
conventional male body, with the broad shoulders and white smile and
short hairy bandy legs she remembered.
Michelle knew that he hadn’t made any
backups during their time in Belau. He had his memories up to the
point where he’d lain down on the nanobed in Delhi. That had been
the moment when his love of Michelle had been burning its hottest,
when he had just made the commitment to live with Michelle as an ape
in the Rock Islands.
That burning love had been consuming
him in the weeks since his resurrection, and Michelle was glad of
it, had been rejoicing in every desperate, unanswered message that
Darton sent sizzling through the ether.
"Damn it," Michelle said, "I’m
working."
<Talk to me> Darton’s fingers
formed. Michelle’s fingers made a ruder reply.
"I don’t understand," Darton said. "We
were in love. We were going to be together."
"I’m not talking to you," Michelle
said. She tried to concentrate on her video display.
"We were still together when the
accident happened," Darton said. "I don’t understand why we can’t be
together now."
"I’m not listening, either," said
Michelle.
"I’m not leaving, Michelle!"
Darton screamed. "I’m not leaving till you talk to
me!"
White cockatoos shrieked in answer.
Michelle quietly picked up her deck, rose to her feet, and headed
inland. The voice that followed her was amplified, and she realized
that Darton had brought his bullhorn.
"You can’t get away, Michelle! You’ve
got to tell me what happened!"
I’ll tell you about Lisa Lee, she
thought, so you can send her desperate messages,
too.
Michelle had been deliriously happy
for her first month in Belau, living in arboreal nests with Darton
and spending the warm days describing their island’s unique biology.
It was their first vacation, in Prague, that had torn Michelle’s
happiness apart. It was there that they’d met Lisa Lee Baxter, the
American tourist who thought apes were cute, and who wondered what
these shaggy kids were doing so far from an arboreal
habitat.
It wasn’t long before Michelle
realized that Lisa Lee was at least two hundred years old, and that
behind her diamond-blue eyes was the withered, mummified soul that
had drifted into Prague from some waterless desert of the spirit, a
soul that required for its continued existence the blood and
vitality of the young. Despite her age and presumed experience, Lisa
Lee’s ploys seemed to Michelle to be so obvious, so
blatant. Darton fell for them all.
It was only because Lisa Lee had
finally tired of him that Darton returned to Belau, chastened and
solemn and desperate to be in love with Michelle again. But by then
it was Michelle who was tired. And who had access to Darton’s
medical records from the downloads in Delhi.
"You can’t get away,
Michelle!"
Well, maybe not. Michelle paused with
one hand on the banyan’s trunk. She closed her deck’s display and
stashed it in a mesh bag with some of her other stuff, then walked
out again on the overhanging limb.
"I’m not going to talk to you like
this," she said. "And you can’t get onto the island from that side,
the overhang’s too acute."
"Fine," Darton said. The shouting had
made him hoarse. "Come down here, then."
She rocked forward and dived off the
limb. The salt water world exploded in her senses. She extended her
wings and fluttered close to Darton’s kayak, rose, and shook sea
water from her eyes.
"There’s a tunnel," she said. "It
starts at about two meters and exits into the lake. You can swim it
easily if you hold your breath."
"All right," he said. "Where is
it?"
"Give me your anchor."
She took his anchor, floated to the
bottom, and set it where it wouldn’t damage the live coral.
She remembered the needle she’d taken
to Jellyfish Lake, the needle she’d loaded with the mango extract to
which Darton was violently allergic. Once in the midst of the
jellyfish swarm, it had been easy to jab the needle into Darton’s
calf, then let it drop to the anoxic depths of the lake.
He probably thought she’d given him a
playful pinch.
Michelle had exulted in Darton’s
death, the pallor, the labored breathing, the desperate pleading in
the eyes.
It wasn’t murder, after all, just a
fourth-degree felony. They’d build a new Darton in a matter of days.
What was the value of a human life, when it could be infinitely
duplicated, and cheaply? As far as Michelle was concerned, Darton
had amusement value only.
The rebuilt Darton still loved her,
and Michelle enjoyed that as well, enjoyed the fact that she caused
him anguish, that he would pay for ages for his betrayal of her
love.
Linda Lee Baxter could take a few
lessons from the mermaid, Michelle thought.
Michelle surfaced near the tunnel and
raised a hand with the fingers set at <follow me>. Darton
rolled off the kayak, still in his clothes, and splashed clumsily
toward her.
"Are you sure about this?" he
asked.
"Oh yes," Michelle replied. "You go
first, I’ll follow and pull you out if you get in
trouble."
He loved her, of course. That was why
he panted a few times for breath, filled his lungs, and dove.
Michelle had not, of course, bothered
to mention that the tunnel was fifteen meters long, quite far to go
on a single breath. She followed him, very interested in how this
would turn out, and when Darton got into trouble in one of the
narrow places and tried to back out, she grabbed his shoes and held
him right where he was.
He fought hard but none of his kicks
struck her. She would remember the look in his wide eyes for a long
time, the thunderstruck disbelief in the instant before his breath
exploded from his lungs and he died.
She wished that she could speak again
the parting words she’d whispered into Darton’s ear when he lay
dying on the ridge above Jellyfish Lake. "I’ve just killed you.
And I’m going to do it again."
But even if she could have spoken the
words underwater, they would have been untrue. Michelle supposed
this was the last time she could kill him. Twice was dangerous, but
a third time would be too clear a pattern. She could end up in jail,
though, of course, you only did severe prison time for
realdeath.
She supposed that she would have to
discover his body at some point, but if she cast the kayak adrift,
it wouldn’t have to be for a while. And then she’d be thunderstruck
and grief-stricken that he’d thrown away his life on this desperate
attempt to pursue her after she’d turned her back on him and gone
inland, away from the sound of his voice.
Michelle looked forward to playing
that part.
She pulled up the kayak’s anchor and
let it coast away on the six-knot tide, then folded away her wings
and returned to her nest in the banyan tree. She let the breeze dry
her skin and got her deck from its bag and contemplated the data
about Terzian and Stephanie Pais and the outbreak of the Green
Leopard Plague.
Stephanie had died for what she
believed in, killed by the agents of an obscure, murderous regime.
It had been Terzian who had shot those four men in her defense, that
was clear to her now. And Terzian, who lived a long time and then
died in the Lightspeed War along with a few billion other people,
had loved Stephanie and kept her secret till his death, a secret
shared with the others who loved Stephanie and who had spread the
plague among the refugee populations of the world.
It was realdeath that people suffered
then, the death that couldn’t be corrected. Michelle knew that she
understood that kind of death only as an intellectual abstract, not
as something she would ever have to face or live with. To lose
someone permanently . . . that was something she couldn’t
grasp. Even the ancients, who faced realdeath every day, hadn’t been
able to accept it, that’s why they’d invented the myth of Heaven.
Michelle thought about Stephanie’s
death, the death that must have broken Terzian’s heart, and she
contemplated the secret Terzian had kept all those years, and she
decided that she was not inclined to reveal it.
Oh, she’d give Davout the facts, that
was what he paid her for. She’d tell him what she could find out
about Stephanie and the Transnistrians. But she wouldn’t mention the
camps that Santa Croce had built across the starvation-scarred
world, she wouldn’t point him at Sidamo and Green Leopard. If he
drew those conclusions himself, then obviously the secret was
destined to be revealed. But she suspected he wouldn’t–he was too
old to connect those dots, not when obscure ex-Soviet entities and
relief camps in the Horn of Africa were so far out of his
reference.
Michelle would respect Terzian’s love,
and Stephanie’s secret. She had some secrets of her own, after
all.
The lonely mermaid finished her work
for the day and sat on her overhanging limb to gaze down at the sea,
and she wondered how long it would be before Darton called her
again, and how she would torture him when he
did.
–With thanks to Dr. Stephen
C. Lee.